Monday, January 21, 2013

Democrats optimistic on 'broad' support for universal gun background checks

Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Ted Cruz, R-Texas weigh in on the gun control debate raging in Washington with Schumer calling the universal background check the "sweet spot" both sides support.

By Carrie Dann, NBC News Political Reporter

Hours before President Barack Obama's official swearing-in to a second term, top Democrats predicted a victory for the broadest component of the White House's push to change the nation's gun laws.?

During an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," Sen. Chuck Schumer, N.Y., called legislation to?institute universal background checks for gun buyers?"the sweet spot."?

"In terms of actually making us safer and having a good chance of passing, this is it," Schumer said on Sunday.?

"I think you're going to see [the very likelihood] in the next week or two a proposal that has broad support for universal background checks," he added.?

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, argues for a return to the assault weapons ban and backs the president's executive actions.

Schumer's confidence echoed the comments of White House senior adviser David Plouffe, who said on CNN Sunday that he's confident the president will have the votes in Congress to pass key parts of his gun control agenda because public opinion has shifted in the wake of the Newtown school shooting last month.?

"Newtown has changed the debate," Plouffe said. "Sadly, it took a tragedy like that, but you?re seeing a lot of people -- by the way Democrats and Republicans -- think differently about this issue since this tragedy."

"I think there's 60 votes in the Senate and 218 votes in the House if votes will come up for some of these gun safety measures like clips, like universal background checks, absolutely," he added. "There is a consensus in America on this, and I think we can get there here on Capitol Hill."

Obama unveiled a sweeping proposal last week that included the background check measure, limits on the capacity of ammunition clips, and a ban on assault weapons. Supporters of the plan point to overwhelming public support for the background check legislation; the assault weapons ban is far more divided along partisan lines.?

Freshman Sen. Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, said that Obama has exploited the mass shooting in Newtown in order to pass a pre-existing legislative agenda that caters to his political base.?

"This is not designed to actually solve the problem of violent crime. This is designed to assuage liberal partisans" on the issue of gun control, he said on Meet the Press.?

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, argues President Barack Obama took advantage of the mass murder that occurred in Conn. to push further gun control measures.

?

Cruz questioned the need to place further restrictions on gun shows, where critics say it is too easy to buy a firearm.?

"There actually isn't the so-called 'gun show loophole.' That doesn't exist," he said. "Any licensed firearm dealer who sells at a gun show has to have a background check."?

Another Republican senator suggested Sunday that the gun legislation may not even come up for a vote in the United States Senate, where Democratic leader Harry Reid faces tough politics when it comes to swing-state Democrats who are up for re-election in 2014.?

"I would really welcome the opportunity to have a fair and open debate on that?in the United States Senate," ?said Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming on CNN.

"But I don't think Senator Harry Reid even brings it to the Senate floor because he has six Democrats up for election in two years in states where the president received fewer than 42 percent of the votes."?

Source: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/20/16610741-democrats-optimistic-on-broad-support-for-universal-gun-background-checks?lite

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

4-bed Single Family Home in Kelowna ! | Jesse East

Single Family Home 2240 ft2

4 Bedroom 3 Bathroom

Lovely home beautifully updated, shows 10/10! Perfect family home with gleaming cherry wood floors, spacious master w. 3 pce. ensuite and walk in closet, oversized deck(20x16) with gas hook up, for entertaining or family fun, and gas fireplace on both levels. Just a few of the many features of this home! Enjoy breakfast in the kitchen nook or wine and dine in the formal dining room; on to the living room where you can relax in front of the fire. Soothing color scheme to calm the soul. Family room down gives the kids somewhere to play too when not allowed out to romp in the huge backyard. Things to take note of: new windows, 3 bedrooms up, one down, portable island in kitchen, u/g irrigation with mature landscaping. A home for making memories. RV/boat parking. And the neighbors are great too!

Property Details:

MLS? #:?10058441 Address:?1718 Smithson Drive, Kelowna , BC, V1Y 4E3 Property Type:?Single Family Home Square Feet:?2240 Bedrooms:?4 Bathrooms:?3 Fireplaces:?2. Fuel:?Gas. Type:?Conventional Basement:?Fully Finished. Type: Full. Features: Separate Entrance. Garage/Parking:?Uncovered Parking:?2. Acres:?0.230 Neighbouhood:?GL ? Glenmore Style:?Bi-Level Year Built:?1970 Heat:?Natural Gas Sewer:?Sewer Water:?Municipal Ownership:?Freehold Taxes:?2,590 Tax Year:?2012

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Provided by:

List Office: RE/MAX Kelowna
Office Phone: (250) 717-5000
List Agent: Marlene Braun
Phone: 250-878-5242

Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

Source: http://www.jesseeast.com/47746/4-bed-single-family-home-in-kelowna-35/

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Kindergarten Student Suspended For Pink Bubble Gun Threat In Pennsylvania

In the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, primary schools across the country are cracking down on gun-related threats.

Last week, in Mount Carmel, Penn., a 5-year-old kindergarten student was suspended from school after she allegedly said she would shoot her classmate, and then herself, with her pink "Hello Kitty" bubble gun, according to multiple local reports.

Parents of the kindergartener are seeking to fight the suspension, since their daughter did not have the bubble gun with her at the time the remark was made on Jan. 10. Their attorney, Robin Ficker of Bethesda, Md., said school district officials labeled the girl a "terrorist threat" after the incident, according to the Associated Press.

The kindergartener was waiting in the bus line with two friends when she made the remark about her pink bubble gun. The next day, officials at Mount Carmel Area Elementary School allegedly questioned the student for three hours about the incident without her parents' knowledge, local news outlet the Daily Item reports.

According to central Pennsylvania's PennLive.com, the kindergarten student was initially suspended for 10 days, but the suspension was reduced to two, after her mother addressed the issue with the school's principal, Susan Nestico. Despite the reduction, Ficker and the family are seeking a full expungement of the suspension, along with a public apology.

?This logic, which was not said in malice, came from the mind of this beautiful 5-year-old child who was playing with her friends, whom she hugs every day,? Ficker told the Daily Item. ?And this shows how hysterical people who work at schools have become since Sandy Hook.?

Gun control and school safety have become hot-button issues as the debate rages on over whether guards and teachers should be armed in public schools.

Addressing guns in schools, President Barack Obama recommended on Wednesday that school police be funded by the federal government, but he left the decision up to the schools on whether those guards should be armed or not.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/18/kindergarten-suspension-pink-bubble-gun_n_2507017.html

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Why Apple paying twice for Lala and Color engineers was a stroke of genius

Apple bought Lala for $80 million down and $80 in retention bonuses, and then, after founder Bill Nguyen and many of the engineers left anyway to found Color, Apple bought them again for around 7 million. Aubrey Johnson tells the story:

Apple obtained the same employees for pennies on the dollar. This time with even more experience and startup life under their belt.

Even more fascinating is the reason Apple bought Lala to begin with, and the way Steve Jobs handled the negotiations. Go. Read.

Source: Aubrey Johnson



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Qtn6QH1UtJo/story01.htm

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Colosseum cleaning yields old frescos, graffiti

ROME (AP) ? A long-delayed restoration of the Colosseum's only intact internal passageway has yielded ancient traces of red, black, green and blue frescoes ? as well as graffiti and drawings of phallic symbols ? indicating that the arena where gladiators fought was far more colorful than previously thought.

Officials unveiled the discoveries Friday and said the passageway ? between the second and third levels of the 1st Century Colosseum ? would open to the public starting this summer, after the ?80,000 ($100,000) restoration is completed.

The frescoes were hidden under decades of calcified rock and grime, and were revealed during a cleaning and restoration project over the last two months. The traces confirmed that while the Colosseum today is a fairly monochrome gray travertine rock, red brick and moss-covered marble, in its day its interior halls were a rich and expensive Technicolor.

"We're used to thinking that during excavations, archaeological surprises are a risk for builders and for the city's development," Rome archaeological heritage superintendent Mariarosaria Barbera said. "But here is a beautiful archaeological surprise ... a monument that has been studied and known and appreciated across the world, yet still provides surprises."

While intriguing, none of the fragments restored so far rival the gorgeous frescoes found in other nearby ruins of the Roman Forum, such as the 6th century biblical scenes in the Santa Maria Antiqua church. But officials stressed that they are nevertheless remarkable because they give a very different impression of what the Colosseum must have looked like in its heyday.

Colosseum director Rosella Rea said less than 1 percent of the painted surfaces of the Colosseum remain. And while the exposed seating area was covered in white marble, "the insides, the galleries, all the corridors and transverse hallways were completely colored."

"We need to imagine a building with extreme contrasts of color," she said. "This was a surprise."

Many of the splashes of color are covered with layers of more recent graffiti. "Ricciu" signed his name there with the date 1943. "Maria" and "Filippo" did as well. Someone else left some drawings in 1620.

But there are also older types of graffiti as well that officials say may date from the 3rd century, after the Colosseum was restored following a fire in A.D. 217.

A red palm frond and a drawing of a crown are believed to have been drawn by a gladiator fan as he or she passed through the passageway, officials said. Another restored section has images of a phallus, which officials said was commonly drawn for good luck.

Asked how such details could have gone undetected for nearly 2,000 years, officials said flatly: money. There simply wasn't funding available to carry out the restoration of the passageway, which Rea said had been a goal for her office for 20 years.

Aside from the hallway cleaning, the Colosseum is set to undergo ?25 million ($33.31 million) head-to-toe restoration funded by Italian businessman Diego Della Valle, founder of the Tod's shoe empire. The effort is primarily designed to shore up the monument, one of the world's most famous, which is crumbling under years of neglect.

Pieces of masonry and rock have fallen from the rafters, and the travertine is covered in gray dirt from car exhaust and pollution. The nearby subway rattles its foundations, such that the Colosseum has begun sinking in the same way the Leaning Tower of Pisa does, with a 40-centimeter (nearly 16-inch) inclination on its south side.

"It's not serious, but it needs to be restored," Rea said, noting the last major restoration was carried out in the 1970s. "The later you start, the worse it is."

Work has been delayed because of court challenges to the contract bidding process, with the latest hearing this week put off until the end of the month.

Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno complained this week that the delays were "exasperating."

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colosseum-cleaning-yields-old-frescos-graffiti-142733644.html

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

The Low-Down on Domain Names - 'Net Features - Website Magazine


By Kelly Meeneghan, Manager,?1&1 Internet, Inc.?

For any business, having a clear address to your physical location is imperative to ensure that your current and potential customers/clients can find you. This accessibility ultimately leads to an increase in both clientele and sales. The same goes for the Internet. It's now common knowledge that in order for a business to succeed, you must create an effective online presence. The first step to accomplish this feat is to start with a domain name, a virtual address, with which the public can use to find a business on the Web.?

A domain name is the sequence of letters after a ?www.? through the ?.com/.net/etc? of a URL. Representing an Internet Protocol (IP) resource, a domain can be associated with the personal computer used to access the Internet, the server computer that is hosting a website or the website itself. Put simply, this name replaces the use of overly complicated and detailed technical codes, which are assigned to every space on the Internet. Without a domain name, no one will be able to find and view a website, directly entering domain names is in fact the fastest and most convenient way for people to discover a business.?

As you decide to venture into the online world, choosing an effective domain name should be top priority. Understanding how computers read domains can help guide you through the process of choosing the most appropriate and effective domain. It is useful to know that domains are organized by the Internet from right to left, the opposite of how we normally read.?

Therefore, the first section you come upon is the top-level domain (TLD), or domain extension, which identifies the purpose and mission of the website. For example, in 1and1.com, .com is the TLD. In fact, it is a gTLD (general top-level domain), which illustrates that it is available for world-wide registration regardless of citizenship, residence or age. Most commonly used, .com is often the first gTLD that businesses consider. Though a smart decision due to its popularity, we encourage businesses to evaluate the potential effectiveness of the other gTLDs. For example, .org extensions are best utilized by non-profit organizations while .name?s are adopted by personal pages. Some businesses prefer .biz to illustrate its professionalism and those that have optimized their website for mobile viewing must use .mobi. Each holds their own purpose and is chosen at the discretion of its owner. By specifying your type of business through the domain extension, you can create a greater impression on visitors rather than misleading them by selecting an inappropriate domain.?

Taking TLDs a step further, there are ccTLDs (country code top-level domains), which are assigned to specific countries and are not available to everyone. Such domains include .us for the United States, .de for Germany and .es for Spain, to name a few. The purpose of ccTLDs is to encourage local businesses to identify themselves?as a business of that country. Specifying the country of residence within the TLD can help businesses better target their local audiences more directly. Each country has their own registration restrictions. Therefore, be sure to understand these guidelines before making an investment in the domain.?

Next, the section to the left of the TLD is considered the domain. Some businesses wish to showcase the official business name, well-known slogan, industry or location through their domain. Though all can be good ideas, 1&1 suggests that the business chooses to feature the official business name. This keeps it simple for you and your visitors to remember and not hinder their potential return to the site in the future. If the name is not available with the desired TLD, like .com, consider an alternative TLD before changing the domain name. Perhaps a .org or .biz TLD will be suitable and therefore you can keep the unique domain.

Once a domain name is decided, it needs to be registered with a domain registrar. This grants you the right to use the domain but it does not assign you legal ownership. Different TLDs and registrars may list domains at different price points, so be sure to shop around to find one you are comfortable with. Once completed, you are ready to begin designing your website.

?

About the Author: Kelly Meeneghan is a manager for 1&1 Internet, Inc. (www.1and1.com). As a global leader among Web hosts, 1&1 provides businesses with the tools necessary to get online and be successful. Meeneghan also wrote the contributor piece, Ditch Your Yellow Pages, for WebsiteMagazine.com.?

Source: http://www.websitemagazine.com/content/blogs/posts/archive/2013/01/18/The-Low_2D00_Down-on-Domain-Names.aspx

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Westfield, Hammerson make peace in London mall battle

LONDON (Reuters) - Australian mall owner Westfield Group has made peace with Anglo-French developer Hammerson in a long-running battle over an ageing south London shopping centre, agreeing to redevelop it together.

The two have been wrangling for over a year about the Whitgift Centre in Croydon whose owners sided with both developers on the right to redevelop the site, resulting in deadlock.

The pair said on Thursday that the joint venture will purchase a 25 percent interest in the 42-year-old site.

Hammerson had previously agreed to buy the stake from one of the centre's leaseholders, Royal London Asset Management (RLAM), on its own for 65 million pounds .

Westfield will also buy a 50 percent stake in the Centrale shopping centre, a mall opposite the Whitgift Centre which Hammerson already owns.

"Croydon has huge potential to return to its former glory as one of London's most vibrant town centres, and a major driver of its economy. The redevelopment of the Whitgift Centre at its heart is crucial to this vision," London's Mayor Boris Johnson said in the statement.

Large British shopping centres that dominate surrounding areas are highly prized by property investors as they have so far weathered the tough retailing climate better than others.

Westfield, whose Stratford City mall near the Olympic Park was one of the biggest retail winners during the Games, said in November the 1.2 million square foot site in Croydon would become its third large London centre after an exclusive deal with the Whitgift Foundation, the freeholder and 25 percent leaseholder.

But RLAM and Irish Bank Resolution Corp (IBRC), which together owned 75 percent of the mall's lease, said in April they had signed an exclusive agreement with Hammerson.

Hammerson and Westfield have set up a joint management company and will meet with all stakeholders in the coming weeks and will create a revised masterplan. Planning consent could be secured in 2013 with construction expected to start on site for the 1 billion pound scheme, they said.

(Reporting by Brenda Goh; Editing by David Cowell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/westfield-hammerson-peace-london-mall-battle-075253973--sector.html

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Exclusive 'Spring Breakers' Trailer: Watch Now!

Selena Gomez, Vanessa Hudgens and Ashley Benson take a wild ride, and MTV News has your first sneak peek.
By Kara Warner


The cast of "Spring Breakers"
Photo: A24

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1700334/spring-breakers-trailer-exclusive.jhtml

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Family History: Our place in space - MyHeritage.com - English blog

16????Jan 20130 comments

How do our surroundings, our homes, impact our families, our thoughts, our history?

Isn't this what our pursuit of genealogy helps to reconstruct? To make sure that our family history remains alive and known and preserved?

In a poem by Leib Borisovich Talalai, a young poet whose family was from our ancestral village of Vorotinschtina, Belarus, and who was murdered in Minsk (1941), he writes about his family home in the village, "If the walls of this house could talk. ..." When I found two of his slim books of poetry at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, it was fascinating to read his words.

What an image he presented of a home?s talking walls! What if we could access those memories? What do you know about the spaces in which your ancestors lived? Today, many of us move frequently to different homes in the same city, or even to different countries. Sometimes it is a positive choice made for education, a better job; at other times, it has been a forced relocation.

One of Spain?s most famous writers, Antonio Munoz Molina (?Sepharad,? 2006), asks his readers what might be the minimal portion of country, of roots or hearth, that a human being requires? Do these moves contribute to maintaining or cutting ties to our past and to our memories? What about those generations of memories? Do we pass them on to the younger generations?

Does your family history include a move from an ancestral location? What stories were handed down by those who relocated? How have you preserved those memories?

Share your memories in the comments below.

Source: http://blog.myheritage.com/2013/01/family-history-our-place-in-space/

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

BenQ Unveils Full HD-based W1070, W1080ST Video Projectors in India

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Taiwanese electronics manufacturer BenQ introduced two full HD based W1070 and W1080ST short-throw video projectors at the recently concluded International CES (Consumer Electronics Show) 2013 and in India simultaneously. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/424171/20130115/benq-tv-projectors-lg-w1080st-ces-2013.htm

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How to Invest in Vacant Land and Win Big - Commercial Real Estate ...

How to Invest in Vacant Land and Win Big

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Many commercial property investors dream of buying a plot of vacant land and turning it into a thriving commercial real estate enterprise. ?It?s hard to beat the satisfaction and sense of achievement you feel when you pass a building or shopping plaza and can say to yourself and others, ?I built that!?

Land development is also a way to take a small amount of money and turn it into a large return on your investment. However, not everything in land development is sunshine and roses.

As in any investment, there are pros and cons.

The best way to develop a vacant property is by changing its allowed use or zoning ? making the land more profitable without investing any money.

How often have you seen a line of stores followed by an empty lot and another line of stores??The reason that lot sits vacant could be because it?s currently zoned for a nonconforming use; it may be a remnant of a formerly all-residential street, or it may be zoned for another use that?doesn?t??fit? with current area businesses.

Normally this land sits for years with a huge For Sale sign in front.?Chances are anyone who does their due diligence will discover the current zoning situation and move on to an easier deal.?They are missing an amazing opportunity; usually this land can be picked up for 25% of the price of nearby lots.

If you do snap it up, all you need now is to be patient and play the bureaucracy game. Apply for a rezoning permit and work to get it zoned in accordance with the other properties on the block.?This takes time and determination, but if you stick to it and it is rezoned, you will have instantly quadrupled your investment.

One of the most important things to be aware of when deciding to invest in a particular property is the potential for environmental hazards on the land.?Just because the land looks fine now and there?s nothing nearby that could have caused a hazard?doesn?t?mean one?doesn?t?exist. Often properties located a mile or more away can have an impact on the lot you are considering purchasing.

For example, they may have had contaminants that got into the groundwater, coursed underground and pooled up under your lot.?Buy it and it?s your responsibility to get it cleaned up. So an environmental study should be a vital part of your due diligence.

Another potential problem is dealing with the local community. Residents don?t always welcome ?big box? retail stores.?They feel they take away from the charm of the community and impact negatively on the local businesses already present.

Fact is, you may have the best investment strategy for your land, but if the community protests the plan, then you are going to find yourself in a losing battle.?When you are planning on building a large-scale project, it?s best to conduct focus groups BEFORE committing, to see how the community feels about your project.

Contact a Texas Commercial Real Estate Expert today:

Luke LeGrand, ePRO 210-843-5853

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Tags: Ask the Experts, Business News San Antonio, Commercial Real Estate Blog, commercial real estate enterprise, Commercial Real Estate San Antonio, How to Invest in Vacant Land and Win Big, kw commercial, kw commercial sa, kw commercial san antonio, Real Estate Blog, San Antonio Business News, San Antonio Commercial Real Estate

Source: http://kwcommercialsa.com/blog/?p=7285

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[Men's Tennis] Spring Hill College names Sajowitz tennis coach

Men's Tennis - Tue, Jan. 15, 2013 at 3:05 PM

Spring Hill College has named Eric Sajowitz as the school's head coach of men's and women's tennis.

"I am pleased that Eric has accepted our offer to be the next tennis coach at Spring Hill College," said Spring Hill College Director of Athletics Jim Hall. "I believe he'll do a good job of motivating our athletes and preparing them for competitive play. His experience as a high level athlete should translate into a distinct advantage for our athletes as he instructs them in the nuances of the game."

Sajowitz comes to SHC from Tennis Europe in Stamford, Conn., where he helped develop junior tennis players from across the country. He served as a tennis professional at the prestigious Sandestin Golf Resort in Florida and at Callaway Gardens Resort in Georgia.

Currently serving as a US Air Force Reservist at the 403rd Force Support Squadron at Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi, Sajowitz was also the head tennis coach at Ruckel Middle School in Niceville, Fla., in 2010.

"I'm very proud to be named the head coach here at Spring Hill," Sajowitz said. "This is a great school with a tremendous history."

Sajowitz received a Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts from Limestone College in Gaffney, S.C., in 2006. While at Limestone, Sajowitz played both No. 1 singles and doubles for the Saints and was rated Top 10 in singles and doubles in Conference Carolinas during the 2006 season. He began his coaching career as a volunteer assistant coach at Limestone in 2007.
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Source: http://www.shcbadgers.com/article/2624.php

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Yammer, Microsoft's 'Golden Egg,' Has Moved Into A Gorgeous New Headquarters (MSFT)

Owen Thomas, Business Insider

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On Monday, Yammer, the enterprise-collaboration startup Microsoft bought for $1.2 billion last year, moved from its longtime home in San Francisco's SoMa district to a new headquarters in 1355 Market, the building that's also home to Twitter and One Kings Lane.

Business Insider was on hand for the ribbon-cutting. We spoke to Yammer CEO David Sacks, CTO Adam Pisoni, and a host of employees about the move.

Microsoft's Dan'l Lewin, its top executive in Silicon Valley, was also on hand?the only sign of a very low-key presence for Yammer's new owners.

Lewin told us that the hands-off approach was very intentional, the result of a lot of learning on Microsoft's part on how to integrate startups. He called Yammer a "golden egg" that Microsoft wanted to handle carefully.

It's incubating in a beautiful new nest.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/yammer-1355-market-grand-opening-photos-2013-1

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Map shows Civil War shipwreck in 3-D

On Jan. 11, 1863, a Union warship was sunk in a skirmish with a Confederate vessel in the Gulf of Mexico.

Exactly 150 years later, a new 3-D map of the USS Hatteras has been released that shows what the remains of the warship look like. The Hatteras rests on the ocean floor about 20 miles (32 kilometers) off Galveston, Texas, according to a release from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, which helped to sponsor the expedition to map the shipwreck.

The Hatteras was sunk in a battle with the Confederate raider CSS Alabama, and was the only Union warship sunk in combat in the Gulf of Mexico during the Civil War.

"Most shipwreck survey maps are two-dimensional and based on observations made by sight, photographs or by feeling around in murky water while stretching a measuring tape," said James Delgado, with NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, in the statement. "Thanks to the high-resolution sonar, we have a three-dimensional map that not only provides measurements and observations, but the ability for researchers and the public to virtually swim through the wreck's exposed remains and even look below the surface at structure buried in loose silt."

Recent storms have dislodged some of the sediment that covered the ship, 57 feet (17 meters) beneath the surface, so researchers took advantage of the opportunity to map the vessel with state-of-the-art sonar in the fall of 2012, according to the statement.

The map has revealed previously unknown features of the shipwreck, including a largely intact paddlewheel that once propelled the vessel forward. It also shows damage to the wheel's steering column and the engine room.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Samples taken from Antarctica's hidden Lake Vostok

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: Russian researchers say they have brought up fresh samples of clear ice from Antarctica's Lake Vostok, a huge reservoir of freshwater more than 2 miles beneath the surface.

    2. Report: Climate shifts are changing life in US
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    4. Simplest clock yet has but a single atom

The Hatteras rests in federal waters, and is protected under the Sunken Military Craft Act as a war grave, according to the release.

The ship was part of a blockade to prevent goods from traveling to and from Galveston, which remained one of the last bastions of the Confederacy late into the Civil War, the NOAA noted.

? 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50458657/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Jeremy Salken: Dating Jennie Garth!

Source:

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How to Lose $3 Million in 1 Second

Losing money is one of the loneliest feelings. It was Oct 22nd, 2008. Lehman Brothers, the investment bank, had filed for bankruptcy the month before. The markets were panicking. A thousand people surrounded me, almost all of us slouched in our seats, staring at computer screens. I had eight, all flashing prices of assets that I couldn?t touch, but, oh, I could feel.

I myself was waiting for one price to flash, an interest rate in Brazil. I had bet that rates would lower over time, from 15.10% to 14.50% or so. The size of my bet was 20,000 USD for every one hundredth of a percent (or 20k per basis point). A move from 15.10% to 15.00% would make me 200,000 USD. A move to 15.20% would lose me the same amount.

I sat with a knot in my stomach, nervously chewing a swizzle stick, waiting for the markets to open in Brazil at 7 am. I jotted down worst-case scenarios, and then turned them into doodles. The default of Lehman had unleashed market hell. I closed my eyes. You could hear the markets, a trading floor filled with murmurs and sighs, the cumulative sounds of disappointment.

The Brazilian rate was a tiny yellow box on one of my screens. I had been in the office since 4 am, waiting, trying to extrapolate from other prices, from other assets how much money I would lose (or make). The price the following day had closed at 15.90%.

This day all assets, stocks, bonds, commodities, interest rates, everything, were trading in two distinct camps, going opposite ways. Most prices were falling, dramatically. A full-on Guppy Suck: Prices were spiraling lower like dead fish flushed down a toilet. Money was going into a few lucky assets, safe havens they were called, things considered having no market risk. Short maturity US bonds. Cash. The correlation between assets was approaching one or negative one.

My Brazilian rate started trading. It blinked 17.40%, 1.50% wider than the prior day. I was out 3 million dollars, and I had no chance to trade. No chance to get out at 15.50% or 16.00%. The market had gapped. I got up, shot a bird at my screen, punched it, and then walked to the bathroom.

Markets are not supposed to do this. Almost all of modern finance, all of trading of assets, is predicated on continuity, on transactions able to be made at every price along a path. Traders, banks, risk management all use mathematical models that have as an assumption continuous liquid markets.

The days following Lehman were notable not only because of the large moves, but because I, and many others, could never have traded at any price. Fists punched screens all across the globe.

It was a self-reinforcing problem. A feedback loop developed. I couldn?t sell my Brazilian rates so instead I sold another investment, Argentinian bonds. Others were doing the same, selling whatever they could, whatever was trading, moving the money into cash. The process devolved down the ladder of securities, from the least liquid to the most liquid. By the end, some of the largest stocks in the world, blue-chip stocks in the S&P 500 were also gapping.

The months following Lehman?s collapse saw the entire financial system start to fail, in a cascade of interconnected plummeting securities, and with them, the world economy. Major banks were broke, hedge funds decimated, and the average investor left feeling fleeced. The process only ended when the Federal Reserve stepped in, bailed out banks, and acted as the buyer and lender of last resort.

Those months reminded many that liquidity, how much of something you can trade per day and convert into cash, without affecting its price, is the most misunderstood variable in finance.

How did we get here?

Finance now is a complex field buttressed by hundreds of mathematical models. At its heart is the Black-Scholes equation for pricing of options.

Published in 1973, it slowly revolutionized finance, leading to a boom in financial contracts and new way of looking at markets in terms of relative value and models. It also changed the type of person who worked on Wall Street. It became people like me, with a PhD in Physics, who could build models, like Black-Scholes, to price complex products like options.

What is an option? It is the right, but not the obligation to purchase (a call) or sell (a put) an asset at a predetermined future date for an agreed price. You might be offered an option to buy a share of stock S in one month at 105 when it?s now trading at 100. What is the value of that? Because the risk is asymmetric (you own the upside of the price, but not the downside) it has a positive value to you. Until 1973 most traders used ad hoc valuations. They knew an option was more valuable the longer the maturity (more upside!), the more volatile the stock (more upside again), but no exact relation existed.

Economists Fisher Black, Myron S. Scholes, and Robert C. Merton derived an equation that valued options on most assets. They did this by making the assumption that assets move over time in a continues motion with a given volatility, so that the future price of an asset was a probability distribution. By finding a strategy of buying and selling the asset that exactly replicated the ownership of the option they derived an equation that specified the value of an option. The sole undetermined variable was the asset?s volatility.

The Black-Scholes model was revolutionary for two reasons. Not only did it put an exact value on the option, but also more importantly, it did so by showing traders how to decrease their exposure to changes in the value of the option. Buying or selling options was now less risky.

It also started people thinking about relative value in financial markets.

If an option was trading less than the value assigned to it by the model, they would suggest buying the option (it was cheap) and employing the strategy of buying and selling stocks against it. Or, in the words of Wall Street, selling the hedge. Or opposite of that, if the option was trading expensively, the model would suggest selling the option and buying the hedge (the replicating portfolio of stock that matched the behavior of the option).

This way of thinking about finance, using mathematical models to view assets as either rich or cheap and to diminish the risk associated with ownership, steadily grew in the 1980s and 1990s.

Hubris rarely is associated with math, but Black-Scholes gave the markets a sense of greater control, greater clarity. Most important, it gave the markets the belief that risk could be understood and lessened, and value better understood. Over time some traders started to focus only on using models to buy cheap assets and sell rich ones.

Mathematical hubris reached its zenith with the founding of LTCM, a hedge fund started in 1994 by John Meriwether and based in Greenwich, Connecticut.

It was one of the first, and the most famous institution, to embrace the ?model driven relative value? approach to trading. Not only did it employ many mathematicians and economists, two of the seminal economists to have worked on Black-Scholes, Myron S. Scholes and Robert C. Merton, were partners in the firm.

By 1994 mathematical modeling of financial assets had gone far beyond just options. Almost every traded security could have a ?fair value? price associated with it, using proprietary models. LTCM used their closely guarded models to buy the ?cheap? securities and sell the ?rich? ones. They did this on a huge scale, using leverage provided by the banks.

LTCM was initially wildly successful, producing hefty returns and growing from one billion dollars under management to five billion by early 1998. During that time they were the rock stars of Wall Street. Magazines wrote glowing articles about the geniuses in Greenwich. Rarely had mathematicians ever acquired such a smooth media veneer.

Then in September 1998 they lost everything, all five billion, in a spectacular crash that threatened to engulf banks and other funds. It only ended when a consortium of investors, prodded by the government, stepped in to salvage LTCM from infecting the broader markets and economy.

What happened? In September 1998 Russia defaulted on its local bonds and froze its currency. Like the days following Lehman, the markets broke, and asset prices jumped or fell with little trading. LTCM found itself unable to buy or sell assets without materially changing the price. Again, markets were anything but continuous.

Others in the markets, seeing LTCM in distress, jumped. If they thought LTCM owned bond X, they would sell it themselves, even if they did not own it, knowing it would force LTCM to have to sell. The process became self-fulfilling.

LTCM found that the assets it had bought, the ones it thought were cheap, proved to be the most illiquid, the ones that fell fastest with the fewest trades. What it had sold against the purchase, assets the model told were expensive, proved to be the most liquid. Those assets held up well. The spread between the two grew, rather than contracted as their model said it should. LTCM was, in the words of one senior trader, ?Getting royally fucked.?

The models, as built, were utterly inadequate at describing the world, as they did not taken into account liquidity. Not to the appropriate degree. More important, the events surrounding LTCM showed that the liquidity of an asset was a tenacious variable, hard to define, and prone to large swings.

The problem was even more complex than that. LTCM itself, by owning certain positions, affected the eventual liquidity of securities. It created a self-reinforcing problem that the models could not address. The models needed to consider that others where using, well, models.

Wall Street learned very little following September 1998. By the time Lehman defaulted and triggered the next financial crisis (and my loss on the Brazilian rates) the same model-based methodology had again taken a primacy in markets, culminating in massive investments in complex mortgage securities.

LTCM itself was reborn. Many of the original partners started a new company, JWM Partners, which launched in late 1999. For much of the early 2000s they were again profitable, but more humble (few laudatory articles this time). Not surprising to some, they fell apart a second time, losing close to 45% in their largest fund in the period surrounding Lehman.

Not all models are to be faulted. There are models that do incorporate illiquidity, or market freezes. These do so by adding rare, but large, discontinuous jumps in the price of assets. These models, however, are of a different breed than the non-jump models.

If a trader buys an option using Black-Scholes and then sells the hedge, assuming the asset?s path over the life of the option is the volatility used in the model, the trader will break even every single time.

Models that incorporate jumps, however, give the expected price, not the actual price. That model will give a higher price to the option to compensate the trader for the rare but dramatic times jumps occur.

If the asset realizes the path postulated by the model, without a jump, the trader will lose a small amount. If the rare jump occurs the trader will make money, a large sum that should equal the total losses from the times without jumps. Not surprisingly, these models will tell the traders to take less risk, a message that many do not want to hear.

It?s also about the incentives.

Wall Street compensates and judges on short-term performance. Two competing funds, one using more conservative models, the other not, will have different return profiles. The more conservative fund will have lower returns six out of seven times, but much higher returns the one year out of seven when markets dislocate, making the more cautious firm the better investment long term.

The conservative fund, however, will find itself living in the media shadow of the risky fund and its gaudy returns. Past performance is no indication of future performance, but it sure as hell is an indication of a wall of cash looking to invest.

So what happens is the LTCM story. Models that encourage risk taking get used. They make good money seven out of eight years as liquidity is well behaved. Chances are the first few years are some of the good years. They make profits, the media fawns on them, investors come, and the traders get paid a lot of money. It?s the fifth or sixth year, when markets freeze, assets go into a fire sale, and models break down, that is their downfall.

Compensation also encourages the boom-bust models. Pay in the boom years is a percentage of profits. Pay in the bust years is zero, not negative. This asymmetry encourages traders and funds to roll the dice.

This overall myopic approach, valuing short-term profits over careful investing, is what led to Wall Street embracing models that inadequately describe the reality of finance. Models were used to rationalize ?too good to be true? returns, turning them into ?smart cutting-edge investing.? They became just another in a long line of ways that companies and traders masked the risk that they were running.

There are smart hedge funds, smart traders that enhance their risk management and profits using models. They do this by doing what has always worked in investing: Judicious risk-taking complimented by a thorough knowledge of the markets. They take the long view on value over the short view on profits. Sadly, they are often not the ones that get the attention or rewards.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=371ac03930639ab2e34692dc8d12a9a3

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Voter turnout push could challenge Israeli leader

Israel's former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, center, visits the site known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Monday, Jan. 14, 2013. Lieberman indicated on Monday that he would quit politics if convicted in his breach of trust and fraud case. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

Israel's former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, center, visits the site known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Monday, Jan. 14, 2013. Lieberman indicated on Monday that he would quit politics if convicted in his breach of trust and fraud case. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

Israel's former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, left, visits the site known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Monday, Jan. 14, 2013. Lieberman indicated on Monday that he would quit politics if convicted in his breach of trust and fraud case. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

JERUSALEM (AP) ? With large numbers of Israelis expected to sit out next week's election, centrist activists have launched a last-ditch appeal to get out the vote, hoping to defy what appears to be a guaranteed victory for a hard-line bloc led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

This grassroots effort could be the moderate camp's only chance. Moderate, secular voters tend to turn out in smaller numbers than ideologically motivated hard-liners. Reversing this trend, experts say, is the surest way to take on the government's handling of major issues like stalled peacemaking with the Palestinians, Iran's nuclear program and a troubled economy.

Polls published in Israeli newspapers over the weekend projected Netanyahu and his traditional right-wing and religious allies winning between 64 and 71 seats, enough to secure a majority in the 120-member parliament, compared to 49 to 56 for centrist and Arab parties.

Pollster Camil Fuchs says those numbers reflect current trends. "But a four to five percentage point change in turnout could change things," he said.

The get-out-the vote campaigners, including television personalities and local celebrities, present their efforts as non-partisan, but many are perceived to be aligned with Netanyahu's opponents.

Netanyahu's opponents say the stakes are especially high in the current election. Critics point to the deadlock in peace efforts with the Palestinians, his repeated run-ins with President Barack Obama and Iran's suspect nuclear program. Without a strong alliance with the U.S., they say, it would be difficult to halt the Iranians or rally international support for Israel's positions toward the Palestinians.

Netanyahu's Likud Party has fielded an especially hawkish slate of candidates who reject concessions to the Palestinians. The rise of "Jewish Home," a pro-settler party that could play a major role in the next coalition government, could further affect peace efforts. Jewish Home's leader, Naftali Bennett, and many inside Likud have advocated annexing parts of the West Bank.

Reflecting his hawkish line Monday, Netanyahu told Israel's Channel 2 TV that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas does not want to negotiate. "We don't have to say that we don't have a future here because Abu Mazen doesn't want to negotiate with us," Netanyahu said, referring to Abbas by his nickname. Abbas blames Israel for a four-year stalemate in peace talks.

The Palestinians claim all of the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, for their hoped-for state. Israeli moderates warn that Israel's continued control of these territories and their millions of Palestinian residents threaten Israel's status as a Jewish democracy.

Despite the pressing issues, turnout in recent elections has been just over 60 percent. Fuchs said turnout among supporters of Netanyahu and his allies is generally higher than among the rest of the population.

According to pollsters, turnout is especially low among several key groups ? political moderates, people under 30 and Israeli Arabs. These constituencies all tend to favor Netanyahu's opponents.

Political parties are conducting classic get-out-the-vote campaigns, with automated phone calls, parlor meetings, transportation to polling stations and specific appeals to groups, like women and young voters.

Other groups not directly affiliated with specific parties are also getting out the message.

Israel's president, Shimon Peres, teamed up with people from Israel's popular TV satire "A Wonderful Country" to produce a get-out-the-vote video clip for his Facebook page. In his largely ceremonial post, Peres, 89, is supposed to avoid politics, but the Nobel peace laureate's dovish leanings are well known.

Social activists who drew hundreds of thousands of protesters into the streets last year to demonstrate against the gaps between rich and poor have recruited dozens of artists, TV personalities and journalists to take part in an ad campaign called "2013 elections ? this time we're all voting." In ads, they don black shirts that read, "Vote or they'll vote for you."

Israeli film producer Ofir Kedar, who is based in London, is pushing a get-out-the-vote campaign with two YouTube videos he hopes will go viral. One of the clips, produced with the "One Voice" non-profit organization, shows a potential voter having a nightmare in which he is fired from his job and Israel is under attack and isolated internationally. He snaps out of it only when his young son says "wake up," followed by a call to go vote.

"I'm trying to help the center-left bloc, not necessarily a specific party, but those who support a two-state solution," Kedar said.

Under Israel's system of proportional representation, voters cast ballots for parties, not individuals, and parties receive seats in parliament based on the percentage of votes they win. To enter parliament, a party must win at least 2 percent of all votes cast, or about 70,000, giving them a minimum of two seats.

"If two ... parties on the left pass the threshold, that could change the blocs," Fuchs said. "The chance for a big change is small but it exists."

A recent poll by the University of Haifa predicted that just half of Israeli Arabs will vote. Two-thirds of those surveyed said they have no faith that Arab parties will be able to improve the lot of their communities, which suffer from poverty and discrimination.

If the Arab voters were to increase their turnout by 10 percentage points, they could win an additional five or six parliamentary seats, said Ytzhak Katz, of the Maagar Mohot survey service. "They could tap their electoral potential and strengthen themselves, but they don't do it," he said.

Helmi Kittani, executive director of the Center for Jewish-Arab Economic Development, has appealed to Arab voters directly, telling them it's not too late to speak up.

"It's not right to sit in your chairs and watch others wage your just struggle," he said. "Elections are an opportunity to change your lives. Don't sit at home."

____

Online: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t-kvsmXvUhU

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-14-ML--Israel-Politics/id-0b4ac58bca814dd0a89bf1e94e63f4ed

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A video letter to Sens. Franken & Klobuchar (Powerlineblog)

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Grieving mum launches Facebook petition to ensure ex-husband won't escape conviction for murdering two sons

ASHOK KALYANJEE'S appeal has been backed by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission on the basis he was suffering from undiagnosed mental illness at the time of the murders.

Giselle has called for her ex-husband's appeal against conviction to be turned down
Giselle has called for her ex-husband's appeal against conviction to be turned down

Chris McNulty

A MUM of two boys stabbed to death by their father has called for his appeal against conviction to be turned down.

Giselle Ross, 43, has launched a Facebook petition to ensure ex-husband Ashok Kalyanjee won?t walk free for slaying five-year-old Paul and two-year-old Jay-Jay in 2008.

The Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) have backed his appeal on the grounds he has a mental illness undiagnosed at the time of the murders.

Giselle, from Robroyston, Glasgow, said: ?He was seen by psychiatrist after psychiatrist. They found him sane and fit to plead. He carefully planned and carried out the murders with chilling precision. Now, he?s doing everything he can to hurt me even more.?

Giselle?s petition gathered hundreds of signatures within hours of its launch.

She added: ?I want the Lord Advocate Frank Mulholland to know the strength of public opinion and for him to assure me he will vigorously oppose Kalyanjee?s appeal.?

Her lawyer, Cameron Fyfe, said: ?I?ve written to the Lord Advocate pointing out that this appeal is groundless and causing Giselle a great deal of distress.

?We?ve asked him to examine the basis for the appeal given the fact he pled guilty and the weight of evidence against him.?

June Thomson, 53, whose children Michelle, 25, and Ryan, seven, were stabbed to death by their father Rab on the same day as Giselle?s sons, is backing the campaign.

June and Giselle, who co-wrote bestseller Beyond All Evil, launched the petition on the book?s Facebook page.

A Crown Office spokesman said: ?We note the decision made by the SCCRC.?

Source: http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/grieving-mum-launches-facebook-petition-1531740

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Slamdance enters 19th year as robust complement to Sundance ...

Courtesy of Paper Chain Productions Andrew Pastides plays Hank, a lonely filmmaker who starts a video correspondence with a Prague student in "Hank and Asha," directed by husband-wife team James E. Duff and Julia Morrison.

Preview ? The 19th annual indie festival ?by filmmakers for filmmakers? prides itself on honing talent.

Peter Baxter could have felt jealous when he opened up last year?s Sundance Film Guide to find Benh Zeitlin?s "Beasts of the Southern Wild" given special pride of place in the screening program.

And Baxter could have torn out his hair to learn the news, weeks later, that Zeitlin?s film won Sundance?s Grand Jury Prize for Dramatic Film, and also the Cannes Film Festival?s Cam?ra d?Or prize.

?

Slamdance 2013

When ? Friday, Jan. 18, through Thursday, Jan. 24

Where ? Treasure Mountain Inn, 255 Main St., Park City

Info ? $12 for features; $8 for film shorts blocks; at 323-466-1786 or http://www.slamdance.com; passes from $150-$325.

More ? Visit http://www.slamdance.com or www.slamdancecollective.com for film schedules and more information

But the cool, collected Englishman and co-founder of the Slamdance Film Festival did neither. Baxter instead basked in the quiet, but little-known fact that Zeitlin, now an Academy Award nominee, cut his film festival teeth at the 2005 Slamdance with "Egg," a surrealist short inspired by Moby-Dick.

In fact, Baxter delights in running off a list of well-known directors who count themselves among the aspiring film talents who once walked through Slamdance?s festival doors and onto bigger projects. Among them: Oren Peli, the prodigy behind "Paranormal Activity"; "Batman" and "Memento" director Christopher Nolan; and Utah?s Jared Hess, the creator of "Napoleon Dynamite."

When Slamdance first pitched its tent next to the Sundance calendar in 1995, industry elites from both coasts sniffed their noses in curiosity ? or, worse, derision. Today, just one year shy of Slamdance?s 20th year, that curiosity has grown into a robust sense of name recognition among filmmakers. With its programming selection process driven solely by filmmakers from the previous year?s festival, Slamdance remains proud of its "By Filmmakers For Filmmakers" marketing mantra.

"It?s never been about offering up competition to Sundance," Baxter said by phone from Los Angeles. "It?s just that when you put both festivals side by side, you have a greater American film festival experience."

This year?s festival showcases two new features, a Special Screenings Program featuring the work of global filmmakers and the launch of a Slam Collective. The latter boasts seven Slamdance directors, from five continents, who will direct a collective short titled "I Want to Be an American." Inspired by the parlor-game method of picking up where the past participant left off, each filmmaker will contribute a documentary segment inspired by the one previous.

The festival itself offers 70 film works culled from more than 5,000 submissions, and the competition for a foot in the Slamdance door grows more fierce with every year. This year?s offerings include "Between Us," a dramatic feature by festival co-founder Dan Mirvish, already the winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the Bahamas International Film Festival; "My Name Is Faith," a documentary about a 13-year-old girl recovering from a disorder brought on by childhood neglect; and "Diamond on Vinyl," a drama of sexual intrigue and secrets starring Sonja Kinski, daughter of ?80s-era film star Nastassja Kinski and granddaughter to German acting legend Klaus Kinski.

"[Kinski] was just electric, to the point where other people in the audition were losing track of their lines," said J.R. Hughto, director of the film, by phone from Los Angeles. "She has a very different energy from her mother, but there?s a very strong echo."

Hughto said he put his full trust in Slamdance?s blind submission process, and its jury of filmmakers, when he submitted his film to the festival.

story continues below

"I?ve only been in the [Slamdance] family for a few weeks now, but it?s a very comfortable feeling because it?s about cultivating a filmmakers? collective in so many ways," he said. "Everyone?s very generous. I think I?ve learned as much as I have in one month already as I have in the past three years."

James Duff and Julia Morrison, the husband-and-wife directing team behind "Hank and Asha," are traveling their own professional film journey along those same lines. The couple?s quiet, but intense drama, about two young filmmakers romancing each other across the North American and European continents through "video letters," seemed an ideal fit for the Slamdance ethos. "Hank and Asha" works on parallel levels, as love story and the art of narrative seduction but also, said Morrison, about "the anticipation of creating yourself" through visual communication.

The couple discovered the idea through a friend in Prague, who was sending his beloved video footage of his hotel room or latest walk through a park.

"We thought they would be extraordinarily boring," Duff said. "They weren?t."

Morrison added: "We liked the Slamdance vibe from the outset. It?s intimate and appealing when you?ve just come out from the larger film world, sweating it out on your own."

bfulton@sltrib.com

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/entertainment2/55600290-223/film-slamdance-festival-filmmakers.html.csp

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California regulator: Banks do good by by offering free services

Teveia Barnes, the commissioner of the California Department of Financial Institutions, saluted financial institutions in California that are offering banking services for free to people who are in unbanked households in the department?s Bank on California program.

Teveia Barnes, the commissioner of the California Department of Financial Institutions, saluted financial institutions in California that are offering banking services for free to people who are in unbanked households in the department?s Bank on California program.

Barnes, in her most recent regulatory newsletter, points out that California is a very mixed state with a minority majority population.

?With this comes opportunities and challenges for financial institutions in California,? she said in a news release.

Bank On California is a voluntary initiative offers unbanked households access to mainstream financial products, such as no- and low-cost checking and savings accounts as well as access to financial education.

Three of the 13 institutions participating in Bank on California are credit unions based in the Sacramento area: The Golden 1 Credit Union, SAFE Credit Union and Schools Financial Credit Union.

Nearly all of the institutions have operations in the Sacramento market, including Bank of the West, Cathay Bank, East West Bank, Patelco Credit Union and Travis Credit Union.

The remaining institutions in the program are United Security Bank, Orange County?s Credit Union, Pan American Bank, Redwood Credit Union and Security First Bank.

?The bottom line is that each financial institution needs to look at its community and determine how best to serve that community and its customers and members,? she said. ?My vision is to promote the public?s trust and confidence in the financial system by ensuring the safety and soundness of the state?s chartered and regulated institutions.?

Mark Anderson covers technology, banking, finance, restaurants and tourism for the Sacramento Business Journal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_10/~3/KVzn1eUS6ic/calif-banks-free-services-poor-household.html

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