Tuesday, November 22, 2011

UN: Concentrations of greenhouse gases hit record (AP)

GENEVA ? Global warming gases have hit record levels in the world's atmosphere, with concentrations of carbon dioxide up 39 percent since the start of the industrial era in 1750, the U.N. weather agency said Monday.

The new figures for 2010 from the World Meteorological Organization show that CO2 levels are now at 389 parts per million, up from about 280 parts per million a quarter-millenium ago. The levels are significant because the gases trap heat in the atmosphere.

WMO Deputy Secretary-General Jeremiah Lengoasa said CO2 emissions are to blame for about four-fifths of the rise. But he noted the lag between what gets pumped into the atmosphere and its effect on climate.

"With this picture in mind, even if emissions were stopped overnight globally, the atmospheric concentrations would continue for decades because of the long lifetime of these greenhouse gases in the atmosphere," he said.

Negotiators from virtually all the world's nations will gather later this month in South Africa to try to agree on steps to head off the worst of the climate disruptions that researchers say will result if concentrations hit around 450 parts per million.

That could happen within several decades at the current rate, though some climate activists and vulnerable nations say the world has already passed the danger point of 350 parts per million and must somehow undo it.

The WMO said the increase of 2.3 parts per million in CO2 in the atmosphere between 2009 and 2010 shows an acceleration from the average 1.5 parts per million increase during the 1990s.

But there are seasonal fluctuations, too. During the summer growing season, plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In winter, the concentration of C02 rises as vegetation and other biomass decompose.

Since 1750, WMO says, atmospheric concentrations of CO2 have risen 39 percent, those of nitrous oxide have gone up 20 percent and concentrations of methane jumped 158 percent.

Its report Monday cites fossil fuel-burning, loss of forests that absorb CO2 and use of fertilizer as the main culprits.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_sc/eu_un_greenhouse_gases

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Truck strikes Yale-Harvard fans, killing 1

People look at the scene where the driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before an NCAA college football game between Yale and Harvard suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)

People look at the scene where the driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before an NCAA college football game between Yale and Harvard suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)

Authorities work the scene where the driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before an NCAA college football game between Yale and Harvard suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)

Tailgating tables remain at the scene where the driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before an NCAA college football game between Yale and Harvard suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)

A man looks at the scene where the driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before an NCAA college football game between Yale and Harvard suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. (AP Photo/Bob Child)

New Haven and Yale Police investigate the scene of an accident at Yale Bowl Lot D before the football game between Yale and Harvard on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011 in New Haven, Conn. The driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking area before the game suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said. It's not clear why the driver sped up, New Haven Police spokesman David Hartman said. The truck then crashed into other rental vans in the lot, an open playing field used for pre-game parties before Yale home games (AP Photo/The New Haven Register, Peter Hvizdak) MAGAZINES OUT. TV OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT

(AP) ? A driver of a rental truck carrying beer kegs through a parking lot before the Yale-Harvard game Saturday suddenly accelerated, fatally striking a 30-year-old woman and injuring two other women, police said.

It's not clear why the driver sped up, New Haven Police spokesman David Hartman said. The truck then crashed into other rental vans in the lot, an open playing field used for pre-game parties before Yale home games in New Haven.

Tim Walker of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, said he was grilling sirloin tips when he heard the crash behind him. He turned and saw two people lying on the ground.

People huddled around them trying to help, according to a video that appears to have been recorded shortly after the accident and posted online. "We're not getting a pulse," said someone crouched near one victim, while the cameraman notes the ambulance hasn't arrived.

After emergency officials arrived, Walker said, he saw one victim being given cardiopulmonary resuscitation as she was taken away.

"The driver looked shocked. Absolutely shocked," Walker said. Police have not said whether alcohol was a factor.

"He didn't look intoxicated or anything like that," Walker added. "He had a dazed look like he had just hit someone."

Hartman said the driver was in police custody.

He said the woman who was killed was pronounced dead at about 10:15 a.m. at Yale-New Haven Hospital. Police did not immediately release her identity.

A second woman, who Yale said was a student at its School of Management, was listed in critical but stable condition at the hospital.

The third woman suffered minor injuries.

At the annual Yale-Harvard game, the parties outside the stadium are nearly as storied as the competition itself. Elaborate buffets dot the parking lots, and fans frequently fill rental trucks with kegs, grills and hard alcohol.

Six years ago, Yale began shutting down all parties after halftime in an effort to curb binge drinking and keep students and alumni safe. Saturday, the university said it planned to review its policies and regulations on tailgating before games.

"The Yale community is deeply saddened by the tragic vehicle accident that occurred at a Yale Bowl parking lot this morning," the school said in statement.

"Yale extends our sympathies and prayers to the family of the woman who was killed and hopes for the speedy recovery of the two women hurt," the statement said. "Our thoughts are also with those who witnessed or were affected by this tragic accident."

The fans had gathered for the 128th game of the Ivy League rivalry, which Harvard won 45-7 for its fifth straight victory over Yale. Three hours after the accident, the loud tailgating continued in the lot, with music blaring from large speakers and fans grilling hot dogs, sausage and hamburgers. Some students danced on top of other rental trucks.

The accident scene was cordoned off by yellow police tape.

At halftime of the game, the public address announcer at Yale Bowl informed the crowd of the accident and the woman's death. He asked spectators to stand and observe a moment of silence.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-20-Yale-Harvard-Tailgate%20Accident/id-805888036b7c4b38bf7844df169d8d15

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

India: Kangra Bir Waterfall 3

Asia is the biggest continent on Earth, a darling little gem floating around in space.

Hm, what is Asia? Who's in on it?

China and India are safe bets for Asian nations. Korea, Japan, Thailand, you're fine.

Europe? No. Europe would sort of be on the "Asian continent" if not for those pesky Ural mountains dividing things up in the middle, and then also the whole lineage of kings and wealth and nations and the EU and all that "give me my respect" stuff.
Russia would probably be happiest as its own continent, so for now we'll leave it in "Eurasia" and just hope the natural gas supplies keep flowing.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are dang close to Asia, but politically they show up in "Middle East" news stories an awful lot. Verdict: Eurasia.

I guess we'll actually have to consider everything from Turkey on eastward to be "Eurasian", although the moniker seems overlappitory of the territory.

The Asian economy is now officially raging like a wild furnace of lava that consumes everything in its path. Japan has had the largest individual economy in Asia for decades, but it is forecast that both India and China will outstrip Japan within twenty years.

China is the largest holder of United States debt and is positioned to become the world's next superpower, provided that Godzilla doesn't return and decide to stomp everybody back into the Shang Dynasty.

Text by Steve Smith.

Source: http://www.360cities.net/image/kangra-bir-waterfall-3

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Mexico names intelligence chief interior minister (Reuters)

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) ? Mexico picked the head of the national intelligence agency as the country's new interior minister on Thursday, beefing up the job's security profile as the government attempts to bring violent drug cartels to heel.

Alejandro Poire, director of the Center for Research and National Security (CISEN), succeeds Francisco Blake, who was killed in a helicopter crash on Friday.

Poire, 40, has never held elected office, and spent more than a year staunchly defending President Felipe Calderon's army-led crackdown on the drug gangs as national security spokesman before he moved to the CISEN in September.

The bloody conflict against the gangs has dominated Calderon's presidency, damaging support for his conservative National Action Party and eroding his own popularity.

"Crime is the biggest threat to our society and our citizens," Calderon said in a televised address, noting that he had chosen Poire "because of his profound knowledge and his vast experience in security matters."

More than 45,000 lives have been lost in drug-related violence since Calderon sent in the army to crush the gangs shortly after he took power in December 2006.

Calderon has staked his reputation on restoring security to Mexico and analysts say he needs to make clear progress to give his conservative National Action Party (PAN) a chance of retaining the presidency when elections are held in July 2012.

Calderon is barred by Mexican law from running again.

As interior minister, Poire will also play a key role in ensuring the 2012 elections run smoothly. The trained political scientist is an expert on the Mexican electoral process.

Latest surveys show Calderon's PAN polling around half as much support nationally as the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). The centrist PRI ruled Mexico for 71 years until being ousted in 2000.

PLACING BETS

Poire, 40, will be Calderon's fifth interior minister. Blake, who died with seven other people in the helicopter, was the second interior minister to die in an aircraft crash.

The interior minister was for years viewed as the number two to the president, though Blake, who took the job in July 2010, had a lower profile than many previous incumbents.

A loyal supporter of Calderon, Poire steadfastly backed the drug war strategy during some of the conflict's most testing moments as national security spokesman.

Jose Luis Pineyro, a security expert at Mexico's Autonomous Metropolitan University, said the appointment of Poire showed Calderon was placing his bets firmly on being able to convince voters his drive against the cartels was paying off.

"He has no other option. He's failed to live up to the other two major pledges he made as president: generating more jobs and cutting poverty. Poverty has risen," said Pineyro. "Poire will act as a kind of public face (on security)."

A Harvard graduate who later worked as an academic, Poire was an adviser to Calderon early in his presidency.

Poire blamed lax U.S. gun laws for allowing high-powered weaponry to reach Mexico and arm the cartels. The entry of U.S. arms into Mexico has been a regular bone of contention between Mexico and Washington during Calderon's presidency.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/wl_nm/us_mexico_minister

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Sports Illustrated Legal Analyst Discusses Disadvantages Of ...

Jerry Sandusky (Photo Credit: Office Of Pennsylvania Attorney General)

Jerry Sandusky (Photo Credit: Office Of Pennsylvania Attorney General)

PITTSBURGH (93-7 The FAN) ? Sports Illustrated Legal Analyst and Director of Sports Law Institute at Vermont Law School Michael McCann joined Seibel, Starkey and Miller to discuss why former Penn State Defensive Coordinator Jerry Sandusky?s lawyer would have him do that interview last night on national television.

McCann said Sandusky only hurt himself by talking last night because he admitted to behavior that was arguable criminal, and his attorney must have been hoping that people would see that while Sandusky made poor judgments both morally and ethically, he didn?t do anything illegal, but it didn?t come across that way and the audience still most likely views him as guilty.

McCann also discussed the legal impact Sandusky?s interview could have on Penn State and others implicated in the Grand Jury testimony.

Source: http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2011/11/15/sports-illustrated-legal-analyst-discusses-disadvantages-of-sandusky-interview/

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

King James Bible anniversary marked by Queen

King James Bible:?The translation ? the Old Testament from Hebrew, the New Testament from Greek ? was assembled by 47 translators in six committees working in London, Oxford and Cambridge.

Queen Elizabeth II attended a ceremony at London's Westminster Abbey Wednesday to mark the 400th anniversary of the?King?James?Bible, often considered the most influential book ever printed in the English language.

Skip to next paragraph

The translation ? the Old Testament from Hebrew, the New Testament from Greek ? was assembled by 47 translators in six committees working in London, Oxford and Cambridge.

It came about when?King?James?I summoned a conference at Hampton Court Palace near London in 1604, hoping to thrash out differences between Church of England bishops and Puritans. Failing to make progress on other issues, Puritan leader John Reynolds proposed a new translation ? which emerged in 1611.

Wednesday's service at Westminster Abbey came after lectures, educational programs and theater performances around the world marked the anniversary of the?Bible?dubbed the "DNA of the English language" by broadcaster Melvyn Bragg.

The queen was joined by her husband, Prince Philip, and son, Prince Charles, in leading around 2,000 worshippers.

Early editions of the?bible?were presented at the altar,and the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams paid tribute to the "extraordinary" and "abiding importance" of the?King?James?Bible.

Williams told the congregation that the translators would have been "baffled and embarrassed" by the idea of a perfect translation but had sought instead to convey the "almost unbearable weight of divine intelligence and love" into the English language.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/l0Q6qDBI6T4/King-James-Bible-anniversary-marked-by-Queen

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Syria faces growing world pressure to halt bloodshed (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? Jordan's King Abdullah told Syria's President Bashar al-Assad on Monday he should step down and the European Union added pressure with more sanctions after the Arab League's surprise decision to suspend Damascus for its violent crackdown on protests.

Syria looks ever more isolated, but still has the support of Russia, which said the Arab League had made the wrong move and accused the West of inciting Assad's opponents.

Despite the diplomatic pressure, there was no let-up in violence and at least two people were killed, activists said.

The anti-Assad unrest, inspired by Arab revolts elsewhere, has devastated Syria's economy, scaring off tourists and investors, while Western sanctions have crippled oil exports.

Jordan's King Abdullah said Assad should quit. "I believe, if I were in his shoes, I would step down," he told the BBC.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moualem said the League's decision, due to take effect on Wednesday, was "an extremely dangerous step" at a time when Damascus was implementing an Arab deal to end violence and start talks with the opposition.

Syria has called for an emergency Arab League summit in an apparent effort to forestall its suspension.

Nabil Elaraby, the organization's secretary general, said he had delivered the request to rulers of Arab League states and 15 members would have to approve in order to hold a summit, according to Egypt's state news agency MENA.

The League's suspension is a particularly bitter blow for Assad who has always seen himself as a champion of Arab unity. But adding to the injury, the Cairo-based League plans to meet Syrian dissident groups on Tuesday.

Even so, Elaraby said on Sunday it was too soon to consider recognizing the Syrian opposition as the country's legitimate authority.

Elaraby met representatives of Arab civil society groups on Monday and agreed to send a 500-strong fact-finding committee, including military personnel, to Syria as part of efforts to end the crackdown on demonstrators and dissenters.

"Syria agreed to receive the committee," said Ibrahim al-Zafarani, of the Arab Medical Union.

Moualem said Syria had withdrawn troops from urban areas, released prisoners and offered an amnesty to armed insurgents under an initiative agreed with the Arab League two weeks ago.

Yet violence has intensified since then, especially in the central city of Homs, pushing the death toll in eight months of protests to more than 3,500 by a U.N. count. Damascus says armed "terrorist" gangs have killed 1,100 soldiers and police.

Syria's ban on most foreign media makes it hard to verify events on the ground.

SHOOTING, TANK FIRE

In the latest violence, security police shot dead activist Amin Abdo al-Ghothani in front of his nine-year-old son at a roadblock outside the town of Inkhil, a grassroots organization known as the Local Coordination Committees said.

In Homs, residents said renewed tank shelling killed a teenager and wounded eight people in the restive Bab Amro district. Students in the Damascus suburb of Erbin chanted "God is greater than the oppressor," according to a YouTube video.

Moualem described Washington's support for the Arab League action as "incitement," but voiced confidence that Russia and China would continue to block Western efforts to secure U.N. Security Council action, let alone any foreign intervention.

"The Libya scenario will not be repeated," he said.

It was the Arab League's decision to suspend Libya and call for a no-fly zone that helped persuade the U.N. Security Council to authorize a NATO air campaign to protect civilians, which also aided rebels who ousted and killed Muammar Gaddafi.

The Arab League made no call for military action, but its disciplining of Syria is deeply embarrassing to a nation touted by its Baathist leaders as the Arab world's "beating heart."

Syrian state television said millions of Syrians protested at the League decision in Damascus and other cities on Sunday.

Crowds also attacked Saudi, Turkish and French diplomatic missions in Syria after the Arab League announcement.

Moualem apologized for the assaults, which have worsened already tense ties between Syria and its former friend Turkey.

"We will take the most resolute stance against these attacks and we will stand by the Syrian people's rightful struggle," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told the Turkish parliament, saying Damascus could no longer be trusted.

Non-Arab Turkey, after long courting Assad, has lost patience with its neighbor. It now hosts the main Syrian opposition and has given refuge to defecting Syrian soldiers.

Turkey's stance has stung its former friends in Damascus.

"The implementation of the Arab plan must be accompanied by the securing of borders by neighboring countries," Moualem Said. "I mean here specifically the flow of weapons from Turkey and the transfer of money to the leaders of armed groups."

EU SANCTIONS

The European Union extended penalties to 18 more Syrians linked with the crackdown on dissent and approved plans to stop Syria accessing funds from the European Investment Bank.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said she was in touch with the Arab League to work on an approach to Syria, but the 27-nation body appears set against military intervention.

"This is a different situation from Libya," British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in Brussels, where EU foreign ministers were meeting. "There is no United Nations Security Council resolution and Syria is a much more complex situation."

Syria, which borders Israel, is Iran's main Arab ally and has strong ties with Shi'ite Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon and the Islamist Hamas movement that rules the Gaza Strip.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, whose country joined China to block a U.N. resolution critical of Syria in October, criticized the Arab League's decision.

Russia, an arms supplier to the Syrians, has urged Assad to implement reforms but opposes sanctions and has accused the United States and France of discouraging dialogue in Syria.

"There has been and continues to be incitement of radical opponents (of Assad) to take a firm course for regime change and reject any invitations to dialogue," Lavrov said.

The Arab League also plans to impose unspecified economic and political sanctions on Syria and has urged its members to recall their ambassadors from Damascus.

Assad still has some support at home, especially from his own minority Alawite sect and Christians, wary of sectarian conflict or Sunni Muslim domination if he were to be toppled.

Despite some defections, the Syrian military has not emulated its counterparts in Egypt and Tunisia in abandoning long-serving presidents faced with popular discontent.

The government has acknowledged that sanctions are hurting, but it is not clear whether this will force any policy change.

Chris Phillips of the Economist Intelligence Unit in London said Syria's economy was "slowly bleeding to death."

(Additional reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Suleiman al-Khalidi in Amman, Steve Gutterman in Moscow, Tulay Karadeniz in Ankara, Dominic Evans in Beirut, Ayman Samir in Cairo and Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111114/wl_nm/us_syria

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Awards honor excellence in social and personality psychology

Awards honor excellence in social and personality psychology [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lisa M.P. Munoz
spsp.publicaffairs@gmail.com
703-951-3195
SAGE Publications

November 14, 2011 Racial prejudice and stereotyping, pay-what-you-want pricing, cross-cultural training these are just a few of the research areas of this year's winners of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) annual awards. Each of the recipients has made a unique and significant contribution to understanding the individual and social factors shaping people's personalities, interactions, and behaviors.

The Society's highest awards the Jack Block and Donald T. Campbell awards go to Charles S. Carver of the University of Miami and John Dovidio of Yale University, respectively. Carver's research on self-regulation over the past 30 years has helped shape modern personality psychology. His work has also examined individual differences in stress and coping and, more recently, the role of certain genes in self-regulation. Dovidio's work has shed light on modern stereotyping and discrimination, in particular how contemporary forms of prejudice and discrimination are more subtle and less recognizable than traditional racism. He is currently executive officer of SPSP and past president of the Society.

The recipients of this year's Career Contribution awards are Thomas Pettigrew and Harry Triandis. Pettigrew, of the University of California, Santa Cruz, has been at the forefront of research on racial prejudice. An expert on black-white relations in the United States, he has also conducted inter-group research in Australia, Europe, and South Africa. Triandis, of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has made significant contributions to the field of cross-cultural psychology, how human behavior and mental process differ among and between cultures. He has applied his work to design cultural training to help minority groups adjust to society.

Pay-what-you-want pricing is at the center of this year's Robert B. Cialdini Award for excellence in a published field study. Ayelet Gneezy of the Rady School of Management at University of California, San Diego, and her colleagues conducted a field study involving approximately 115,000 individuals, some of whom were informed that half of their payment of choice for a photo souvenir would go to charity. Payments were five times higher compared to other conditions, showing how corporate and charitable interests can be aligned to benefit all parties. The paper, "Shared Social Responsibility: A Field Experiment in Pay-What-You-Want Pricing and Charitable Giving," was published with co-authors Uri Gneezy, Leif Nelson, and Amber Brown in Science in July 2010.

Recipients of the Carol and Ed Diener mid-career awards in personality and social psychology are Laura King of the University of Missouri and Galen Bodenhausen of Northwestern University, respectively. Laura King studies personality development in adults, and her work on happiness and meaning of life has attracted broad interest. Galen Bodenhausen is an internationally renowned expert on the mental processes underlying social attitudes, impressions, judgments, and decisions, as well as mental illness stigma.

The 2011 Media Achievement Award goes to David Brooks for showcasing the relevance of personality and social psychology to current events through his insightful articles, columns, and books. Brooks is a columnist at the the New York Times, senior editor at The Weekly Standard, a contributing editor at Newsweek and the Atlantic Monthly, and a commentator on "The Newshour with Jim Lehrer." Winners of the 2011 Media Prize are Jon Hanson of Harvard Law School and Michael McCann of Vermont Law School for creating the Situationist, an online forum for scholars, students, lawyers, policymakers, and interested citizens to discuss the effects of situational forces on society.

The remaining SPSP awards for 2011 are as follows:

  • The 2011 Murray Award: Michelle Fine of the Graduate Center - City University of New York for her extensive contributions to the study of social injustice, including working with urban youth and young adults in real-world settings.
  • The 2011 SPSP Service Award for Distinguished Service to the Society: Richard Petty of Ohio State University for his varied work for SPSP, including as editor of its journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, president of the Society, chair of the Publications Committee, as well as for his significant contribution in the creation of the new journal Social Psychological and Personality Science
  • The 2011 SPSP Award for Distinguished Service to the Society: Mark Snyder of the University of Minnesota for his work as SPSP president and his contributions to the leadership of the Foundation for Social and Personality Psychology.
  • The 2011 SPSP Award for Service on Behalf of Personality & Social Psychology: Rep. Brian Baird, former U.S. Congressman in Washington (1999-2011), for his steadfast commitment to support and defend scientific research in general, and social and personality psychology in particular.
  • The 2011 Theoretical Innovation Prize: Mark Landau of the University of Kansas with co-authors Brian Meier, Lucas Keefer for their September 2010 Psychological Bulletin article entitled "A Metaphor-Enriched Social Cognition," which examines how people come to understand the social world through the conceptual metaphors that surround them.

###

A ceremony at the 2012 annual SPSP meeting in San Diego, CA (Jan. 26-28) will honor all of this year's award recipients. www.spspmeeting.org

SPSP promotes scientific research that explores how people think, behave, and interact. With more than 7,000 members, the Society is the largest organization of social and personality psychologists in the world. www.spsp.org


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Awards honor excellence in social and personality psychology [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lisa M.P. Munoz
spsp.publicaffairs@gmail.com
703-951-3195
SAGE Publications

November 14, 2011 Racial prejudice and stereotyping, pay-what-you-want pricing, cross-cultural training these are just a few of the research areas of this year's winners of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) annual awards. Each of the recipients has made a unique and significant contribution to understanding the individual and social factors shaping people's personalities, interactions, and behaviors.

The Society's highest awards the Jack Block and Donald T. Campbell awards go to Charles S. Carver of the University of Miami and John Dovidio of Yale University, respectively. Carver's research on self-regulation over the past 30 years has helped shape modern personality psychology. His work has also examined individual differences in stress and coping and, more recently, the role of certain genes in self-regulation. Dovidio's work has shed light on modern stereotyping and discrimination, in particular how contemporary forms of prejudice and discrimination are more subtle and less recognizable than traditional racism. He is currently executive officer of SPSP and past president of the Society.

The recipients of this year's Career Contribution awards are Thomas Pettigrew and Harry Triandis. Pettigrew, of the University of California, Santa Cruz, has been at the forefront of research on racial prejudice. An expert on black-white relations in the United States, he has also conducted inter-group research in Australia, Europe, and South Africa. Triandis, of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has made significant contributions to the field of cross-cultural psychology, how human behavior and mental process differ among and between cultures. He has applied his work to design cultural training to help minority groups adjust to society.

Pay-what-you-want pricing is at the center of this year's Robert B. Cialdini Award for excellence in a published field study. Ayelet Gneezy of the Rady School of Management at University of California, San Diego, and her colleagues conducted a field study involving approximately 115,000 individuals, some of whom were informed that half of their payment of choice for a photo souvenir would go to charity. Payments were five times higher compared to other conditions, showing how corporate and charitable interests can be aligned to benefit all parties. The paper, "Shared Social Responsibility: A Field Experiment in Pay-What-You-Want Pricing and Charitable Giving," was published with co-authors Uri Gneezy, Leif Nelson, and Amber Brown in Science in July 2010.

Recipients of the Carol and Ed Diener mid-career awards in personality and social psychology are Laura King of the University of Missouri and Galen Bodenhausen of Northwestern University, respectively. Laura King studies personality development in adults, and her work on happiness and meaning of life has attracted broad interest. Galen Bodenhausen is an internationally renowned expert on the mental processes underlying social attitudes, impressions, judgments, and decisions, as well as mental illness stigma.

The 2011 Media Achievement Award goes to David Brooks for showcasing the relevance of personality and social psychology to current events through his insightful articles, columns, and books. Brooks is a columnist at the the New York Times, senior editor at The Weekly Standard, a contributing editor at Newsweek and the Atlantic Monthly, and a commentator on "The Newshour with Jim Lehrer." Winners of the 2011 Media Prize are Jon Hanson of Harvard Law School and Michael McCann of Vermont Law School for creating the Situationist, an online forum for scholars, students, lawyers, policymakers, and interested citizens to discuss the effects of situational forces on society.

The remaining SPSP awards for 2011 are as follows:

  • The 2011 Murray Award: Michelle Fine of the Graduate Center - City University of New York for her extensive contributions to the study of social injustice, including working with urban youth and young adults in real-world settings.
  • The 2011 SPSP Service Award for Distinguished Service to the Society: Richard Petty of Ohio State University for his varied work for SPSP, including as editor of its journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, president of the Society, chair of the Publications Committee, as well as for his significant contribution in the creation of the new journal Social Psychological and Personality Science
  • The 2011 SPSP Award for Distinguished Service to the Society: Mark Snyder of the University of Minnesota for his work as SPSP president and his contributions to the leadership of the Foundation for Social and Personality Psychology.
  • The 2011 SPSP Award for Service on Behalf of Personality & Social Psychology: Rep. Brian Baird, former U.S. Congressman in Washington (1999-2011), for his steadfast commitment to support and defend scientific research in general, and social and personality psychology in particular.
  • The 2011 Theoretical Innovation Prize: Mark Landau of the University of Kansas with co-authors Brian Meier, Lucas Keefer for their September 2010 Psychological Bulletin article entitled "A Metaphor-Enriched Social Cognition," which examines how people come to understand the social world through the conceptual metaphors that surround them.

###

A ceremony at the 2012 annual SPSP meeting in San Diego, CA (Jan. 26-28) will honor all of this year's award recipients. www.spspmeeting.org

SPSP promotes scientific research that explores how people think, behave, and interact. With more than 7,000 members, the Society is the largest organization of social and personality psychologists in the world. www.spsp.org


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/sp-ahe111611.php

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

New threat to bailout as Greek right rejects more (Reuters)

ATHENS (Reuters) ? Greece's conservatives vowed on Monday to reject any new austerity measures in return for the aid that is keeping Athens from bankruptcy, signaling a new coalition government may not enjoy the kind of cross-party support its lenders demand.

New technocrat Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said Greece had no choice but to remain inside the euro zone, telling lawmakers reforms were the only way to mitigate painful austerity measures which had deepened the recession.

Euro zone leaders are demanding the conservative New Democracy and its two coalition partners -- the Socialists and the right-wing LAOS party -- sign pledges that they will do what is necessary to make a new, 130 rescue loan package work.

If they do not, Greece's international lenders have warned they will withhold an 8 billion euro aid tranche Athens needs to avoid running out of cash next month.

New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras said he would not sign any pledge for new belt-tightening.

He has said his party would support all the measures Greece has passed so far to meet the terms of its aid deal, but his support for the three-day old government has been lukewarm. The LAOS party has also objected to any new wage or pension cuts.

"I agree with the goals to cut government spending ... to reduce debt, to erase the deficit, to make structural changes. I do not agree with whatever stunts growth," he told party MPs.

Crucially, he said he would not sign a pledge of support for conditions on the new bailout agreement demanded by EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn. Those terms have not yet been specified but may require new measures.

"I don't sign such statements," Samaras said, adding that his word should be sufficient.

His stance suggested a continuation of wrangling between New Democracy and the Socialists of fallen Prime Minister George Papandreou that last week pushed Greece to the brink and prompted EU peers to consider Greece's exit from the euro.

Opening a parliamentary debate that will culminate in a confidence vote on Wednesday, incoming premier Papademos urged the parties to commit to implementing the bailout's terms as agreed by euro zone leaders at a meeting last month.

"Our European partners and the international organizations that support us have made clear that further funding of Greece will continue only with the implementation of the terms... and the economic policies associated with them," Papademos told lawmakers.

"For this, the commitment of the government and of the leaders of the parties that support it, is required."

PUBLIC PROTESTS

Papademos, a former vice president at the European Central Bank, must convince Greece's aid sponsors that Athens is able to take further pain in return for the new bailout, which will also wipe out debt held by the private sector amounting to almost a third of its total 360 billion euro debt load.

Inspectors from the EU, International Monetary Fund and the ECB, known as the "troika," were due to meet the new administration after Wednesday's confidence ballot but uncertainty surfaced over whether they would actually come.

Tens of thousands of people angry at more than a year of austerity measures are expected to rally on Thursday, the anniversary of a 1973 student uprising that helped bring down a 1967-1974 military junta.

The march could be the biggest in months of protests and would complicate discussions with the troika by shutting down Athens, particularly as previous rallies have turned violent.

Greek public sector workers also vowed to walk off the job for three hours on Tuesday in protest against measures to cut jobs, salaries and pensions passed in October, while private sector union GSEE is considering nationwide strikes later in the month when the budget is to be voted on in parliament.

"They may come at the end of the week but nothing is fixed," a spokesman for the European Commission's mission in Greece said of the troika team, which only last Friday had been slated to arrive early in this week.

Without a positive report from the inspectors, the lenders may withhold the key aid tranche Athens needs by mid-December to pay off bond redemptions and avert bankruptcy.

MARKETS LOCKING UP

A similar scenario played out in Italy, where Silvio Berlusconi's technocrat replacement, former European Commissioner Mario Monti, worked to create a new administration and halt a collapse in market confidence in Rome.

But the appointments of both Papademos and Monti failed to quell fears of a possible Greek default or break up of the euro zone. Equity markets and the euro slid in global trading.

BlackRock, one of the world's largest asset managers, said debt restructuring in Greece, Portugal and Ireland should include losses of 75 percent to 80 percent for private bondholders -- above the 50 percent envisioned in Greece's rescue package -- to help stop a global meltdown.

"Governments are falling, bond yields are zig-zagging by whole percentage points and markets around the world are locking up: the euro zone turmoil risks turning into a global crisis," it said in a research note.

Greece made marginal progress in a drive to sell state assets to raise funds, earning 380 million euros in the sale of mobile phone frequencies. It was a fraction of the 50 billion pledged in privatizations through 2015, but was still a start.

If Athens continues to slip in its revenue and spending targets -- as it has repeatedly -- or the economy weakens, the troika would have to suggest further tough measures.

Sworn in on Friday, Papademos said reforms tied to Greece's bailout package had worsened a recession that is in its fourth year and hit unemployment, which rose to a euro era record 18.4 percent in August.

He said new reforms could help remedy this problem, but he stressed the coalition parties first had to commit to fulfilling their part of the bailout in writing.

"This request must not be seen as a demand made by faceless powers and organizations," he said.

"The requested pledge expresses the demand and the expectation of the peoples and the taxpayers who are backing us, because it's they who are assuming the risks and the obligations that will possibly arise if we fail to achieve fiscal restructuring."

(Writing by Ben Harding and Michael Winfrey; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111114/wl_nm/us_greece

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Monday, November 14, 2011

Mexican leader's sister in close race for governor (AP)

MORELIA, Mexico ? The race between Mexican president Felipe Calderon's sister and the candidate of the resurgent opposition party was a dead heat early Monday with early counts too close to name the next governor of violence-plagued Michoacoan state.

Calderon's conservative National Action Party, or PAN, is seeking a symbolic victory in his home state, where he launched his nationwide armed offensive against drug cartels in late 2006. A focal point in his administration, the drug war has killed more than 40,000 people according to many estimates, although no official figures have been released in nearly a year.

A win for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which ruled Mexico for 71 years until 2000, would build momentum in its bid to take back the presidency in 2012.

Roy Campos, president of independent pollster Consulta Mitofsky, told the Televisa network the race was a "technical tie" that only official ballot counts could clear up.

With a quarter of polling stations reporting, Fausto Vallejo Figueroa, of the PRI, had 35 percent of the votes, while the president's sister, Luisa Maria "Cocoa" Calderon, had 33 percent. Silvano Aureoles Conejo, whose leftist Revolutionary Democratic Party currently holds the governorship, had 29 percent.

Voters also elected 40 state congressional representatives and 112 mayors following dozens of drug cartel-related attacks over the past two years targeting local officials in the state.

The PRI so far is fielding the most popular pre-candidate in the presidential race, former Mexico state Gov. Enrique Pena Nieto.

Opinion polls have been indicating that Calderon's PAN will struggle to retain the presidency it first won in 2000, ending 71 years of one-party rule for the PRI.

Luisa Maria Calderon campaigned on a promise to advance her brother's anti-drug campaign and led in most opinion polls going into the vote, the last state election before the presidential contest in July. The PAN has been hurt recently by voter fatigue over drug violence, a factor that weakened the PRD in its bid to hold on to Michoacan's governorship.

Such violence has been a main concern in Michoacan. But Sunday's vote took place normally with a few exceptions.

Jesus Zambrano Grijalvo, president of the PRD, said his party sympathizers in a mountainous zone plagued by drug violence were being intimidated by organized crime gangs and pressured not to vote. Zambrano did not go into details at a news conference Sunday.

Residents of the rural city of Cheran refused to let poll workers into their town amid demands for an election that they said would respect their customs and traditions. The indigenous Purepecha people who live in Cheran have in recent months wielded rifles and mounted roadblocks keeping out suspected illegal loggers and drug traffickers.

The Michoacan Electoral Institute said in a news release Sunday that officials were still unable to carry out elections in Cheran and were determining how the 16,000 residents there will elect their leaders.

In the city of La Piedad, a local newspaper published on Sunday an unsigned note blaming the PAN for drug killings and threatening the party's supporters. News reports said the newspaper had been forced to publish the warning.

"Don't wear T-shirts or PAN advertising because we don't want to confuse you and have innocent people die," read the note, which was also circulated by email.

It was not clear who sent the email or published the newspaper ad, which came 11 days after La Piedad Mayor Ricardo Guzman was shot dead while handing out leaflets for several PAN candidates, including Luisa Maria Calderon. No arrests have been made in the attack.

Twitter users claiming to belong to the "Anonymous" hackers movement said they were behind an attack on the website of a party backing Luisa Maria Calderon. The tweets also said hackers attacked the Michoacan Electoral Institute's website.

The PAN has yet to win a governorship in Michoacan, and the PRD has dominated federal offices and the presidential vote there since 2000. Local offices have been a toss-up between the PRD and the PRI.

As Michoacan's governing party for a decade, the PRD drew criticism for the state's drug violence, and some of its legislative candidates were accused of having close ties to drug cartels.

___

Associated Press writer Adriana Gomez Licon contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_election_michoacan

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Mexico detains a top operator of Sinaloa cartel (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? Mexican soldiers detained a top operator for the powerful Sinaloa drug cartel, a man for whom the U.S. government had offered a reward of up to $5 million, the army said Thursday.

Suspect Ovidio Limon Sanchez is one of the most-wanted U.S. drug fugitives in Mexico, sought "for importing and distributing hundreds of tons of cocaine into the United States within the last two decades," according to a U.S. State Department notice announcing the reward.

An army spokesman, Col. Ricardo Trevilla, described Limon Sanchez as "one of the most important operators" for the Sinaloa cartel. The gang, headed by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, is considered Mexico's most powerful trafficking organization.

Trevilla said Limon Sanchez was detained without a shot being fired in a carefully planned raid Wednesday in the city of Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state, which has long been considered the cradle of Mexican drug trafficking.

The stocky, unblinking Limon Sanchez, 48, was paraded before journalists in handcuffs, with masked soldiers standing on either side of him.

Limon Sanchez's detention "significantly affects the Guzman Loera criminal organization and its capacity to ship and traffick cocaine," Trevilla said.

He said Mexico detained Limon Sanchez on a U.S. extradition request and he had been turned over to civilian prosecutors.

Extradition can often be a lengthy legal process lasting years in Mexico because of appeals.

Trevilla described Limon Sanchez as a sort of all-purpose cocaine shipper based in Culiacan, who bought cocaine, shipped it through Mexico for distribution in California in the Los Angeles area.

The State Department reward notice said Limon Sanchez "organizes, manages, and distributes multi-ton quantities of cocaine from Mexico into his distribution hubs located in southern California; from there his drug trafficking organization distributes cocaine throughout the United States."

"The Limon-Sanchez trafficking organization is also responsible for transporting millions of dollars of drug proceeds in bulk currency from the United States into Mexico," it states.

The notice said he faces an indictment issued in the Central District of California in 2009.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111110/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

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Custom glass bending

Custom glass bending [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tobias Rist
tobias.rist@iwm.fraunhofer.de
49-761-514-2430
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft

At times a shimmering gray, at times more of a greenish color, the glass facades of high-rise buildings are mostly fairly similar in appearance. They become unique when individual glass elements are shaped differently, however. The problem is that manufacturing a large number of short runs of glass elements is complex and expensive. The glass bender must first produce an appropriate mold, before laying the glass on top of the mold in a walk-in furnace. At this stage, the glass is only in contact with the top edge of the mold. The furnace is closed and heated over a period of several hours until the material becomes viscous, sinks downward and takes on the shape of the bending mold. The process has its pitfalls, though: if the glass is not heated for long enough, it will not adopt the predefined shape. But if the process lasts too long, pressure marks form at the support points.

All that is set to change now, as researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Mechanics of Materials IWM in Freiburg have developed a new glass-bending process as part of a sponsored joint project. "Our process is roughly six times faster than the conventional process, as well as being considerably more energy-efficient and cost-effective," explains Tobias Rist, a scientist at the IWM. "It's no longer necessary to produce a special steel mold." Instead, the researchers have developed a mold which changes according to requirements it is vaguely reminiscent of the pin art gadgets that you can press your hand into to make an image. The mold starts out flat, with all the support points at the same height. Since the mold and the glass panel placed on it are moved into the furnace by machine, there is no longer any need to reheat the furnace for each batch of glass because the researchers can load it while it is in operation. The process saves a lot of energy and a few hours' time which the furnace would otherwise need to heat up and cool down.

For one thing, the temperature of the furnace is a few degrees below the temperature at which the glass becomes viscous. Another feature is that additional heat is applied to the glass using a stream of hot air or a laser only at those points which are to be shaped, so that only these parts of the glass become viscous. The mold then adopts the desired geometry at the touch of a button. A device positions the support points so the glass is able to sink downward as dictated by its temperature and the shape of the mold. The major advantages of this approach are that the material changes shape only at the desired points and that flat surfaces stay flat. They do not warp unchecked as before and do not bend back into shape again. This considerably improves the quality of the product's appearance, with fewer distortions for example. The material assumes the shape better and fewer indentations are formed in the glass.

But how long does the glass need to be heated for? And what is the ideal temperature? "While the conventional process relies a great deal on trial and error, we simulate the process and the material behavior on a computer. We then compare the outcome with the results from physical tests so we can identify and implement the most favorable process conditions," says Rist. The researchers are also able to regulate and monitor the temperature during the process. So far they have processed sheet glass measuring up to approximately one square meter. The next steps will see the sizes increase and the shapes become even more complex; for example the scientists are aiming not only to produce hemispherical structures but also to go one step further and create aspherical forms. There is also scope for the specialists to improve bending processes or develop processes for producing sheet glass with functional coatings.

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Custom glass bending [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tobias Rist
tobias.rist@iwm.fraunhofer.de
49-761-514-2430
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft

At times a shimmering gray, at times more of a greenish color, the glass facades of high-rise buildings are mostly fairly similar in appearance. They become unique when individual glass elements are shaped differently, however. The problem is that manufacturing a large number of short runs of glass elements is complex and expensive. The glass bender must first produce an appropriate mold, before laying the glass on top of the mold in a walk-in furnace. At this stage, the glass is only in contact with the top edge of the mold. The furnace is closed and heated over a period of several hours until the material becomes viscous, sinks downward and takes on the shape of the bending mold. The process has its pitfalls, though: if the glass is not heated for long enough, it will not adopt the predefined shape. But if the process lasts too long, pressure marks form at the support points.

All that is set to change now, as researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Mechanics of Materials IWM in Freiburg have developed a new glass-bending process as part of a sponsored joint project. "Our process is roughly six times faster than the conventional process, as well as being considerably more energy-efficient and cost-effective," explains Tobias Rist, a scientist at the IWM. "It's no longer necessary to produce a special steel mold." Instead, the researchers have developed a mold which changes according to requirements it is vaguely reminiscent of the pin art gadgets that you can press your hand into to make an image. The mold starts out flat, with all the support points at the same height. Since the mold and the glass panel placed on it are moved into the furnace by machine, there is no longer any need to reheat the furnace for each batch of glass because the researchers can load it while it is in operation. The process saves a lot of energy and a few hours' time which the furnace would otherwise need to heat up and cool down.

For one thing, the temperature of the furnace is a few degrees below the temperature at which the glass becomes viscous. Another feature is that additional heat is applied to the glass using a stream of hot air or a laser only at those points which are to be shaped, so that only these parts of the glass become viscous. The mold then adopts the desired geometry at the touch of a button. A device positions the support points so the glass is able to sink downward as dictated by its temperature and the shape of the mold. The major advantages of this approach are that the material changes shape only at the desired points and that flat surfaces stay flat. They do not warp unchecked as before and do not bend back into shape again. This considerably improves the quality of the product's appearance, with fewer distortions for example. The material assumes the shape better and fewer indentations are formed in the glass.

But how long does the glass need to be heated for? And what is the ideal temperature? "While the conventional process relies a great deal on trial and error, we simulate the process and the material behavior on a computer. We then compare the outcome with the results from physical tests so we can identify and implement the most favorable process conditions," says Rist. The researchers are also able to regulate and monitor the temperature during the process. So far they have processed sheet glass measuring up to approximately one square meter. The next steps will see the sizes increase and the shapes become even more complex; for example the scientists are aiming not only to produce hemispherical structures but also to go one step further and create aspherical forms. There is also scope for the specialists to improve bending processes or develop processes for producing sheet glass with functional coatings.

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/f-cgb111111.php

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Saturday, November 12, 2011

Can Memories Be Counted?

The series Too Hard for Science? discusses ideas scientists would love to explore that they think are difficult or impossible to investigate.

The Scientist: Robert Stickgold, director of the Center for Sleep and Cognition at Harvard Medical School.

The Idea: How many memories does a person create in one day? Assumptions regarding this number are at the foundation of many studies of the brain. One could put recording equipment on volunteers and compare what they experienced to what they actually remembered about events, Stickgold suggests. This is something he and his colleagues attempted.

The Problem: One dif?ficulty regards how one counts memories. Is going to the grocery store one memory or a series? Remembrances are fractal in nature: the deeper a person looks into one memory, the more details one can unearth.

Furthermore, Stickgold adds, ?There probably really isn?t anything in the brain that?s a discrete memory.? The brain is one vast, interconnected network, so how much you glom together and call a memory??Well, it?s not a question that?s meaningful at the level of the brain.?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=11ea9469d08bb2d6f651503c2c2d4651

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EMI sale ends 80 years of independence (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? EMI, the London-based record label that for 80 years brought the world everyone from the Beatles and Queen to Coldplay and Katy Perry, is no longer independent.

The company was chopped up and sold in pieces Friday, with Vivendi's Universal Music Group winning EMI's recorded music auction with a $1.9 billion offer. A consortium led by Japan's Sony is expected to announce later on Friday that it won the auction for EMI's music publishing operations in a deal valued at $2.2 billion, according to numerous sources involved in the process.

Both companies were victorious, coming from behind in the auction's final week after nearly five months of intense negotiations, trumping bids by archrivals Warner Music Group and BMG.

For EMI owner Citigroup Inc, which took control of the record label after its previous owner, Guy Hands' buyout shop Terra Firma, defaulted on loans owed to the investment bank, the better-than-expected $4.1 billion in total deal value approaches the break-even level, something few observers thought possible.

Citigroup provided 2.6 billion pounds ($4.2 billion) of debt to Terra Firma's 2007 leveraged buyout of EMI but had to write off most of the loans as a result of the company's struggles.

Citigroup declined to comment on the matter.

WARNER WALKS, SONY RISES

Warner Music led the bidding on the recorded music side for much of the auction, while KKR-backed BMG was ahead on the song catalog side. But in a surprise move, Warner Music rescinded its bid last week after failing to agree to terms for taking over EMI's pension liabilities.

Warner's exit opened the door for Universal to return to the negotiating table after previously dropping out of the auction for the very same reason. Under the deal's terms, Universal assumes the regulatory risk -- and getting the deal approved won't be easy -- while Citigroup retains all of EMI's roughly $600 million in pension liabilities and any potential liability from lawsuits related to Terra Firma's ownership.

The $1.9 billion price equates to a cash flow multiple of 7 times, which is roughly in line with the 7.3 times cash flow multiple Len Blavatnik paid in his $3.3 billion deal for Warner Music in July. Cost synergies are expected to lower the cash flow multiple to 5 times, said a source.

On the publishing side, Sony lined up Blackstone Group, Abu Dhabi's Mubadala Development Co, and Raine Group as financing partners. But what really put its offer over the top was a last-minute assist from investment bank UBS, which agreed to provide it with more than $1 billion in financing, according to two sources involved in the deal. Billionaire music and movie mogul David Geffen also invested $50 million in mezzanine debt to help Sony finance the deal, said a third source with knowledge of the situation. Those two late investments allowed Sony to raise its offer and trump BMG.

REGULATORY RISK

Both deals are expected to attract intense regulatory scrutiny, as Universal is already the worldwide market share leader in recorded music and Sony will catapult to the No. 1 position in publishing.

The deal, if approved, would increase Universal's recorded music market share to 36 percent globally. In the U.S., the world's largest music market, the combined company would control 38 percent of the market. More concerning to regulators, however, is the fact that in some European territories Universal's market share would be in excess of 50 percent.

Though Sony will jump from fourth to first place in music publishing -- owning the rights to around 3 million songs including the iconic hit "New York, New York" and Adele's recent smash "Rolling in the Deep" -- its deal is structured in a way that would make it more palatable to regulators. Instead of an outright purchase, Sony is only a minority partner, meaning that it won't consolidate revenue or debt from EMI on its books. Rather, it will administer the catalog, or find commercially viable ways to license EMI's songs, in return for a management fee.

Even so, Impala, the trade organization that represents Europe's independent music companies, issued a statement saying it will lobby for both deals to be blocked outright. Universal has already offered to sell more than $500 million in assets to appease regulators, but Impala said that wasn't enough.

Though Impala has successfully lobbied to block major music deals in the past, most notably Warner Music's attempt to buy EMI a decade ago, sources dismissed its concerns this time around.

These sources said the music industry in much weaker and more fragmented than it was a decade ago and that stronger companies are needed to help protect and promote artistic talent. They also cited the rise of powerful distributors like iTunes, Google, and Amazon, which together account for about 80 percent of music sales, as the principal price setters in today's market.

Indeed, the fact that Universal agreed to assume the deal's regulatory risk, which would require it to find another buyer and absorb any losses if the deal is rejected, suggests that it believes it will secure approval.

REBUILDING EMI

Even before Terra Firma bought EMI, the company had been so poorly managed that its initials were derisively said to mean "Ever Mistake Imaginable."

But Guy Hands' stewardship drove EMI further into the ground. Hands, an investor known for turning around bars and gas stations, immediately alienated artists and executives alike with brash proclamations that they knew little about running a business. He slashed budgets, cut staff, and upset cultural sensitivities. Radiohead, Paul McCartney, Robbie Williams, Coldplay, and other artists either left the label or spoke out in protest against Hands.

"(We will) replenish and rebuild the rosters that have lacked the level of investment that frankly a business like this should have had. EMI is not a utility company," Lucian Grainge, head of Universal, told reporters on a conference call in a slap at Hands' mismanagement of EMI.

Even Mick Jagger weighed in on the deal, saying, "This is a very positive development and I particularly welcome the fact that EMI will once again be owned by people who really do have music in their blood."

BRONFMAN LOSES, BANDIER WINS

Losing EMI to Universal is a crushing defeat for Edgar Bronfman Jr. The Warner Music chairman and scion to the Seagram's beverage fortune, has been trying to buy EMI for years, but control issues always stood in the way of a deal. After Blavatnik bought Warner Music in July, Bronfman moved into the chairman role with the sole purpose of completing his long-sought after deal for EMI.

But, according to a source close to Warner, Bronfman has no regrets about losing the deal based on the price Universal paid.

"Anyone can win an auction," this source said. "But it takes immense financial discipline to walk away from one you've been after for a while because the economics didn't make sense."

On the publishing side, the deal reunites Sony's Martin Bandier with the asset he helped build into the a powerhouse during his 18 years at EMI. Bandier was eased out of EMI in 2007 and he joined Sony that same year with ambitions to eventually buy the division he led for nearly two decades.

The publishing win is also a validation for Sony CEO Howard Stringer. Stringer, who has been criticized for allowing Sony to lose its leadership position in consumer electronics and other areas, in 2005 made a commitment to the company's music unit, particularly its publishing unit. The EMI deal represents the unit's fourth deal in six years, increasing its value from around $500 million to more than several billion dollars.

(Reporting by Peter Lauria in New York and Lionel Laurent in Paris; additional reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Derek Caney, John Wallace and Bernard Orr)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/digitalmusic/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111111/bs_nm/us_vivendi

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