Monday, November 28, 2011

Iran threatens to hit Turkey if US, Israel attack

Members of the Iranian paramilitary Basij force, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, attend a rally in front of the former US Embassy in Tehran, Iran, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Militant Iranian students seized the embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, believing the embassy to be a center of plots against Iran, and then held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The US severed diplomatic ties in response, and the two countries have not had formal relations since. The men's headbands bear the names of Shiite saints, including Hussein.(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Members of the Iranian paramilitary Basij force, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, attend a rally in front of the former US Embassy in Tehran, Iran, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Militant Iranian students seized the embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, believing the embassy to be a center of plots against Iran, and then held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The US severed diplomatic ties in response, and the two countries have not had formal relations since. The men's headbands bear the names of Shiite saints, including Hussein.(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

(AP) ? A senior commander of Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard says the country will target NATO's missile defense shield in Turkey if the U.S. or Israel attacks the Islamic Republic.

Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Guards' aerospace division, is quoted by the semiofficial Mehr news agency as saying the warning is part of a new defense strategy to counter what it sees as an increase in threats from the U.S. and Israel.

He says Iran will now respond to threats with threats rather than a defensive position.

Tehran says NATO's early warning radar station in Turkey is meant to protect Israel against Iranian missile attacks if a war breaks out with Israel.

Turkey agreed to host the radar in September as part of NATO's missile defense system.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-26-ML-Iran/id-2ff8d4e158094b9b93ba6afc0cc02113

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

PFT: Ravens defense steals Harbaughs' spotlight

Green Bay Packers v Detroit LionsGetty Images

In the past, when Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh has supplied his version of an on-field incident that resulted in a penalty or a fine, he seemed persuasive.

After Thursday?s Haynesworthy performance against the Packers, Suh?s effort to talk his way out of trouble comes off as pathetic.

?What I did was remove myself from the situation the best way that I felt in me being held down in the situation that I was in,? Suh said, via NFL.com.? ?My intentions were not to kick anybody, as I did not.? [I was] removing myself, as you see, I?m walking away from the situation.? And with that I apologize to my teammates, and my fans and my coaches for putting myself to be in position to be misinterpreted and taken out of the game.?

It gets better.? Or, for Suh, worse.

?I was on top of a guy being pulled down and trying to get up off the ground, which is why you see me pushing his helmet down,? Suh said.? ?As I?m getting up, I?m getting pushed so I?m getting myself unbalanced. . . .? With that a lot of people are going to interpret it as or create their own storylines, . . . but I know what I did, and the man upstairs knows what I did.?

What Suh did requires no interpretation.? He aggressively pushed the head of Evan Dietrich-Smith into the ground, and Suh stomped on Dietrich-Smith?s arm as Suh started to walk away.

?I understand in this world because of the type of player and type of person I am, all eyes are on me,? Suh said.? ?So why would I do something to jeopardize myself, jeopardize my team, first and foremost?? I don?t do bad things.? I have no intentions to hurt someone.? If I want to hurt him, I?m going to hit his quarterback as I did throughout that game.?

He needs to quit while he?s not ahead.

?If I see a guy stepping on somebody I feel like they?re going to lean into it and forcefully step on that person or stand over that person,? Suh said.? ?I?m going in the opposite direction to where he?s at.?

It?s an amazingly flimsy, and perhaps delusional, effort to explain what was obvious to anyone with eyes.? Apart from the ultimate penalty that will be imposed on Suh by the league office ? and plenty of people believe a suspension is coming ? Suh needs to be concerned about the impact of his behavior and his lame explanation of it on his marketability.? From Subway to Chrysler to any other company that has chosen to give Suh a lot of money to endorse its products, that money could be drying up, quickly.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/11/24/ravens-smother-san-fran-in-har-bowl-i/related

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Oil prices fall on global economic worries (AP)

NEW YORK ? Worries that the global economy is weakening pushed oil prices down Wednesday, even though the government said that oil supplies fell sharply in the U.S.

West Texas Intermediate crude, the benchmark used to price oil in much of the U.S., fell $1.84 to finish at $96.17 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, which is used to price oil produced in many foreign countries, fell $1.95 to end at $106.70 a barrel in London.

Oil prices and stocks have fluctuated for weeks with concerns about the European debt crisis. On Wednesday those worries intensified after a German bond offering failed to attract buyers. Germany is Europe's largest economy, and among its strongest, so its struggle to raise money increased anxiety that weaker economies could face a disastrous cash crunch that could ripple through the global financial system.

Oil prices have stayed relatively high, however, because investors worry that continuing strife in the Middle East could disrupt supplies. Also, demand for oil in China and other developing nations has remained strong. Global oil demand is expected to reach record levels this year of more than 89 million barrels per day.

But there are signs that even China's economy may be weakening after a survey found manufacturing activity slowing there.

When economies slow, demand for crude oil and refined products like diesel, jet fuel and gasoline falls because fewer goods are produced and shipped, and people travel less. Oil has fallen more than 6 percent since last Wednesday, when it spiked to $102.59 per barrel.

Phil Flynn, an analyst at PFG Best in Chicago said oil prices likely would have fallen much further this Wednesday, but U.S. government data showed that stocks of crude shrank by nearly 2 percent. That suggests more oil will be needed to replenish supplies.

Crude supplies fell by 6.2 million barrels to 330.8 million barrels, which is about 8 percent below year-ago levels, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report.

Supplies of gasoline, however, rose sharply. Gasoline supplies increased by 4.5 million barrels, or 2.2 percent, to 209.6 million barrels. That's triple the amount analysts expected.

Demand for gasoline in the U.S. has fallen steadily this year as pump prices rose to near record levels in the spring and remained high throughout the year. Demand for gasoline over the four weeks ended Nov. 18 averaged 8.6 million barrels a day, 4 percent lower than a year earlier when gasoline was 14 percent cheaper.

The reason, analysts say, is that demand for diesel has been extraordinarily strong around the globe, especially in Asia and Latin America. U.S. refiners have been working at near-full capacity to produce diesel, but the process also creates gasoline, adding to supplies even though the market is soft.

The excess supply of gasoline is good news for U.S. drivers. Retail gasoline prices are lower than expected, given the relatively high price of crude.

Pump prices extended a two-week slide that has seen average prices down 11 cents a gallon since Nov. 10. The average price of retail gasoline on Wednesday fell a penny to $3.33 per gallon, according to AAA, OPIS and Wright Express.

Gasoline futures rose 4 cents to finish at $2.5177 a gallon in New York.

In other energy trading in New York, natural gas rose 4 cents to end at $3.46 per 1,000 cubic feet, and heating oil fell 8 cents to finish the day at $2.9591 a gallon.

Jonathan Fahey can be reached at http://twitter.com/JonathanFahey.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_bi_ge/us_oil_prices

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Ormie the Pig (Little green footballs)

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Jayhawks fall 68-61 to Duke in Maui finale

Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski shouts instructions to his team in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski shouts instructions to his team in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Duke forward Ryan Kelly (34) attempts to block a shot by Kansas forward Thomas Robinson, right in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Kansas head coach Bill Self shouts out instructions to his team in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Duke guard Austin Rivers, left, attempts to hold off Kansas forward Thomas Robinson, right, in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Kansas center Jeff Withey, center, grabs a rebound from Duke guard Seth Curry (30) and Ryan Kelly (34) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

(AP) ? Kansas didn't expect the first 3-pointer from Tyler Thornton. The Jayhawks couldn't believe his second long jumper.

Tyler hit one 3-pointer to give Duke the lead and dropped in another with the shot clock winding down and the Jayhawks in his face, sending No. 14 Kansas to a 68-61 loss and the sixth-ranked Blue Devils to their fifth Maui Invitational title Wednesday night.

Thornton, who had taken nine shots all season, surprised Kansas (3-2) when he made a 3-pointer with 1:10 left to put the Blue Devils up two. He followed with another did-he-just-do-that one with 20 seconds left, sending the crowd into a frenzy while keeping Duke (7-0) undefeated in Maui Invitational at 15-0.

"We couldn't have guarded him any better," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "That was unbelievable."

The Blue Devils and Jayhawks went toe-to-toe from the start, electrifying the crowd with the kind of compelling counterpunching you'd expect from blue blood programs.

Unleashing an array of alley-oops, 3-pointers and teeth-jarring picks, they never let the other get too far ahead, with 16 lead changes and 12 ties.

Ryan Kelly hurt Kansas with his inside-outside game, scoring 17 points to earn MVP honors. Mason Plumlee gave the Jayhawks fits inside with 17 points and 12 rebounds.

Kansas was led by Thomas Robinson, who had 16 points and 15 rebounds. Jeff Withey provided an unexpected lift with 14 points and 10 rebounds. Tyshawn Taylor had a solid first half on his way 17 points, but tired down the stretch to finish with 11 of Kansas' 17 turnovers.

Fittingly, it came down to a thrilling finish.

Eljiah Johnson hit a 3-pointer with 1:33 left to put Kansas (3-2) up 61-60. Thornton answered 23 seconds later, surprising the Jayhawks with a 3 of his own.

Thornton then put the punctuation on this classic in paradise, dropping in his improbable 3 after Taylor had his 11th turnover at the other end.

"It's a dream shot," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "People will say it's a lucky shot, but I'll say I'm lucky to have him on my team. Sometimes you're on a bus with a guy who deserves and for that moment we were on his bus. Thank goodness he knew how to drive it."

This rare early matchup of college basketball powers had the potential to be one of the most exciting in the 28-year history of the Maui Invitational.

Duke's resume includes four national titles, the winningest coach in Division I history ? Krzyzewski passed mentor Bobby Knight last week ? and as strong a following as any team in the country.

Kansas has three national titles, a coach who's won 83 percent of his games in Self and is right up there with the Blue Devils as a fan favorite.

Duke lost its top three scorers from last season, reloaded with another stellar recruiting class, headed by Austin Rivers. Big, versatile and athletic, the Blue Devils outlasted Tennessee to win their Maui opener, then shot past No. 15 Michigan in the semifinals.

Kansas lost a good chunk of its top end, too, not to mention half of its heralded recruiting class because of eligibility issues.

Still, the Jayhawks have Robinson, Taylor and three of those talented freshmen.

Kansas opened the Maui Invitational by bumping off gritty Georgetown, then outlasted UCLA in the semifinals after nearly blowing all of a 20-point lead.

By getting through one of the toughest brackets ever at the Maui Invitational, these two elite teams set up a championship game that figured to be as sparkling as the Pacific Ocean just outside.

The atmosphere inside quaint Lahaina Civic Center fit the matchup, with the rowdy fans from each team trading chants, cheers and boos.

"This is what the Maui Invitational is all about," Krzyewski said.

The show lived up to the billing, starting with Rivers' deep, leg-splaying 3-pointer for the game's first points and an alley-oop by Miles Plumlee.

Robinson shook off a shot to the face in the first 15 seconds to throw down a pose-after-it dunk and Taylor had a surprising three-point play on his way to 13 first-half points, asking his teammates with an incredulous look if the shot went in.

Kansas also got a lift from Withey, who had 10 points after averaging 6.3 the first four games, to take a 35-31 lead at halftime.

The highlights continued in the second half.

Withey scored on an alley-oop from Taylor, who had an up-and-under reverse layup the next trip. Seth Curry opened with a 3-pointer, Kelly followed with one of his own.

It kept going like that until Thornton provided the knockout blow in a memorable Maui finale.

"Give him credit; I don't know if he even saw the rim when he took the shot," Self said. "It was a great shot and that was the ballgame. That was game."

An amazing one at that.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-24-BKC-T25-Kansas/id-40d7ecd94f864a2a818c18734eb744bb

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AP Interview: Shiseido exec aims to elevate women

(AP) ? As vice president of Shiseido, Kimie Iwata helps lead one of the biggest cosmetics companies in the world and among Japan's best known brands. She is also a rare female executive in the country, a powerful symbol of both the progress and ongoing struggles of Japanese women in the workplace.

Iwata, 64, has been on the front lines of the fight for gender equality for more than a quarter century. She played an instrumental role in crafting the landmark Equal Employment Opportunity Law in the mid-1980s as a labor ministry bureaucrat. Now at Shiseido Co., she is the driving force behind the company's efforts to foster its female talent and spark broader changes within corporate Japan.

While Japanese women have made significant professional strides over the last 25 years, Iwata is virtually alone in having made it to the top of a major company.

Women's participation in the work force still lags that of men, with most leaving after their first child. They are pushed out by day care shortages and inflexible workplaces, and pulled by social forces that venerate the stay-at-home mom.

The long-standing gender gap suggests a critical role women could play in solving Japan's generational challenge of an aging population and an ever shrinking work force.

A survey this year by the Nikkei financial daily found that women account for less than 1 percent of all executives at the top 500 Japanese companies, compared with more than 10 percent in the U.S. and U.K. The percentage of female managers overall ? just over 10 percent ? is far behind other advanced economies, according to the government's Gender Equality Bureau.

"If you examine the root of this, it's not ability or desire," Iwata said in an interview with The Associated Press. "It's because during maternity, women leave their jobs, and their careers fall to zero."

If they attempt to return to the work force years later, they encounter a harsh reality. Companies won't hire them as full-time employees. "And as a part-timer or contractor, no matter how hard you work, it's nearly impossible to become a regular employee," said Iwata.

That has left Japan with a big pool of highly educated women either not working or only partially working at a time when it is struggling to overcome two decades of lackluster growth and faces a looming demographic crisis.

With low birthrates and long lifespans, Japan's population of 128 million is projected to shrink by more than a quarter by 2050. The elderly will account for some 40 percent of the country, while the working-age population that's meant to support them contracts, according to government estimates.

Kathy Matsui, chief Japan equity strategist for Goldman Sachs, describes women as Japan's most underutilized asset. She has waged a decade-long professional crusade to push Japan to more fully mobilize its women.

Matsui contends that if Japan's female employment rate ? around 60 percent ? rises 20 percentage points to match that of males, it would add 8.2 million people to the labor force and boost gross domestic product by as much as 15 percent. And contrary to prevailing opinion, more women working could actually drive birthrates higher.

Empirical evidence shows that countries with relatively high percentages of working women also have robust birth rates. The correlation holds true even within Japan's 47 prefectures: those with greater female labor rates have higher birth rates.

"I'm optimistic because there's no choice," Matsui told the AP. "This country doesn't have any options at all."

Iwata is also hopeful, simply because she's seen just how far Japan has progressed since the early 1970s.

Raised on the western island of Shikoku, Iwata credits her mother for setting her on an extraordinary path for a woman of her generation. She encouraged her daughter to study hard, find a good job and gain financial independence.

After high school, Iwata moved 330 miles away from home to attend the prestigious University of Tokyo. She then moved even further ? to Wisconsin's Ripon College for a magical year abroad.

She received a rude awakening after returning to Japan. When Iwata began looking for her first job, she found that no company was hiring women for career-track positions.

Firms instead hired women for menial, dead-end tasks like making tea and copies for men. They were expected to quit at marriage.

With few options, Iwata considered civil service. It turned out the labor ministry was hiring one woman in 1971. She applied and got the job.

"It really wasn't an era where you could build a career," Iwata said. "It was more like there was nowhere else to go."

She stayed for more than three decades, climbing up the ministry's ranks while raising two daughters. It was through the ministry that she came to work intimately on legislation that would become a groundbreaking victory for Japan's working women.

Passed in 1985 and implemented a year later, the Equal Employment Opportunity Law emerged as Japan faced increasing international pressure to address gender discrimination. It prohibited employers from discriminating against women in areas including hiring, promotion, training, job assignment and benefits.

Critics, however, assailed the law for being toothless. It obligated companies to comply but did not mandate sanctions for those that did not.

Still, Iwata said the law served as a key first step.

"Things have changed tremendously in the last 25 years," she said.

Iwata landed at Tokyo-based Shiseido in 2003 upon retiring from government. A high school acquaintance opened the door to the company, which offered her a chance to finally work in the private sector and implement on-the-ground change for both women and men.

The union proved to be an ideal match for both sides.

For the 139-year-old company, there was a growing strategic and social imperative to improve conditions for women. Its business, after all, relies almost entirely on female workers and consumers around the world.

Yet when Iwata started, the vast majority of Shiseido's women were quitting after they gave birth. Women accounted for less than 12 percent of Shiseido's managers ? better than the national average but low for a company where females outnumber males four to one.

It decided to step up efforts to keep its women.

Shiseido opened day care facilities at its Tokyo headquarters in autumn 2003. It introduced systems for short-term parental leave and paid nursing care leave for children two years later. In 2006, it launched the "Kangaroo Staff" program, through which part-time workers fill in for Shiseido's beauty consultants needing time to care for children.

Iwata takes pride in Shiseido's new normal.

Now, almost no women quit after childbirth. They take maternity leave, then return, sometimes at reduced hours at first. The ratio of female managers climbed to 20 percent last year.

But she isn't satisfied just yet.

"The goal isn't just to have them return," Iwata said. "We want to develop their careers regardless of gender. We want to have a lot of female managers and executives."

For that to happen, Shiseido needs to make more drastic changes to its corporate culture. Like at other Japanese companies, employees have for decades put in long hours and relied largely on seniority to get ahead.

"If men's work style is the standard, then women, especially with children, will always be second-class employees," Iwata said. "So we need to change how men work."

Shiseido is cutting overtime hours and encouraging men to take paternity leave. The company is also looking to change evaluation systems that currently overlook productivity.

By 2013, the company hopes that 30 percent of its managers will be female.

"I firmly believe that things are heading in the right direction," Iwata said. "I do wish things would change a little bit faster. Change takes a long time in Japan."

___

Follow Tomoko A. Hosaka on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tomokohosaka

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-22-AS-Japan-Working-Women/id-ee0408cf07984a7eab471b04181264ed

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

MLB players, owners sign agreement (AP)

NEW YORK ? Baseball players and owners signed an agreement for a new labor contract Tuesday, a deal that makes baseball the first North American professional major league to start blood testing on human growth hormone and expands the playoffs to 10 teams by 2013.

The five-year deal collective bargaining agreement makes changes owners hope will increase competitive balance by pressuring large-market teams to rein in spending on amateur draft picks and international signings.

Other highlights of the deal include: requiring players to play in the All-Star game unless injured or excused; expanding instant replay to include decisions on foul lines and traps, subject to an agreement with umpires; banning smokeless tobacco products during televised interviews by players, managers and coaches; requiring players arrested for DWI to undergo mandatory evaluation; and wearing improved batting helmets manufactured by Rawlings by 2013.

An initial positive test for HGH would result in a 50-game suspension, the same as a first positive urine test for a performance-enhancing substance.

"This was very important to me," baseball commissioner Bud Selig said. "This really is in everyone's best interest."

Random testing for HGH will take place during spring training and the offseason, but there is no agreement yet on random testing in-season. There can be testing at any time for cause.

"We've consulted with a lot of scientists on this, and we know there's a difference of opinion among scientists we've consulted," union leader Michael Weiner said. "We are sufficiently comfortable with the science to go ahead with testing, but we have preserved the right if there is a positive test for there to be a challenge ? if that's appropriate ? to the science at that point in time."

The sides will explore in-season testing, but the union wants to make sure it's done in a way that doesn't interfere with players' health and safety. Weiner said scientists told baseball the current blood test can only detect HGH in the blood from 48-to-72 hours.

"The players want to get out and be leaders on this issue, and they want there to be a level playing field," Weiner said. "The realities, though, are that baseball players play virtually every single day from Feb. 20 through October. And that's unlike any other athlete ? professional or amateur ? who's subject to drug testing. We want to make sure that we're doing everything we can on the HGH issue, but that it be consistent with not interfering with competition and not interfering with players health and safety under those circumstances."

In addition, the number of offseason urine tests will increase gradually from 125 currently to 250 before the 2015 season.

At a time when the NBA season is threatened by a lockout and NFL preseason was disrupted by labor strife, this deal ensures baseball will have 21 consecutive years of labor peace since the end of the 1994-95 strike.

"Nobody back in the `70s, `80s and early `90s, 1994, would ever believe that we would have 21 years of labor peace," Selig said.

The deal, which still must be ratified by the players and owners, is the first contract since Weiner replaced Donald Fehr as union leader last year.

As for the playoffs, there will be an additional two teams starting in 2012 or 2013 that will give baseball 10 of 30 clubs in the postseason. In the NFL, 12 of 32 teams make the playoffs. In the NBA and NHL, 16 of 30 advance.

MLB executive vice president Rob Manfred said a decision on whether the expanded playoffs would start next year likely will be made by the January owners' meeting.

The two wild cards in each league ? the non-first place teams with the best records ? will meet in a one-game playoff, and the winners will move on to the division series.

This agreement calls for the Houston Astros to switch from the NL Central to the AL West in 2013, leaving each league with three five-team divisions. It's baseball's first realignment since the Milwaukee Brewers went to the NL after the 1997 season.

In a change, teams will be allowed to have 26 active players for day-night doubleheaders, provided they are scheduled with a day's notice in order to give clubs time to bring up someone from the minor leagues.

On the economics, the threshold for the luxury tax on payrolls will be left at $178 million in each of the next two seasons, putting pressure on high-spending teams such as the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies not to raise their spending even more. The threshold rises to $189 million for 2014-16.

And there is a new market disqualification test as an incentive for clubs to increase revenue, preventing teams from large markets from receiving revenue-sharing proceeds.

Both teams from New York, Los Angeles and Chicago will be ineligible to receive revenue sharing by 2016 along with Atlanta, Boston, Houston, Oakland, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Texas, Toronto and Washington, a person familiar with the agreement said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the teams were not announced. The proceeds will be given back to the teams paying in revenue-sharing, as long as they stay under the luxury-tax payroll threshold.

The minimum salary reaches the $500,000 mark in 2014, and then there will be cost-of-living increases in both of the following two years. There also will be a new "competitive balance lottery" that gives small-market teams extra selections in the amateur draft, and those draft picks can be traded.

Major league free agent compensation will be completely revised in 2013, with a team having to offer its former players who became free agents the average of the top 125 contracts ? currently about $12.4 million ? to receive draft-pick compensation if a player signs with a new team. It eliminates the statistical formula that had been in place since the 1981 strike settlement.

In addition, the portion of players with 2-3 years of major league service who are eligible for salary arbitration will rise from 17 percent to 22 percent starting in 2013.

Owners achieved their goal of reining in spending on amateur players coming to the major leagues. For high school and college players taken in the June amateur draft, there will be five bands of penalties, starting with a 75 percent tax on the amount 0-5 percent over a specified threshold for each team next year, based on its selection spot. For teams going 5-10 percent over, the tax will rise to 100 percent and they will lose their next first-round draft pick. If a team goes more than 15 percent over, it could lose its following two first-round draft picks.

For players taken in the 11th round and beyond, teams may give them signing bonuses up to $100,000 without it counting against the new threshold.

Manfred said the amateur draft range will be from $4.5 million to $11.5 million next year. For players taken in the 11th round and beyond, teams may give them signing bonuses up to $100,000 without it counting against the new threshold.

For international amateur signings from nations such as the Dominican Republic and Venezuela, a luxury tax will begin with the July 2012-June 2013 signing season on amounts over $2.9 million.

___

Associated Press writer Frederic J. Frommer in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbo_labor

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Milwaukee's Ryan Braun wins NL MVP

BC-BBN--NL MVP, 4th Ld-Writethru,826,824Milwaukee's Ryan Braun wins NL MVPAP Photo NY161, NY159, NY156, NY157Eds: New approach. Adds video. With AP Photos. AP Video.By HOWIE RUMBERGAP Sports Writer

NEW YORK (AP) ? Ryan Braun sat alone on a balcony in his Malibu home that overlooks the Pacific Ocean, uneasy about his chances of winning the NL Most Valuable Player award.

With the season Los Angeles' Matt Kemp had, he wasn't sure the call would come at all.

The phone rang all right, and Braun has been smiling ever since.

Braun was voted the NL MVP after helping the Milwaukee Brewers win their first division title in nearly 30 years.

"I'm not going to pretend like I wasn't anxious or nervous because I was," Braun said. "It's honestly difficult to put into words how much this means to me."

The left fielder received 20 of 32 first-place votes and 388 points in voting announced Tuesday by the Baseball Writers' Association of America.

A nerve-racking morning that began with a solitary drive turned to elation in the California sun.

The 28-year-old Braun shared the news with his brother and girlfriend, who were at the house. He called his parents, then rang good friend Aaron Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers quarterback, and exchanged text messages with Kemp, the runner-up.

"This really is a dream," Braun said. "This is beyond my wildest dreams to be in this position at this point in my career."

Kemp earned 10 first-place votes and 332 points after coming close to winning the first Triple Crown since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967. Braun's teammate Prince Fielder finished third with 229 points, and Arizona's Justin Upton finished fourth with 214 points. Fielder and Upton each received one first-place vote.

St. Louis' Albert Pujols finished fifth. It was the 11th straight year the three-time MVP was in the top 10 in balloting.

NL Cy Young Award winner Los Angeles' Clayton Kershaw was 12th in the voting a day after Detroit's Justin Verlander added the AL MVP to his Cy Young.

"I think he was the single most dominant player in baseball this year," Braun said of Verlander. "As a position player I'm biased to the fact that I think position players should be at the forefront of the award, but if you honestly look at what he accomplished, how much he meant to that team and how dominant he truly was you cannot make any argument against him winning that award."

In his fifth year in the big leagues, Braun led the NL with a .597 slugging percentage and had a chance to overtake Jose Reyes for the batting title on the last day of the season but finished second with a .332 average. The four-time All-Star had 33 homers, 111 RBIs, 109 runs scored and stole 33 bases as Milwaukee won a franchise-best 96 games. His 77 extra-base hits was tops in the league.

Kemp led the NL with 39 homers, 126 RBIs and was third in average (.324), but played for the NL West's third-place Dodgers. He also won a Gold Glove.

"Matt's one of the best players in the game. No question about it. The season he had will go down as one of the greatest in Dodgers history," said Braun, who grew up in California rooting for the Dodgers. "If he had won the MVP I certainly couldn't have argued with him winning. He had a phenomenal year."

Although Braun and Kemp had similar statistics, Kemp was hindered by the Dodgers' 82-79 third-place finish in the NL West. The Brewers won the NL Central title, their first division crown since winning the AL East in 1982.

"Without a doubt I think it's a drastically different experience playing meaningful games down the stretch," said Braun, the 2007 NL Rookie of the Year.

Braun, in fact, was convinced the Brewers' first-place finish is what put him over the top with voters.

"If you honestly assess both of our seasons individually I think his numbers are probably better than mine, and I just feel fortunate to have been on the better team," Braun said. "It's an individual award, but it's a result of being part of a special team, a special organization."

Braun is the first Brewers player to win the MVP award in the National League and first since Robin Yount won in 1989, when Milwaukee was in the AL East. Rollie Fingers (1981) and Yount in 1982 are the other Brewers to take home MVP honors.

"Robin's the greatest player in Milwaukee Brewers history, so anytime you're mentioned alongside him it's a tremendous achievement," Braun said.

Braun signed a $105 million, five-year contract extension in April, linking him to the Brewers through 2020. He received a $100,000 bonus for winning the MVP.

''This team has been so loyal to me. They believed in me. They drafted me. They helped to develop me, and there would be nothing more meaningful to me than to eventually win a world championship in Milwaukee," he said. "It would mean a lot more to me than if I went to a large-market team, big-market-team and won two or three championships."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-22-NL%20MVP/id-c3faea3f49154f80bbda918f7b312be3

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MLB: Baseball Players & Owners Reach Tentative 5-Year Labor Agreement

Well it seems like the NBA is the only league that can?t seem to get it together. ?Baseball players and owners have reached a tentative verbal agreement on a five-year labor contract and hope to have a signed deal by next week. ?Read more after the jump.

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Negotiators reached an understanding when they met late Thursday at the InterContinental O?Hare in Rosemont, Ill., a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity Friday because the agreement still was being drafted.

The sides hope to sign a memorandum of understanding in time to announce the agreement Monday or Tuesday. The last item to fall in place was the luxury tax on high payroll teams.

The agreement, the first for the union since Michael Weiner succeeded Donald Fehr as head last year, would replace the deal expiring Dec. 11 and would give baseball 21 years of labor peace since the 1994-95 strike.

Under the agreement, there will be a new restraint on the amount of money a team spends each year to sign selections from the amateur draft, with teams going over a threshold being penalized with a type of luxury tax.

In addition, there will be a separate restraint on the amount of money spent to sign international amateur free agents from nations such as the Dominican Republic, Venezuela and Cuba. There also will be a committee established to review the system for international signings, leaving open the possibility of a new system during the term of the deal.

Negotiators also worked to lower the percentage of major league free agents who require the highest form of draft pick compensation for the teams losing them.

As part of the deal, players and owners are agreeing to add an extra wild-card round to the playoffs. The extra round will be one game, winner take all.

-AP

Source: http://www.inflexwetrust.com/2011/11/19/mlb-baseball-players-owners-reach-tentative-5-year-labor-agreement/

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Climate change warning: brace for hotter heat waves, stronger storms

A new report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects that such events are likely to occur if greenhouse-gas emissions continue unabated.

Global warming is increasing the frequency and ferocity of some extreme-weather events, highlighting the need for governments at all levels to reduce vulnerabilities and increase the resilience of their citizens to such events.

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That's according to a new report from the United Nations-backed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The spectrum of tools available to help is familiar: improved forecasts and warnings for severe weather, rigorously enforced zoning and building codes, and restoration of ecosystems that serve as buffers between people and river floods or coastal-storm surges, for instance.

The success of such efforts, particularly in developing countries, depends in part on reducing poverty and social inequalities that can deprive people of the help they need to prepare for and cope with severe weather, the report's authors say.

In any event, the climate has "profound changes on the way," says Chris Field, director of the Carnegie Institution for Science's Department of Global Ecology at Stanford University in California.

In managing the risks from disasters, current and future, "one of the key messages from the report is that opportunities need to be taken advantage of at every scale ? the local scale, the national scale, and the international scale," said Dr. Field, who cochairs one of two of IPCC working groups that contributed to the report. A briefing about the report was held Friday in Kampala, Uganda, where the two working groups were holding a joint meeting.

The challenge in looking for trends in weather extremes is that the extremes still tend to be relatively rare, researchers say.

Still, over the past decade, the researchers say, additional events and improvements in the tools to analyze them have allowed researchers to identify patterns in some climate features with increasing confidence.

Already, global warming's fingerprints are evident in broad temperature and precipitation trends over the past 60 years, say scientists from the two working groups ? one that focuses on climate science and one that focuses on assessing the effects and vulnerability.

Globally, the number of warm days and nights has grown, while the number of cold days and nights has decreased. In the United States, researchers have documented an increase in the number of high-temperature records set per decade and a decrease in the number of records lows set.

Also globally, the number of storms delivering a deluge rather than gentle showers has increased in more regions than those regions recording decreases in intense rain or snowfall ? a sign that the warming atmosphere is holding more moisture.

Moreover, a warming climate has contributed to sea-level rise, the report says. This has led to an increase in incidents of extreme coastal flooding during storms.

Among the changes researchers have tracked, they're most confident in the conclusions drawn about the changes described above. The picture is more mixed for trends in tropical cyclone activity, droughts, and river floods globally.

Looking ahead, the report acknowledges that projecting further changes to extreme-weather patterns as the climate warms carries significant uncertainties ? particularly over the next 20 to 30 years, "because climate-change signals are expected to be relatively small compared to natural climate variability" over that period.

"The largest uncertainty in extreme events and in their projection into the future is associated with small-scale phenomena, which have large impacts" locally, adds Thomas Stocker, a climate researcher at the University of Bern in Switzerland who cochairs the IPCC working group that focuses on climate science.

Still, the report projects with virtual certainty that if greenhouse-gas emissions continue unabated, temperature extremes will grow warmer and occur more frequently.

By the end of the century, expect heat waves that occur on average every 20 years now to take place every two years, Field says. Likewise, the number of storms delivering heavy precipitation by century's end is expected to grow. The storms include tropical cyclones as well as winter storms in the northern mid-latitudes.

A 1-in-20-year storm is expected to return as often as once every five years. The number of tropical cyclones globally is likely to either decrease in number or remain at today's levels, but the maximum wind speeds are likely to increase in some ocean basins. And rising sea levels will continue to increase the hazards from ocean storms, including flooding and coastal erosion.

In at least one sense, the anticipated effects of global warming on extreme weather aren't new.

But with a run of highly visible, record-snapping severe-weather events over the past several years ? including severe floods and intense droughts in Australia and heat waves in Europe and Russia that led to thousands of casualties ? "it's dawning on people that the way we're going to see a lot of climate change is through extremes" and not global averages, says Gerald Meehl, a climate researcher at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., who was one of the new report's reviewers.

As that realization has come, cities and counties around the US ? from Lewes, Del., to San Diego ? have been working the effects of a warming climate into their plans for risk reduction and new infrastructure, says Brian Holland, climate program director for ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability, a nongovernmental organization that helps communities plan for the effects of global warming.

Many of the approaches represent what the report refers to as low-regrets measures ? approaches that make sense whether extreme-weather trends are driven by natural climate shifts or global warming.

But low regrets don't necessarily mean low costs for countries where poverty reigns. One key issue that negotiators at UN-sponsored climate talks will discuss later this month in Durban, South Africa, involves financial aid to developing countries for adaptation to climate change.

At global climate talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 2009 and Canc?n, Mexico, in 2010, developed countries agreed to provide $30 billion in "quick start" assistance by 2012 to help poor countries pay for adaptation measures and for technology to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions. It was to be the first step in providing $100 billion a year for adaptation and mitigation by 2020.

So far, the developed world has pledged $28.1 billion toward the 2012 goal, according to an analysis by the World Resources Institute.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ZsASXFxiYuw/Climate-change-warning-brace-for-hotter-heat-waves-stronger-storms

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

'Breaking Dawn' rises to $283.5M worldwide debut

In this image released by Summit Entertainment, Kristen Stewart, foreground, and Robert Pattinson are shown in a scene from "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1." (AP Photo/Summit Entertainment, Andrew Cooper)

In this image released by Summit Entertainment, Kristen Stewart, foreground, and Robert Pattinson are shown in a scene from "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1." (AP Photo/Summit Entertainment, Andrew Cooper)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? "The Twilight Saga" has staked out another huge opening with a $139.5 million first weekend domestically and a worldwide launch of $283.5 million.

The domestic total gives "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn ? Part 1" the second-best debut weekend for the franchise, after the $142.8 million launch for 2009's "The Twilight Saga: New Moon." ''Breaking Dawn" did more than half of its business, $72 million, on opening day Friday.

Opening in 54 overseas markets, "Breaking Dawn" pulled in $144 million internationally.

But the dancing penguin sequel "Happy Feet 2" stumbled in its debut, pulling in just $22 million over opening weekend. That's barely half what the first film in the animated franchise earned in its 2006 opening.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-20-Box%20Office/id-9ae3f8af42224b03a495bfed3d77ba57

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Tyler Perry explains Kim Kardashian "Counselor" casting (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Tyler Perry has caught no small amount of flak for casting reality TV star Kim Kardashian in his upcoming movie "The Marriage Counselor."

And now the writer/producer/media magnate has spoken out in defense of using the "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" star, whose resume is a little thin when it comes to officially scripted fare. Perry has posted a lengthy missive on his blog, detailing his reasons for casting Kardashian.

The takeaway from Perry's pro-Kardashian manifesto? He's doing it for the kids -- specifically, to get them into the theaters to see his movie and absorb its message.

The "Madea" auteur begins his justification with a little ice-breaker, acknowledging the flood of angry emails he's received over the casting decision with a joke.

"Y'all gave me a new movie title, Tyler Perry's 'Diary of a Mad Black Woman Cause You Hired Kim Kardashian, Don't Make Me Take Off My Earrings and Boycott Yo A**,'" Perry quips. "Some of my ladies are upset. OK, all jokes aside, can I have my say? Will you at least here me out?"

According to Perry, he cast Kardashian, 31, in the film because of the sway she has over the youth audience. Perry noted in his post that, after writing the script, he read through it and realized the importance of exposing a younger audience to the message of the film.

"YOUNG FOLKS NEED TO SEE THIS!!!" Perry said of "The Marriage Counselor, which trails an aspiring relationship expert whose own union becomes imperiled by outside influences.

Perry added that, as he was casting the film a couple of months ago -- "long before I even heard about Kim's marriage or divorce" -- he asked a producer which performers are admired by the nation's youth. After being shown a photo of a young crowd piling up outside of one of the Kardashians' Dash boutiques, Perry had his answer.

"I thought, 'What better person?'" Tyler recalled. "She literally has millions of young people following her. I thought and still do think, that it would be very responsible of her to be a part of this film."

Adds Perry, "If one of those young people see this film and find the strength to live a better life and not go through what these characters went through in this movie, then we have all done what I feel I'm being led to do here. I hope you understand. I really do!"

In the film, Kardashian plays Ava, a co-worker of the film's female lead character, Judith (portrayed by Jurnee Smolett), who's "constantly trying to influence Judith on everything from her shoes to her hair."

Since word of Kardashian's casting broke, a multi-front campaign on internet outrage has sprung up. Threatening to boycott the film if Kardashian wasn't axed from the production, many complained of Kardashian's supposed lack of moral fiber, in light of her 72-day marriage to NBA player Kris Humphries.

Former "The Talk" co-host Holly Robinson Peete, meanwhile, joked that the worldwide community of "blacktresses" were upset because Perry had eliminated a potential job for them by casting Kardashian.

Perry addresses the moral issue at the end of his post, asking, "And lastly, because I believe that my films speak from the inside out, why wouldn't Kim Kardashian be invited into a film about Faith, Forgiveness and the healing power of God? What is wrong with that??"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111117/film_nm/us_tylerperry

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

AP Impact: Right-to-know laws often ignored (Providence Journal)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/163058754?client_source=feed&format=rss

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"Jeopardy!" burglary suspect facing trial (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? A San Francisco woman accused of breaking into the hotel room of "Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek is facing trial on charges of first-degree burglary and receiving stolen property.

San Francisco Superior Court Judge Andrew Cheng ruled at the end of a preliminary hearing Tuesday that there was sufficient evidence for 56-year-old Lucinda Moyers to stand trial on those charges.

Authorities say Moyers broke into Trebek's room at a downtown San Francisco hotel July 26 and stole a bracelet, purse and wallet with $661 in cash.

The Jeopardy host allegedly tore his Achilles tendon as he tried to chase Moyers down.

Moyers's attorney, Mark Jacobs, has said his client was not in Trebek's room.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111116/ap_en_tv/us_jeopardy_host_injured

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Friday, November 18, 2011

France draws fire after "alarm bells" warning (Reuters)

PARIS/ROME (Reuters) ? France came under heavy fire on global markets Tuesday, reflecting fears that the euro zone's second biggest economy is being sucked into a spiraling debt crisis.

Global stocks and the euro fell as Italian bond yields climbed back to unsustainable levels on doubts that Italy's Mario Monti and new Greek leader Lucas Papademos, unelected technocrats without a domestic political base, can impose tough austerity measures and economic reform.

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has predicted the 17-nation currency bloc will be in a mild recession by the end of the year, a view underlined by data showing the economy barely grew in the third quarter and faces a sharp downturn.

"The risks of a technical recession have increased and we expect the economy in Germany to shrink at least in one quarter," said Michael Schroeder of the German economic research institute ZEW.

On the markets, Italy's 10-year bond yield rocketed back above 7 percent, pushing its borrowing costs to a level that helped to trigger the fall of Silvio Berlusconi's government last week and is widely seen as unsustainable in the long term.

Spain's Treasury paid yields not seen since 1997 to sell 12- and 18-month treasury bills.

French 10-year bond yields have risen around 50 basis points in the last week, pushing the spread over safe haven German bonds to a euro-era high of 173 basis points.

French banks are among the biggest holders of Italy's 1.8 trillion euro public debt pile.

The urgency of resolving the debt crisis was underscored by a think-tank report saying that triple-A rated France should also be "ringing euro zone alarm bells" as it could not make rapid adjustments to its economy.

"THREAT TO THE WORLD"

Fears are growing in the United States that Europe's debt crisis is mushrooming into a wider systemic problem.

Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said the European debt crisis was the leading risk to the U.S. recovery.

And U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Europe had a difficult task in boosting the creditworthiness of some of its economies while also boosting growth.

"That's a difficult balance and you can see they're struggling with it but I think they're gradually making progress," he told a conference sponsored by the Wall Street Journal. "This is absolutely within Europe's capacity to solve and it's within their ability.

"We are helping both directly and indirectly through a range of things you know about, financially, and we have a lot of useful lessons from our experience."

But Greek conservatives set themselves on a collision course with the European Commission, refusing its demand to sign a pledge to meet the terms of a bailout designed to save Greece from bankruptcy and safeguard the euro zone.

New premier Papademos looks certain to sail through a confidence vote Wednesday, but members of the New Democracy party, a key player in his crisis coalition, said they would not bow to "dictates from Brussels" to give written guarantees. New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras says he is opposed to measures that fail to help Greece grow its way out of trouble.

With the survival of the 17-state currency zone in its current form now at risk, EU governments have until a summit on December 9 to come up with a bolder and more convincing strategy, involving some form of massive, visible financial backing.

Geithner restated the U.S. view that the European Central Bank should play a bigger role, while acknowledging the objections of Germany, the EU's main paymaster, to any step that limits ECB independence or its mandate to fight inflation:

"There are lots of ways for the central bank to play a more effective supportive role in resolving this without violating the obvious constraints we respected here ... for (the central bank's) independence and making sure the central bank is not providing a direct source of financing for governments."

Peter Bofinger, a member of the group of economists who advise the German government, said that if the bloc's debt troubles threatened to rip apart the financial system, the ECB should in fact become the euro zone's lender of last resort.

Many analysts believe the only way to stem the contagion for now is for the ECB to buy up large quantities of bonds, effectively the sort of 'quantitative easing' undertaken by the U.S. and British central banks.

"If politics can't do it, then the ECB must do all it can to bring interest rates down to more reasonable levels," Bofinger said at Euro Finance Week.

LACK OF GROWTH

The debt crisis is likely to make matters worse in the next months with nations such as Italy, Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain forced to adopt unpopular spending cuts to stop the bond market driving them toward default.

Economists say there is no visible growth strategy in place to counter those austerity measures.

After a disastrous week for the euro zone's third biggest economy, Italy's Monti secured a breakthrough when Angelino Alfano, secretary of Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party, emerged from talks with Monti saying moves to form a government would succeed.

The prime minister-designate said he would present the results of his consultations to the president Wednesday, hinting he had cleared any obstacles to forming a government.

"I would like to confirm my absolute serenity and conviction in the capacity of our country to overcome this difficult phase," Monti said.

His technocrat-led cabinet have the job of speeding reform of pensions, labor markets and business regulation to put Italy's finances on a sustainable path. Italy must refinance 200 billion euros ($273 billion) of bonds by the end of April.

Germany and France posted solid growth in the third quarter, according to new data. But countries on the front line of the crisis fared much worse, for overall growth of just 0.2 percent. Analysts expected bleaker times in the core economies.

"Forward-looking indicators suggest that the euro zone economy is likely to drop back into recession in the fourth quarter and beyond," said Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics.

(Additional reporting by Luke Baker in Brussels and Glenn Somerville and Lesley Wroughton in Washington; Writing by Peter Millership and Jon Boyle)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111115/bs_nm/us_eurozone

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Vienna Girardi and Kasey Kahl: It's Over!


Vienna Girardi and Kasey Kahl, rejects from The Bachelor and Bachelorette who teamed up on Bachelor Pad and in life, have ended their relationship.

"Yes vienna and I have split. It's been 5 weeks now. I can't fake it anymore. I will always love, be there for her, and wish her the best," Kahl Tweeted.

"@KaseyRKahl will always be my best friend, but we have split. No idea what the future holds for us but we will always remain friends," Girardi said.

Vienna Girardi and Kasey Kahl Pic

Girardi briefly became engaged to Jake Pavelka on The Bachelor but things quickly went south and culminated in an ugly, televised break-up interview.

Kahl wooed Ali Fedotowsky on The Bachelorette with song, and had his lame ass catch phrase, "guard and protect your heart," tattooed on his wrist.

Ali was unimpressed, but he won over Vienna Girardi, who he teamed with on Bachelor Pad. There, Kasey set out to "mentally beat the $h!t out of Jake."

That didn't really work out either. While they quickly became the power couple to beat, Holly Durst and Michael Stagliano prevailed in the show's finale.

We wish Kasey and Vienna the best in their future endeavors. Endeavors which, hopefully, never require us to post about the douche-tastic pair again.

[Photo: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/vienna-girardi-and-kasey-kahl-its-over/

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