30 Seconds to Mars- Kings & Queens – Portland Maine 5-8-11 Yegor 30 Seconds To Mars – The Kill Kenosha 4/15/11 30 Seconds to Mars talk cookies, concert themes and the Echelon … When 30 Seconds to Mars stopped by MuchMusic last week on their way to play a sold out show in Toronto we caught up with the guys and talked touring, music. 30 Seconds To Mars To Break Up? | Review Rinse Repeat According to these Tweets, it appears that after their current tour, 30 Seconds To Mars will be calling it quits. 30 Seconds To Mars feat. Kayne West- Hurricane [Lyrics … 30 Seconds To Mars feat. Kayne West- Hurricane [Lyrics!] no comment Posted by admin. Requested by Yzert55 Leave a comment telling me what lyrics you would like me to make! Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act … 30 Seconds To Mars Support: 30 Seconds to Mars in Manila July 29 … 30 Seconds to Mars in Manila July 29 for promo tour! May 7, 2011. Music Management International (MMI) is bringing Thirty Seconds to Mars to the Philippines to promote the group’s album This Is War on July 29, 8 p.m. at the Trinoma Mall … 30 Seconds to Mars talk cookies, concert themes and the Echelon … There are a number of anomalies surrounding rock group 30 Seconds to Mars . They are fronted by singer and songwriter Jared Leto, who has successfully bridged the gap between his first public career as an actor and his work as a … hayyaware says: RT @HottieScottie96 : 30 Seconds to Mars is breaking up??? Someone please tell me its a joke :/
Continue reading …Morganza Spillway morganza spillway heading south Transported over the Morganza Spillway…2 dangerous to ride Governor Jindal Says US Army Corps Decision to Open Morganza … Ed Flemming, New Orleans District Commander of the Army Corps of Engineers, officially requested the Mississippi River Commission in Vicksburg to partially open the Morganza Spillway over the weekend. We know Army Corps Gen. … BREAKING: LSU at risk if spillway stays closed (5/9) : Headline News NORCO (AP) — A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers official says LSU and other infrastructure south of Baton Rouge would be flooded if the Morganza Spillway isn’t opened to divert water from the Mississippi River. Maj. Gen. … Memphis and Baton Rouge brace for record-breaking Mississippi … “It would be less, maybe a couple of feet less, with opening the Morganza spillway , depending on how much was diverted,” Mr. Graschel said. Additional rainfall in the next two weeks could add to the flow, he added, but so far, … Unprecedented: Army Corps opening third spillway? | No Silence … This is the 10th time since 1937 that the Bonnet Carre’ Spillway has been opened. The Army Corps is considering opening the final spillway they have in reserve, the great Morganza Spillway in Louisian. b.rox » Blog Archive » Morganza More ominously, the Corps is considering opening the Morganza Spillway for the first time in 35 years. That would divert a huge amount of the Mississippi’s flow into the Atchafalaya River basin. … bhebert2 says: RT @viequesbound : #Info4 #News Alert: Corps Releases Inundation Map if #Morganza spillway is opened… http://t.co/XaKJW8a #lawx #NOLA #floods
Continue reading …NATO warplanes struck Tripoli early Tuesday in the heaviest bombing of the Libyan capital in weeks. (May. 10)
Continue reading …You might not remember Ryan Palser by name, but you’ll surely recall the good gent’s homemade Fallout 3 plasma rifle . He has since stepped his game up to bigger and badder video game weapon replicas, and has just completed the construction of the first of his forthcoming army of Portal laser turrets. Thankfully, Ryan has been sporting enough to build the older version of these human eviscerators (not the upgraded Portal 2 turrets, phew!), giving us at least a small chance of survival — provided we have the right gear , of course. See the laser-equipped, GLaDOS-approved, 38-inch tall turret next to its maker after the break, or hit up the source link for some gorgeous photos of its construction. Continue reading Portal turret replica has real laser, insatiable bloodlust Portal turret replica has real laser, insatiable bloodlust originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 May 2011 03:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …May 21 Please Dont’t Go Crazy over the rapture Remix Video Market Update May 9, 2011_0001.wmv Beauty Supply Contest! Judgment Day: May 21, 2011 ? They claimed that hidden in the Bible are some clues that the world will end May 21, 2011 . NPR’s Weekend Edition takes a peek inside the Judgment Day movement (and the radio show behind the latest J-date): “I’ve crunched the numbers, … May 21, 2011 – End of the world… funny right? Isn't it possible … They looked Nigerian and they held their hands over their mouths and stared at the ground while they held out their brochures… behind them it said, in great big words, ‘The end of the world May 21, 2011 ‘. … The Rapture Will Come On May 21, 2011 | Living in America Now that I have said the Rapture will come on May 21, 2011 , I will say I don’t believe it, or I do not believe anyone can be sure of this date. Christians … Judgment Day– May 21, 2011 | The End Times Are Here This is a repost in case you missed it the first time)Throughout our lifetimes we have most likely heard of someone setting a date for the rapture or the end of the world–the latest example being Harold Camping of Family Radio– May 21, … Some Say Judgment Day Will Take Place Saturday, May 21, 2011 … Some Say Judgment Day Will Take Place Saturday, May 21, 2011 . Rolling Out “People need to know,” Kevin Brown told NPR, “and God commands us to share the Gospel about the end of the world. He says if we do not share the Gospel then their … itsmeJHOANN says: May 21, 2011 . Judgement Day? :O Is it true? Do you believe this? It was once said in the Bible. — Woah http://4ms.me/joaIXo
Continue reading …Type: Beauty Title: Neutrogena Norwegian Formula Hand Cream, Fragrance-Free, 2 Ounce (Pack of 4) See all customer reviews Product Description: Concentrated relief for dry chapped hands. Dermatologist recommended. Neutrogena Norwegian Formula Hand Cream delivers effective relief for dry, chapped hands. It is so concentrated that only a small amount instantly leaves dry hands noticeably softer and smoother after just one application. Used daily, it helps prevent dry, chapped skin – even under the harshest of conditions. It started with Norwegian fisherman. Faced with some of the harshest, coldest weather on earth, they used a formula that delivers concentrated levels of glycerin to dry, chapped skin providing immediate and lasting relief. Five years of independent clinical testing confirm what the fishermen knew all along – Norwegian Formula Hand Cream consistently outperforms other products. Just a little goes a long way. This 2 oz tube contains over 200 applications. Made in USA. Features: Provides concentrated relief for dry chapped hands Only a small amount instantly leaves dry hands noticeably softer and smoother Use daily to help prevent dry, chapped skin even under the harshest of conditions Fragrance-free, dermatologist-recommended Please read all label information on delivery See the details
Continue reading …( Richard Nixon ) by Eddie Earle EFEMÉRIDES. Hace 38 años el diario The Washington Post, fue premio Pulitzer por “Watergate” The New World Order (NWO) Quotation Collection Phil Jackson and the ghost of Richard Nixon – USA Today | The … May 09, 2011 Phil Jackson and the ghost of Richard Nixon The ghost of Richard Nixon appears in the strangest places. Sunday, RN popped up in North Tex… Hon. Barbara Hackman Franklin Elected to Richard Nixon Foundation … YORBA LINDA, Calif., May 9, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — The Richard Nixon Foundation is pleased to announce the election of the 29th Secretary of Commerce Barbara Hackman Franklin to its board of directors, joining a roster of leaders in … In what ways did Richard Nixon expand presidential and/or federal … I’m looking for bills, executive orders, practices, or statements in which Richard Nixon either expanded, attempted to expand, or talked about expanding the powers of the president or the powers of the federal government. … Steinbrenner blamed lawyers for conviction | News Online Kennerly covered Richard Nixon from the 1968 presidential campaign to Nixon’s resignation in 1974, then became President Gerald Ford’s White House photographer. The Nixon Presidential Library videotaped an oral history of those years … Steinbrenner: Illegal Nixon contribution due to bad legal advice … WASHINGTON (AP) — George Steinbrenner blamed аn illegal corporate campaign contribution tο President Richard Nixon οn tеrrіblе legal advice, according tο FBI documents released Monday. Steinbrenner, whο died last year аftеr a tumultuous … RebeccaHolmes3 says: 'Doctor Who' visits America, Richard Nixon http://bit.ly/jspZ6z
Continue reading …One of the key catalysts that precipitated the perfect storm in precious metals selling last week was the WSJ article that John Burbank, among others, had sold off some or all of his holdings. Today, in a Bloomberg TV interview, Burbank refutes all the skeptics who think the top of gold is here, and makes it clear that while his offloading of the precious metal was merely a temporary trade to lock… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : zero hedge Discovery Date : 09/05/2011 19:27 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …The most vulnerable sections of society are emerging as the worst hit by council cuts If he’s lucky, Frank Bailey gets a good night’s sleep twice a week. The rest of the time he is on call and spends the small hours worrying, waiting for a bell to ring, to signal at best that his sick wife, Faith, needs help out of bed; at worst that she is struggling for breath and he will have to call paramedics to take her to hospital. At 80, Frank suffers from angina, arthritis and limited use of his left arm because of tendon problems. He has been a carer for Faith since she was diagnosed with life-limiting heart and lung disease four years ago. Asked what is wrong with her, Faith, 72, lets out a sigh, shakes her head and then, rummaging in her handbag, hands over a well-worn piece of paper on which is typed a catalogue of afflictions: diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, asthma, osteoporosis, lung disease. She can no longer walk and a small tube delivering oxygen to her lungs that her body can’t provide is permanently attached to her nostrils. “My brain’s still working, but that’s about it,” she says. “The heart is the bit that’s failing the most.” Faith’s illness was considered so severe that her local authority, Birmingham city council, provided her with overnight carers three nights a week. But several months ago, after a spell in hospital, the Baileys were told that it was being cut back from three nights a week to two. “It doesn’t sound much,” says Frank, a former milkman, as he sits hand-in-hand with his wife of 40 years. “But it makes a big difference to me. They used to come Monday, Wednesday and Friday, which was all right as, if you have a weekend, one of the granddaughters might stop over. I knew that every couple of nights I’d have a break. I could get some sleep. I don’t sleep when they’re not here because her breathing might go. Some nights you do, some nights you don’t.” The couple, who have two children and six grandchildren and recently became great-grandparents, are among thousands of Britain’s most vulnerable citizens who have seen their home care cut over the past year. Already bearing the brunt of welfare changes at a time of financial hardship, with worse to come as local authorities implement this year’s savage cuts, the disabled and the cared-for are facing an uncertain future. In Birmingham, which has restricted free social care to those who have “critical” needs, elderly and disabled people such as the Baileys are more worried about what’s around the corner than most. The shift in eligibility, described as “catastrophic and counterproductive” by disability campaigners, is aimed at saving the council £17.5m this year and £52m over the next three years, according to its business plan for 2011. Those affected will include people with conditions such as dementia, Parkinson’s disease and diabetes. An estimated 4,100 of Birmingham’s council-funded care users have been assessed as having “substantial” but not critical needs, and face losing their care packages altogether. Others face losing some of their home care. The Baileys do not know whether their needs have been assessed as critical or substantial and are unsure if they are among those most at risk. Restricting eligibility is a controversial move: according to Department of Health guidance, people with substantial needs include those who have suffered abuse or neglect, those unable to carry out the majority of care or domestic routines, and those for whom social support systems and relationships cannot or will not be maintained. However, in an interim decision that is being closely watched by the caring community, a high court judge ruled last month that Birmingham council’s care-cutting business plan is unlawful. In a judicial review brought by the families of four severely disabled people, Mr Justice Walker found that, in making the plan, council leaders had failed to consider their duty to disabled people. Public authorities have a duty under the Disability Discrimination Act to encourage disabled people to participate in public life and to take steps to meet their disabilities, even when that involves treating them more favourably than others. One of the four who brought the case, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told journalists she felt it important to take a stand against the council’s decision. She feared it would extinguish the 24-hour care in a home, paid for by the council, provided for her sister-in-law, 65, who has severe learning difficulties, and that her quality of life would fall dramatically as a result. The judgment, although welcomed by disability campaigners, has created anxiety in some quarters as no one knows what the outcome will be and whether the council will appeal. In a statement issued after the interim decision, Birmingham city council said: “Like all councils, Birmingham faces a huge financial challenge, with adults and communities having to make a share of the savings like all other directorates, and we need to assess the impact of this decision.” There can be no further assessment of social care needs until Walker delivers his full judgment, expected next week, but the vacuum has created its own problems. Nearly one in four disabled and older people have experienced cuts to services and increased charges for care, with families “pushed to breaking point”, according to a recent report from a group of charities. In a survey conducted by charities including Carers UK, the Alzheimer’s Society, Macmillan Cancer Support and Scope, more than a fifth of respondents said services had been cut back even though their needs had stayed the same. More than half said they had seen their health suffer, 52% said they were struggling to maintain their independence, and half said increased charges for care meant they could no longer afford essentials such as food and heating. As part of its plans to restrict social care, Birmingham council, a Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition, said it would “signpost” those no longer eligible towards possible alternative sources of support, such as the voluntary sector. But in Kingstanding, north Birmingham, home to the Baileys and one of the poorest areas in the city, the voluntary sector aimed at supporting elderly and disabled people is itself struggling to survive. Jackie Dray, a former social worker, has run the support group Elders with Attitude for two years. Aimed at giving carers a break and the cared-for confidence, it has been a lifeline for the Baileys and others like them. Faith Bailey, who talks with candour about the blackness that threatens to engulf her, says: “I love that group. Otherwise it’s just the four walls. I was scared at first, but Jackie makes you feel wanted. She makes me feel that she cares. I get upset sometimes, I cry. But she tells me to aim for the stars.” Dray, who is adored by her charges, used to run four groups in Birmingham, but was told in March that her £30,000 council grant was to be cut altogether. She now runs only one group and is looking for alternative funding. She says: “They are cutting luncheon clubs or groups like mine that could make a difference between somebody remaining in the community or sinking into clinical depression and residential care. For a small amount of money, you could delay the point at which people have to go into hospital. I see a lot of clinical depression in carers and cared-for alike. People are teetering on the brink. There’s a lot of frustration, worry, lack of sleep.” At Witton Lodge community centre in Kingstanding, at a meeting for carers and charities organised by Jack Dromey, the local Labour MP, one person after another stands up to talk about cuts in funding. Bernie Blackledge, of Alzheimer’s UK, which runs four cafes each used by between 40-50 families, spoke of how cuts in council funding had led her to make good, experienced cafe staff redundant. The council has since found additional funding, she says, but the damage has already been done, the staff gone. “What are we supposed to do?” she says. Margaret Binns, of Age Concern Kingstanding, who advises elderly people on benefits and welfare, describes her office as the “last-chance saloon. After us, there’s nothing.” The charity, which also runs two day centres for people with dementia or physical disabilities, has had a 15% reduction in funding. Pauline Pullen, the chief executive, said: “If we close our services down, where do people go? People with memory loss are very vulnerable and if they live with a carer, it is very stressful to care for them. Day care is vital for both of them.” Dromey said: “The tragedy about the cuts to care is that the people concerned are invisible. If care packages are cut, if caring organisations go under, the vulnerable go back to their houses and no one ever hears from them again. The true responsibility lies with the government who are inflicting the biggest cuts in local government history and creating nigh-on impossible problems for local government. But councils have to reflect on their responsibilities.” Whatever the outcome of the high court judgment, it will not be enough to help the Baileys. Faith says she cried when she was told her night carers were being cut. “Frank’s getting old. I know he’s 80 but in the last few months, I’ve really seen it in him. I don’t like to see him struggling. He says he doesn’t find it hard, but I can see he’s in pain.” Disability Public sector cuts Public services policy Health policy Welfare Social care Public finance Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Business experts question whether internet phone service Skype could be worth price after recording losses last year Microsoft is reported to have closed a $8.5bn (£5bn) deal for the internet phone service Skype, in a deal that has shocked analysts who think it would be a substantial overpayment for the company. The acquisition, which is expected to be announced on Tuesday, would be Microsoft’s biggest, ahead the $6bn it paid for online advertising company aQuantive in 2007, and would bring it 660 million users worldwide while giving it a foothold in voice and video communications. Analysts suggested the service could be integrated into existing Microsoft products such as its Xbox 360 games console and Kinect gaming systems, or even into its flagship Office product to let users collaborate more effectively. Speculation has been rife in Silicon Valley for months about Skype’s future. Rumours last week suggested Facebook, Google or Cisco Systems were interested in acquiring it to fold into their own services. Tony Bates, the chief executive hired from Cisco last year, has reportedly been exploring the idea of joint ventures or a sale to Google and Facebook. News of the deal and Microsoft’s interest in Skype was first reported by the Wall Street Journal online and the technology site GigaOM. Analysts have broadly favoured the idea of the deal, but questioned whether it could ever be worth the price. Skype was bought by eBay for $2.6bn in 2005: at the time people suggested its services could be incorporated into auctions so that bidders or sellers could call each other ahead of their close. But the synergistic ideas never materialised, and eBay wrote down Skype’s value by $1.4bn, before selling off a 70% stake at the end of 2007. Ironically, the suggested price would make its 30% stake worth $2.4bn – effectively making money on the deal long-term. Skype has debt of $686m, which Microsoft would assume in the purchase. Microsoft’s online efforts have been staggering loss-makers over the past few years. Its online service division, which includes its Bing search engine, has lost $8bn over the past six years, and has not been profitable since the end of 2005. Google previously looked at purchasing Skype in 2005, but decided against it because of questions over patent ownership – essential patents for the service are owned by a company linked to Skype’s founders – and doubts about integration into its own offerings. Microsoft already has a voice-over-internet offering, called Lync, which combines email, instant messaging and voice communications into a single program. That is run by its huge Office division, one of Microsoft’s two biggest profit centres along with the Windows division. While Skype has a name among consumers, it has barely bumped along on profitability. With 663 million registered users, most of its services are free, using internet connections for make calls between computers or in some cases internet-enabled phones. It makes revenues on voicemail services and calls to physical landlines or mobile numbers. In 2010 it recorded a loss of $7m on revenues of $859.8m, and there has been little sign that it will gain traction there. Mobile carriers tend to see Skype as a threat to their own services, because it allows people to make calls for free via data links rather than over voice connections, and have been reluctant to route its traffic. Though Microsoft is keen to push its Windows Phone mobile operating system, it is not clear whether it could keep carriers sweet while incorporating that. Microsoft rarely makes large purchases, preferring to buy smaller startups. It made an ill-fated $48bn bid for Yahoo in January 2008, which was opposed and fell apart. Since then Yahoo’s value has halved and Microsoft has taken over its search business, but in their latest quarterly results the companies revealed that integration had been more difficult than they expected. In 2004 it also explored a takeover of the corporate integration software company SAP for $50bn, but that too stalled. Skype Internet Telecoms Microsoft Computing Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
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