Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Woman found dead in abandoned car in east London

police cordon

A woman has been found dead in an abandoned car in Hackney, east London.

Police launched a murder investigation after a young woman abducted from her home in east London was found dead in an abandoned car.

The 20-year-old was pronounced dead minutes after she was discovered in a grey Fiat Stilo in Hackney, east London, having suffered stab wounds.

Police said they were awaiting formal identification but believed that the woman was Kirsty Treloar, of Hackney. She is thought to have been kidnapped from the semi-detached house by a suspect who fled the scene in a grey Fiat Stilo before the arrival of police.

Police and the ambulance service were called at around 7.10am to reports of a disturbance. A 22-year-old man and a 24-year-old woman were taken from the house to hospital with stab wounds. The man is said to be in a stable condition and the woman was treated for a minor injury. A month-old baby girl who police said was in the house at the time of the incident was also taken to hospital as a precaution.

Just over an hour after the initial reports, at 8.30am, police and ambulance crews were called to a street in Hackney, where a grey Fiat Stilo had been found abandoned with the injured woman inside.

She was pronounced dead at 8.34am, a police spokesman said.

A tarpaulin covered one of the ground-floor windows at the house as officers examined the scene. Police have revealed no details about the suspect but said inquiries are continuing.

Neighbours living on Brownlow Road described hearing a "hysterical" cry coming from the property at around 6am.

A woman living close to the three-storey home described how she was woken at around 5.30am before hearing "a female sounding extremely distressed".

The woman, 45, who did not give her name, added: "I don't know what woke me up. It was some time at around six or just after that I heard a noise. I thought it might be foxes fighting, which can sound quite human.

"Then I thought, no, it's definitely not, it sounded like a young woman in distress. It was very short-lived and stopped quite abruptly. It sounded like she was a bit hysterical."

A retired couple, Mary and David Ward, said they were shocked to hear what had happened at the property so close to their home.

Mr Ward, 70, added: "It's a terrible shock. We couldn't believe all this happened, it's a real tragedy.

"The area is pretty good, really ? we've lived here nearly 30 years and it's the first time anything like this has occurred.

"We have never had any trouble ? we didn't know the family, but the young girl seemed to be very nice when we saw her to say hello to."

Another neighbour in Brownlow Road, who did not want to be named, said he heard what sounded like a window breaking early this morning and a person shouting: "Please, please, please."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/jan/02/woman-found-dead-east-london

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Snooki Dyes Hair Red, Flaunts Cleavage


Jersey Shore Season Five kicks off this week, and star Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi is marking the occasion by taking her long locks in a new, fiery direction: red.

"Sneaky peak! I went mega red! My @BradleyStyleNYC is genius!" the 24-year-old Tweeted to the 3,920,728 people who follow her for reasons unknown.

Based on the Snooki photos she and other sites posted, she appears to have lightened her all-over shade and added bold red highlights and extensions.

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Hair isn't the only thing Polizzi has changed. In recent weeks, her weight loss has been well documented, with Snooks slimming down to 98 pounds.

Crazy. Anyway, what do you think of Snooki's red hair?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/01/snooki-dyes-hair-red-flaunts-cleavage/

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HBT: Padres acquire Quentin from White Sox

Huh, and you probably thought New Years Eve day was going to be pretty boring for baseball news. Not so.

The Padres just announced that they have acquired outfielder Carlos Quentin from the White Sox for prospect right-hander Simon Castro and prospect left-hander Pedro Hernandez.

Quentin, a San Diego native, will be reunited with Josh Byrnes, who traded him to the White Sox for Chris Carter in December of 2007 when he was general manager of the Diamondbacks.

Quentin, 29, earned $5.05 million this season while batting .254/.340/.499 with 24 home runs, 77 RBI and an .838 OPS over 483 plate appearances. He is arbitration-eligible for the final time this winter. While he?ll give a boost to the punchless Padres? lineup, he?s leaving behind the best ballpark for right-handed power for one that?s in the middle of the pack. He?s also a liability defensively in a pretty big outfield.

As for the White Sox, I guess we can say the rebuilding effort is back on. Castro, 23, was hyped as a top prospect in the Padres? organization last winter, but posted a disappointing 5.63 ERA and 94/34 K/BB ratio over 115 innings this past season between Double-A San Antonio and Triple-A Tucson. Hernandez, 22, posted a 3.49 ERA and a quality 94/22 K/BB ratio over 116 innings in 2011 between High-A Lake Elsinore, Double-A San Antonio and Triple-A Tucson. For what it?s worth, Baseball America did not include either of them among the Padres? top 10 prospects?earlier this month. That being said, they should rank much higher in the depleted White Sox system. And with Quentin gone, Dayan Viciedo should finally get a chance to play everyday.

It?s sort of a head-scratcher for the Padres in that they aren?t expected to contend this season, but they had the excess pitching depth in the minors to make this deal without hurting them in the long-term. Of course, there?s always the chance they can use Quentin as a trade chip around the deadline.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/31/padres-acquire-carlos-quentin-from-the-white-sox/related/

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Monday, January 2, 2012

MapleLeafMommy: RT @mommakoala: Enter @MapleLeafMommy to win a Silver Lunar Lotus Year of the Dragon coin from @CanadianMint ($99 value, Canada only). h ...

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Source: http://twitter.com/MapleLeafMommy/statuses/152966713644826624

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Iraq: the aftermath (Unqualified Offerings)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/181817995?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

On 10th anniversary, euro takes blame for economy (AP)

PARIS ? Just three years ago, the euro was being praised as the can-do currency that had delivered unprecedented prosperity in Europe.

Now, it's widely derided as a hugely flawed experiment in the wake of a debt crisis that's threatening its very existence ? an uncomfortable backdrop as the currency's notes and coins hit their first decade in circulation on Jan. 1.

The question is: Will it get to its 11th birthday, let alone 20th? In the euro's tumultuous short history, it has already been heralded as the ultimate mark of a peaceful, united Europe; scoffed at as a giant act of hubris by a distant political elite; and credited with giving Europe a more influential voice in the world.

These days, as it faces its biggest crisis yet, the euro is a daily reminder to more than 330 million people of the dismal state of the economy in the 17-nation eurozone. Many countries seem headed back into recession, and policymakers are grappling with a spiraling debt crisis.

While few Europeans are prepared to scrap the euro ? in part because they fear a chaotic collapse more than the current muddle ? some are nostalgic for the money they counted on before it arrived.

Parisians waiting to exchange their old francs outside a branch of the Banque de France before a Feb. 17 deadline harked back to the "rosy" days.

"Life was better before," said Mamia Zenak, a 52-year-old doctor. "It (the euro) is a misery for everyone."

But it was not always so.

In 2009, fanfare accompanied the 10th anniversary of the euro's "launch," when it began floating on international exchanges and banks and governments started using it in their accounting. It was widely credited with cushioning the countries that use it from the banking crisis sparked by the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008, and for preventing proud euro member Ireland from descending into the economic chaos that befell non-euro Iceland.

"When the euro was launched there were plenty of people who thought it would crash and burn," the BBC wrote in a story on its website at the time. "Ten years on, its role as a global currency is secure."

It doesn't look so secure now. Events took a dark turn in 2010, when the debt-fueled boom years finally caught up with Greece and the eurozone realized it didn't have the tools to deal with its economic implosion.

Eventually Greece's euro partners and the International Monetary Fund found the money to bail the country out but it wasn't long before Ireland had to be rescued too after its property and banking sectors collapsed. In 2011, Portugal's failure to deal with its chronically sclerotic economy meant it joined the bailout club too.

Now as 2012 dawns, the euro's role as even a regional currency is uncertain as the crisis has spread to much-bigger Italy, with many skeptical about its ability to survive, at least in its present form.

Today's pessimism recalls the early days, when consumers worried that the currency would do them in financially, as shopkeepers took advantage of the changeover to hike prices. Maria Esteban, a catering manager in Madrid, remembered the price of a beer jumping from 150 pesetas to euro1.50 ? an increase of 66 percent.

"People barely knew what they were paying," said the 50-year-old.

Prices that had been set for their ease ? 10 francs, which was one coin, for a cone of roasted chestnuts in Paris, for instance ? saw some of the most egregious markups. Overnight, those chestnuts rose by a third ? to euro2, also a single coin.

A European Central Bank analysis found that while the perception that prices skyrocketed after the euro is generally exaggerated, 0.3 percentage point of 2002's 2.3 percent inflation was due to the introduction of the new notes and coins.

But, after that first uneasy year, an EU survey found that just over half of respondents thought the euro was "overall advantageous," while nearly a third thought the opposite. By 2007, at the height of an economic boom and with calls for the euro to become the world's reserve currency, 72 percent thought the currency was a "good thing" for Europe.

In the EU's latest survey, that figure has fallen to around two-thirds of respondents, and the economic downturn has renewed complaints about the squeeze exerted by the single currency.

While public affection for the euro vacillates frequently, Europeans have remained convinced of one thing: Few believe the currency has achieved one of its more lofty goals, forging a common European identity from Dublin to Tallinn.

The European Commission most recently asked citizens last year if the euro had made them feel more European. More than three-quarters said it had "no effect." That number has remained fairly intractable over the years; it was 80 percent in 2002.

Dutchman Patrick Plomp, who collects and trades rare bank notes, said the bills' design is partially responsible for their failure to instill a connection to Europe.

Whereas his country's guilders carried pictures of the sunflower, Austrian schillings depicted a Lipizzaner stallion and Greece's drachma bore Apollo's head, the drawings on euros are merely examples of different types of European architecture: They don't represent real monuments.

"If you look at a euro, you'll see that it's made with buildings that don't exist, bridges to nowhere," said Plomp, 44. "The effect that this has is that people feel alienated from the money. It's something that comes from far away."

Taina Kovamaki, a 40-year-old nurse, added that a feeling of alienation from the note leads to worries about the currency in general.

"After all the Finnish markka was Finnish ? it was our own," Kovamaki said as she lined up at the Bank of Finland counter in Helsinki, where the markka can be changed until Feb. 29. "The financial crisis scares me. I'm just not sure those people in Brussels know what they're doing."

But as with all things euro, how people feel about it depends largely on what they had before.

While many deride their generic look, stationery store owner Yiannakis Ioannides compares the notes to the flimsiness of the old Cypriot pound.

"It's better quality than the pound, which wasn't as good," the 52-year-old said.

The view from outside the currency union has also been just as fickle. Once seen as a sign that eastern European countries had "made it," joining the euro is now a far more sensitive subject. Poland, for one, is carefully measuring its words, calling for reforms before it joins.

Pauline Frommer, the managing editor of the Frommer's travel guides, recounts the glee of the currency's early days, when an Italian shopping spree could be had on the cheap by Americans because of the favorable exchange rate and the eventual dismay as the rate turned around in recent years.

Now, the euro has moved into a new phase, she said.

"The euro has come to symbolize something that may not have been fully thought through and may come back to bite us," said Frommer. "I think we're all very worried about the future of the euro, that maybe its 10th anniversary will be its last."

___

Online:

European Commission's surveys on the euro: http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/topics/euro_en.htm

___

Associated Press writers Toby Sterling in Amsterdam, Matti Huuhtanen in Helsinki, Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia, Cyprus, Harold Heckle and Ciaran Giles in Madrid and Vanessa Gera in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_euros10_years_on

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Download the WBTV News 3 app for iPhone and Droid today

Just a reminder for those of you who use an i-Phone or Droid, you can get your news on the go by downloading our WBTV News?app.

Search WBTVNews in the iTunes store or Android Market to download it and?always stay up to date with the latest news, weather and traffic information!

Our new news app features more news content, more video, and a display that you can tailor to your own?preference.

When you download the new WBTV app, you will immediately notice there are more top stories on the home page. When you click on a story, you can easily share it via email, twitter, and?Facebook. You can also save?those stories in your "MyView" section to view later.

If you see news happening, you can now easily send it in using our new "My Report" feature. It interacts directly with WBTV's 'See It, Snap It, Send It!' Just snap your photo or video and send it in using the?"contribute" tab. You can also browse all of the photos our viewers have sent in under the Community Gallery.

In our "More" section, you'll find sports news and scores, headlines from around the state and region, national news, health news,?and more!

There's also plenty of video to watch in our "video" section. Catch the?most recent?weather forecast and watch all of the latest top news stories.

Note: If you already have?a working?WBTV app, then you have the latest version.

To download the new app,?search "WBTVNews" in the Android Marketplace or iTunes store.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION

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Here are answers to some Frequently Asked Questions:

1) What happens to the old WBTV news app?
Those apps are going away at the end of July. You need to download and install this new free app to continue to receive breaking news notifications from WBTV. The WEATHER app we released last month will live on, however.

2) Will the new app automatically replace the old app?
No. You must download and install this new app. You are welcome to delete the old app at any time.

3) Why do the stories not refresh when I reopen the app?
The app does not automatically refresh when you reopen it. To refresh the story listings on the app, pull the screen down (like you do with the Facebook app) until the screen begins to refresh. You can also manually close the app and relaunch it. If you have an iPhone, shake the phone each time you open the app to ensure that it has been refreshed.

4) Is there an iPad app?
No, not yet. We are working on that and hope to have something available later this year.

5) What about an app for Blackberry?
We are working on that and hope to have something ready in the near future.

6) What about an app for Windows mobile devices?
At this time, we do not have plans to?create an app for Windows, but our mobile website m.wbtv.com will soon be automatically updated.

Source: http://lancaster-chester.wbtv.com/news/news/70162-download-wbtv-news-3-app-iphone-and-droid-today

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