Friday, November 4, 2011

Books flow from an American teen to African schools

High school junior Tatiana Grossman founded 'Spread the Words' to send books, both paper and digital, to schoolchildren in Africa.

Tatiana Grossman, a high school junior, says she?s having a busy year so far, what with a full homework load.

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But she has another demand on her time: her non-profit organization Spread the Words, an initiative Ms. Grossman founded that encourages people to send books to children in Africa, for which she recently won the 2011 World of Children Youth Award along with two other honorees. She's in New York City today to receive the award.

Grossman, who lives in Palo Alto, Calif., says she first found out about the high rate of illiteracy in Africa when she was 12. Her mother had told her about a book drive that was being organized by a local library aiming to donate books to schoolchildren in Africa.

?I was like, 'Wait, why would they need a book drive?? ? Grossman says.

Her mother told her some of the statistics, and Grossman says they were a revelation.?

?I was stunned,? she remembers.

Soon after, Grossman started a book drive on her community library lawn after contacting the African Library Project, an organization founded in California that works with partners in Africa to donate books and compile libraries at African schools. The African Library Project gave her suggestions on how to set up the book drive and an address where she could send the books, Grossman says.

She eventually collected 3,500 books in 10 days, many of which were books from parents whose children had outgrown them.

Grossman says the results blew her away.

?I didn't even think I would get a thousand,? Grossman says. ?I was like, 'I'm just a kid. How am I going to do this?' I was really shy.?

Today, Spread the Words has compiled libraries to serve 99 African villages and schools. Grossman was able to travel to Africa when she was 13 and see some of the results of her work.

?It was an unforgettable experience,? she says. ?It was amazing to see how [the students] were using the books.?

Grossman has also spoken publicly about the organization, including at a literacy conference in Africa, where she delivered a speech in front of thousands of people. She found that was difficult, at first.

?I was pretty nervous about it,? she says. ?But once I got up there, the message was more important than my shyness.?

Currently, she?s working on a project with Silicon Valley experts, open source digital content providers, and teachers that would enable classrooms in Africa to have digital textbooks ? a difficult challenge when many don?t have electricity. The plan would involve classrooms installing projectors that would project textbooks and children?s books onto a screen.

According to the current plan, schools that lack electricity will power their projectors using solar panels. Now that she's won the World of Children Award, Grossman says, the financial support that comes from winning the prize will make it possible for projectors to be installed in African classrooms.

?[The projectors will] have the largest impact on classrooms,? Grossman says. ?Right now, the teachers are teaching from memory.?

In her spare time, Grossman enjoys swimming on her school team, playing oboe, and reading. Her favorite book is a children's book by Pam Munoz Ryan, ?Esperanza Rising,? about a young girl who moves to America from Mexico. Its message about conquering adversity spoke strongly to her.

?It was the first time I remember being exposed to a young girl who faced adversity and prevailed,? Grossman says. ?It opened my eyes to the problems other kids have and how strong they have to be to overcome them.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/mUdzVuj8mgw/Books-flow-from-an-American-teen-to-African-schools

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Dayton: Vikings stadium push in 'limbo' (AP)

ST. PAUL, Minn. ? The Minnesota Vikings' chances for getting a decision this year from state lawmakers on financing for a new football stadium plummeted Wednesday, pushing resolution of the issue past the date when the team's current lease binding it to Minnesota runs out.

Gov. Mark Dayton emerged from a late afternoon meeting with legislative leaders to declare the stadium push in "limbo," complaining that leading lawmakers wouldn't get on board with his plan to call a special legislative session in late November to vote on financing for a stadium to replace the Metrodome.

"My timetable has been rejected by the Legislature," said Dayton, a Democrat. "Now the question is, what's their timetable?"

Earlier in the day, as word spread that House Speaker Kurt Zellers opposed a special session, a Minnesota Vikings executive warned that delaying the issue until next year's regular session would increase the project's already hefty cost. Vice President Lester Bagley stopped short of saying the team would pull up stakes, but noted that after this season the Vikings "will be the only team without a lease."

"The strategy of avoiding a stadium issue has not worked," Bagley said. "It only gets more costly and more difficult to resolve, especially if they allow the lease to expire with no action."

Following the afternoon blowup, the Vikings released a statement calling the turn of events "very disappointing."

Zellers, in an email sent Tuesday night to his 71 House GOP colleagues, said the issue should wait until lawmakers convene the 2012 session in January. The Vikings have four remaining home games in their Metrodome lease, and whispers of relocation have run throughout the stadium discussion. There has been little outward recruiting of the Vikings by Los Angeles or other cities seeking an NFL presence, though Dayton has said he takes the prospect seriously that failure to act could mean losing the team.

Zellers and Senate Republican Leader Amy Koch would reveal few details of their meeting with Dayton, and Zellers declined to explicitly repeat the contents of his email, calling it a private communication to colleagues. But both said the Legislature should hold public hearings on various questions of the stadium debate, including where to locate it among several prospective sites and the best source of public money to pay for it, before lawmakers proceed with a special session.

Dayton doesn't need the Legislature's consent to call a special session, but lawmakers determine how long it lasts once they're back in St. Paul. Governors typically avoid calling a session without mutual agreement on an agenda.

Dayton had planned to release his own stadium proposal next week, possibly as early as Monday. But after his meeting with lawmakers, he said he'd abandon that plan, and that he also planned to cancel several stadium-related meetings in the coming days including a planned Friday meeting with team owner Zygi Wilf.

Zellers and Koch said it was difficult to get support for a special session so quickly given the many uncertainties surrounding the proposal. That was echoed by Republican Sen. David Hann, an opponent of a public stadium subsidy, who said it would be wrong to rush a plan through in a special session.

"What other billion-dollar things do we do in the Legislature in three weeks without ever having seen them before? I can't think of any," Hann said. "I would think that the public would not want the Legislature to act that way."

One possible option fell away a day earlier when Dayton and lawmakers effectively ruled out new local sales taxes to pay for a share of the expected stadium cost. They said a sales tax lacks the votes to pass the Legislature unless a public referendum is required; the earliest a referendum could be held is November 2012 and the Vikings oppose one.

Discussions in recent days have focused on expanded gambling. There are several possibilities: authorizing a new casino in downtown Minneapolis; adding video slot machines at two horse-racing tracks near the Twin Cities; allowing bars and restaurants to shift from offering paper pull-tab gambling cards to electronic ones; and selling themed scratch-off lottery tickets.

The pull-tab plan, which also envisions a bingo component, appears to have the most traction. Legislative researchers estimate it would raise up to $42 million a year.

"I think the electronic pull-tabs probably has the most promise at this point in terms of drawing enough support in the Legislature," Dayton said. "My sense is that's probably the most immediately available and plausible source right now."

Another possible approach would be to divert money from the state's "Legacy" sales tax, which was approved by voters in 2008 to dedicate money to arts and cultural programs, outdoor preservation and clean water initiatives. Dayton said that would not be his preferred approach but that he is not ready to rule it out either.

But those questions are likely to recede for the time being, given the apparent disappearance of momentum to settle the issue this year. Dayton had long been a proponent of settling the issue in 2011, given that lawmakers who return for the regular session at the end of January are likely to be facing another state budget shortfall, a politically messy redistricting battle as well as the prospect of all 201 legislators up for reelection in November.

Asked what happens next, Dayton put the onus on legislators: "The ball is in their court," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111102/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_vikings_stadium_special_session

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Man accused of celeb hacking to appear in court (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? A Florida man is expected to make his first appearance in a California courtroom Tuesday after being charged with hacking into the email accounts of celebrities such as Scarlett Johansson whose nude photos eventually landed on the Internet.

Christopher Chaney, 35, of Jacksonville, Fla., was indicted last month on 26 counts, including unauthorized access to a computer and wiretapping. If convicted, he faces up to 121 years in prison.

Chaney was arrested as part of a yearlong investigation of celebrity hacking that authorities dubbed "Operation Hackerazzi."

There were more than 50 victims in the case, including Christina Aguilera, Johansson and Mila Kunis. Some nude photos taken by Johansson herself were posted on the Internet. Chaney offered some material to celebrity blog sites but there isn't any evidence that he profited from his scheme, authorities said.

Chaney is accused of mining through publicly available data and figured out password and security questions for celebrity accounts. He hijacked a forwarding feature so that a copy of every email received was sent to an account he controlled, according to court documents.

A search warrant unsealed and obtained by The Associated Press said Chaney's computer hard drive contained numerous private celebrity photos as well as a document that compiled their extensive personal data.

Chaney, who is free on $10,000 bond, has apologized for his actions. His attorney, Christopher Chesnut, told AP last week that his client doesn't want the case to drag on, but the resolution has to be within reason.

The warrant also said Chaney may have stalked a Connecticut woman online for the past 12 years. The document contends there is probable cause that Chaney violated federal charges of stalking and unauthorized access to a computer.

No other charges have been filed against Chaney.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111101/ap_en_ce/us_hollywood_hacking

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Kim Kardashian Filed For Divorce Today

Sing it with me, Kim Kardashian… D-I-V-O-R-C-E. Folks, we saw this coming for a while now. After just 72 days of marriage, Kim filed for divorce from Kris Humphries this morning in Los Angeles. Kim has hired high profile divorce attorney Laura Wasser, and court documents reveal (you can see those here) the typical ‘irreconcilable differences’ as the reason for the dissolution of marriage. Date of their separation is listed as today. There was a pre-nup in place, and Kim has requested to ‘terminate the court’s jurisdiction to award spousal support to Respondent’, as well as wanting each to pay their own attorney fees. Rumors of strife between the two have been circulating for a while now. It was just going to be a matter of time before they were headed down this road. Just this past Saturday, Kim hosted the Midori Halloween Party in New York, dressed as Poison Ivy, but partied solo, adding more speculation about the couple’s relationship. Last week reports surfaced that Kris was not her original choice to date, instead it was another NBA player, Danilo Gallinari, that she allegedly had her eyes on. When E! reps allegedly approached Gallinari to see if he’d be [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/sqwteZ0lnuM/

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Douglas opens up about cancer diagnosis

Veteran actor Michael Douglas said in a recent interview with Alec Baldwin that he will never forget when he was first told he had late-stage throat cancer in 2010.

The 66-year-old "Fatal Attraction" actor, who was diagnosed with the disease in August, underwent radiation treatment and chemotherapy and in January 2011, announced the tumor was gone. But five months earlier, the story was different.

"I'll never forget that moment when he (the doctor) looked up at me and looked back down. I knew, and he said 'Well, I guess we're going to have to take a biopsy, see there's a polyp here,' it was on my tongue. Two days later, he called me back and said, 'You've got cancer,'" Douglas told Baldwin in a podcast posted earlier this week for New York public radio station WNYC.

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Douglas said that just after filming "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" his throat felt "a little sore," but he thought it was from the stress of portraying financier Gordon Gekko, the role that earned him an Oscar in 1987's "Wall Street."

"I thought maybe it was from tension, from the part, where you haven't placed your voice, where you're swallowing your words and you speak from the back of your throat," he said. "I had a little bit of a sore gum and so I saw doctors."

Slideshow: Michael Douglas (on this page)

He underwent seven weeks of treatments that cleared the cancer and now he has this advice for others: "The thing with cancer is that you want to get it as early as you can."

Douglas also touched on coming to terms with his eldest son Cameron's history of drug abuse and his jail sentence in 2010 for dealing methamphetamine and cocaine and possessing heroin.

Story: Michael Douglas to play Liberace in HBO biopic

"I think as far as drug addiction, your peer group plays a huge part of that," said Douglas. "In my oldest son's case, there was no end, until he was incarcerated."

After taking time to recover from cancer treatments, Douglas will next be seen in the title role of "Liberace," a film based on the life of the famous American pianist with Matt Damon playing his on-screen lover.

"Liberace was a lovely guy," said the actor. "I haven't played a lot of nice guys."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45102684/ns/today-entertainment/

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G20 to keep focus on China currency flexibility: U.S. (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Greater currency flexibility from China and other emerging economies will be reviewed by G20 leaders this week as they focus on the need for balanced global economic growth, a top U.S. Treasury official said on Monday.

"In China and other surplus emerging market economies, allowing exchange rates to appreciate to reflect market forces is the most powerful near-term tool to accelerate the shift to domestic consumption," said Lael Brainard, undersecretary of the Treasury for International Affairs.

President Barack Obama will attend the Group of 20 gathering of leaders on November 3 and 4 in Cannes, France, and his administration has said that he will continue to push China's President Hu Jintao to allow the yuan to rise further.

U.S. senators earlier this month passed legislation to punish China for what they claim are policies that keep the yuan artificially cheap against the dollar to boost Chinese exports into the United States, at the cost of U.S. jobs.

Obama has voiced reservations about the yuan currency bill, which has little chance of becoming law because it is opposed by Republicans who control the House of Representatives, but he does believe the yuan is undervalued and needs to rise.

Brainard noted that emerging economies with trade surpluses -- of which the largest by far is China -- have already committed to the G20 to allow their currencies to achieve greater flexibility to reflect economic fundamentals.

Furthermore, with Europe and U.S. growth likely to be subdued for a while, it made sense for China to focus internally and abandon an "outdated" export-driven growth model.

"They are looking at the same numbers we are," she told a briefing at the White House. "So it's very much in China's own interest ... to shift to domestic consumption-led growth rather than relying on an outdated growth model based on net exports to advanced economies where demand is likely to be weak for some time," she said.

(Reporting by Alister Bull and Deborah Charles; editing by Philip Barbara)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/bs_nm/us_china_usa_currency

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Apple Cider Vinegar Ginger Spice (12 Bottles) 16 Ounces Reviews

Apple Cider Vinegar Ginger Spice (12 Bottles) 16 Ounces Reviews

Apple Cider Vinegar has been highly regarded throughout history. In 400 B.C. Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine, used it for its amazing natural detox cleansing, healing, and energizing qualities. Hippocrates prescribed Apple Cider Vinegar for its health properties. Now you can enjoy Bragg Organic Apple Cider Vinegar in a convenient refreshing drink. *Certified Organic by Organic Assurance International in accordance with the USDA organic standards Based on Paul & Patricia Bragg?s Original Recipe ? Made with Organic Ginger ? Sweetened with Natural Stevia ? Great-Tasting, Healthy Refreshing Drink ? Great for a Quick Energy Boost ? Convenient Pre-mixed Drink (two 8-oz Servings per Bottle) ? Certified Organic and Kosher Certified ? YOU WILL LOVE IT!!

  • 16 Ounces Liquid
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Apple Cider Vinegar Ginger Spice (12 Bottles) 16 Ounces Reviews

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Source: http://www.vitaminshealth.net/vitamins-supplement-nutrition/apple-cider-vitamins/apple-cider-vinegar-ginger-spice-12-bottles-16-ounces-reviews.html

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