Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Romney says he's not letting up on Fla. campaign (AP)

DUNEDIN, Fla. ? Make no mistake: Mitt Romney isn't taking his foot off the gas ? or off Newt Gingrich's neck.

The Republican presidential candidate on Monday expressed confidence of victory in Tuesday's Florida primary but also made clear that he's girding for a long, state-by-state fight for the nomination against his chief rival and the other candidates still in the race.

"I don't think you can ever count on a state being in your corner," a relaxed Romney said as he flew with reporters and top aides from Jacksonville to Clearwater.

Over the course of the day, Romney continued to pummel Gingrich at every stop, even though polls show the former Massachusetts governor with a comfortable lead.

"You are not going to see Mitt Romney go into cruise control," said senior adviser Eric Fehrnstrom.

That's what Romney essentially did after crushing Gingrich's rise in Iowa a month ago by fiercely attacking him. Gingrich came in a dismal fourth place and his momentum was gone as the race turned to New Hampshire. Romney nearly stopped attacking his opponent, believing him politically dead, and won that state big. His jubilant advisers were envisioning an easy path to the nomination.

Then Gingrich headed to South Carolina, where he mounted a remarkable comeback and cruised to a 12 percentage point victory over Romney.

Just a week ago, Romney arrived in Florida nervous and tired after the staggering loss. He's spent the past week attacking Gingrich at every turn and assailing him on TV, where Romney and his allies are outspending Gingrich and his backers by almost five to one.

His campaign has held repeated conference calls with surrogates bashing Gingrich for his leadership style and ties to Freddie Mac. And when Gingrich appeared on a series of Sunday news talk shows ? Romney himself watched from his campaign bus ? the campaign made sure he was booked on all three network TV morning shows on Monday.

In Florida, Romney's advisers say they've seen the vindication of a strategy that focused on pushing Gingrich off his game, both in appearances and on the debate stage. "He's like a bubbling volcano when he's under pressure," Fehrnstrom said.

As his team looks ahead to the February calendar ? in particular Nevada on Feb. 4, Colorado and Minnesota on Feb. 7 and Michigan on Feb. 28 ? it plans to keep up that pressure while using the other two candidates in the race against him.

Texas Rep. Ron Paul has organized extensively in Nevada, and Romney's team is eager to talk up former Rick Santorum's chances in Minnesota. The former Pennsylvania senator was campaigning there Monday.

"It's not a two-person contest between Mitt and Newt Gingrich, as much as Newt might feel that way," Fehrnstrom said.

Gingrich's team is urging Santorum to drop out of the race to allow conservatives to consolidate their support behind a single candidate.

In foreclosure-wracked Nevada, Romney will likely keep up the message he's been pushing in Florida: Gingrich earned $1.6 million consulting for the quasi-government mortgage giant Freddie Mac. It's an attack Romney began early during the Florida campaign and one senior advisers say helped drive the former speaker's poll numbers down. Aides say the argument is also likely to resonate in Nevada, where home values have fallen and the foreclosure crisis is particularly severe.

Paul, who skipped Florida in favor of states that hold caucuses instead of primaries, could make a surprisingly strong showing. The state's large Mormon population and Romney's 2008 win in the state could make a victory there be simply meeting expectations instead of pushing Romney forward.

Speaking to reporters, Romney emphasized the state's active tea party ? possibly offering a preview of the campaign's effort to show he can connect with conservatives.

Gingrich, for his part, has vowed to stay in the race until the Republican National Convention in Tampa in August. On Monday, he was still talking about winning in Florida.

Romney himself showed flashes of the confidence he displayed in New Hampshire after a soaring victory speech focused exclusively on President Barack Obama.

"That's usually the case when you think you're going to lose, when you say, `I'm going to go on no matter what happens,'" Romney said of Gingrich. "That's usually not a good sign."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120131/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney

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Monday, January 30, 2012

Polling Shows Romney With Big Lead in Florida (Little green footballs)

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Most banks tightening credit to Europe, Fed says (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? More than two thirds of banks in a Federal Reserve survey of senior loan officers said they had tightened credit to European financial firms in January, underscoring the continent's severe banking crisis.

The survey, published on Monday, also found U.S. banks snapping up business from their beleaguered European competitors, countering the notion that new regulations are hurting Wall Street's competitiveness.

"About half of the respondents who reported competing with European banks noted such an increase in business," The Fed said.

There was also "more widespread tightening of standards" to non-financial firms that have U.S. operations and significant exposures to European economies.

Policymakers worry that a freezing up of bank lending in Europe could spill over into the United States, potentially threatening a fragile economic recovery.

Still, the findings painted a more benign picture of U.S. credit markets: Domestic lending standards were largely unchanged this month, while loan demand picked up somewhat.

Demand for home equity loans fell, the survey found, a sign of the housing sector's persistent weakness.

(Reporting By Pedro da Costa; Editing by Neil Stempleman and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120130/bs_nm/us_usa_fed_europe

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Cain backs Gingrich's presidential bid

(AP) ? Former presidential hopeful Herman Cain threw his support behind Newt Gingrich Saturday night, providing the former House speaker with a late boost just days before Florida's primary.

Cain, a tea party favorite, endorsed his fellow Georgian at a GOP fundraiser Saturday calling him "a patriot."

"Speaker Gingrich is not afraid of bold ideas," Cain said.

The former pizza executive, who left the race before the first nominating contests after facing accusations of unwanted sexual advances, suggested the two have both undergone intense scrutiny.

"I know that Speaker Gingrich is running for president and going through this sausage grinder," Cain said. "I know what this sausage grinder is all about."

Cain is set to campaign with Gingrich on Monday in an 11th hour push for support. Gingrich is in a fierce fight for Tuesday's Florida's GOP primary with Mitt Romney.

Gingrich on Saturday night said that, like Cain, he is running a campaign based on big ideas and bold solutions.

The decision was not unexpected but the announcement comes at a make or break moment. .

"I had it in my heart and mind a long time ago," Cain said.

The timing is similar to a Saturday night surprise four years ago, when then-Florida Gov. Charlie Crist endorsed John McCain's presidential bid.

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry also endorsed Gingrich when he bowed out of the race in South Carolina.

Since exiting the race in December, Cain appeared at a rally in South Carolina with late-night comedian Stephen Colbert.

Cain, the charismatic former head of Godfather's Pizza, briefly led in the polls in the fall. He became known for his signature 9-9-9 tax overhaul plan that would have scrapped the current tax code and replaced it with a 9 percent tax on individual income and corporate taxes as well as a new 9 percent national sales tax.

But his support plummeted after accusations that he sexually harassed women more than a decade ago when he led the National Restaurant Association. An Atlanta-area woman then stepped forward and said she had a lengthy sexual affair with Cain.

He denied the affair and any wrongdoing but withdrew from the race saying the accusations had become distracting and he needed to focus on his family.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-28-Cain-Gingrich/id-d57a8ea60f5d4dc0afd7a422ffeaf478

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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Hands on with Bag It! for iPhone and iPad

While checking out the showroom floor at Macworld 2012, we encountered this cute little game called Bag It! The goal is to efficiently bag your groceries while optimizing space


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

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If Round 1 is the war of words, Phil Davis leads 10-8 over Rashad Evans

CHICAGO -- In most interviews Phil Davis comes off as a reserved young man. He's not out to ruffle any feathers, but those of us who've had a chance to speak to him repeatedly always knew there was a potential media darling behind that conservative facade.

In the lead-up to Saturday's UFC on Fox 2 card, Rashad Evans has brought out the beast in Davis and the former UFC light heavyweight hasn't reacted too well.

It started last week when Evans flipped out on Davis calling him a "boy." Yesterday during the UFC on Fox 2 prefight press conference, Evans shook his head, appeared annoyed and even looked flustered on several occasions.

As the banter began, Evans tried to play it cool.

"For the most part, I've got nothing against Phil, but you we've got a fight so I've got a lot against him right now. It's personal, but not really PERSONAL personal," said Evans, who had heated prefight words with previous opponents like Tito Ortiz and Quinton Jackson.

Evans got irked when the issue of college wrestling came up. Phil Davis, a more accomplished NCAA star at Penn State than Evans was at Michigan State, laughed when someone asked if his opponent could beat him in a straight wrestling match. Evans kept saying "your technique is trash."

Then Davis was asked about missing the opportunity to face Evans back in August in Philadelphia. Davis quickly pointed out that he didn't get to fight in front of his friends and family from nearby Harrisburg, Pa. Evans took issue with the fact that Davis didn't say he was sad to lose out on the opportunity to fight him. Davis fired back, "Nobody heard me say that!"

Evans snapped again when Davis explained his understanding of what the result of a win could be, a possible title shot against Jon Jones.

"The winner of this fight will fight for the title, but in the event that I hit him too hard and break my hand ... it might lead to somebody else getting the title shot first," said Davis.

"You don't punch nobody hard. Phil can't hit. Phil punches with his hands open and everything," Evans said. "He couldn't bust a grape. You look like Arsenio Hall."

Davis laughed.

"Give him a hand y'all. Give him a hand," said Davis.

That opened the door for a female fan to ask Davis whether he looked more like Hall or NBA star Dwight Howard? Davis handled it gracefully as he done throughout the lead-up to Saturday's tilt. We'll see if his poise remains intact in the fight. Either way, this week showed he'll be a valuable asset on main cards for years to come in the UFC.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/round-1-war-words-phil-davis-10-8-154948395.html

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Lawyer withdraws $7.5 million dollar lottery claim

(AP) ? A New York attorney's decision to withdraw his claim on a multimillion dollar Iowa Lottery prize doesn't put to rest officials' questions about how he obtained the ticket.

Crawford Shaw, of Bedford, N.Y., withdrew his claim Thursday on a multimillion dollar Iowa Lottery prize just as mysteriously as he has made it, saying through a Des Moines law firm that he couldn't satisfy lottery officials' request for basic information about how he obtained the winning ticket.

The lottery has asked the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation and the Iowa attorney general to investigate.

Officials say Shaw submitted the ticket for redemption on behalf of a trust on Dec. 29, less than two hours before it expired, and has identified the recipient only as a corporation in the country of Belize. The lottery wants to know how Shaw obtained the ticket to make sure it wasn't stolen and that a valid player bought it.

It has been 13 months since the winning ticket was purchased at a Des Moines gas station in December 2010. The payout for the prize would have been $7.5 million cash, or $10.3 million spread over 25 years after taxes.

Iowa lottery officials had given Shaw until Friday to provide the identities and contact information of anyone who purchased or possessed the ticket.

Instead of claiming the prize in person, as is normally done, Shaw signed the ticket on behalf of the trust and shipped it by FedEx to a Des Moines law firm he had retained.

Shaw, 76, sent a fax to the law firm Thursday saying he doesn't know the identity of the purchaser. The firm relayed the information to lottery officials.

"In order that the claim be resolved without further controversy, Crawford Shaw, as Trustee for and on behalf of the Trust, does hereby withdraw the Claim and does hereby agree to take no further action to enforce the Claim," the fax signed by Shaw reads.

Shaw signed the ticket on behalf of Bedford, N.Y.-based Hexham Investments Trust, though lottery officials have said he misspelled the name of the trust by leaving off the second "h." Shaw claimed not to be a beneficiary of the trust.

Iowa Lottery CEO Terry Rich said Thursday that it's the strangest situation officials can recall in the 26-year history of the lottery. He declined to speculate on the details of the claim, saying if he knew more than what's been released, lottery officials would probably be writing a check to a winner.

"I'm telling you, if I could take all of the suggestions, it would be a heck of a fun book," Rich said.

He previously had said the lottery had received several claims that the ticket was stolen.

Iowa law also prohibits employees and contractors of the lottery, their relatives and anyone younger than 21 from playing.

Shaw said Wednesday through the Des Moines-based Davis Brown Law Firm that if the jackpot were paid, the money would be donated to charity. He declined to comment further Thursday.

Records show Shaw played at least a minor role in the collapse of Industrial Enterprises of America, a chemical company that was looted and bankrupted in 2009 by a stock manipulation scheme. Shaw helped found the company after taking control of a Houston-based shell corporation, serving as its CEO from 2004 to 2005.

Shaw's history also includes lawsuits alleging fraud in Delaware and Texas.

The unclaimed money will go toward future prizes, Rich said.

___

Associated Press writer Ryan J. Foley in Iowa City, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-27-Mystery%20Millionaire/id-56da1088494a4573be199466c7f02bde

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Friday, January 27, 2012

[OOC] Need For Speed: World Race

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House Dems raised $61 million in donations in 2011 (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The political committee representing House Democrats said it has raised more than $61 million last year, giving the group a stronger financial footing heading into the November election.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's fundraising blitz leaves it with $11.6 million in cash on hand, helping to extinguish the debt the group carried through late last year.

"Going into 2011, our goal was to match the Republican majority in fundraising," DCCC Chairman Steve Israel said. "But so far, our grassroots supporters have driven us to exceed all expectations."

The National Republican Congressional Committee, the Democrats' House counterpart, said it has about $15 million cash on hand. Federal Election Commission figures show the group would have had to raise an additional $9.6 million in December to match the DCCC's fundraising efforts.

A full report on both committees' expenses will be filed with the FEC by Jan. 31.

____

Follow Jack Gillum at http://twitter.com/jackgillum

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_el_ho/us_democrats_house_fundraising

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St. Louis hosts 1st big parade on Iraq War's end

Niliah Banks, foreground, works with other students in her fifth grade class at Ross Elementary create hand-made signs Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, in Creve Coeur, Mo. The signs will be used when St. Louis hosts a "Welcome Home the Heroes from Iraq Day" on Jan. 28 with a noontime parade through downtown to welcome veterans of the war in Iraq. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Niliah Banks, foreground, works with other students in her fifth grade class at Ross Elementary create hand-made signs Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, in Creve Coeur, Mo. The signs will be used when St. Louis hosts a "Welcome Home the Heroes from Iraq Day" on Jan. 28 with a noontime parade through downtown to welcome veterans of the war in Iraq. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Ross Elementary fifth grade students, clockwise from left, Juilanna Bell, Mollie Weinberg, Courtney Turner and Mckenzie Thompson work to create a hand-made sign Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, in Creve Coeur, Mo. The sign will be used when St. Louis hosts a "Welcome Home the Heroes from Iraq Day" on Jan. 28 with a noontime parade through downtown to welcome veterans of the war in Iraq. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

(AP) ? Since the Iraq War ended there has been little fanfare for the veterans returning home. No ticker-tape parades. No massive, flag-waving public celebrations.

So, two friends from St. Louis decided to change that. They sought donations, launched a Facebook page, met with the mayor and mapped a route. On Saturday, hundreds of veterans are expected to march in downtown St. Louis in the nation's first big welcome home parade since the last troops left Iraq in December.

"It struck me that there was this debate going on as to whether there should or shouldn't be a parade," said Tom Appelbaum, one of the organizers. "Instead of waiting around for somebody somewhere to say, 'Yes, let's have a parade,' we said, 'Let's just do it.'"

Appelbaum, a 46-year-old lawyer, and Craig Schneider, a 41-year-old school technology coordinator, said they were puzzled by the lack of celebrations marking the war's end. But, they wondered, if St. Louis could host thousands of people for a parade after their beloved Cardinals won the World Series, why couldn't there be a party for the troops who put their lives on the line?

The effort got help with donations from two corporations with St. Louis connections ? $10,000 from Anheuser-Busch and $7,500 from the Mayflower moving company. Individual donations have boosted the project's total budget to about $35,000. By comparison, more than $5 million was spent two decades ago on New York's welcome-home parade for Gulf War veterans who helped drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait.

Ticker-tape salutes to returning troops are part of the American culture, including parades in many cities honoring veterans of World War I and World War II.

Since the end of the latest war in Iraq, there have only been small events at military posts, gatherings of families at airports and a low-key appearance by President Barack Obama at Fort Bragg, N.C., a base that endured more than 200 deaths from fighting in the war.

In St. Louis, Army Spc. James Casey appreciates the handshakes he's gotten at local and often informal observances of his 11.5 years with the Army Reserve and three tours in Iraq, which included the 2003 invasion. But the 29-year-old father of a year-old daughter relishes attending the St. Louis parade he considers "the proper welcoming home we all know we deserve."

He hopes larger U.S. cities follow suit.

"For the longest time, St. Louis has been the east-meets-west society, so I'm not surprised it's happening here. Hopefully, everybody sees what we're doing and grabs onto this," Casey said Friday. "Something like this ? where it's showing support for those that have served ? is not just a thank you. It's an embracing of the sacrifice so many Americans have made."

Celebrating the end of the Iraq War hasn't been as simple as the outpourings after the world wars, said Wayne Fields, professor of English and American Culture Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. With 91,000 troops still fighting in Afghanistan, many Iraq veterans could be redeployed ? suggesting to some that it's premature to celebrate their homecoming.

"We're not celebrating the end of a war the way we were with V-E Day or V-J Day (after World War II)," Fields said. "Part of what this is trying to do is recognize the special service of those who were there even though we can't declare a victory over a clearly identified enemy."

In May 2003, then-President George W. Bush landed on an aircraft carrier to hail the end of major combat operations in Iraq. Behind him during that speech was a banner that read, "Mission Accomplished," yet U.S. troops remained in Iraq for 8 ? more years.

Even some of the festivities in St. Louis will serve as a reminder that Bush launched the Iraq War as part of the larger war on terror following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

As part of the weekend, a "Reading of the Fallen" will begin at 9:11 p.m. Friday at Soldiers Memorial downtown. It will continue until the names of the approximate 6,500 Americans killed since the attacks are read.

"Veterans have sacrificed so much for the safety and well-being of St. Louisans," Mayor Francis Slay said. "This is a chance to demonstrate our appreciation for them."

City officials agreed to waive permit fees and allow use of streets for the parade from the heart of downtown along Market Street to Union Station, the former train station that is now a shopping center and hotel. A "Resource Village" will be set up there that will include food, music and entertainment but will also connect returning vets with organizations to help ease transition to civilian life.

Organizers expect about 100 parade entries ? floats, marching bands, first-responders, veterans groups. Appelbaum said that while the parade marks the end of the Iraq War, any military personnel involved in post-Sept. 11 conflicts are welcome.

Appelbaum has no idea how many people will turn out to cheer on the troops but said response has been overwhelming despite the lack of any substantial marketing.

"It's significant that this is strictly a grassroots effort, and coming out of the heartland of the U.S., I think it really says something," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-27-Iraq%20War-Parade/id-b3161ab129624d4bbc47d6331491be89

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Working too much is correlated with two-fold increase in likelihood of depression

ScienceDaily (Jan. 25, 2012) ? The odds of a major depressive episode are more than double for those working 11 or more hours a day compared to those working seven to eight hours a day, according to a report is published in the Jan. 25 issue of the online journal PLoS ONE.

The authors, led by Marianna Virtanen of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health and University College London, followed about 2000 middle aged British civil servants and found a robust association between overtime work and depression. This correlation was not affected when the analysis was adjusted for various possible confounders, including socio-demographics, lifestyle, and work-related factors.

There have been a number of previous studies on the subject, with varying results, but the researchers emphasize that it is hard to compare results across these studies because the cut-off for "overtime" work has not been standardized.

"Although occasionally working overtime may have benefits for the individual and society, it is important to recognize that working excessive hours is also associated with an increased risk of major depression," says Dr Virtanen.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Marianna Virtanen, Stephen A. Stansfeld, Rebecca Fuhrer, Jane E. Ferrie, Mika Kivim?ki. Overtime Work as a Predictor of Major Depressive Episode: A 5-Year Follow-Up of the Whitehall II Study. PLoS ONE, 2012; 7 (1): e30719 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030719

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Sullinger leads No. 4 Ohio St past Penn St 78-54 (AP)

COLUMBUS, Ohio ? Jared Sullinger had 20 points and 13 rebounds, and No. 4 Ohio State took advantage of Penn State's slow start to roll to a 78-54 victory on Wednesday night.

The Buckeyes (18-3, 6-2 Big Ten) won their third in a row and fifth in six games while tuning up for Sunday's big home showdown with No. 20 Michigan. The Wolverines, Ohio State and Michigan State came into the week tied for the top spot in the Big Ten.

The Nittany Lions paid tribute to Joe Paterno by wearing black bands on their jerseys. Paterno, Penn State's football coach for 46 years and the winner of a major-college record 409 games, died Sunday at age 85. A public viewing and funeral was held earlier on Wednesday.

William Buford added 15 points and Aaron Craft had 11 ? all in the first half ? as the Buckeyes built a lopsided lead.

Big Ten scoring leader Tim Frazier had 16 points and Jermaine Marshall 14 for Penn State (10-12, 2-7), which has lost its last 17 meetings with Ohio State.

In the waning moments, Ohio State's student section prepped for the game against the Buckeyes' chief rival by singing "We Don't Give A Damn For the Whole State of Michigan."

The Buckeyes improved to 15-0 at home this season while running their home winning streak to 37 in a row ? the second-longest streak in the country behind Kentucky's 47 straight.

Already ahead 38-18 at halftime, Ohio State benefited from a flagrant foul and a technical foul against the Nittany Lions in the opening 2 minutes of the second half.

Frazier was called for the flagrant foul when he swung an elbow that caught Craft in the jaw. Moments later, first-year coach Patrick Chambers was whistled for yelling at the officials.

Sullinger had a layup and a dunk ? both off assists from swingman Sam Thompson ? in a 7-0 run that swelled the Buckeyes' lead to 56-29. From then on, a crowd of 16,907 was just biding its time before heading for the parking lots.

Penn State endured a miserable first half, shooting just 22 percent (7 of 32) and falling behind by as many as 23 points.

The Nittany Lions had just one field goal and two points over the first 8 minutes and were outscored 15-2. They came in shooting 39 percent from the field for the season but made only one of their first 14 field goals.

Frazier was dogged wherever he went by Buckeyes defenders. He was 2 of 9 from the field at halftime.

Craft opened the scoring with a spinning reverse layup off an assist from Sullinger, who made it 4-0 with a baby hook. After Buford hit a pair of foul shots, Deshaun Thomas added a short jumper for an 8-0 lead.

Marshall, who had half of the Nittany Lions' points at the break, hit a perimeter jumper to finally break the ice at the 15:02 mark. After the Buckeyes coasted to a 24-6 lead, he hit back-to-back outside jumpers.

But the Buckeyes were the story of the opening half. Craft, who hit his career high of 19 against Penn State last January, had 11 at the break on 4-of-4 shooting from the field. Buford chipped in with eight points and five rebounds, while Sullinger had seven points and eight boards and Thomas had six and six.

Penn State is in the midst of a stretch of three straight games vs. Top 25 teams, two on the road. The Nittany Lions lost at No. 11 Indiana 73-54 on Sunday and play No. 25 Wisconsin on Tuesday.

The Buckeyes finished up hitting half of their 50 shots from the field. Penn State mustered just 31.3 percent (20 of 64).

___

Follow Rusty Miller on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/rustymillerap.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_penn_st_ohio_st

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Boat Insurance Tips from Stafford Marine Insurance | BoatingLocal ...

Boaters should check their insurance policies carefully to make sure they're covered in case of a catastrophic event like this. Photo/USCG

When it comes to insuring boats, few companies have a longer history than Stafford Insurance. Founded in 1881 in Fall River, Massachusetts, Stafford is wrapping up its 130th year in the marine insurance business.

Stafford Insurance's Fall River offices, c. 1900. Photo/Stafford Insurance

In the early days, the company insured the trading vessels that sailed and steamed in and out of Fall River, as well as their cargoes of lace and other textile goods. As local manufacturing fell on hard times and recreational boating began to blossom, Stafford made the switch to handling individual boat policies. From commuter boats and Chris Crafts to carbon-fiber sailboats and hybrid-powered cruisers, Stafford has been there from the beginning of recreational boating in New England.

Stafford Insurance founder J.F. Stafford. Photo/Stafford Insurance

Today, that tradition continues, with company president Jay Kay?whose grandfather started at Stafford in 1919?and his team providing a deep understanding of the unique needs and concerns of the region?s boaters. Indeed, Kay is a longtime boater himself, having sailed and fished the waters off Martha?s Vineyard and the Massachusetts Southcoast since he was 4. He currently owns a 28? Albin powerboat and a 19? Vineyard Gem sloop built on-island in 1962.

BoatingLocal recently caught up with Kay, who explained some of the benefits of choosing an agent that specializes in marine insurance.

Underwriter Connections:

One is that few mainstream agencies have direct contact with the underwriters who specialize in boats. ?There used to be over 100 marine underwriters to choose from; now that?s down to 3 or 4 serious companies,? says Kay. ?We have deep ties with the right underwriters, and we?re able to negotiate the best rate due to the volume of policies we hold.?

One of the biggest drawbacks to using a non-marine insurance company is that the policy terms can vary widely from one underwriter to another. ?You could get 10 totally different policies for the same price,? Kay notes. ?It?s not like a homeowner?s policy, which is very standardized. Boat insurance policies are extremely varied.?

Valuation Terms:

Jay Kay, president of Stafford Insurance. Photo/Stafford Insurance.

One potential stumbling block is the ?valuation clause?. In the event of a complete loss, many boaters are unaware that insurers will subtract the depreciation of the boat based upon its age and condition. In other words, they may only issue a check for the value of the boat based on the current market value listed in the so-called ?BUC Book? (the marine version of the Blue Book for cars). Subsequently, many boaters end up paying too much on their policy as the boat depreciates over the years, and do not receive the replacement value they expect if their boat sinks, is stolen or catches fire in a total loss.

For example, if you paid $100K to purchase a boat 5 years ago, the insurance company is not going to give you $100K if the boat is totaled. They use the age and condition to determine the current value, and that?s the amount you might receive a check for, less your policy deductible. ?Consequently, there are a lot of people who overpay on their insurance policies, or think they will receive full replacement value if something happens to their boat,? says Kay. ?We advise our clients on these things, whereas many companies do not. Re-evaluate the policy every year to make sure you?re not overpaying.? On a partial loss, like a theft of electronics, most good policies provide replacement cost without depreciation. But be careful, as not all policies do. Read the fine print, or ask.

If you own a classic boat, a restored boat, or a boat with a lot of sentimental value that would take a lot of money to replace, you may need an ?agreed-value? policy. With this type of policy, you and the insurance company agree on the value of the boat and what it would cost to replace in the case of a total loss.

Coverage of Engines, Equipment:

Kay recommends digging deeper into the valuation terms of your policy. Check the value assessed for partial losses on big-ticket items beyond the hull, such as electronics, the engine, the generator and the trailer. Also, be aware that the repair or replacement of sails, curtains and canvas will rarely be at replacement cost, as most companies will deduct depreciation on these items.

?Unlike a car, each part of the boat needs to be covered. You need to consider cost and depreciation on the engine, safety gear, sails, canvas?you name it,? Kay explains. ?Most boaters neglect to consider the value and depreciation of expensive electronics when insuring their vessels. Some insurance companies will not pay the full cost to replace your chart plotter, radar and fishfinder. Others will.?

Contractual Concerns

Be sure to stay within the waters dictated by your policy's navigational limits or you may void the policy. Photo/USCG

Another major area of concern is the contractual terms of the policy. For example, if your policy has a standard ?layup warranty?, common in the Northeast, you have agreed that the boat will not be used between the dates of November 1 and April 1. If you use the boat during the layup period and have a mishap, the policy is automatically void?something to think about on those unseasonably warm days late or early in the season. ?If you think you might use your boat later or earlier than the dates specified in your policy, contact your agent, as it?s usually pretty easy and inexpensive to extend the navigation period,? says Kay.

Similarly, if your boat is only insured for use in coastal waters, or a certain area of travel, you need to stay within the boundaries outlined by your policy or you risk violating the policy warranty. For example, if your coverage only extends to ?coastal waters,? you will not be covered if an accident occurs beyond the 3-mile state-waters limit. On the plus side, it is very easy to get a rider or endorsement if you plan to occasionally travel beyond those limits. You can usually get something in writing (an email will suffice) within 24 hours of making the request.

Liability Concerns

Liability should also be considered when choosing your policy, says Kay, especially if you have guests on your boat. ?Get the maximum amount of liability you can afford, as there?s not that big a difference in premium between a $100,000 policy and a $500,000 policy. Also, you may want to consider getting a $1 million umbrella policy via your homeowner?s insurance, which will cover you if something happens on your boat, over and above the amount you have on your boat policy.?

Racing & For-Hire Coverage

A major area of concern for sailors is racing coverage. ?You definitely need to watch out if you do any sort of racing. And I?m talking about even laidback Thursday-night-after-work racing with your buddies,? says Kay. You need to make your underwriter aware of any competitive usage of your boat, so you can get a racing rider or endorsement on your policy.

Also, if you charge people to ride on your boat or pay someone to serve as mate or crewman, even for a day, you will usually void your policy. ?Whenever money is changing hands, you need to be careful,? warns Kay. This applies even if you?re simply hiring someone to serve food or drinks on your boat during an onboard party.

What About the Kids?

Consider an umbrella policy if you often have guests and their families aboard your vessel. Photo/USCG

Similarly, you should let your underwriter know if your spouse or children will be driving the boat, even when you?re onboard?and especially if you?re not. If your kids damage the boat in your absence, you may not be covered. The best plan is to list any operators on your insurance policy.

Lowering Your Premium:

Kay explains that many boaters fail to realize that their driving record can affect their boat-insurance policy, so one way to lower your premium is to avoid any motor vehicle violations. ?Your driving record is very important,? says Kay. ?A clean record will result in a lower premium.?

Depending on your underwriter, taking an approved safe-boating course or earning your captain?s license may also lower your premium, but only if you bring it to the attention of your agent and have all the necessary documentation.

The above are just a few bit of good advice from Jay Kay and Stafford Insurance. Be on the lookout for more tips in the coming months.

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Source: http://boatinglocal.com/news/boat-insurance-tips-from-stafford-marine-insurance.html

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Legal Schnauzer: This Might Explain Why Newt Gingrich Actually ...


After the results of Saturday's GOP primary in South Carolina, Americans face the real possibility that Newt Gingrich could become president. How did we get to such a frightening place? In a general sense, it's because Barack Obama has left himself vulnerable by failing to stand up for the progressive base that got him elected. To be specific, it's largely because of Obama's dismal record on justice issues.

Want more evidence of how badly Obama has botched things on the justice front? Stay tuned for a federal bingo prosecution that is set to be re-tried on January 30 in Montgomery, Alabama. In the original trial last summer, prosecutors from the Obama Department of Justice (DOJ) charged that various pro-gaming forces had tried to buy votes in the Alabama Legislature for bills related to electronic bingo.

That trial resulted in zero convictions, and you might think the DOJ would decide the case was a stinker and not bother with remaining counts where the jury deadlocked. But you would be wrong. The DOJ is back for more, and it already looks like Trial No. 2 will be a study in theater of the absurd.

What happens when a Democratic administration gets mixed up with the people and philosophies left over from a corrupt gang of Republicans? Well, the results ain't pretty--and events in Montgomery already are spelling that out. Consider what transpired last week. (Andrew Kreig, of the D.C.-based Justice Integrity Project, provides an excellent summary here.)

* The Incredible Vanishing Prosecutor--Justin Shur, of the DOJ's Public Integrity Section, was to be lead prosecutor on the second Alabama bingo trial. But Shur announced last week that he is leaving the department to take a job with the Washington law firm MoloLamken. The MoloLamken firm has strong ties to Baker Botts, the Houston-based outfit that has powerful connections to the Bush family. In fact, Baker Botts perhaps has been best known recently for defending various Saudi interests who have been sued in connection with the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Justin Shur, it appears, has long been in bed with "loyal Bushies," and the Obama DOJ was going to rely on him to spearhead the politically charged Alabama bingo case? Sheesh.

* The Withheld Documents--Attorneys for gambling magnate Milton McGregor are seeking sanctions against federal prosecutors for failing to turn over documents and intentionally trying to mislead jurors in the first trial. Lawyer Joe Espy states in a court filing that prosecutors withheld testimony that contradicted their bribery charges against McGregor. This all will sound familiar to those who have followed the Don Siegelman case. Could this have contributed to Shur's hasty exit from the scene?

* The Incredible Vanishing Witnesses--Current state legislator Scott Beason and former legislator Benjamin Lewis, both Republicans, were star witnesses for the government in the first trial. In fact, they were the ones who wore wires and wound up catching Beason on tape referring to black Alabamians as "aborigines." How have prosecutors decided to deal with that inflammatory, race-based problem? They have announced that they will not call Beason and Lewis in the second trial.

Yes, you heard that correctly. The two witnesses who were considered so crucial that they wore wires to catch alleged unlawful activity now are so unimportant that the prosecution will not call them as witnesses. And how is this for irony? The DOJ, under the nation's first black president, has been relying on a witness who taped himself calling black people "aborigines." The creators of The Three Stooges couldn't make this stuff up.

If Attorney General Eric Holder is not embarrassed by this traveling minstrel show . . . well, he must not be capable of shame.

This is what happens when you treat the American justice system like a plaything. Consider some of Obama's inexplicable actions on matters of justice:

* He announced, even before taking office, that he was going to give Bush officials a free pass on apparent criminality;

* He adopted Bush positions on key justice issues, running counter to progressive principles;

* He has failed to seek accountability for the financial gurus who brought our economy to the edge of collapse. Now we learn that Holder and criminal-division head Lanny Breuer have powerful ties to mortgage banks. Breuer's name, by the way, has been all over documents in the Alabama bingo case.

* He left key Bush-era justice officials in place for more than two-plus years.

The Alabama bingo train started pulling out of the station under Leura Canary, the abominable Bush nominee as U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Alabama. The Obama DOJ has failed to stop it and failed to show any signs of restoring justice in a state that was home to the Don Siegelman case, perhaps the most notorious political prosecution in American history.

Thoughts of Newt Gingrich in the White House should send shivers down the spine of our body politic. But given the shenanigans unfolding in Montgomery, Alabama, it's hard to argue that Barack Obama deserves another term--at least based on justice issues.

Source: http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-might-explain-why-newt-gingrich.html

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Happy Monday!

Happy Monday!

Celebrities Who Look Great Without Makeup [The Frisky] Demi Lovato Takes a Break From Twitter [HollyWire] Steven Tyler Botches National Anthem? [Right Celebrity] Jim Carrey’s [...]

Happy Monday! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/waL87cfZEtw/

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Basic Automotive Repair Diagnostics | Automotive Diagnosis

Modern vehicles that are released in the automotive industry are getting more sophisticated as they pack even more complex technology. In contrast, classic vehicles of long ago were typically easy to work on and maintain in the sense that you just had to know the basics. Today, with all the bells and whistles on the latest vehicles around it?s nearly impossible for your ordinary car owner to spot anything specific in the event that they experience any technical issues regarding their vehicle. Most often than not, they would just rather take their vehicles in and pay auto repair shops to do all the work for them. That may be the convenient option especially if you don?t know a thing or two about auto repairs but it is certainly a costly one. There?s also the problem regarding several technicians taking advantage of car owners who really have no clue how their vehicle?s work. Thus finding an honest automotive technician is quite a rare commodity and it would also help to arm yourselves by knowing a thing or two about automotive diagnostics so that you are less likely to be cheated out of your car repair cost.

Question is what you actually need to do in order to learn all these things. This can be quite a tricky question but the Internet is always a good place to start. It is after all a treasure chest filled with information. You can do a search engine keyword search for automotive repair or anything specific about a particular technical issue and you should pull up information or instructions in text or video format.

If the problem you are having with your vehicle is the fact that it won?t seem to start, the first thing that you need to do is check the battery connections. Make sure all the connections from the battery to the engine are secure and that they are not loose in anyway. Check for any corrosions because this may also affect the flow of power through the connections. It may also be possible that there is a problem with the battery itself and most of the time; it is the reason why a vehicle just won?t start.

What if the car does start and then dies out shortly? This scenario is actually pretty complicated because it suggests problems with complicated components such as ignition modules and crankshaft sensors. Handling this issue by yourself isn?t really recommended unless you have the right set of tools,chilton auto repair manual and utmost confidence that this is in fact something you can do proficiently. Keep in mind that a lot of vehicle owners who attempted to do their own repairs without the necessary knowledge or tools only end up damaging it even further. It would be best to seek out the proficiency of a qualified technician.

Lastly, what if your car does run but seems to lack power with the check engine light turned on? These types of problems can be isolated into three factors that allow your vehicle to run smoothly which includes compression, spark and fuel pressure. Work around the car?s components that has something to do with these essential factors. To make your job easier, you can make use of an OBD (on-board diagnostics) scanner which you can plug in to your vehicle?s OBD computer allowing you to pinpoint the problem rather easily. Your vehicle?s computer would also tell you if there is a circuit failure.

It would certainly be great if we can just work on our own vehicle in any technical issues. Sadly, some issues are more complicated than others which would require knowledge, Audi Repair manuals,equipment and proficiency to address appropriately. It would be best to seek the services of an automotive repair technician and do your homework on the issue so you can at least get a picture of what needs to be done.

Source: http://www.riredistricting.org/basic-automotive-repair-diagnostics.html

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Young Breast Cancer Survivors Face Psychological Distress | Psych ...

By Rick Nauert PhD Senior News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on January 23, 2012

Young Breast Cancer Survivors Face Psychological Distress A new study discovers that cancer treatments can significantly hinder the quality of life of younger breast cancer survivors.

Researchers discovered younger women with breast cancer experience a decrease in their health-related quality of life. They also may experience increased psychological distress, weight gain, a decline in their physical activity, infertility and early onset menopause.

The study is published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

Breast cancer is the most common non-skin cancer in women, and is the leading cause of death in women under 50 in the U.S.

Researchers note that although the survival rate for younger women with breast cancer has improved over the last two decades, their cancer treatments, despite their effectiveness, can seriously affect quality of life and other health outcomes.

In the study, researchers sought to determine the impact of cancer treatment on the quality of life of younger breast cancer survivors. Patricia A. Ganz, M.D., and colleagues reviewed studies that focused on overall quality of life, psychosocial effects, menopause and fertility-related concerns, and behavioral outcomes related to weight gain and physical activity.

The studies were published between January 1990 and July 2010. Of the 840 titles and abstracts reviewed, they focused on 28 with the most relevant data.

Investigators found that overall quality of life was compromised in younger breast cancer survivors, with the mental issues more severe than the physical problems.

Depression was also a problem as young women were also more depressed compared to the general age-matched population of women without cancer or women over 50 with breast cancer.

Premature menopause, infertility and menopause-related symptoms were more common and contributing factors to the level of distress in women 50 or younger after treatment.

Weight gain and physical inactivity were common health outcomes in younger women, although exercise rates generally increased after treatment.

Researchers believe the findings demonstrate the need for personalized treatment for breast cancer, especially among young women.

?By tailoring [treatment] and giving cytotoxic therapy only to those who may benefit, we can mitigate some of these side effects, but the long life expectancy for these younger women also provides a window of opportunity for cancer prevention and health promotion activities.?

Source: Journal of the National Cancer Institute


APA Reference
Nauert PhD, R. (2012). Young Breast Cancer Survivors Face Psychological Distress. Psych Central. Retrieved on January 24, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/news/2012/01/23/young-breast-cancer-survivors-face-psychological-distress/33987.html

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Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2012/01/23/young-breast-cancer-survivors-face-psychological-distress/33987.html

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Monday, January 23, 2012

eBlaster Mobile (for Android)

I?ve long suspected that my colleague?Eugene Kim?faked his weekly sick days. Without fail, he calls in sick every Thursday (NB. Wednesday night is Ladies' Night here in New York City) and leaves me to cover all his menial responsibilities. Tired of his truancy, I became determined to gather evidence of his fake illnesses and expose him to HR.?Fortunately, there's an app for that.

eBlaster Mobile?will cost you a pretty penny ($69.95/year for one license, direct), but it's one of the more comprehensive mobile surveillance tools in the parental control category of mobile security apps. Brought to you by PC surveillance expert SpectorSoft, the folks behind Spector Pro 2011,?this tool lets you discreetly track every call, text message, website visited, and GPS coordinate on your target's Android device; it captures even more on a BlackBerry device, such as BBM conversations and Instant Messages sent via Yahoo! Messenger, Windows Live Messenger, and Google Talk. These cell phone activities (called "Activity Reports") are emailed to you at a frequency and detail you can adjust, though not as much as I'd like.

Parental espionage
eBlaster Mobile is marketed towards parents who want to monitor their children?s mobile usage, particularly in an era where they have to worry about sexting and truancy and what not. Spector Soft insists that its customers inform their child that the program has been installed, but of course for my purposes, I haven't. Unless Eugene roots his Android, he won't be able to find a monitoring process in Task Manager.

Getting started
To download eBlaster Mobile, you have to load Spector Pro's Website on your mobile browser, as it isn't available in the Android Market yet. So one day while Eugene was away from his desk, I grabbed his Samsung Galaxy Nexus, input my email address at the prompt, installed the app, and quietly put the phone back in its place. This app is made for stealth; there were no obvious traces of eBlaster Mobile anywhere in his Task Manager or startup screen, so Eugene had no idea it had been tampered.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ulPZQrhUPbA/0,2817,2399181,00.asp

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Leaked Sony image: Is this the ST25i Kumquat?

What's this? If this is true, it looks like one of the jilted partners in the Sony Ericsson split is doing all it can to ruin the nice surprises planned for next month's MWC. An image has appeared at Xperia Blog that purports to be of the ST25i Kumquat, which, if you've been paying attention is the cheapest of the three phones due in April listed on the leaked roadmap from a few days ago. The design language matches the Nozomi and the Xperia S we played with at CES, but the on-screen icons are clearly bigger: pointing us in the direction of this having a cheaper display (with a worse resolution) than its brothers. Don't let that Sony Ericsson logo fool you either, the company's producing versions that bear both branding, at least for this set of releases. We're off to grab a microscope and see if we can't glean any more facts from the snap.

[Thanks, Joseph]

Leaked Sony image: Is this the ST25i Kumquat? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceXperia Blog  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/22/leaked-sony-image-st25i-kumquat/

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Urban US Chinatowns wane as Asians head to suburbs (AP)

WASHINGTON ? America's historic Chinatowns, home for a century to immigrants seeking social support and refuge from racism, are fading as rising living costs, jobs elsewhere and a desire for wider spaces lure Asian-Americans more than ever to the suburbs.

As the Lunar New Year begins Monday, annual festivities in Washington, D.C.'s shriveled Chinatown are, for the first time, being promoted by a large marketing firm. New York's Chinatown, one of the nation's oldest, has lost its status as home to the city's largest Chinese population, based on the 2010 census.

Shifts also are under way in Los Angeles, Boston, Houston, San Francisco and Seattle, where shiny new "satellite Chinatowns" in the suburbs and outer city limits rival if not overshadow the originals.

"The traditional Chinatown is changing, and in most cities it is no longer the residential, political and cultural center of Asian-American life that it once was," said Wei Li, an Arizona State University professor who chairs the Census Bureau's advisory committee on the Asian population.

She explained that urban Chinatowns continue to serve a role for newly arrived immigrants with less education or lower skills who seek entry-level work, as well as for elderly residents with poor English skills who can't drive. But middle-class families are almost nowhere to be found, and in many cities, rising downtown property costs and urban gentrification threaten their traditional existence.

"Some have become functional as tourist attractions," Li said.

Signs of Chinatown decline can be seen in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, home to the nation's largest Asian-American population at 1.9 million. There, Monterey Park, deemed part of an "ethnoburb" outside Los Angeles after it became majority Asian-American in the 1990s, has long been a first stopping point for newly arrived Chinese seeking bigger houses away from downtown Los Angeles.

Due to fast growth, the Asian-American suburban population has spread to other areas of California's San Gabriel Valley and more recently to Irvine, where their share of the population jumped from 30 to 39 percent over the last decade.

"Irvine is one of the new wave of Asian communities, but it is not overtly Chinatown," said Ralph Lee, 28, of Irvine. Lee, whose immigrant parents reared him in the affluent seaside community of Newport Beach, Calif., has never been to the Los Angeles Chinatown.

Nationwide, about 62 percent of Asian-Americans in the nation's large metropolitan areas live in the suburbs, up from 54 percent in 1990 and the highest ever. Tied with Hispanics as the fastest-growing group, the nation's 4.4 million Asians are more likely than other minorities to live in the suburbs; only whites, at 78 percent, are higher.

Since 2000, nearly three-fourths of Asian population growth in the U.S. occurred in suburbs, many of them in the South.

"While the general image of Asians is associated with Chinatowns, Koreatowns or urban neighborhoods with Indian restaurants, the majority of all major Asian groups now live in the suburbs," said William H. Frey, a demographer at Brookings Institution, who reviewed the census data. "Suburban living is still the American dream for most minorities in the U.S. and a sign of `making it,' and better schools are also a draw."

It wasn't always that way.

The first neighborhoods known as Chinatowns emerged in the 1800s during the Gold Rush and the building of railroads. After the work was done, a shortage of jobs led Congress to pass a law in 1882 banning the entry of new Chinese laborers. Seeking refuge, many Chinese in the U.S. avoided jobs that directly competed with white labor and opened laundries and restaurants in urban Chinatowns.

The neighborhoods prospered for much of the 20th century after the ban was lifted, before a loosening of federal immigration laws in 1965. That spurred waves of Asian immigrants in subsequent decades who filled existing Chinatowns and pushed new growth of communities elsewhere.

Today, lower-income immigrant families are now more apt to move to outer city areas in Flushing, Queens, or Sunset Park, Brooklyn, than New York's Chinatown, drawn by affordability and wider spaces. More immigrants, especially those who are affluent or hold college degrees, are heading straight to suburbs in the South including Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia and Texas, where high-tech or manufacturing jobs are in greater supply.

The shifting migration is spurring development of new mini-Chinatowns in the suburbs and South, typically large shopping malls where residents living in subdivisions miles away can get a day of cultural community at the hair salon, Dim Sum restaurant or Asian supermarket.

"The movement from big-city ethnic enclaves suggests that discrimination and other barriers to upward mobility have declined," said Daniel Lichter, a Cornell University sociology professor who is president of the nonprofit Population Association of America. Still, traditional Chinatowns aren't necessarily going away, he says, comparing them to pockets of "Little Italy" where Americans of all backgrounds now shop and eat.

"Chinatown may change from being strictly safe havens for new Asian immigrants to serving America's never-ending appetite for new cultural experiences," Lichter said.

In the Washington, D.C., metro area, which has a population of one-half million Asian-Americans, fewer than 500 Asians live in Chinatown, down from around 3,000 in 1970. Once a close-knit community of modest shops and rowhouses, it now has become known more for a sports arena, high-rise luxury apartments and national chains including Starbucks, Bed Bath & Beyond and Hooters.

The Chinese residents have scattered to large Asian communities in suburban Montgomery County, Md., and Fairfax County, Va. Many who remain are elderly and live in federally subsidized housing, taking vans several times a week to Great Wall, a Chinese supermarket in suburban Falls Church, Va., so they can buy groceries.

"I'm not going to deny that Chinatown is shrinking," said Soohyun "Julie" Koo, director of the district's Office on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs, who lives blocks away and is advising the planners of next week's Chinese New Year parade. Parade organizers recently told a local paper they had decided in the Year of the Dragon ? a symbol of power ? that it was time to think big to attract sponsors and promote the neighborhood's heritage.

Shirley Woo, 62, a district native who now lives in Fairfax, Va., has been visiting Chinatown since childhood. Her Chinese immigrant parents owned a laundromat in the city and would socialize with friends and dine there. But outside Chinatown, their options were limited, and she remembers taking trips to New York to stock up on groceries and other staples.

Now, she said, her mother lives in Silver Spring, Md., and has several nearby options that serve authentic Cantonese cuisine.

"Most people don't go down there to eat anyway," Woo said. "You don't think of Chinatown as having the best Chinese food."

___

Associated Press writer Amy Taxin in Irvine, Calif., contributed to this report.

___

Online: http://www.census.gov

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_go_ot/us_census_changing_chinatowns

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