Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Firefighters serenade Judi Dench in London

LONDON (AP) — Judi Dench has been serenaded by firefighters as she arrived for the London premiere of her latest film.


Dench walked the red carpet in Leicester Square Wednesday for the London Film Festival screening of "Philomena."


The movie tells the true story of an Irishwoman's quest to track down the son she was forced to give up for adoption 50 years earlier.


Members of the Fire Brigades Union, drinking at a pub after a protest march against pension cuts, spotted the 78-year-old star, chanted "We love you Judi" and broke into a rendition of Beatles song "Hey Jude."


The Stephen Frears-directed film also stars Steve Coogan as Martin Sixsmith, a journalist who helped Lee in her search and wrote a book about her story.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/firefighters-serenade-judi-dench-london-194452510.html
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US lower house to vote on own plan to end stand-off


Washington (AFP) - The US House of Representatives will vote on its own bill to end a government shutdown and debt ceiling standoff, Republican lawmakers said Tuesday, just two days before Washington exhausts its borrowing authority.


The Republican plan is similar to a measure being worked up in the Senate, which would fund government through January 15 while extending the debt ceiling to February 7, according to Congressman Darrell Issa.


But he said the House bill will include provisions aimed at chipping away at President Barack Obama's health care law by delaying for two years a medical device tax that helps fund the reforms.


"We're today going to vote a bill that we believe the Senate can accept," Issa said.


"Now if the Senate wants to say 'my way or the highway,' then I suggest that Senate Republicans not go along with that strategy."


The US federal government has been partially shut down for just over two weeks since Congress failed to agree a budget for the new fiscal year, and the Treasury has warned that it will could hit its debt ceiling any time from Thursday.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-lower-house-vote-own-plan-end-stand-142611436.html
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Iran hints at nuclear concessions, next talks set for Nov 7-8


By Louis Charbonneau and Yeganeh Torbati


GENEVA (Reuters) - Iran appears ready to scale back activity of potential use in making nuclear bombs, suggesting it is willing to compromise for a deal to win relief from harsh economic sanctions, diplomats said on Wednesday, and follow-up talks will be held on November 7-8.


Details of Iran's proposals, presented during two days of nuclear negotiations in Geneva with six world powers, have not been released, and Western officials were unsure whether Tehran was prepared to go far enough to clinch a breakthrough deal.


But, in a clear sign of hope, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said it was agreed to hold the next round of negotiations in three weeks in Geneva, and Iran's chief negotiator praised this week's discussions as "fruitful".


After a six-month hiatus, Iran and the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany began negotiations in earnest on Tuesday to end a long, festering stand-off that could boil over into a new Middle East war.


Diplomatic paralysis reigned during the eight-year tenure of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a bellicose hardliner. But a door to serious negotiations opened in June with the landslide election of moderate Hassan Rouhani on a platform of conciliation to overcome Iran's international isolation.


The powers want the Islamic Republic to stop higher-grade uranium enrichment to allay concerns that it would provide Iran a quick path to bomb-grade nuclear fuel. Iran says it is refining uranium only to generate more electricity for a rapidly expanding population and to produce isotopes for medicine.


Ashton told a closing news conference that the powers were "carefully" examining Iran's proposals and that this week's discussions were "the most detailed (discussions) we have ever had, by, I would say, a long way."


Ashton, presiding over the talks on behalf of the six powers, said the two sides had agreed that nuclear and sanctions experts would convene before the next high-level negotiations.


Iranian Foreign Minister and chief negotiator Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tehran looked to a new era in diplomatic relations.


"We sense that members of the (six powers) also have exhibited the necessary political will in order to move the process forward. Now we need to get to the details," he told reporters. He said two sides had for the first time agreed on a joint statement after the talks, but declined to elaborate on what had been discussed.


After Tuesday's initial round, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi suggested Tehran was prepared to address long-standing calls for the U.N. nuclear watchdog to have wider and more intrusive inspection powers.


He also told the official IRNA news agency that measures related to its uranium enrichment were part of the Iranian proposal, but hinted the Islamic Republic was not inclined to make its concessions quickly.


"Neither of these issues are within the first step (of the Iranian proposal) but form part of our last steps," he said without elaborating, in comments reported on Wednesday.


The sequencing of any concessions by Iran and any sanctions relief by the West could prove a stumbling block en route to a landmark, verifiable deal. Western officials have repeatedly said that Iran must suspend enriching uranium to 20 percent fissile purity, their main worry, before sanctions are eased.


"Are we there yet? No, but we need to keep talking," a Western diplomat said as talks resumed on Wednesday.


Israel, Iran's arch-foe, urged the powers to be tough in the talks by demanding a total shutdown of enrichment and ruling out any early relaxation of sanctions. But it did not repeat veiled threats to bomb Iran if it deems diplomacy pointless.


British Foreign Secretary William Hague underscored Western reluctance to move fast, saying during a trip to Tokyo that any changes in sanctions would only follow action by Iran.


"We are not today in a position to make any changes in those sanctions. Sanctions must continue. Sanctions are important part of bringing Iran to the negotiating table," he told reporters.


HESITATION


Western diplomats were hesitant to divulge specifics about the negotiations due to sensitivities involved - both in Tehran, where conservative hardliners are skeptical about striking deals that could curtail the nuclear program, and in Washington, where hawks are reluctant to support swift sanctions relief.


But Iran, diplomats said, has made much more concrete proposals than in the past, when ideological lectures and obfuscations were the norm, to the point that Tehran's negotiators were concerned about details being aired in public before they had had a chance to sell them back in Tehran.


Zarif said earlier in a post on Facebook that secrecy was working in the negotiators' favor. "Normally, the less negotiators leak news, the more it shows the seriousness of the negotiations and the possibility of reaching an agreement."


Diplomats said other proposals Iranian envoys had made regarding eventual "confidence-building" steps included halting 20 percent enrichment and possibly converting at least some of existing 20 percent stockpiles - material that alarms the powers as it is only a short technical step away from weapons-grade - to uranium oxide suitable for processing into reactor fuel.


COMPLETE HALT TO ENRICHMENT OUT OF QUESTION


But Iran did not intend to renounce all enrichment itself "under any circumstances", the Russian state news agency RIA quoted an unidentified Iranian delegation source as saying.


He was dismissing the maximal demand of U.S. and Israeli hawks which Western diplomats concede would undermine Rouhani's authority at home by exposing him to accusations of a sell-out from conservative hardliners in the clerical and security elite.


Most Iranians of whatever political persuasion equate the quest for nuclear energy with national sovereignty, modernization and a standing equal to the Western world.


"Apart from suspending 20 percent enrichment, it is possible to consider a scenario involving reducing the number of centrifuges (enriching uranium)," RIA quoted the delegate as saying. "However, for this, concrete steps from our opponents are required, which we do not see yet."


Iran has sharply expanded its uranium enrichment capacity in recent years and it now has roughly 19,000 installed such machines. Of those, about 10,400 are currently enriching.


The fact that Iran has so many idle centrifuges potentially allows it to swiftly expand enrichment, if it wanted, or to use them as a bargaining chip in negotiations with the powers.


Rouhani's election in June turned Western pessimism into guarded optimism that Iran might be ready to do a deal before tensions escalated uncontrollably into armed conflict.


The sprawling Shi'ite state of 75 million people has become anxious to be rid of Western-led sanctions that have impaired its economy, slashed its critical oil export revenues by 60 percent and brought about a devaluation of its rial currency.


Iran has previously spurned Western demands that it shelve 20 percent enrichment as an initial step in return for modest sanctions relief encompassing, for example, imported aircraft parts. Instead, it has called for the most far-flung and painful sanctions, targeting oil and banking sectors, to be rescinded.


(Additional reporting by Fredrik Dahl, Yeganeh Torbati, Justyna Pawlak and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Marcus George in Dubai, Kiyoshi Takenaka in Tokyo and Alexei Anishchuk in Moscow; Editing by Mark Heinrich)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-offers-concessions-nuclear-talks-no-deal-yet-123311814.html
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The MMA Hour - Episode 203 - Mike Pierce


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Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/videos/2013/10/15/4840372/the-mma-hour-episode-203-mike-pierce
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Watch: Elizabeth Berkley Recreates Her ‘Saved By The Bell’ Performance Of ‘I’m So Excited’ On ‘Dancing With The Stars’



PERFECT 10!!!





Over the weekend we learned that actress Elizabeth Berkley was planning to pay homage to her Saved By The Bell days with her performance this week on Dancing with the Stars. Elizabeth and her partner Valentin Chmerkovskiy danced the jive to I’m So Excited by the Pointer Sisters, the very same song she performed to on Saved By The Bell in a very special episode of the show that dealt with drug abuse. Last night, Elizabeth and Val gave the PERFORMANCE OF A LIFETIME! Click the video embedded above to watch the performance in full (including her pre-performance interview). The performance starts at about the 2:35 mark of the video but watch the whole thing, it’s fun. I think she should’ve received a perfect score but … she got robbed.


Elizabeth did make it thru to the next round of the competition. I’m PRAYING TO THE OLD GODS AND THE NEW that her next performance will be an homage to Showgirls. I mean … right? Who wouldn’t want to see Nomi Malone in action again?





Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pinkisthenewblog/~3/2qFaYBUavqQ/watch-elizabeth-berkley-recreates-her-saved-by-the-bell-performance-of-im-so-excited-on-dancing-with-the-stars
Category: BlackBerry   irina shayk   Comic Con 2013  

Activist Group Asks Comic Cons to "Protect Our Secret Identities"



Attendees of last week's New York Comic Con might have been surprised to see messages appearing on their social media streams that they hadn't actually written. It turned out that the tweets and Facebook status updates rhapsodizing about how great the show was ("Can't. handle. the. awesome" went one) were automatically generated and sent by a system once the attendees' RFID chip within their convention badge registered that they had arrived at the show, which was a surprise to those who didn't know that was even a possibility -- which is to say, all of them.



Within a day, ReedPOP, the organization behind NYCC, had turned off the automated messages and released a statement apologizing for being "too enthusiastic in our messaging" and "any perceived overstep." That wasn't enough for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, however, which has responded with an open letter to all the comic cons, asking them to "protect our secret identities."


STORY: NYCC: Marvel Reveals Live-Action Stage Event to Launch 2014 (Video)


"Being too enthusiastic is only one issue. Regardless of the messaging, ghost tweets are at best tacky, at worst creepy, and always unnecessary," the letter -- written by the organization's Dave Maass -- reads. "Even more problematic is that if even journalists such as Jill Scharr, for whom words are their livelihood, were unaware they were granting that kind of authority over their online personas, then NYCC did not do an adequate job of making its intentions clear. As a result, NYCC has tainted the safe spaces that these gatherings are to many a geek."


Even more troubling than hijacked social media accounts, Maass argues, is the potential for abuse of the RFID chips in the NYCC badges. "How many fans would steer clear of controversial graphic novels or manga tables (or even cheesy guilty childhood pleasures) if they knew someone was creating a log of every booth where they lingered? Think about the young LGBT artists who have yet to come out to their parents, but are finding the courage through sitting in the back of a queer comics panel. Would they still enter if they had to scan their personally identifiable badges at the door?"


The response to NYCC and ReedPOP's use of new technology has proven that a lot of work remains to be done not only in terms of exploring the potential for use, but also fine-tuning the way in which convention attendees are made aware of what the technology is actually being used for. As Maass writes, "You can still have a convention at the cutting edge of culture, without bleeding your attendees' privacy away." Just ask yourself: What Would Batman Do? (Actually, maybe not.)



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/THRComicCon/~3/RcGdljUjeD0/story01.htm
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Supreme Court takes on affirmative action in Michigan ban case

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

Students protest in support of affirmative action, outside the Supreme Court during the hearing of "Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action" on Oct. 15, in Washington.

By Pete Williams and Daniel Arkin, NBC News

Demonstrators crowded the sidewalk outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday as the justices took on the hot-button issue of affirmative action, hearing oral arguments in a case about Michigan's voter-backed ban on using race as a criterion in college admissions.

The gathered advocates urged the top court to stand by a 2003 ruling which held that the country's colleges can choose to use affirmative action practices in deciding which students to admit.

At issue is whether a 2006 Michigan constitutional amendment that blocks the state from taking account of race and gender in public education, employment and contracting constitutes discrimination or preferential treatment.



"It's wrong to treat people differently based on your race or the color of your skin," said Michigan's attorney general Bill Schuette, whose office is defending the Proposal 2 measure. "So we're saying: 'Equal treatment under the law.' That's our approach in Michigan."

But opponents of the ban sued and won in a federal appeals court, arguing that the prohibition is tantamount to discrimination, blocking only minority students from seeking preferences in school admissions.

During Tuesday’s courtroom argument, Mark Rosenbaum, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union who argued to strike down the Michigan measure on behalf of University of Michigan students and faculty, said that other groups pursuing preferential treatment in school admissions could appeal to administrators, only race may not enter the conversation.

“I want the same rule book. I want the same playing field. The problem with Proposal 2 is that it creates two playing fields,” Rosenbaum said, according to the Associated Press.

Shanta Driver, a Detroit-based lawyer also arguing in support of affirmative action on behalf of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, called on the justices to bring the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause “back to its original purpose and meaning, which is to protect minority rights against a white majority, which did not occur in this case.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor was the most outspoken justice on the bench about the Michigan ban, at one point saying: "It was intended to bring back segregation, and appears to have done just that."

When Michigan Solicitor General John Bursch, the state's representative in court, suggested Michigan could get rid of legacy admissions as a way to admit a more diverse student body, Justice Sotomayor remarked: "The minorities finally get in and have children, and now you want to do away with alumni preferences."

And yet a bare majority of the justices appeared to believe that Michigan's ban could withstand a constitutional challenge.

Chief Justice John Roberts asked: "Why can't a state say, 'Do all you can to achieve diversity without racial preferences?'"

And Justice Antonin Scalia defended the Michigan measure, which 58 percent of the state's voters approved, saying: "It's not a racial classification. It's the elimination of racial classification."

No matter the outcome of Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, any ruling is likely to fan the flames of the decades-old debate over affirmative action.



A ruling that strikes down the Michigan ban could send dominoes toppling across the country, potentially threatening bans in seven other states — Arizona, California, Florida, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Oklahoma and Washington.

And a move to uphold the Michigan amendment could represent a victory for affirmative action opponents, who may attempt to recreate their wins at the ballot box in other jurisdictions.

Tuesday's oral arguments came just four months after the justices avoided a major decision on the race-based admissions policy at the University of Texas at Austin, ruling instead to send the closely-watched case back to the lower court.

In a June 7-1 vote, with Justice Elena Kagan having recused herself, the justices said an appeals court did not apply the proper standard in determining whether the university's policy runs afoul of the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution.

That case, Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, was brought by a white student who claimed she was turned away from the University of Texas while racial minority students with lower standardized test scores were mailed acceptance letters.

The Michigan case arrives at the Supreme Court after time in front of a federal appeals court in Cincinnati.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in an 8-7 decision, said the Michigan provision violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution as it places a burden on affirmative action boosters who would be forced to launch their own extensive, circuitous campaign to strip the constitutional provision, according to the AP.

That burden "undermines the Equal Protection Clause's guarantee that all citizens ought to have equal access to the tools of political change," Judge R. Guy Cole, Jr., write for the majority on the Cincinnati appeals court.

Opponents allege that due to the ban, proponents for racial considerations in admissions are blocked from directly lobbying universities like those seeking to use other advantages — such as family alumni "legacy," for example.

Instead, those opponents would be required to push for the passage of an entirely new amendment to the state constitution, reversing the 2006 voter-backed measure, Reuters reported.

The Michigan case, like the Texas one, will be heard by only eight of the top court's nine justices. Justice Kagan, who prior to her 2010 appointment was the U.S. solicitor general and managed some affirmative action litigation, has rescued herself.



The long-simmering debate over affirmative action dates back to the early 1960s, when President John K. Kennedy first called on federal contractors to take "affirmative action" to hire racial and ethnic minorities, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

In a 1961 Executive Order, President Kennedy directed government employers to take "affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin."

For more than a quarter-century, the Supreme Court has often been at the center of pitched legal and political battles surrounding the issue.

In the watershed Regents of the University of California v. Bakke case in 1978, brought by white aspiring medical student Allan Bakke, the top court outlawed quotas but said educational institutions could balance race against other admissions criteria.

African-American and Latino enrollment at the University of Michigan has plummeted since the prohibition on affirmative action went into affect, according to the AP.

And at California's leading public universities, African-Americans make up a smaller share of incoming freshmen, while Latino enrollment has spiked slightly — although still far below the state's growth in the overall percentage of Latino high school graduates, according to the AP.

Some 86 percent of people surveyed by Pew Research said society "should do what is necessary to make sure that everyone has an equal opportunity to succeed." And yet only a third of Americans surveyed agreed with the statement: "We should make every possible effort to improve the position of blacks and other minorities, even if it means giving them preferential treatment."

Related: NBC News/WSJ poll: Affirmative action support at historic low

NBC News' Polly DeFrank, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/327fbe44/sc/42/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C10A0C150C20A975390A0Esupreme0Ecourt0Etakes0Eon0Eaffirmative0Eaction0Ein0Emichigan0Eban0Ecase0Dlite/story01.htm
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