Deadly Snowstorm Hits Central US, Stalls Holiday Travel

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A late-autumn snowstorm lumbered into the central U.S., unleashing snow and fierce winds that turned roads to ice, reduced visibility to zero and jeopardized thousands of holiday motorists’ travel plans just two days before the official start of winter.

The storm was blamed for a fatal accident in eastern Colorado, where a guard and an inmate were killed when a prison van lost control along an icy highway. Eight other inmates and a prison employee were hospitalized with moderate to serious injuries, according to the Colorado State Patrol.

National Guard troops and sheriff’s deputies in the Texas Panhandle were called out on nearly 100 rescues after Interstate 40, a major east-west route, was closed Monday night from Amarillo into New Mexico. No injuries were immediately reported and several shelters were being set up, Oldham County sheriff’s dispatchers said.

From northern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle through Oklahoma and northwestern Kansas, blizzard conditions put state road crews on alert and had motorists taking refuge and early exits off major roads.

In northern New Mexico, snow and ice forced the closure of all roads from the town of Raton to the Texas and Oklahoma borders about 90 miles (145 kilometers) away. Hotels in Clayton, New Mexico, just east of where the three states touch, were nearly full.

Linda Pape, general manager of the Clayton Super 8 motel said it was packed with unhappy skiers who had been headed to lodges in Colorado and elsewhere in New Mexico.

“They lost a day or two of skiing, and they had budgeted an amount of money they were going to spend, and now they have to spend more staying somewhere else,” she said.

Pape said it’s not uncommon for skiers to get stuck in Clayton during the winter, and she keeps two freezers and a refrigerator stocked in case roads are closed.

“They are not happy, but we are not letting them go hungry,” she said.

The storm came after much of the country had a relatively mild fall. With the exception of the October snowstorm blamed for 29 deaths on the East Coast, there’s been little rain or snow. Many of the areas hit Monday enjoyed relatively balmy 60-degree Fahrenheit (16-degree Celsius) temperatures just 24 hours earlier.

Travel throughout the region was difficult. New Mexico shut down a portion of Interstate 25, the major route heading northeast of Santa Fe into Colorado, and Clayton police dispatcher Cindy Blackwell said her phones were “ringing off the hook” with calls from numerous motorists stuck on rural roads.

Bill Cook, who works at the Best Western in Clayton, said he hadn’t seen such a storm since the 1970s, when cattle had to be airlifted with helicopters and the National Guard was called in to help out. His hotel was packed Monday with people “happy they have a room,” and some of the children were playing outside in the snow.

Though some drivers were inconvenienced, farmers and meteorologists said the storm was bringing much needed moisture — first rain, then snow as temperatures dropped — to areas of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas that had been parched by a drought that started in the summer of 2010.

Number of Violent Crimes Down in First Half of 2011

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The number of violent crimes reported in the United States fell 6.4 percent in the first six months of 2011 compared to the same period last year, the FBI reported Monday.

The US law enforcement agency’s preliminary semiannual crime report, based on information from more than 12,500 local police agencies, found declines in homicide, rape, robbery and aggravated assault.

The number of murders and other homicides, excluding negligent homicide, was down 5.7 percent, and the number of rapes fell 5.1 percent. Robbery declined 7.7 percent, and aggravated assault decreased 5.9 percent.

For property crimes, the number of burglary offenses declined 2.2 percent, larceny-theft dropped 4.0 percent, and motor vehicle theft fell 5.0 percent.

Review: ‘Chipwrecked’ Is a Whole Lot of Fun

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Release Date: December 16, 2011

Rating: G

Genre: Family, Animation, Comedy

Run Time: 87 min.

Director: Mike Mitchell

Actors/Voices by: Jason Lee, David Cross, Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler, Jesse McCartney, Amy Poehler, Anna Faris, Christina Applegate, Andy Buckley, Jenny Slate

Let’s face it, a movie featuring a trio of singing chipmunks isn’t exactly Oscar bait. But it’s probably a whole lot of fun for anyone a) feeling nostalgic or b) under the age of 8.

And if the audience of kiddos joining me for the screening of Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked were any indication of whether it worked or not (cue: plenty of giggles throughout), well, the answer is a resounding yes. Meanwhile, many of their parents seated nearby breathed a collective sigh of relief for a relatively short running time–a mere 87 minutes of squeaky-voiced rodents singing, dancing and fighting for their survival in the wild.

A considerable diversion from 2009′s Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, Chipwrecked is far less focused on the ‘munks career prospects. Instead, Alvin (Justin Long, Alpha and Omega), Simon (Matthew Gray Gubler, (500) Days of Summer), Theodore (TV actor Jesse McCartney), The Chipettes (Amy Poehler,Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil, Anna Faris, Yogi Bear and Christina Applegate, Hall Pass, respectively) and their oh-so-patient adoptive father Dave (Jason Lee, Cop Out) are in full-on relaxation mode before the upcoming International Music Awards. Or that’s the idea anyway when they all board a luxury cruise ship.

Naturally, with Alvin being Alvin, kicking back was never really in the cards, and things go seriously awry in a hurry. After plenty of unruly behavior leads Dave to confine all the chipmunks to their suite while he attends a quick meet and greet with the ship’s captain (Dave’s first big mistake that kick-starts the story into gear), Alvin still has no intention of staying on the proverbial straight and narrow. So in his reliably persuasive (read: annoying) manner, Alvin eventually convinces everyone but Theodore to ditch the low-key movie night in favor of a real adventure.

For whatever reason, Alvin is feelin’ the need for something extreme, so he tries his luck at hang-gliding, which of course doesn’t lead him (or his pals) anywhere good. Now “chipwrecked” on an island that’s barely in the ship’s view, they all face a test that’s even greater than landing a record deal or performing in front of a crowd of thousands. They’re trading in their pampered existence for something far more rustic and really hoping that Dave and their former manager-turned-cruise-ship-entertainment Ian (David Cross, Kung Fu Panda 2) will be able to rescue them.

AT&T Decides To Sell Off T-Mobile

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Telecom giant AT&T is looking to sell their T-Mobile assets. They have come up with this decision after having a long fight against the U.S government. On March 2011, AT&T made a deal of $39 billion with Deutsche Telekom to buy T-mobile. At that point Deutsche Telekom was looking to leave the U.S market. But the U.S. Justice Department considered this deal as an anti-competitive act and started persuading the mobile companies in the court room. Later U.S FCC (Federal Communications Commission) joined this battle against the mobile company. AT&T has tried everything possible on their part to save this deal but has failed to convince the U.S. government.

So to save their skin At& had to look into selling off T-mobile to some other carriers like MetroPCS Communications, Dish Network and Leap Wireless International. The company has decided to sell off about thirty percent of the deal to leap wireless international company.

Apple Finalizes Deal With Anobit

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Last week Apple was eyeing at Anobit, a renowned flash memory technology company for a potential deal. Now Israel based news outlet Calcalist is saying that this multi million deal has been finalized. Although every Anobit employee are aware of this deal but terms of this deal is still a mystery to outsiders.

Apple did not give any formal word on this deal, so how much Apple is paying is still unknown. But a guess is that this deal is worth of about 400 to 500 million. 9to5mac’s sources said that even though this deal is finalized but the employees of two companies are yet not formally introduced.

Anobit is a flash memory solution company which is dedicated to improve the speed as well as performance. At the same time, it also eyes on reducing the cost. So this is a good deal for Apple as majority of their devices are based on solid state flash memory.

AT&T Gives Up On $39 Billion Bid For T-Mobile USA

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AT&T has dropped its controversial $39 billion bid for Deutsche Telekom’s U.S. wireless unit, bowing to fierce regulatory opposition and leaving both companies scrambling for alternatives.

AT&T will have to find another way to address its shortage of wireless airwaves while Deutsche Telekom has to go back to the drawing board on what to do with T-Mobile USA, the struggling U.S. business it had desperately wanted to shed.

The failure of the deal, which was seen as a tough sell from the very start, may call AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson’s judgment into question as he was clearly surprised by the strength of regulatory opposition.

AT&T, which would have vaulted to first place in the U.S. market if the deal succeeded, was so sure it would win approval that it even promised Deutsche Telekom a record break-up package that will cost it an eye-popping $4 billion this quarter.

Stephenson was caught red faced after promoting the deal on TV the same day the U.S. Justice Department sued to block it. From August to late November many experts were puzzled by the companies’ optimism they would win over the regulators.

“It was definitely a miscalculation (by AT&T),” said Steve Clement, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities.

“I don’t know that it’s such a big deal to the extent that you’re going to have people looking for a change of management (at AT&T). But they definitely miscalculated what they would be able to push through to regulators,” he said.

As for Deutsche Telekom CEO Rene Obermann, the break-up package will not be enough to soften the blow of losing a deal that has been described as “almost a dream come true” for the German telephone company. Now Obermann will have to either invest billions more in the U.S. market or find a new way to exit the country.

“There are very few occasions when you are forced to walk away from the table with $4 billion in your pocket and still feel like you’ve just been short-changed,” said Thomas Wehmeier of research firm Informa Telecoms & Media.

AT&T’s Stephenson said the company would continue to invest as it looks to boost its capacity, but he also urged policy-makers to make additional spectrum available.

But the carriers’ options for buying more spectrum were not immediately clear. While AT&T was fighting for approval of its deal, its bigger rival, Verizon Wireless, quietly forged an agreement to buy spectrum from cable operators.

The AT&T deal failure may have other companies thinking twice about acquisitions to bolster their competitive position.

Having to navigate “seemingly insurmountable regulatory hurdles is likely to shake the confidence of would-be consolidators to the core,” Wehmeier said.

After announcing the deal in March, AT&T and Deutsche Telekom in November withdrew their application for Federal Communications Commission approval to focus on addressing Justice Department concerns.

But that plan backfired as the judge presiding over the Justice Department case criticized the withdrawal and gave AT&T and Deutsche Telekom an ultimatum to figure out whether they wanted to go ahead with fighting for the deal or not.

The deal, which was the biggest U.S. acquisition announced this year, was also the boldest move made by Stephenson since he took the helm at AT&T, whose previous CEO, Ed Whitacre, earned a

reputation as the industry’s most renowned deal maker.

Deutsche Telekom said the deal would not change its group forecast for 2011 expected earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of around 19.1 billion euros ($24.9 billion).

“It’s a bigger blow to Deutsche Telekom in that they were getting a good price for that mobile asset and I don’t think there’s an alternative that’s nearly as good for them,” Pacific Crest’s Clement said.

Deutsche Telekom had planned to use the proceeds from the sale to pay debt, launch a 5 billion euro ($6.51 billion) share buyback and step up investments at home and in the rest of Europe.

Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup, which advised T-Mobile, and AT&T’s banks, which included Greenhill, Evercore and JPMorgan, stand to lose a total of $150 million in fees, according to earlier estimates from Thomson (Freeman Consulting).

Shane Battier to Sign with Miami Heat

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Shane Battier said at this point in his career, he only wants “a winning role.”

He figures his best chance of that is with the Miami Heat.

Battier said Thursday morning that he would sign with the Eastern Conference champion Heat, the club that let him know as soon as the free-agency shopping window formally opened this week that he was their top signing priority – even though it has some question marks at the point guard and center spots.

It’s a Duke reunion of sorts; Heat CEO Nick Arison has a close relationship with Battier from their time together in college. Nick Arison, the son of Heat owner Micky Arison, was the Duke team manager when Battier played for the Blue Devils, including when Mike Krzyzewski’s club won the 2001 national title.

Battier wrote on Twitter early Thursday that the lockout gave him a lot of time “to consider what was important to me at this stage of my life and career.”

“Over the last week, I’ve played out every scenario in my head over and over,” he wrote. “It always came back to one thing for me: a winning role.”

The Heat are not expected to be able to comment on the Battier decision until Friday. No contracts can be formally signed until the new collective bargaining agreement is completed, a process that is now in its final stages. Battier is expected to be at Miami’s first training-camp practice, tentatively scheduled for Friday afternoon.

For his career, Battier has averaged 9.6 points and 4.7 rebounds. The 33-year-old is entering his 10th NBA season, having previously played for Memphis and Houston.

With Mike Miller sidelined while recovering from hernia surgery, and James Jones not necessarily assured of returning to Miami, the Heat wanted to add another veteran shooter who can extend defenses – and Battier seemed like the right fit. He’s a 38 percent shooter from 3-point range for his career, and he had 27 games with multiple 3-pointers last season.

Battier wrote on Twitter that “after much deliberation, I would like to quote the great poet Jimmy Buffett and take my chances `Trying to Reason with Hurricane Season.’” He soon added: “Down … In … Miami.”

Battier said in recent days that he was also targeted by Memphis, Houston and Oklahoma City, among other clubs. He’s started 81 percent of his 767 NBA regular-season games, though with the wing slots in Miami being filled by Dwyane Wade and LeBron James, he’ll almost certainly be moving toward a sixth-man role with the Heat.

Health Chief: Plan B Won’t Be Sold Over Counter to Young Teens

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The federal government Wednesday rejected a request to let young teenage girls buy the controversialmorning-after pill Plan B directly off drugstore and supermarket shelves without a prescription.

In a rare public split among federal health officials, the Health and Human Services Department overruled a decision by the Food and Drug Administration to make the drug available to anyone of any age without a restriction.

In a statement, FDA Administrator Margaret A. Hamburg said she had decided the medication could be used safely by girls and women of all ages. But she added that Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius had rejected the move.

“I agree … there is adequate and reasonable, well-supported, and science-based evidence that Plan B One-Step is safe and effective and should be approved for nonprescription use for all females of child-bearing potential,” Hamburg said.

“However, this morning I received a memorandum from the Secretary of Health and Human Servicesinvoking her authority under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to execute its provisions and stating that she does not agree with the Agency’s decision to allow the marketing of Plan B One-Step nonprescription for all females of child-bearing potential,” she said.

In a separate statement and letter to Hamburg, Sebelius said she overruled the FDA because she had concluded that data submitted by the company that makes the drug did not “conclusively establish” that it could be used safely by girls of all ages.

“About 10 percent of girls are physically capable of bearing children by 11.1 years of age. It is common knowledge that there are significant cognitive and behavioral differences between older adolescent girls and the youngest girls of reproductive age,” Sebelius said. “If the application were approved, the product would be available, without prescription, for all girls of reproductive age.”

The surprising decision is a stunning blow to some doctors, health advocates, family-planning activists, members of Congress and others who backed relaxing the restrictions to help women prevent unwanted pregnancies.

“We are outraged that this administration has let politics trump science,” said Kirsten Moore of the Reproductive Health Technologies Project, a Washington-based advocacy group. “There is no rationale for this move. This is unprecedented as evidenced by the commissioner’s own letter. Unbelievable.”

Susan F. Wood of George Washington University, who resigned from the FDA in 2005 because of delays in relaxing restrictions on Plan B, said she was “beyond stunned” by the decision.

“There is no rationale that can justify HHS reaching in and overturning the FDA on the decision about this safe and effective contraception,” Wood said. “I never thought I’d see this happen again.”

Opponents had urged the agency to reject the move, saying such a decision would expose girls and women to potential risks from taking high doses of a potent hormone, interfere with parents’ ability to monitor their children and make it easier for men to prey on vulnerable minors.

Angelina Jolie Sued Over Directorial Debut, In the Land of Blood and Honey

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Just weeks before Angelina Jolie is scheduled to release her directorial debut, In the Land of Blood and Honey, the actress/filmmaker has been sued by Croatian journalist James Braddock, who claims the forthcoming movie about a love affair during the Bosnian Civil War violates his copyright on a book, The Soul Shattering.

Braddock is demanding statutory damages plus an injunction against the film’s release.

Jolie is a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, and she certainly travels far and wide promoting humanitarian causes, but what is the likelihood she had seen Braddock’s original book, which was published in Croatian in 2007? According to Braddock’s lawsuit, the key figure might be an individual named Edin Sarkic, a co-defendant in the lawsuit who served as one of the film’s producers and has been credited in the press with helping Jolie attain the necessary permits to film in Sarajevo.

Braddock claims that after publishing his book in 2007, he traveled to Sarajevo to promote his work and create awareness for Bosnian war victims. There, he says he was allegedly approached by Sarkic, who told Braddock that he read The Soul Shattering and wanted to meet to discuss the book in further detail. Braddock and Sarkic allegedly met three more times in 2008 to discuss details about the book, “including plot and character development and the story’s cultural significance and historical accuracy.”

The discussions are said to have evolved into the possibility of creating a film adaptation of the book. The two kept in touch over telephone and text messages over the next two years. Braddock also says he e-mailed an individual at one of Jolie’s charities to propose a collaboration on a project to build villages across Sarajevo and New Orleans.

Putin Criticizes Clinton for Encouraging Russians Protesting Election Fraud

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Prime Minister Vladimir Putin strongly criticized U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday, accusing her of encouraging and funding Russians protesting election fraud, and warned of a wider Russian crackdown on dissent.

By describing Russia’s parliamentary election as rigged, Putin said Clinton “gave a signal” to his opponents.

“They heard this signal and with the support of the U.S. State Department began their active work,” Putin said in televised remarks. He said the United States is spending “hundreds of millions” of dollars to influence Russian politics with the aim of weakening a rival nuclear power.

Putin’s tough words show the deep cracks in U.S.-Russian ties despite President Barack Obama’s efforts to “reset” relations with the Kremlin. Ahead of the election, President Dmitry Medvedev threatened to deploy missiles to target the U.S. missile shield in Europe if Washington failed to assuage Moscow’s concerns about its plans.

Clinton has repeatedly criticized Sunday’s parliamentary vote in Russia, saying “Russian voters deserve a full investigation of electoral fraud and manipulation.”

Russian protesters have taken to the streets in Moscow and St. Petersburg for three straight nights despite a heavy police presence, outraged over observers’ reports of widespread ballot box stuffing and manipulations of the vote count. This week has seen some of the biggest and most sustained protests Russia has faced in years, and police have detained hundreds of protesters.

Thousands were expected to join protests in Moscow and other cities on Saturday.

Putin’s United Russia party barely held onto its majority in parliament, with official results giving it about 50 percent of the vote, down from 64 percent four years ago. But the fraud allegations indicate that support for United Russia was even lower than that, and Russians appear to be growing weary of Putin and his party after nearly 12 years in office.

Putin was president from 2000 until 2008, when he moved into the prime minister’s office to abide by a constitutional limit on two consecutive terms. He intends to reclaim the presidency after an election in March that would give him at least six more years in power.

Putin’s return to the Kremlin still seems assured, but he clearly has been shaken by the outburst of public anger and it is not yet clear how much of a challenge it will pose to his power.

Moscow has already put about 50,000 police and 2,000 paramilitary troops on the streets, backed by water cannon.

Putin warned that the government might take an even harder line against those who try to influence Russia’s political process on behalf of a foreign government.

He accused the U.S. State Department of spending “hundreds of millions” of dollars in Russia and his government has to “work out ways to protect our sovereignty from outside interference.”

“We are the largest nuclear power,” Putin said, addressing supporters during a televised meeting. “And our partners have certain concerns and shake us so that we don’t forget who is the master of this planet, so that we remain obedient and feel that they have leverage to influence us within our own country.”

He said “especially unacceptable is the infusion of foreign money into the electoral process.”

Clinton reached out to Russia on Thursday.

“I think it’s important to recognize that we value our relations with Russia,” she said at a NATO meeting in Brussels, where she also met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. “We have invested a great deal of effort on working together … and we have made progress.”

Clinton defended her criticism of the elections, saying she was expressing concerns the U.S. thought were well-founded.

Russia’s only independent election monitoring group, which is supported by grants from the United States and European governments, has come under heavy official pressure in recent weeks. The Golos website documenting violations was hacked and the group was fined the equivalent of $1,000 after prosecutors accused it of violating election law.

Putin’s attempt to rally support by blaming the United States for his troubles would find little support among ordinary Russians, said political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin.

“Even in Soviet times, it did not work,” Oreshkin said. “Now it won’t work for sure.”

Also Thursday, Russia’s top election official urged prosecutors to study photographs and video clips circulating on social networking sites that purport to show election fraud, and signaled that those who posted the materials could be punished.

If the images show genuine violations, they will be investigated, Central Election Commission chief Vladimir Churov said. But if evidence is found that the photographs and videos were “provocations” or faked, those who created, commissioned or sponsored them will be held to account, he said.

Opposition groups have called for a mass protest near the Kremlin on Saturday to demand recount of the vote. About 30,000 people have now signed up to a Facebook page on the protest.

A map circulating on the Internet shows similar protests planned for Saturday in more than 75 cities around Russia, while a page on LiveJournal lists more planned protests in 15 countries around the world.

The use of the Internet to mobilize and organize protesters in Russia is a new phenomenon.

“I used to express my opinion in my blog, in social networks, I wasn’t really politically active,” said Artyom Goryachev, a 27-year-old PR manager. “But enough is enough. I am fed up with all of this.” He said he planned to go to Saturday’s protest with friends from work.

Anton Nossik, a popular blogger and Internet expert, said it was not the Internet that energized the protesters but the brazen vote rigging that prompted many young Russians to express their discontent offline.

“They came out not because they read information (online) on where to show up for the first time, but because for the first time many people got the feeling that the time had come for that,” Nossik said.

Sam Greene, director of the Center for the Study of New Media and Society in Moscow, said this week’s protests in Moscow were a combination of online and offline social networks working together. “They’re going out to protests with people they know, with people they trust,” he said.

The Internet doesn’t create protests or a revolution, “but it certainly makes it possible for people to communicate and to learn about what’s going on around them in an environment like Russia, where the traditional media are much more closely controlled,” Greene said.

Russia’s Kremlin-controlled television networks have largely ignored the demonstrations.

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