Sunday, December 30, 2012

Woman charged with murder in NY subway shove death

In this image provided by the New York City Police Department, a composite sketch showing the woman believed to have pushed a man to his death in front of a subway train on Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 is shown. Police arrested Erica Menendez on Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012, after a passer-by on a street noticed she resembled the woman seen in a surveillance video. The attack was the second time this month that a man was pushed to his death in a city subway station. (AP Photo/New York City Police Department)

In this image provided by the New York City Police Department, a composite sketch showing the woman believed to have pushed a man to his death in front of a subway train on Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 is shown. Police arrested Erica Menendez on Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012, after a passer-by on a street noticed she resembled the woman seen in a surveillance video. The attack was the second time this month that a man was pushed to his death in a city subway station. (AP Photo/New York City Police Department)

Commuters walk on the platform as a train enters the 40th St-Lowry St Station, where a man was killed after being pushed onto the subway tracks, in the Queens section of New York, Friday, Dec. 28, 2012. Police are searching for a woman suspected of pushing the man and released surveillance video Friday of her running away from the station. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Commuters watch as a train enters the 40th St-Lowry St Station, where a man was killed after being pushed onto the subway tracks, in the Queens section of New York, Friday, Dec. 28, 2012. Police are searching for a woman suspected of pushing the man and released surveillance video Friday of her running away from the station.(AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Commuters wait on the platform as a train passes through the 40th St-Lowry St Station, where a man was killed after being pushed onto the subway tracks, in the Queens section of New York, Friday, Dec. 28, 2012. Police are searching for a woman suspected of pushing the man and released surveillance video Friday of her running away from the station. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

(AP) ? A woman who told police she shoved a man to his death off a subway platform into the path of a train because she has hated Muslims since Sept. 11 and thought he was one was charged Saturday with murder as a hate crime, prosecutors said.

Erika Menendez was charged in the death of Sunando Sen, who was crushed by a 7 train in Queens on Thursday night, the second time this month a commuter has died in such a nightmarish fashion.

Menendez, 31, was awaiting arraignment on the charge Saturday evening, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown said. She could face 25 years to life in prison if convicted. She was in custody and couldn't be reached for comment, and it was unclear if she had an attorney.

Menendez, who was arrested after a tip by a passer-by who saw her on a street and thought she looked like the woman in a surveillance video released by police, admitted shoving Sen, who was pushed from behind, authorities said.

"I pushed a Muslim off the train tracks because I hate Hindus and Muslims ever since 2001 when they put down the twin towers I've been beating them up," Menendez told police, according to the district attorney's office.

Sen was from India, but police said it was unclear if he was Muslim, Hindu or of some other faith. The 46-year-old lived in Queens and ran a printing shop. He was shoved from an elevated platform on the 7 train line, which connects Manhattan and Queens. Witnesses said a muttering woman rose from her seat on a platform bench and pushed him on the tracks as a train entered the station and then ran off.

The two had never met before, authorities said, and witnesses told police they hadn't interacted on the platform.

Police released a sketch and security camera video showing a woman running from the station where Sen was killed.

Menendez was arrested by police earlier Saturday after a passer-by on a Brooklyn street spotted her and called 911. Police responded, confirmed her identity and took her into custody, where she made statements implicating herself in the crime, police spokesman Paul Browne said.

The district attorney said such hateful remarks about Muslims and Hindus could not be tolerated.

"The defendant is accused of committing what is every subway commuter's worst nightmare," he said.

On Dec. 3, another man was pushed to his death in a Times Square subway station. A photo of the man clinging to the edge of the platform a split second before he was struck by a train was published on the front page of the New York Post, causing an uproar about whether the photographer, who was catching a train, or anyone else should have tried to help him.

A homeless man was arrested and charged with murder in that case. He claimed he acted in self-defense and is awaiting trial.

It's unclear whether anyone tried ? or could have tried ? to help Sen on Thursday.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Friday urged residents to keep Sen's death in perspective as he touted new historic lows in the city's annual homicide and shooting totals.

"It's a very tragic case, but what we want to focus on today is the overall safety in New York," Bloomberg told reporters following a police academy graduation.

But commuters still expressed concern over subway safety and shock about the arrest of Menendez on a hate crime charge.

"For someone to do something like that ... that's not the way we are made," said David Green, who was waiting for a train in Manhattan. "She needs help."

Green said he caught himself leaning over the subway platform's edge and realized maybe he shouldn't do that.

"It does make you more conscious," he said of the deaths.

Such subway deaths are rare, but other high-profile cases include the 1999 fatal shoving of aspiring screenwriter Kendra Webdale by a former psychiatric patient. That case led to a state law allowing for more supervision of mentally ill people living outside institutions.

___

Associated Press writer Karen Matthews contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-12-30-Subway-Push%20Death/id-360aa2d3202d459e99d8c057fdc4a8be

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Ma praises charity work in Africa

  • The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- President Ma Ying-jeou yesterday praised a Buddhist organization for its charity work in Africa, adding that Taiwan has become an exporter of goodwill and ...

  • Manufacturing sector wont see growth until Q2 TIER

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Taiwan's manufacturing sector has seen lackluster growth for nine consecutive months, according to data released yesterday by the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research ...

  • Govt to offer mainland tourists re-entry permits for cruises

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI--Taipei will offer Chinese tourists double-entry permits to encourage them to take cruises in and out of Taiwan, Hsieh Li-kung, the chief of the National Immigration Agency, said ...

  • Local bourse expected to perform better in 2013 TWSE chairman

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Taiwan Stock Exchange Corp. (TWSE, ?????) Chairman Schive Chi said yesterday that he expects the stock market to perform better in the coming year, citing improvements in ...

  • Interior Ministry says political parties on the rise in country

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The Ministry of Interior (MOI, ???) yesterday announced that there are a total of 224 registered political parties in Taiwan, up by 15 from last ...

  • Alliance threatens to paralyze MRT on New Years Eve

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The National Alliance for Workers of Closed Plants yesterday threatened to paralyze the operation of the mass rapid transit systems in Taipei during the New Year's Eve if the ...

  • Travel fair in 2013 to pitch Chinese New Year deals

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI--A travel fair targeting Taiwanese who plan to travel during the Lunar New Year holiday will open on Jan. 4, with more than 130 exhibitors scheduled to participate, the show's organizer ...

  • Lin scores 21 but Rockets 5-game win streak ended

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI--The Houston Rockets' five-game winning streak was ended by the Spurs in San Antonio on Friday, the third straight time Houston has lost to its Texas rival this ...

  • Sports Affairs Council to end as part of govt restructuring

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The Sports Affairs Council (SAC) under the Executive Yuan will come to an end in 2013 after 15 years of existence, and will be reborn as the Sports Agency under the Ministry of ...

  • US visa exemption and energy price hikes among 2012s top news events

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Radio Taiwan International (RTI) listeners recently ranked the United States Visa Waiver Program (VWP) as the top Taiwan news story of ...

  • Something for everyone when ushering in New Year

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    In Taipei, revelers can attend a city-sponsored countdown party that will feature performances by pop diva Chang Hui-mei, singer and TV host Harlem Yu and Aaron Kwok from Hong Kong. The highlight, ...

  • 101 fireworks to be theatrical designer

    The China Post - Saturday 29th December, 2012

    TAIPEI--Taipei 101 Tower, one of tallest skyscrapers in the world, will stage a theatrical New Year fireworks show to celebrate the arrival of 2013, the pyrotechnic design company Groupe F promised ...

  • Source: http://www.taipeinews.net/index.php/sid/211657910/scat/0dd057261bcc461b

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    Thursday, December 27, 2012

    2013 'Rescued Heroes' Calendar Features Rescued Dogs Who Now Work As Therapy Dogs (SLIDESHOW)

    One couple is paying tribute to the amazing work of therapy and service dogs in a 2013 calendar.

    Titled 'Rescued Heroes,' the calendar features 11 dogs who were rescued -- via adoption or by sheer luck -- and now work as therapy dogs, providing service and comfort to people in need. On the cover is Fitz, a service dog for an Iraq veteran with PTSD.

    "We were so impressed with the way service dogs can help veterans manage their 'invisible wounds' and get their lives back," creator Lynn Sansale told The Huffington Post.

    Lynn's husband, Paul Sansale, does all the original artwork for the calendar. The calendar's release comes one year after their 2012 edition, 'Rescue Dogs To Therapy Dogs,' which also paid tribute to some of the most amazing canines who have risen above difficult backgrounds.

    One such example is Lucy, a small, beautiful Golden Retriever. At age one and a half, she was given up by her family due to hip dysplasia. In May 2006, Gwen, a life coach, submitted a request to meet Lucy, who was up for adoption on a local website.

    Serendipitously, Lucy's owner had already called Gwen earlier that day, wanting to become a client. Once introduced, Gwen and Lucy attended an evaluation for Lucy to become a therapy dog, and they now frequent R.E.A.D. storytelling sessions, which are a perfect fit for Lucy's hip issues.

    ?Lucy just loves kids,? Gwen says. ?Her sweet, gentle presence is a wonderful gift to shy and struggling readers.?

    Check out the dogs in this year's calendar in the slideshow below, which includes a sampling of their heartwarming stories. For the rest, purchase the 2013 calendar here.

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    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/25/2013-rescued-heroes-calen_n_2353343.html

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    Friday, December 21, 2012

    2013 Ford C-MAX Hybrid SEL ($33,080)

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    Thursday, December 20, 2012

    South Florida (SID): Bulls Roll Past Penguins in Second Half


    By TOM ZEBOLD

    USF Senior Writer

    TAMPA ? USF hit the accelerator in the second half and rolled past Youngstown State, 72-54, on Tuesday night at the Sun Dome.

    The Bulls trailed by six with less than 15 minutes to play before finishing with a 33-9 run that helped them improve to 6-3 overall and 5-2 at home this season. Youngstown State (6-5) hit six of its first 10 shots after the break, but went 8-for-21 the rest of the way and didn?t have a field goal in the final 9 minutes, 47 seconds before seeing its three-game winning streak get snapped.

    ?I thought our defense kept turning it up, and turning it up, and we finally were able to get the stops we needed,? USF head coach Stan Heath said.

    Victor Rudd posted a career-high 16 rebounds and a season-high 16 points in USF?s first game since a loss at Oklahoma State on Dec. 5.

    ?It makes me feel good as a player because when I rebound everything else comes easy,? he said.

    Anthony Collins added 14 points and seven assists, while Toarlyn Fitzpatrick added 11 points in the series? second installment. USF defeated the Penguins, 63-56, ironically on the same day in 1984.

    ?I think we know we have all the pieces. It?s the point of putting everything together and just playing together as a team,? said Collins, who went 7-for-12 from the field.

    Dunks by Rudd and Fitzpatrick capped off USF?s 7-0 run to open the game while the Penguins missed their first six shots and took more than three minutes to score.

    Youngstown State heated up quickly after a timeout and used a 9-0 run to take a 14-11 lead, powered by three straight 3-pointers. The lead changed hands twice before Rudd went on a 7-0 run of his own to put the Bulls ahead, 24-18, and the redshirt junior headed into the break with 10 points.

    The aggressive Penguins kept firing away from long range and used two straight 3-pointers by Kendrick Perry to grab a 29-27 lead with less than four minutes to go before halftime. Perry, the Penguins? top scorer, made four of Youngstown State?s seven 3-pointers in the half and his buzzer-beating layup tied things up at 33.

    ?We didn?t give the respect Perry really deserved,? Heath said.

    Perry had 14 points in the first half, but scored just one more after the break before fouling out with 5:49 to play while his team went 0-for-10 from the field after his exit.

    ?We let their best player go off in the first half and we wanted to focus on trying to shut him down,? Rudd said.

    Youngstown State became the sixth team to be held under 60 points this season against USF and the Penguins were hampered by a 27.6 shooting percentage after halftime.

    They made a bunch of baskets and we were pretty poor in transition all night. That was the major factor,? Penguins head coach Jerry Slocum said.

    USF stays home to battle Bowling Green 7 p.m. Friday before it wraps up the non-conference portion of the schedule at UCF on Wednesday, Jan. 2. The Bulls? first Big East game is Saturday, Jan. 6 against Syracuse at noon inside the Sun Dome.

    NOTES

    -The Bulls played without injured Shaun Noriega (foot) and Javontae Hawkins (back).

    -USF improved to 5-2 at home this season and has won its past three games at the Sun Dome.

    -The Bulls committed 10 turnovers after coming into the game ranked 11th in the country in turnover average (10.4).

    -Musa Abdul-Aleem scored eight points and played 16 minutes in his second game as a Bull.

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    Source: http://www.bbstate.com/news/618102

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    Twitter Suspends Anonymous Account For Vigilantism, Breaking TOS For Releasing Westboro Church Info [Updated]

    images (32)Twitter has just taken aggressive action against one of the most powerful hacking groups on the Internet. Anonymous's main Twitter account was suspended for publishing people's "private information," most likely a reference to the recent hacking and release of Westboro Baptists Churches personal information. While Twitter would probably rather not irk an influential hacker contingent, nor defend the practices of a radical religious organization planning to picket Newtown's funeral with offensive signs, Anonymous's practice of "hacktivism" is a clear violation the social network's Terms of Service.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/92FAZNc-rGM/

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    The best-laid plans: How we update our goals based on new information

    Dec. 18, 2012 ? Humans are adept at setting goals and updating them as new situations arise -- for example, a person who is playing a video game may switch to a new goal when their phone rings.

    Now, Princeton University researchers have identified mechanisms that govern how the brain incorporates information about new situations into our existing goals, according to research recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

    Using brain scans of human volunteers, researchers at the Princeton Neuroscience Institute (PNI) found that updating goals takes place in a region known as the prefrontal cortex, and appears to involve signals associated with the brain chemical dopamine. When the researchers used a magnetic pulse to interrupt activity in that region of the brain, the volunteers became unable to switch to a new task when playing a game requiring them to push a button after seeing letters pop up on a screen.

    "We have found a fundamental mechanism that contributes to the brain's ability to concentrate on one task and then flexibly switch to another task," said Jonathan Cohen, Princeton's Robert Bendheim and Lynn Bendheim Thoman Professor in Neuroscience and co-director of PNI. "Impairments in this system are central to many critical disorders of cognitive function such as those observed in schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder."

    Cohen worked with lead author Kimberlee D'Ardenne, who earned her Ph.D. in chemistry and neuroscience from Princeton in 2008 and is now a postdoctoral associate at Virginia Tech; Neir Eshel, a graduate student at Harvard Medical School who conducted the research as an undergraduate as part of his Princeton senior thesis; Joseph Luka, a medical student at Tulane University School of Medicine; Agatha Lenartowicz, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of California-Los Angeles; and Leigh Nystrom, co-director of the Neuroscience Cognitive Control Laboratory at PNI.

    Existing research has shown that when new information is used to update a task, behavior or goal, this information is held in a type of short-term memory storage known as working memory. Investigators did not know, however, what mechanisms were involved in updating this information.

    To find out, Cohen's team used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the brains of human volunteers playing a game wherein they pressed a specific button depending on a particular visual cue. If the volunteer saw the letter A prior to seeing the letter X, he or she had to press button 1. But if the volunteer saw the letter B prior to seeing the X, the participant had to press button 2. The A and B served as the new information that the participant used to update their goal of deciding which button to press. Another version of the task required the same participants to press button 1 upon seeing an X regardless of whether an A or B was shown.

    With the fMRI, the researchers detected activity in the right prefrontal cortex during tasks that required the participants to remember whether they saw an A or a B before pressing the correct button, but not during tasks where the participant only had to press the button when prompted by an X.

    These results confirmed findings from a previous study led by Cohen and published in the journal Cognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience in 2010 that used another scanning method to gauge the timing of the brain activity. Using electroencephalography (EEG), the researchers found that the prefrontal cortex showed a spike in brain electrical activity 150 milliseconds after the participant viewed the context letter A or B.

    For the current study, the researchers demonstrated that the prefrontal cortex is indeed the area of the brain involved with updating working memory by sending a short magnetic pulse to the region. This pulse disrupted cortex activity at the precise time -- as revealed by the EEG -- the researchers suspected that the prefrontal cortex was updating working memory. When the researchers introduced the pulse to the right side of prefrontal cortex about 150 milliseconds after the volunteers saw the A or B, the participants were unable to press the correct buttons, Cohen said.

    "We predicted that if the pulse was delivered to the part of the right prefrontal cortex observed using fMRI, and at the time when the brain is updating its information as revealed by EEG, then the subject would not retain the information about A and B, interfering with his or her performance on the button-pushing task," Cohen said.

    Finally, the researchers explored their theory that dopamine -- a naturally occurring chemical involved in motivation and reward among other brain functions -- tags new information entering the prefrontal cortex as important for updating working memory and goals. Cohen and his team imaged a brain region called the midbrain, which contains clusters of nerve cells called dopaminergic nuclei that are the source of most of the dopamine signals in the brain. Using high-resolution fMRI, the researchers probed the activity of these dopamine-releasing cells in the brains of volunteers engaged in the game described above. The researchers found that the brain activity in these areas correlated both with the activity in the right prefrontal cortex and with the ability of the volunteers to press the correct buttons.

    "The remarkable part was that the dopamine signals correlated both with the behavior of our volunteers and their brain activity in the prefrontal cortex," Cohen said. "This constellation of findings provides strong evidence that the dopaminergic nuclei are enabling the prefrontal cortex to hold on to information that is relevant for updating behavior, but not information that isn't."

    David Badre, a Brown University assistant professor of cognitive, linguistic and psychological sciences, said that the work is an important step forward in understanding how working memory is updated. Badre is familiar with the work but had no role in it.

    In a commentary published online Nov. 9 by PNAS, Badre wrote: "The mechanisms by which the brain achieves an adaptive balance between flexibility and stability remain the basis of much current investigation in cognitive neuroscience. These results provide a basis for new investigations into the neural mechanisms of flexible, goal-directed behavior."

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Princeton University. The original article was written by Catherine Zandonella.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal References:

    1. K. D'Ardenne, N. Eshel, J. Luka, A. Lenartowicz, L. E. Nystrom, J. D. Cohen. From the Cover: Feature Article: Role of prefrontal cortex and the midbrain dopamine system in working memory updating. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; 109 (49): 19900 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1116727109
    2. D. Badre. Opening the gate to working memory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; 109 (49): 19878 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1216902109

    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.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/O8iefVH6udc/121218121556.htm

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    Wednesday, December 19, 2012

    Apple crisp anyone? http://wherewomencook.com/apple-crisp-recipe/

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    TEA - The Royal Wedding Blend - (Specialty White Tea) - 2oz. bag by TeaForAllReasons

    White Champagne Raspberry Rose - An exceptional blend of White Champagne Raspberry Tea with Rose Petals and Pearl Dragees that is striking in flavor though light and delicate; a blend truly fit for a future king and queen! This beautiful tea is a perfect blend for a wedding and can be purchased in bulk for your reception as well as packaged in individual 2" tins for wedding favors.

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    Car bomb kills 17 people in market in Pakistan

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) ? A car bomb exploded in a crowded market in Pakistan's troubled northwest tribal region near the Afghan border Monday, killing 17 people and wounding more than 40 others, officials said.

    The bomb went off near the women's waiting area of a bus stop close to the office of one of the Khyber tribal area's top political officials, said Hidayat Khan, a local government official. It was unclear if the office was the target, he added.

    The 17 dead included five boys and two women, said Abdul Qudoos, a doctor at a local hospital in Jamrud town, where the attack occurred. At least 44 people were wounded, he said.

    The explosives were packed in a small white car parked in the middle of the road, blocking traffic, said Shireen Afridi, who was nearby buying a phone card when the bomb exploded.

    "There was fire in which children burned, women burned, poor Afghan people burned, and it caused a lot of destruction," said Afridi. "People's heads were lying in the drain."

    Local TV footage showed several cars and shops in the market that were badly damaged. Residents threw buckets of water on burning vehicles as rescue workers transported the wounded to the hospital.

    The market was located close to the office of the assistant political agent for Khyber, said Khan, who works in the office. Initial reports wrongly indicated the women's waiting area was for the political office, not the bus stop.

    No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing.

    Khyber is home to various Islamist militant groups, including the Pakistani Taliban, who have waged a bloody insurgency against the government for the past few years.

    Also on Monday, Taliban militants fired rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons at an army convoy in northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, killing three soldiers and wounding three others, said Nisar Ahmad, a local government official.

    The soldiers were escorting a polio vaccination team outside the town of Lakki Marwat when the attack occurred, said Wazir Khan, a local resident.

    The Taliban have spoken out against polio vaccination in recent months, claiming the health workers are acting as spies for the U.S. and the vaccine itself causes harm.

    A Pakistani Taliban spokesman in the South Waziristan tribal area, Asim Mehsud, claimed responsibility in a telephone call to The Associated Press.

    "These polio drops are a deadly American campaign to poison us," he said.

    In the southern city of Karachi, an unknown gunman shot and killed a Pakistani working with the World Health Organization's anti-polio campaign, said police officer Qamar Ahmed.

    Zubair Mufty, who works for the U.N. agency, said it was looking into the reported attack.

    The army has carried out offensives against the Taliban in most parts of the tribal region, including Khyber, but militants continue to carry out regular attacks in the country.

    On Saturday night, 10 Taliban militants attacked the military side of an international airport in Peshawar with rockets and car bombs, killing four people and wounding over 40 others. Five of the militants were killed during the attack, and five others died the next day in a gunbattle with security forces.

    Elsewhere on Monday, gunmen in the southwest killed a provincial government spokesman and two nearby policemen in an apparent sectarian attack, police said.

    The attackers shot dead Khadim Hussain Noori in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, said local police official Hamid Shakeel. Noori was the provincial spokesman and also a Shiite Muslim.

    As the gunmen were speeding away on a motorcycle, they killed two policemen and wounded a third, said Shakeel.

    Baluchistan has experienced a spike in sectarian killings in the past year as radical Sunni Muslims have targeted Shiites, who they consider heretics.

    The province is also the scene of a decades-long insurgency by Baluch nationalists who demand greater autonomy and a larger share of the province's natural resources.

    ____

    Associated Press writers Abdul Sattar in Quetta, Pakistan, Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, and Adil Jawad in Karachi, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/car-bomb-kills-17-people-market-pakistan-085053721.html

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    Iranian Oil Revenues Have Been Halved By ... - Business Insider

    Iran is losing half of its oil revenues because of international sanctions imposed over its disputed nuclear programme, Economy Minister Shamseddin Hosseini said in remarks quoted by media on Monday.

    "Iran is facing a 50-percent drop in its oil revenues due to sanctions," Hosseini told state television, Jomhuri Eslami newspaper reported.

    Hosseini put down the loss to difficulties in repatriating oil money.

    Subject to harsh Western sanctions over its controversial nuclear work, Iran is struggling against what it calls an "economic war" to cope with punitive measures targeting its vital oil income and access to global financial systems.

    An oil embargo on Iran imposed by the European Union came into effect in July, ending European purchases of Iranian crude and also decreasing Tehran's oil exports to its Asian customers from 10 to 30 percent.

    According to the International Energy Agency, Iranian exports in November were estimated at 1.3 million barrels per day, down from nearly 2.3 million last year.

    A number of Iranian lawmakers and government officials have hinted that the drop in oil revenues will shrink the budget for the next Iranian calendar year, starting on March 21, 2013.

    In early September, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad acknowledged that Iran had "some problems" in selling its oil because of the sanctions.

    Iran insists its programme of uranium enrichment is for purely peaceful purposes, and denies Western and Israeli allegations that it wants to manufacture nuclear weapons.

    SEE ALSO:?REPORT: Iran Drew Up Plans To Cause A Vast Oil Spill In The Strait Of Hormuz

    Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/iranian-oil-revenues-have-been-halved-by-international-sanctions-2012-12

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    Tuesday, December 18, 2012

    Making Back Office Apps Fun ?

    Business software is beginning to undergo a design revolution comparable to the seismic shift from the green screen to the graphical user interface (GUI) that began in the mid-1980s. Three forces are at work. One is the retirement of large numbers of members of the baby-boom generation and the rise of a generation that grew up with computers and computer games from a young age. Also, software and technology vendors have been recognizing the need to ?consumerize? business applications as mobile device interactions, gestures and other newer user interface (UI) conventions, and are incorporating these innovations in their stodgy products. I commented on this in my assessment of Tidemark?early this year. A third factor, ?gamification??is all the rage in business consulting circles. The idea is to engage younger employees more completely by transforming dull, routine chores into more entertaining pursuits. I join with those skeptical of just how fun one can make clerical tasks. But software can ? and should ? be made less tedious (and therefore more productive), especially for a new generation of users.

    I saw evidence that the generational shift is upon us when walking around this fall?s Dreamforce and Oracle OpenWorld conferences, which were held just weeks apart. It struck me that the crowd at the 2012 Dreamforce was younger and its energy level was higher. While the focus of Dreamforce has shifted more to those working in IT rather than line-of-business roles (and in this respect the event is increasingly like OpenWorld), I found there more of a sense of fundamental change in design and use of business computing even (and maybe especially) when you stripped away the cloud ballyhoo. The applications I saw demonstrated seemed more fluid, agile and easier to use. By contrast, many of the newer business applications on offer from Oracle have a stale look and feel to them.

    Supporting the design revolution over the next several years will be evolving information technology. For example, HTML 5 enables a richer, more capable set of capabilities in web-based and mobile software. A growing number of vendors offer low-cost computing infrastructure in the form of platform-as-a-service, which significantly reduces barriers to entry for startup software companies because up-front costs are low and businesses enjoy fewer constraints to scaling up. Third, there are the ongoing gains in the price and performance of computer processing power and memory. It is ? and will continue to be ? difficult to say which of these is most important, since each will feed off of and drive the others.

    Until the 1990s, the market for business applications was pretty small. The client-server revolution had a profound impact on the design of business software, making it easier to work with and more flexible compared to the mainframe applications that preceded them. Much of this change was driven by a switch to relational and multidimensional databases, easier-to-use development tools, and the adoption of graphical user interfaces, which permitted event-driven programming. These underlying technologies made it easier for people to do computer-related jobs. With that came a change in how users expected to work with business software and the information they expected to get from their systems. The new generation of technology was easier to use, more flexible and more powerful. This, and the increasing homogenization of infrastructure elements and buyers? demand for open standards, also contributed to the decline in the cost of developing applications and drove demand for more off-the-shelf applications.

    Today we?re on the cusp of a similar generational change as the evolution of underlying information technology drives a major redesign of business software. To oldsters, the coming shift in business computing may be welcome, disconcerting or both. If you?re a baby boomer, you probably can remember what things were like before the client-server era and maybe what life was like before personal computers. The major shifts that took place in the 1990s are about to be repeated in ways that are subtle individually but fundamental in aggregate. People entering the workforce today and people who are in the process of taking leadership positions in companies have a different set of experiences and expectations in dealing with computing devices and technology than the boomers. The set of CIOs that came of age in the 1990s and even some millennials will need to forget old certainties, or the organizations that employ them will be forced to lose their old CIOs.

    I?m pretty sure that accounts receivable or order entry will never be fun for all but the chosen few. For the rest, I?m equally certain these processes can be far less painful to execute. More fluid interactions with the software, less burdensome training, easier collaboration and greater adaptability to personal preferences are all feasible and increasingly essential for the coming releases of business applications. I also foresee increased automation to improve efficiency and reduce processing errors in these sorts of purely mechanical tasks. The result will be that, more than ever, executives and managers will need to rethink how work is performed in their parts of the business. Corporations must automate as much of the purely mechanical aspects of work as they can. This is especially true in the finance function, which still grinds out work that can and should be handled hands-free by software. In the process, companies must shift the focus of what people do to tasks that require knowledge, insight, perspective and judgment ? things that (for now at least) are not easily supplied by IT. That would make back office work ?funner,? if not exactly fun.

    Regards,

    Robert Kugel ? SVP Research

    37.769127 -121.960068

    Source: http://blog.ventanaresearch.com/2012/12/17/making-back-office-apps-fun/

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    Saturday, December 15, 2012

    Elementary school shooting: What gun control laws might US voters support? (+video)

    An elementary school shooting spree in Connecticut, in which 20 children were killed, could focus attention on gun control laws. Polls show Americans are open to limited forms of gun control.

    By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / December 14, 2012

    People embrace at a firehouse staging area for family around near the scene of a shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., where authorities say a gunman opened fire, leaving 27 people dead, including 20 children, Friday.

    Jessica Hill/AP

    Enlarge

    Will the heartbreaking school shooting in Newtown, Conn., lead to more support for gun control measures in the US? That?s certainly possible. The deaths of so many innocent children, so young, are likely to earn the crime a place on a tragic roll call of recent American history. Columbine. Virginia Tech. Tucson, Ariz. Aurora, Colo. And now Newtown.

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    Certainly those who have long pushed for greater control on gun ownership see the awful event as yet another teaching moment to try and sway public opinion to their side.

    ?How young do the victims have to be and how many children need to die before we stop the proliferation of guns in our nation?? said Marion Wright Edelman, chairman of the Children?s Defense Fund, in a statement Friday afternoon.

    Yet in the past such calls, however emotional, have done little to sway the American public?s general attitudes towards guns. US citizens tend to see mass shootings as resulting more from troubled individuals than from easy availability of firearms.

    For instance, a Pew Research survey taken in the wake of July?s shootings in an Aurora cinema found that 67 percent of respondents agreed with the statement that mass gun killings such as that ?are just the isolated acts of troubled individuals.? Twenty-four percent said they ?reflect broader problems in American society.?

    The Pew poll found US attitudes toward guns little changed after Aurora. Prior to the shootings, 45 percent of respondents said it was more important to control gun ownership, while 49 percent said it was more important to protect the right to own guns. After the shootings, 47 percent said gun control was more important, while 46 percent said gun rights were more important.

    Other polls echo the fact that this is a question on which the US is generally split. A 2011 Gallup survey found that 44 percent of voters thought US gun laws should be tightened, while 43 percent felt they should be kept as-is.

    Yet this might not be quite the whole story. What?s clear is that US public opinion is against most flat gun bans. Seventy-three percent of respondents told Gallup that they would not support the banning of handguns, for instance.

    Presented with detailed choices, however, many voters approve of particular moves to control or limit firearm ownership.

    A ban on high-capacity ammunition clips, which can carry more than 10 bullets, appears to be widely popular. A 2011 ABC News/Washington Post survey found 57 percent support for such a ban, and 39 percent opposition.

    A CNN/ORC poll from last August found an almost identical result on the clip question.

    As to whether all gun purchasers should undergo a background check to determine if they have committed a felony, 96 percent of respondents said ?yes,? in the CNN/ORC survey.

    Majorities also favored banning AK-47-style assault rifles, preventing convicted felons and the mentally ill from possessing firearms, and requiring gun owners to register guns with their local government.

    The CNN survey showed Americans opposed limiting the number of guns an individual can own ? but only by a 45 to 54 percent margin.

    ?The public favors most sensible gun policies, policies the US does not have,? concluded Harvard public health professors David Hemenway and Robert Blendon after analyzing public polls.

    Finally, gun ownership in the US is already on the decline. In the 1970s, about half of US homes had firearms, according to the long-running General Social Survey conducted by the National Opinion Research Center. Today only about one-third do.

    ?Driving the decline: a dramatic drop in ownership of pistols and shotguns, the very weapons most likely to be used in violent crimes,? writes Patrick Egan, an assistant professor of politics and public policy at New York University in a post at the Monkey Cage blog.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/-kDXA3aQOBw/Elementary-school-shooting-What-gun-control-laws-might-US-voters-support-video

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    Friday, December 14, 2012

    Too many antibiotics? Bacterial ecology that lives on humans has changed in last 100 years

    Dec. 13, 2012 ? A University of Oklahoma-led study has demonstrated that ancient DNA can be used to understand ancient human microbiomes. The microbiomes from ancient people have broad reaching implications for understanding recent changes to human health, such as what good bacteria might have been lost as a result of our current abundant use of antibiotics and aseptic practices.

    Cecil M. Lewis Jr., professor of anthropology in the OU College of Arts and Sciences and director of the OU Molecular Anthropology Laboratory, and Raul Tito, OU Research Associate, led the research study that analyzed microbiome data from ancient human fecal samples collected from three different archaeological sites in the Americas, each dating to over 1000 years ago. In addition, the team provided a new analysis of published data from two samples that reflect rare and extraordinary preservation: Otzi the Iceman and a soldier frozen for 93 years on a glacier.

    "The results support the hypothesis that ancient human gut microbiomes are more similar to those of non-human primates and rural non-western communities than to those of people living a modern lifestyle in the United States," says Lewis. "From these data, the team concluded that the last 100 years has been a time of major change to the human gut microbiome in cosmopolitan areas."

    "Dietary changes, as well as the widespread adoption of various aseptic and antibiotic practices have largely benefited modern humans, but many studies suggest there has been a cost, such as a recent increase in autoimmune related risks and other health states," states Lewis.

    "We wish to reveal how this co-evolutionary relationship between humans and bacteria has changed, while providing the foundation for interventions to reconstruct what has been lost. One way to do this is to study remote communities and non-human primates. An alternative path is to look at ancient samples and see what they tell us," Lewis says.

    "An argument can be made that remote traditional communities are not truly removed from modern human ecologies. They may receive milk or other food sources from the government, which could alter the microbial ecology of the community. Our evolutionary cousins, non-human primates are important to consider. However, the human-chimp common ancestor was over six million years ago, which is a lot of time for microbiomes to evolve distinct, human signatures."

    Retrieving ancient human microbiome data is complementary to these studies. However, studying ancient microbiomes is not without problems. Assuming DNA preserves, there is also a problem with contamination and modification of ancient samples, both from the soil deposition, and from other sources, including the laboratory itself.

    "In addition to laboratory controls in our study, we use an exciting new quantitative approach called source tracking developed by Dan Knights from Rob Knight's Laboratory at the University of Colorado in Boulder, which can estimate how much of the ancient microbiome data is consistent with the human gut, rather than other sources, such as soil," explains Lewis.

    "We discovered that certain samples have excellent gut microbiome signatures, opening the door for deeper analyses of the ancient human gut, including a better understanding of the ancient humans themselves, such as learning more about their disease burdens, but also learning more about what has changed in our gut today."

    Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Oklahoma.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Raul Y. Tito, Dan Knights, Jessica Metcalf, Alexandra J. Obregon-Tito, Lauren Cleeland, Fares Najar, Bruce Roe, Karl Reinhard, Kristin Sobolik, Samuel Belknap, Morris Foster, Paul Spicer, Rob Knight, Cecil M. Lewis. Insights from Characterizing Extinct Human Gut Microbiomes. PLoS ONE, 2012; 7 (12): e51146 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051146

    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.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/g-3PktpcVno/121213132546.htm

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    Paid surveys ? What exactly is Andre Johnson Jersey Paid Surveys ...

    Posted by HugleOlaya on December 14, 2012 in Articles with No Comments


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    Source: http://darululoomnewcastle.co.za/?p=22361

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    Elementary School teacher and family homeless after house ...

    News 12 This Morning / Thursday, Dec. 13, 2012

    CLEARWATER, S.C. -- A family has been left with nothing more than the clothes on their backs after their home caught on fire early Thursday morning.

    The home belongs to a family with three young children ages 2, 6 and 8. The father is a fifth grade teacher at North Aiken Elementary school and the mother works at GHSU.

    Thursday night was just a normal night in the McClary home.

    "I had just put some white clothes in the dryer," explained father, Quinton McClary.

    Their children were in bed while Mr. McClary was finishing up some nightly chores.

    "The smoke started, so I turned the dryer off and opened the window and tried to beat the fire myself," he said.

    By that point, the fire was already too big.

    "I told my wife to call 911 immediately, and I got them out the house, and it was just out of my hands from that standpoint," he said.

    It spread quickly through the whole house.

    "The hardest part for me was just being here and it was out of my control," McClary said. "I couldn't do anything except get my family out. I'm thankful to God that we got them out but that was just the hardest part."

    Now, they're left to face a harsh reality.

    "The four main rooms are pretty much damaged, especially the back end of the house and the fireman said there's smoke damage throughout the rest of the house," McClary said.

    Firefighters say 50 percent of the house was destroyed by fire everything else by smoke.

    "Memories, clothes, material things, you know everything," he said. "We weren't able to get any clothes out except what we're wearing right now."

    But the fire took a lot more than just possessions. Quinton and his family have lived in the house for 10 years and it's also the home his wife grew up in, built by her grandmother more than 40 years ago.

    "The memories that we've had here and we've made here, but I know things can be restored. The main thing is we're safe and that's the main thing," McClary said.

    The fire broke out around 1:15 a.m. They also lost all the Christmas gifts under the tree that they had just purchased this past Saturday.

    Bowles Construction came out to board up the home and make sure everything was secure. The McClary's are staying next door with family.

    If you are interested in helping out the family, email hope.jensen@wrdw.com. The biggest thing they are in need of right now is clothing for the children and work clothing for the parents.

    Clothing sizes for the family:

    • 2-year-old boy: 24 months, shoe size: 6 or 7
    • 6-year-old girl: 8 slim, shoe size: 13
    • 8-year-old boy: 10, shoe size: 2 1/2
    • Mother: 2X top / 3X bottom, shoe size: 10 1/2
    • Father: XL shirt, shoe size: 10 1/2

    Thursday, Dec. 13, 2012

    CLEARWATER, S.C. -- Clearwater fire crews say a family is safe this morning after a fire ripped through their home.

    It happened around 1:15 a.m. on the 200 block of Diamond Street, which is off Old Stormbranch Road.

    A family member told News 12 they think a dryer sparked the flame. However, fire crews have yet to confirm that.

    The fire is under investigation as this time, and News 12 will continue to update you with more information as it comes into the newsroom.


    Have information or an opinion about this story? Click here to contact the newsroom.


    Copyright WRDW-TV News 12. All rights reserved. This material may not be republished without express written permission.

    Source: http://www.wrdw.com/home/headlines/Family-out-safe-after-house-fire-in-Clearwater-183300181.html

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    Thursday, December 13, 2012

    Sean Penn: Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is like Detroit

    This magazine cover image released by Esquire shows actor and activist Sean Penn on the cover of the January 2013 issue of "Esquire." The issue will be available nationwide on Dec. 18. (AP Photo/Esquire)

    This magazine cover image released by Esquire shows actor and activist Sean Penn on the cover of the January 2013 issue of "Esquire." The issue will be available nationwide on Dec. 18. (AP Photo/Esquire)

    (AP) ? As the three-year mark approaches of the devastating earthquake in Haiti that killed, injured and displaced hundreds of thousands of people, actor- activist Sean Penn describes life in the country's capital city.

    In the January issue of Esquire magazine, Penn compares Port-au-Prince to Detroit, saying, "It's not more dangerous, it's not less dangerous."

    Penn founded a relief organization in response to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. He still spends about half his time there.

    The two-time Oscar winner says a child with a fever in the U.S. gets medicine, a cold bath, or a trip to the emergency room. In Haiti, he says, parents wait "to see if he's going to die or not."

    The January issue of Esquire goes on sale Jan. 18.

    ___

    Online:

    http://www.esquire.com/

    http://www.jphro.org/

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-12-12-People-Sean%20Penn/id-4bd390c40c124ec084450e661469c32e

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    Taylor Swift Releases Music Video for "I Knew You Were Trouble"

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/taylor-swift-releases-music-video-for-i-knew-you-were-trouble/

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    The Hallelujah phenomenon

    ?

    Leonard Cohen?s song Hallelujah got a lift when it was recorded by Jeff Buckley for his Grace album (1994).

    Photograph by: John Kenney , The Gazette

    MONTREAL ? In the second of his two Bell Centre concerts last month, roughly midway through the second half of the show, Leonard Cohen sang Hallelujah.

    Hardly surprising in itself ? it?s all but unthinkable that he could leave it out. But its placement in the set, as neither an early grabber nor a rousing climax, felt significant. The sellout crowd, as if caught off-guard, never quite mustered the cathartic chorus singalong that might have been expected. It was almost as if Cohen, in his respectful way, was downplaying the song?s astounding contemporary ubiquity, perhaps beginning to put the brakes on a runaway train.

    But can Cohen in fact do anything to contain the song that is not only the most popular in his deep catalogue, but rapidly becoming one of the most covered and sung songs of all time? It?s a clich? to say that a song, once released, belongs to the people at large more than to its creator, but here is a rare case where that has been proven. The Hallelujah genie is well and truly out of the bottle.

    It was only a matter of time until a whole book was written on the subject, and thankfully it?s been done by someone equal to the task. As his CV encompassing books about the Beastie Boys and Gregg Allman, and editorship of the hip-hop Vibe and alterna-rock Spin magazines would indicate, Alan Light is a man of catholic interests.

    The Holy or The Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley & The Unlikely Ascent of ?Hallelujah? (Atria, 254 pages, $28.99) combines broad music scholarship and insightful textual analysis with the narrative drive of a good detective novel.

    Light was interviewed by email from his home in New York about the historic rise and spread of a song that languished unregarded for 10 years or more after its initial 1984 release, beginning to gather steam only when Jeff Buckley chanced upon a little-heard cover by former Velvet Underground member John Cale.

    What?s your own history with Hallelujah? When did you first hear it?

    I wish I had a better answer to when I first heard it, because I honestly can?t recall. I must have been aware of it in some form around when it came out, because I did pay at least peripheral attention to Leonard Cohen, if only because he was a McGill classmate of my father?s and so a running source of interest within my family. I saw him play at the Beacon Theatre in New York in 1988 or ?89. But like so many others, it didn?t really register with me until it started to become apparent as a phenomenon. As I tell in the book, it was when Hallelujah was sung at Yom Kippur services a couple of years ago that I first thought, ?Wow, this song really has reached another kind of standing in the world, hasn?t it??

    Why do you think the song?s popularity had such a slow gestation? Is it a simple case of a song being ahead of its time? I was working in campus radio in Edmonton back when the Various Positions album was released, and partly with the incentive of Canadian content regulations, I played songs from it fairly often. But to be honest I barely noticed Hallelujah.

    It?s hard to know ?why? it took such a long and circuitous path to popularity. Obviously, Jeff Buckley?s version (on the Grace album, 1994) really did re-contextualize the song, and in many ways made it easier for younger listeners to relate to it. But Grace wasn?t actually a hit, either. So it was the combined associations of Buckley?s death in 1997 and the new resonance that gave to the song, and the right evangelists at the right time, that started the snowball rolling.

    Though he has never officially recorded it, Bob Dylan was ahead of the pack in recognizing Hallelujah. Dylan isn?t known for doing a lot of contemporary covers; what?s your theory on his affinity for the song?

    What Cohen says is that Dylan liked the ?uplifting? feeling of the song, especially of the original last verse. But it is extraordinary, isn?t it, that Dylan picked up on this song so much earlier than the rest of the world. I suppose as someone who has explored biblical imagery so frequently, he would take notice of the writing ? and, I imagine, like so many other singers, he found something in this remarkable melody that he could connect with.

    I?ve always felt John Cale has been under-credited as an evangelist for Hallelujah. How would you describe the role of his version in the song?s history?

    Cale?s role was absolutely pivotal in the progression of Hallelujah. He did the edit of the song that shaped it into the form we have grown most familiar with ? the structure that Jeff Buckley utilized and that, in turn, has become the usual text of Hallelujah most people now know. Cale distanced himself from some of the song?s more grandly spiritual notions and made it something more tangible, the song of a younger man than what Cohen created, of someone grappling with the pain and disappointment of life and struggling to still find hope and faith, rather than the song of a survivor looking back on a life that he is trying to make sense of. I love Cohen?s last verse ? the ?Lord of Song? verse ? but it makes sense that it?s not something Cale would have felt as comfortable with.

    Given the ever-growing list of covers, not to mention the countless amateur renditions on YouTube, it has become something of a parlour game to list favourites. Do you ever find yourself doing that? If so, what would be your personal Top Five?

    My favourites change constantly. I think the way that Cohen sang the song on the last tour (and, I assume, on this one ? I haven?t seen a show yet, since he?s not in NYC until later in the month) is pretty definitive, and incorporates so much of what?s been found in the best interpretations while also retaining that wonderful final verse. k.d. lang does a pretty great version.

    Cale?s, as you say, was revelatory. But then I?ll find something like the version sent to me just as I was finishing the book, by three teenage girls in?no kidding?North Pole, Alaska, who recorded it for a Christian website and did a really beautiful rendition of the song. I also love the ukulele virtuoso Jake Shimabukuro?s instrumental version, if only because it?s so easy to spend all your time talking about the lyrics and forget that any truly great song first resonates with listeners for its melody.

    Sylvie Simmons, in her new Cohen biography I?m Your Man, calls Hallelujah ?an all-purpose ecumenical/secular anthem for the new millennium.? I?m especially intrigued by that ?all-purpose? idea. In your view can an interpreter err in either the ecumenical or secular direction? Is there such a thing as a wrong reading of the song?

    It?s hard to talk about a ?wrong? way to sing Hallelujah. I think that part of the incomparable story here is the way in which the lyrics and the interpretation have been given permission to shift as necessary. The malleability of the words, and the ability to turn up or turn down the different elements of the song ? the spiritual side or the heartbreak or the sexuality, the celebration or the sorrow ? has been central to its universal embrace. It seems like the only way you can really mess it up is to try something extreme, like Bono?s awful trip-hop version or Susan Boyle?s nonsensical edit of the lyrics. If you just deliver the song itself, it still basically always works. And it?s amazing to me that it has retained its sense of solemnity without having been brutally parodied in some way that really popped its bubble ... maybe not a Weird Al Yankovic version, but some kind of spoof that would mean it had to go on the shelf for a while. But that just hasn?t happened yet.

    Can you think of any near-equivalents to the Hallelujah phenomenon in popular culture? I can?t.

    Not really. The unprecedented trajectory of the song is why I wanted to write the book. Is there a cult movie that wasn?t released but then discovered decades later and became a hit? At least it?s not the full Vincent Van Gogh situation ? Leonard Cohen was alive to watch the song reach the larger world. There are some other songs that have become modern global standards ? Bridge Over Troubled Water, Imagine, maybe A Change is Gonna Come ? but unlike Hallelujah, those were all recognized when they were first released, and didn?t take 15 or 20 years to get recognized.

    Cohen himself has hinted that perhaps the song has been over-covered. Can there be too much Hallelujah?

    I think there are some uses that need to be retired for a while. I don?t think there?s much to be gained from more uses of the song as the music for the Big Emotional Climax of TV dramas. But it?s kind of astonishing that something about the song still feels like a discovery, still seems cool, and powerful, and meaningful, to so many people, and that people can still find new meanings and new structures for it that work.

    In some ways, the biggest revelation for me came in talking to regular people who have embraced this song as something really significant in their lives ? people who used it at weddings, funerals, religious services, very central and important moments. It?s very easy to be cynical about music today, and to decide that it?s been so commodified and cheapened that it?s just not as important as it used to be, that people don?t care about music the way they used to. But talking to people about Hallelujah, it?s evident that a truly great song can still be incredibly meaningful, and can still connect in a way that no other art can do.

    ? Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

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    Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/music/Hallelujah+phenomenon/7684504/story.html

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