Saturday, December 31, 2011

Fantasy Football Week 17 Running Back Rankings

Don't expect C.J. Spiller to drop the ball for you in the last week of the season as he takes on the soft Patriots defense. He should get plenty of touches on the ground and through the air as a must-start RB this week.


It's the last week of the season and we're a little bit late due to some waiting for some of these situations to develop with which guys will get rest and which backups could prove to be valuable in Week 17. I'm doing all of the rankings this week and if you have any questions about why I have a guy a bit higher than you might expect, don't be bashful and put post a question in the comment section or you can send them to me on Twitter @MikeSGallagher.

I'd also encourage you to check out Kenny's Preview that covers every game. I covered several scenarios in Waiver Wire Scoops as well. Plus don't forget that I'll be posting the superfluously informative Active/Inactive Update early Sunday.

Links to the ranks: QB RB WR TE D/ST IDP

Running Back Rankings after the jump:

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Source: http://www.faketeams.com/2011/12/30/2671534/fantasy-football-week-17-running-back-rankings

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Video: Why a new GOP front-runner every week?

Arc: Big East loaded with good, not great, teams

Beyond the Arc: Georgetown's win over Louisville on Wednesday is the sort of thing we'll be seeing a lot of this season in the Big East, a league stocked with good teams, but no great ones beyond Syracuse.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45809007#45809007

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A poll is more thermometer than crystal ball (The Arizona Republic)

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Failed Flying Car Design Makes For a Lovely iPhone Dock [Speakers]

The flying car is still a few years from being a practical reality, let alone a sound business venture. So why do companies keep pouring millions into developing them when their designs clearly work better as a stylish iPhone dock? More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/aQvgedU0g6g/failed-flying-car-design-makes-for-a-lovely-iphone-dock

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Issue for the week of January 14th, 2012

  • With a little data, Eureqa generates fundamental laws of nature (p. 20)

  • Elite athletes get their heads in the game (p. 22)

  • Elements under pressure reveal secrets of extreme chemistry (p. 26)

  • Nine-year record collected from orbit finds supply dropping mostly due to agriculture. (p. 5)

  • A brain-damaged man yields controversial clues to how people identify complex objects. (p. 8)

  • Treatment enables cells to produce a key blood-clotting compound, allowing some patients to quit medication. (p. 9)

  • The Kepler space telescope gets one step closer to its mission of discovering habitable worlds by finding two orbs of terrestrial proportions orbiting a distant sunlike star. (p. 10)

  • Nearly a year after receiving a spectacular celestial gift, astrophysicists are still asking: ?What is it?? (p. 11)

  • Based on the way that primitive lungfish use their fins to move along tank bottoms, researchers argue for an underwater start to four-legged locomotion. (p. 12)

  • Island?s natural fruit supply iffy for orangutans. (p. 12)

  • Just hearing recordings of predators, in the absence of any real danger, caused sparrows to raise fewer babies. (p. 13)

  • A fossilized feathered dinosaur dined on bird not long before its own demise. (p. 13)

  • People in southern Arabia around 100,000 years ago made tools like those of East Africans. (p. 14)

  • When stressed, bacteria can temporarily turn comatose and dodge germ-screening tests. (p. 16)

  • The complete genetic instruction book for making monarch butterflies contains information about how the insects manage their long migration to Mexico. (p. 16)

  • Naked mole rats don?t feel the burn of acid thanks to tweaks in a protein involved in sending pain messages to the brain. (p. 17)

  • Decisions more democratic when individuals with no preset preference join a group. (p. 18)

  • Analysis of stock trading data suggests an effort to manipulate the market in 2007. (p. 18)

  • Review by Bruce Bower (p. 30)

  • Review by Nick Bascom (p. 30)

  • (p. 30)

  • (p. 30)

  • (p. 30)

  • (p. 30)

  • (p. 30)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 31)

  • A pituitary hormone goes from labor drug to love drug. (p. 4)

  • Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/issue/id/337264/title/Issue_for_the_week_of_January_14th,_2012

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    Video: Obama's baby surprise

    PBT: Relentless Heat too much for Celtics

    PBT: In dispatching the Celtics on Tuesday, Miami looked like a relentless machine. The Heat were two games away from a title and they look better than they did last season. Much better. Which is scary for the other 29 teams.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45799904#45799904

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    Yifat Oren: I'm A Celebrity Wedding Planner, Get Me Out Of Here

    Sometimes the thing you're known for is not at all how you imagine yourself.

    In my case, being described as a "celebrity" wedding planner always leaves me bemused. I'm certainly not a celebrity, and though some of my clients have achieved fame, most go out of their way to remove themselves from the limelight. I would gladly name drop, but I find it to be a big bore, especially in Los Angeles, where so many deem themselves a "celebrity" of sorts, even wedding planners. If you really want to know who my famous clients are, I am more than sure you can easily find that out through Google and a myriad of search engines and blogs.

    For my part, I prefer to view myself as a seasoned professional, providing impeccable service to the world's most discerning clientele. I pride myself in the team caliber I have built, the creativity of our design and our ability to execute couture celebrations. To earn a top spot in my field, I have overcome many challenges over the nearly 15 years I have been in this business. And during this time, I cannot think of one moment when celebrity mongering came into play. My goal is to do work that inspires me, not aggressively hunt down a celebrity clientele, which turns out is not so uncommon in my field of work.

    As a descriptor, the word "celebrity" can cause plenty of excitement, but its over-use renders the term about as meaningful and specific as the word "supergreat." Look up "wedding planner" in any state and you'll get lists of thousands of "celebrity" wedding planners. Anyone who has ever read an issue of US Weekly, it seems, can adopt the moniker and claim they can deliver Hollywood magic to an Omaha bride. This usually involves heavy doses of sparkle, shiny fabrics, and complicated up-dos.

    Likewise, television programs dedicated to weddings tell stories of women who want to be like their favorite "star" on their big day, or worse, morph into divas or bridezillas who feel entitled to devastate their family's finances in service of their "dream wedding." I am mystified by the idea of spending money you don't have on a wedding just to keep up with people you've never actually met.

    I think the constant media coverage of Hollywood is a huge disservice to our sense of self. We compare our lives to manufactured, professionally styled images of people and events, not real people. Just like those angular, pore-less models you see in magazines who have been air brushed, so too are the reporting of celebrity weddings worked over by professionals. You can read all about the gorgeous items featured in Kim Kardashian's wedding, but chances are, those were paid sponsorships.

    Perhaps that is what I object to the most, the idea of a wedding as a product commercial or illusion-fueled fantasy. I understand how the economics work - celebrities beget press coverage and if your bracelet/watch/car/wedding dress is wrapped around the celebrity, your bracelet/watch/car/wedding dress is going to become more sought after. Having been behind the scenes, might I suggest that much of the frenzy surrounding celebrity weddings is a fabrication and trying to emulate it is an exercise in futility?

    I remember vividly the day of Kevin Costner and his bride Christine's wedding at their ranch in Aspen, Colorado. I was busy running around with my team putting out the usual fires, and calming a few frayed nerves. I was so consumed with my work on the ranch that I wasn't really aware of the media frenzy that the wedding was causing in this small mountain town. It was not until I was getting ready to line up the wedding party that I looked up at the hillside overlooking the property and my mouth nearly dropped open to see it covered with photographers and many many long lenses. And I thought to myself, what is it these people are trying to capture? What story are they trying to tell? Having witnessed celebrity nuptials several times since that day, I can attest to the following; there is no special story, celebrity weddings are like all other weddings, they have snafus, annoying family members, bouquets that need to be fixed, toasts you could have lived a lifetime without. It's a wedding, that's it, no more nor less. If you are still vested in fairytales, may I suggest the Brothers Grimm, they were my favorite. When I was eight.

    Hollywood doesn't hold a monopoly on magic or creativity or perfection. Authentic, magical moments happen when people express who they really are at their weddings. It happens when a child interrupts the ceremony to scream that they love the bride, making everyone laugh. Sometimes it happens when no one is watching, and the father of the groom hugs his son for the first time in years. Weddings, no matter how lavish, are intimate and personal and ought to be low on show and high on warmth. I have no interest in weddings that serve to imitate someone else's life. What I am passionate about is celebrating the real life of my clients and would rather be known for my lack of illusions than my celebrity roster.

    ?

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yifat-oren/im-a-celebrity-wedding-pl_b_1163448.html

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    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    SLAMonline: Freed Up: The NCAA?s refereeing philosophy is in the process of becoming more like the NBA?s. http://t.co/zDJnL9nT

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    About that left-libertarian alliance thing (Unqualified Offerings)

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    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179809675?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Snow hits New Mexico, roads closed across the state

    The storm has hit central and northern New Mexico.

    >Check your weather forecast

    Some areas are reporting more than 6 inches of snow.

    Many motorists are left stranded due to the following road closures:?

    Interstate 40 between Albuquerque and Gallup

    I-40 from Tucumcari to the Torrance County line

    I-40 eastbound in Albuquerque between Louisiana and Tramway

    I-40 eastbound between the East Mountains and Tucumcari

    I-25 through Socorro County

    U.S. 285 from Vaughn to Roswell

    U.S. 550 between Bloomfield and Bernalillo

    U.S. 64 between Tierra Amarilla and Tres Piedras

    N.M. 120 between Roy and Yates

    N.M. 72 between Folsom and Raton

    Difficult and severe driving conditions are reported throughout the state.

    >Check complete traffic conditions

    The storm is expected to last through Friday.

    Meanwhile, the New Mexico Transportation Department says some phone service providers are having issues with 511, the Department?s road advisory hot line.

    Because of the pending winter storm, if the public is having trouble with their mobile device in reaching 511, they can connect to 511 by calling 1-800-432-4269.

    The transportation department says it is currently working on the situation and hopes to have the problem solved soon.

    Count on KOB Eyewitness News 4 to bring you up to the minute weather and road updates.

    Source: http://eastmountains.kob.com/news/news/104561-snow-hits-new-mexico-roads-closed-across-state

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    Yemen interim government priorities are electricity and oil derivatives

    Posted in: Business & Economy
    Written By: Faisal Darem
    Article Date: Dec 24, 2011 - 7:57:02 PM

    The government puts returning the affected basic services in its urgent priorities, topped by electricity and oil derivatives.

    Economic experts confirmed that the Yemeni economy was suffering greatly even before the crisis, but the political unrest exacerbated the situation.

    Dr. Mohammad al-Maitami, a professor of economics at Sana?a University have said? "Tens of thousands of small businesses stopped working, leading to tens of thousands of workers losing their jobs, and many business people lost their capital because of the disruptions."

    Al-Maitami called the economy "the focal point of the political process, and the root of the humanitarian problems".

    He said commodity prices have risen seven-fold, especially after the absence of oil derivatives from the market, which will lead to higher inflation this year.
    "These losses cannot be regained in a short period of time, and hard work is required to mitigate the negative effects on the economy and subsequently achieve partial stability," al-Maitami said.

    The cabinet approved Monday the national reconciliation government's general program, which is to be submitted to the parliament soon.
    In its meeting chaired by Prime Minister Mohammed Salem Basindwa, the cabinet assigned Higher Education and Scientific Research Minister and the cabinet's secretary general to revise the program taking the ministers' notes into consideration.
    The program is based on the constitution, Gulf initiative and its executive mechanism in addition to the draft 4th four-year plan for socio-economic development and poverty reduction 2011 ? 2015.

    It targets a set of priorities the government will focus on to tackle the challenges Yemen is facing currently.

    In the political area, the government will mobilize all national efforts in order to restore political stability and security, create the suitable environment to achieve safe and peaceful transfer of power, respect human rights and carry out the youths' legitimate demands for change.

    Economically, the government puts returning the affected basic services in its urgent priorities, topped by electricity and oil derivatives.

    The government will seeks to convince the fraternal and friendly States to establish a special international fund for Yemen to finance priority projects for governorates' development and contract with consulting firms to prepare the required studies and select companies to carry out them.

    In addition, it will set up a fund to present monthly assistances for families of killed and wounded people and to hospitalize the wounded people abroad if required.

    The government will form committees to contact with youth movements all over the country to discuss and involve them in determining the country's future.
    ?

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    ??? Requirements and Obstacles for an E-Government in Yemen

    Source: http://www.yobserver.com/business-and-economy/10021730.html

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    Training stepped up for Afghan special forces

    In this Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 photo, members of the growing Afghan special forces, practicing a house raid, prepare to enter and clear the building of suspected insurgents on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Deb Riechmann)

    In this Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 photo, members of the growing Afghan special forces, practicing a house raid, prepare to enter and clear the building of suspected insurgents on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Deb Riechmann)

    (AP) ? "Attention! Attention! You are surrounded by Afghan forces. Come out with your hands up."

    The order barked by an Afghan soldier launched a training exercise last week that pitted members of the nation's growing elite force against actors posing as Taliban fighters.

    Afghanistan and the U.S.-led coalition have stepped up training of the Afghan special forces unit to fill the vacuum that will be left by foreign troops slated to end their combat mission in 2014. In the future, it will be Afghan special forces countering insurgents in villages across the country.

    As the force expands, they will also lead more of the controversial house searches ? something that could mitigate Afghan President Hamid Karzai's intense opposition to the nighttime raids by international troops that Afghans have found culturally offensive.

    Even though Afghan troops have been along for the more than 2,800 raids during the past year, Karzai has argued that the teams often treat innocent Afghans as if they were insurgents and violate citizens' privacy in the conservative Afghan society.

    Karzai wants all raids halted. He wants foreign troops to stop entering Afghan homes. The thorny issue is being negotiated by U.S. and Afghan officials crafting a strategic agreement that will govern how remaining American forces operate in Afghanistan after 2014.

    A recent national assembly of elders advised the Karzai government to allow the raids to continue as long as they are conducted solely by Afghans. If so, many more Afghan special forces soldiers need to be trained.

    Neither NATO nor the Afghan Ministry of Defense would disclose how many Afghan special forces had been trained or how large the force will become. Jalaluddin Yaftali, a special forces team leader at the training site, said the force currently numbered 1,000 to 1,500.

    "It takes time. It's like nation-building ? an endless task. It will take years, but the will is there and right now the force is growing," said Afghan army Col. Mohammad Farid Ahmadi.

    "The program started two years ago, but now we are jointly working with the coalition forces to Afghanize as soon as possible. We have already started. It's growing."

    So far, most have been recruited from the Afghan National Army Commandos, a quick reaction force regarded as the most professional unit in the Afghan army. Commandos receive 10 weeks of training on top of the roughly 10 weeks they completed to become an Afghan soldier. Moreover, Afghan soldiers usually serve about four years as commandos before being selected for special forces training.

    Their training is further refined while partnered with American forces. Eventually, they will be tasked with a variety of operational missions, including night raids, throughout the country.

    "It not only takes a long time to select the right people for the job, but also to bring them through a training program so they are capable of operating with other special forces or on their own," German Brig. Gen. Carsten Jacobson, a NATO spokesman, said at the training site on the outskirts of Kabul, the Afghan capital.

    While some are already conducting solo operations, the Afghan special forces will continue to need coalition air power, intelligence and other support for years to come, he said.

    Seth Jones, a RAND Corp. political scientist who advised the commander of U.S. Special Operations forces in Afghanistan, said it's hard to rush special forces training.

    "The Afghan program, which was first conceptualized in 2009 and established in 2010, is relatively new. I remember participating in the brainstorming sessions as we helped build the Afghan special forces," Jones said.

    "Focusing on numbers, rather than quality, and trying to mass produce Afghan special forces would be a serious mistake. I'm not suggesting anyone is doing this yet, but it should be monitored very closely."

    The Afghan soldiers conducting the training exercise crouched in shadows at the foot of man-made hills surrounding the practice compound. The residential compound resembled a western cowboy movie set.

    "Drop your weapons!" the Afghan soldier barked into a bullhorn. "Keep your hands raised and come out."

    Trying to give the occupants time to cooperate, the more than 20-man Afghan special forces team waited patiently, their guns drawn. When nobody came out, they tossed two harmless grenades that made loud bangs when they landed in front of the house.

    A few minutes later, an actress covered in a red shawl slowly emerged with her hands raised. The soldier with the bullhorn asked her to reveal her face so the troops could be sure she was a woman and not a man. When it was clear that she was female, she was led away to be searched by a female Afghan soldier.

    Having male troops search females is taboo in Afghanistan. So is touching a family's Quran, the Muslim holy book, or entering a home without being invited ? things that foreign forces have learned in the decade-long war.

    Soon after the woman left, two men walked from the house with their hands held high. Making sure they weren't armed, the troops ordered them to lift their shirts and pant legs. The would-be Afghan suspects then were cuffed and taken away.

    "We are asking the Defense Ministry to make one special forces platoon of just female soldiers so they can go talk to the families, the children, the women," Yaftali said. "If you are a female, you can talk openly with the family."

    It was clear to onlookers that the more than 20 Afghan special forces soldiers who conducted the house search and did a live ammunition training exercise with M4 rifles and 9mm pistols were the best of the elite force. With their dark glasses, night vision headsets, microphones and radios, they looked just like their U.S. Special Operations forces counterparts.

    Jones said the first Afghan special forces soldiers trained were very competent because they were recruited directly from the Afghan National Army Commandos.

    "In practical terms, this suggests that there will be some variation in the competence of Afghan special forces by 2014," Jones said. "Some will be fully capable ... but others may struggle."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-25-AS-Afghanistan-Elite-Force/id-a9cdd393cc2541bb939afbe3c2eed73d

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    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    Analysis: Isolated on tax cut, House GOP blinks (AP)

    WASHINGTON ? With tea party-backed first-termers calling the shots, House Republicans snatched political defeat from the jaws of victory in a year-end showdown over Social Security payroll tax cuts and jobless benefits.

    This time, they pushed the country to the brink ? and wound up blinking.

    "In the end House Republicans felt like they were re-enacting the Alamo, with no reinforcements and our friends shooting at us," said veteran Republican Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas.

    Precisely.

    By spurning a deal that Senate Republicans had embraced, for a two-month extension of tax cuts for 160 million Americans and jobless benefits for millions more, the House wing of the party isolated itself politically and by some calculations improved President Barack Obama's re-election prospects.

    Friday brought a humbling surrender, the only realistic alternative despite grumbling from scattered holdouts and Newt Gingrich, courting tea party support in the race for the presidential nomination.

    By then, even allies said Republicans had become vulnerable to Obama's accusation that they, alone, were threatening a fragile economic recovery and the well-being of the employed and unemployed alike. "Right now, the bipartisan compromise that was reached on Saturday is the only viable way to prevent a tax hike on Jan. 1," Obama said Tuesday after the House rejected the two-month measure that had sailed through the Senate on a vote of 89-10.

    The reliably conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal piled on, referring to a circular Republican firing squad. The GOP has "achieved the small miracle of letting Mr. Obama position himself as an election-year tax cutter. ... This should be impossible," it wrote on Wednesday.

    One poll said Obama ran ahead of Republicans when it came to handling taxes, an issue that has generally favored the GOP since Ronald Reagan sat in the White House three decades ago.

    No less critical were Senate Republicans, fearing the impact on their own political prospects, both individually and as a group eager to gain a majority in the 2012 elections. A gain of four seats would give them control, and several close races are likely. Losses suddenly seemed possible instead. There was in even talk that the hardline stance by House Republicans was putting the GOP's big majority in that chamber in danger.

    Most importantly, for the first time all year, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell wasn't in a position to help as House Speaker John Boehner sought to carry out the wishes of his rank and file, the Kentucky senator having voted for the bill that House Republicans insisted was a loser.

    At its core, the dispute was a simple one.

    Talks between the two parties in the Senate on a full-year extension faltered when negotiators could not agree on the cuts needed to make sure the measure did not increase deficits. The two-month stopgap bill was designed to keep the tax cuts and jobless benefits going until the negotiations could resume again after the first of the year.

    To the tea party types, that smacked of government as usual, precisely what they came to Washington to change.

    "We're as unified as we've been all year," said Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, on the night before the House Republicans rejected the Senate bill, demanded negotiations on a compromise and drove themselves into a political dead end.

    This time, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Democrats had no incentive to negotiate, unlike earlier when brinkmanship pushed the government to the edge of a partial shutdown or an unprecedented default.

    They and the White House had already caved to Republican demands that any extension be paid for, and that Obama decide within 60 days whether to allow construction of an oil pipeline from Canada to Texas.

    The president had threatened to veto any measure that linked tax cuts and the pipeline, hoping to postpone a decision on the project until after the election. Late last week, he did an about-face and demanded Congress send him a bill that did precisely that.

    The reversal gave Republicans the political victory some had sought if they were going to approve an extension of the tax cuts and jobless benefits at the core of Obama's jobless program.

    Boehner told House Republicans as much in a conference call on Saturday, according to several officials who listened. They added he recommended no specific course of action and sought the all views.

    Some lawmakers suspected Boehner had acquiesced in the two-month extension that McConnell worked out, and he was challenged on it 48 hours later in a closed-door meeting. He bristled at the accusation, according to several participants, and denied it flatly.

    There were hints of infighting. Behind closed doors, one Republican lawmaker raised a concern about a memo ? inaccurate, he said ? from an unidentified staff aide who wrote that Boehner favored a more conciliatory approach than Majority Leader Eric Cantor and other members of the leadership.

    "We're here and ready to work," Boehner told reporters on Wednesday morning. He spoke at a made-for-television event with Cantor and the eight Republicans, including three first-termers, appointed to conduct non-existent negotiations with Democrats.

    Little more than 24 hours later, the charade ended when Boehner informed his own rank and file, no consultations permitted.

    By then, even two newcomers to the House had issued public statements calling for an end to the standoff.

    "I don't think that my constituents should have a tax increase because of Washington's dysfunction," said freshman Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., now a voting member of the government he was criticizing.

    The struggle over, Reid said he hoped the episode had been "a very good learning experience, especially to those who are newer" to Congress.

    "Everything we do around here does not have to wind up in a fight."

    ___

    EDITOR'S NOTE ? David Espo covers Congress for The Associated Press.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_go_co/us_payroll_tax_analysis

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    Central California SPCA needs more help for ailing horses

    The public is responding to the plight of 30 neglected and malnourished horses found at two farms in Fresno County over the past week, contributing more than $2,000 in donations to provide feed and care for the animals.

    But officials at the Central California Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said they remain in need of more donations of cash, hay, food and supplies to properly care for the horses. The sudden influx of large livestock has created a pressing need for portable corral fencing that has been part of an ongoing fundraising campaign as well.

    "Our target for building the corral was $11,000, and that's just for the outside corral fence itself," said Beth Caffrey, the SPCA's humane education administrator. But, she added, that was for a much smaller corral to cope with only a handful of horses including four that were seized in October.

    Caffrey said SPCA officials have yet to determine how much more space and corral fencing they will need to accommodate additional horses from the two neglect cases last week. So far, she said, the SPCA had raised $5,000 for the corral.

    Nineteen starving horses were found Tuesday on a ranch on East Shepherd Avenue, north of Clovis. One had to be euthanized because it was severely malnourished. The owner of the horses was arrested for suspicion of felony animal abuse and is free on bond.

    On Friday, a second herd of hungry and dehydrated horses was discovered on a ranch on South Garfield Avenue near Riverdale. Officials said 14 horses were found at the ranch, and two were euthanized because of their poor condition. Four dead horses were also found on the ranch. The horses' owner is reportedly out of the country but could face arrest for animal cruelty, officials said.

    In addition to the surge in cash donations, some donors have also provided hay to help feed the horses, Caffrey said. On Saturday, Caffrey said it can cost up to $10 per day to feed each horse. Among the other supplies needed to care for the horses are halters, ropes, and buckets, tubs and troughs for food and water.

    On Friday, Caffrey suggested it could cost as much as $60 to $70 daily to feed each horse. She said the cost was so high because the afflicted animals have special nutritional needs and because many of the horses are wild and waste much of their feed.

    Horse owners and livestock feed store operators, however, said the SPCA's figure was unrealistically high. Based on the current prices of hay and feed supplements, they said, it should cost $5 to $7 a day to feed a healthy adult horse. A malnourished horse would need some additional feed and care, they said, but nowhere near $60 or $70 a day.

    Caffrey said Saturday that she re-estimated the feed cost after checking with horse experts.

    The reporter can be reached at tsheehan@fresnobee.com or (559) 441-6319.

    Source: http://www.fresnobee.com/2011/12/24/2660775/central-california-spca-needs.html

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    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    Roseville's Joe Block is new radio voice of Brewers baseball

    Roseville native and Michigan State alum Joe Block is the Brewers' new radio voice. He joins the legendary Bob Uecker, starting in 2012.

    It's the first full-time major league job for Block, whose goal since his youth was to get to this point.

    "I'm ecstatic to have the opportunity to work with one of the all-time greats in Bob Uecker and help bring everyone in Wisconsin their Brewers on the radio for years to come," Block said.

    "Bob and I have talked about how much fun we'll have in the booth all summer and I can't wait to get started."

    Block hosted the Dodgers' postgame radio show in 2011, and was the radio studio host for the NBA's New Orleans Hornets for four years before that. He's also worked major college basketball and football for Comcast Sports Southeast for the past 10 years.

    But Block's passion always has been baseball. Block, who counts late Tigers broadcaster Ernie Harwell among his idols, worked his way up through the minor leagues ? doing games from Jacksvonille, Fla., to Great Falls and Billings, Mont. He's done more than 900 professional baseball games, including select games for the Expos during their final two seasons in Montreal (2003-04).

    Now Block, 33, is a major leaguer. In Milwaukee, he replaces Cory Provus, who left for the Twins' broadcast booth.

    "Joe and I spent some time together and I think he'll be a great addition," Uecker said. "Joe sounds good on the air, he's a Midwest guy and he wants to be in Milwaukee as a part of the Brewers. Bottom line, all of those are important qualities that will make him successful here."

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    Source: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20111223/SPORTS0104/112230414/1129/rss15

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    HBT: Yankees' luxury tax down to $13.9 million

    It?s time for baseball?s biggest spenders to pay up.

    According to the Associated Press, via NBCSports.com, the Yankees were hit with a $13.9 million luxury tax bill from MLB on Thursday and the Red Sox were asked to pay $3.4 million.

    For the Yanks, it?s their lowest luxury tax bill since 2003, down from $18 million in 2010 and $25.7 million in 2009. For the Red Sox, it?s their highest bill ever, up from the $1.5 million they paid last year. Both fees, which are based on the teams? payrolls for 2011, must be paid to the MLB?commissioner?s?office by the end of January. The luxury tax threshold was $178 million.

    Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/22/yankees-red-sox-only-teams-hit-with-luxury-tax-bills/related/

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    Friday, December 23, 2011

    Lady Gaga 'So Happy' About Oscar Recognition

    Pop star's duet with Elton John, 'Hello Hello,' is on short list for Best Original Song.
    By Jocelyn Vena


    Lady Gaga performs at the EMAs
    Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage

    How does Lady Gaga feel about making the short list for the Best Original Song race at the Oscars? Well, she's pretty excited.

    "Just heard my duet 'Hello, Hello' with Elton [John] is up for nomination at the Oscars! 'Gnomeo & Juliet' is such a beautiful film," she wrote on Twitter. "I'm so happy!!"

    On Monday, it was announced that the Gaga/Elton duet is one of the 39 tracks vying for a nomination. will.i.am's "Rio" track, "Hot Wings," Mary J. Blige's "The Living Proof" from "The Help," and Zooey Deschanel's "Winnie the Pooh" track, "So Long," along with multiple tracks from "The Muppets," are also in the running. The final nominations will be announced January 24, and the awards show is slated to take place February 26 at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles.

    Gaga is celebrating her latest achievement in Japan, where she will spend the holidays. "Well, I'll be in Japan right up until Christmas Day," she recently told MTV News. "So I'll be eating with all my Japanese Little Monsters. I like shabu shabu [a type of Japanese hotpot]."

    Since touching down, Mother Monster has been keeping her fans up-to-date on what she's been up to on Twitter. "Sipping tea in Japan with Haus. Feeling so grateful," she wrote. "We sold about 1 million albums a month worldwide since the release of BORN THIS WAY."

    The busy holiday season caps off an even busier year for Lady Gaga, who happened to be MTV News' Top Newsmaker of 2011. She tirelessly released singles, videos, personas and a chart-topping album (Born This Way) and scooped up awards at seemingly every show from the Grammys to the VMAs. She was also #5 on our list of Best Artists of 2011, and her disco empowerment track "Born This Way" snagged the #5 spot on the Best Songs of 2011 list as well.

    Related Artists

    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676332/lady-gaga-hello-hello-academy-awards.jhtml

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    Monday, December 19, 2011

    Key Things to Know About Unemployment Insurance ? Center on ...

    Special Series: Economic Recovery Watch

    In the heat of the battle over how to address the imminent expiration of federal emergency unemployment insurance (UI) benefits (and the payroll tax cut), policymakers should not lose sight of what UI is and how it has functioned over the years. UI not only cushions the financial blow for workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own but also helps sustain consumer demand during economic downturns by providing a continuing stream of dollars for families to spend.

    What is unemployment insurance?

    The federal-state unemployment insurance system helps people who have lost their jobs and are eligible for benefits by temporarily replacing part of their lost wages.[1] Created in 1935, UI is a form of social insurance in which employers pay taxes (which economists believe are financed by reductions in their employees' compensation) into the UI system and states use those funds to provide income support to workers and their families if they lose their jobs.

    To qualify for UI benefits, a person must have lost a job through no fault of his or her own and be ready, willing, and able to take a "suitable" new job. Unemployment insurance does not cover people who leave a job voluntarily, people looking for their first job, or re-entrants who previously left the labor force voluntarily. For the past 25 years, fewer than half of unemployed workers have actually received unemployment insurance, except during recessions.[2]

    The average unemployment benefit is about $300 per week. However, individual benefit levels vary greatly depending on the state and the worker's previous earnings. State laws typically aim to replace about half of a worker's previous earnings up to a maximum benefit level. Because the benefit is capped, UI benefits replace a smaller share of previous earnings for higher-wage workers than lower-wage workers. [3]

    The total number of weeks of benefits available in any particular state depends on the unemployment rate and unemployment insurance laws in the state where the person worked.[4] Workers are eligible for up to 26 weeks of benefits from the regular, state-funded UI program in most states.[5]

    In the current downturn, workers in any state who exhaust their regular UI benefits before they can find a job can receive up to 34 additional weeks of benefits through the temporary federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) program enacted in 2008. [6] That number rises to 53 weeks in states with especially high unemployment rates. Workers who exhaust their regular UI and EUC benefits can receive up to 20 additional weeks of benefits through the permanent federal-state Extended Benefits (EB) program if their state's unemployment insurance laws allow it.

    What's the issue before Congress?

    EUC is scheduled to expire on January 3 ? even though over two-fifths of the unemployed have been looking for a job for more than 26 weeks. Also scheduled to expire is full federal funding for the permanent EB program, whose cost is typically shared 50-50 between the states and the federal government.[7] Full federal funding for EB, which Congress enacted in the Recovery Act, allowed many states to temporarily expand their programs.

    With the unemployment rate expected to remain above 8 percent through next year,[8] the fundamental question that Congress is debating is whether to continue these emergency federal UI programs.

    If Congress does not extend these federal programs before the holidays, all federal UI benefits will end, and the number of weeks available in the rest of the states will shrink significantly (see Figure 1). Most of the several hundred thousand workers who exhaust their regular state benefits each month would receive no further help. The Administration estimates that up to 6 million individuals would lose benefits over the course of 2012.

    How does UI affect the economy?

    The problem for most businesses in an economic slump is not that they don't have enough capacity to meet existing demand but that they don't have enough demand to fully utilize their existing capacity. Thus, policies that put customers in the stores with money to spend are likely to be more successful at closing the output gap and creating jobs than giving businesses tax breaks.

    As the Congressional Budget Office has explained, unemployment insurance "adds to overall demand and raises employment over what it otherwise would have been during periods of economic weakness."[9] UI benefits are targeted on workers who are involuntarily unemployed and whose income has fallen, a group that tends to be concentrated in the areas and industries most affected by a slowdown. Supporting spending by unemployed workers in hard-pressed communities helps prevent the spread of layoffs and job losses in those communities.

    This is why CBO consistently ranks assistance for unemployed workers as one of the most effective policies for generating economic growth and creating jobs ? CBO rated it first among the 11 spending and tax measures evaluated in a recent report.[10] Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, estimates that each dollar of UI benefits generates $1.55 in new economic activity in the first year.

    A Labor Department report released last year (originally commissioned during the Bush Administration) reinforces CBO's conclusion. It found that in the depths of the recession, federal emergency UI benefits boosted employment by about 750,000 jobs. [11] (Regular, state-funded UI benefits boosted employment by an additional 1 million jobs.)

    Failure to extend the federal unemployment programs would mean less spending by unemployed workers and their families, which would hurt sales at local businesses and undermine job creation in an already weak recovery. Effective temporary stimulus measures like emergency UI benefits can give the economic recovery a much needed boost and reduce the risk of sliding back into recession.

    Why do we still need a federal unemployment insurance program?

    Congress has created a program to provide additional weeks of UI benefits in every major recession since the 1950s. The reason is simple: job opportunities are scarce in a weak economy and it can take jobless workers longer than the 26 weeks that state UI programs typically provide to find a job, no matter how hard they are looking.

    These federal programs have always been temporary, ending when the economy is back on track and job opportunities are starting to open up ? but not before then.

    Basic economics tells us that we're still far away from that point, which means it would be a serious mistake to let the current programs expire on January 3rd. Finding a job remains extremely difficult: in October, about 14 million people were competing for about 3 million job openings. That means that even if every job opening were instantly filled with an unemployed worker, three out of four unemployed workers would still be looking for a job. Over 40 percent of the unemployed have been looking for a job for more than 26 weeks, half of them for over a year, according to the Pew Economic Policy Group.[12] We still have a long way to climb out of the huge jobs hole that the recession created. Allowing the federal programs to expire now, while the economy is underperforming, would be like taking our foot off the gas pedal just as we're trying to restart the economic engine.

    As Figure 2 illustrates, the highest unemployment rate at which federal unemployment benefits have ended in previous recessions was 7.2 percent (in March 1985). November's unemployment rate was 8.6 percent.

    Does extending unemployment insurance make unemployment worse?

    Opponents of continuing emergency unemployment benefits often assert that UI discourages people from looking for work and that ending these benefits would speed a return to full employment. Though research from earlier periods showed that additional weeks of unemployment insurance have an impact in lengthening unemployment spells, the most careful recent research indicates that these concerns are overblown. [13]

    Additional weeks of UI benefits have three distinct effects on the duration of unemployment spells. First, unemployment insurance has the beneficial effect of allowing an otherwise financially strapped unemployed worker to search more efficiently for an appropriate job (rather than having to accept the first job offered, whether or not it is a good match for his or her skills). Second, since unemployed workers are required to seek work in order to qualify for UI benefits, additional weeks of UI benefits keep unemployed workers attached to the labor force and looking for jobs for longer than they might have without those benefits. Finally, UI creates minor disincentives to look hard for a job.

    One study released in early 2010 offers the "back of the envelope calculation," based on the relevant research, that weeks of benefits added through EUC could account for "between 0.7 and 1.8 percentage points of the 5.5-percentage-point rise in the unemployment rate." [14] But it also suggested that "the true effect of extended UI benefits on unemployment duration is likely to be at the lower end of these estimates."

    Indeed, a careful study of recent evidence by economist Jesse Rothstein (former chief economist at the Labor Department) found that federal extensions of UI in the past few years likely had an even smaller effect than this. Rothstein found that the unemployment rate in December 2010 would have been only about 0.2 percentage points lower without the extension of unemployment compensation. [15] Moreover, Rothstein also found that at least half of this 0.2 percentage-point increase could be from increasing labor force attachment ? i.e. keeping UI recipients actively searching for work rather than dropping out of the labor force. Most other studies of the disincentive effect of UI in the current downturn have also found relatively small effects.

    Harvard economist Lawrence Katz has also observed that traditional estimates of the relationship between UI and the length of unemployment spells ignore other effects, such as "the macroeconomic stimulus impacts of increased consumption expenditures by the unemployed ? as well as the gains from keeping more of the long-term unemployed attached to the labor market rather than moving onto disability programs." [16]

    Arguments that emergency UI benefits are an important contributor to high unemployment in today's economy have cause and effect backwards. We have a temporary federal program because unemployment is so high and jobs are so hard to find. When there are four unemployed workers for every job opening, it is hard to see how sharply curtailing the duration of unemployment insurance benefits would increase the pace of job creation.

    Who receives unemployment compensation?

    Unemployment insurance has kept millions of people out of poverty in each of the past few years. CBPP analysis finds that the UI system kept 4.6 million people out of poverty in 2010 ? 3.2 million of them as a result of the federal emergency UI benefits that Congress is debating whether to continue.[17]

    As critical as UI is for many families near the poverty line, it is also a bedrock middle-class program. Analysis of recent Census data shows that nearly 70 percent of the families who received UI during 2010 had incomes in the middle 60 percent of the income distribution (see Figure 3).

    A CBO analysis released last year found that the median income of families receiving UI benefits was $54,800 in 2009. [18] The median income of families receiving UI who had been unemployed for more than 26 weeks ? those households who will not have access to any federal unemployment benefits in most states if Congress allows the emergency programs to expire ? was slightly lower at $49,000, but close to the middle of the income distribution.

    CBO also found that workers in families with incomes of more than twice the federal poverty line (about $44,000 for a family of four in 2009) were more than twice as likely to receive UI benefits during spells of unemployment than workers in families below the poverty line.

    How many unemployed workers would lose benefits if Congress does not extend the federal programs?

    If Congress fails to continue the federal UI programs, 1.8 million workers will miss out on federal unemployment benefits in January, according to the National Employment Law Project (NELP).[19] The Administration projects that this number will rise to 6 million over the course of 2012.

    NELP's estimate of 1.8 million workers affected in January includes:

    • Over 430,000 workers who will exhaust their regular state benefits in January and won't have access to any federal benefits. Several hundred thousand unemployed workers exhaust their regular benefits each month ? a trend that will continue over the coming year.
    • Over 700,000 workers receiving EB benefits who will lose those benefits immediately because their states will end their EB program when full federal funding expires.
    • Almost 650,000 workers receiving EUC benefits who will lose those benefits prematurely. EUC provides benefits in "tiers" of weeks; people receiving EUC as of January 3rd will be allowed to complete their current tier but not move on to the next tier.[20] NELP estimates that almost 650,000 workers will reach the end of their current tier and thus receive no further federal benefits in January. Many more will lose EUC benefits prematurely in the months to follow.

    End Notes:

    [1] For a more thorough discussion of the unemployment insurance system, please see Hannah Shaw and Chad Stone, "Introduction to Unemployment Insurance," Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, April 16, 2010, http://www.cbpp.org/files/12-19-02ui.pdf.

    [2] The share was less than 40 percent prior to the start of the current recession, but it is now much higher. The rate goes up in recessions because job losers account for a larger fraction of the unemployed and because people unemployed for 27 weeks or longer may continue to receive benefits through temporary, federally funded programs.

    [3] In 2009, the most recent year for which data are available, the average UI recipient collected benefits equal to about 47 percent of lost earnings.

    [4] See "Policy Basics: How Many Weeks of Unemployment Compensation Are Available" (updated weekly) for information on the maximum duration of UI by state: http://www.cbpp.org/files/PolicyBasics_UI_Weeks.pdf.

    [5] Arkansas, Missouri, and South Carolina reduced the maximum duration of unemployment benefits available through their UI programs in 2011, and three more states ? Florida, Illinois, and Michigan ? will reduce benefits in January 2012. The duration of benefits available for an individual depends on his or her employment history in most states.

    [6] Fewer weeks of federal benefits are available in states with reduced regular benefits.

    [7] A technical change made last year that allowed the EB program to continue in states with persistently high rates of unemployment also expires at the end of 2011.

    [8] The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the unemployment rate will be 8.7 percent in both 2012 and 2013. Economist Mark Zandi estimates that the unemployment rate will be 9.0 percent in 2012 and 8.5 percent in 2013. The latest Blue Chip consensus estimate for 2012 is 9.0 percent. The Federal Reserve recently estimated that the unemployment rate would be between 8.5 and 8.7 percent in 2012, and between 7.8 and 8.2 percent in 2013.

    [9] Congressional Budget Office, "Unemployment Insurance Benefits and Family Income of the Unemployed," November 17, 2010, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/119xx/doc11960/11-17-UnemploymentInsurance.pdf.

    [10] Douglas Elmendorf, "Policies for Increasing Economic Growth and Employment in 2012 and 2013," testimony before the Senate Budget Committee, Congressional Budget Office, November 15, 2011, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/124xx/doc12437/11-15-Outlook_Stimulus_Testimony.pdf.

    [11] Wayne Vroman, "The Role of Unemployment Insurance as an Automatic Stabilizer During a Recession," Department of Labor, July 2010, http://wdr.doleta.gov/research/FullText_Documents/ETAOP2010-10.pdf .

    [12] The long-term unemployed represent 3.7 percent of the labor force. Prior to this recession, the previous highs for these statistics over the past six decades were 26.0 percent and 2.6 percent, respectively, in June 1983. Pew Fiscal Analysis Initiative, "A Year or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment," November 2011, http://www.pewtrusts.org/uploadedFiles/wwwpewtrustsorg/Reports/Fiscal_Analysis/Long-term-unemployment-addendum-November-2011.pdf .

    [13] For a more thorough discussion of some of the research on the disincentive effects of extended UI compensation, please see Chad Stone and Hannah Shaw, "Emergency Unemployment Insurance Benefits Remain Critical for the Economy," Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, November 10, 2010, http://www.cbpp.org/files/11-10-10ui.pdf.

    [14] Michael Elsby, Bart Hobijn, and Aysegul Sahin, "The Labor Market in the Great Recession," Brookings Institution Papers on Economic Activity, Spring 2010, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/Programs/ES/BPEA/2010_spring_bpea_papers/2010a_bpea_eslby.pdf.

    [15] This is the estimate Rothstein finds using his preferred method of estimating the effect. Using alternate specifications he finds the range of the effect is from 0.1 to 0.5 percentage points.? Jesse Rothstein, "Unemployment Insurance and Job Search in the Great Recession," University of California, Berkley, October 16, 2011, http://gsppi.berkeley.edu/faculty/jrothstein/workingpapers/Rothstein-UI-Oct2011.pdf. For a concise summary of this paper, please see Heidi Shierholz, "What's UI got to do with it?" Economic Policy Institute, September 22, 2011, http://www.epi.org/blog/unemployment-insurance-benefits/.

    [16] Lawrence F. Katz, "Long-Term Unemployment in the Great Recession," testimony before the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress, April 29, 2010, pp. 4-5, http://jec.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?a=Files.Serve&File_id=e1cc2c23-dc6f-4871-a26a-fda9bd32fb7e. For a concise summary of this testimony and other recent research, see Joint Economic Committee, "Does Unemployment Insurance Inhibit Job Search?" July 2010, http://jec.senate.gov/public/?a=Files.Serve&File_id=935ec1e7-45a0-461f-a265-bbba6d6d11de.

    [17] Arloc Sherman, "Poverty and Financial Distress Would Have Been Substantially Worse in 2010 Without Government Action, New Census Data Show," Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, November 7, 2011, http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3610.

    [18] Congressional Budget Office, "Unemployment Insurance Benefits and Family Income of the Unemployed," November 17, 2010, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/119xx/doc11960/11-17-UnemploymentInsurance.pdf.

    [19] National Employment Law Project, "Hanging On By a Thread," October 11, 2011, http://www.nelp.org/page/-/UI/2011/NELP_UI_Extension_Report_2011.pdf?nocdn=1.

    [20] For more on the structure of EUC please refer to Hannah Shaw and Chad Stone, "Introduction to Unemployment Insurance," Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, April 16, 2010, http://www.cbpp.org/files/12-19-02ui.pdf.

    Source: http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3646

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