Wednesday, January 2, 2013

PFT: Woodson cleared to return for Packers

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Black Monday had a dual meaning this year.? In addition to seven coaches and five General Managers losing their jobs, every player suffered a defeat when Judge David Doty refused to permit a collusion claim against the NFL proceed.

Doty, who did the NFLPA a favor by issuing his ruling on the last day of the 2012 calendar year and the hectic first day of the 2013 offseason, ruled that the players had released all claims that could have been made against the league when signing off on the 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement.? The NFLPA believes that Doty?s ruling is incorrect, and we?re told that the union is now considering its next move.

The options are limited.? The union can ask Judge Doty to take a second look at the issue (known in the legal industry as a ?motion for reconsideration?), the union can file an appeal to the federal court that oversees Judge Doty, or the players can punt, figuratively.? (Or literally, if they decide to wad up the written decision into a ball and kick it.)

The best move could be to move on.? Though the players believe the settlement agreement that released all claims that could have been made by the union (including a claim for collusion arising from an allegedly secret salary cap in the uncapped year of 2010) required formal court approval, it?s a technicality at best.? And judges tend to ignore meaningless technicalities that would point to an unfair result.

There are three reasons why the result would have been unfair.? First, if the lawyers had presented the paperwork to Doty for approval, he would have applied the rubber stamp and banged the gavel without giving the settlement agreement serious consideration.? Second, the NFLPA affirmatively accepted the cap penalties imposed on the Cowboys and Redskins that triggered the claim for collusion in order to obtain a higher per-team salary cap for 2012.? Third, and as we explained at the outset of this specific controversy, the NFLPA arguably ratified any collusion by agreeing to permit punishment to be imposed on the Cowboys and Redskins for failing to comply with the collusive behavior.

Judge Doty didn?t delve into those issues.? Indeed, he generally avoided in his 11-page written opinion any commentary that would have ?called out? the NFLPA or otherwise made the players or their leadership or their lawyers look bad.? Though there?s a good-faith argument to be made that court approval was required because the settlement encompassed a class action affecting the rights of hundreds of players, Doty likely took the simplest path from point A to point B, finding a way to end the case without embarrassing the NFLPA or chiding their counsel for trying to have it both ways.

If the NFLPA pushes the issue, the next opinion from Judge Doty or the appeals court (which has a reputation for being business friendly) could be more blunt regarding the failure of the NFLPA to assert the claim before signing off on the settlement agreement, the decision of the NFLPA to agree to cap penalties imposed on two teams who treated the uncapped year as, well, uncapped, and the arguably disingenuous idea that the NFLPA didn?t suspect collusion until after the Cowboys and Redskins were whacked for $48 million in cap space.

So, yes, the smartest move could be to wad the decision up into a ball and kick it.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/01/woodson-cleared-to-play-no-word-yet-on-nelson/related/

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Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Fiscal cliff: 48 hours to go and Senate negotiations slow to a crawl

A late-breaking Republican demand to cut Social Security benefits through an alternative method of calculating inflation adjustments has put negotiations at an impasse.

By Gail Russell Chaddock,?Staff writer / December 30, 2012

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) speaks with the media as he leaves the Senate Chamber Sunday afternoon. Efforts to prevent the economy from tumbling over a "fiscal cliff" stalled as Democrats and Republicans remained at loggerheads over a deal that would prevent taxes for all Americans from rising on New Year's Day.

Mary Calvert/REUTERS

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UPDATE: Senate majority leader Harry Reid told the Senate at 5:48 p.m. Sunday that Senate Republicans have dropped their call for Social Security benefit cuts, or ?chain? CPI, as part of a deal to avert the fiscal cliff. There is still ?significant distance? between the two sides, he said, but ?there is still time left to reach an agreement." The Senate will come in at 11 a.m. Monday, when the majority leader expects to make "further announcements."

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Fiscal cliff negotiations hit a wall late Saturday night, but it took Senate Republicans about 15 hours to figure that out.

Typically, 11th hour negotiations are marked by a flurry of offers and counteroffers, all-night staff negotiations, phone calls, and huddles in back rooms littered with pizza boxes and diet soda cans.

That?s not happening, say staff close to the negotiations. Senate Republicans made their last offer about 7:10 p.m. Saturday. Democratic staff for majority leader Harry Reid promised a response by 10 a.m. on Sunday. Nothing came.

Instead, word leaked to the press that a late-breaking GOP demand to cut Social Security benefits through an alternative method of calculating inflation adjustments as ?chained? CPI [Consumer Price Index] had put negotiations at an impasse. It was a poison pill, a show-stopper, Democratic aides told reporters.

2012 enters the record books. Were you paying attention? A news quiz.

President Obama first proposed the idea in negotiations last spring with House Speaker John Boehner (R) of Ohio for a comprehensive deal on the debt ceiling and deficit reduction. But it?s anathema to many Senate liberals.

?Social Security has nothing to do with deficit reduction,? said Sen. Bernard Sanders (I) of Vermont, after the talks stalled on Sunday. ?The idea of Republicans asking for cuts for Social Security and cuts for programs for disabled veterans while at the same time protecting the wealthiest people in this country is totally outrageous and I?m glad that Senator Reid said no.?

But GOP staff close to the negotiations say that Reid or his staff never conveyed that view back to Republicans.

?If they have a problem with that piece, we are encouraging them to resubmit an offer with it,? says a GOP aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity. ?But all we heard is that the majority leader would not be countering.?

?There is no single issue that remains an impossible sticking point,? said Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell in a floor speech before party caucus meetings to brief senators at 3 p.m. ?The sticking point appears to be a willingness, an interest or frankly the courage to close the deal.?

Standing side by side on the Senate floor, Senator Reid responded: ?I have had a number of conversations with the president, and at this stage we?re not able to make a counteroffer.?

?Perhaps as the day wears on, I will be able to,? he added. ?I will say this: I think that the Republican leader has shown absolutely good faith. It?s just that we are apart on some pretty big issues.?

If Senate leaders fail to reach an agreement, the Senate is expected to take up on Monday President Obama?s proposal for a stripped down agreement that would extend Bush-era tax rates for all incomes below $250,000 and extend unemployment rates at the current 99 weeks.

But such a measure would also have to pass the House, where many GOP conservatives are strongly committed to opposing all tax hikes. Last week, Speaker Boehner was forced to pull his own ?Plan B? proposal to extend current tax rates for all incomes below $1 million, after opposition within GOP ranks.?

?I still can?t believe they won?t get something done given the perilous place this leaves our country,? said Sen. Olympia Snowe (R) of Maine, after the floor exchange between the two leaders.

?But the only thing Congress is predictable about is waiting until the very last hour,? she added.

2012 enters the record books. Were you paying attention? A news quiz.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/buISQw8YIEU/Fiscal-cliff-48-hours-to-go-and-Senate-negotiations-slow-to-a-crawl

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Olivia Wilde & Jason Sudeikis Cheer On The University Of Kansas Jayhawks

In Lurve

Posted by: Trent on |

Actors Olivia Wilde and Jason Sudeikis brought their adorable love affair to the University of Kansas this weekend so that they could root for the Jayhawks basketball team. As an alumnus of the University of Kansas, Jason tries to get back to Lawrence, KS as much as possible to lend support for his college team ? Olivia, as you can see below, was happy to tag along and lend her support as well. The couple looked about as cute as can be all night long, which you can see for yourselves in the adorbs photos below.

Olivia Wilde is such a great sport. Their first public outing as a couple was at Kansas University basketball game so it?s small surprise that Olivia Wilde and Jason Sudeikis keep returning to the same scene. Olivia and Jason snuggled together as they took in the Kansas Jayhawks vs. American University Eagles on Saturday in Lawrence, Kansas. Jason is a graduate of Kansas University and a big fan of their team, and Olivia has joined him on numerous occasions to see the college players in action. The wide-eyed actress must be devoted to her honey, for she went all out, wearing a spirited blue, red and white knit cap with ear flaps. The Saturday Night Live star opted for a simple grey baseball cap with the initials KU on front. But both showed their support for Kansas in matching sports wear ? Olivia in a short-sleeved tee and Jason in a blue Kansas University sweat jacket. After the game, the pair were even invited to meet the Jayhawks in the guys? locker room. Olivia took to Twitter to share the experience, writing: ?Hung out in the KU locker room and gave them some pointers. I have never felt so short or white. Good game, boys!? ?Ok I was playing it cool but suffice it to say that was the coolest meet n greet in the history of locker rooms,? Olivia added. ?Thanks guys!! Rock chalk!?

I just love these two together. They make such a cute couple, they always look so happy ? it?s clear to see that they are in love. I don?t know about you but bearing witness to happiness like this really warms the heart. I love that Olivia got herself all dolled up in Kansas colors to support her man?s team. I am very much looking forward to seeing more photos of this happy couple together in the year to come.

[Source]

Source: http://www.pinkisthenewblog.com/2012-12-30/olivia-wilde-jason-sudeikis-cheer-on-the-university-of-kansas-jayhawks

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Jay-Z Is Scoring The Great Gatsby

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When the first trailer for director Baz Luhrmann?s ambitious adaptation of the classic novel The Great Gatsby debuted online, many were jarred by the juxtaposition of Jay-Z and Kanye West?s ?No Church in the Wild? against the film?s period setting.? The decision to use that song in the trailer wasn?t a complete shock, as Luhrmann has shown a propensity for populating his period films with modern music. ?He had no problem mixing Shakespeare with Radiohead in?Romeo + Juliet and 1900s France with Madonna?in?Moulin Rouge!.? Now, though, it appears that Luhrmann isn?t just repurposing existing songs for The Great Gatsby, but is having Jay-Z himself provide an original score for the film.? Hit the jump for more details.

Rumors have swirled for months regarding the score and soundtrack for The Great Gatsby, with previous reports noting that Prince and Lady Gaga might be providing original songs for the film.? Yesterday, singer/songwriter/producer Jeymes Samuel of The Bullitts fame took to Twitter (via The Film Stage) to confirm that he and Jay-Z are composing the film?s score:

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No other details are known at this time, but I?m pretty excited to see what comes of this collaboration.? Luhrmann isn?t exactly known for his?subtlety?as a filmmaker, and the trailers for The Great Gatsby promise a wildly ambitious and visually arresting iteration of F. Scott Fitzgerald?s American classic.? It?s entirely possible that the whole thing may turn out to be a complete disaster, but I remain (maybe foolishly) overly optimistic.

In case you missed it, check out the latest trailer for the film below.? The Great Gatsby opens in 3D on May 10, 2013.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926568/news/1926568/

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Ten Secrets About A Happy Relationship

The First Secret: THE POWER OF THOUGHT
Love begins with our thoughts. We became what we think about. Loving thoughts create loving experiences and loving relationships. Affirmations can change our beliefs and thoughts about others and ourselves. If we want to love someone, we need to consider their needs and desires. Thinking about your ideal partner will help you recognize her when you meet her.

The Second Secret: THE POWER OF RESPECT
You cannot love anyone or anything unless you first respect them. The first person you need to respect is yourself. To begin to gain self-respect ask yourself, What do I respect about myself? To gain respect for others, even those you may dislike, ask yourself What do I respect about them?

The Third Secret: THE POWER OF GIVING
If you want to receive love, all you have to do is give it! The more love you give, the more you will receive. To love is to give of yourself, freely and unconditionally. Practice random acts of kindness. Before committing to a relationship ask not what the other person will be able to give to you, but rather what will you be able to give them. The secret formula of a happy, life-long, loving relationship is to always focus on what you can give instead of what you can take.

The Fourth Secret: THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP
To find a true love, you must first find a true friend. Love does not consist of gazing into each other's eyes, but rather looking outward together in the same direction. To love someone completely you must love them for who they are, what they look like. Friendship is the soil through which love seeds grow. If you want to bring love into a relationship, you must first bring friendship.

The Fifth Secret: THE POWER OF TOUCH
Touch is one of the most powerful expression of love, breaking down barriers and bonding relationships. Touch changes our physical and emotional states and makes us more receptive to love.

The Sixth Secret: THE POWER OF LETTING GO
If you love something, let it free, if it comes back to you it's yours, if it doesn't it never was. Even in a loving relationships, people need their own space. If we want to learn to love, we must first learn to forgive and let go of past hurts, and grievances. Love means letting go of our fears, prejudices, egos and conditions. Today I let go of all my fears, the past has no power over me, today is the beginning of a new life.

The Seventh Secret: THE POWER OF COMMUNICATION
When we learn to communicate openly and honestly, life changes. To love someone is to communicate with them. Let the people you love know that you love them and appreciate them. Never be afraid to say those three magic words: I LOVE YOU! Never let an opportunity pass to praise someone. Always leave someone you love with a loving word, it could be the last time you see them. If you were about to die but could make telephone calls to people you loved, who would you call, what would you say...??? and what are you waiting?

The Eight Secret: THE POWER OF COMMITMENT
If you want to have love in abundance, you must be committed to it, and that commitment will be reflected in your thoughts and actions. Commitment is the true test of love. If you want to have loving relationships, you must be committed to loving relationships. When you are committed to someone or something, quitting is never an option. Commitment distinguishes a fragile relationship from a strong one.

The Ninth Secret: THE POWER OF PASSION
Passion ignites love and keeps it alive. Lasting passion does not come through physical attraction alone, it comes from deep commitment, enthusiasm, interest and excitement. Passion can be recreated by recreating past experiences when you felt passionate. Spontaneity and surprises produce passion. The essence of love and happiness are the same; all we need to do is to live each day with passion?

The Tenth Secret: THE POWER OF TRUST
Trust is the essential in all loving relationship. Without it one person becomes suspicious, anxious and fearful and the other person feels trapped and emotionally suffocated. You cannot love someone completely unless you trust them completely. Act as if your relationship with the person you love will never end. One of the ways you can tell whether a person is right for you is to ask yourself, Do I trust them completely and unreservedly? If the answer is no, think carefully before making commitment.

Originally Entry written by Francis Morilao
Essay Writing Contest on Happy Relationship. 1989
? January 2013 www.kwentonikiko.com

Source: http://www.kwentonikiko.com/2013/01/ten-secrets-about-happy-relationship.html

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The Aging Effects Of Sugar

While we all know the damaging effects of sun damage, smoking and drinking have on our skin, a hidden culprit is sugar. Sugar of all types can cause loss of elasticity, sagging and deeper wrinkles. Find out how to minimize these effects and slow skin aging.

Article by Health-and-Fitness:Anti-Aging Articles from EzineArticles.com (c) Health-and-Fitness:Anti-Aging Articles from EzineArticles.com - Read full story here.

Source: http://anti-aging.fitnessthroughfasting.com/anti-aging/the-aging-effects-of-sugar.php

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A surprisingly good vintage as market logs gains

NEW YORK (AP) ? If you'd told investors what was going to happen in 2012 ? U.S. economic growth at stall speed, an intensifying European debt crisis, a slowdown in China, fiscal deadlock in Washington, decelerating corporate earnings growth ? and asked how the stock market would perform, few would have predicted a good year.

But that's just what they got.

The Dow Jones industrial average, the Standard & Poor's 500 and the Nasdaq composite index all ended the year substantially higher, despite losing ground in the final days of year as concerns about the looming "fiscal cliff" mounted.

The Dow gained 7 percent for the year, its fourth consecutive annual advance, having started the year at 12,217. The S&P 500, which started the year at 1,257, is up 13 percent, beating the 7.8 percent average annual gain of the past 20 years. The Nasdaq also logged a better-than-average gain, 16 percent.

Including dividends, the total return on the S&P 500 index was even better: 16 percent.

Financial companies led the gains among S&P 500 stocks, advancing 26 percent, as banks continued their restructuring efforts after the recession. Bank of America more than doubled, gaining $6.05 to $11.61 and Citigroup advanced $13.25, or 50 percent, to $39.56. Utilities, the best-performing industry group last year, was the only sector of 10 industry groups in the index to decline, dropping 2.9 percent.

"There's been a lot thrown at this market, and it's proven to be very resilient," said Gary Flam, a portfolio manager at Bel Air Investment Advisors in California. "Here we are at the end of the year, and it's still relatively strong."

Stocks started the year on a tear, with optimism about an improving job market and a broader economic recovery providing the backdrop to the S&P 500's best first-quarter rally in 14 years.

The index advanced 12 percent by the end of March, closing the quarter at 1,408, its highest in almost four years, with financial companies and technology firms leading the charge. The Dow ended the first quarter at 13,212, logging an 8 percent gain.

Apple was one of the star performers of the first quarter and was probably the year's most talked-about company.

The popularity of the iPhone and iPad led to staggering sales growth that helped push its stock up 48 percent to almost $600 at the end of March. Apple also announced a dividend and overtook Exxon Mobil as the U.S.'s most valuable company.

At the start of the second quarter, the intensifying European debt crisis and concerns about the impact that it would have on global economic growth prompted a sell-off.

By the start of June, U.S. stocks had given up the year's gains. Borrowing costs for Spain surged and investors fretted over the outcome of Greek elections that had the potential to pull the euro currency bloc apart.

The outlook for growth in China, the world's second-largest economy, also began to weigh on investors' minds. Economic growth there slowed to 8.1 percent in the first quarter as export demand waned, and investors worried that it would keep falling.

The Dow fell as low as 12,101 June 4. The S&P dropped to 1,278 June 1.

The second quarter was also marred by Facebook's initial public offering.

The stock sale was one of the most keenly anticipated initial public offerings in years, but investors didn't "like" the $16 billion market debut. The social network priced its IPO at $38 per share, and the stock started to fall soon after the first day of trading on concern about the company's mobile strategy.

Facebook closed as low as $17.73 on Sept. 4 before recovering some of the ground it lost to close the year at $26.62.

Company earnings reports were also starting to make uncomfortable reading for investors. Earnings growth for S&P 500 companies fell as low as 0.8 percent in the second quarter, according to S&P Capital IQ data.

The stock market only recovered its poise after the European Union put together loans to bail out Spain's banks on June 10 and the head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, pledged to do "whatever it takes" to save the euro.

Speculation that the Federal Reserve was set to provide the economy with more stimulus to prevent it from slipping back into recession also bolstered stocks.

The rally even survived a blip when a software glitch at trading firm Knight Capital threw stock prices into chaos Aug. 1.

The firm said the problem was triggered by new trading software it installed. Erroneous orders were sent to 140 stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange, causing sudden price swings and surging trading volume.

Apple launched the iPhone 5, the latest version of its smartphone, in September, and the company's stock climbed to a record close of $702.10 on Sept. 19. That gave Apple a market value of $658 billion, and many analysts predicted more gains lay ahead.

By the time Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke announced Sept. 13 that the U.S. central bank would start a third round of its bond-purchase program, which is intended to push longer term interest rates lower and encourage borrowing and investment, the S&P 500 had surged 14 percent from its June 1 low. A day later, the index peaked at five-year high of 1,466. The Dow Jones reached its peak for the year of 13,610, Oct. 5.

As is often the case on Wall Street, investors "bought the rumor and sold the fact," and quickly turned their attention to the challenges that lay ahead.

Analysts had also been cutting their outlook for growth in the final quarter of the year. At the start of the second quarter, estimated earnings growth for the period was 15.7 percent. That forecast had fallen to 3.4 percent by Dec. 27.

"One of the blessings that supported the stock market's moves in prior years was earnings growth," said Lawrence Creatura, a portfolio manager at Federated Investors. "That's true this year, but at a decelerating rate. It's not gone unnoticed that earnings growth is slowing, and many forecasts now include a full stall."

Apple's halo also began to slip in the final three months of the year. Its iPad Mini tablet, launched Nov. 2, met with lukewarm reviews, there were hints of unrest among its executive ranks. Investors began to fret that the intensifying competition in the smartphone market would crimp Apple's profits. The stock tumbled, and despite rallying in recent days is still down 27 percent from its September peak.

The year's final twist came in Washington.

Stocks wavered ahead of a presidential election that at times seemed too close to call, and while President Barack Obama ultimately reclaimed the White House by a comfortable margin, the Republicans retained control of the House.

The divided government set the stage for a tense end to the year as Democrats and Republicans sought to thrash out a budget plan that would avoid the U.S. falling off the "fiscal cliff," a series of tax hikes and government spending cuts that economists say would push the economy back into recession.

Initially, markets fell as much as 5 percent in the 10 days after the elections as investors worried that a divided government would not be able to agree on a budget plan to cut the U.S. deficit.

While the S&P 500 managed to recoup those losses by December on optimism that a deal would be reached, some investors are still urging caution. Any agreement will still be "ill-tasting medicine" to the economy, as it will almost certainly involve both spending cuts and tax hikes, says Joe Costigan, director of equity research at Bryn Mawr Trust Company.

"The question is, how much will the drag from the government be offset by business and personal spending," says Costigan. "The market has reasonable expectations for growth priced in, so I don't think we're going to see a big run-up."

___

Online:

http://hosted.ap.org/interactives/2012/markets/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/surprisingly-good-vintage-market-logs-gains-203040985--finance.html

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