Thursday, May 12, 2011

Former NHL enforcer is trying MMA in June

On skates, Donald Brashear could always fight with the best of them.

Can he do it bare-footed and against trained professional fighters? Brashear wants to find out.

According to the Canadian Press, the former NHL henchman, who's still playing hockey in the minors, has signed a deal with Ringside MMA to fight in June in Quebec City.

"Despite Brashear's lack of experience in MMA, he's a very athletic guy, he's in good shape, he's gutsy, he's learning pretty fast and showed an early interest and motivation," a Ringside MMA spokeswoman said. "Plus, he's no stranger to fighting."

Keep in mind, Brashear is also 39 years old. The 6-foot-3, 237-pounder will have to get approval from local authories before he steps into the cage.

Brashear may want to look at MMA sparring videos with another former NHL player George Laraque. Sure he was facing one of the best in the world, but Laraque was schooled a few months ago by Georges St-Pierre.

We're guessing the biggest test for Brashear will be conditioning and avoiding the potential adrenaline dump that happens in fighting. Baltimore Ravens safety Tom Zbikowski, who's crossed over to professional boxing, said fighting is unlike any conventional sport.

"You have to control it in boxing, because in football maybe that first series you get real excited. The warm up in boxing is far, far more important than in football," Zbikowski told ESPN1100 in Las Vegas.

During his 17-year career, Brashear piled up 2,634 penalty minutes in 1,025 NHL games.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Former-NHL-enforcer-is-trying-MMA-in-June?urn=mma-wp1474

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Electric Land Rover makes it way easier to sneak up on cowardly lions

Quiet debut for electric Land Rover Defender

Axeon has worked closely with Jaguar Land Rover South Africa to produce an all-electric version of its iconic Defender model for use in game parks, minimising both environmental and noise pollution.

The battery system produced by Axeon, Europe's leading independent developer and manufacturer of lithium-ion battery systems, has been fitted to a Land Rover Defender 110 High Capacity Pick Up in place of the standard 2.4-litre diesel engine.

Unlike many electric vehicle battery packs that are positioned in the floor of the vehicle, the Axeon pack has been designed to fit into the vehicle's engine bay in order to maintain ground clearance and wading height for this unique vehicle.

The bespoke battery system also incorporates Axeon's proprietary Battery Management System (BMS), which monitors the battery state, measuring and controlling key operational parameters, thus ensuring safety ? particularly important for an electric vehicle that may encounter harsh conditions.

The replacement of the engine means that the production vehicle's tailpipe carbon dioxide emissions of 295g/km have been reduced to zero and the electric Defender is also able to operate very quietly. In testing the range was shown to be capable of 3 times a typical game drive on a single charge.

The short development timescale of the battery was achieved by deploying Axeon's accumulated experience in the design and manufacture of lithium-ion battery systems, and by working actively with engineers from both Land Rover and their South African partner Barker Performance Products.

The electric Defender has been received well by experienced Land Rover drivers, including those from the official Land Rover Experience, and it has performed exceptionally well on the rigorous and gruelling Gerotek test facility. In testing, the vehicle has also been able to get closer to animals within the game park due to its much quieter operation.

Whilst the electric Defender has been designed specifically for the game park sector, there are numerous other potential applications for such a vehicle, where reducing environmental and/or noise emissions are a priority.

The electric Defender has been launched as a concept vehicle at INDABA, one of Africa's largest tourism events, held in Durban, South Africa, from 7th to 10th May 2011.

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/LiL0DurlGHM/

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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Online Parent Support: Home-based Business Opportunities: Home ...

News6 new results for home based business
?Mone-y.com Launches Seven Day Home Biz Success Video Bootcamp
PR Web (press release)
More people now than ever are looking for a home based business thanks to the economic turmoil of the past several years. This one of a kind opportunity is sure to turn some heads. Chris Curtis just launched Mone-y.com, a free informational resource ...
See all stories on this topic ?
Work From Home Opportunities And Home Based Business Explained With Expert Advice
The Open Press (press release)
This reality has prodded people to think out of the box and settle for work from home jobs that pay them their worth. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reveals that there are approximately 18 million home based businesses in the country, generating a ...
See all stories on this topic ?
Earth Day Is EPG Day At KB Home
TheStreet.com (press release)
For the first time, KB Home can project for homebuyers the potential financial benefit of owning an energy-efficient KB home based on data provided by independent third-party consultants. To learn more about EPG Day and to locate the KB Home community ...
See all stories on this topic ?
Montgomery County Career Center hosting job fair
Clarksville Leaf Chronicle
The center has lined up vendors ranging from manufacturing, health and retail sectors to educational services and home-based businesses all with one goal in mind ? to get people in the Clarksville-Montgomery County area back to work. ...
See all stories on this topic ?
ExecuCenter gets ready to open
Delmarva Now
"At ExecuCenter they will have a place to go to work every day and to interact with other businesses without the distractions that come with a home-based business." Savarese sees the center as attracting a wide variety of tenants such as marketing ...
See all stories on this topic ?
Edmonds City Council finally passes amended ordinance governing home-based ...
My Edmonds News (registration)
It took nearly four months of discussion and reconsideration, but the Edmonds City Council on Tuesday night finally approved an amended ordinance governing home-based businesses. The vote was 6-1 with Councilmember Michael Plunkett voting no. ...
See all stories on this topic ?

Source: http://ops-homebasedbusiness.blogspot.com/2011/04/home-based-business-news-for-42011.html

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CANNES: Tom Hanks' 'Cloud Atlas' Leads Ambitious Focus Int?l Slate

Alison Thompson's Focus Features International is bringing one of its most diverse slates ever to the Marche du Film at Cannes, including the $100 million Tom Hanks event pic Cloud Atlas from co-directors Andy and Lana Wachowski and Tom Tykwer.

The movie is based on David Mitchell's best-selling novel, which follows six narratives across vastly different time periods, from high-seas drama to 1970s California to dystopian fantasy.

Warner Bros. snapped up domestic distribution rights to Cloud Atlas this year from Anarchos Pictures and X Filme, while Focus International -- a division of Focus Features -- was tapped to handle international sales.

Thompson is one of the most respected foreign sales executives in the business. Last year, she sold Hanna at Cannes. The film, distributed in the U.S. by Focus Features, has become a box office hit and has started to roll out overseas.

For years, Focus Features -- like the Weinstein Co. -- has used its foreign sales division to support the bottom line by repping third-party titles as well as to raise money for some of its own productions through foreign presales.

"First of all, in general, everybody is excited about the market this year, both in terms of the films that are being presented and the turnaround in the market. For Focus specifically, we are excited to be bringing one of the most varied slates ever with incredible filmmakers," Focus Features president Andrew Karpen said.

Thompson also will be showcasing Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom to foreign buyers (Focus Features will distribute the film domestically). Anderson has already begun shooting the film, from an original script by Roman Coppola, about a New England coastal town turned upside down when a young girl and boy run away together.

Moonrise stars Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, Tilda Swinton and Jason Schwartzman. Newcomers Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward play the youngsters.

Moonrise Kingdom is being produced by Anderson, Scott Rudin, Indian Paintbrush's Steven Rales and American Empirical's Jeremy Dawson. Indian Paintbrush executive produced and co-financed Anderson's Fantastic Mr. Fox and The Darjeeling Limited, both produced by Rudin as well.

Focus Features' untitled Paul Weitz film -- starring Robert De Niro and Paul Dano -- also will be shopped to international distributors for the first time. The film is based on Nick Flynn's 2004 memoir and also stars Lili Taylor, Olivia Thirlby and Julianne Moore. Weitz and Andrew Miano are producing with Corduroy Films and De Niro's Tribeca Prods. Focus will release the film domestically.

Another potential high-profile title for Focus International is Franklin D. Roosevelt historical drama Hyde Park on the Hudson, starring Murray. Roger Michell (Notting Hill) will direct and produce alongside Kevin Loader (In the Loop) and David Aukin.
Focus International also is selling Andrew Adamson's Mister Pip. Hugh Laurie is attached to star in the film, which is based on New Zealand author Lloyd Jones' book that's shaped around the plot of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations. There's no domestic distributor yet.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/flI82SK9cYE/cannes-tom-hanks-cloud-atlas-187234

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TV People Say Not Deleting Your Email Means You're an "E-Hoarder" [Wtf]

Sometimes life is dull, so to jazz things up, you use your imagination and fabricate. Such is the case in this news segment, wherein reporters and a psychologist label some dude with a bunch of computers an e-hoarder. The horror. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Yod2esYAJq8/tv-people-say-not-deleting-your-email-means-youre-an-e+hoarder

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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Obama To Lay Out Plan For Immigration Overhaul

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/05/10/136163103/obama-to-lay-out-plan-for-immigration-overhaul?ft=1&f=1003

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Feds Suing More Anti-Abortion Activists

The Justice Department under President Obama has taken a harder line against anti-abortion activists accused of trying to block access to clinics, suing at least a half-dozen of them under a federal law that lay mostly dormant during the Bush administration.

The law, written to protect people who seek or provide abortions, was revived after Obama took office and in the wake of the 2009 slaying of Kansas abortion provider George Tiller, who was shot to death moments before Sunday services were to begin at his Wichita church.

Since Obama's inauguration, federal lawsuits have been filed against a woman who blocked a car from entering a clinic in West Palm Beach, Fla.; a Texas man who threw his body across the door of a patient waiting area in San Antonio; and a Pennsylvania man who posted on the Internet the names and addresses of abortion providers and extolled his readers to kill them.

Government records obtained by The Associated Press show that in slightly over two years, the Obama Justice Department has filed six lawsuits under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, mostly to seek injunctions and fines. That compares with just one such lawsuit during the entire eight years of George W. Bush.

Tiller's slaying "brought home to many of us the terrible potential for violence and the need to use every legal means at our disposal to prevent it," said Barry Grissom, U.S. attorney for Kansas.

President Clinton signed the law in 1994 after a turbulent period that included massive sit-ins at clinics, clinic bombings and other anti-abortion activities that culminated with Tiller being wounded in a 1993 shooting. The Clinton Justice Department subsequently filed 17 civil lawsuits under the law during his remaining term.

Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond law professor who follows the federal judiciary, said Justice Department decisions usually mirror the president's views. He was not surprised to see the government acting more aggressively.

"I think President Bush was pretty clear about his position on that type of issue," Tobias said. "It is less clear what the present administration's position is, but maybe it is partly reflected in their willingness to be more rigorous about enforcing it."

Thomas Perez, assistant attorney general for the civil rights division, has said protecting abortion providers so they can do their jobs is of the "utmost importance."

The Justice Department "will continue to aggressively enforce the FACE Act against those who seek to violate the rights of their fellow Americans to safely provide or obtain such services," Perez said in announcing the Kansas lawsuit.

The figures do not include criminal prosecutions, which have been more consistent from one White House to the next during the early years of the Bush and Obama administrations.

The law was heavily used in the years immediately after it took effect. During President Clinton's two terms, 37 criminal prosecutions were filed, compared with 18 under Bush and six under Obama. Since the law was enacted, the Justice Department has filed criminal cases against a total of 89 defendants, convicting 86 of them.

In civil court, one of the latest cases is a Kansas lawsuit filed last month against an abortion opponent who allegedly sent a threatening letter to a doctor. The government sued Angel Dillard when she wrote that thousands of people across the nation were watching the doctor and suggested she check under her car daily for explosives.

Citing First Amendment protections, Judge J. Thomas Marten ruled that Dillard's letter was not a "true threat" because she did not personally intend to harm the doctor. He refused to issue a preliminary injunction that would have kept her 250 feet away from the doctor, her clinic and her home.

The lawsuit is still pending while the judge awaits arguments on whether to dismiss the case entirely.

Grissom has said the Justice Department pursued a civil case against Dillard rather than criminal charges because the legal standard needed for a preliminary injunction is lower than "beyond a reasonable doubt," which is required for a criminal conviction.

In the Pennsylvania Internet case, the government obtained a court order that prohibits the defendant from posting threats against the doctors. The other recent civil cases remain to be resolved.

The sole civil lawsuit filed under the statute during the Bush years was a 2007 complaint against a separate Pennsylvania man who made similar threats on his website.

Hans von Spakovsky was counsel to the assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's civil rights division from 2001 to 2005. He said the fact that the Bush administration filed lots of criminal cases under the clinic law is evidence that the agency was willing to prosecute when the situation deserved it.

Von Spakovsky, now manager of the Civil Rights Reform Initiative for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, said the Justice Department's decision under Obama to bring numerous civil lawsuits raises two issues: It brings up First Amendment questions because some protests are protected speech. And it suggests authorities are pursuing civil action "because they know they don't have the evidence" to file criminal charges.

Anti-abortion activists harbor the same doubts.

"You don't just go around filing injunctions against people that you believe are proponents of violence," Operation Rescue President Troy Newman said. "Domestic violence cases have proven that little injunctions don't stop people from committing acts of violence. ... They are pretty weak cases all around the country."

Newman, who along with other defendants was sued in 1998 for blockading a Washington, D.C., clinic, said that if the Justice Department is serious about stopping abortion violence it should file criminal charges under more broadly written criminal statutes, rather than using an act that specifically targets abortion activists.

Kathy Spillar, executive vice president of the Feminist Majority Foundation, a women's advocacy group that works to protect abortion rights, said the Justice Department needs to do more, given the heightened level of threats now against abortion providers since Obama's 2008 election.

The lawsuits "send a very strong message that extremists are not going to be able to make threats, much less carry out threats, without consequences,"
Spillar said. "The sooner and more diligent the response, then you don't get a ratcheting up and ultimately a horrific act of violence."

During the Bush years, Congress heard considerable testimony suggesting that the Justice Department, particularly its civil rights division, was highly politicized, Tobias recalled.

"I suppose other people would say that in fairness to the other side ... that the Obama administration is just as politicized in its Justice Department as the Bush one was," he said. "That is a fair criticism, I think. All the administrations have different priorities."

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/05/04/135995097/feds-suing-more-anti-abortion-activists?ft=1&f=1003

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