Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Dutch court: compensation for gas attack survivors

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) ? A Dutch court on Wednesday ordered a businessman convicted of selling Saddam Hussein raw materials for mustard gas to pay compensation to victims of chemical weapon attacks by the late Iraqi dictator's regime.

The landmark ruling was largely symbolic for the 16 survivors as the businessman, Hans van Anraat, is serving a prison sentence for selling the chemicals and is believed to be destitute. But it served as a warning to individuals or businesses who may still try to sell chemicals to tyrants at a time of reports that poison gas is being used in Syria's bloody civil war.

"I am of course very happy that the judgment is finally in our favor," said Rebas Kadir, the only victim in court. "For us it was very important that it sent a message that something like this should not and cannot happen."

Kadir was just 4 years old when he survived Saddam's notorious 1988 attack on the Kurdish city of Halabja in Iraq in which an estimated 5,600 civilians were killed. His parents, brother and sister died and he was left with badly damaged lungs that make even day-to-day activities like climbing a flight of stairs tough.

Saddam, then Iraq's dictator, ordered the Halabja attack as part of a scorched-earth campaign to crush a Kurdish rebellion in the north, which was seen as aiding Iran in the final months of its war with Iraq.

Kadir now lives in the Netherlands, where Van Anraat is serving a 16 ?-year sentence for supplying Saddam with a chemical known as TDG,in the full knowledge that it was going to be used to make poison gas.

Van Anraat, who was not in court, was ordered to pay each survivor ?25,000 ($32,475).

He was Iraq's sole supplier of TDG, or thiodiglycol, for its mustard gas production program. His lawyer, Hans Vermeer, said Wednesday that Van Anraat believed the chemical was to be used in the Iraqi textile industry.

Judges rejected that argument at his 2005 trial and said he knew the chemicals might well be used for war crimes, but sold more than 1,000 tons to Saddam anyway, motivated by greed. Van Anraat continued selling the chemicals even after learning of the Halabja attack.

Wednesday's case in The Hague came amid mounting claims of the use of chemical weapons in Syria.

A senior Israeli military intelligence official said on Tuesday that Syrian President Bashar Assad used chemical weapons last month in his battle against insurgent groups.

Britain and France also recently announced that they had evidence Assad's government had used chemical weapons. Although the U.S. says it has not been able to verify the claims, President Barack Obama has warned that the introduction of chemical weapons by Assad would be a "game changer."

Britain and France asked the U.N. to investigate allegations of chemical weapons use in two locations near Damascus on March 19, as well as in the city of Homs on Dec. 23. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon appointed an investigative team, but the Syrian government has largely blocked its effort. Syria, meanwhile, has accused the rebels of using chemical weapons.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dutch-court-compensation-gas-attack-survivors-115415325.html

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Nevada Psychiatric Hospital Accused of Dumping Patients in California

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/nevada-psychiatric-hospital-dumped-patients-in-california/

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AT&T Q1 2013: Wireless revenues of $16.7 billion, income of $4.7 billion

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Record 6 million smart phones sold in the quarter; 72-percent of postpaid customers now own smart phones

AT&T has just released its Q1 2013 earnings, which encompasses both its wireless and wireline businesses. Earnings for the quarter were generally strong, although they were counteracted by a fall in revenues in the wireline business. We're most interested in the wireless portion though, so we're going to focus on that. Here are the high points:

  • $16.7 billion in total revenue, up 3.4-percent year-over-year
  • $4.7 billion in operating income, up 4.1-percent y-o-y
  • Wireless data revenues up 21-percent y-o-y
  • 296,000 postpaid net customer additions
  • Postpaid churn improved to 1.04-percent
  • 1.2 million new smart phone subscribers
  • Postpaid data ARPU up 18-percent

In nearly all metrics, AT&T is performing well on the wireless side of its business. The carrier added nearly 300,000 new customers, moved 1.2 million customers to smart phones, and says a full 72-percent of postpaid customers now own smart phones. AT&T sold a record 6 million smart phones in the quarter, which made up 88-percent of all postpaid phone sales. Data ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) shot up by 18-percent, and phone-only ARPU rose 2-percent.

Nearly 70-percent of AT&T's customers are now on usage-based (tiered data and Mobile Share) plans, which is up from 61-percent a year earlier. About 14-percent of AT&T's customers are now on Mobile Share plans, with an average of 3 devices per plan. About 25-percent of those Mobile Share plans are using 10GB of data or more per month, driving up data revenues.

On the network front, AT&T says it currently covers 200 million POPs with its LTE network, which is running ahead of schedule. By the end of 2013, it plans to reach 90-percent of its goal to have 300 million POPs covered. AT&T says 60-percent of its customers have a "4G" (aka HSPA+ or better) device, with over half of those being LTE devices.

Source: AT&T

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/HC716jSbptE/story01.htm

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News Corp, shareholders agree to phone hacking deal

By Jennifer Saba and Tom Hals

(Reuters) - News Corp will receive $139 million worth of insurance proceeds in a rare cash settlement that resolves a lawsuit by shareholders alleging the board failed to investigate the company's phone hacking scandal.

The $139 million, which will be paid by the liability insurance for the board members, is the largest cash settlement in such a derivative case, according to one of the plaintiff's attorneys.

In a derivative lawsuit, shareholders seek to step into the shoes of the company and hold board members and officers responsible for harm caused to the corporation. The cases often settle for changes to corporate governance, and as is the case with News Corp, any payment goes to the company, with shareholders benefiting indirectly.

The original lawsuit, brought by plaintiffs including the labor union-owned Amalgamated Bank and the New Orleans Employees' Retirement System, accused the board of refusing to investigate alleged phone hacking because the directors were more interested in protecting the interests of the Murdoch family.

Rupert Murdoch, who is chairman and CEO of News Corp, controls the company. His sons, Lachlan and James, sit on the News Corp board.

Since the breadth of the phone hacking and bribery scandal in Great Britain came to light in 2009, scores of News Corp employees have been arrested and one of its most popular tabloids News of the World was shuttered.

The lawsuit also alleged that Murdoch used News Corp funds for political donations to advance his conservative political agenda, which the plaintiffs said showed the board lacked independence and could run afoul of election laws.

As part of the deal, News Corp said it would adopt enhanced corporate governance procedures - including a policy to disclose to its shareholders political contributions made directly by the company.

The agreement indicated the settlement is not an admission of wrong doing by News Corp.

"We are pleased to have resolved this matter," News Corp said in a statement.

The settlement comes as News Corp prepares to separate into two publicly traded companies later this year: One dedicated to its publishing assets such as The Wall Street Journal and Times of London, and the other, which will operate its entertainment division, and includes the Fox network.

The adopted corporate governance procedures will apply to both companies.

HOLDING BOARDS TO THE FLAME

Experts said insurers would certainly take the settlement into consideration when pricing future policies, though one suggested they might actually save money, having resolved a huge overhanging legal issue.

Joseph Monteleone, a lawyer with Tressler in New York whose practice is focused on directors and officers insurance, said he could see some insurers actually feeling more comfortable insuring the company's directors now, because this agreement resolved two major areas of potential liability.

News Corp declined to comment on its directors and officers insurance rates.

The plaintiffs first sued in March 2011 over News Corp's $670 million acquisition of Shine Group Ltd, a company owned by Chairman Rupert Murdoch's daughter.

Cash settlements of derivative lawsuits became more common with last decade's lawsuits that related to the backdating of options awarded to executives, according to Kevin LaCroix of OakBridge Insurance Services, who runs the D&O Diary blog.

Some big settlements of recent years included a $100 million donation to charity in 2005 by Larry Ellison of Oracle Corp , who was alleged to have traded using nonpublic information.

Independent research firm GovernanceMetrics International, which grades companies' corporate governance, has given News Corp an 'F' grade in each of the past six years.

Still, investors have driven up News Corp shares 65 percent over the past 12 months.

News Corp closed up 1.4 percent at $31.64 on Monday.

(Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York, Tom Hals in Wilmington and Ben Berkowitz in Boston; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Jeffrey Benkoe, Theodore d'Afflisio and Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-corp-139-million-shareholder-lawsuit-settlement-123202454--finance.html

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Tom Cruise's 'Oblivion' Effective Enough To Win Weekend Box Office

Tom Cruise has had a rough time at the box office in recent years. Aside from the "Mission: Impossible" franchise, the A-lister hasn't registered an opening weekend north of $30 million since 2005's "War of the Worlds." That all changed with "Oblivion," which opened early overseas to strong ticket sales and debuted this weekend in [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/04/22/tom-cruises-oblivion-box-office/

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Blue Metropolis: They'll sleep later - Montreal Gazette

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Blue Metropolis programming director Gregory McCormick, right, with festival president William St-Hilaire.

Photograph by: Allen McInnis , The Gazette

MONTREAL - William St-Hilaire and Gregory McCormick are holding up just fine, considering. Chatting in the Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival?s office in St-Henri, president/general manager/artistic director St-Hilaire and programming director McCormick are in the final pre-event home stretch, a stage where rest has become a distant memory.

They?ve got good cause to feel wide awake. Blue Metropolis, in a time of tightened belts for everyone in the arts, is doing well. This year?s edition, the 15th, features 200 writers (up from 150 last year) at 184 events (124 in the adult festival, 60 in the children?s), many already sold out or close to it; last year?s attendee head count of 22,000 is expected to be surpassed. One key ingredient in this success has been a rethinking in venue philosophy: after hosting at a series of big chain hotels, a move was made to the boutique Hotel 10 at Sherbrooke St. and St. Laurent Blvd. last year. It has been a case of a user-friendly downsizing coming up trumps.

?Feedback has been very good,? McCormick says of the new site. ?It?s often said that in a smaller venue, people cross paths more, you run into people you know ? friends, people you haven?t seen in a long time, famous writers. Previous hotels had sometimes felt conference-y. You tended to get lost a bit, the rooms were very big. Personally, I would rather have 100 people in a room and have that room feel packed than have the same number of people or more in a room that feels half empty.?

?The location was an issue, too,? says St-Hilaire. ?We looked at a lot of hotels to find a perfect spot between the francophone and anglophone communities, something that was more central and hip.?

The festival also makes use of neighbouring spaces to accommodate overflow, including, for the first time last year, the Grande Biblioth?que for the onstage interview with the International Literary Grand Prix recipient. ?There was a lot of skepticism about that last year, from several different camps,? says McCormick. ?It was an anglo writer (Joyce Carol Oates) and there was a lot of talk that the anglo audience wouldn?t go there, because it was thought to be a space that the anglophone community doesn?t frequent. But it sold out, so there you go.?

When the lineup and themes are being drawn up, ?nothing is spontaneous,? says St-Hilaire. ?We need to consider a lot of parameters. We have 75 per cent Canadian content because of grant stipulations, a certain proportion of anglophones to francophones to other languages. We start with ideas: we brainstorm, think of l?air du temps, consider personal passions like sustainability. Mental health (a theme this year) was something important to me because of my personal family background.?

When it comes time to actually book the writers, a process ideally finished by the previous Christmas, a lot of variables come into play: who?s available, who?s got a new book out, who?s on a tour that might line up with other stops on the circuit, like the Ottawa International Writers Festival and the Frye Festival in Moncton.

?Another nice thing,? says McCormick, ?is that we can definitely use Montreal as part of our pitch. Writers like to come here.?

Book people being no different from anyone else in their attraction to star power, name recognition plays an undeniable role, says McCormick. ?There?s always a certain tension between introducing audiences to writers they don?t know and bringing in big names. It?s a matter of balancing those two sides of the program. I think our Grand Prix winners, historically, have satisfied that big-name angle.?

The Grand Prix pick ? this year it?s Irish novelist and playwright Colm Toibin ? is crucial, providing a common talking point for festivalgoers and, in a sense, setting the tone for the whole event. The list of past winners shows a nice series of balances: Canadian and international, anglophone and francophone, male and female. That?s an especially happy result given that the selection jury (headed this year by T.F. Rigelhof) is independent. ?We have to completely respect that distance,? says St-Hilaire. ?You can?t be independent only when it?s convenient.?

When St-Hilaire took over in 2010 from outgoing festival founder Linda Leith, she found that her history in the arts didn?t preclude a vertiginous learning curve. ?I started my career as an (arts) organizer, and I?m a former musician, so I was aware how it was in the cultural business, how tough it is to get the money,? she says. ?I did that for a very long time, at places like Usine C. Then I went to CBC, where for 10 years I spent other people?s money. So when I got back into the arts (with Blue Metropolis), I remembered, ?Oh, right, this is why I quit the first time.? ?

Once she got over the shock of an accumulated festival deficit, St-Hilaire set to work: full-time staff was halved from 10 to five, new funding activities were started and new granting bodies tapped (the overall million-dollar operating budget is divided roughly down the middle between grants and private funding/box office revenue), and within a year, the festival?s books went from the red to the black. ?We?re doing more with less, no question,? says St-Hilaire. ?But that?s the times. We?re no different in that sense than the hospitals and the fonction publique.?

More with less, for Blue Met?s organizers and volunteers, is a mantra that will fit the next seven days all too well when it comes to sleep and the lack of it, too. ?It?s like preparing for a marathon,? says St-Hilaire. ?At this point, it?s 20 hours a day.?

McCormick, for his part, says: ?I?ll crash for three days when it?s all over.?

The Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival runs Monday through Sunday. For information on events and tickets, visit www.bluemetropolis.org or call 514-937-2538.

ianmcgillis2@gmail.com

Twitter:@IanAMcGillis

? Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

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Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/Blue+Metropolis+They+sleep+later/8274464/story.html

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Illustrated History Of Heart Disease - Bodybuilding Forum Muscle Chat

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