If Gingrich had one million dollar line of credit at Tiffany’s, why not a second? Former House speaker Newt Gingrich had a second line of credit at the high-end jewelry store Tiffany’s for as much as $1 million dollars, his presidential campaign acknowledged Tuesday. Joe DeSantis, a spokesman for Gingrich, said that the candidate’s personal financial disclosure filing, which is due within 30 days of his formal entrance into the presidential race, will “show that the Gingriches had a $500,000 to $1 million line of credit at Tiffany’s, that it has a zero balance, and it has been closed.” DeSantis added that all debts to Tiffany’s had been paid in full. He offered no details about when the second line of credit was taken out, what it was used for or when it was closed. This revelation comes roughly a month after personal financial disclosure forms for Gingrich’s wife, Callista, showed that the family had carried a line of credit ranging between $250,000 and $500,000 at Tiffany’s during 2005 and 2006 . Maybe Newt’s new platform will be ‘Vote for Newt and You too Will Know the Glory of Tiffany’s”
Continue reading …It’s rare that anyone in any U.S. administration says something remotely critical of Saudi Arabia, or mentions a controversial subject for fear of annoying the Saudis. So when Secretary of State Clinton did so this morning she had to have considered her words with some care and thought. From the NY Times : WASHINGTON – Hillary Rodham Clinton’s advocacy for women’s rights – as First Lady, Senator and now Secretary of State – is well known. And yet she found herself facing criticism for not being outspoken enough on one issue: Saudi Arabia’s ban on women driving. In a series of letters and statements this month, a coalition of Saudi activists has pressed Mrs. Clinton to use the State Department’s bully pulpit to support its campaign against the kingdom’s ban, expressing disappointment earlier Tuesday that she had not yet spoken out. Then she did. “What these women are doing is brave and what they are seeking is right,” Mrs. Clinton said, when asked about the criticism at an appearance with Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates and their Japanese counterparts at the State Department. Of the women’s campaign, she added, “I am moved by it, and I support them.” The campaign — waged largely online inside Saudi Arabia — called on women to drive in collective protest last Friday, an event that appeared to draw a much smaller number than organizers had hoped. Maureen Dowd, who on her good days can write a decent column, had some praise for her comments but wished that Clinton had been more forceful, urging her to Sing Out, Hillary . It would have been thrilling if Hillary 2011 had simply channeled Hillary 1995, when, as first lady, she made her bodacious speech in Beijing, declaring that “women’s rights are human rights.” In her memoir, Hillary wrote that, despite pressure against it, she was determined to give that speech because she was fed up with “the crucial concerns of women” getting sacrificed “to diplomatic, military and trade issues.” So it was startling on Monday when Saudi women activists, struggling to bring the Arab Spring to the medieval House of Saud by urging women to drive, chided Hillary for her silence. Clinton’s office responded that the secretary had used “quiet diplomacy” — raising the issue, and more pressing ones, in a call with the Saudi foreign minister on the Day of Driving Dangerously. By Tuesday, the secretary of state — who has worked hard for women under the radar and whose legacy will be shaped by her support of women’s rights around the world — realized that she needed to be a bit louder.
Continue reading …Gov. Tom “Secret Agent Man” Corbett is pursuing many of the same draconian budget and union-busting measures as more high-profile Republican governors, but since he so rarely holds unscripted press conferences or answers questions, I suppose the state’s media gang figures there’s nothing to cover! Since taking office in January, Gov. Tom Corbett and his allied Republican majorities in the state House and Senate have been guided by two principles as they approach crafting a new budget: no proposal may exceed the $27.3 billion originally proposed by Corbett regardless of specific spending; any revenue derived from the booming natural gas industry must be dedicated to specific purposes rather than deposited in the general fund. Corbett and legislative leaders view the general fund as a swirling, voracious black hole. Once public money enters the vortex, it is lost forever. So any new revenue must be put in funds dedicated to specific purposes. Curiously, however, the rule does not seem to apply to existing funds with dedicated revenue streams. One of the first acts of the administration, with tacit approval from the legislative majorities, was to eliminate state subsidized health insurance coverage for more than 40,000 low-income working adults under the adultBasic program. Instead, the state directed those needy workers to far less affordable skeletal plans offered by private insurances. Far fewer than 10 percent of the newly uninsured workers opted for the private plans, for which premiums range up to 500 percent of the premium under adultBasic. Yet, a major part of the funding for adultBasic came from a dedicated revenue stream – Pennsylvania’s share of the master settlement that states reached with the tobacco industry. In 2001 the state Legislature passed and Gov. Tom Ridge signed a law creating the Tobacco Settlement fund and dedicating the revenue solely to health-related purposes – including adultBasic. This year the state is scheduled to receive $315 million in settlement funds. But instead of using the money for the dedicated purposes established by law in 2001, the administration plans to divert some of the fund for other purposes, including $220 million for a business loan fund.
Continue reading …• Hit refresh or select our auto-refresh button for the latest • Live scoreboard: Follow all of today’s action from SW19 • Full order of play for day three at the All England Club • Email your thoughts to xan.brooks@guardian.co.uk 1.17pm: Out comes Venus Williams for her opening service game, but she’s sloppy and rusty and Date-Krumm breaks her to love. The Japanese player then claws her way out of a 0-30 deficit to hold for 2-0, finishing off with a glorious drive volley into the open court. Kimiko Date-Krumm, incidentally, played her first Wimbledon way back in 1989 – before 36 of the players in this year’s women’s draw had even been born. Back then the men’s trophy went to Boris Becker and the women’s to Steffi Graff. Back then the spectators wore top hats and returned home in horse-drawn handsome carriages and you could pick up a Centre Court ticket for three-shillings-and-sixpence, and still have change left over for a flagon of mead. It was a happier time, an age of innocence. And, so far at least, the times are a-changing back. 1.03pm: While we wait for Venus Williams (recovering from a hip injury) and Kimiko Date-Krumm (40-years-old and still with all her own teeth) to get play underway on Centre Court, here’s Matt Scott on the (alleged) Problem With Mrs Murray: So Judy Murray is more of a hindrance than a help to her son Andy’s career — according to Boris Becker — and sport’s most famous mum has felt the need to justify herself. “Between the Australian Open in January and the Italian Open [on 8 May] I did not attend a tournament,” she said, which is perhaps a reduction in her courtside commitment. But it is nowhere near as light a touch as Andy Roddick’s parents, with the American world No.10 explaining in his USA Today column: “My parents are here [at Wimbledon] with me this year for the first time since 1997. “It’s the first time they’ve ever seen me play here. I thought they might have snuck over for one of my three finals and were just sitting in the stands, but they swear they haven’t. (They never sit in the player box). I haven’t seen much of them, however. I brought them down to get credentialed a couple days ago and got them lined up for some sightseeing, but they give me my space. They know I have to play a tournament.” Number of Wimbledon finals for Roddick: 3. Number of Wimbledon finals for Murray: 0. Just saying. 12.50pm: Raining hard at Wimbledon and this is how it looks . The PA informs us that this is likely to keep up until around 3pm, after which it will be wine and roses and Monte Carlo levels of sunshine and unfettered play on every spare bit of grass. Possibly. In the meantime the roof is drawn on Centre Court, where proceedings start in about 10-minutes. First up is Venus Williams versus Kimiko Date-Krumm, the battle of the golden oldies. We’ll be covering that while also keeping an eye on the covers. What’s going on under those covers? Are the pygmy professionals of the Lilliputian Tennis Academy playing one of their brutal, unseen contests? Or do the covered courts double as a kind of dormitory for the other players, with the likes of Novak Djokovic, Caroline Wozniacki and Jurgen Melzer all slumbering on the lawns, waiting to be roused and called to battle? If this deluge keeps up, we may be forced to crawl under and find out just what’s going on. Until then we’re moseying over to Centre Court. 12.24pm: Here’s more from the great Matt Scott on today’s Elf’n’Safety controversy. Wimbledon has been publicly chastised by the health-and-safety ombudsman over its claims that Murray Mount had to be closed in heavy rain. A letter to the Lawn Tennis Association’s chief executive, Roger Draper, and his All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club counterpart, Ian Ritchie, has been made public by Judith Hackitt, the chair of the Health and Safety Executive, and it does not make for pretty reading for the pair. Hackitt’s beef is that the closure of Murray Mount at so high-profile an international event was nothing more than “an excuse”. And it is illuminating that Hackitt says sports fans are frequently subjected to similarly shabby treatment. “There is nothing in health and safety legislation which prohibits the continued broadcasting of centre court action to the crowds on the hill during the rain,” wrote Hackitt. “People have been walking up and down wet grassy slopes for years without catastrophic consequences. If the LTA was concerned about people slipping and suing for their injuries the message should have made clear the decision was ‘on insurance grounds’. “Health and safety excuses are becoming as much a feature of the British sporting calendar as the rain. You will understand that while we can do nothing about the weather, we will not let the excuses pass unchallenged.” Hackitt believes it undermines genuine interventions by the HSE on safety grounds. Wimbledon’s ill-judged decision, it’s the health & safety executive that’s gone mad. We’re now wondering if the picture above might not be of the notorious Elf and Safety. Elf calls to mind a smirking Andy Murray, while Safety resembles a placid, long-haired Roger Federer. Steer well clear. They’ve both gone utterly mad. 12.13pm: Down in the comments, Sociopol wonders why Britain’s Alex Bogdanovic missed out on a Wimbledon wild-card. I believe this is on account of the organisers refusing him one after he lost something like seven first-round matches on the trot (at least I think it was seven: it may have been fewer, like six, or more, like 15). What they gave him, by way of compensation, was a wild-card into the qualifying tournament. Bogdanovic promptly lost in the first round, in straight sets, to a player called Bastian Knittel, who in turn lost in the second round, in straight sets, to Marc Gicquel. Thanks to the Wimbledon daily report for providing such a window into the subterranean pre-history of this year’s tournament. 12.05pm: In other rain-related news, a tweet from Esther Addley: Three hrs of heavy showers, says #wimbledon officials, so no play for foreseeable. How will they stage olympic tennis here next year? 12.00pm: Is here time for an email? It transpires that there is. The courts are covered and the promised midday start rolled back to the afternoon. Wilson Beuys (presumably no relation of Joseph, the avant-garde German artist) has an issue with the Murray mask: Whoever made that Andy Murray mask had a bit of a job on their hands. Where did they find a picture of him where he’s not snarling? I can only assume they altered it in PhotoShop – which explains why it looks nothing like him. Agreed, the image is deeply unsettling. It makes me worry that Murray and Federer have fallen in love, run to seed and are just about to embark on a dead-eyed killing spree, starting at your house, as the rain falls outside. Bolt the windows. Don’t open the door. Then mail to reassure us that all is well. 11.50am: Looking on the bright side, here’s the order of the play for the two main show-courts, where play kicks off at 1pm. First up on Centre is what the tournament’s official “daily report” is dubbing “the Zimmer Frame Special”, pitting 31-year-old Venus Williams against Kimiko Date-Krumm, the Little Miss Methuselah who celebrates her 41st-birthday in September. That’s followed by Nadal versus Sweeting, after which eighth seed Andy Roddick takes on Romania’s Victor Hanescu. Over on uncovered Court One, the 2010 runner-up Thomas Berdych faces France’s Julien Benneteau. Then, all being well, we have Andy Murray battling for a place in the third round against Tobias Kamke of Germany, followed by Britain’s Anne Keothavong versus the talented Petra Kvitova, who sliced and diced her way to last year’s semi-finals. The outside courts, meantime, play host to the likes of Gael Monfils, Francesca Schiavone, Vera Zvonereva, Richard Gasquet and the redoubtable Mardy Fish. It should be a grand day of tennis. But that “should”, it must be pointed out, comes ringed by lowering clouds and trumpeted by an ominous rumble of thunder. 11.35am: Umbrellas at the ready for day three of these Wimbledon championships, where the sky is like porridge and the met office are predicting heavy showers throughout the day. Already the moisture is gathering in the air around Centre Court and the ground-staff seem as nervous and jittery as rescue-centre greyhounds, all set to bolt for the covers at the first sign of a deluge. Undeterred, Rafael Nadal is currently camped on an outside court, warming up for his second round match against Ryan Sweeting, belting topspin forehands with a blithe insouciance. Regardless of the weather, the reigning champion will be OK. He’s due on Centre, most likely beneath the roof and possibly for the benefit of the rear admiral in the royal box. So bully for him and hurrah for the admiral. But what of the other competitors, cast out in the cold of the outside courts? And what of the lowly-born non-rear admirals who have come all this way to watch them? Here at the All England Club, we are battening down for a lengthy, stuttering afternoon. Stay indoors and watch us drown. 11.26am: An early story knocking around SW19 today concerns health and safety bosses, who have criticised Wimbledon organisers for using their legislation to shut down the hill now known as ‘Murray Mount’ when it rains. History was made at SW19 on Monday when the giant screen was turned off for the first time as officials feared fans would slip and injure themselves. Judith Hackitt, chair of the Health and Safety Executive, wrote to Wimbledon and the Lawn Tennis Association complaining about the decision. The HSE clearly feels it is being wrongly scapegoated whenever there is the slightest chance of anyone getting injured. “People have been walking up and down wet grassy slopes for years without catastrophic consequences. If the LTA was concerned about people slipping and suing for their injuries the message should have made clear the decision was ‘on insurance grounds’.” • Xan will be here shortly. In the meantime, check out today’s order of play and catch up with our reports from yesterday’s matches . • Feast your eyes on the best images from day two with our award-winning photographer Tom Jenkins’s picture gallery . • If reading our Wimbledon live blog has made you want to get down and experience the action at SW19 for yourself, why not enter our competition to win VIP tickets to savour this Saturday’s action. It’s a very simple question. • And check out the weather at Wimbledon here … Wimbledon 2011 Wimbledon Tennis Xan Brooks guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Newtie’s peeps are leaving in droves. All hail the literati! Newt Gingrich’s top two fundraising advisers resigned on Tuesday, and officials said the Republican candidate’s hobbling presidential campaign carried more than $1 million in debt. The departures of fundraising director Jody Thomas and fundraising consultant Mary Heitman were the latest blow for the former House speaker who watched 16 top advisers abandon his campaign en masse earlier this month, partly because of what people familiar with the campaign spending described as a dire financial situation. These people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the campaign inner workings, said the former Georgia lawmaker racked up massive travel bills but money had only trickled in since he got into the race earlier this spring. These officials said that he is at least $1 million in debt. The current fundraising quarter ends June 30, and Gingrich will have to disclose his campaign finances by July 15. He is personally wealthy and could fund his campaign out of his own pocket, at least in the short term, to keep his campaign afloat. Gingrich has insisted that he will not abandon his troubled bid and will continue fighting for the Republican nomination for president “no matter what it takes.” He’s revamping his campaign, given the series of departures. Look at the power we have over the inner workings of the Gingrich campaign. Nicole Belle recently wrote: Sign Of Things To Come: Gingrich Aides Resign En Masse Looks like she was correct. I haven’t seen Newt on The O’Reilly Factor since his ” Ryan’s Medicare plan is right wing social engineering ” MTP performance and he was a fixture on BillO’s show. That’s something that’s hard to go back on because he’s no amateur when it comes to being on TV. I doubt he’ll be on any time soon. Benen: Now Gingrich has been reduced to scheduling events within driving distance of his home. At least for now, the disgraced former Speaker insists he’s going to stay in the race, but his willingness to keep trying is irrelevant. He has no campaign operation, no financial resources, no work ethic, and no popularity. Come on, Steve. You just don’t understand Newt these days. Well, nobody does these days.
Continue reading …Does Lindsay Lohan not remember that she used to be in legitimate feature films? Did someone Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind this woman? Even I Know Who Killed Me must have had a sound guy. However, Lindsay Lohan’s commercial for internet auction site Beezid.com is just another sad reminder that the star of Mean Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : VH1′s Today In Music Discovery Date : 21/06/2011 17:37 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Type: eBooks Title: Clutter-Free Home Living: The How-To Guide See all customer reviews Product Description: Wish you could get organized and STAY organized at home? Introducing “Clutter-Free Home Living: The How-To Guide,” a Vook with easy instructions that will help you establish a cleaner, clearer living space, and save you time and money. Download it now and put an end to the cycle of constant clutter! Researchers have found that we lose about a year of our lives looking for items we need. A clutter-free home not only makes you and your guests feel more comfortable, it also makes the things you need easier to find, literally saving you time and money. In eight chapters “Clutter-Free Home Living: The How-To Guide” highlights the important reasons to get your house in order and how to do it. You’ll learn step-by-step how you can better organize areas that tend to attract clutter, such as your kitchen, bathroom, and closets, putting you back on track. You’ll also discover how to organize items such as gadgets and electronics that tend to go missing when you need them most, and how to purge the items that you don’t really need. Get this Vook and take control of your home and life from now on! See the details
Continue reading …So Bachmann was playing with House money , huh? I’m sure the same fine media organizations that saw Rep. Weiner punished for his sins will jump right on this. Right? On Nov. 5, 2009, at the behest of Rep. Michele Bachmann, thousands of tea party activists descended on the Capitol to vent their rage over the health care overhaul bill pending before Congress. The assembled activists chanted, “Kill the bill! Kill the bill!” and waved signs opposing a government takeover of health care — but they may not have known that the same government was paying for the event. According to House expense reports, Bachmann and three conservative GOP colleagues — Reps. Tom Price (Ga.), Steve King (Iowa) and Todd Akin (Mo.) — each paid $3,407.50 that day, a total of $13,630, to a sound and stage company called National Events, apparently for the sound system used at the rally. The money came from the Members’ taxpayer-funded office accounts, despite House rules prohibiting the use of these funds for political activities . Bachmann’s office insists the expense was a proper use of official funds. Bachmann billed the event as a “press conference,” which can be funded from official accounts. But no questions were taken from the press and, unlike most press conferences, it opened with a prayer, the national anthem and a recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance. A few days earlier, the Minnesota Republican had appeared on a Fox News talk show and made an appeal for activists to come to D.C. for the event, promising to help them lobby Congress against the bill. This isn’t the first time Bachmann has been, shall we say, somewhat irregular in her use of staffing funds. She did it even when she was a state senator , too.
Continue reading …Ash from Chile’s Cordón Caulle volcano grounds domestic flights in and out of Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra Australia faces air transport chaos after ash from Chile’s Cordón Caulle volcano shut the country’s busiest airports. Thousands of travellers were stranded after Qantas cancelled all domestic flights in and out of Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra on Tuesday afternoon, until at least Thursday. International flights have also been affected, with all Qantas planes due to land on Wednesday diverted or delayed until Thursday. Virgin has also cancelled flights out of Sydney and Melbourne until further notice. “The ash plume is at a very low level and we’re not comfortable flying at those levels,” said Virgin Australia spokeswoman Danielle Keighery. The ash cloud from the volcano is circling Earth for a second time, after last week delaying about 700 flights across Australia and New Zealand . Passengers have been using whatever means possible to get to their destinations. Extra bus services have been put on, while three men paid a taxi driver A$1,200 (£770) to drive them for 10 hours from Melbourne to Sydney. The bureau of meteorology’s volcanic ash advisory centre says the plume has travelled more than 2,500 miles (4,000km) in the past 24 hours and is “clearly visible on satellite imagery”. It is hovering at between 5 and 8 miles. Hundreds of thousands of passengers have been disrupted across the country, according to Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority. “When you take out major centres like Sydney and Melbourne, the knock-on effects of that are huge and that’s unfortunate, but safety has to come first,” said its spokesman, Peter Gibson. Australia Air transport Chile Sydney Australia Australasia Melbourne Alison Rourke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Shelter report shows link between house repossessions and unemployment More than 60 areas have been dubbed “repossession hotspots” in a report by housing charity Shelter , with Corby in the east Midlands named the place with the highest proportion of homeowners at serious risk of losing the roof over their head. The research shows the local authority areas in England with the highest proportion of homeowners issued with a possession order, and therefore at serious risk of repossession. Rising unemployment during the recession has led to a steep increase in repossession orders against homeowners this year. Shelter said the blackspot for repossessions was in Corby, which had the highest rate of “at risk” homeowners – 7.56 per 1,000, nine times higher than the lowest rate in West Dorset of 0.83. It was closely followed by Barking and Dagenham (6.62 per 1,000), Thurrock in Essex (6.16 per 1,000), Knowsley in Merseyside (5.68 per 1,000), and Newham in London (5.57 per 1,000). Shelter warned that the figures reflected a need for homeowners across the country to prepare for higher mortgage repayments if interest rates rise as expected later this year. Repossessions rocketed by 15% in the first quarter of the year , and the charity has found that unemployment rose by 3.3% on average in local authority areas with the highest levels of repossession orders. In comparison, unemployment rose by an average of 1.4% in areas with the lowest rates of repossession. Shelter analysed Ministry of Justice figures for repossession orders in the first three months of the year to identify the hotspots, with most grouped across the north of England, around the Wash, and the east of London leading out to the north Kent and Essex coast. Other hotspots include: • Fenland, next to the Wash (5.04 at-risk homeowners per 1,000) • Harlow in Essex (4.85 per 1,000) • Manchester (4.63 per 1,000) • Peterborough (4.57 per 1,000). However, Corby confounds the trend: while it is England’s top hotspot for repossession orders, unemployment is relatively low at 6.4%, rising by just 0.9% in the thee years to last September. Lenders have faced heavy criticism for enabling ill-disciplined and inexperienced borrowers to take on too much debt. But Shelter’s findings indicate that the root cause of people losing their homes is loss of income through reduced earnings and unemployment. Shelter’s findings are supported by data from the Consumer Credit Counselling Service , which advises struggling debtors. Of the mortgage borrowers calling the CCCS for help with their debts last year, 19% were unemployed, 28% were suffering reduced income and just 8% were over-committed on credit. Lenders applied for a total of 13,520 repossession orders in England from January to the end of March – a rate of 0.73 claims per 1,000 households – while unemployment rose by 2.9% to an average of 7.8% during the three years to September 2010, according to the latest unemployment figures by local authority published by the Office for National Statistics. Although the unemployment rate dropped slightly in England to 7.7% for the three months to April, it is expected to rise sharply later this year as public sector job cuts feed through, with a further rise in repossessions anticipated. Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: “This research paints a frightening picture of repossession hotspots across the country where homeowners are on the brink of losing the roof over their head. “We know only too well that the combined pressures of high inflation, increased living costs and stagnant wages are really taking a toll on people. All it takes is one thing like job loss to tip people over the edge and into the spiral of debt, repossession and ultimately homelessness.” Repossessions Property Borrowing & debt Unemployment Social exclusion Housing market Housing Communities Jill Insley guardian.co.uk
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