Saturday, December 31, 2011

Archive Team Google Groups Collection - 08

Archive Team Google Group Collection: Starting with 08

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Source: http://www.archive.org/details/archiveteam-googlegroups-08

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Friday, December 30, 2011

"Big Bang" wins for CBS on another all-repeat night (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? The holiday programming lull has once again proven beneficial for CBS. On a night marked by an absolute lack of new programming across the board for the Big 4, the network took an overall win Thursday night with a roster of reruns spearheaded by "The Big Bang Theory," according to preliminary numbers.

"The Big Bang Theory" at 8 p.m. was the highest-rated program of the night, drawing a 2.8 rating/9 share in the adults 18-49 demographic with 10.1 million total viewers, which also made it the most-watched program of the night.

Combined with "Rules of Engagement," "Person of Interest" and "The Mentalist," CBS averaged a 2.0/6 and 8.7 million total viewers, which also made it the most-watched network of the night.

CBS also took a win Wednesday night -- which, like Thursday, was all repeats from the Big 4 -- and tied with Spanish-language broadcaster Univision on repeat-heavy Tuesday.

Of the other Big 4 networks, Fox averaged a 1.1/3 and 4.8 million total viewers; ABC (which aired its annual telecast of the holiday special "Happy New Year, Charlie Brown!") averaged a 0.9/3 in the demo and 3.3 million total viewers; and NBC averaged a 0.8/2 and 2.1 million total viewers.

Univision, which ran "Una Familia Con Suerte" and "La Rosa de Guadalupe," came in second with an average 1.4/4 and 3.5 million total viewers.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/tv_nm/us_tvratings

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Ryan Moore Out to Make Golf More Affordable

The Moores: Aim to level the playing course

When Ryan Moore isn?t playing golf on tour, he enjoys pondering business ventures ? he became a minority owner in Scratch Golf in late 2009 (but relinquished his equity interest a year later and then signed with Adams) and then invested in TRUE Linkswear, a shoe apparel company, in spring 2010.

His latest project aims not only to make good golf more available to the public, but also to help jump-start the struggling golf course industry in the Tacoma area, where he grew up and still calls home.

Moore, along with 13 partners consisting of primarily friends and family, created RMG Golf Course Management LLC, or RMG Club, according to The News Tribune?s Todd Milles.

Not only will RMG Club run the day-to-day operations at the Classic Country Club in Spanaway and McCormick Woods in Port Orchard, the company announced Thursday that it had acquired Oakbrook Golf and Country Club in Lakewood [Ed. note: Which is a solid and challenging track from my recollection].

With those three venues in the fold, RMG Club will launch a membership-driven business model Jan. 1 that is designed to attract all types of golfers.

The company will offer three levels of unlimited-golf memberships, ranging from its three-course, all-access $179-per-month package, to a one-course, $99-per-month rate, to a twilight-only $49-per-month package.?We want this to be a product that appeals to everyone ? and not just to people who are 45 and can afford a membership and go play golf any time they want,? Moore said. ?We want people to have great facilities that they can go play at a reasonable rate.?

I think that?s a polite way of saying they?d like people who aren?t middle-aged white male businessmen, earning at least a healthy six-figure salary to have access to golf courses besides the local cow pasture, without coughing up thousands to pay the club initiation fee. And $179-per-month all-access?! That?s an incredible deal. Greens fees at resort courses are usually more than $200 for 18 holes and most decent public courses cost at least $50 to play.

Basically, they?re trying to break through the elitist country club mold and reverse golf?s dwindling popularity in the tough economic climate.

The company?s aim is to offer a quality golf experience at minimal cost ? while rewarding customer loyalty.

A group of investors began forming. Shawn Cucciardi, a co-owner at McCormick Woods, began meeting with the Moore family, brainstorming on ideas.

Jason Moore and JD Rastovski ? Ryan Moore?s caddies on the PGA Tour ? came up with a membership rewards program idea that is part of all the membership packages.Each of the membership packages, which require a golfer to sign up for a minimum 12 months, offers the same perks ? discounted family-membership options, unlimited driving-range balls, access to the restaurant and locker rooms and advanced tee-time booking.

Good idea? I think so. Will the RMG Club help revive golf in the area? It can?t hurt.

(Photo via The News Tribune)

Source: http://www.weiunderpar.com/post/ryan-moore-out-to-make-golf-more-affordable

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

For Iowa, campaign brings more attention than money (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179807705?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Francesca Koe: California's Newest State Parks Are in the Ocean

On January 1, 2012 Southern California will celebrate the grand opening of a series of underwater parks that stretches from Santa Barbara to the Mexican border. The parks will join a growing statewide network called for under California's landmark ocean protection law, the Marine Life Protection Act. Soon, the state will have a system of "marine protected areas" dotting the coast like a string of gems, that protect iconic areas like Point Reyes, Big Sur, and La Jolla.

Southern California's new marine protected areas were planned by local residents with guidance from scientists. They are designed to protect the kelp forests, rocky reefs and coral gardens that feed and shelter sea life while leaving about 90% of coastal waters open for fishing. Many are located near public beaches and bluffs, and offer great recreation for everyone including tide-pooling, diving, kayaking, bird-watching and other activities. For a glimpse of the plants and animals found offshore from Southern California, check out the slideshow below.

?

Follow Francesca Koe on Twitter: www.twitter.com/free_dive

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/francesca-koe/california-state-parks_b_1166337.html

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Nokia Lumia 900 with Windows Phone 7 ready in January

Nokia Lumia 900 with Windows Phone 7 Tango will be ready in January? Windows Phone 7 Tango coming soon: in January could come with the new Nokia Lumia 900. Everything is ready for the launch of the new release of Windows Phone 7 that should be in January. Tango, as seen here, the next version [...]

Smartphone database, Tablet database, Service Manual database, Android apps, Blackberry apps, Nokia apps, WP7 apps, iPhone apps, iPad apps, Nokia Lumia 900 with Windows Phone 7 ready in January is a post from: A to Z Smartphone

Read Complete post.

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Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5671511785

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Albertson?s Southern California?s BEST Weekly Deals 12/28-1/3

Dec

27

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

Here are this week?s best deals from Albertson?s Southern California. Thank you to?Save at Home Mommy, our Albertson?s expert in Southern California, for putting this list together!

Mangoes $0.50 each

4 Day Sale Weds-Sat (12/28-12/31)

Nabisco Crackers $1.99
Use the $1.00 off of two Nabisco Crackers printable
Or, use the $1.00 off of two Nabisco Crackers printable
Or, use the $0.75 off of two Nabisco Crackers Coupon from the 11-13-11 SS
Or, use the $1.00 off of two Nabisco Crackers Coupon from the 11-13-11 SS
Total Cost As low as $1.49 each

Pace Picante or Salsa $1.50
Use the $0.50 off of two Pace Salsa, Picante, or Queso Sauce Printable Coupon
Or, use the $1.00 off of two Pace Salsa, Picante or Queso Sauce Coupon from the Share Something Delicious Booklet
Total Cost $1.00

Avocados, (4ct bag) $1.99 with In-Ad Coupon
FREE Great Guacamole Mix Included (Limit 2 bags)
Total Cost Like paying $.50 each

Red Baron Pizza, (14.76-22.63 oz) $2.99 each with In-Ad Coupon (limit 6)


Jennie-O Hickory Smoked Turkey or Oven Roasted Turkey Breast $3.99/lb with In-Ad Coupon

?

Be sure to check out?Save at Home Mommy?for more great deals!

**If you are new to couponing, you will notice some abbreviations next to certain coupons. SS Stands for Smart Source, RP Stands for Red Plum and PG Stands for Proctor and Gamble. They are all of the coupons inserts you can get in your Sunday paper.

by Freebies2Deals on December 27, 2011 8:35 pm ?

Source: http://freebies2deals.com/2011/12/albertsons-southern-californias-best-weekly-deals-1228-13.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

10,000 murders in 4 years in Ciudad Juarez; Mexico's war on drugs sullied by federal forces, corruption

(Reuters) - In March, municipal police officers detained the two brothers of Armida Vazquez and whisked them away in patrol cars.

Vazquez and her mother searched for Dante and Juan Carlos, cellphone shop workers in their mid-20s, and checked with the local and federal police here, to no avail. Nineteen days later, the strangled bodies of the brothers were found on the outskirts of this notoriously violent city. Witness testimony and other evidence led to three policemen, now in jail awaiting trial.

But the police pushed back. Policemen in civilian clothes, Vazquez says, approached her mother outside church and told her to stop making trouble. When Vazquez made a statement against the suspects last month, she says other policemen and relatives of the officers threatened her outside the courthouse.

Terrified, 20 members of the Vazquez family packed their bags and fled across the U.S. border to El Paso, Texas, a short trip into a world of gleaming shopping malls, well-kept highways and safe neighborhoods.

"We left all we had in Juarez, our house, everything," said a pregnant Vazquez, in the tiny apartment she and her three children now share with a sister in El Paso.

Tens of thousands more people like her have abandoned Ciudad Juarez, a city wrecked by Mexico's drug violence. Although official figures vary, the city this month likely surpassed 10,000 homicides in the past four years. That's more than Afghanistan's civilian casualties in the same period and more than double the number of U.S. troops killed in the entire Iraq war.

The violence here, as across the nation, fundamentally stems from a turf war among drug cartels. U.S. and Mexican officials say the battle in Ciudad Juarez pits the Sinaloa cartel, run by Mexico's most wanted man, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, against the Juarez cartel, with deep ties along Mexico's northern border.

But the Vazquez family's nightmare underscores another challenge in Mexico's war on drugs: the government's own warriors.

Business owners, security experts and ordinary residents told Reuters that official corruption at all levels of the security forces has fanned violence in the city, with local and federal police and soldiers complicit in, or actually committing, many of the murders.

The human rights commission of the local state of Chihuahua registered 1,250 complaints of torture, forced disappearances and extrajudicial executions by the army during its two-year deployment in Ciudad Juarez. It counts 400 similar grievances against the federal police who moved in when the soldiers were pulled out. These numbers document only 20 percent of the violations taking place, it estimates.

When President Felipe Calderon launched his war on drug cartels in late 2006, he meant it quite literally. He sent security forces to many parts of the country to try to put powerful drug gangs on the defensive. The nation's armed forces, in particular, were seen as a relatively clean player that would change the game.

The drug warriors have failed at every level of government in places like Ciudad Juarez. Before the army and federal police rolled into the city, many of the municipal and state police were paid operators for the Juarez cartel, government officials have conceded, directly involved in drug trafficking, kidnappings and murder. It has now come full circle: The army left Juarez in the face of a popular backlash, and the local police force is back in charge of the city's security, struggling to clean up its reputation.

While the problem is extreme in Ciudad Juarez, deep corruption inside the security forces is a problem across Mexico, a major weak spot in Calderon's campaign. It hinders efforts to end the violence that has killed more than 45,000 people around the country in the past five years.

Public outrage over the deaths is bleeding into debates ahead of next year's presidential election, with Calderon's strategy widely criticized and his conservative ruling party trailing in opinion polls.

In a speech this month, Calderon explained what he believes has happened. He said the crisis began in the 1990s when Mexican traffickers transporting Colombian cocaine north to consumers in the United States began receiving payment in kind. They found a ripe market among Mexicans and began selling drugs at home, which swelled the army of criminals and forced them to fight one another for territorial control.

"They no longer employ tens or hundreds of people, but thousands of people, thousands, extending their networks into areas that did not exist before," Calderon said. He said they get into other criminal activities, bribe authorities to look the other way and, if unchecked, ultimately create a "symbiosis where crime and security institutions are one and the same."

In Ciudad Juarez, many people believe Calderon's campaign was poorly designed and caused unnecessary suffering.

There were only 300 murders here in 2007, but when the violence arrived in early 2008 it rolled across the city with a vengeance. The government sent in 10,000 troops and federal police to try to quell the mayhem, but the deaths kept rising.

State officials counted 3,622 homicides in 2010, making Ciudad Juarez the city with the highest murder rate in the world at 272 per 100,000 residents. Authorities cite a drop in killings this year as a sign of success, but the murder rate is still more than six times higher than it was in 2007.

"As president, you should know what you are, and are not, capable of and not steer the country into the tragic situation we are in now," said Hugo Almada, an academic and psychotherapist who treats victims of violence in the city. "He calculated very badly."

THE LIST

Ciudad Juarez was once a kind of Las Vegas during the U.S. Prohibition era of the 1920s and early 1930s, hosting American film stars and singers at its bars.

Named after Benito Juarez, a 19th-century president who in 1865 briefly took refuge here with his forces during the French invasion of Mexico, it is still scattered with dilapidated monuments that recall the fighting during the Mexican Revolution between 1910 and 1920. It later became famous for modern manufacturing industries that attracted workers from across the country and billions of dollars in foreign investment.

But it is now a shadow of its former self. The Autonomous University of Ciudad Juarez estimates 239,000 of the city's 1.3 million people have gone in the past four years. Nearly one in three of the businesses along the main boulevard is shuttered, often gutted by bands of looters who rip out copper wiring and the insulation in the walls.

Some say the descent into chaos began on New Year's Day 2008 when a local cop turned up dead, riddled with bullets in his black Volkswagen Jetta. The killings continued, and later that month, an ominous hit list appeared on a monument honoring fallen policemen. Under a heading "for those who didn't believe," it named five recently murdered officers. Under "for those who continue not believing" were 17 more.

Most of the 17 were killed within the year, along with many others. Around 50 policemen had been killed by mid-year, and the murder rate in the city quintupled.

Experts believe many of the murdered policemen were working for "La Linea," or "The Line," the armed wing of the Juarez cartel, and were targeted by a rival gang, most likely the Sinaloa cartel.

The Juarez cartel is run by Vicente Carrillo, 49, a keen horseman who took charge in 1997 after his brother Amado died during plastic surgery in an attempt to change his appearance. Amado, the more flamboyant of the two, was known as "Lord of the Skies" for his prowess using a fleet of airplanes to ferry Colombian cocaine into Mexico.

The younger Carrillo now handles about a fifth of Mexico's $40 billion-a-year narcotics business, drug experts say, and has avoided capture for the past 13 years, in part by adeptly corrupting local officials.

"All our police forces are infiltrated. All of them, it's as simple as that," Chihuahua state's then-governor, Jose Reyes Baeza, said in 2008.

JUNKYARD MURDERS

Along the bustling border, cars and mechanics are cheaper in Mexico than in the United States. Ciudad Juarez built up a busy autoparts business with around 600 junkyards, some legitimate and some chop shops for stolen cars.

Like others, the business has been ravaged by the cartels. Junkyard owners say the trouble started at the end of 2007, when a group of men contacted a leader of their business association demanding a collective protection fee. Fifteen days after he refused to pay, the first junkyard owner was kidnapped.

The group raised a complaint with the state police, said one leader of the junkyard industry. He says he found their reply menacing.

"Instead of getting a consoling response from them, the first commander said, 'I am not interested, I don't want to hear anything about it,'" he said. "And the second commander said, 'Well, when people start showing up wrapped in sheets and stuffed in boxes, you'll probably start paying attention'."

He interpreted it as a warning to just pay the gangs. "I left there really scared."

Since 2008, at least 30 junkyard owners have been kidnapped and some of them killed. More than three-quarters of the city's junkyard businessmen simply decided to shut down their shops, and most who stayed open have to pay regular protection money to the gangs, the leader saod.

SEND IN THE CAVALRY

Calderon sent 2,500 soldiers to Ciudad Juarez in March 2008, and more the following year. At first the crackdown was welcomed. People hoped the army would be less corrupt and less abusive than local authorities.

The army's first target was the police. Just one month after their arrival, soldiers arrested 21 police officers, stripping off their clothes, interrogating them and holding them for a day without charges. Some 400 police officers were fired after they failed federal background checks. Many others quit.

By mid-2008 there were fewer than 200 local police patrolling the streets per shift. Transit police were banned from carrying weapons, leaving them unprotected. Soldiers in charge of day-to-day security operations used the demoralized officers as chauffeurs, said Gustavo de la Rosa from the state human rights commission.

Accusations of torture and illegal detention against soldiers began to surface, and not even the harsh tactics had any impact on the surging homicide rate.

General Jorge Juarez, in charge of the mission in Ciudad Juarez and the rest of Chihuahua State at the time, told reporters they should stop writing about "one more death" and instead print that there was "one less criminal."

In a recent report, Human Rights Watch says army abuses are not unique to Ciudad Juarez but endemic across Mexico and that the government has failed to properly address most complaints.

Gerardo Baca filed one of them. He says his son Victor was just 21 when he was picked up by soldiers three years ago at a hot dog stand with a couple of friends. Victor has not been heard from since.

Even after his friends were released claiming they were in custody with Victor, the army denies ever having held him. Baca goes every week to the morgue to scan records of unidentified bodies, hoping to find some characteristics matching his son. He has reported the case to every authority he can think of with no success.

"This is hell, we are living in a nightmare," Baca said in the small living room of his publicly subsidized home, pointing to pictures of Victor, one in a white cowboy hat, another in a plaid shirt. "I wouldn't wish this on anybody, not even the soldiers who detained my son."

The army did not respond to requests for information about specific cases for this article.

In his recent speech, President Calderon conceded the army has gone too far in some cases. "There have been excesses, that's true, unfortunately," he said. And we are very concerned and it's very serious. But believe me, my friends, that these cases, given the magnitude of the operations carried out, the arrests that are made daily, are the exception rather than the rule."

One former professional hitman says the abuses may have gone much deeper.

Interviewed by Reuters late last year, the hitman said he had worked with a group of 20 other paid assassins doing jobs for bosses he never met. He claimed his main contact was a former military officer, that he received training on a military base, and that he and other hitmen collaborated with soldiers.

"There are groups, paramilitary groups, that are the big ones in the army," said the man, who admitted to beheading and torturing his victims. Many times, he says, he did not know why he had been ordered to target the person he was killing.

"One time I saw the army wave through a checkpoint three vans filled with hitmen from Sinaloa with automatic weapons," he said. "They didn't wait in line, just gave a code, showed a paper and they let them through to do their work."

The army did not respond to questions about the claims,

which couldn't be independently confirmed.

A spokesman for Calderon's government said in September that "there is no evidence that phenomenon of paramilitary groups exist."

Human Rights Watch found there were 921 investigations opened in the military justice system for abuses in Chihuahua between December 2006 and May 2011 - more than any other state. Charges were brought in only two cases and no sentences were handed were down.

Rising disenchantment with the military siege sparked a series of public protests in Ciudad Juarez in late 2009. The army handed over control to the federal police in mid-2010, just as the violence was peaking.

A FIGHTBACK

Once the federal police took charge, they went after the criminal gangs, arresting more than 400 suspected members of the Juarez and Sinaloa cartels along with over 5,000 other alleged criminals, breaking up kidnapping and extortion gangs.

Crime decreased, although the flow of narcotics was barely interrupted and the state human rights commission said complaints of corruption continued.

In what was dubbed "green zone," federal police set up checkpoints to patrol the main commercial strip of bars and discos near the border even after most businesses, squeezed by extortionists, had shut down or were set on fire. The intensive patrols were meant to encourage patrons to return to the area. They didn't work, in part because police were looking for bribes and potential customers were worried the police would be targets for criminals, making the area more dangerous.

"People were not only afraid of the criminals but also of the police," said Federico Ziga, the head of the restaurant association.

The area is still largely abandoned. Places like the Sphinx, a once-popular nightclub shaped like a pyramid with a golden pharaoh's head on the roof, are up for rent.

In October, the federal police followed the army and left, handing command of the city's security back to the local authorities. Mayor Hector Murguia says he has beefed up the municipal police force to 2,600 officers, spending 47 percent of the city's budget on security.

He brought in a tough new police chief, a retired military man named Julian Leyzaola, last March. Praised by the socialite magazine "Quien" as one of Mexico's most influential people, Leyzaola is credited with bringing down crime rates in the violent border city of Tijuana, across from San Diego, Calif.

Leyzaola has said he helped purge the Tijuana force of corrupt and inefficient officers. Four local policemen in Tijuana say they were detained and tortured by Leyzaola, a charge he vehemently rejects. Leyzaola's office did not respond to requests for an interview for this article.

Mayor Murguia stands by the police chief. "I am not interested in these complaints, let them be pursued legally," the mayor said. "As far as I'm concerned he is showing results in Juarez and I think he is one of the best police commanders in this country."

Murguia, a member of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, is in his second term as mayor.

During his latest election campaign, rival politicians, rights groups and drug trade experts accused Murguia of being in the pay of the Juarez cartel. He has never been charged and denies any wrongdoing.

SIGNS OF LIFE?

The government points to a drop in homicides, car thefts and armed robberies of businesses this year as a sign of success in Ciudad Juarez even as violent car-jackings rose.

Special agent Joseph Arabit at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in El Paso said improved intelligence sharing between the U.S. and Mexico has helped the two governments make more arrests.

Factory jobs in the city's more than 300 assembly plants for export, or "maquilas," are slowly picking up again after a steep drop in 2008 and 2009 during the U.S. recession. Ziga of the restaurant association said customers are venturing out again, encouraged by relatively calmer streets. And the mayor said there was a good turnout for Mexico's independence day celebrations, a sharp contrast to last year when most were canceled due to fear of attacks.

"We are much more effective at capturing criminals," said Murguia. "We have been able to reduce the kidnapping rate to basically zero."

Moments after the interview with Murguia, 15 minutes from his office, reporters crowded around a red Nissan with the windows shot out that had been abandoned in the middle of the street, the keys still in the ignition. It was another "levanton," or "pick up," where the fate of the driver is unknown. It didn't merit a mention in the next day's local newspaper.

Minutes later, on the same street, police cars chased armed men who had tried to rob a carwash. After a shootout, three men were arrested. Panicked witnesses crashed their cars trying to escape the scene.

Another day this month, a day like many others, 13 people were killed. Among the dead were four dialysis patients and a paramedic gunned down in an ambulance.

(Additional reporting by Patricia Giovine in El Paso; Editing by Kieran Murray)

? Copyright (c) Reuters

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F229/~3/cz3AvnKkAfE/story.html

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a new opinion in Campus & Careers about Liverpool John Moores University in general

Liverpool John Moores University in general

Newest Review:?... yourself and can cope by yourself, but the ones who do care are happy to help. University provide an extensive support team at all the cam... more

Lucy

Author Name: Lucy

I am currently in my 2nd year studying Sports Development, Physical Education and Inclusion. The student halls accomodation across the city I can not fault, it is lovely, well cared for and the staff who work within them are very helpful and welcoming, although it is very expensive (?92-160 per week). The campus itself is rather dated on the outside but inside is full of technology, it is in the lovely countryside although the local residents arent very welcoming of students. The course itself is very up and down, some modules are excellent and you cannot fault them, however for every good one there is one which is very pointless and no relevant (as far as myself and others can see/understand). The lecturers are up and down as well, some are really really good and very helpful, provide support for studies and home life, although on the other hand there are others that have the attitude you are grown up enough to look after yourself and can cope by yourself, but the ones who do care are happy to help. University provide an extensive support team at all the campus' which is a great support for anyone as they deal with a variety of issues and point you in the right direction if they cannot help themselves. LJMU offer a wide variety of societies and clubs, some are very cheap and accessable but others are rather expensive (a lot more than if you joined a local club). LJMU do offer some good job opportunites but only after you have finished your degree (WOW certificates and Graduate skills, as well as gradute job days). Also a lot of sports kit is very expensive and so are the books especially as they know you are students (the uni's answer is to use your student loan that is what it is there for! Most dont understand student loan doesn't cover your accomodation!) I would reccomend this uni if you are a very independent student and cope with little study support and enjoy nightlife.

Summary: It is okay as long as you are made of money!

Source: http://www.dooyoo.co.uk/universities/liverpool-john-moores-university-in-general/1607331/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Mindy McCready?s Mother Appeals For Grandson?s Christmas Return To Florida

Mindy McCready
Country star Mindy McCready?s estranged mother has issued a plea to Arkansas authorities to reunite her with her grandson in time for Christmas, three weeks after he was taken into foster care. Th?

Read More >



Mindy McCready?s Mother Appeals For Grandson?s Christmas Return To Florida

Source: http://thegossipwire.com/celebrity-news/mindy-mccreadys-mother-appeals-for-grandsons-christmas-return-to-florida/

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technews4free: Chinese hackers target U.S. Chamber of Commerce, sensitive data stolen: According to sources close to _The Wall... http://t.co/CjOTYvLa

Twitter / pchelp4free: Chinese hackers target U.S ... Loader Chinese hackers target U.S. Chamber of Commerce, sensitive data stolen: According to sources close to _The Wall...

Source: http://twitter.com/technews4free/statuses/150541757350817792

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Columbiana Storm Ruled Possible Tornado


People usually want trees inside of their home this time of the year... not on top of them.

The owner of this house found out about the tree versus his home from his brother because he and his family are not home for the holidays.

"He gets the call this happened and you know they are in the middle of the moving process and the remodeling process, so it's a tough time for him," said Greg York.

However... "In retrospect, it's a blessing that nobody was here and they were out of town for Christmas."

This tree and the countless others were downed due to severe weather event that swept through the area, severe enough for the national weather service to come in and review it.

"Wind speeds were probably the strongest right here at touch down so consistent with about 70-to-80 mile-per-hour winds, which is an EF-0 weak tornado," said National Weather Service Meteorologist Jim Stefkovich.

Which created a new landscape for this neighborhood.

"It took out several of out pretty, old trees," said Cecelia Ebert.

She's been living in this neighborhood for 36 years. At the time of this severe weather event, she was at church attending a funeral.

"When it came over, you could see the rain outside and then, all of a sudden, I thought somebody had come in the doors, but they said that the doors were pulled open and you could see the rain and the leaves and all the stuff in the church parking lot kind of making a rotating, you know, and it kind of unnerved me because this is the closest I've ever been."

And she's hoping she'll never come that close again.

Source: http://www.wtvy.com/home/headlines/Columbiana_Storm_Ruled_Possible_Tornado_136171578.html

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What The EPA Just Did (Balloon Juice)

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Florida minorities could benefit from Countrywide settlement

Many African-American and Hispanic homeowners in South Florida could benefit from a $335 million settlement that the U.S. Department of Justice reached with Countrywide Financial Corp.?

Countywide, which is now owned by Bank of America?

?The complaint alleges that these borrowers were charged higher fees and interest rates because of their race or national origin and not because of the borrowers? creditworthiness or other objective criteria related to borrower risk,? the DOJ said in its news release.

The $335 million settlement will provide compensation for the victims.

There could be many in South Florida. Using Compliance Technology?s database to examine Home Mortgage Disclosure Act filings, Countrywide made 12,447 mortgages with high interest spread ? otherwise known as subprime ? in South Florida in 2006. That was the peak year for subprime lending.

Looking at those local Countrywide customers, high-rate loan ...

Many African-American and Hispanic homeowners in South Florida could benefit from a $335 million settlement that the U.S. Department of Justice reached with Countrywide Financial Corp.?

Countywide, which is now owned by Bank of America?

?The complaint alleges that these borrowers were charged higher fees and interest rates because of their race or national origin and not because of the borrowers? creditworthiness or other objective criteria related to borrower risk,? the DOJ said in its news release.

The $335 million settlement will provide compensation for the victims.

There could be many in South Florida. Using Compliance Technology?s database to examine Home Mortgage Disclosure Act filings, Countrywide made 12,447 mortgages with high interest spread ? otherwise known as subprime ? in South Florida in 2006. That was the peak year for subprime lending.

Looking at those local Countrywide customers, high-rate loans went to 49 percent of black borrowers, 44 percent of Hispanic borrowers and only 25 percent of non-Hispanic, white borrowers.

High-spread subprime loans have the greatest default rate for borrowers. That means the minority populations that were given those types of loans when, as the DOJ alleges, they should have qualified for regular loans, have suffered a higher rate of foreclosure as a result.

About 8,800 minorities in South Florida who took out high interest spread loans from Countrywide in 2006 could be eligible under the settlement ? and that?s only one of the five years included in agreement. Borrowers who believe they are eligible for compensation should email the DOJ at countrywide.settlement@usdoj.gov.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_61/~3/MwA20YmWCNk/south-florida-blacks-hispanics-could.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Racism in English soccer becomes a criminal matter

Chelsea's John Terry, center, reacts as he limps off the pitch after an injury while manger Andre Villas-Boas, right, looks on during a soccer training session at Stamford Bridge, London, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)

Chelsea's John Terry, center, reacts as he limps off the pitch after an injury while manger Andre Villas-Boas, right, looks on during a soccer training session at Stamford Bridge, London, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)

Chelsea's John Terry, center, is being assisted as he walks from the pitch after an injury during a soccer training session at Stamford Bridge, London, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)

(AP) ? For the first time in the long history of English soccer, a player is being prosecuted over words spoken on the field.

Prosecutors said Wednesday that John Terry, one of the country's best-known athletes, racially abused an opponent during an October match. Though the potential penalty ? a $4,000 fine ? is relatively small, the case throws soccer's decades-long struggle with racism onto a high-profile stage with deep ramifications for both the sport and Terry, who captains Chelsea and the English national team.

England has largely eradicated the abuse against black players that blighted the game here in the 1970s and '80s, but recent incidents have raised questions about how far the Premier League has to go. On Tuesday, Liverpool striker Luis Suarez received an eight-match ban and 40,000-pound ($62,000) fine from England's Football Association for racially abusing a Manchester United player during another match in October.

The sport's international governing body has a mixed record on the issue. FIFA has launched anti-racism campaigns but its president, Sepp Blatter, set off a wave of outrage last month by claiming that racist abuse does not exist on the soccer field and suggesting that any incidents could be settled by a handshake at the end of a match.

Prosecutors decided on Wednesday to charge Terry after studying video of him apparently hurling abuse at Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand toward the end of the Oct. 23 match, which was broadcast around the world. The video appears to show him yelling two obscenities and the word "black."

Prosecutors declared that Terry had committed a "racially aggravated public order offense."

Terry denies wrongdoing, though he doesn't deny saying the words after a verbal clash with Ferdinand. He said the words were taken out of context because he was repeating an accusation he felt had wrongly been made against him.

"I have never aimed a racist remark at anyone and count people from all races and creeds among my closest friends," Terry said. "I will fight tooth and nail to prove my innocence."

Ferdinand has not commented directly on the case, and the Football Association has yet to issue a ruling, saying it will wait for the police investigation to be completed. Police and prosecutors became involved after a member of the public made a complaint against the defender, having seen footage of his comments.

"After careful consideration of all the evidence I am satisfied there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and it is in the public interest to prosecute this case," Alison Saunders, the chief crown prosecutor for London, said in a statement.

Terry will have to appear at West London Magistrates' Court on Feb. 1 in a case that could threaten both his public image ? worth millions in endorsements ? and his international career.

If he is found guilty, it will be difficult for him to represent England at next summer's European Championship ? especially since he often partners with Ferdinand's brother Rio in central defense. Terry already lost the England captaincy once, ahead of the 2010 World Cup, after being embroiled in a sex scandal, but he regained the armband this year.

Anti-racism campaigners are hailing prosecutors' announcement and the FA's punishment of Suarez as evidence that new weapons are being deployed against racism in soccer.

"It's a very important point in the history of campaigning against racism in football," said Herman Ouseley, chairman of the group Kick It Out. "People who are very cynical ? and a lot of black footballers have been right up until I think yesterday ? think it's a waste of time because the campaign hasn't stopped these things from happening. It goes on, it's quiet, it's subtle and nothing ever gets done.

"It's quite important that (players) now feel a bit more confident that, although it has taken a while, due process with decisive action could well make a change."

Suarez was found by an independent FA panel to have directed racist abuse at Manchester United defender Patrice Evra, who is black. However, unlike the Terry case, Suarez's abuse was not caught on camera and there has been no complaint to the police to trigger a criminal investigation.

Liverpool players issued a statement Wednesday saying they were "shocked and angered" by Suarez's punishment, and that they support their Uruguayan teammate. "We know he is not racist," they said.

England is far from alone in European soccer in having to combat discrimination. Most high-profile cases have involved abusive chants by fans against players, but there have been several on-field incidents as well.

The French soccer league has opened an inquiry after claims from Morocco midfielder Kamel Chafni that an assistant referee racially insulted him during Auxerre's 1-0 defeat at Brest on Saturday.

Bulgaria's national federation was fined euro40,000 (about $52,000) by UEFA after its fans directed racist abuse at England players during a Euro 2012 qualifying match in September.

But Luis Aragones held onto his job as Spain coach in 2005 after making racist remarks about French striker Thierry Henry, landing a fine of just euro3,000 ($3,900).

"I think the problem has never gone away ? it's just become more subtle and less obvious," said Ouseley, a member of the House of Lords. "I think there is an awareness that more has to be done."

Ouseley pointed out that Poland and Ukraine, the co-hosts of Euro 2012, have also had problems with racism in the past, and that next summer's tournament will be a good indicator of whether they and other countries are taking the matter seriously.

"We know from the reports we've had back (that) there are going to be problems there," Ouseley said. "They will make the right noises but will they do they right thing? Will they stop abuse?"

___

Rob Harris can be reached at www.twitter.com/RobHarrisUK

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-21-SOC-Terry-Racism/id-b74d600b7741422eaff9032b65d95441

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Kindle Fire Update Fixes Performance, Adds Privacy

Amazon has released the promised software update for the Kindle Fire, which will supposedly fix all of the launch issues in one go. What it won’t do is add in a proper hardware volume control.
The update, which will be sent automatically to your Kindle Fire, “enhances fluidity and performance, improves touch navigation responsiveness.” That takes [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/AiKwq2QvE-8/

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Czechs, world leaders mourn Vaclav Havel (AP)

PRAGUE ? Czech citizens joined their leaders and foreign politicians Sunday in paying tribute to Vaclav Havel, the dissident playwright who led the 1989 Velvet Revolution that peacefully toppled communism in the former Czechoslovakia.

A black flag flew over Prague Castle, the presidential seat, while Czechs lighted candles at the monument to the revolution in downtown Prague in memory of Havel, who died earlier Sunday at the age of 75.

"Mr. President, thank you for democracy," read a note placed there.

Others came to Havel's villa in Prague to lay flowers and light candles.

Josef Klik, a 67-year-old, was among the mourners.

"He is an unforgettable person who contributed to the fall of communism," Klik said. "And after that, he remained a moral authority for ordinary people."

At downtown Wenceslas Square, where Havel talked to hundreds of thousands during the 1989 revolution, an impromptu gathering of mourners was planned for late Sunday.

Vaclav Klaus, Havel's political archrival who replaced him as president in 2003, called Havel "the symbol of the new era of the Czech state."

Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg added that Havel "returned dignity to the Czech nation."

In neighboring Poland, the founder of the anti-communist Solidarity movement and former president Lech Walesa called Havel "a great fighter for the freedom of nations and for democracy."

"It is a great pity and a great loss. His outstanding voice of wisdom will be missed in Europe," said Walesa, the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

"We have lost a great leader," former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who is of Czech origin, said in a statement sent to the AP.

"Vaclav Havel leaves our world better for having been a part of it," Albright said. "My thoughts and prayers go out to his wife Dagmar Havlova, his family and the people of the Czech Republic."

British Prime Minister David Cameron said "Havel led the Czech people out of tyranny. And he helped bring freedom and democracy to our entire continent."

The Czech government meets Monday to declare a period of official mourning. Klaus said condolence books will be available for people to sign at the Prague castle, the presidential seat, starting Monday for people to sign.

In Slovakia, which split from the Czech Republic in 1993, prime Minister Iveta Radicova said it was Havel who "opened the gates to the world after 1989."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in East Germany and went into politics as communism crumbled, said she learned "with great dismay" of Havel's death.

"His dedication to freedom and democracy is as unforgotten as his great humanity," Merkel wrote in a message to Klaus. "We Germans also have much to thank him for. Together with you, we mourn the loss of a great European."

The president of the European parliament Jerzy Buzek ? a former Polish prime minister and activist in Solidarity ? wrote on Twitter: "Vaclav Havel is the figure that represents the Velvet Revolution and the reunification of Europe. He will be sorely missed."

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt tweeted that Havel was "one of the greatest Europeans of our age."

He added on his blog that Havel was "maybe the strongest voice from behind the iron curtain that no longer accepted a Europe divided between freedom and repression."

In Russia, Grigory Yavlinsky, a veteral opposition figure and leader of the Yabloko party, told the Itar-TASS news agency that Havel "was a man of integrity and dignity who has never been afraid of anyone".

"He devoted his life to freeing his people from a totalitarian regime," Yavlinsky said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_re_eu/eu_czech_havel_remembered

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Psychology researcher finds that second-guessing one's decisions leads to unhappiness

Psychology researcher finds that second-guessing one's decisions leads to unhappiness

Friday, December 16, 2011

You're in search of a new coffee maker, and the simple quest becomes, well, an ordeal. After doing copious amounts of research and reading dozens of consumer reviews, you finally make a purchase, only to wonder: "Was this the right choice? Could I do better? What is the return policy?"

Reality check: Is this you?

If so, new research from Florida State University may shed some light on your inability to make a decision that you'll be happy with.

Joyce Ehrlinger, an assistant professor of psychology, has long been fascinated with individuals identified among psychologists as "maximizers." Maximizers tend to obsess over decisions ? big or small ? and then fret about their choices later. "Satisficers," on the other hand, tend to make a decision and then live with it.

Happily.

Of course, there are shades of gray. In fact, there's a whole continuum of ways people avoid commitment without really avoiding it.

Ehrlinger's latest research on decision making was published in the peer-reviewed journal Personality and Individual Differences. The paper, "Failing to Commit: Maximizers Avoid Commitment in a Way That Contributes to Reduced Satisfaction," was co-authored with her graduate student, doctoral candidate Erin Sparks, and colleague Richard Eibach, a psychology assistant professor at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada. It examines whether "maximizers show less commitment to their choices than satisficers in a way that leaves them lesssatisfied with their choices."

The paper, based on two studies of Florida State undergraduate volunteers, finds that the maximizers' focus on finding the best option ultimately undermines their commitment to their final choices. As a result, the authors argue, "maximizers miss out on the psychological benefits of commitment," leaving them less satisfied than their more contented counterparts, the satisficers.

Past research into the differences between maximizers and satisficers looked at how the two groups made choices differently and, more importantly, how the process itself varied. Ehrlinger's research, however, looked at something else entirely: What happened after a choice was made?

"Because maximizers want to be certain they have made the right choice," the authors contend, "they are less likely to fully commit to a decision." And most likely, they are less happy in their everyday lives.

Whether being a maximizer is a central and stable part of the personality or simply a frame of mind remains unclear, but Ehrlinger hopes to isolate the cause of the behavior in future research.

"Current research is trying to understand whether they can change," she said. "High-level maximizers certainly cause themselves a lot of grief."

Over the years, Ehrlinger's scholarly research has led her to study self-perception and accuracy and error in self-judgment. Her latest research into the ways maximizers avoid commitment is important for several reasons.

First, the differences between maximizers and satisficers may play a bigger role than previously thought in consumer decision making and purchasing. For example: "Maximizers get nervous when they see an 'All Sales Are Final' sign because it forces them to commit," Ehrlinger said.

Also, a maximizer's lack of contentment creates a lot of stress, so the trait could potentially have an enormous effect on health, Ehrlinger explained. It's not just coffee-maker purchases they stress over ? and second-guess themselves about ? it's also the big life decisions such as choosing a mate, buying a house or applying for a job.

Even after considerable deliberation before choosing a mate or a house, a high-level maximizer may still feel unhappy, even depressed, with his or her final decision.

"Identifying the 'right' choice can be a never-ending task (for a maximizer)," Ehrlinger and her co-authors write. "Feelings about which option is best can always change in the face of new information. Maximizers might be unable to fully embrace a choice because they cannot be absolutely certain they chose the best possible option."

###

Florida State University: http://www.fsu.edu

Thanks to Florida State University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116066/Psychology_researcher_finds_that_second_guessing_one_s_decisions_leads_to_unhappiness

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WikiLeaks founder granted extradition appeal in UK

FILE - This is a Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011 file photo of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange as he talks during a news conference in central London. As the suspected source for the biggest leak of intelligence material in American history faces his first hearing Friday Dec. 15 ,2011, U.S. prosecutors have their eye on another prize: The man who disclosed the documents to the world. When WikiLeaks' spectacular disclosures of U.S. secrets exploded onto the scene last year, much of Washington's anger coalesced around Julian Assange, the silver-haired globe-trotting figure whose outspoken defiance of the Pentagon and the State Department riled politicians on both sides of the aisle. Pfc. Bradley Manning, long under lock and key, hasn't attracted the same level of ire. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, File)

FILE - This is a Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011 file photo of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange as he talks during a news conference in central London. As the suspected source for the biggest leak of intelligence material in American history faces his first hearing Friday Dec. 15 ,2011, U.S. prosecutors have their eye on another prize: The man who disclosed the documents to the world. When WikiLeaks' spectacular disclosures of U.S. secrets exploded onto the scene last year, much of Washington's anger coalesced around Julian Assange, the silver-haired globe-trotting figure whose outspoken defiance of the Pentagon and the State Department riled politicians on both sides of the aisle. Pfc. Bradley Manning, long under lock and key, hasn't attracted the same level of ire. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, File)

(AP) ? Britain's Supreme Court said Friday it had agreed to hear WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's appeal against extradition to Sweden over sex crimes allegations.

The court said a panel of three judges had considered a written submission and granted a two-day appeal beginning on Feb. 1, meaning there is no prospect of Assange being sent to Stockholm until at least next year.

In a statement, the court said it had "decided that seven justices will hear the appeal given the great public importance of the issue raised, which is whether a prosecutor is a judicial authority."

Assange's legal team argue that police and prosecutors ? like the Swedish prosecutor seeking to bring Assange back to the country for questioning ? are not a proper judicial authority, and shouldn't have the right to order extraditions.

Earlier this month, High Court judges John Thomas and Duncan Ouseley said Assange could apply to the Supreme Court to argue that point and seek to prove that Europe's process of carrying out extradition was flawed.

However, Thomas warned Assange that his chance of success "may be extraordinarily slim."

Assange ? who leads the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy website ? was accused of rape, coercion and molestation following encounters with two Swedish women in August 2010. Swedish authorities issued a European Arrest Warrant on rape and molestation accusations, and Assange was arrested in London in December 2010.

The 40-year-old denies wrongdoing and is currently on bail on the condition that he lives under curfew at a supporter's country estate in eastern England and wears an electronic tag.

Claes Borgstrom, the lawyer in Sweden representing the two women, said the decision would cause more strain for his clients ? and predicted Assange would eventually face extradition.

"It is stressful for my clients that there is yet another extension," Borgstrom told AP by telephone.

"I assume that the Supreme Court will rule that Assange should be extradited according to the European Arrest warrant. If not, you can scrap it," he said.

In a hearing in London in February, Judge Howard Riddle had ruled that Assange can be extradited to Sweden to face questions about the allegations, rejecting his claims that he would not receive a fair trial there.

Assange appealed to the High Court, and will now take his legal battle to the country's highest legal authority, the Supreme Court. The hearing will be his last avenue in Britain to avoid extradition, though lawyers have said they could consider a further appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

___

Associated Press writer Karl Ritter in Stockholm contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-16-EU-WikiLeaks/id-fb35dd5c76e74c34a856b11e01df402e

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

'Barefoot Bandit' gets 7 years for crime spree

The young man who gained international notoriety as the "Barefoot Bandit" while evading police in stolen planes, boats and cars during a two-year crime spree was sentenced to more than seven years in prison Friday.

Judge Vickie Churchill said "this case is a tragedy in many ways, but it's a triumph of the human spirit in other ways." She described Harris-Moore's upbringing as a "mind-numbing absence of hope" and said she believed he was genuinely remorseful and contrite.

"He survived," Churchill said.

Friday's proceedings consolidated cases against Harris-Moore in three Washington counties. He has already pleaded guilty to federal charges in Seattle and will be sentenced for those crimes early next year. He will serve his state and federal sentences at the same time.

Wearing handcuffs and an orange jail uniform, Colton Harris-Moore spoke softly in court while entering his pleas and sat next to his lawyers with his eyes downcast, looking even younger than his 20 years.

In a statement provided to the judge, he said his childhood was one he wouldn't wish on his "darkest enemies."

Still, he said he took responsibility for the crime spree that brought him international notoriety.

Freedom in flight
Harris-Moore said he studied manuals and online videos to teach himself to be a pilot, and the thrills he experienced while flying stolen planes renewed his passion for life and will help him rehabilitate while in prison.

"The euphoria of the countdown to takeoff and the realization of a dream was nearly blinding," he said of his first illicit flight on Nov. 11, 2008. "My first thought after takeoff was 'Oh my God, I'm flying.' I had waited my entire life for that moment."

He said he'll use his prison time to study and get ready to apply to college, with the hope of earning an aeronautical engineering degree.

Several victims and a few curious citizens watched Harris-Moore enter his pleas in Island County Superior Court, along with Harris-Moore's aunt.

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"He was a menace," Island County Prosecutor Greg Banks told the court. "His burglaries threatened and distressed people. People were afraid to leave their houses."

He pleaded guilty to a total of 16 counts from Island County, including identity theft, theft of firearm and residential burglary. Then the hearing continued with Harris-Moore pleading guilty to 17 counts from San Juan County.

Harris-Moore's daring run from the law earned him international fame and a movie deal to help repay his victims after he flew a stolen plane from Indiana to the Bahamas in July 2010, crash-landed it near a mangrove swamp and was arrested by Bahamian authorities in a hail of bullets.

State prosecutors asked for a nine-and-a-half year sentence. Browne and attorney Emma Scanlan, sought a low-end, six-year term, citing Harris-Moore's bleak childhood in a Camano Island trailer with an alcoholic mother and a series of her convict boyfriends. They laid out the details of his upbringing in psychiatric and mitigation reports filed with the court.

Criminal record begins
Harris-Moore's first conviction came at age 12, in 2004, for possession of stolen property, and according to the reports, his first experience with burglary came when he broke into the homes of his classmates to steal food because his mother spent most of her Social Security income on beer and cigarettes ? something she has denied.

Over the next three years he was convicted of theft, burglary, malicious mischief and assault, among other crimes. At one point he was arrested when a detective posed as a pizza-delivery driver.

In 2007, the boy was sentenced to three years in a juvenile lockup after pleading guilty to three burglary counts in Island County. But he fled the minimum-security facility in April 2008 and was soon back to his old tricks, breaking into unoccupied vacation homes, stealing food and sometimes staying there.

As red-faced investigators repeatedly failed to catch him, his antics escalated: He began stealing planes from small, rural airports and crash-landing them ? at least five in all.

"What was characterized by the media as the swashbuckling adventures of a rakish teenager were in fact the actions of a depressed, possibly suicidal young man with waxing and waning post-traumatic stress disorder (following his first plane crash in November 2008)," wrote Dr. Richard S. Adler, a psychiatrist who evaluated him for the defense lawyers.

Waves of burglaries broke out on Orcas Island, where Kyle Ater runs his Homegrown Market and Deli, in late 2009 and in early 2010, after stolen planes were found at the airport there. The second time, Harris-Moore left Ater's new security system in a utility sink, under a running faucet. He took cash and a tray of croissants, and Ater's insurance company jacked up his rates.

'Fearing for our lives'
Mike Parnell, a former owner of the Oakley sunglasses company who lives on Orcas, was repeatedly victimized. Harris-Moore hid out for long periods in the second level of his hangar at the airport, and when Parnell and his family would go on trips in their plane, Harris-Moore would take their car to their house and eat their food. At one point, Harris-Moore entered their home while Parnell was there with his wife and three children and grabbed his wife's car keys off a counter.

"We were all fearing for our lives," Parnell said Thursday. "The kids wouldn't sleep in their own bedrooms. We purchased night vision goggles. I'm glad that day is finally approaching when we will finally know what the consequences are, and I hope it's sufficient for the way our whole island suffered."

Harris-Moore's final spree came after he stole a pistol in eastern British Columbia and took a plane from a hangar in Idaho, where investigators found bare footprints on the floor and wall. That plane crashed near Granite Falls, Wash., after it ran out of fuel.

He made his way to Oregon in a 32-foot boat stolen in southwestern Washington ? stopping first to leave $100 at an animal shelter in Raymond, Wash. From Oregon, authorities said, Harris-Moore traveled across the United States, frequently stealing cars from the parking lots of small airports. In Indiana, he stole another plane and made for the Bahamas, more than 1,000 miles away, where authorities finally caught him in a manhunt that spanned multiple islands.

Among the courtroom spectators Friday were 18-year-olds Annie Cain and Hayley Hanna, who drove from nearby Langley to be at the courthouse at 5:30 a.m. ? four hours before the hearing.

"We wanted to be here just because he's so young, and everything he did, it's fascinating," Cain said.

Hanna got to the point even more quickly: "He's a badass," she said.

"This man is a serial burglar," San Juan County Prosecutor Randall Gaylord told The Associated Press. "I'm glad he's going to be held accountable, and I'm really glad he's taking responsibility for these things. I hope he gets through this chapter in his life, is resilient and is able to move on."

Fox bought the movie rights in a deal that could be worth $1.3 million, and Dustin Lance Black, who won an Academy Award for writing the movie "Milk," about the gay rights activist Harvey Milk, is working on the screenplay.

Harris-Moore doesn't get to keep any of the money under the terms of his federal plea deal.

Msnbc.com contributed to this report by The Associated Press.

? 2011 msnbc.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45696590/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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