Saturday, December 31, 2011

Justin Bieber's Snake To Lady Gaga's Egg: 2011 Red-Carpet Highlights1676575

Beyonce's baby bump was one of the year's most-memorable moments.
By Jocelyn Vena


Justin Bieber at the 2011 VMAs
Photo: Christopher Polk/ Getty Images

Anything can happen on the red carpet at any given awards show, and in 2011, it felt like anything that could happen did. As MTV News reflects on some of the biggest moments of the year, we decided to remember some of the most-memorable things A-listers did live right in front of us all.

Lady Gaga's Egg
In February, Gaga had everyone guessing how she would arrive to the Grammys. Given her penchant for crazy looks, no one would have guessed she would have showed up in an egg. Designed by Hussein Chalayan, Gaga later emerged from the structure to proclaim that she was "Born This Way." What was your favorite red-carpet moment of 2011? Vote in our Newsroom poll! Snooki
Speaking of the Grammys, the reality star joined MTV News' own Sway Calloway to talk to all the stars at the show. After helping us out on the 2010 red carpet, we learned that anything is possible with Snooki, and 2011 solidified that she's the fieriest "meatball" to grace the "Jersey Shore." We wonder if she and Bruno Mars ever ended up dating. Paul McDonald and Nikki Reed
"Twilight" star Nikki Reed surprised everyone when she hit up the MTV Movie Awards in June. No, she hadn't borrowed Gaga's egg: She was rocking an engagement rock from her beau and "American Idol" alum Paul McDonald. The couple used the red carpet as the platform to announce their engagement, and married in October. Beyoncé's Baby Bump
She might have rubbed that burgeoning baby bump onstage at the Video Music Awards in August, but hours before she took the stage, donning a bright orange gown, Beyoncé let the paparazzi know she was expecting her first child with hubby Jay-Z by flaunting her pregnancy glow. Justin Bieber's Snake
While Beyoncé shared with the world her baby news, Bieber not only planted a kiss on VMA pre-show host and real-life lady love Selena Gomez, but also introduced her to his pet snake. His name? Johnson. She seemed less interested in the snake than perhaps he would have liked. What was your favorite red-carpet moment in 2011? Share your pick below!

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676575/justin-bieber-beyonce-red-carpet-moments.jhtml

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NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26

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    Skylar Diggins #4 before the game (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Brittany Mallory #22 and Skylar Diggins #4 during the introductions (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Rianna Frazer #32 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Kayla McBride #23 guards Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Brittani Billups #5 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Notre Dame Head Coach Muffet McGraw (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Crystal Smith #3 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Chelsea Coward #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Natalie Novosel #21 blocks Brittani Billups #5 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Rianna Frazer #32 is closely guarded (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Kaila Turner #15 and Muffet McGraw (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Heather Tobeck #24 looks for an opening past Kayla McBride #23 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Natalie Novosel #21 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Skylar Diggins #4 and Rianna Frazer #32 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Skylar Diggins #4 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Skylar Diggins #4 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Devereaux Peters #14 with a rebound (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Ariel Braker #44 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Markisha Wright #34 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Ariel Braker #44 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Whitney Holloway #3 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Markisha Wright #34 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Whitney Holloway #3 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

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    Longwood Head Coach Bill Reinson had a long day (NCAA Women's Basketball: Notre Dame 92 vs. Longwood 26, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 28, 2011)

  • Source: http://www.sportspagemagazine.com/content/bb/wc-bb/gal-wc-bb/ncaa-womens-basketball-notre-dame-92-vs-longwood-2.shtml?50515

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    Jamaica's youngest leader in tough re-election bid

    Jamaica's Prime Minister Andrew Holness shows his inked finger after casting a ballot in parliamentary elections in Kingston, Jamaica, Thursday Dec. 29, 2011. Jamaica is holding 63 parliamentary races where Holness' Jamaica Labour Party is in a tight race against the People's National Party, headed by former Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, to win control of the government for the next five years. (AP Photo/Collin Reid)

    Jamaica's Prime Minister Andrew Holness shows his inked finger after casting a ballot in parliamentary elections in Kingston, Jamaica, Thursday Dec. 29, 2011. Jamaica is holding 63 parliamentary races where Holness' Jamaica Labour Party is in a tight race against the People's National Party, headed by former Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, to win control of the government for the next five years. (AP Photo/Collin Reid)

    Electoral workers review voter lists outside a polling station during parliamentary elections in Kingston, Jamaica, Thursday Dec. 29, 2011. Jamaica is holding 63 parliamentary races where Prime Minister Andrew Holness' Jamaica Labour Party is in a tight race against the People's National Party, headed by former Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, to win control of the government for the next five years. (AP Photo/Collin Reid)

    FILE - This combo image of two file photographs shows Jamaica's former Prime Minister and leader of the opposition People's National Party, Portia Simpson Miller, left, speaking during his swearing-in ceremony in Kingston on March 30, 2006 and current Prime Minister and leader of the ruling Jamaica Labour Party, Andrew Holness, during his inauguration speech in Kingston on Oct. 23, 2011. Jamaica's two main political parties are in a neck-and-neck race to capture a majority of the country's 63 parliamentary seats in the Thursday Dec. 29, 2011 general elections. With most opinion polls puting the two parties in a virtual dead heat, candidates have scrambled for traction with undecided voters across the Caribbean island known as the birthplace of reggae and a hothouse for big-time sprinters. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa (left), Collin Reid (right), Files)

    FILE - In this Oct. 23, 2011 file photo, Andrew Holness delivers a speech after being sworn in as Jamaica's ninth prime minister in Kingston. Jamaica's two main political parties are in a neck-and-neck race to capture a majority of the country's 63 parliamentary seats in the Thursday Dec.. 29, 2011 general elections. Holness, a 39-year-old lawmaker who was unanimously chosen to be prime minister by his party when predecessor Bruce Golding resigned, has tried to woo swing voters by promising new jobs in a debt-wracked nation with roughly 13 percent unemployment. (AP Photo/Collin Reid, File)

    FILE - In this March 30, 2006 file photo, Jamaica's former Prime Minister and leader of the opposition People's National Party, Portia Simpson Miller, speaks during her swearing in ceremony in Kingston. Jamaica's two main political parties are in a neck-and-neck race to capture a majority of the country's 63 parliamentary seats in the Thursday Dec. 29, 2011 general elections. Detractors say Simpson Miller's political style is largely superficial and that she was out of her depth during her brief tenure as Jamaica's first female prime minister. Known for her plain speaking style and warm interactions, supporters refer to her as "Sista P" and "Comrade Leader." (AP Photos/Ramon Espinosa, File)

    (AP) ? From beach resort towns to mountain villages, Jamaicans braved bottlenecks for as long as four hours Thursday to cast ballots in fiercely contested national elections.

    Previous votes have been marred by bloodshed, but there were few reports of trouble at polling centers for the 63 parliamentary races contested by the center-right Jamaica Labor Party and the slightly left-leaning opposition People's National Party.

    The vote hit some snags as fingerprint scanners meant to stop people from voting more than once worked intermittently, leading to lengthy lines at some of the roughly 6,600 polling centers in the island country.

    The breakdown spurred confusion and frustration among voters and election workers. At one polling center in the volatile Tower Hill area of Kingston, exasperated people who had waited in line for hours chanted: "The machines don't work!"

    The People's National Party has tried tapping into voter disillusionment, especially among Jamaica's many poor inhabitants, and complained of the slow voting process Thursday. The party also alleged that some ruling party candidates violated rules by campaigning on election day.

    Lisa Shoman, the Belizean chief of the observer mission for the Organization of American States, said her 25-member team has not observed "any disturbances or any issues that would cause us any serious concern."

    Military helicopters flew over the capital of Kingston as part of a nationwide security operation involving thousands of soldiers, police and national reserve forces. Soldiers with automatic weapons kept watch over the two polling stations where Prime Minister Andrew Holness and opposition leader Portia Simpson Miller cast their ballots.

    The two top candidates' different styles were clear while they cast their votes.

    Holness, who's the country's youngest ever leader at age 39, is largely seen as unexciting, but bright and pragmatic. He whisked into the voting center in the middle class area of Mona, barely interacting with voters. After being heckled by an opposition partisan, he said he was "very confident" of a Labor victory and departed after quickly taking three questions from reporters.

    By contrast, the 66-year-old Simpson Miller, who had been the country's first female prime minister, hugged and chatted with supporters at a school in Whitfield Town, most of them clad in the party's orange.

    Holness' party is considered more conservative and business friendly than the People's National Party, which experimented with democratic socialism in the 1970s and is still perceived as more focused on social programs for the poor. There are no longer stark ideological differences between the two clan-like factions that have dominated Jamaican politics since independence from Britain in 1962.

    During the monthlong campaign in the thick of the crucial winter tourist season, both parties pledged to lift debt-wracked Jamaica out of poverty, secure foreign investment, work with international lenders and create jobs.

    Most opinion polls put the two parties in a virtual dead heat, and candidates have scrambled for traction with undecided voters across the Caribbean island known as the birthplace of reggae and a hothouse for big-time sprinters.

    Holness was chosen as prime minister by his party just two months ago when predecessor Bruce Golding resigned amid anemic public backing. Holness has promised new jobs in a nation with about 13 percent unemployment.

    "Jamaicans are now safer, our economy is stable with a solid foundation for job creation," Holness said in a last-minute national address.

    Holness said his party has started to reverse economic stagnation and has effectively battled criminal gangs that have long been a scourge. He has also pledged to modernize the bloated public sector without massive layoffs.

    He argues that the now-opposition party mismanaged the economy over its 18-year-tenure until its 2007 election loss, and has warned that its win would scare away foreign investment and dash hopes of economic progress.

    Simpson Miller, a People's National Party stalwart since its days as a democratic socialist faction, has dismissed Holness as indecisive and painted his party as hopelessly corrupt and unsympathetic to the plight of Jamaica's many poor inhabitants.

    Simpson Miller, whose party's supporters refer to themselves as "comrades," was born in rural poverty and grew up in a Kingston ghetto, not far from the crumbling concrete jungle made famous by Bob Marley. Also referred to as "Sista P" and "Comrade Leader," she is known for her plain speaking style and warm interactions with supporters.

    But detractors say she was out of her depth during her brief tenure as Jamaica's first female prime minister between March 2006 to September 2007, when her party was narrowly voted out of power.

    The winner will face deep economic problems in this island of 2.8 million people, with a punishing debt of roughly $18.6 billion, or 130 per cent of gross domestic product. That's a rate about 10 percentage points higher than debt-troubled Italy's.

    Jamaica's economy has been on a meager upswing, but roughly 60 percent of government spending still goes to debt payments and another 30 percent pays wages. That leaves just 10 percent for education, health, security and other parts of the budget.

    Nonetheless, the monthlong campaign often had a festive feel as cheering, horn-honking caravans of partisans attended packed rallies, waving banners and dancing to reggae tunes pounding out of big speakers.

    Political Ombudsman Bishop Herro Blair said the campaign was one of the "best we've ever had" in Jamaica, with just three deaths and about a half dozen injuries that he says investigators might determine were politically motivated.

    In the lead-up to the 1980 elections, more than 800 people were killed in political clashes. Since then, large-scale political violence has dissipated and most killings are blamed on the drug and extortion trade.

    Complaints about Labor were still flying Thursday among the hardcore opposition supporters in Bob Marley's gritty old neighborhood of Trench Town, where goats graze along tightly packed concrete homes.

    "They won't do nothing for us cause they don't care. Labor isn't for the ghetto people," said Trishette Bond, a twenty-something resident who wore an orange shirt and a bright orange wig to show her allegiance to the People's National Party.

    In a Labor-aligned slum in the East Kingston area of Mountain View, a 46-year-old man who only gave his name as Russ said the youthful Holness deserved a mandate to lead Jamaica in a better direction.

    "The (People's National Party) mashed up this country for a long time. We can't go back to that," he said. "It's young people time now."

    ___

    David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter.com/dmcfadd

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-29-CB-Jamaica-Elections/id-1ffb5d6a8bc84ec1bd33fdf7df2305b2

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    Forest fire cuts across vast Chilean national park (AP)

    SANTIAGO, Chile ? Chilean President Sebastian Pinera says an out-of-control fire has already burned 32 square miles (8,500 hectares) of a national park in the nation's south, and it has prompted the evacuation of 400 tourists.

    The president interrupted a summer vacation to meet with top aides on Friday about how to respond to the conflagration at the Torres del Paine National Park, which receives tens of thousands of foreign visitors each year.

    He says "the terrain in the area is extraordinarily rough and that enormously complicates access and work." Gusts as strong as 70 mph (120 kph) also have fanned the fire.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_chile_forest_fire

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    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    Fitch Rates Florida's $239MM GO Full Faith & Credit Right-of-Way Bonds 'AAA'; Outlook Negative

    NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fitch Ratings assigns an 'AAA' rating to the following state of Florida full faith and credit bonds:

    --$238.77 million Department of Transportation right-of-way acquisition and bridge construction bonds, series 2011B.

    The bonds are expected to sell competitively as soon as the week of Jan. 3 for bids on 18 hours' notice.

    In addition, Fitch affirms the following ratings:

    --Approximately $14 billion in outstanding Florida full faith and credit bonds at 'AAA'.

    The Rating Outlook is Negative.

    KEY RATING DRIVERS

    SOLID LONG-TERM ECONOMIC PROSPECTS: Long-term economic prospects are solid, although current economic performance remains weak. Economic fundamentals are strong with future growth expected; however, the housing market remains weak and the unemployment rate above average.

    STRONG FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT PRACTICES: The state employs sound financial management practices, including the use of consensus revenue estimating and a history of prompt action to maintain fiscal balance.

    SIGNIFICANT RESERVES: Florida has maintained large reserves, totaling more than $3.46 billion as of fiscal 2011 year-end. These reserves offset risks associated with an economically sensitive revenue system that is vulnerable to declines in the rates of population growth, consumption, and activity in the housing market.

    MODERATE LIABILITIES: The state's debt burden is moderate and pensions are well funded.

    WHAT COULD TRIGGER A RATING ACTION

    --Inability to maintain budget balance while preserving an adequate reserve position;

    --Economic performance weaker than what is assumed in state forecasts.

    SECURITY

    Florida's full faith and credit bonds are secured first by specific revenues, in this case, a first lien on motor and diesel fuel taxes. Florida's full faith and credit are also pledged and provide the basis for the rating.

    CREDIT PROFILE

    Florida's 'AAA' general obligation (GO) rating recognizes the state's strong financial management practices, moderate debt burden, well-funded pension system, solid long-term economic prospects, and still significant reserves, including various trust funds. The Negative Outlook reflects the severity of the state's economic and revenue decline as well as continuing uncertainty associated with the economic and revenue outlook.

    Until the recent recession, the Florida economy was characterized by rapid growth, economic broadening and diversification as it was transformed from a narrow base of agriculture and seasonal tourism into a service and trade economy, with a substantial insurance, banking and export components. Strong underlying fundamentals remain, including a relatively low cost of living, attractive tourist and retirement destinations, and favorable geographic location; however, there is significant uncertainty regarding the near term economic outlook and economic performance during the recession was among the weakest of the states. The state's natural amenities include 2,200 miles of tidal shoreline, proximity to Latin American and Caribbean markets, the presence of some of the world's most popular tourist destinations, large convention venues, and major cruise ship ports.

    Florida's poor economic performance in the downturn, one of the most negative among the states, reflects the state's severe housing market correction following the historic run-up. State employment was down 3.5% in 2008, compared to a 0.6% loss for the nation, another 6.2% in 2009, much worse than the 4.4% loss for the U.S., and a further 1.1% in 2010, when the U.S. declined 0.8%. Year-over-year performance has been improving and state employment has grown each month since the start of calendar 2011, the first year-over-year growth since June 2007. Employment growth had generally been lagging the national rate although November non-farm employment increased 1.4% year-over-year, surpassing the U.S. for the third consecutive month. Construction employment continues to drop, albeit at a slower pace, and is less than half what it was in 2006. The state's unemployment rate, although down from a historical high of 12% in December 2010, was 116% of the U.S. rate at 10% in November 2011.

    Florida's revenue sources (primarily a sales tax but also a documentary stamp tax in large part based on real estate transactions) have been especially susceptible to the state's steep housing market correction; the state has no personal income tax. The Florida legislature consistently and promptly addressed numerous large negative revenue estimate revisions during the downturn, maintaining budget balance and an adequate reserve position. A large budget gap for fiscal 2010 was closed primarily through the use of federal stimulus monies and some trust fund balances, spending reductions, and significant fee and tax increases ($1.9 billion, including about $850 million from a $1/pack cigarette tax increase). Except for those increases, the state has not relied on revenue measures to close budget gaps. The budget for fiscal 2011 addressed a gap of about $2.8 billion with federal stimulus funds, reserve draws, spending control, and $433 million from a gaming compact with the Seminole Tribe.

    The enacted fiscal 2012 budget, which totals $69.2 billion, a reduction of $1.5 billion (2.1%) from the fiscal 2011 budget, closed a projected $3.6 billion gap with spending reductions and a requirement that employees begin making contributions to retirement plans. The budget, as enacted, is structurally balanced and does not use non-recurring revenues to support on-going spending. It is projected to generate an operating surplus that would be used to add to general fund and budget stabilization reserves.

    Reserves at fiscal 2011 year-end remained significant with $1.03 billion (unaudited) in general fund reserves, including the budget stabilization fund of $281.3 million, and trust fund balances of $2.4 billion, including $769 million in the Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund. Although aggregate reserves are sharply reduced from the peak of $9.9 billion in fiscal 2006 and down from original expectations for the year, the state's maintenance of a solid reserve position in such a strained financial environment has been notable and a key credit strength. The fiscal 2012 budget as enacted would add to reserves and begin the rebuilding of the budget stabilization fund as required by law after a drawdown.

    The state's slow economic recovery, however, continues to have an effect on revenues as is indicated by a $600 million (2.5%) downward revision in expected revenues for fiscal 2012 as of the October revenue estimating conference. This revenue shortfall is expected to be accommodated through the use of general reserves, which were $289 million higher than anticipated during budget preparation. General Fund revenue is still expected to grow 2.9% on a year-over-year basis. Revenues through October were 0.2% above estimate and 2.2% higher year-over-year. The governor's proposed budget for fiscal 2013 would further reduce appropriations to $66.4 billion and increase allocations to education while reducing spending on Medicaid and corrections. Per pupil education funding would rise 2.3% to $6,372 from the current $6,230, still well below the fiscal 2008 peak of $7,126.

    The state's debt position and structure are conservative. Debt represents a moderate burden on Florida's resources with net tax-supported debt of about $23.6 billion equal to 3.2% of personal income. Florida's debt portfolio does not include derivatives and variable-rate debt is negligible at less than 0.5% of net tax-supported debt. Pensions had been overfunded since fiscal 1998, but due to market losses and assumption changes to reflect the results of a 2009 experience study the funded ratio dropped to a still solid 87% as of July 1, 2010.

    Florida's full faith and credit bonds are secured first by specific revenues. The right-of-way acquisition and bridge construction bonds are payable primarily from pledged motor and diesel fuel taxes that are transferred from the state transportation trust fund (STTF) to the right-of-way acquisition and bridge construction fund, and ultimately by Florida's full faith and credit pledge. State law limits the amount to be transferred from the STTF to the lesser of 7% of STTF revenues or $275 million. Estimated fiscal 2012 pledged revenues provide 7.5x coverage of pro forma debt service and 5.8x coverage of maximum allowable debt service. Minimum maximum annual debt service (MADS) coverage of 1.11x by pledged gas taxes is required for parity bond issuance. Consumption of and tax receipts resulting from motor and diesel fuels have grown consistently and tax rates are increased annually with the consumer price index.

    Additional information is available at 'www.fitchratings.com'. The ratings above were solicited by, or on behalf of, the issuer, and therefore, Fitch has been compensated for the provision of the ratings.

    In addition to the sources of information identified in Fitch's report 'Tax-Supported Rating Criteria', this action was additionally informed by information from IHS Global Insight.

    Applicable Criteria and Related Research:

    --'Tax-Supported Rating Criteria', dated Aug. 15, 2011;

    --'U.S. State Government Tax-Supported Rating Criteria', dated Aug. 15, 2011.

    Applicable Criteria and Related Research:

    Tax-Supported Rating Criteria

    http://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=648898

    U.S. State Government Tax-Supported Rating Criteria

    http://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=648897

    ALL FITCH CREDIT RATINGS ARE SUBJECT TO CERTAIN LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS. PLEASE READ THESE LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS BY FOLLOWING THIS LINK: HTTP://FITCHRATINGS.COM/UNDERSTANDINGCREDITRATINGS. IN ADDITION, RATING DEFINITIONS AND THE TERMS OF USE OF SUCH RATINGS ARE AVAILABLE ON THE AGENCY'S PUBLIC WEBSITE 'WWW.FITCHRATINGS.COM'. PUBLISHED RATINGS, CRITERIA AND METHODOLOGIES ARE AVAILABLE FROM THIS SITE AT ALL TIMES. FITCH'S CODE OF CONDUCT, CONFIDENTIALITY, CONFLICTS OF INTEREST, AFFILIATE FIREWALL, COMPLIANCE AND OTHER RELEVANT POLICIES AND PROCEDURES ARE ALSO AVAILABLE FROM THE 'CODE OF CONDUCT' SECTION OF THIS SITE.

    Source: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20111227005407/en/Fitch-Rates-Floridas-239MM-Full-Faith-Credit

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    CREATE vector ICON for Chinese sign of Dragon for 2012 by olelav

    • Project ID:

      1358747
    • Project Type:

      Fixed
    • Budget:

      $30-$250 USD

    Project Description:

    REQUIREMENTS:

    +++Artistic requirements:

    The icon should be in the same style and feel as our last year's icon which was done for the white rabbit. The new and old icons will be shown close to each other and should not be very different in style.

    The last year's icon can be seen here:
    http://imageshack.us/f/221/sidebysidez.png/

    or in the attachment.

    We need both your creativity with the idea and execution. We are not sure what the icon should be like. Once the project is awarded to you, we will ask for a few quick hand sketches of your ideas and then proceed with one of the sketched ideas on.

    +++Technical requirements:

    - The sources have to be vector, preferably in Illustrator and they will be released to us upon completion.

    - The size we are targeting is about 50x50px. But it should look reasonably good if scaled to about 30x30px or enlarged to 200x200px. Upscale should not be a problem in general, but with downscale smaller details will be lost and the icon may look bad. We should be able to do the scaling ourselves without deep knowledge of illustrator.

    CONDITIONS: (READ before you bid!)

    1. The work has to be genuine and authentic

    2. You will release all the copyright for the artwork to us signing a document where you claim that all the rights to the artwork belong to you and you did not use/incorporate any copyrighted material or in any other way violated any existing copyrights while creating the artwork and you transfer irrevocably all the rights to the created artwork to us.

    3. Please only bid if you are able to deliver within reasonable amount of time (say no more than a week from when we reach an understanding). If you feel that you are very suitable for this job but are swamped with work now - you can still bid, but please mention this fact.

    SUMMARY:
    You do not need to send samples now unless you really want to - it's totally up to you. Although sending existing vector samples of work you did would give us some indication as to your skill set. When we narrow down to a few candidates, we will communicate with those in more details and see if we can reach an understanding. We respect your time and don't want to waste it unless we are really interested in your offer.

    Skills required:

    Graphic Design, Icon Design, Illustrator

    Additional Files:

    side-by-side.png

    Source: http://www.freelancer.com/projects/Graphic-Design-Illustrator/CREATE-vector-ICON-for-Chinese.html

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    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    Abstract painter Helen Frankenthaler dies at 83 (AP)

    NEW YORK ? Helen Frankenthaler, an abstract painter known for her bold, lyrical use of color who led a postwar art movement that would later be termed Color Field painting, died Tuesday at her home in Connecticut, her nephew said. She was 83.

    One of Frankenthaler's most famous works is "Mountains and Sea," a 1952 painting at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., which she created by pouring thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor.

    Frankenthaler's death at her home in Darien, Conn., followed a long illness, said her nephew, Clifford Ross, a multimedia artist and photographer known for his large landscapes.

    Her abstract style helped American art make the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting and influenced such artists as Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.

    "Very few artists are able to develop a vocabulary and create an aesthetic that affects other artists deeply," said Ross. "She was the one who transmitted a certain kind of freedom and boldness use of the subconscious and impulse from the Abstract Expressionists on through the Color Field painters."

    She was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2002. From 1985 to 1992, she served on the National Council on the Arts of the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Frankenthaler was born on Dec. 12, 1928, on New York's Upper East Side and got her bachelor's degree from Bennington College in Vermont, where she studied with Paul Feely. She studied at Columbia University in New York and took painting classes with Vaclav Vytlacil at the Art Students League and also with Hans Hofmann.

    She was only 23 when she created "Mountains and Sea," building on Jackson Pollock's abstract technique by pouring highly thinned oil paint from coffee cans directly onto the raw canvas to create floating fields of translucent color. Louis later said "Mountains and Sea" was "the bridge between Pollock and what was possible."

    Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951 at New York's Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and she was also included that year in the landmark exhibition "9th Street: Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture." Frankenthaler also showed internationally, exhibiting at the International Biennial of Art in Venice in 1966 and in the United States Pavilion at Expo in Montreal in 1967.

    Frankenthaler went on to develop a highly personal painterly manner within the abstract expressionist movement. She worked in a wide range of media in addition to paintings on canvas and paper, including ceramics, sculpture, woodcuts, tapestry and printmaking.

    Frankenthaler explored a variety of linear components in her oil paintings of the 1950s, but in the 1960s she shifted her focus, embracing acrylic paints to explore open, flat fields of color, evident in the large and glowing 1973 painting "Nature Abhors a Vacuum." Ross said she was never doctrinaire and cheered art from Henri Matisse to David Smith to Willem de Kooning.

    In later years, Ross said, she seemed to have fallen out of favor "because of her embrace of beauty." He predicted that in the years to come, Frankenthaler's contribution will be "as a beacon about lyricism and openness and, frankly, beauty."

    "Helen's role, critically, was to provide beauty and a certain sustenance at a very bleak time," Ross said. "One of the things I'm very curious about is to see how quickly that will be absorbed and celebrated."

    Frankenthaler, whose 13-year marriage to the painter Robert Motherwell ended in 1971, also is survived by her second husband, Stephen M. DuBrul Jr.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_en_ot/us_obit_frankenthaler

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    GoDaddy Dickheads May Be Delaying Domain Transfers On Purpose (Updated) [StopSOPA]

    GoDaddy may claim to be "neutral" about SOPA, the shameful censorship law cheered by a bunch of greedy copyright corpocrooks, but that isn't stopping thousands of people from leaving their dreadful service. More »


    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/eaP8JqMGdVM/godaddy-may-be-delaying-domain-transfers-on-purpose

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    China to try another dissident for "subversive" online essays (Reuters)

    BEIJING (Reuters) ? China will try a veteran dissident, Chen Xi, on charges of "inciting subversion" for pro-democracy essays he published online, his wife said on Sunday, days after another dissident was jailed for nine years on similar charges.

    Chen, a human rights campaigner in Guiyang city in Guizhou, southwest China, was arrested last month and will be tried for "inciting subversion of state power," a charge often used against critics of the ruling Communist Party, said his wife Zhang Qunxuan.

    "They accused him because of 36 essays he published at home and overseas," Zhang told Reuters in a telephone interview.

    "I don't know exactly what the charges are, because the court and prosecutors wouldn't show me the indictment. They said there are rules against showing that to family members," she said, adding that one of Chen's lawyers told her about the subversion accusations.

    Chen, 57, is sure to maintain that he is innocent, but is certain to be found guilty and jailed by China's party-controlled judiciary, Zhang said.

    "He's definitely going to fight the charges," she said, citing her discussions with his defense lawyers. She was told of the trial date on Friday, she added.

    "But it looks certain that he'll be convicted. That's what courts always decide."

    Chen was arrested last month after being released from a week-long detention triggered by his campaigning for independent candidates seeking to win places on China's party-controlled People's Congress assemblies, said Zhang.

    Police confiscated his computer, she added.

    "Then on November 29, the police called him and said he could come and get his computer," she said. "Instead, they lured him to the public security bureau and arrested him."

    Calls to the Guiyang People's Intermediate Court were not answered on Sunday, a rest day in China,. Another human rights activist, Lu Yongxiang, told Reuters he also knew of the trial on Monday through Chen Xi's friends and supporters.

    The trial will come after a court in Sichuan province, also in southwest China, convicted rights advocate Chen Wei and sentenced him to nine years in jail after a brief trial on Friday -- the stiffest punishment in a crackdown on dissent this year.

    Chen in a common family name in China, and the two men are not related.

    Chen Wei's wife, Wang Xiaoyan, and lawyers said he was jailed as punishment for essays that he had published on overseas Chinese websites.

    China uses a "firewall" of Internet filters and blocks to prevent citizens from reading websites abroad that are deemed to be politically unacceptable or socially unsound.

    Chen Wei's sentence was the third-longest term ever handed down for inciting subversion after Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo, who has been serving an 11-year sentence since 2009, and Liu Xianbin, who was jailed for 10 years in March this year.

    Earlier this year, Chinese police held hundreds of dissidents, rights activists and protest organizers in a crackdown on dissent this year, when the ruling Communist Party sought to prevent potential protests inspired by anti-authoritarian uprisings across the Arab world.

    Many of those detained have been released but remain under police watch. But officials appeared determined to "make an example" of Chen, said Huang Qi, a human rights advocate in Chen's home Sichuan province and a long-time friend of his.

    Chen Xi, who faces trial on Monday, is a former soldier and factory worker who was jailed for three years for his support for the 1989 pro-democracy protests across China that ended after troops crushed demonstrations, said his wife.

    He was again jailed in 1996, but since his release in 2005 has been an organizer of a citizens' human rights forum in Guiyang.

    (Editing by Yoko Nishikawa)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/wl_nm/us_china_dissident_trial

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    TiPb Asks: So? what iPhone and iPad gifts did you get this year?!

    So, what awesome iOS devices — iPhones, iPads, iPod touch, Apple TVs — did you get this year for Christmas, Hanukkah, or just because? What awesome accessories were in your stockings? What amazing apps were gifted your way? Naughty or nice, TiPb Nation, we know you’re ripping the wrapping...


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/vd5mY0ucHzc/story01.htm

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