Monday, February 11, 2013

Katy Perry Breasts: Singer Apparently Didn't Get CBS's No Skin Grammys Memo (PHOTO)

CBS released a memo prior to Sunday night's 2013 Grammy Awards asking that stars tone down the skin show on the red carpet -- Katy Perry apparently did not receive that memo.

The buxom beauty turned it out on the red carpet, showing off her chest in a green cut-out dress.

Check out Perry's sexy act of defiance below:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/10/katy-perry-breasts-grammys-2013-photo_n_2659103.html

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3 shot at Delaware courthouse, suspect in custody

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) ? A police spokesman says three people were shot at the New Castle County Courthouse in Wilmington, Del., and a suspect is in custody.

Wilmington police Cpl. Jamaine Crawford says two women and a man were shot early Monday and that the man hit was a security guard. Crawford says he does not know the condition of the three people who were shot.

The person in custody is a man.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/3-shot-delaware-courthouse-suspect-custody-140940235.html

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

Water Views At The Riviera Condominium In Port Jefferson Long ...

Nestled in Port Jefferson?Long Island, in The Town of Brookhaven,?The Riviera?is a the rivieraprivate Condo?community on the North Shore of Eastern Long Island.

The Riviera?can be?reached by the Long Island Expressway to the Nicolls?Road Exit and North to Route 25A?to Oakwood Road.? Opened in the 1970?s?and continued through the 1980?s, the Condos at The Riviera?were designed?with a contemporary?design.

There are attached Ranch floor?plans, and 2 story townhouse?units.?This community is unique because?it was built with no Condo?backing up on another. This?creates more privacy for?each homeowner, and the complex has?a private community pool and deck for the enjoyment of the homeowners too.?

Each unit at this established community of?The Riviera in Port Jefferson?has a 1 or 2 car garage, and some residences have a basement.? The common ground area landscaping is maintained by the?community and snow is removed up to your door.? The homeowner?s are responsible for their own landscaping around their unit for individual plantings?that is set among?pretty?mature landscaping.

Port Jefferson Long Island is a popular day-trip destination.? It?s home to American?s earliest shipbuilders and the Village boasts a deep water harbor, historic homes and a vibrant downtown area. For more information and all there is to offer, call the?Chamber of Commerce at?631-473-1414.?

The Riviera Condo?is?positioned?within easy access into New York City from the Port Jefferson Long Island Railroad Station located at?Route 112, Main Street and Oakland Avenue.? It is?approximately 59 miles?from Mid-Town Manhattan. There are monthly common charges and also Local and Village taxes for homeownership.

Are you Relocating to Long Island?? We are Certified Relocation Specialists and Certified?Negotiation Specialists!?

Call, and take a look at The Riviera Condos In Port Jefferson Long Island?

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Source: http://suffolkexperts.com/2013/02/10/water-views-at-the-riviera-condominium-in-port-jefferson-long-island/

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Sony trims quarterly loss to $115 million

Sony's logo is seen outside the company's head office in Tokyo Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. Sony Corp. is still struggling but managed to reduce its red ink for the latest quarter as the Japanese electronics and entertainment company aims for a comeback from record yearly losses. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa)

Sony's logo is seen outside the company's head office in Tokyo Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. Sony Corp. is still struggling but managed to reduce its red ink for the latest quarter as the Japanese electronics and entertainment company aims for a comeback from record yearly losses. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa)

People walk outside Sony head office in Tokyo Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. Sony Corp. is still struggling but managed to reduce its red ink for the latest quarter as the Japanese electronics and entertainment company aims for a comeback from record yearly losses. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa)

(AP) ? Sony Corp. is still struggling but managed to reduce its red ink for the latest quarter as the Japanese electronics and entertainment company aims for a comeback from record yearly losses.

Sony on Thursday reported a 10.7 billion yen ($115 million) loss for the October-December quarter compared with a 158 billion yen loss a year earlier.

The company had a record loss of 457 billion yen for the fiscal year through March 2011 as its TV business struggled and it suffered from factory and supplier damage in northeastern Japan from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Quarterly sales inched up nearly 7 percent to 1.95 trillion yen ($21 billion) despite declining sales of gadgets such as flat-panel TVs and Blu-ray video recorders, but only because Sony got a perk from a weaker yen.

The yen has been weakening because of expectations the central bank will ease monetary policy and that helped Sony by boosting the value of its overseas sales.

Sony has lost money for the past four years as it fell behind powerful rivals such as Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. in profitability and innovation.

Kazuo Hirai, who took over as president nine months ago, is promising to lead a comeback with what he calls "wow" products, such as nifty mobile devices, sophisticated digital cameras and interconnected gadgetry designed to show off Sony's technological prowess.

The problem is that rivals are doing the same and sometimes doing it faster and at cheaper prices.

Sony is expected to disclose information about the PlayStation 4 video game machine later this month, but it's unclear whether video games can really save Sony.

Sony's TV division is in its ninth straight year of red ink.

Its movie business fared better on the success of "Skyfall" and "Hotel Transylvania," while its music business also did well with best-sellers in Alicia Keys' "Girl on Fire," One Direction's "Take Me Home", and Celine Dion's "Sans Attendre," according to Sony. Both divisions posted increases in operating profit and sales.

Sony stuck to its forecast for eking out a return to profit at 20 billion yen ($214 million) for the fiscal year through March. It also left unchanged its projection for 6.6 trillion yen ($70.6 billion) in annual sales, up 1.6 percent from the previous year.

Other Japanese electronics makers are also suffering but have gotten some help from the weak yen.

Panasonic Corp. and Sharp Corp. are both expecting massive losses for the fiscal year through March. Panasonic reported last week a 61.4 billion yen ($667 million) profit for the October-December period Friday, reversing from losses the same quarter a year earlier, while Sharp reported a smaller flow of red ink at a 36.7 billion yen ($399 million) quarterly loss.

Sony has promised to reduce the bureaucracy in its managerial ranks and product-development decision-making. It is selling its New York headquarters building for $1.1 billion in a deal set to be completed in March. It has entered a partnership with Japanese medical equipment maker Olympus Corp. to expand in that lucrative field.

Sony was once a brand known for innovation, creating new electronics sectors like the Walkman, one of the first mobile devices to catch on when it became a hit in the 1980s. Some analysts say playing catch-up in smartphones and flat-panel TVs may be too little too late, and the company needs a far more pioneering product if it hopes to regain its historical glamour.

Also Thursday, Fujitsu announced it is slashing 5,000 jobs, or nearly 3 percent of its global work force, by the end of next month, as it seeks to reshape its computer-chip business and overseas operations. Of those job cuts, 2,800 will be in Japan, and 2,200 overseas, mostly in Europe. A more detailed breakdown was not immediately available.

Company spokesman Takashi Koto said the job cuts will be achieved by early retirement, layoffs and other methods.

__

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at www.twitter.com/yurikageyama

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-02-07-AS-Japan-Earns-Sony/id-1edb226e55f6420db889b8324a8a94ee

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Stock market starts year strong, but can it last?

The pattern looks eerily familiar.

The stock market scampers up to historical heights to start the year then gets knocked on its back. Last year, worries about Greece and the U.S. economy helped flatten a rally by June. The year before it was an earthquake and tsunami in Japan along with a political fight in Washington.

This year, the stock market raced off to its best start since 1997. So, what could squash the good cheer this time?

The top candidates are two of the same culprits from the previous years: Europe and Washington. But the big difference is that the U.S. economy, corporate America and Europe are all in much better shape, investors say. A slump this year shouldn't be as bad.

"Even if we're tired of hearing about the dangers, dismissing them hasn't been a smart thing to do for the past few years," says Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at the brokerage BTIG.

History never repeats itself, exactly, but people who play with numbers for a living see patterns. Last year, strong corporate earnings and steady growth in the U.S. economy drove the S&P 500 index up 8 percent by the middle of February. Less than three months later, fears that Greece would drop the euro currency and a surprisingly weak employment report left the index back where it started.

In 2011, the broad-market index staggered higher to start the year, reaching a peak in May with a 9 percent gain. By August, it was all gone. That echoed the year before, and the year before that.

"It's funny how at the beginning of the year everybody gets excited and then by the middle of the year it's, 'Everything stinks,'" Greenhaus says.

Over the past week, Europe's troubles have recaptured investors' attention. In Spain, charges of bribery have put pressure on Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to resign. In Italy, polls show strong support for Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, in elections later this month. The scandal-plagued Berlusconi has called for billions in tax rebates and amnesty for Italians who haven't paid them.

Both developments have heightened concerns that the two countries will be able to handle their struggling banks as well as their debts. As a result, interest rates for Spanish and Italian government bonds have edged higher over recent days.

But the damage won't be as deep as in prior years. Borrowing costs for Spain and Italy remain far below levels reached last year, thanks to the European Central Bank's pledge to stand behind the hardest hit countries and protect the euro currency. Last July, for example, the cost for Italy's government to borrow from the bond market for 10 years topped out at 7.5 percent. On Friday, after creeping higher all week, it was 4.5 percent.

The European debt crisis no longer has Wall Street's investment banks on a leash. Back in October 2011, fears that Greece would be unable to get another lifeline from lenders helped push Goldman Sachs's stock as low as $84.27. It's now $151.11.

Jeffrey Kleintop, the chief market strategist at LPL Financial, says the ECB's pledge largely removed the prospect of a financial crisis spreading from Europe to the rest of the world. Even though the scariest threat is gone, Europe's economic troubles still pose a risk.

If Germany, for instance, gets pulled into a recession with the rest of the region, the pain is bound to spread, Kleintop says. Added together, the 17 countries that use the euro rank as the world's second-largest economy. Europe is also China's top customer for exports.

The other major concern for investors stems from Washington, where drawn-out budget battles have turned into an annual event. Steep spending cuts are scheduled to kick in March 1, unless Congress and the White House find a way to avoid them. Previous high-stakes talks have rattled financial markets. In August 2011, a fight over raising the government's borrowing limit ended with the country losing its top credit rating and panicked investors fleeing for safety. Worries that lawmakers would fail to avoid budget cuts known as the "fiscal cliff" were blamed for the stock market's swoon last fall.

There's little agreement about what will happen this time, except that it won't be nearly as bad. Some think that investors have seen enough budget brawls that they won't be fazed by another one.

"People are pretty much sick of hearing about this," says Joseph Tanious, the global market strategist at JPMorgan Funds.

The S&P 500 is already off to its best start in decades, after climbing 6 percent this year. Kleintop, however, says the buoyant mood is unlikely to last. If more companies keep warning of slower earnings in the coming weeks, the pile-up of worries could unnerve investors. Without another last-minute deal between Congress and the White House to avoid the budget cuts, the stock market's gains could be erased as early as March, Kleintop says.

The good news is that even those who believe the ride is about to get bumpy expect it to end well. Unlike previous years, it's hard to find anyone predicting a crash or a replay of 2008. They mainly believe the stock market can't keep up its blistering start. Repeat the S&P 500's surge in January over the rest of 2013 and it works out to an annual gain of 79 percent -- roughly nine times better than the historical average.

For all his skepticism, Kleintop expects the S&P 500 to end the year trading around where it is now. He's drawn up a list of companies he plans to scoop up after the next big drop.

"It will be a buying opportunity," he says. "We'll be ready to step in, because this bull market isn't over."

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/stock-market-starts-year-strong-can-it-last-1B8310115

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

U.S. envoy says France paid ransoms that went to al Qaida

PARIS (AP) ? The former American ambassador to Mali says France paid $17 million in ransoms to free French hostages and that the money ended up in the hands of the same al-Qaida militants the country is fighting now.

In an interview that aired Friday on iTele, Vicki Huddleston said the money allowed al-Qaida's North Africa branch to flourish in Mali.

Claude Gueant, who was French President Nicolas Sarkozy's chief of staff at the time, on Friday denied that France had ever paid a ransom and said intermediaries had been negotiating to free the hostages.

France launched a military operation on Jan. 11 to help Mali's government wrest control from Islamic extremists linked to al-Qaida. The retreating rebels are holding Western hostages, including eight who are French.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-envoy-says-france-ransoms-fed-africas-al-090241853.html

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Gunmen kill Nigeria women giving polio vaccines

KANO, Nigeria (AP) ? Gunmen suspected of belonging to a radical Islamic sect shot and killed at least nine women who were taking part in a polio vaccination drive in northern Nigeria on Friday, highlighting the religious tensions surrounding the inoculation of children in one of the few nations where the disease still remains endemic.

The attack shocked residents of Kano, the largest city in Nigeria's predominantly Muslim north, where women often go from house to house to carry out the vaccination drives as Muslim families feel more comfortable allowing them inside their homes than men. It also signaled a new wave of anger targeting immunization drives in Nigeria, where clerics once claimed the vaccines were part of a Western plot to sterilize young girls.

The first attack Friday morning happened in Kano's Hotoro Hayi neighborhood and saw gunmen arrive by three-wheel taxis and open fire. At least eight female vaccinators died in that attack, witnesses said.

The second attack, in the Unguwa Uku neighborhood, saw another four people killed, witnesses said. The witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of angering the radical sect known as Boko Haram.

However, confusion surrounded the death toll, as Kano state police spokesman Musa Magaji Majia said the attacks killed only nine people ? all of them women taking part in the drive and giving the oral vaccine drops to children. A local hospital later said it received only two corpses from the Unguwa Uku attack, with four others wounded.

Definitive death tolls for such attacks in Nigeria are difficult to obtain. Police and military forces in Nigeria routinely downplay such casualties, and families quickly bury the dead before the next sunset per local Muslim tradition.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland condemned the killing and injuring of health workers in Nigeria.

"They were engaged in life-saving work, trying to vaccinate children," she told reporters. "Any violence that prevents children from receiving basic life-saving vaccines is absolutely unacceptable wherever it happens."

While police said they had no immediate suspects for the attacks, witnesses said they believed that Boko Haram had been behind the shootings. Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is sacrilege" in the Hausa language of the north, has been behind a series of violent attacks across northern Nigeria as part of its fight against the country's weak central government. Boko Haram is blamed for killing at least 792 people last year in Nigeria, according to an Associated Press count. That includes a massive attack in Kano last January that killed at least 185.

There have been other attacks targeting polio vaccinators in Kano. In October, police said two officers involved in guarding a polio immunization drive there were shot and killed. State government officials who oversee the vaccination program did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the attack Friday or whether they'd suspend the drive after the killings.

A Kano radio station earlier this week aired a program talking about how one of its journalists had been attacked by local officials and had his equipment confiscated after coming upon a man who refused to allow his children to be vaccinated. A producer for the program apparently spoke on air about fears people have about the vaccine, which then spread through the city. Kano state's police commissioner later ordered his officers to arrest the producer, officials said.

The suspicion surrounding polio vaccinations in Nigeria exploded in 2003, when a Kano physician heading the Supreme Council for Shariah in Nigeria said the vaccines were "corrupted and tainted by evildoers from America and their Western allies." That led to hundreds of new infections in children in Nigeria's north, where beggars on locally made wooden skateboards drag their withered legs back and forth in traffic, begging for alms. The 2003 disease outbreak in Nigeria eventually spread throughout the world, even causing infections in Indonesia.

Today, Nigeria remains one of only three countries where polio remains endemic, the others being Afghanistan and Pakistan. Last year, Nigeria registered 121 new polio infections, more than half of all cases reported around the world, according to data from the World Health Organization.

Attacks targeting polio vaccinators don't just occur in Nigeria, however. In December, militants in Pakistan killed at least nine workers on a polio vaccine drive. Militants there have accused health workers of acting as spies for the U.S., alleging the vaccine is intended to make Muslim children sterile. Those rumors only grew after it was revealed a Pakistani doctor ran a fake vaccination program to help the CIA track down and kill al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden.

___

Gambrell contributed to this report from Johannesburg and can be reached at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP .

Associated Press reporter Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-08-Nigeria-Polio-Attacks/id-7bbd79f94bc14804a36095cfcdbcc50d

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