The number of Americans filing first-time claims for jobless benefits rose a bit last week after dropping sharply the previous week. Four hundred and one thousand people made initial unemployment claims, the Labor Department said. That was an increase of 6000 from the previous week’s figure. The previous week’s number was revised up to 395,000
Continue reading …85-year-old Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, the Duchess of Alba and possessor of more aristocratic titles than anyone else in the world, has married Alfonso Diez, making the commoner the Duke of Alba. The wedding took place this morning in the chapel of one of the Duchess’s palaces, the Dueñas Palace in Seville, with a variety of high-profile Spaniards, including the bride’s children, in attendance. The octogenarian bride wore a short, coral-colored dress with lace detail at the shoulder and a green ribbon around the waist. The groom wore tails. The wedding, which follows the Cayetana and Alfonso’s lengthy courtship, has made one of Spain’s more controversial pairings official. The Spanish aristocrat has 46 titles, according to Reuters, as she is a duchess, a countess and a marquesa several times over. Spanish Vanity Fair reports that her wealth is valued at an estimated at nearly $4.9 billion and when combined, her property is 170 times the size of Monaco. As such, Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart is a tabloid fixture — in the past and now. The Duchess’ wedding to Diez, a professional civil servant 25 years her junior, caused a stir, as the Duchess’ children disapproved of the marriage quite vocally. Reuters reported that the Duchess’ son Cayetano Martinez de Irujo, the Duke of Salvatierra, expressed displeasure at having only met Diez three times, especially because he will become the Duke of Alba. The Duchess told Hola! in August, “The tough part was that my children didn’t understand and they got quite angry with me.” But the magazine reported that to allay her family’s fear, she spent the summer dividing up her wealth, including palaces and artwork by masters like Goya and Velazquez, among her six children. By giving up her wealth in advance, she seems to have her children’s support in time for her nuptials, according to Hello!. Unfortunately the bride’s only daughter, Eugenia Martinez de Irujo, was not in attendance, having pulled out of the wedding just yesterday. A press release confirmed that the 42-year-old had fallen ill with the chickenpox, reports Hello!. But the wedding still happened — congrats to the happy couple! Check out pictures below.
Continue reading …CBS and NBC led Wednesday night with glowing stories about the growth and diversity of the far-left “Occupy Wall Street” protests, though without any ideological label applied nor any critics allowed, a promotional approach the networks never provided in Tea Party coverage. “We begin tonight with what has become by any measure a pretty massive protest movement,” NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams announced. “While it goes by the official name ‘Occupy Wall Street,’ it has spread steadily and far beyond Wall Street, and it could well turn out to be the protest of this current era.” ABC’s Cecilia Vega touted how “it is a crowd that grows daily in size and diversity,” CBS’s Michelle Miller heralded “they’re gaining momentum and new recruits” and NBC’s Mara Schiavocampo trumpeted “the largest crowd yet, and more varied in age and background.” She assured viewers that “experts say though still largely undefined, the movement has a lot of potential.” Over a montage of pictures, Williams opened his newscast by applying rock lyrics from the 1960s to the events: Good evening. We begin tonight with what has become by any measure a pretty massive protest movement. While it goes by the official name “Occupy Wall Street,” it has spread steadily and far beyond Wall Street, and it could well turn out to be the protest of this current era. The lyric from 45 years ago in the Buffalo Springfield song For What It's Worth could also describe this current movement right now. Once again, “there is something happening here. What it is ain't exactly clear,” but it encompasses a lot of things: anger, frustration, disenfranchisement, income disparity, unaccountability and general upheaval and dissatisfaction. Again today, thousands took to the streets of this city. They're in the streets of other cities as well. ABC’s Vega highlighted how “thousands of union workers marched in solidarity in joining a common cause, blaming bank greed for the country's economic woes.” She then ran a clip of an iron union worker – the very same white man who also got a soundbite in NBC’s story. And NBC’s Schiavocampo on Wednesday night showcased the very same professor from Columbia University, Dorian Warren, as ABC featured in a report aired on Monday’s World News.
Continue reading …Video shot over the past week purports to show unrest in the town of Rastan, Syria, which troops retook Saturday after five days of intense fighting with army defectors, a rights group said. (Oct. 5)
Continue reading …The latest addition to the WD TV Live family has been announced, and this micro sized 802.11n WiFi-equipped, internal storage-lacking streamer that supports the latest version of its UI , as seen in the already available WDTV Live Hub . Also new to these two boxes is support for Spotify , bringing up to 320kbps music streaming to the living room along with a newly supported video service, Dailymotion added to the existing list (Netflix, Hulu Plus , YouTube, Facebook etc.) and extensive local media playback options. The new WDTV Live is available for $99, check after a break for a pic of the box itself and the press release with all the details. Continue reading Spotify streaming hits the living room on the latest $99 WDTV Live, WDTV Live Hub Spotify streaming hits the living room on the latest $99 WDTV Live, WDTV Live Hub originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Oct 2011 08:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The death of Steve Jobs has brought tribute from politicians from across America, many of whom compare Jobs to the greatest geniuses in American history, Politico reports. President Obama: “The world has lost a visionary. And there may be no greater tribute to Steve’s success than the fact that much…
Continue reading …CGI 2010 Commitment – Laureate/IYF YouthActionNet® Program CGI 2010 Progress Report – Bringing the Future to the Children of South Africa Global Philanthropy Forum 2007: Bill Clinton adriaticblue says: Steve Jobs with wife Laurene Powell Jobs . http://t.co/h9AiAWWs
Continue reading …Republican hopefuls didn’t waste any time getting in touch after Sarah Palin announced that she isn’t going to run for president . Several candidates have already called and Todd Palin is setting up some meetings, Palin told Fox’s Greta Van Susteren in an On the Record appearance Wednesday night. Palin says…
Continue reading …Experts say turning point had been reached in England’s heroin epidemic, with fall particularly sharp among under 30s Young people in England are turning their backs on the most dangerous drugs for the first time in 30 years, according to the head of the national treatment agency. New figures show that the total number of drug users entering treatment for heroin or crack cocaine has fallen by 10,000 over the past two years. The official data shows that the fall in heroin use is particularly sharp among under 30s with the number of 18-24 year olds in treatment more than halving and the 25-29 age group almost matching this fall. Drug treatment experts say that they are “cautiously optimistic” that the heroin epidemic which has gripped Britain since the 1980s may have finally passed its high water mark. Paul Hayes, NTA chief executive, said the new figures which also show an 18% rise in the number of people officially defined as “recovering from addiction” were an indication that the trend was moving in the right direction: “We’re a goal up, but it’s not half time yet. I think what it shows is that we’ve probably passed the high water mark of the impact of the epidemic of the late 80s and 90s.” Hayes said that the once popular images “heroin chic” and Trainspotting culture were no longer fashionable and young people instead see the damage heroin and crack use has done to their older siblings and, sadly, in some cases even their parents. “If you see people in your community who actually can’t cope because of heroin and crack use. If you increasingly see heroin and crack dependency concentrated among the people in society who do life least well, as that becomes apparent, it’s difficult to see it being fashionable or chic.” But he warned that the onset of the heroin epidemic that scarred the late 1980s and 1990s on the back of a sharp rise in youth employment could yet return: “We need to be vigilant that if we see a rise in youth unemployment that it doesn’t lead to a return to 1980s level of heroin use. It is not inevitable but we have to watch the situation very closely.” The latest NTA drug data for 2010/11 shows that 52,933 drug users entered treatment for heroin or crack cocaine in the past year, down from 58,016 in 2009/10 and 62,963 in 2008/09. The national drug treatment monitoring system figures show that 27,969 adults left treatment “free from dependency” last year – an 18% increase over the previous year. The figures echo estimates from Glasgow University’s drug misuse research centre which put the number of heroin and crack users in England in 2009/10 at 306,000 down from 332,000 in 2008/09. The annual budget for drug treatment has risen to £600m a year from £200m a decade ago. Harry Shapiro of the DrugScope, the independent drugs information charity, agreed that a real turning point had been reached in England’s heroin epidemic: “Things seem to moving in the right direction. The figures are showing an absolute decline in the heroin using population in Britain for the first time since the late 1960s.” He said that was confirmed by the ageing nature of the heroin using population and the fact that young people’s treatment services were now dealing with many more people with alcohol and cannabis problems than heroin. Shapiro said significant successes by the Turkish authorities in disrupting the traditional flow of heroin into Europe from Afghanistan via Iran had also played a role. Drugs Health Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
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