SEAL Team Six Members Reprimanded in Video Game Consulting Deal
















Seven members of the Navy’s now-famous SEAL Team Six have been issued letters of reprimand and docked pay after divulging classified information to video-game maker Electronic Arts, CBS News reports.


The SEAL’s revealed the secret information in the course of their work as consultants for EA’s “Medal of Honor: Warfighter” game, which boasts of its high level of realism thanks to input from current and former soldiers, according to CBS.













One of the disciplined SEALs participated in the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden, though that mission is not portrayed in the game, according to CBS. Four former members of the team who remain in the armed services are also under investigation, CBS reported.


The letters of reprimand can make it difficult to get promoted.


Gaming News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Mark Wahlberg to star in next ‘Transformers’ movie
















LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mark Wahlberg, roll out.


Transformersdirector Michael Bay says the 41-year-old actor will star in the franchise’s fourth film.













Bay called Wahlberg the “perfect guy to re-invigorate the franchise and carry on the Transformers‘ legacy” in a post on his blog Thursday. He previously squashed rumors that Wahlberg was joining the film franchise about warring robots.


Bay worked with Wahlberg on his upcoming film, “Pain and Gain.”


“Transformers 4″ is scheduled to be released by Paramount Pictures on June 27, 2014.


Bay has said the next film will take a new direction in the series. The first three movies starred Shia LaBeouf and featured Peter Cullen as the voice of Autobot general Optimus Prime.


The third “Transformers” film, “Dark of the Moon,” was the second highest-grossing film of 2011.


Entertainment News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Canada top court rules against Pfizer in Viagra patent case


















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Bank refrains from new stimulus

















The Bank of England has decided not to extend its quantitative easing (QE) stimulus programme, which has injected £375bn into the UK financial system.













Under QE, the Bank creates money and uses it to buy government bonds to try to stimulate the economy.


The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) also decided to keep interest rates at 0.5%, the record low they have been held at since March 2009.


The UK came out of recession recently, growing 1% between July and September.


But a succession of poor economic indicators and corporate results has led many observers to believe that the economy is still weak, leading to speculation that more QE would be needed.


Indeed, the minutes from the last MPC meeting in October showed that some members thought more QE would be required at some point in the future.


“We are pretty sure that the economy will need more stimulus in the months ahead,” said Vicky Redwood of Capital Economics.


“And we do not think that the committee is out of firepower yet.”


Continue reading the main story



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The best credit rating that can be given to a borrower’s debts, indicating that the risk of borrowing defaulting is minuscule.




On Wednesday, the European Commission cut its 2013 eurozone growth forecast from 1% to just 0.1% and said it expected unemployment to continue rising next year.


As about half of Britain’s trade is with Europe, the commission’s forecast, if accurate, could have a significant knock-on effect for the UK.


But the jury is out on whether QE is effective enough at stimulating consumer spending and business investment.


In July, the Bank launched its Funding for Lending Scheme (FLS), aimed at encouraging banks and building societies to increase the size and frequency of loans they make to consumers and small businesses.


Under FLS, the Bank lends money to the financial institutions at below market rates, and offers a better deal to those who make the most loans.


As yet there is no published data showing how well the scheme is going.


However, on Friday the Bank is due to release statistics showing the lending rates being offered by financial institutions, and a general lowering of rates could indicate that FLS is beginning to work.


BBC News – Business



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Ghana building collapse traps dozens, kills 1
















ACCRA, Ghana (AP) — A five-story shopping center built earlier this year in a bustling suburb of Ghana‘s capital collapsed Wednesday, killing at least one person and leaving several dozen people trapped in the rubble, authorities and eyewitnesses said.


Rescue crews used cranes to try and remove debris from the top of the building amid fears that machinery sifting through the wreckage could injure trapped survivors. Crowds of bystanders gathered as rescuers sifted through cement and glass.













The fatality at the Melcom Shopping Center at Achimota, a suburb of Accra, was confirmed by Public Affairs Officer of the Ghana Fire Service Billy Anaglate. “We are still working to find out the fate of others who may be trapped under,” he said.


Other officials told The Associated Press that the death toll was likely to rise.


An AP reporter at the scene saw at least one man pulled from the debris, covered in dust and who was then whisked into an ambulance.


A Greater Accra Regional Public Affairs officer, deputy superintendent Freeman Tettey, confirmed that one person died and told the AP that 51 have been rescued and sent to hospitals around the capital.


“I was on my way to the shop when l saw it crumpling down,” Kojo Boadi, an eyewitness, said.


President John Mahama declared the scene a disaster zone and cut short his election campaign in the north of the country to be able to visit the site. The presidential election is scheduled for December.


The five-story store opened in February is part of the Melcom chain owned by Indian immigrant magnate, Bhagwan Khubchandani. His late father arrived in Ghana in 1929 as a 14-year-old to work as a store boy in the-then Gold Coast.


The store sells a variety of cheap, imported household goods and appliances that are popular with working-class Ghanaians.


Africa News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Harvard Students Send First Burger Into Space
















One burger has gone where no burger has gone before: the edge of space.


Five Harvard students, sponsored by a local burger restaurant, spent about 30 hours total over two weekends sending the first burger toward the upper reaches of the atmosphere.













The students, juniors Renzo Lucioni, Nuseir Yassin, Daniel Broudy, Jamie Law-Smith and Matt Moellman, spent a weekend brainstorming ideas.


The five, mostly science majors, decided they wanted to send a hamburger into space and contacted Jon Olinto, co-founder of B.good burger.


e4c45  ht harvard burger space 2 mi 121107 wblog jpg 204224 Harvard Students Send First Burger Into Space


Yassin told ABC News, “School just got a bit repetitive.” He said they came up with the idea as a “purely fun project.”


Olinto was immediately interested and asked his secretary to send over a check to the students. She thought Olinto was joking at first and didn’t send the check until after he told her the students were serious about the project.


“This is the most incredible thing that could happen to us ,” said co-founder Jon Olinto to ABC News.


Two weekends, a GoPro Hero camera, a HTC Rezound phone and a 600-gram weather balloon later, the students were ready to launch the project. They had gotten the burger two days before, varnished it, super-glued the layers together and screwed it to the pedestal.


SLIDESHOW: 9 Over-the-Top Cheeseburgers


Launched in Sturbridge, Mass. on October 27 at 12:22 P.M., the B.good burger took about two hours to ascend to an altitude of 30,000 meters (19 miles), and an hour to descend.


“There were so many things that could go wrong,” said Yassin. He listed issues with the camera or where the burger landed as some of their concerns.


Once it landed, it was recovered about 130 miles north of Boston. The phone transmitted GPS data to the students every 30 minutes, but they also used wind data to predict where it would land. The burger landed high up in a tree and B.good had to hire a tree climber to get it down.


e4c45  ht harvard burger space mi 121107 wmain Harvard Students Send First Burger Into Space 


They checked their video. “We were nervous that all of it was blurry and we couldn’t see space,” said Yassin. Luckily, he said, they “actually found 2 to 3 minutes of clear footage.”


The students already have the funds for another mission and hope to involve a local high school.


“All of us have aspirations in doing something in the private sector of space,” said Yassin.


The restaurant, which offered a special buy one burger, get one free promotion in conjunction with the launch, spent about $ 1,000 on the project.


“Definitely the best 1,000 bucks we ever spent,” Olinto said.


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Wireless News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Rihanna a rock star on Victoria’s Secret catwalk
















NEW YORK (AP) — Rihanna rocked lingerie at Wednesday night’s Victoria’s Secret fashion show in New York, providing the highlight of the live-music soundtrack and holding her own on the catwalk with some of the world’s top models.


And those models even had props, including Adriana Lima‘s ringmaster wand, Doutzen Kroes‘ body cage and several pairs of the oversized wings that the retailer has made its signature. It would be a close contest who got the biggest wings: Toni Garrn’s giant poppy pair or Miranda Kerr’s swan-style feathered pouf. Only Lily Aldridge could boast star-spangled wings that shot out silver sparkles.













Alessandra Ambrosio’s orchid-petal wings might have lacked a little grandeur, but she made up for it with a $ 2.5 million jeweled “floral fantasy bra.”


Still, wearing a sheer pink mini that gave glimpses of her bra, Rihanna sang “Fresh Out the Runway” at the end of the corset-and-garter parade and she was the one to grab the audience’s biggest applause.


The fashion show has become a pre-holiday season tradition for the retailer. CBS will turn it into a one-hour special, which also had performances from Justin Bieber and Bruno Mars, to be shown on Dec. 4.


Lima said she loved opening the show in the ringmaster costume. “The atmosphere of the Victoria’s Secret fashion show is electric,” she said. “It’s so much fun to be able to interact with the audience! What other show will you see Rihanna, Justin Beiber and Bruno Mars on the runway with angels?”


This year’s event had a slight twist. It started with an announcer noting that Victoria’s Secret and CBS had each made a donation to relief efforts for Superstorm Sandy, and a thank you to the National Guard members who are based out of the Lexington Avenue Armory that has for years been home to the show.


Mostly, though, models are encouraged to smile, ham it up and show off the extra time at the gym that most admit to in the weeks beforehand. “It’s highly televised, and you take that into consideration,” said model Joan Smalls ahead of the show. “This is kind of not the same as other runways. You have to prepare your body: No. 1 is the wings are heavy, and No. 2 is you have to be comfortable with your body because the camera will pick up on it if you’re not comfortable and confident.”


There’s an emphasis on glitz, skin and dramatic production here, not wearable undergarment trends for typical Victoria’s Secret shoppers. It was divided into six sections: Circus, complete with acrobats, contortionists and a sword eater; Dangerous Liaisons; Pink Is Us; Silver Screen Angels; Angels in Bloom; and Calendar Girls, which allowed Bruno Mars to serenade a model for each month of the year.


For his first song, “Beauty and the Beat,” Bieber, wearing low-slung white pants and a white leather studded vest, sat alone with his guitarist in the mellowest part of the show. For “As Long As You Love Me,” however, he brought in backup dancers and interacted with the models while moving around a giant makeshift pinball machine.


“It’s like a dream come true,” said Bieber on the pink carpet before the show. “I would rather be here than anywhere in the world.”


___


AP reporter John Carucci contributed to this report.


___


Samantha Critchell tweets fashion at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Fashion


Entertainment News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Pfizer returns EU selling rights on Auxilium hand-disorder drug
















(Reuters) – Auxilium Inc ended a marketing deal for its hand-disorder drug with Pfizer Inc, regaining the rights to sell the drug in Europe, and pushed up its 2012 revenue forecast to reflect deferred revenue from the termination of the deal.


Pfizer, which had the right to negotiate marketing other Xiaflex indications in the European Union, will return the rights to the Dupuytren’s contracture treatment by April 24, 2013.













Auxilium, which is also testing Xiaflex to treat penile curvature, will record $ 94 million in deferred revenue. The drugmaker said it now expects between $ 153 million and $ 163 million in Xiaflex sales for 2012.


The company earlier expected Xiaflex sales of between $ 65 million and $ 77 million for the year. Sales of Xiaflex, called Xiapex in Europe, accounted for 22 percent of the company’s total sales in its third quarter.


Auxilium, which filed a marketing application with U.S. health regulators to sell Xiaflex to treat penile curvature on Wednesday, said it still expects 2012 to be its first profitable year.


(Reporting by Vidya P L Nathan; Editing by Joyjeet Das)


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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The Next Four Years: Obama’s Steady, Slo-Mo Recovery
















President Barack Obama promises to use his second term to boost the U.S. economy. The opposite is more like it: A strengthening economy will boost the president’s second term. The likelihood of continued job growth will increase tax revenue, which will make it easier to shrink the budget deficit while keeping taxes low and preserving essential spending. All this will occur without any magic emanating from the Oval Office. In fact, it would have occurred if Mitt Romney had been elected president. “The economy’s operating well below potential and there’s a lot of room for growth” whoever is in office, says Mark Zandi, chief economist of forecaster Moody’s Analytics (MCO).


Something could still go wrong, but the median prediction of 37 economists surveyed by Blue Chip Economic Indicators is that over the next four years, economic growth will gather momentum as jobless people go back to work and unused machinery is put back into service. “The self-correcting forces in the economy will prevail,” predicts Ben Herzon, senior economist at Macroeconomic Advisers, a forecasting firm in St. Louis.













By a range of indicators, the economy is better situated for growth today than it’s been in years. Banks have strengthened their balance sheets. Most households, which borrowed too much during the housing bubble, have gotten their debt back to normal levels through a combination of frugality and default. Upper-income households’ balance sheets “are as pristine as they’ve ever been,” although mortgage debt remains a heavy burden at lower income levels, Zandi says. Housing prices have gone from falling to rising, buoying confidence. Increased consumer spending should induce more business investment in a virtuous circle. And there’s pent-up demand for residential and commercial construction.


That’s not to say that growth will be gangbusters. In fact, it may not even be strong enough to get the U.S. back to full employment by the time the president’s second term comes to an end.


Obama worked hard during the campaign to persuade voters that he should not be held responsible for the weakness of the economy. Voters apparently listened: Not since Franklin D. Roosevelt has a president been reelected with the unemployment rate as high as it is now, 7.9 percent as of October.


By the same token, Obama can’t claim all the credit for the recovery that began slowly in June 2009 and is on track to continue through his second term.


Most economists say that the influence of the president, any president, over a nearly $ 16 trillion economy is smaller than commonly believed. “Knowing who’s going to be president takes you only about 10 percent of the way,” says Robert Shapiro, a Democratic adviser who is chairman of Sonecon, a Washington-based economic consultancy.


Even Obama’s own former chief economic adviser, Austan Goolsbee, once said that: “Most all of the economy has nothing to do with the government.”


Presidents’ policy choices do matter during crises, like the one that greeted Obama when he took office in January 2009. As the president never tires of pointing out, the U.S. was losing about 800,000 jobs a month. Moody’s Zandi, who advised Republican candidate John McCain during the 2008 presidential campaign, argues that “what Obama did with regard to fiscal policy [in 2009] was critical to avoiding a depression.” A Republican president might have acted less aggressively and allowed the economy to tank.


Derring-do is no longer essential. “The economy needs less support from the government in the coming four years than in the past four years,” says Harm Bandholz, chief U.S. economist of UniCredit (UCG), a European banking group.


In any case, contrary to what both campaigns argued, Obama’s second term won’t look that different from what would have been Romney’s first when it comes to the factors that affect the overall economy. Federal deficits ballooned to over $ 1 trillion in each of the past four fiscal years because the deepest recession since World War II forced up government spending while depressing tax revenue. Things will start getting back to normal in the coming term as the economy continues to revive and more working people pay taxes. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office predicts that even without any increase in tax rates (except for the scheduled expiration of the payroll tax break), federal revenues will jump 38 percent by 2016.


Both candidates promised to cut deficits by similar amounts. Romney vowed to cut taxes across the board and shrink the budget deficit entirely through spending cuts; Obama also plans to rely heavily on spending cuts, though he says he’ll get a quarter of the action through higher taxes. That distinction, while important to individual constituents, matters much less to economic forecasters.


The same goes for spending choices. Where the dollars go is of intense concern to lobbyists for defense contractors, farmers, and the like, but relatively unimportant to forecasters, who focus on the overall balance of spending and revenue more than its composition. Deficits could actually be smaller under Obama than they would have been under Romney—who, like George W. Bush, might have gotten Congress to give him lots of tax cuts but not so many spending cuts.


It’s telling that the major economic forecasters didn’t bother creating separate scenarios for an Obama win vs. a Romney win. The differences were too small to justify the effort.


Forecasters do care—a lot—about monetary policy, because interest rates have a big influence on economic activity. But the easy-money policy of the past four years is likely to continue throughout Obama’s second term. Wall Street was nervous that a President Romney would appoint an inflation hawk such as his adviser, Hoover Institution economist John Taylor, to replace Chairman Ben Bernanke when Bernanke’s term ends in January 2014. Obama will probably pick someone more in Bernanke’s mold, such as Vice Chairman Janet Yellen. Bottom line: little or no change.


So what will drive economic growth over the coming four years? Mostly the natural healing process.


The Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee pegs the economy’s long-run potential growth rate at 2.3 percent to 2.5 percent. But growth is likely to exceed that pace slightly for the next few years as unused labor and capital get put back into service. Blue Chip Economic Indicators says the average forecast of economists it surveys is for growth of about 3 percent in 2014, 2015, and 2016, with the unemployment rate gradually sinking over the period from 7.4 percent to 6.9 percent to 6.5 percent.


Notice that the 6.5 percent unemployment predicted for Obama’s last year in office, while better, is still above the historical average. Blue Chip’s survey doesn’t have the jobless rate under 6 percent until 2019, showing just how long it takes for the economy to recover from a severe blow like the 2007-09 recession.


It’s possible growth could beat expectations by the end of Obama’s second term—but the economy may just as easily underperform. Growth forecasts are predicated on the assumption that the federal government keeps the confidence of the world’s investors by putting itself on a plausible path to long-term financial stability. Putting off spending cuts made sense when the economy was weak and vulnerable, but if Congress and the White House continue to avoid taking bad medicine when the economy is in better shape, bond investors may lose confidence and demand to be paid higher yields on America’s $ 11 trillion mountain of publicly held debt.


The state of the world economy will affect the U.S.’s prospects too, and there the American president has even less influence than he does at home. If Europe’s crisis gets bad enough, it could damage the U.S. financial system—payback for the harm that the U.S. did in 2008 after the Lehman Brothers crisis. Maybe a hard landing in China will disrupt global growth. Or war in the Middle East will cause an oil shock.


Even if none of that happens, job growth will be constrained by globalization, says John Silvia, chief economist of Wells Fargo Securities (WFC). U.S. companies will continue to satisfy growing foreign demand by building factories abroad, not in the U.S., Silvia says. “The character of the labor market has changed,” he says. “It’s much harder to integrate low-skilled or semi-skilled workers into the economy.”


Sonecon’s Shapiro says that “the central economic problem” of the next four years is to “change the path of earnings” so the benefits of economic growth reach ordinary workers, not just corporations and their shareholders.


Politically speaking, Obama’s biggest advantage is that expectations have been beaten down so far that even so-so economic growth will look pretty darn good to the average American.


For a while, anyway. The biggest risk for Obama is that by 2016, a slo-mo recovery in a socially polarized economy will cease to impress. The crises may be less extreme over the next four years, but the economic challenges are no smaller.


Businessweek.com — Top News



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Canada firms to capitalize on nuclear trade with India
















NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Canadian firms will be able to export uranium and nuclear reactors to India for the first time in almost four decades under an agreement between the two nations, their prime ministers said, but more work is needed to implement the deal.


Once implemented, the agreement will end a ban on nuclear cooperation Canada imposed in 1976 after India secretly exploded its first nuclear bomb in 1974, commonly called the “Smiling Buddha”, using material from a Canadian-built reactor in India.













“Being able to resolve these issues and move forward is, we believe, a really important economic opportunity for an important Canadian industry, part of the energy industry, that should pay dividends in terms of jobs and growth for Canadians down the road,” Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said on Tuesday on a visit to New Delhi.


A negotiator with the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), speaking on condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the talks, said that what remained was a careful legal review of the language; translation into French and Hindi; and then a signing.


This is not expected to take very long, he said. The two sides have set up a joint committee to liaise on nuclear issues, but he said it would not be negotiating.


India aims to lift its nuclear capacity to 63,000 MW in the next 20 years by adding nearly 30 reactors. The country currently operates 20 mostly small reactors at six sites with a capacity of 4,780 MW, or 2 percent of its total power capacity, according to the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited.


Canada’s ambassador to India, Stewart Beck, said on Monday his country wanted to be able to track all nuclear material, but that India felt it only needed to report to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).


It was not clear who made concessions in the talks and how effective the safeguards would be to ensure that Canadian material did not get used again for making nuclear weapons.


However, the CNSC official said India would now be required to notify Canada of any transfers to a third country and trade could only go to facilities that are safeguarded by the IAEA.


PROBABLY BEATING AUSTRALIA


Harper said the CNSC had worked to “achieve all of our objectives in terms of non-proliferation”.


Canada is in a race against Australia, its strategic ally but a commercial rival in the uranium business. Australia is also trying to nail down safeguards under which it too could sell uranium to India.


“We are effectively ahead of the Australians,” the CNSC official said, noting however that Russia and Kazakhstan were already supplying into India.


Opening up the Indian market would be a big help to Canada’s Cameco Corp, which is the world’s largest publicly traded uranium producer but which recently cut its long-term output targets due to the Fukushima disaster.


“Anytime we can reduce the roadblocks to selling our product around the world is always helpful,” Cameco chief executive Tim Gitzel told Reuters in Canada. “It opens a new market for us with the appropriate safeguards in place. So this is good news.”


Another potential beneficiary is Canadian engineering firm SNC Lavalin Group Inc, which bought the government’s commercial nuclear division, which designed the Candu reactor that is in use in numerous countries.


“As far as the sales of reactors goes, we would normally now request that Canada be accorded the same treatment as the Russians, the French and the Americans and that a site be designated in India for the implementation of at least a twin- unit Candu nuclear power station,” SNC Lavalin International President Ronald Denom, part of Harper’s delegation in India, told Reuters.


He also said it should open up the market to service the existing reactors in India.


Harper also said Canada welcomed foreign investment, after the country temporarily blocked Malaysian state oil firm Petronas’ C$ 5.17 billion ($ 5.19 billion) bid for gas producer Progress Energy Resources on October 20.


Late on Friday, Canada extended to December 10 its review of a $ 15.1 billion bid made in July by China’s CNOOC Ltd for Canadian energy producer Nexen Inc.


“Those decisions have to be taken looking at the global evolving economy in which we operate,” Harper said.


($ 1 = C$ 0.9965)


(Additional reporting by Julie Gordon in Toronto; Additional writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Michael Roddy)


Canada News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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