Free Batman: Arkham City skin, unlock code offered as a ‘thank you,’ new DLC for sale


Rocksteady is giving us all a free Batman Inc.-style Batman skin for Arkham City, as a “thank you all for your incredible support before, during and after the game’s release,” according to a statement from director Sefton Hill. With that costume, you’ll be all set to travel the world and recruit some international Batmen, although, of course, you won’t actually be doing that. The costume will be offered as a free download tomorrow on Xbox Live, PC, and PS3.

The world has opened up for us in other ways, however. Along with this announcement, Hill shared a code that will allow you to use any downloadable skin in the campaign without having to complete it first. At the main menu, after choosing your save slot, press left, left, down, down, left, left, right, up, up, down. Then all the costumes you’ve bought or otherwise acquired will be available. Old school!

If you really feel like buying stuff, you have a couple of options there, as well. The “Arkham Bundle” collects the Nightwing Bundle Pack, Robin Bundle Pack, and the Arkham City Skins Pack for 1200 MSP ($15); there’s also a Challenge Map Pack including the new Batcave map, the Joker’s Carnival, and the Iceberg Lounge, for 240 MSP ($3). Both are due today.

[Thanks, Nick!]Continue reading Free Batman: Arkham City skin, unlock code offered as a ‘thank you,’ new DLC for saleFree Batman: Arkham City skin, unlock code offered as a ‘thank you,’ new DLC for sale originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 20 Dec 2011 11:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments

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Herzog’s Doc Brings Prehistoric Paintings To Life

Enlarge Mark Valesella/IFC Films Herzog was only permitted to enter the caves for one week of filming.

Mark Valesella/IFC Films Herzog was only permitted to enter the caves for one week of filming.

This interview was originally broadcast on April 20, 2011. The Cave of Forgotten Dreams is now available on DVD and Blu-ray. In 1994, three French cave explorers discovered hundreds of prehistoric paintings and engravings on the walls of the Chauvet Cave in southern France. Carbon dating has since shown that the depictions of rhinoceroses, lions, cave bears, horses, bison, mammoths and other animals are between 30,000 and 32,000 years old. That doesn’t mean the ancient drawings are any less sophisticated than what artists create today, says filmmaker Werner Herzog. “Art … as it bursts on the scene 32,000 years ago, is fully accomplished. It doesn’t start with ‘primitive scribblings’ and first attempts like children would make drawings,” Herzog says. “It’s absolutely and fully accomplished.” The acclaimed German director, who has produced, written and directed more than 40 films, gained exclusive access to the Chauvet caves. He tells their story and the story of the world’s oldest cave paintings in The Cave of Forgotten Dreams, a 3-D documentary film. “Since early adolescence, I have been fascinated by cave paintings,” Herzog tells Fresh Air’s Terry Gross. “It actually was my personal intellectual awakening … and shook me to the core — seeing an image of a horse [from the] prehistoric Stone Age. I couldn’t believe it.” Part of Herzog’s interest in the paintings, he says, is the knowledge that tens of thousands of years ago, humans had the instinct to make art in order to represent the world around them. “It is strange and very significant that all of a sudden, we have the presence of what I would call ‘the modern human soul,’ ” he says. “Neanderthal man actually did not have all of this, and other civilizations did not have it. And earlier human beings did not represent the world in figurative means — paintings and sculptures and so on.”

Enlarge Mark Valesella/IFC Films Anthropologist Nicholas Conard (left) and filmmaker Werner Herzog examine artifacts from the Chauvet caves in southern France.

Mark Valesella/IFC Films Anthropologist Nicholas Conard (left) and filmmaker Werner Herzog examine artifacts from the Chauvet caves in southern France.

Filming Inside The Chauvet Caves Making a documentary inside the Chauvet caves was a difficult endeavor — in part because the cave has so many restrictions. All visitors are required to obtain permission from the regional French government and wear protective body suits to prevent the spread of bacteria and biological growth within the cave. Herzog had to convince both government officials and scientists that he would film inside the cave for only one week. “I was only allowed [in the cave] for four hours a day,” Herzog recalls. “I was only allowed three men with me. I was only allowed to carry along what we could in our hands. So we couldn’t move heavy equipment in there. [I could only bring] lights that would emit light without any temperature. And, of course, you never step off the metal walkway.” The men who accompanied Herzog into the cave are frequently seen in the film’s final footage, mainly because they could never leave the metal walkway. But seeing the drawings inside the cave, Herzog says, made all of the restrictions worthwhile. “[The first time I saw the drawings], it was just a moment of complete awe,” he says. “I was not prepared for the fact that the cave was so beautiful. It’s like crystal cathedrals and stalactites and stalagmites and just like a fairy tale universe down there, and I was not prepared. … Facing the paintings, it’s just sheer awe how beautiful and how accomplished they are.”

Interview Highlights On what the cave smelled and felt like “It’s slightly humid. … There is a plan to re-create the cave outside in some sort of what I called the Disneyland version. Since nobody’s going to be allowed in the cave, they will replicate the entire cave. They’ll replicate the paintings on the walls. And there was even a plan to re-create, in our imagination, the scent inside of the cave. Which means maybe some carrion of rotting cave bears, some fire, some … resins. I’ve found a master perfumer who fantasize[s] wildly about how the odor may have been 32,000 years ago. However, when you are entering there, it is slightly humid. There’s no significant traces of any smell of anything significant in there.” On shooting in 3-D “When I saw photos, it looked almost like flat walls — maybe slightly undulating or so. Thank God, I went in there without any camera a month before shooting. What you see in there is limestone, and you have these wildly undulating walls — you have bulges and niches and pendants of rock, and there’s a real incredible drama of information. The artists utilized it for their paintings. … So it was clear it was imperative to do this in 3-D, in particular, because we were the only ones ever allowed to film.”

On how Fred Astaire footage wound up in the documentary “Arguably, or for me, the greatest single sequence in all of film history [is] Fred Astaire dancing with his own shadows, and all of a sudden he stops and the shadows become independent and dance without him and he has to catch up with them. It’s so quintessential movie. It can’t get more beautiful. It’s actually from Swing Time [1938]. And when you look at the cave and certain panels, there’s evidence of some fires on the ground. They’re not for cooking. They were used for illumination. You have to step in front of these fires to look at the images, and when you move, you must see your own shadow. And immediately, Fred Astaire comes to mind — who did something 32,000 years later which is essentially what we can imagine for early Paleolithic people.”

Herzog’s Doc Brings Prehistoric Paintings To Life

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Second Mile charity will freeze assets in Penn State suit (Reuters)

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) ? The Second Mile charity has agreed to freeze its assets to settle a lawsuit filed by a man only identified as Victim 4 in a sexual abuse indictment against a former Penn State Coach, his lawyer said on Friday.

Second Mile, founded by coach Jerry Sandusky, who is now charged with molesting eight men when they were juveniles, settled the lawsuit that was filed November 23 in state court in Philadelphia, said attorney Ben Andreozzi, who represents the alleged victim.

The charity to help troubled children, through which Sandusky allegedly met his victims, agreed to obtain court approval prior to the transfer of assets or closure and to provide notice to the man. It also agreed to allow the man “to be heard by the court regarding the interest of victims and the distribution of assets.”

The charity has said that it is considering three options for its future, one of which is closing. The Second Mile recently told potential donors to give to another charity.

(Reporting by Dave Warner; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/us_nm/us_crime_coach_lawsuit

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Laugh-In’s Alan Sues Dies at 85 (omg!)

Laugh-In regular Alan Sues has died. He was 85.

Sues died Thursday night while watching television at his home in West Hollywood, his longtime friend Michael Gregg Michaud told the Los Angeles Times.

“He had been in failing health the last couple of years, but it was nothing you could put your finger on; just old age,” Michaud said. “Mentally, he was funny and ‘on’ as usual. He was a delightfully funny man, with a wonderful career that spanned six decades.”

See other celebs we lost this year

Born and raised in California, Sues studied theater and made his Broadway debut in Elia Kazan’s Tea and Sympathy in 1953. He then joined the improv group The Mad Show, which led to his Laugh-In casting.

During his run on the show from 1968 to 1972, Sues was noted for play loud, flamboyant and clownish characters, including Big Al, an effeminate sportscaster obsessed with ringing a bell, and Uncle Al the Kiddies’ Pal, an unendingly drunk children’s entertainer.

Outside of Laugh-In, Sues appeared in such TV shows as?The Wild, Wild West?and?The Twilight Zone, in the memorable episode “The Masks,” in which a wealthy old man forces his greedy heirs to wear masks at a party or else be cut off from their inheritance.

Get the rest of today’s news

His film credits include Move Over, Darling and The Americanization of Emily.

In the ’90s, Sues toured for four years with Singin’ in the Rain, playing the Elocution Instructor.

Sues is survived by his ex-wife, Phyllis Sues, to whom he was married from 1953 to 1958.

Related Articles on TVGuide.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_laugh_ins_alan_sues_dies85_160100811/43793797/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/laugh-ins-alan-sues-dies-85-160100811.html

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If a fat tax is coming, here’s how to make it efficient, effective

Friday, December 2, 2011

A ‘sin tax’ applied to sweetened goods on store shelves is not the most efficient, effective method of lowering caloric intake from sweet food and would be more disruptive to consumers than necessary, according to Iowa State University research.

With a national debate taking shape about the possibility of a national tax on foods with high sweetener content, ISU economists have examined how such a tax would best be applied.

Rather than assessing a tax on these sugary goods as they are taken through the grocery store checkout lines, the research shows that a better way is to tax the food processers on the amount of caloric sweeteners, such as corn syrup and sugar added in processing before the product hits the shelves.

The economists, John Beghin and Helen Jensen, both professors in the Department of Economics, are quick to point out that they are not advocating for or against any tax, but simply researching how and where a possible sweetener tax would be most effective.

“We are not saying. ‘To resolve obesity, here is what you should do,’” said Beghin. “In that sense, we are not advocating anything. We are saying, ‘Given that you are considering a panoply of tax instruments, and there is a possibility of a soda tax, is there a better way to use that idea?’”

“This is motivated,” added Jensen, “by a lot of ideas out there that say we could tax sweetened products. We wanted to see what the effect of such a tax would be and, alternatively, if you imposed a tax on ingredients, what would be the effect of that.”

The research, published in the journal Contemporary Economic Policy, shows that if the goal of a sin tax on sweeteners is to reduce calories consumed, lawmakers should consider taxing the inputs instead of the final product.

Assessing the tax at the processing stage allows food processors to reduce the amount of sweeteners they put into their products. Processors will also have incentives to use more of the lesser-taxed artificial sweeteners, and less of the higher-taxed sweeteners that are heavy in sugary products.

These solutions would also raise the price at the store less than a direct tax on the end product, while reducing the calories attributable to the sweetener, according to the study.

“Taxing the processing ingredients makes more sense when compared with taxing the end product,” said Beghin. “You can abate the same number of calories without having consumers face such high prices.”

Any new tax on sweeteners, even the tax on food inputs proposed by the study, will cause prices to go up. One drawback of any tax on sweetened goods is the regressive nature of that tax.

In economic terms, regressive taxes are those that impact poorer economic groups more than higher ones.

“Since much of these (sweeter) goods are consumed by poorer economic groups,” said Beghin, “you may be increasing the cost of calories for poor people.”

The study looks only at calories in food. The research does not make any claims about lowering obesity.

The United States’ obesity rate has many factors, and the amount of calories consumed is only one, say the economists.

“We are not looking at health aspects,” said Jensen. “Just the consumption of calories from sweetened goods and the disruption to the consumer.”

The findings of the study fit generally accepted economic principles that say if you want to change a given behavior or economic decision, you should try to find a policy instrument that is closest to the behavior or decision, according to Beghin.

As part of the study, the two collected data from both government and private sources on industrial food inputs.

“We spent quite a bit of time assembling a data set based on published data on what inputs the food industry uses,” said Jensen. “So we know that for all the different food sectors, how much sugar and corn syrup go into that industry group’s food processing. You’d be amazed to see how much sweetener goes into food processing.”

###

Iowa State University: http://www.iastate.edu

Thanks to Iowa State University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115684/If_a_fat_tax_is_coming__here_s_how_to_make_it_efficient__effective

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Obama: Relations with tribes at turning point (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama met for the third time with Native American tribal leaders on Friday, signing an executive order on tribal colleges and assuring them “you have a president that’s got your back.”

Obama has won plaudits among Native Americans by breaking through a logjam of inaction on tribal issues and for giving a voice to their issues with the annual gatherings in Washington. At Friday’s conference, Obama announced he had signed an executive order establishing a White House initiative on American Indian and Alaska native education. The initiative will be overseen by an executive director appointed by the interior and education secretaries.

“You have an administration that understands the challenges that you face and most importantly you have a president that’s got your back,” Obama said, drawing cheers.

Obama reminded the leaders from the 565 federally recognized Native American tribes and representing Alaska natives that he had promised “a true government-to-government relationship” that recognizes “our sometimes painful” history and respects Native American heritage.

“I believe that one day we’re going to be able to look back on these years and say that was the turning point … the moment when we stopped repeating the mistakes of the past and started building a better future,” Obama said.

Obama shared the stage briefly with Hartford and Mary Black Eagle, his Crow nation “parents” who “adopted” him during the 2008 campaign. He joked that his “parents” were grateful for not having to experience his “terrible 2s” or “terrible teens.”

“They got me after I was a little more polished,” Obama said.

Several leaders at the Tribal Nations Conference said Obama had kept his promises to them.

Bill John Baker, principal chief of the largest Indian tribe, the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma, said before the conference that American Indians have been both “well-served” and “hurt” by other administrations, but Obama has “backed up his words with actions that have made a positive impact on the lives of Native people.”

“Obama has done better for tribes than the others, except for the Nixon administration,” said Ben Nighthorse Campbell, a former Republican senator from Colorado. President Richard Nixon advocated tribal self-determination as official U.S. policy.

With the accomplishments come greater expectations from a people whose rates of unemployment, violent crime, youth suicides, poverty and high school dropouts are significantly higher than in the rest of the country.

“It’s two steps forward, one step backward,” Campbell said. “No matter what we do, we have to find a way for Indians to be self-sufficient and not dependent on the federal government, except for those services required by treaty in the old days.”

The administration still must implement laws Obama signed and fund lawsuit settlements. Also, tribes want to see the administration push legislation through Congress to get around a 2009 Supreme Court decision limiting the interior secretary’s authority to accept land into federal trust on behalf of Indian tribes. The decision has held up economic development for tribes.

Salazar told the leaders Friday the court’s decision was a “wrong decision” and needs to be fixed.

“We still need improvements in roads, bridges, schools, hospitals as well as addressing the digital, electrical and clean water disparities that hamper development and quality of life issues for our people,” Baker said.

Still, Obama has assembled a respectable bragging list. He has:

? Signed the Tribal Law and Order Act to improve law enforcement and public safety in tribal communities.

? Renewed the Indian Health Care Improvement Act and made it permanent.

? Settled the class-action Cobell lawsuit over federal government mismanagement of royalties for oil, gas, timber and grazing leases and an American Indian farmers discrimination lawsuit.

? Nominated Arvo Mikkanen to be a federal judge in Oklahoma. His nomination is awaiting Senate confirmation.

? Launched a test crime-fighting program on four reservations that early results show has led to drops in violent crime in the first year.

“We should be proud of what we’ve done together, but of course that should sharpen our resolve to do even more because as long as Native Americans face unemployment and poverty rates that are far higher than the national average we are going to have more work to do,” Obama said. He said his jobs bill would help.

Jacqueline Johnson Pata, executive director of the National Congress of American Indians and an Alaska native, said native peoples’ enthusiasm for Obama goes deeper.

Obama has embraced Native American tribal sovereignty preserved in the Constitution, court decisions and treaty agreements and made that the foundation for his administration’s dealings with tribes, Pata said.

Like former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, Obama appointed a Native American to his Intergovernmental Affairs staff. But he also appointed Kimberly Teehee, a member of the Cherokee Nation, as senior policy adviser for Native American Affairs.

In addition, Obama reminded executive department heads and agencies in a November 2009 memo of their obligation to regularly consult and collaborate with tribal officials on policies that impact Native Americans.

“I think we have made strides under the Obama administration the likes of which tribes have not seen for 30 years,” said Stacy Bohlen, executive director of the National Indian Health Board. Bohlen is a member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians in Michigan.

Several agencies have yet to draft policies, according to the National Congress of American Indians.

___

Follow Suzanne Gamboa at http://twitter.com/APsgamboa .

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_native_americans

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Unborn baby Facebook friend requests raises ire

By Suzanne Choney

A condom maker’s ad agency thought it’d be a swell idea to scare men out of causing unwanted pregnancies by?? wait for it???sending them Facebook friend?requests from their unborn future offspring.

“Men like a lot of things. But there’s something most of them wouldn’t like very much,” says the narrator in the Olla Condoms ad (above). The next sound you hear: a baby crying.

According to the video, the ad agency identified “some” young men, “created their sons’ profile,” and sent?Facebook friend requests to each of them. The request was from a baby who bore the recipient’s very same name ??followed by “Jr.” A note in the request basically identified it as an ad for the condoms.

But the all-too-clever “Unexpected Babies” social media ad campaign by Brazil’s Age Isobar agency appears to be misfiring, so to speak. Even if the requests were sent to just a handful of men, in order to prove the concept, the fallout from the strategy is global.

“No brand shall friend request me, without? a lifetime hatred called upon them,” hissed “ThomasBigum” on the YouTube page where the video of of the ad is posted.

“Wow, you have officially brought? social media advertising down to a whole new low,” noted LadyAnne525.

“The behavior is definitely spamming … but I guess it’s more creative than most spam,” posted CaeserOct1.

Creative it is. And creating fake profiles for virtual babies of the future sounds like a violation of Facebook’s policy.

“Facebook has always been based on a real-name culture … we believe this leads to greater accountability and a safer and more?trusted environment for the people who use our service,” said a spokesperson for the social networking site.

“It’s a violation of our policies to use a fake name or operate under a false identity, and we encourage people to report anyone they think is doing this.”

One way is to go to Facebook’s Help Center page on “Report Abuse or Policy Violations.”

But the social networking site also has a “dedicated team that reviews these reports and takes action as necessary,” the spokesperson said. ” We also have technical systems in place to flag and block potential fakes based on name and anomalous site activity.”

Either way, it sounds like this ad agency’s baby may be abandoned soon.

Related stories:

Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on?Facebook,?and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

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Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/01/9147132-unborn-baby-facebook-friend-requests-cause-stir

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American Airlines files for bankruptcy (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? American Airlines filed for bankruptcy protection on Tuesday to cut labor costs in the face of high fuel prices and dampened travel demand, capping a prolonged descent for what was once the largest U.S. carrier.

AMR Corp, the parent of American Airlines, also filed for bankruptcy and replaced its chief executive.

The company, which employs about 88,000, has been mired for years in fruitless union negotiations, complaining that it shoulders higher labor costs than rival domestic and foreign carriers that have already restructured in bankruptcy.

United Continental Holdings Inc’s United Airlines and Delta Air Lines Inc, both of which used Chapter 11 to cut costs and later found merger partners, are now the largest U.S. carriers. American ranks third.

“The world changed around us,” incoming Chief Executive Tom Horton told reporters on a conference call. “It became increasingly clear that the cost gap between us and our competitors was untenable.”

AMR named Horton as chairman and chief executive, replacing Gerard Arpey, who retired.

American plans to operate normally while in bankruptcy, but the Chapter 11 filing could punch a hole in the pensions of roughly 130,000 workers and retirees.

AMR pension plans are $10 billion short of what the carrier owes, and any default could be the largest in U.S. history, government pension insurers estimated.

Ray Neidl, aerospace analyst at Maxim Group, said a lack of progress in contract talks with pilots tipped the carrier into Chapter 11, though it has enough cash to operate. The carrier’s passenger planes average 3,000 daily U.S. departures.

“They were proactive,” Neidl said. “They should have adequate cash reserves to get through this.”

PROBLEMS TO ADDRESS

Bankruptcy gives AMR a chance to pare less profitable operations, and could result in the sale of flight routes. The process also gives AMR more flexibility, according to Jack Williams, a professor of law at Georgia State University.

“There are considerable tax benefits that they will be able to use in a bankruptcy case, and they will be able to more aggressively manage their liabilities,” Williams said.

But analysts question whether the bankruptcy will address operational shortcomings that have eroded revenue.

“Bankruptcy is not necessarily the be-all, end-all,” said Helane Becker, an analyst with Dahlman Rose & Co. “They’ve got more problems to address in addition to the cost problem.”

Shares of AMR closed Tuesday down $1.36, or 84 percent, at 26 cents, down from a 52-week high of $8.89 on January 7. Stock typically is wiped out in bankruptcy.

Shares of rival airlines rallied on expectations that reduced competition could boost fares. AMR had kept a lid on industrywide fares in its effort to keep its airplanes full.

United Continental shares closed up 6.3 percent at $17.63, Delta rose 5 percent to $7.80 and US Airways Group Inc climbed 4.4 percent to $4.46.

AMR shares were halted 28 times on the NYSE on Tuesday for triggering a circuit breaker rule, activated when a stock moves up or down at least 10 percent within five minutes.

SLIMMED-DOWN AMR

In its bankruptcy petition filed in Manhattan, AMR reported assets of $24.72 billion and liabilities of $29.55 billion. The company has $4.1 billion in cash.

One bankruptcy rule is “don’t wait too long,” Harvey Miller, a partner at Weil, Gotshal & Manges representing AMR, said at a court hearing. “Don’t wait until the course is irreversible. That is what American Airlines is doing today.”

AMR’s bankruptcy filing showed few details about how the company would proceed, said Stephen Selbst, a bankruptcy attorney with Herrick Feinstein in New York.

“It’s possible they are still in negotiations and don’t want to put something on paper that might prejudice those negotiations,” he said.

Experts believe AMR stands to save billions by restructuring its obligations in bankruptcy.

“AMR will no longer have its defined benefit pension plan, helping absorb nearly $7 billion in debt,” Morningstar equity analyst Basili Alukos said.

“I imagine the company can save between $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion in labor costs, in addition to savings on repair and maintenance and better fuel burn,” he said.

MERGER IN THE OFFING?

AMR said the bankruptcy has no direct legal impact on non-U.S. operations. It also said it was not considering debtor-in-possession financing.

But it could susceptible to unsolicited takeover bids from rival carriers. AMR has long said it could thrive on its own.

Robert Herbst, an analyst with AirlineFinancials.com and a former American pilot, said there was a “95 percent” chance American would join up with another carrier within two years.

“US Airways is probably toward the top of the list but it wouldn’t be the only (potential merger partner),” he said.

A US Airways representative did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Most large U.S. carriers are the products of mergers.

United Continental combined the former United Airlines and Continental Airlines, while Delta bought the former Northwest Airlines. US Airways was formed from a 2005 merger with America West Airlines.

US Airways and United Airlines filed for bankruptcy protection in 2002, and Delta and Northwest in 2005. US Airways had tried to buy Delta out of bankruptcy.

Japan Airlines Co, one of American Airlines’ alliance partners, filed for bankruptcy last year.

American Airlines said it would remain an active member of the oneworld global airline alliance.

LABOR PAIN

American struggled with labor costs despite massive concessions from unionized workers in 2003, which enabled it to avoid Chapter 11 at the time.

“That deal wasn’t good enough,” former American chief Robert Crandall told Reuters. “The other airlines that went bankrupt cut their costs much deeper than American.

“If you look at all of the elements of the problem, they all stem back to costs,” he said. “It hasn’t cut capacity effectively given the constraints” that labor placed.

Contract talks with pilots hit a wall in recent weeks over wages, benefits and work rules. Talks with unionized flight attendants have also flagged.

“While today’s news was not entirely unexpected, it is nevertheless disappointing that we find ourselves working for an airline that has lost its way,” David Bates, president of the Allied Pilots Association, said in a statement.

A wave of pilot retirements this year prompted speculation of a Chapter 11 filing, given that the retirements could preserve pensions that might be at risk of being terminated.

“The 18-month timeline allotted for restructuring will almost certainly involve significant changes to the airline’s business plan and to our contract,” Bates said.

The case is In re: AMR Corp, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District Of New York, No. 11-15463.

(Reporting by Kyle Peterson in Chicago; Matt Daily, Nick Brown, Caroline Humer, Chuck Mikolajczak and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Karen Jacobs in Atlanta; John Crawley in Washington; John D. Stoll in Detroit; and Tanya Agrawal in Bangalore; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier, Maureen Bavdek, John Wallace, Derek Caney and Carol Bishopric)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111130/bs_nm/us_americanairlines

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Intern with HCC's Communications Dept. in spring 2012 : Houston …

HCC?s Office of Communications (for credit) and HCC?s advertising/communications firm Yaffe/Deutser (for pay) have internships available for spring 2012. The application deadline is 5 p.m., Friday, January 13, 2012. ?All International students must confirm participation eligibility with the Office of International Students prior to applying to the internship program.

Overview of Program:

The student must be a current HCC student in good standing and/or enrolled in an internship course within their major and have completed the prerequisites prior to applying for the program. Internship requirements will include in-class and hands-on work in the District Communications offices.

Program Qualifications:

? Must have completed 12 semester credit hours

? Minimum 2.8 GPA

? Ability to work 12 ? 15 hours per week

?

Internship Responsibilities:

Print and E-Media Intern

? Enroll and/or completion of Editing and Layout and/or Web Design

? Web social media management

? Web content production

? Print production of HCC brochures and catalogs

? Video production (shooting, editing) for HCC events

? Content maintenance in HCC?s content management system

Community Development Intern

? Enrollment and/or completion of Public Relations and/or Advertising

? Assist staff with planning and executing special events

? Organize, distribute and maintain inventory of HCC specialty items

? Assemble media kits

? General marketing research

Photography Intern

? Completed Portraiture I (PHTC 1353) and Illustrative Photography I (PHTC 1345)

? Serve as HCC photographer at HCC sponsored events

? Maintain and archive photography database

? Provide photography assistance on special projects

HCCTV Intern

? Approval from Film/Video and Special Effects Department Chair

? Enrollment in RTVB 2386

? Assist in HCCTV studio production, editing, field reporting and associate producing as needed or assigned.

? Develop, upload and maintain video library for HCCTV and HCC website.

? Serve as Production Assistant for program shoots, including equipment operation, copy writing and producing for studio shows and broadcasts.

The HCC Communications Internship is a non-paid internship; student may earn up to 3 semester credit hours upon completion of the program, contingent on their enrollment in an approved internship course at HCC.

Yaffe|Deutser Internship

Overview of Program:

Yaffe|Deutser provides internship opportunities to enhance educational experiences of students. The firm offers internships during the Spring and Fall semesters. Additionally, the firm periodically offers special programs designed for shorter periods of time as required by the firm.

Yaffe|Deutser looks forward to including HCC students in the program. The students work under supervision and have the ability to learn through work experience. Interns are required to document their experience through a series of guided daily journals and memos reflecting on bridging their academic experience with their internship experience.

Our structured internship program provides students with an overview of our firm. Students receive guidance and support to complete a variety of projects working with senior level account directors, strategists, media directors and designers. The experience varies based on the skill set and interest of the intern as well as the workload of the firm. Because we are a high functioning firm dealing with confidential and very complex business issues, we require all interns to abide by the same confidentiality and level of professionalism as all of the firm?s employees.

The firm recognizes that academic preparation through coursework is the key to a successful future. However, a professional internship sets the stage for the beginning of a fulfilling career and introduces students to new professional opportunities. We have hired a number of previous interns for full time employment with the firm. At the conclusion of a successful internship, a student will be evaluated, be asked to provide a confidential evaluation and assessment on their experience, and will receive a letter of recommendation.

Internship Responsibilities:

Creative Intern

? Work with Yaffe|Deutser?s creative team on various projects and concept development for both print and electronic pieces

? Develop mock-ups for presentations to client

? Utilize Photoshop and graphic designing skills to design various pieces, including: brochures, pamphlets, posters, print and online advertisements, etc. (Ability to concept, design and/or write are assets for this position)

Communications Account Intern

? Conduct background research

? Draft documents for various projects, including: press releases, proposals, memos, and reports

? Assist with special events

? Research various online vehicles, including social networking

? Draft advertisements and other communications

? Assist with various grassroots and community based initiatives

? Miscellaneous organizational tasks that are consistent with an Account Executive

The Yaffe|Deutser Internship requires students to work a minimum of 15-hours per week. This is a paid internship; Salary: $10/hour

The HCC Communications Department has additional internship positions available and is accepting applications for paid and non-paid internship positions with reputable media and public relation organizations in Houston. ?For more information click here

Application Process:

Submit copy of transcript, cover letter, writing/portfolio sample and resume to:

HCC Communications Department

Attn. Moniki Specks

3100 Main, MC 1107

Houston, Texas 77002

Fax (713)718-5166

moniki.specks@hccs.edu

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Source: http://sites.hccs.edu/mediaroom/2011/11/28/intern-with-hccs-communications-dept-in-spring-2012/

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Ballot Campaign to Repeal Insurance Mandate Ends In Mass …

| By marthab

From the Massachusetts Against the Mandate Webpage

By Martha Bebinger
WBUR

If you chafe against the Massachusetts requirement that you have health insurance, sorry but you won?t have a chance to vote against it ? not in the next election, anyway.

Backers of a ballot measure to repeal the state?s insurance mandate sent out an email last week saying they had failed to gather the needed signatures. (Points to policy-types-turned-crack-reporters Brian Rosman of Health Care for All and John McDonough of Harvard for reporting that development here and here.)

The ballot initiative?s organizers say their bid to derail the individual mandate failed because supporters were torn.

One group, those involved with Massachusetts Citizens for Life, worried about dividing their efforts between two ballot questions next year, one that would allow assisted suicide and one that would repeal the insurance mandate. In the end, fighting the assisted suicide question won.

In addition, conservative backers ?were very concerned that this would make Mitt Romney look bad, and as they support him in the primaries they didn?t want to sign on to this, or donate to it or work for it? says Bridget Fay with Massachusetts Against the Individual Mandate.

Most of the 45,000 people who signed the repeal petition did so because they?re frustrated with the national health care law, says Fay, and wanted to make that point. But some, including Fay, object to the mandate and penalty in Massachusetts. Fay has insurance that does not meet the state?s minimum insurance standard so she pays an annual fine. ?It?s ridiculous,? she says, ?to pay a penalty for having insurance just because it isn?t good enough.?

Organizers of the ballot question are working with legislators on a bill that would get rid of the insurance mandate. They hope to file the legislation next year.

Health Care for All?s Brian Rosman says on the groups? blog, ?it?s telling that despite the huge uproar against the mandate in national politics, not a single bill has been introduced in the Massachusetts legislature to repeal the mandate or the health reform law.? Rosman says polls show the law still has strong support.

Source: http://commonhealth.wbur.org/2011/11/insurance-mandate-repeal/

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