Friday, December 23, 2011

Snooki sued for $7 million over merchandising deal

Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi may soon end up in court -- but not for the usual reasons.

PHOTOS: Snooki's wild summer in Seaside Heights, NJ

The 24-year-old "Jersey Shore" star has been hit with a $7 million counterclaim in her legal battle with licensing company SRG Ventures.

VIDEO: Snooki on her body: "What the hell happened?"

According to The New York Post, Polizzi initially partnered with the company to launch an array of merchandise including school supplies, watches, shoes and lingerie. The pint-sized party girl filed suit in October to end her contract with SRG Ventures, claiming the company didn't fulfill its obligation to secure enough money and develop sufficient branding partnerships.VIDEO: Snooki installs a stripper pole in her house

SRG Ventures' counterclaim alleges Polizzi sabotaged their agreement by negotiating with brands behind the company's back -- a claim Polizzi's lawyer strongly denies. "Ms. Polizzi disputes SRG's version of the facts and looks forward to her day in court," SRG's lawyer Robert J. Hantman says.

Copyright 2011 Us Weekly

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45754514/ns/today-entertainment/

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Pakistan deadliest country for journalists in 2011 (Providence Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/177067137?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Ask Amy: Sports trip with lesbians worries this mom

Dear Amy: My daughter is going on a team sports trip next month.

There are seven girls going without parents (my daughter is one of them). These girls will be rooming in two hotel rooms.

Two of the seven girls are lesbians. How should the team handle the rooming situation?

One of the lesbian girls is in a long-term relationship and is also a friend of my daughter?s.

My daughter is not worried about sharing a room with her.

But my daughter calls the other girl ?sketchy? (her opinion). My daughter would definitely not be comfortable sharing a bed with her.

Some of the other girls and probably most of the parents are unaware of the sexual orientation of the players.

The ages of the players on the team run from 13 to 19 years old.

The sexual orientation of any one of the players is not an issue except for this situation, especially considering the age differences.

What would you and your readers recommend?

SPORTS MOM

Dear Mom: As you note, a player?s sexual orientation isn?t an issue otherwise ? and it shouldn?t be an issue here, either.

Your unspoken assumption plays into a predator stereotype that simply isn?t true.

The most important fact that these girls should be aware of is that ANY sexual activity involving team members must be prohibited.

Sexual activity between an older and younger teen would also be illegal (in my home state, sex between a 19- and 13-year-old is also a felony).

All participants should be educated about what is and is not permitted ? and this includes sexual behavior of coaches, other adults traveling with the team and fellow team members.

If your daughter has any reason at all to suspect there is a specific problem, she should take it to you and her coach.

You should also take your questions/concerns to the coach in advance of the trip.

If your daughter doesn?t want to share a bed with another player, she can call the front desk and ask for a cot to be sent to the room; these are usually available for a small fee.

Dear Amy: Counseling isn?t helping me too much, so I?d like to hear from your peanut gallery.

I love my partner of 13 years, but something changed a few years ago: I am not physically attracted to him anymore. It?s not about his being unattractive ? I just realized that kissing him was like kissing a brother.

We are compatible in many ways, but my reluctance to be physical with him is getting worse. I tell myself to ?change my thinking,? but my heart is not in it.

We are not married, and he is my best friend. I just don?t know what to do. I think I need to make the break, but the thought just kills me.

I?d like to hear what you and readers think.

TORN

Dear Torn: You present this as an attraction problem, but you don?t mention your own mojo.

The two of you may be able to revive your attraction.

If he wants to have an intimate relationship with you he should be given the opportunity to work on it along with you.

My two cents is that it might help for you to step away from this relationship ? temporarily ? to get a handle on what you really want and what you want to do.

Dear Amy: I side with readers who protest your blanket condemnation of pornography.

I enjoy a glass of wine but have never been drunk. I have gone to the casino but don?t have a gambling problem. This and many other things are OK in moderation.

I have lived all over the world and could write a book on the different standards of pornography in every country.

I would not like to offend a nice lady like you by describing what is displayed at a Swedish gas station, while in Mexico, Playboy is too raw for the newsstand.

TOM

Dear Tom: I have a problem with pornography when it objectifies people and when viewing it creates a problem in real-world relationships.

Otherwise, while in a Swedish gas station, do as the Swedes do (presumably this involves putting fuel in one?s car).

askamy@tribune.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IdahostatesmancomLife/~3/3-VITCvTvTk/hanky-panky-on-sports-trip-feared.html

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Congress' new terrorism rules leave open questions (AP)

WASHINGTON ? After a bruising battle in Congress, the Obama administration retained the right to investigate and try suspected terrorists in civilian courts. But officials say newly enacted legislation raises a host of questions that will complicate and could harm the investigation of terrorism cases.

During a struggle that began last May and ended this past week in a compromise defense bill, the administration waged an uphill fight against a majority of Republicans and some Democrats trying to expand the role of the military while reducing the role of civilian courts in the fight against terrorism.

It was the latest effort by conservatives to keep open the U.S. military prison facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to place terrorism suspects in indefinite detention and to designate military commissions as the preferred alternative to civilian courts for meting out justice.

In the end, the administration came away with one major victory. Gone from the defense bill during House-Senate negotiations was a provision that would have eliminated executive branch authority to use civilian courts for trying terrorism cases against foreign nationals.

The new law would require military custody for any suspect who is a member of al-Qaida or "associated forces" and involved in planning or attempting to carry out an attack on the United States or its coalition partners. The military custody requirement does not apply to U.S. citizens or to lawful U.S. residents.

The president or a designated subordinate may waive the military custody requirement by certifying to Congress that such a move is in the interest of national security.

The new law "will ramp up the political costs" when the administration decides to hold a civilian criminal prosecution for a detainee, said University of Texas law professor Robert M. Chesney, who focused on detainee issues while serving at the Justice Department in 2009.

But, Chesney added, "this law does leave the president with flexibility" to have civilian trials "and therefore the law is neither quite as bad as its opponents say nor as useful as its supporters think."

Weighing in heavily in the debate was the FBI, the front-line investigative agency that now must operate in a reordered environment in which the U.S. military will suddenly play a bigger role that is sometimes side by side with law enforcement.

In a Nov. 28 letter to Congress, FBI Director Robert Mueller said the legislation will inhibit the bureau's ability to persuade suspected terrorists to cooperate immediately and provide critical intelligence.

Mueller tried to make a similar point at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing this past week, but got little sympathy from Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.

"What I am focused on is what happens at the time of arrest," the FBI director said.

"Well, then you need to work this out with the Department of Defense, don't you?" said Sessions, a former federal prosecutor and ex-Alabama attorney general.

Mueller also said it wasn't clear how agents should operate if they arrest someone covered by the military custody requirement but the nearest military facility is hundreds of miles away.

And last month, Lisa Monaco, assistant attorney general for national security, said that "agents and prosecutors should not have to spend their time worrying about citizenship status and whether and how to get a waiver . in order to thwart an al-Qaida plot against the homeland."

Law enforcement officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, say that it won't be easy working under a new set of rules that must be written in the next 60 days before the law goes into effect.

Pressure from the administration produced one late compromise section that says nothing in the bill may be "construed to affect the existing criminal enforcement and national security authorities of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or any other domestic law enforcement agency with regard to a covered person, regardless whether such covered person is held in military custody."

But that left open questions.

"I'm concerned with the lack of clarity about who is in charge of investigation and interrogation for detainees in military custody," Michael J. Nardotti, the judge advocate general of the Army from 1993 to 1997, said of the legislation.

"If the detainees are in military custody and the military is responsible for their disposition and control, what role does the FBI have in that process and is the FBI going to be directed in some respects by the military on the use of the bureau's investigative resources?" asked Nardotti.

"The second concern I have," said Nardotti, "is that the use of the words `associated forces' in the legislation can be read as expanding the definition of who can be held indefinitely in military custody in an open-ended conflict." That could become an important issue because the legislation will undoubtedly at some point ? or at many points ? undergo scrutiny by the courts.

Gary Solis, a retired judge advocate who served 26 years in the Marine Corps, called the latest political venture into how best to battle terrorism "a very bad idea."

"Making the military the warders of every suspected terrorist goes far beyond the military's legislatively assigned mission," he said.

"It appears to me to be an effort to assure that all suspected terrorists will be tried by military commission," said Solis. "Despite the fact that hundreds of terrorists have been tried in the federal courts, convicted and sentenced to long terms, for reasons that escape me Congress is unwilling to allow our courts to proceed with what they have demonstrably been so capable of doing."

Congress and the White House have been at odds over detention policy ever since President Barack Obama was sworn in.

Many lawmakers have resisted the administration's efforts to close the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay and have opposed trying terror suspects in federal courts in the United States rather than by military commission. This latest round featured some Democrats, including Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin of Michigan and Sen. Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, supporting the measure while some Republicans and libertarian-leaning Republicans, including Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mike Lee of Utah, opposed the legislation that the administration objected to.

___

Associated Press writer Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_terrorism

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Ben Flajnik Dishes on His Date with Jennifer Love Hewitt

Shortly after the world watched Ashley Hebert stomp on his heart, Ben Flajnik was spotted having a drink with admitted Bachelorette fan Jennifer Love Hewitt. At the time, Flajnik denied that he was dating anybody, tweeting that he was "far too busy" with his winery. But now that he's the new Bachelor, (premiering Monday, Jan. 2, at 8 p.m. on ABC) Flajnik is spilling some details about his get-together with Hewitt.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/bachelor-ben-flajnik-dishes-date-jennifer-love-hewitt/1-a-411175?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Abachelor-ben-flajnik-dishes-date-jennifer-love-hewitt-411175

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Why there are so many drunk Brits on Facebook

Helen A.S. Popkin

To be fair, this Facebook photo features two Americans, one of which is me.

By Helen A.S. Popkin

British Facebook users are under the influence of old demon alcohol in 76 percent of the photos in which they are tagged, according to a recent survey.?More than half said they sure wouldn't want their employers or co-workers to see those photos. And yet, two-thirds of survey respondents said they'd intentionally tagged their "friends" in embarrassing photos to make sure?other Facebook friends got a look.

So the big take away from this survey seems to be that three quarters of British Facebook users are lousy friends.

Live Poll

Do you have any drunk pics on Facebook?

Sure, only 8 percent of survey respondents said they'd been tagged in such photos on Facebook that might cause them to get in trouble with their employers or even lose their job. But nearly all survey participants (93 percent) said they'd actively untagged their names from photos they found "too embarrassing."?

That's some pretty lax observance of the Golden Rule, IMHO.

It might really make me question the superfluous "u"?spellings of our former rulers across the pond, if my own self-hating xenophobia didn't make me suspect that we Americans are way more obnoxious when it comes to blatant attempts to humiliate our closest compatriots via tagged photos on Facebook.?

Alas, I just don't have the science to back that up.

The survey ? conducted by photo website MyMemory.com ? is restricted to British Facebook users, and only 1,781 of them at that. With such a humble polling pool, we are not even assured how accurately it applies to the more than 30 million Facebook users in the UK.

Such a survey does remind us however ? especially during holiday party season when drunkenness has been known to occur ? how it's important to remain vigilant about who's posting what about you on Facebook.?Now, it used to be you didn't have much control over who tagged you in photos. Over the summer however, Facebook rolled out new privacy settings that allow you to approve who can tag photos of you, as well as who can see those photos.

More than 50 percent of the survey respondents said their settings allowed Facebook friends to view photos tagged with their name, and a quarter said their tagged photos were set to "Public."? One in 10 however said they blocked their friends from seeing photos in which they are tagged.?

You can change the "Public" default settings on tagged photos by clicking the drop down arrow at the top right of your Facebook page, choosing "Privacy Settings" and on that page, scroll down to "How Tags Work" and click "Edit Settings."

??via The Telegraph

More on the annoying way we live now:

Helen A.S. Popkin?goes blah blah blah about privacy, then asks you to join her on Facebook?and/or?Twitter ... because that's how she rolls. Oh! Also, Google+.

Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/16/9496111-why-there-are-so-many-drunk-brits-on-facebook

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Houston DA turns up heat on Occupy activists

Pat Sullivan / AP file

Protestors in Houston on Oct. 6 rally in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement demanding an end to corruption in politics and business.

By Kari Huus, msnbc.com senior reporter

Across the country, Occupy protesters have sparked a variety of official responses. Some have faced police in riot gear with pepper spray, while others have been nudged out by authorities for ?health and safety concerns.? In Houston, where the protesters and the police had been relatively genteel, the authorities now are pursuing highly aggressive legal cases against a group of activists.

The cases involve seven people arrested while blocking the road to the Port of Houston on Monday on the felony charge of using or possessing a ?criminal instrument? ? referring to PVC pipe that the activists use to link themselves together to make arrest more difficult.

Even though a Houston district court judge dismissed the cases on Wednesday, saying the prosecutors had not shown probable cause for the felony arrest, the district attorney attorney?s office said Thursday that it would seek an indictment by a grand jury.


?Highly unusual,? is how it was characterized by Sandra Guerra Thompson, a criminal law professor at the University of Houston Law Center. ?What we?re talking about is civil disobedience. We have a long history in this country of people committing crimes to bring attention to social issues? At the same time, the government has in the past arrested people when they needed to maintain order? Generally in this type of passive resistance, you?re not going to see felony charges.?

Randall Kallinen, an attorney representing one of the defendants as a member of the National Lawyers Guild, said he does not believe the protesters use of the PVC ? as what they call a ?sleeping dragon? or ?arm tube?? meets the standard as a ?criminal instrument?? a felony that carries a jail term from six months to two years.

?Criminal instruments have to be primarily designed and adapted for a crime,? Kallinen said, ?not just something used in a crime.? He says the charge is used to arrest people who are planning to commit a crime, not after they have committed one.

But he says that the outcome of a grand jury, in which all proceedings are kept secret?? depends largely on how the district attorney presents the case to the judges.

?There?s a saying,? says Kallinen. ?In Texas, you can indict a ham sandwich.?

The Harris County District Attorney?s Office did not respond to inquiries about the arrests and charges by the time of publication.

However,?Assistant District Attorney Colleen Barnett told the Houston Chronicle on Wednesday that the felony charges were appropriate.

"In the manner of its use, I believe it was a criminal instrument," Barnett told the Chronicle. "The use of it was in blocking the roadway."

Some observers say the grand jury hearing, scheduled for Tuesday, may be more related to politics or economic concerns than to the threat from PVC-wielding protesters.

She notes that the Houston?protesters ? unlike their counterparts in other cities ? have not been forced to leave a park where they are camped, and in fact were largely ignored until they blocked the port.

?I would say that it?s an election year coming up in 2012, so there may be some politics involved,? said the University of Houston?s Guerra Thompson. ?But also Houston is a city where people value work and commerce, so the interference with business is something that is going to be taken very, very seriously.?

But the whole thing strikes civil rights lawyer Michael Ratner as simply another flavor of the crackdown?against Occupy protests going on around the country.

?We?ve seen numerous police tactics that are more exaggerated than they should be ? whether it's 700 people getting arrested on a bridge in New York or pepper spray of UC Davis protesters or charging people excessively for criminal conduct,? says Ratner, a member of the National Lawyers Guild who is tracking cases related to the movement around the country.

?A neutral judge dismissed this case. That should have been the dead end of it,? he said.??The message it sends to people who are going to engaged in protest is that you will be punished severely.?

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Click here to follow Kari Huus on Facebook

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9475696-houston-da-turns-up-the-heat-on-occupy-activists

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