Thursday, February 2, 2012

Man U wipes out City's lead

By ROB HARRIS

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 6:48 p.m. ET Jan. 31, 2012

LONDON (AP) -Manchester United wiped out Manchester City's lead at the top of the Premier League on Tuesday with a 2-0 victory over Stoke as its neighbor went down 1-0 at Everton to a goal by a former United player.

Darron Gibson, who left Old Trafford earlier in January, struck on the hour for Everton against City, which is now only top due to its superior goal difference over United.

Defending champion United scored both goals from the penalty spot through Javier Hernandez and Dimitar Berbatov.

Tottenham is five points off the lead after Gareth Bale's double helped the north London sweep past Wigan with a 3-1 win. Chelsea is now seven points adrift of Spurs in fourth after requiring an own goal to salvage a 1-1 draw at Swansea.

Liverpool provisionally climbed above Arsenal into fifth place with a 3-0 win at Wolverhampton Wanderers, ahead of the Gunners' match against Bolton on Wednesday.

The Premier League's leading sides were in action as their officials were wrapping up deals in the final hours of the January transfer window.

Alex Ferguson's United side was without 11 senior players, including both first-choice goalkeepers, but had little trouble against a lackluster Stoke side that rarely threatened.

United took the lead after Park Ji-sung raced onto a short pass from Paul Scholes and was brought down by Jermaine Pennant.

Hernandez found the bottom corner in the 38th-minute spot kick, sending Thomas Sorensen the wrong way. But he handed over penalty duties to Berbatov seven minutes into the second half after Jon Walters had bundled Antonio Valencia over in the area.

"The first (penalty) one was very debatable," Stoke manager Tony Pulis. "The second one was (a penalty) ... and the one he didn't give - for a foul on Patrice Evra - was a definite penalty."

The result at Goodison Park made it a perfect night for United.

At White Hart Lane, Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp went to the match straight from his tax evasion trial at a London court. His side had little trouble dispensing of Wigan on another night when Bale shone for the north London club to consolidate its bid for an automatic Champions League qualification place.

Bale volleyed in a 29th-minute opener that was followed up by Luka Modric's cool finish five minutes later from 18 yards.

Bale struck again for his 11th goal of the season in the 64th, before James McArthur scored a consolation goal for Wigan in the 80th.

In south Wales, a last-gasp own goal by Neil Taylor salvaged a point for Chelsea against Swansea, which beat Arsenal at home two weeks ago.

Former Chelsea winger Scott Sinclair had given Swansea the lead five minutes before halftime, volleying the ball over goalkeeper Petr Cech after a slack defensive header by Jose Bosingwa.

Chelsea's hopes of a comeback appeared over when defender Ashley Cole was sent off for a second booking in the 86th. However, the visitors leveled when Bosingwa's shot was deflected into the net by Taylor in injury time.

Fernando Torres failed to score his first Premier League goal for Chelsea since September on the first anniversary of his 50 million-pound (then $80 million) move from Liverpool.

But the striker who joined Liverpool on that same day did enjoy a happy anniversary in the win at Wolves, with Andy Carroll striking his first league goal since Oct. 29.

Craig Bellamy added another in the 61st and Dirk Kuyt wrapped up Liverpool's second win in its past seven league matches in the 78th.

"It was a very professional, high-quality performance," Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish said. "It was great for Andy to score a goal. Craig scored a fantastic goal, as did Dirk."

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Terry to stand trial for racism

??England captain John Terry will stand trial after the European Championship over allegations he racially abused an opponent during a Premier League match ? possibly clearing the way for him to play in the tournament.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44131091/ns/sports-soccer/

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Severe declines in Everglades mammals linked to invasive pythons, researchers find

ScienceDaily (Jan. 31, 2012) ? Collaborative research, led by Michael Dorcas of Davidson College and John "J.D." Willson of Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and Environment, has linked precipitous declines in formerly common mammals in Everglades National Park to the presence of invasive Burmese pythons.

The study, published on Jan 30, 2012, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to document the ecological impacts of this invasive species and strongly supports that animal communities in the 1.5-million-acre park have been markedly altered by the introduction of pythons within 11 years of their establishment as an invasive species. Mid-sized mammals are the most dramatically affected.

"Our research adds to the increasing evidence that predators, whether native or exotic, exert major influence on the structure of animal communities," said Willson. "The effects of declining mammal populations on the overall Everglades ecosystem, which extends well beyond the national park boundaries, are likely profound, but are probably complex and difficult to predict."

Willson is a post-doctoral researcher in the Wildlife Ecotoxicology and Physiological Ecology Program in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation at Virginia Tech and is a co-author of the book "Invasive Pythons in the United States."

"Dr. Willson's recent work on pythons provides significant insights into the important roles that reptiles can play in community structure and ecosystem processes," said Associate Professor Bill Hopkins, who directs the ecotoxicology program. "Understanding how introduced predators like pythons influence community structure will ultimately prove critical to conserving important ecological systems like the Everglades."

The most severe declines, including a nearly complete disappearance of raccoons, rabbits, and opossums, have occurred in the remote southernmost regions of the park, where pythons have been established the longest. In this area, populations of raccoons dropped 99.3 percent, opossums 98.9 percent, and bobcats 87.5 percent. Marsh and cottontail rabbits, as well as foxes, were not seen at all.

"Pythons are wreaking havoc on one of America's most beautiful, treasured, and naturally bountiful ecosystems," said U.S. Geological Survey Director Marcia McNutt. "Right now, the only hope to halt further python invasion into new areas is swift, decisive, and deliberate human action."

The researchers collected their information via repeated systematic nighttime road surveys within Everglades National Park, counting both live and road-killed animals. Researchers traveled a total of nearly 39,000 miles from 2003 to 2011 and compared their findings with similar surveys conducted along the same roadways in 1996 and 1997 before pythons were recognized as established in the park.

The study's authors noted that the timing and geographic patterns of the documented mammal declines are consistent with the timing and geographic spread of pythons.

The authors also conducted surveys in ecologically similar areas north of the park where pythons have not yet been discovered. In those areas, mammal abundances were similar to those in the park before pythons proliferated. At sites where pythons have only recently been documented, however, mammal populations were reduced, though not to the dramatic extent observed within the park where pythons are well established.

"The magnitude of these declines underscores the apparent incredible density of pythons in Everglades National Park and justifies the argument for more intensive investigation into their ecological effects, as well as the development of effective control methods," said lead author Michael Dorcas, a professor in the Department of Biology at Davidson College in North Carolina, who co-authored "Invasive Pythons in the United States" with Willson. "Such severe declines in easily seen mammals bode poorly for the many species of conservation concern that are more difficult to sample but that may also be vulnerable to python predation."

The mammals that have declined most significantly have been regularly found in the stomachs of Burmese pythons removed from Everglades National Park and elsewhere in Florida. The authors noted that raccoons and opossums often forage for food near the water's edge, a habitat frequented by pythons in search of prey.

The authors suggested that one reason for such dramatic declines in such a short time is that these prey species are "naive" since such large snakes have not existed in the eastern United States for millions of years. Burmese pythons over 16 feet long have been found in the Everglades. In addition, some of the declining species could be both victims of being eaten by pythons and of having to compete with pythons for food.

"It took 30 years for the brown tree snake to be implicated in the nearly complete disappearance of mammals and birds on Guam; it has apparently taken only 11 years since pythons were recognized as being established in the Everglades for researchers to implicate pythons in the same kind of severe mammal declines," said Robert Reed, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist and a co-author of the paper. "It is possible that other mammal species, including at-risk ones, have declined as well because of python predation, but at this time, the status of those species is unknown."

The scientists noted that in their native range in Asia, pythons have been documented to consume leopards. Consequently, even large animals, including top predators, are susceptible to python predation. For example, pythons in the Everglades have been documented consuming alligators and full-grown deer. Likewise, the authors state that birds, including highly secretive birds such as rails, make up about a fourth of the diet of Everglades pythons, and declines in these species could be occurring without managers realizing it.

The authors found little support for alternative explanations for the mammal declines, such as disease or changes in habitat structure or water management regimes.

"This severe decline in mammals is of significant concern to the overall health of the park's large and complex ecosystem," said Everglades National Park Superintendent Dan Kimball. "We will continue to enhance our efforts to control and manage the non-native python and to better understand the impacts on the park."

"No incidents involving visitor safety and pythons have occurred in the park," Kimball continued. "Encounters with pythons are very rare; that said, visitors should be vigilant and report all python sightings to park rangers."

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a rule in the Federal Register on Jan. 23, 2012, that will ban the importation and interstate transportation of four non-native constrictor snakes (Burmese python, yellow anaconda, and northern and southern African pythons) that threaten the Everglades and other sensitive ecosystems. These snakes are being listed as injurious species under the Lacey Act. In addition, the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service will continue to consider listing as injurious five other species of nonnative snakes (reticulated python, boa constrictor, DeSchauensee's anaconda, green anaconda, and Beni anaconda).

The authors of the research paper, "Severe mammal declines coincide with proliferation of invasive Burmese pythons in Everglades National Park," are Michael E. Dorcas, Davidson College; John D. Willson, Virginia Tech; Robert N. Reed, U.S. Geological Survey; Ray W. Snow, National Park Service; Michael R. Rochford, University of Florida; Melissa A. Miller, Auburn University; Walter E. Meshaka Jr., State Museum of Pennsylvania; Paul T. Andreadis, Denison University; Frank J. Mazzotti, University of Florida; Christina M. Romagosa, Auburn University; and Kristen M. Hart, U.S. Geological Survey.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Virginia Tech.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. M. E. Dorcas, J. D. Willson, R. N. Reed, R. W. Snow, M. R. Rochford, M. A. Miller, W. E. Meshaka, P. T. Andreadis, F. J. Mazzotti, C. M. Romagosa, K. M. Hart. Severe mammal declines coincide with proliferation of invasive Burmese pythons in Everglades National Park. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1115226109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/03d57L8UvGw/120131135205.htm

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Video: Talking Numbers: Buy Viacom Pre-Earnings?

Greg Troccoli, The Chart Lab, and David Bank, RBC Capital Markets, discuss the Viacom trade ahead of the company's earnings release.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/46225535/

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Home prices: How they are faring in six 2012 swing states

Home prices are recovering in some regions, fluctuating in others, and stuck in the basement in still others. How they are faring may yet be an important factor in the 2012 presidential election, as voters stew over the economy. Here's the status of home?prices in metro areas in six swing states, measured from the housing market's peak in 2006 to last November, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices.?

- Leigh Montgomery,?Staff writer

Charlotte, N.C., will host the Democratic National Convention in September. The city is the corporate headquarters for Bank of America, Duke Energy, Lowe's, and Family Dollar, and its economic base is a mix of manufacturing, retail, education, and transportation. The largest?employment sector, banking, has struggled. Home prices fell 13 percent from the peak of the market, but have increased 2 percent over the past year.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/gOysh1zPmt0/Home-prices-How-they-are-faring-in-six-2012-swing-states

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'Drive-by' email infects readers immediately

For the past few years, drive-by downloads have been the bane of computer-security professionals. These malicious Trojans lurk inside seemingly innocuous Web pages and try to infect any browser that visits them. If a user doesn't have strong anti-virus software installed on his PC, he'll be immediately infected just by looking at the Web page.

Now this "instant-infection" threat has moved to an even more dangerous forum: email. A new class of drive-by email messages has been discovered that infect users who simply view a message, or possibly just glance at it in a preview window.

"The new generation of e-mail-borne malware consists of HTML e-mails which contain a JavaScript which automatically downloads malware when the e-mail is opened," reads a press release by the Berlin-based email security company Eleven.

  1. More security news from MSNBC Tech & Science

    1. How crooks fake an ATM and steal your money

      There's no dearth of sophisticated gear for the aspirational ATM thief. But skimmers don't exactly have an aisle at Wal-Mart. Gizmodo takes a look at the scary Internet black market where fraudsters get their tools ? or get swindled themselves.

    2. Man pleads not guilty to running vast spam network
    3. Charles Manson had cell phone under mattress
    4. NYT: China hacked Google, leaked cables say

Until now, malware infection via email has involved action on the part of the user, who is deceived into opening a malicious attachment or clicking on a malicious link. This HTML-based exploit removes that step by having the JavaScript do it instead.

Many email messages, especially those sent by online retailers, are full of HTML ? Web-based coding that allow images, formatted text and even movies to be displayed in the body of the messages. But because those messages have essentially become mini-Web pages, they are vulnerable to the same sort of exploits that plague websites.

Eleven said this new threat has been spotted in emails that pretend to come from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the U.S. government's insurance plan for consumer bank deposits. The subject heading is "Banking security update," but it's likely that variants on that theme are in the works.

The U.S. security giant Symantec spotted a very similar fake FDIC email message with the subject line "Update for your banking account." It carried the malicious HTML file as an attachment. It's not clear whether that message was an earlier version of the one Eleven found, or the same one viewed through an email client that had HTML rendering disabled.

Disabling HTML rendering in incoming email messages is indeed the best and most simple defense against this new threat, whether you're using a stand-alone email application like Microsoft Outlook or a Web-based service like Gmail.

Unfortunately, while you can usually send messages in plain text, it's not always easy or even possible to get incoming messages to display that way.

We found that it can be done in Outlook 2007 via Tools ?> Trust Center ?> E-mail Security ?> Read all standard mail in plain text. Earlier versions of Outlook use Tools ?> Options ?> Read ?> Read all messages in plain text.

Gmail automatically displays all email in the intermediate Rich Text format, which enables text formatting and links but disables images. (It's not clear whether JavaScript commands would be active in Rich Text.) Yahoo! Mail users can get the same result by going to Options ?> Mail Options ?> Spam ?> Initially block all images. Neither Webmail service seemed to have a plain-text display option.

Apple Mail users can block loading of images hosted on remote Web servers by going to Preferences ?> Viewing ?> uncheck Display remote images in HTML messages, which would theoretically block a remote JavaScript-directed download. (The malicious message that Eleven found affects Windows PCs only.)

As always, your final line of defense against drive-by downloads, whether from a Web page or an email message, is to install a robust anti-virus application and make sure it's always on and updated.

? 2012 SecurityNewsDaily. All rights reserved

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46211081/ns/technology_and_science-security/

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Octomom on Kids: Eight Pieces of POOP!


Nadya "Octomom" Suleman shared some thoughts on her octuplets, who just turned three, on UStream this weekend. She likened raising them to fecal matter.

To be fair, she did not say they're crap overall, and believes the blessings far outweigh the negatives. Still, you may want to reconsider your word choice, Nads.

In a 30-minute nonsensical rant, Octomom lashes out for 21 minutes against her haters, whom she calls "obsessors" that "hide behind their computer screen."

She then gets into the "joy" of child-rearing ...

Recalling the conception of her octuplets, Nadya Suleman acts like she had no control in the matter and says she prayed, "Please God, don't let there be eight!"

She says she's not showing them on UStream because "I want to protect them and ... I got in trouble a little bit showing the eight in the beginning." Mmm.

About 19 minutes in, she says, "Is this easy? God no, it's not easy at all! I'm not going to be trying to don any façade and say 'Oh yeah, life is a piece of cake.'"

"It's not. It's a piece of poop ... eight pieces of poop, all day long."

Nadya then adds that the "rewards outweigh anything negative" and that "Your opinion of me and my family, it's none of my business, so lets keep it that way."

Perhaps referring to her kids as poop isn't the best way to assure that, Octo, but it looks like she's keeping her weekly UStream show going. Thank goodness.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/01/octomom-on-kids-eight-pieces-of-poop/

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Pets can get free rabies vaccine | WIVB.com

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) - Your pet can get vaccinated against rabies for free. Tuesday, Erie County Legislator Lynn Marinelli is hosting the free clinic.

It runs from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the North Buffalo Community Center, on Sanders Road.

This clinic is open to all dog, cat and ferret owners.

More clinics are set for the coming months.

Source: http://www.wivb.com/dpp/news/local/pets-can-get-free-rabies-vaccine

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