রবিবার, ১৬ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Marilyn Manson avoids 'becoming Van Goth'

By Natalie Finn, E! Online

Marilyn Manson / Twitter

Marilyn Manson tweeted a photo of his injured ear Friday.

On the bright side, if Marilyn Manson had lost an ear, that's something to stick in formaldehyde and display in his living room, right?

"I was hit by a glass table in a dangerous fight. I was however, the victor but had to have 24 stitches to keep my ear from becoming Van Goth," the shock rocker tweeted Tuesday, followed by a close-up of his bandaged ear.?

Manson and Rob Zombie's Twins of Evil tour had touched down in Basel, Switzerland, that night -- and that's where the aforementioned brawl reportedly went down.?

Manson scored a Grammy nod for Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance?

Aside from his clever play on words, Manson didn't provide any further details regarding what went down.?

Ouch! See more celebrity injuries?

He and Zombie are scheduled to touch down in Ekaterinburg, Russia, Saturday night.?

More in TODAY Entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/12/14/15915083-marilyn-manson-tweets-photo-of-injured-ear-after-dangerous-fight?lite

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৫ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

RF President includes Chief of Gen Staff Valery Gerasimov in Security Council

MOSCOW, November 15 (Itar-Tass) ? Russian President Vladimir Putin has included Chief of the General Staff of the Russia Armed Forces ? First Deputy Defence Minister Valery Gerasimov in the RF Security Council,? excluding from it Nikolai Makarov.

The presidential decree takes effect on the day of its signing, the Kremlin website specified.

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Source: http://www.itar-tass.com/c154/572512.html

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Kelli O'Hara to sing 'Carousel' with Philharmonic

NEW YORK (AP) ? Kelli O'Hara will be taking a break from singing Gershwin songs on Broadway early next year ? to sing Rodgers & Hammerstein tunes with the The New York Philharmonic.

The Philharmonic said Monday that O'Hara, currently starring in "Nice Work If You Can Get It" at the Imperial Theatre, will appear as Julie Jordan in a production of "Carousel" running from Feb. 27 to March 2.

The musical includes such hits as "If I Loved You," ''June Is Bustin' Out All Over," and "You'll Never Walk Alone." O'Hara is set to return to Broadway after "Carousel" closes.

Joining O'Hara will be Nathan Gunn as Billy Bigelow, Stephanie Blythe as Nettie Fowler and Alexander Gemignani as Enoch Snow. John Rando will direct and Rob Fisher conducts.

___

Online: http://nyphil.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kelli-ohara-sing-carousel-philharmonic-202117241.html

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বুধবার, ৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Fight over gay rights milestone divides Maryland

BALTIMORE (Reuters) - Ezekiel Jackson is black and his wife is white. As Jackson campaigns to legalize gay marriage in Maryland, he likens the plight of same-sex couples to that of interracial couples, who were banned from marrying in the state until 1967.

Maryland was one of the last U.S. states to allow blacks and whites to marry, but on Tuesday it could become one of the first states to legalize same-sex marriage by a popular vote. Voters in Maine and Washington are also heading to the polls to decide whether to let gays and lesbians wed.

Six U.S. states and the District of Columbia already allow gay marriage, but the decisions were made by court rulings and legislative action.

Interracial couples used to travel from Maryland to nearby Washington D.C. to wed before the state ban was lifted. It is the same trip same-sex couples now make to marry.

"I couldn't help but make that comparison," said Jackson, an organizer with the Service Employees International Union and the head of Marylanders for Marriage Equality.

Black voters have traditionally been reliable foes of same-sex marriage. In Maryland, Emmett Burns, a prominent black pastor, has been a leading opponent of the referendum and says it is insulting to African Americans to describe marriage as a civil rights issue.

"When did sodomy get to be a civil right?" Burns said in an interview. "Two consenting adults can do what they want in private but you want to change the definition and make it marriage? No."

A quarter of the Maryland electorate is black and public opinion polls suggest the outcome of the referendum will be close.

"It was against the law for black people to be married to one another at one time," Ralph Moore, a community activist, said at a recent debate in Baltimore. "The definition of marriage has constantly been changed in this country."

"Black people should not be a part of denying rights," he said. "That's not how we got here."

Gay marriage campaigners say they are beginning to win over more black voters, boosted by President Barack Obama, who was the first U.S. president to support same-sex marriage and has endorsed the efforts in Maryland, Washington and Maine.

Black celebrities like hip hop moguls Jay-Z and Russell Simmons have also spoken out in support of same-sex marriage.

'MOTHERLESS OR FATHERLESS FAMILIES'

But in Maryland, some voters - black and white - will never be convinced. Last month, several dozen people gathered at a Christian center in Davidsonville for an event held by the Maryland Marriage Alliance - the main group opposing the referendum.

"When you say that a homosexual family is equal to mine, that's offensive to me," said David Austin Nimicks, a lawyer with the Alliance Defense Fund. "We're talking about the intentional creation of motherless or fatherless families."

Three panelists made a case that expanding the right to marriage beyond heterosexual couples would weaken the institution and thus weaken the family.

"There's a reason the left is going after marriage," said Doug Mainwaring of the Capital Tea Party Patriots, who is gay. Family and the church are "a bulwark against government taking over our lives."

Mainwaring said allowing same-sex marriage will open the door to legalizing other kinds of unions, like "threesome relationships."

"They're trying to make this look so normal, so conservative, so appealing - they're just like you and me," he said of the campaign to legalize gay marriage.

Demographics are on the side of those pushing for expanded marriage rights. National polls consistently show more people support same-sex marriage than oppose it and that young people back same-sex marriage by a large margin.

Even Jackson, who is helping to lead the effort, said that until a few years ago, he was "very much against homosexuality." Then, he learned that a close childhood friend was gay.

He said the news forced him to reexamine his views.

"It wasn't someone throwing talking points at me that changed my mind. It was that I could relate it to something real," he said. "I think that's happened every time a group has changed their mind."

Carlton Smith, a founder of Baltimore Black Pride, said he does not personally plan to marry if the referendum passes. Smith, who is 49, says he has survived a lifetime of bullying from family members and fellow blacks and from the white gay community, and he hopes life will become easier for gay, black men in Baltimore.

"It will seem close to equality," he said. "We're not all there yet but it will be one more milestone I'll live to see."

(Editing by Jim Loney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fight-over-gay-rights-milestone-divides-maryland-030148856.html

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শনিবার, ৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Cell Service Deteriorating in NY, NJ; Verizon Regarding Damage ...

Verizon?s flooded headquarters on West St., lower Manhattan (The Wall Street Journal)

As cleanup efforts continue across New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, some of America?s largest telecommunications companies are coming under increased scrutiny for being caught flat-footed after Hurricane Sandy roared across the tri-state region, causing damage Verizon?s chief technology officer now admits is worse than 9/11.

As of this morning, Verizon Wireless? network is reportedly straining, particularly in Manhattan and Brooklyn, where cell service that worked immediately after the storm is now increasingly failing.

Verizon said 94% of its cell sites were operational after the storm, but some local officials in the area believe 94% of Verizon?s wireless network has now failed them when they need it the most.

Many telecom companies, particularly AT&T, are being criticized for excessive secrecy about the ongoing state of their networks post-Sandy. AT&T, which left its customers in the dark about service restoration as late as last night while asking customers to contribute $10 to the American Red Cross, finally mass e-mailed customers a statement devoid of much detail signed by Steve Hodges, president of AT&T?s northeast region.

?Restoring our wireless network is our top priority,? Hodges writes. ?The vast majority of our cell sites in the Northeast are online and working. We are working issues in areas that were especially hard-hit, where flooding, power loss, transportation and debris all pose challenges. Our crews are working around the clock to restore network service to areas that were impacted by the storm. We will not stop until we repair all of the damage to our network and restore service back to its full capacity.?

The Federal Communications Commission correctly predicted?the situation with mobile phones could get worse before it gets better, as backup power wears down and flooding persists. At a press conference held yesterday, FCC chairman Julius Genachowski revealed at least a quarter of all cell sites in areas damaged by Sandy were not operational. Those numbers were less optimistic that those provided by carriers.

The FCC this week activated the?Disaster Information Reporting System, a central reporting point for telecommunications companies to update the agency regarding outages and other service disruptions. The FCC also alerted providers that in emergency circumstances, they can assist companies getting fuel for generators and help locate portable cell tower equipment for companies caught unaware.

AT&T?s belated letter to customers affected by Hurricane Sandy

Some may need the help.

New York State Assemblyman Alec Brook-Krasny and Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz both reported Verizon Wireless? outages are worsening in Brooklyn and midtown Manhattan.

Brooklyn Borough president Marty Markowitz

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) today told Sen. Chuck Schumer the federal agency will reimburse New York for 100 percent of the costs incurred restoring power across the storm areas. But that may not expedite how quickly power returns.

Power restoration is expected to bring most cell towers back online. Worsening service is being attributed to battery backup or generator equipment exhausting on-hand fuel supplies, which usually keeps service up and running for up to three days. That means cell towers without power and unreachable by workers will have begun failing late Wednesday into today.

Damage assessments are further behind in New Jersey, the state that took the worst impact from Hurricane Sandy.

Stop the Cap!?obtained some new figures from cell phone companies regarding the state of their networks:

  • Verizon: Still holding to 94% operational in storm areas;
  • AT&T: Declined to comment except to say ?the vast majority? of their network is operational;
  • T-Mobile: 80% operational in NYC, 90% operational in Washington, D.C.
  • Sprint: 75% operational
http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSJ Verizon Offices Damaged 11-1-12.mp4

Verizon?s critical network takes another hit. ?We?ve been here before,? says one Verizon executive, referring to the destruction from the 9/11 terrorist attacks which severely damaged the same facility on West Street now flooded out. (3 minutes)

Our readers report that cell service becomes spotty to non-existent in coastal New Jersey and Connecticut. In Manhattan anywhere south of 29th Street, readers report almost no signals at all.

Verizon?s damaged facilities include those on West and Broad Streets in Manhattan (circled).

Residents are trading tips about ?magic spots? where cell service does suddenly pop up, and Gizmodo notes?the only place in Alphabet City (the east side in southern Manhattan) to get service is on literally one street corner, where crowds congregate to make and receive calls.

The other salve for telecom withdrawal is the nearest pay phone.

Amusing stories of 20-somethings waiting in long lines only to be confounded by unfamiliar pay phones are appearing in the New York media. One radio station even aired basic instructions for members of the Millennial Generation that have never heard of inserting coins into telephones.

The biggest challenge for the city?s pay phone vendors is clearing them of coin overloads, something unheard of before the storm.

The often maligned pay phone has exposed the limits of the ?more advanced? and expensive networks that were supposed to replace them. Despite claims of superiority for wireless service, northeast residents have once again discovered it has its limits:

  • They don?t work during major weather events that knock out power and limit access to maintain backup generators;
  • Cell networks are less capable of handling large call volumes, a problem made worse when cell phone refugees in other areas seek out remaining cell signals, further congesting the network;
  • Wireless is just as susceptible to wireline or fiber failures on the ground. Cell towers typically connect to providers through wired backhaul circuits, which knock out cell service if they fail;
  • Cell phone users need power to recharge their power-hungry smartphones. Batteries drain even faster searching for a weak or non-existent cell signal;

Hardest hit remains Verizon, which allowed reporters access inside damaged facilities to help New Yorkers better understand the scope of the problem.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSJ Wireless Network Outages 11-1-12.mp4

The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the state of the wireless communications networks across the northeastern U.S. and when service will be back. ?(4 minutes)

Eleven years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks that took out Verizon?s West Street office when buildings collapsed at the nearby World Trade Center, Verizon is likely going to have to re-learn some lessons about catastrophe management as flood waters recede.

Verizon has deployed this 53-foot Emergency Mobile Communications Center for use by the Nassau County Office of Emergency Management that provides Internet and phone service.

The Wall Street Journal was able to obtain access inside the damaged facilities, and the reporter covering the event was left somewhat stunned by the scope of the damage.

In the middle of organized, yet chaotic recovery efforts was Verizon?s chief technology officer Tony Melone who had seen enough to declare the damage worse than 9/11.

The pictures of several feet of muddy water from the nearby Hudson River covering the lobby of the company?s headquarters on West Street said it all. The mostly salt water was an unwelcome guest in Verizon?s building, especially considering the five level basement below the lobby contains critical cables and telecommunications equipment. Almost four of those basement floors were completely flooded. After the water was pumped out, dampness and leaves from nearby trees remain littered on the floor.

One lesson learned after 9/11 was not to place critical phone switches below ground level. After reconstruction, the switches were moved to a higher floor and consequently were left undamaged.?But while Verizon moved its backup generators upstairs, it left the pumps and fuel tanks that power them in the basement ? leaving them inoperable.

This morning, passersby on West Street have to step around Verizon?s network of generators now running outside of the building, right next to large temporary fuel tanks to power them.

Verizon central offices in other parts of Manhattan, particularly further southeast on Broad Street, were never upgraded and are in worse shape, with electrical equipment damaged perhaps beyond repair.?The force of the water was strong enough to bend the 86 year-old steel and bronze doors. Workers there are still trying to get water out of the building, shoving a pipe down an elevator shaft to facilitate pumping.

Verizon has some redundancy built into its network to protect its most valuable customers. That kept the landline phones working at the New York Stock Exchange, even though other landline and wireless customers will have ?to wait longer for service to resume.

AT&T?s generator staging area near Meriden, Connecticut. (Credit: Brian Pernicone)

Some critics of the increasingly concentrated telecommunications landscape think Verizon and other companies have still not learned enough to prevent the kinds of service disruptions that will leave some customers without service for weeks.

It is hard to miss the bustle outside of Verizon?s offices damaged by the storm, watching flood water drain down the street. But things are murkier at cell phone providers who have been less than forthcoming about specific outage information and service restoration assessments.

Some have advocated the federal government step in and require cell phone service, now deemed essential by an increasing number of Americans, be protected with robust backup solutions to keep service up and running after catastrophic weather events.

After Hurricane Katrina, the FCC in 2007 tried to issue new rules that required a minimum of eight hours of backup power for all cell sites. The industry balked, predicting it would lead to??staggering and irreparable harm? for the cell companies. One wireless trade association warned their members might take several cell sites down if they were forced to provide backup power.

The CTIA Wireless Association and Sprint-Nextel sued the agency in federal court and the Bush Administration?s?Office of Management and Budget eventually killed the proposed regulations.

T-Mobile and AT&T have cut an emergency deal to share their cellphone networks in areas affected by Superstorm Sandy. They?re trying to make it a little easier for customers to get a signal as carriers restore their networks. Some say companies should be forced to make their networks more resilient. National Public Radio?s Morning Edition has the story. (November 1, 2012) (3 minutes)
You must remain on this page to hear the clip, or you can download the clip and listen later.

Other stories of interest:

  1. AT&T Cell Towers in Connecticut Damaged by Winter Storm: 152; Verizon Wireless: 0
  2. Hurricane Sandy?s Wrath on Telecommunications Extends Beyond the Hardest Hit Areas
  3. Mid-Atlantic Storm Damage Shows Big Telecom Unprepared for Bad Weather
  4. Hurricane Irene Did Its Worst in North Carolina, Upstate NY, and New England
  5. Verizon Making Storm Preparations for Sandy?s Impact on Landline/Wireless Network

Source: http://stopthecap.com/2012/11/01/cell-service-deteriorating-in-ny-nj-verizon-regarding-damage-its-worse-than-911/

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বুধবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Commercial Real Estate - Hosseini Law Firm

Property law in Canada falls under provincial jurisdiction. Property law in Ontario has developed through the English common law. Interests in land are generally held directly in fee simple or by leases as leasehold interests. If you are thinking of expanding your business to Ontario and want to invest in commercial real estate here, you can choose from many legal structures. They include a corporation, general partnership, a limited partnership, co-ownership (often referred to as a ?joint venture?), a trust, real estate investment trust, personal ownership or any combination of these. We can help with your choice of an appropriate investment structure by advising you on pertinent factors like tax planning requirements, liability issues, business considerations and foreign investor rules and regulations.

Ontario generally imposes no restrictions or prohibitions on foreign investors in land, whether natural or corporate. But certain taxing, reporting and registration provisions may apply. Investors in real estate may acquire several types of interests in land, including full ownership (a ?freehold? interest), an interest for a specified period (a ?leasehold? interest) or a partial interest in a freehold or leasehold interest as co-owners under a joint venture.

If you?re thinking about buying commercial property here, we can advise about and draft the agreement of purchase and sale. We will ensure it contains all necessary business terms for the transaction, such as the legal description of the land, purchase price, deposit(s), closing date, purchaser?s right to search the title before completing the sale, ?title and/or due diligence periods, representations and warranties, and any other agreed upon terms and conditions. We can conduct various searches to verify that the vendor has good title to the property and conduct other due diligence.

We can advise you on the various laws that might affect your situation. For instance, land use planning legislation, bylaws and regulations to control how real estate is developed.? If you are thinking about leasing, know that it is a complex area and there are several ways to lease property here. If you need financing, it is usually obtained from institutional lenders like banks. You might need to know about the detailed statutes, laws, regulations, bylaws, guidelines and recommendations concerning the protection of the environment. You would be prudent determine a property?s environmental status by inspecting applicable company and public records You should also be aware that property development and land use is mostly regulated at the municipal level through official plans and zoning bylaws and at the provincial level under the Planning Act. Another consideration is the land transfer tax. Imposed at graduated rates, for most commercial transactions it is about 1.5% of the purchase price.

These are just some of examples of laws that affect a commercial real estate here.? For specialized advice on you particular situation, give us a call.

Tags: agreement of purchase and sale, corporation, due diligence, financing, freehold interest, general partnership, good title to property, joint venture, land transfer tax, land use planning, leasehold interest, leasing, Planning Act, property development, real estate investment trust, REIT, trust

Source: http://www.hosseinilaw.com/commercial-real-estate

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শনিবার, ২৭ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Galaxy halos are produced by orphan stars, findings indicate

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Isolated stars kicked to the edges of space by violent galaxy mergers may be the cause of mysterious infrared light halos observed across the sky, according to UC Irvine and other astronomers.

"Background glow in our sky has been a huge unanswered question," said UCI physics & astronomy professor Asantha Cooray, lead author of a paper about the discovery in the Oct. 25 issue of the journal Nature. "We have new evidence that this light is from stars that linger between galaxies. Individually, they're too dim to be seen, but we think we're seeing their collective blush."

Cooray and colleagues examined 250 hours of data captured by NASA's powerful Spitzer Space Telescope from a large swath of sky called the Bo?tes field, which covers the equivalent of 40 full moons near the constellation of the same name. The large scale allowed the researchers to better analyze the patterns of diffuse light.

"Studying this faint background was one of the core goals of our survey, and we carefully designed the observations in order to directly address this important, challenging question," said co-author Daniel Stern of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

The team concluded that the infrared glow, while weak, is too strong to be consistent with earlier theories that it's being emitted by the very first celestial bodies. "The glow is just too bright to be from those ancient, far-off galaxies and stars," said UCI doctoral student and co-author Joseph Smidt.

Instead, the scientists have a new theory, saying it's "intracluster" or "intrahalo" starlight. Early in the history of the universe, as galaxies grew, they collided and bulked up in mass. As the crashing galaxies became gravitationally tangled, strips of stars were shredded and tossed into space as leftovers. Galaxies also grow by "swallowing" dwarf neighbors, a messy process that likewise results in stray stars. Cosmologists believe these orphaned stars produce the diffuse, blotchy smatterings of light that make up galaxy halos extending well beyond the outer reaches of galaxies.

Additional research is needed to confirm the theory. But the researchers say it makes sense. "A lightbulb went off when we were reading earlier papers predicting the existence of diffuse stars," Cooray said. "They explain what we're seeing with Spitzer."

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University of California - Irvine: http://www.uci.edu

Thanks to University of California - Irvine for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124809/Galaxy_halos_are_produced_by_orphan_stars__findings_indicate

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