Saturday, December 31, 2011

USC women fall short against No. 4 Stanford (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Michael Cooper is tired of Southern California coming close against the best teams in women's basketball only to lose.

It happened again Thursday night, when the Trojans pressured Stanford nearly the entire game before dropping a 61-53 decision in the teams' Pac-12 opener.

USC gave defending national champion Texas A&M all it could handle before losing 71-70 on Dec. 18.

"It's getting frustrating with our team that we come so close," Cooper said. "There's no reason to lose this game. We had them right where we wanted them."

USC got within one several times early in the second half before taking its only lead of the half, 44-43, on a 3-pointer by Ariya Crook. In the first half, the Trojans held narrow leads.

Ashley Corral scored 21 points for the Trojans (5-6, 0-1), who returned home after nearly a month on the road to lose their eighth straight to the Cardinal (10-1, 1-1). USC was ranked to start the season, but lost three of its first four games to fall out.

"When it's winning time, we just don't push and get through it," Corral said. "We really beat ourselves this game."

Nnemkadi Ogwumike had 19 points and 15 rebounds and Toni Kokenis added 15 for Stanford, which pulled away over the final 10 minutes to win.

It was a three-point game for much of the second half, and Stanford switched to a zone late.

"Their zone wasn't disruptive," Cooper said. "It was our inability to recognize what was open and hit shots."

After the Trojans led by one, Stanford outscored them 15-5 to end the game. Nnemkadi Ogwumike had nine points and her sister Chiney Ogwumike, who played with three fouls, added four in the spurt.

"They show you what elite players do," Cooper said. "They kept grinding and grinding."

The Trojans repeatedly missed shots after keeping it close on the shooting of Corral and Christina Marinacci, who had 12 points.

"We get the energy on the offensive end from defense," Marinacci said. "There was a stretch where we just weren't getting shots. We weren't able to get that energy back and get another push in there."

Chiney Ogwumike finished with 12 points and 13 rebounds. The sisters helped Stanford to a 30-14 scoring advantage in the paint and a 44-40 edge on the boards.

"The sisters came down and took it to another level," Corral said.

Briana Gilbreath had 12 rebounds ? 10 on the defensive boards ? for the Trojans, who led by three points early in the game.

"They defended well," Nnemkadi Ogwumike said. "They made it difficult for us to execute our offense."

The Trojans closed the half on a 14-5 run to trail 33-30 at the break. Corral scored five points and Briana Gilbreath made four straight free throws to erase most of Stanford's largest lead of 12 points.

"We knew USC was going to give us a really tough game," Kokenis said. "They made it difficult for us to score. We kept fighting and got some loose balls. We got some key stops defensively that really helped us in the end."

The Cardinal opened the game on a 13-5 spurt before USC ran off nine unanswered points to take a one-point lead. Stanford responded with a 15-2 run of its own, including 11 straight points during which Bonnie Samuelson and Kokenis had 3-pointers, to lead 28-16.

Both teams shot nearly identically in the half and both had seven turnovers.

The Trojans were without senior Jacki Gemelos, who tore her ACL against Texas A&M for the fourth time when she hurt her left knee on Dec. 18.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkw_t25_usc

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Viennese Cafe Icon Hawelka dead at 100 (AP)

VIENNA ? Andy Warhol stopped by for a cup of his coffee. So did princes, paupers, playwrights, poets and untold thousands for whom a visit to Vienna was unthinkable without a cup of steaming brew served by the bow-tied little man with the perpetual dancing smile.

In this city of more than 1,900 cafes, Leopold Hawelka was an icon, as much part of Cafe Hawelka as its tables ? scarred by burned-out cigarettes, their marble tops worn smooth by the elbows of four generations. He served tourists, the rich and the famous, and the neediest of the needy ? the ragged Viennese masses who crowded his establishment over a free glass of water to escape the cold of their bombed-out city after World War II.

Hawelka's daughter, Herta, said he died in his sleep and "without pain" Thursday aged 100 ? leaving behind a legacy as intimately linked with the city as any of its splendid palaces or sumptuous art collections.

Cafe Hawelka was never posh. But while costly makeovers left other cafes soulless, Hawelka's grew in charm with each layer of patina laid down over the more then 70 years of ungentrified existence that left it little changed from the bleak postwar days.

Today ? as generations ago ? tuxedoed waiters flit around tables, precariously balancing countless Viennese coffee varieties and trademark yeast dumplings on silver trays. Wooden wall paneling is lovingly scarred by the initials of visitors and paintings exchanged for a cup of coffee by impoverished artists in the 1940s still hang on the walls.

Even the ashtrays survived Vienna's no-smoking laws ? though staff put them out in recent years only when ordered to do so by Hawelka, keeping a sharp eye on things from a stuffed brocade couch in the back of his establishment.

Though his visits grew increasingly rare as he neared 100, Hawelka left no doubt who was in charge when he did drop by.

"He remains our director-general," said grandson Michael Hawelka earlier this year. "Whenever he is here, he's the boss."

It was this sense of tradition that made Cafe Hawelka special ? along with reminiscences from the unassuming owner and his late wife, Josefine. Some of their best stories stretched back to the immediate postwar years, when ? split into Soviet, United States, British and French zones ? Vienna was the place of intrigue reflected by the film classic "The Third Man."

Paying tribute to the man and his legacy, Austrian Culture Minister Claudia Schmied described him Thursday as a "legend of coffee house culture."

The son of a shoemaker, Hawelka opened the coffeehouse in 1938, only to close it a year later when he was drafted into Hitler's army. A survivor of the deadly Soviet front, he reopened in 1945 ? to a cold and hungry clientele that reflected the grimness of those years.

"As soon as they saw smoke curling out of the stovepipe they came," Hawelka told The Associated Press in a 2001 interview. "It was a sign that we, at least, had it warm. Some of them sat there the whole day over a glass of water so that they could stay warm."

Over the hiss of espresso machines and the multilingual chatter rising from the tables, Hawelka recalled getting up before dawn, walking for two hours to the Vienna Woods and trudging back with a sack of firewood to keep the stove burning.

A Soviet officer was a regular back then. Eyed by hungry, silent Viennese he would bring his lunch, gobbling down thick slices of ham speared on a jackknife.

The Hawelkas themselves dealt in contraband cigarettes in those lean and hungry days, while recalling others selling black-market lard by the ton. Titles and possessions gone, the prince of Liechtenstein and other Austrian royalty held court in Cafe Hawelka and sold whatever they had been able to hide ? carpets, paintings and anything else the Nazis and Soviets didn't get to first.

Until his wife's death at 91 in 2005, the couple worked up to 14 hour days. He would open early. She closed at 2 a.m and pored over the books until dawn.

The crowd changed ? from the postwar displaced to the likes of Warhol, playwright Arthur Miller and local literary and artistic giants, to business travelers, students and tourists. But the sense of time at a near standstill stayed the same, with some guests lingering for hours over their cup of coffee and glass of water.

Although family members ? the couple had two children ? took over the business in recent years, Hawelka himself was a regular until his late 90s. Too weak to attend his 100th birthday party on April 11, 2011, his smiling portrait placed on his couch served as a reminder of his vigilant commitment to his guests and their welfare.

Back then, longtime patrons reminisced of the special place Cafe Hawelka held in their hearts.

"It was my living room when I was in Vienna," said Robert de Clercq, a 75-year-old Dutchman who first met Hawelka 42 years ago, while Annemarie Eppinger recalled how, years back, Hawelka had watched over her university student niece as she hit the books at a cafe table, shooing away those who might distract her.

"He was like a father to her," she said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_en_ot/eu_austria_obit_hawelka

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Parting Schotts: Penn State, Catamount Cup appear to be on Union 2012-13 hockey schedule

It hasn?t been confirmed yet, but a Union source said that Penn State and a trip to Vermont are on the Dutchmen?s 2012-13 schedule.

The Nittany Lions are expected to play a two-game series at Messa Rink Nov. 23-24. Penn State will begin its first year as a Division I hockey program next season, playing as an independent before joining the new Big Ten hockey conference in 2013-14. The Nittany Lions are coached by Guy Gadowsky, who had been at Princeton.

The Dutchmen are going to play in the Catamount Cup at Vermont for the second time. They last played in that tournament in 2006, when they finished third. They lost to St. Cloud State, 4-2, in the first round and beat RPI, 5-1, in the third-place game.

Source: http://www.dailygazette.com/weblogs/schott/2011/dec/29/penn-state-catamount-cup-appear-to-be-on-union-201/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

O'Reilly Automotive

O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY) continues to rise despite lofty valuation, the stock remains a Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy).

Company Description

O'Reilly Automotive is a specialty retailer of automotive aftermarket parts, tools, supplies, equipment and accessories.

Good Earnings

We have to go back to Oct 26 for the last quarterly report, but it was a good one. Net income increased 27% or $32 million ahead of the year ago level of $117 million. Revenue for the period was up 8% to $1.54 billion.

Earnings per share came in at $1.10, 10% ahead of what analysts polled by Zacks were expecting. After meeting earnings expectations in the June quarter of 2011, ORLY has returned to posting an earnings surprise.

More Shares to be Repurchased

On November 16, the company announced its intention to increase a share repurchase program. Adding $500 million to the existing program brings the total to $1.5 billion. Prior to the increase, the company had repurchased 14.4 million shares for $859 million for an average price of $59.81, well below current levels.

Valuations

Shares of ORLY are not cheap by most metrics, but underlying metrics such as sales per store and sales per square foot increased in the most recent quarter.

The stock is trading at a premium to its direct competitors with a 21.4x forward PE. By comparison, Autozone (AZO), a Zacks #2 Rank (Buy) stock trades at 14x forward earnings estimates.

The Chart

ORLY has a solid history of beating estimates, a key reason for its Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy). A look at the price and consensus chart below shows a consistent trend of higher earnings expecations and a higher stock price.

O'Reilly - ticker ORLY>
 
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Brian Bolan is the Aggressive Growth Stock Strategist for Zacks.com. He is also the Editor in charge of the Zacks Home Run Investor service

Read the full analyst report on ORLY

Source: http://www.zacks.com/commentary/19772/O&%2339;Reilly+Automotive

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Paul's surge prompting a new look from GOP voters (AP)

SAN ANTONIO ? Ron Paul wants to legalize pot and shut down the Federal Reserve. He thinks the federal government has no authority to outlaw abortion, no business bombing Iran to keep it from acquiring a nuclear weapon, and no justification to print money unless it's backed up by gold bars.

And he might win the Iowa caucuses.

The closer the first votes of the 2012 presidential campaign get, the more competitive the Texas congressman has become. It's a moment his famously fervent supporters have longed for. Plenty of others are asking: What's Ron Paul about, again?

As in his two prior quixotic campaigns for president, Paul has toiled for months as a fringe candidate best known for staking out libertarian positions. As every other Republican candidate lined up to attack President Barack Obama's health care law and to promise tax cuts, Paul again demanded audits of the Federal Reserve and a return to the gold standard.

Leading in some state polls, Paul is getting a look from mainstream voters in Iowa, where the 76-year-old obstetrician has emerged as a serious contender in the Jan. 3 caucuses ? and in other early voting states, should he pull off a victory.

The sudden rush of attention to Paul's resume hasn't been kind. He's spent the past week disowning racist and homophobic screeds in newsletters he published decades ago, including one following the 1992 riots in Los Angeles that read, "Order was only restored in L.A. when it came time for the blacks to collect their welfare checks three days after rioting began."

"Everybody knows I didn't write them and they're not my sentiments, so it's sort of politics as usual," Paul said during a recent Iowa campaign stop.

Looking to cut into Paul's support, rivals laid into him on Tuesday.

In an interview on CNN, Newt Gingrich said Paul holds "views totally outside the mainstream of virtually every decent American." And Rick Santorum chided, "The things most Iowans like about Ron Paul are the things he's least likely to accomplish and the things most Iowans are worried about about Ron Paul are the things he can accomplish."

Paul returns to Iowa on Wednesday, giving his impressive grass-roots organization in the state a last chance to present, and perhaps defend, positions he's staked out over a long political career and reiterated during the 13 Republican debates held this year.

Paul has served a dozen terms in Congress as a Republican, but he espouses views that have made him the face of libertarianism in the U.S. He blames both Republicans and Democrats for running up the federal debt and opposes any U.S. military involvement overseas. He wants to bring home all troops from all U.S. bases abroad.

He vows to do away with five Cabinet-level departments ? Commerce, Education, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, and Interior ? and repeal the amendment to the Constitution that created the federal income tax. He opposes federal flood insurance and farm subsidies and wants to remove marijuana from the federal list of controlled substances while allowing states to decide how to regulate it.

He says he'll cut $1 trillion out of the first budget he offers as president. He doesn't believe in a border fence but says illegal immigrants shouldn't get a free education in public schools.

He's reliably described by political pundits as non-establishment, quirky, unorthodox. During a Republican debate in Sioux City, Iowa, earlier this month, Paul defended his views and rejected the idea that they make him unelectable.

"The important thing is, the philosophy I'm talking about is the Constitution and freedom, and that brings people together," Paul said. "It brings independents in the fold and it brings Democrats over on some of these issues."

Paul doesn't always side with the most extreme conservative proposals. When it comes to Gingrich's suggestion that judges could be hauled before Congress to explain their rulings, Paul joined other Republicans in dismissing the idea.

Paul's recent surge in Iowa isn't the first time the GOP establishment has been forced to pay attention to him. A fundraising blitz that netted $5 million in one day in 2008 led Republican operatives to weigh whether he was a bigger threat to siphon votes than previously thought.

Now he may be in his best position yet to do more than just steal votes.

"I see this philosophy as being very electable, because it's an American philosophy, it's the rule of law," Paul said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_el_pr/us_paul_s_positions

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Nintendo Animal Crossing Wild World

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Karoli: do we have the most screwed up bunch of GOP candidates ever? Gingrich, Paul, blerg.

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do we have the most screwed up bunch of GOP candidates ever? Gingrich, Paul, blerg. Karoli

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Romney looks beyond GOP presidential primary (AP)

LONDONDERRY, N.H. ? Republicans have yet to cast a single vote but Mitt Romney is starting to sound like he's already won his party's presidential nomination.

The former Massachusetts governor largely ignored his GOP rivals while speaking to New Hampshire voters Tuesday. With Iowa Republicans set to begin voting in exactly one week, Romney focused instead on President Barack Obama.

And he sounded increasingly optimistic about his chances.

"I'm not exactly sure how all this is going to work, but I think I'm going to get the nomination if we do our job right," Romney said inside the packed dining room of the Coach Stop restaurant, hours before he was to arrive in Iowa to spend the next several days campaigning across that state by bus. "What this president is doing is trying to turn us into an entitlement nation. That's a deadening approach to a nation that has always been powered by the pursuit of happiness."

As he has done consistently, Romney played down his expectations for the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses, the first stop on the path to the GOP nomination.

"I'd like to win in every state, but I'm really not going to get into the expectations business," he said after a subsequent campaign stop. "What I know I have to do is get about 1,150 delegates and that's going to take time in a lot of states, and I hope to get off to a good start."

Romney dinged his chief rival, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, very briefly only when prompted by a reporter.

Republican Party officials in Virginia announced over the weekend that Gingrich had failed to submit enough signatures to get on the ballot for the state's March 6 primary. Campaign Manager Michael Krull compared the situation to the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.

Asked about Gingrich's Virginia ballot problem, Romney referenced a famous "I Love Lucy" episode.

"I think he compared that to ... what was it, Pearl Harbor? I think it's more like Lucille Ball at the chocolate factory," Romney said, referring to the episode where Lucy is humorously overwhelmed by her job. "You've got to get it organized."

It was Romney's first direct criticism of Gingrich on a day when he otherwise ignored his Republican rivals.

Romney focused instead on broad issues likely to win over independents, a voting bloc that's expected to play a critical role in next fall's general election. He promised to reach across the aisle to Democrats if elected.

"I'm not going to spend my time bashing the Democrats and attacking them day in and day out, because that makes it impossible to sit down and work together," he said.

And in a nod toward the country's surging Latino population, Romney added that he's open to expanding legal immigration.

"It is a great source of vitality," he said. "And to protect legal immigration, and potentially make it larger, we want to stop illegal immigration."

Romney also teased a hypothetical general election sales pitch against Obama in which he'd ask voters, "Do you think you're better off than you were four years ago?"

"We know the answer to that one," he said with a smile.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney

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Computerworld: RT @pgralla: Three reasons Microsoft's Bing will gain ground against Google in 2012 http://t.co/gAB9fHLY

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Sony Sells LCD Venture Stake to Samsung as Losses From TVs Mount

Sony Sells LCD Venture Stake to Samsung as Losses From TVs Mount
Source: Business Week
Monday 26th December, 2011??

Dec. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Sony Corp. sold its stake in the venture with Samsung Electronics Co. to make liquid-crystal displays to the South Korean company after predicting an eighth consecutive year of losses from TVs amid sluggish demand. ...

Read the full story at Business Week

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5664403075

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Cuba wraps up dramatic year of economic change (AP)

HAVANA ? A year at the vanguard of Cuba's economic revival has not brought Julio Cesar Hidalgo riches. The fledgling pizzeria owner has had his good months, but the restaurant he opened with his girlfriend often runs at a loss. At times, they can't afford to buy basic ingredients.

Yet the wide-faced 31-year-old says he is grateful to be in business at all. A year ago, Hidalgo was concocting chalky pastries in a Spartan state-run bakery where employees and managers competed to pilfer eggs, flour and olive oil, the only way to make ends meet on salaries of just $15 a month. Today, he is his own boss, a taxpayer, employer and entrepreneur.

"I think my expectations were met because in Cuba today I couldn't have hoped for anything more," he said one recent December afternoon as his girlfriend, Giselle de la Noval, served customers. "We survived."

Hidalgo's story is mirrored by many of the entrepreneurs The Associated Press has followed since January in a yearlong effort to document Communist Cuba's awkward embrace of free-market reforms.

Their experiences ? like the reforms themselves ? cannot be described as an unmitigated success. Of the dozen fledgling business owners, including restaurateurs, a DVD salesman, two cafe owners, a seamstress, a manicurist and a gymnasium operator, three have closed down or begun working for someone else, and one has been harassed by her former state employers. None could be considered successful by non-Cuban standards.

But despite their struggles, many tell of lives transformed, dreams realized, attitudes changed, and doors opened that had been closed for more than half a century.

For Hidalgo, personal hardships have added to the challenges of starting a business on a Marxist island that has looked askance at entrepreneurship since Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution turned a one-time capitalist playground into a Soviet satellite.

After suffering through a slow, hot, summer when nobody wanted a pizza, Hidalgo had to close for two months to care for his grandmother, who has Alzheimer's disease. Even while the business was shuttered, he and de la Noval had to make tax and social security payments, wiping out the few hundred dollars they had saved.

They reopened in late November with so little money they can't always afford to serve their house special.

"We've had to start from scratch, but the only reason we didn't lose the business altogether is because we were disciplined," said de la Noval, 23. "Before we did anything, we always put away the money we needed to pay the state."

A year that President Raul Castro described as make or break for the revolution is ending after a dramatic flurry of once-unthinkable reforms that are transforming economic and social life.

In October, the government legalized a used car market, and a month later extended it to real estate, sweeping away decades of prohibitions. On Tuesday, the state began extending bank credits to new business owners and those hoping to repair their homes.

But one of the most powerful reforms was Castro's decision last year to greatly expand the ranks of the self-employed, part of a somewhat unsuccessful effort to trim bloated state-payrolls.

Some 338,000 people have received licenses to start their own businesses, and the results can be seen and heard everywhere. On nearly every street in Havana and in thousands of hamlets and towns across Cuba, makeshift signs and bright parasols mark the entrances of new businesses, and the long-lost cries of curbside vendors hawking everything from fruit and vegetables to mops and household repair services fill the warm Caribbean air.

"The reforms have advanced, perhaps not quickly enough considering the problems that have accumulated, but they have advanced, one after another, and there is no sign that they will stop or be rolled back," said Omar Everleny Perez, the head of Havana University's Center for Cuban Economic Studies

The government has declined to release any statistics on tax revenue or payroll savings from the reforms, except for an October report in the Communist Party newspaper Granma that said tax revenue from new businesses had tripled.

Cuban leaders this month lowered their forecast for economic growth for 2011 to just 2.7 percent ? from the 3 percent originally hoped for ? an extremely poor showing for a developing country. By contrast, China is forecast to grow by about 9 percent in 2011, Vietnam by between 6 and 6.5 percent and Brazil by 3.8 percent.

Private business owners have complained about the high taxes they must pay, the lack of raw materials and the fact they are suddenly surrounded by competitors. Because most entrepreneurs don't have the capital to start innovative businesses, many have opened cafeterias, nail parlors, small roadside kiosks and the like.

Anisia Cardenas, a seamstress, is among more than 100,000 Cubans who have held private business licenses since the 1990s, the island's last experiment with the free market. In the latest reform, she decided to expand, paying $2 a day to rent the front porch space of a neighbor's house to set up her sewing machine.

But business was slow ? and competition from new license holders fierce. Within a few months she had to retreat to her tiny apartment. By the summer, she began to wonder if she might have to close down, unable to meet the $19 monthly tax payments. By December, she had gone to work as an employee for another seamstress.

"Things are hard," said Cardenas, who is trying to save money for her daughter's 15th birthday party in January. "Everything is very expensive."

Others complain of rules that are often illogical, and state employers who still view entrepreneurship with suspicion.

Maria Regla Saldivar is a black belt in taekwondo who got a license to give private lessons to neighborhood kids in a scruffy park across the street from her job. She began the year with dreams of persuading the government to let her turn an abandoned dry-cleaning warehouse into a private recreation center.

But the government refused to grant her a lease. Then her bosses at Cuba's National Sports Institute docked her pay because they said her outside work was affecting her performance. She quit. Finally, her former boss prohibited her from using the park for martial arts lessons, which are technically prohibited. The government considers it potentially deadly training, even though most of Saldivar's students are not even teenagers yet.

"It's called envy," Saldivar said of her boss.

She insists she is not teaching taekwondo, slyly calling the discipline "Quimbumbia" ? a word of her own invention. She has moved classes for her 14 students into the tiny covered patio in the back of the apartment she shares with her teenage daughter.

But Saldivar says she has no regrets about how the year has unfolded. She says making business decisions for herself has increased her self-esteem, and she is thrilled that she's managed to put away 2,000 pesos ($80), about four months salary at an average state job.

"You may laugh, but for me it's a lot of money," she said, running her coarse fingers over the stripes on a pair of sky-blue track suit bottoms she bought. "I've wanted these for so long and now I have them. I look like a proper trainer now, not someone out picking mangoes from a tree."

Rafael Romeu, the head of the Washington, D.C.-based Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy, said Castro has "changed the conversation" since taking over from his ailing brother in 2006, pushing the leadership to get the island's economic house in order rather than blaming external factors like the 49-year U.S. travel and trade embargo.

But so far, the changes don't go far enough to revive Cuba's moribund economy.

"These are positive steps but when you say them out loud, just think about it ... You are allowed to have a cell phone, you are allowed to buy a home, you are allowed to buy a car or have a microenterprise. This is not the fall of the Berlin Wall. These are not major changes," he said. "Cuba has tremendous difficulties. This is a marathon, and they are taking baby steps."

Romeu, who has worked around the world studying emerging economies, said that Cuba is moving much more deliberately than the Chinese did when they began opening their economy in the late 1970s, or the Vietnamese a decade later.

Cuba's predicament is somewhat different, as well. Both China and Vietnam were deeply agrarian economies whose challenge was lifting tens of millions out of crushing poverty, Romeu said. Cuba is a more urban country with an aging population whose citizens have gotten used to benefits like health care and education, but who have grown accustomed to a system that doesn't make them work for such middle class perks.

"In Cuba, the challenge is sustaining the middle class, not creating one," Romeu said.

Still, some reforms seem to be moving along more quickly than many analysts had hoped.

Business is booming at a street corner long known as the center of Havana's informal real estate market. Only now, the handwritten listings on trees openly advertise legal home sales, instead of disguising them as property "swaps."

Mendez Rodriguez, an unofficial real estate broker, said the buying and selling is aboveboard, controlled by a relatively untangled bureaucracy.

"Everything is by the law now," said Rodriguez, even if his profession is not officially licensed. He and other so-called facilitators work for "gifts" left to the discretion of their clients, he said.

Rumors that real estate brokers would be the latest addition to the list of 181 licensed entrepreneurial activities have not come to pass, but there's still hope the profession will be added in 2012. Rodriguez said the opening seems to have led to a steep increase in prices, with a home worth $20,000 a couple of months ago going for 50 percent more today.

That's the kind of price jump many of the new struggling business owners say they could use.

Javier Acosta has sunk more than $30,000 he saved as a waiter into his own upscale establishment, and says business is far from booming.

"This has been a hard year, a year of sacrifice," he said. "There are days when nobody comes, or when I have just one or two tables, and then there are days when the place is filled."

He said his costs run to about $1,000 a month, and when business is slow he struggles to break even.

Yet the reforms, he says, have changed the face of Cuba, and cynical countrymen who doubt the opening will be lasting must wake up to a new reality.

"After 50 years where everything was prohibited it takes time to change people's minds and make them understand that this time is different," he said, sitting in his empty second-floor restaurant one recent afternoon. "If you don't work, you don't eat."

Despite his struggles, Acosta says he would take the risk again if given the chance, a sentiment shared by Hidalgo and de la Noval. They had hoped to close on New Year's Eve, which Cubans of means celebrate with a traditional feast of pork leg, yucca, black beans and sweets.

Hidalgo said the family simply doesn't have enough saved to take the night off after its year of trials and tribulations. Instead, he's planning to keep the pizzeria open late and celebrate on the job with his girlfriend and his aunt at his side.

"We're thinking of making a small meal for the three of us," he said. "If we can afford a leg of pork it'll be to sell, not to eat ourselves."

___

Associated Press writers Peter Orsi, Andrea Rodriguez and Anne-Marie Garcia contributed to this report.

___

Paul Haven can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/paulhaven/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cb_cuba_s_year_of_change

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Jury awards record $150 billion payout

A jury in Texas has awarded $150 billion in damages to the family of a man who died 12 years after he was horrifically burned on his eighth birthday in what is reportedly the largest personal injury award in U.S. history.

Lawyer Craig Sico said his clients don't expect to collect any of the $150 billion judgment. Instead, they hope it will help persuade prosecutors to seek charges against a man they say doused Robbie Middleton with gasoline and set him on fire.

Middleton survived his horrific injuries for 12 years before dying last year of a rare form of skin cancer, which attorneys argued was related to the extensive burns.

Sico and Middleton's family said they now hope for a renewed investigation of Don Wilburn Collins, who Middleton accused of attacking him.

Collins never faced criminal charges in Middleton's case, in part, prosecutors said, because of inconsistencies in the evidence and difficulty obtaining information from such a young victim.

Sex offender
Now 26, Collins is in prison for an unrelated sexual assault conviction against another 8-year-old boy and for failing to register as a sex offender. He is to be released next year.

He did not appear in court during the civil trial and no attorney appeared on his behalf.

Sico said he asked jurors to make a statement in the case by topping the biggest civil verdict he was aware of ? a $145 billion judgment handed down against the tobacco companies in Florida in 2000.

The Fayette County jury returned the $150 billion verdict Tuesday after a two-day trial.

The Florida tobacco verdict of $145 billion, which was later overturned, had stood as the largest U.S. civil jury verdict, said John T. Nockleby, professor and director of the civil justice program at the Loyola Marymount University School of Law in Los Angeles.

"It's the kind of award that has no meaning outside of an expression of moral outrage," he said. "They could have awarded a trillion dollars, and it would have made no difference."

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Middleton's mother, Colleen Middleton, said Wednesday the family hadn't really thought about the size of the judgment.

"We're never going to see any money," she said. "What we thought was please let these people realize Robert was precious, like everybody else's child, and he didn't deserve this."

"When they came back with the $150 billion, I was like: 'They get it.' And that made me feel so good," she said.

Cold case review
Robbie Middleton was attacked on June 28, 1998 ? his eighth birthday ? as he walked through a wooded area in the Southeast Texas town of Splendora, northeast of Houston. A neighbor who discovered the boy told a 911 dispatcher that the burned child said, "Some kids threw the gas on him."

When police questioned the boy, who was burned over 99 percent of his body, he told them: "Don did it."

Collins, who was 13 at the time, was taken into custody five days later. He was held in juvenile detention for six weeks before he was released without charges to the custody of an uncle appointed as his legal guardian.

In a video deposition taken just before he died last year, Middleton identified Collins as a person who sexually assaulted him about two weeks before the fire attack.

Montgomery County Attorney David Walker said Wednesday that the sheriff's department's cold case unit already has been reviewing the Middleton burning case for several months.

Walker, who was not county attorney at the time of the assault on Middleton but was working at the office, told the Los Angeles Times that Collins was not charged because "the case was very, very difficult, with evidence that was not clear or necessarily compelling at that time."

He said Middleton was severely injured and "his ability to say what had happened and who did this horrible crime to him was extremely difficult."

"There will be people who will say that's an excuse, but the professionals here worked very hard," Walker added.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45761980/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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Judge upholds extradition for "Survivor" producer (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? A federal judge on Wednesday upheld an order to extradite to Mexico a former producer for the TV show "Survivor" to face charges he killed his wife while on holiday in the resort town of Cancun.

The ruling allows the case against Bruce Beresford-Redman to be sent to the U.S. State Department to make the final determination on Mexico's extradition request, said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office.

The badly beaten body of Beresford-Redman's wife, Monica, was found in a sewer at a resort hotel in Cancun, Mexico, where the couple and their children were vacationing in April 2010.

Mexican authorities contend the couple had an argument, Bruce beat her to death, then dumped her body.

Attorneys for Beresford-Redman had asked U.S. District Judge Philip Gutierrez to overturn another judge's decision in July that the former "Survivor" producer should be extradited.

But Gutierrez on Wednesday denied that request and, in a two-page opinion, cited "pages upon pages" of evidence against Beresford-Redman.

That includes reports of screams heard from the couple's Cancun hotel room, the fact her body was found 25 meters from the room, scratches on Beresford-Redman's body and his flight from Mexico, the judge wrote.

Stephen Jaffe, a spokesman for the defense attorneys, said in a statement they are "weighing their options with Mr. Beresford-Redman regarding the future."

One option for the defense team is filing a habeas petition with the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Mrozek said.

Beresford-Redman denies the homicide charge against him and

maintains he is innocent.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/people_nm/us_survivor_producer

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

John Horton: Medical Innovation and Shortening the Long Goodbye

Seventeen years ago, Ronald Reagan penned what some have called his "Long Goodbye": a letter to the American people announcing that he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. He poignantly thanked readers for allowing him to serve as president. "I only wish there was some way I could spare Nancy from this painful experience," he wrote.

Since then, Reagan's public goodbye has been echoed in private by thousands upon thousands of parents and spouses: the painful recognition that Alzheimer's currently has no cure, accompanied by a hope that someday, medicine will advance to the point where the disease can be prevented, managed or even cured.

Today, as we recognize Alzheimer's prominence, what is the state of the medicine -- are we any closer to fulfilling Reagan's wish?

The question is an important one: Alzheimer's is expected to affect one out of every 85 people globally by 2050. The well-documented costs of Alzheimer's ranges from the deeply personal -- I can still remember my confusion, as a 7 year old, when my grandfather didn't know who I was -- to the economic, with some experts estimating social costs of approximately $100 billion per year in the U.S. alone.

One of the more promising lines of research involves "biologics" -- a comparatively new category of medicine that, in contrast to drugs like Lipitor that are chemical-based, are derived from living tissue. Scientists are just beginning to understand and appreciate the full potential of biologics, which have promising applications for diseases as intractable and diverse as cancer, arthritis -- and potentially Alzheimer's. (For instance, a biologic called Enbrel has showed signs of promise in treating this disease.)

But medical advances require a fertile innovative environment, with room for competition and a supportive regulatory structure. Will new government policies nurture a competitive, creative atmosphere resulting in breakthrough treatments -- or stymie future innovation?

The FDA is wrestling with that question now. Not only does the agency have to set clear standards for the development of biologic treatments, but the inevitable development of their imitative counterparts. The core issue pertains to "biosimilars" -- what one might initially think of as being akin to a "generic biologic" (an imitative drug not made by the original drug company), but which, unlike generic chemical drugs, are not truly identical: just as no two living things are precisely alike, drugs extracted from living tissue can be similar at best, but never the same.

As we all know, generics are often far cheaper than brand name drugs. But, unlike chemical drugs, the process for developing imitative biosimilars is not clear. The question for the FDA is how to safely permit a "pathway" to biosimilars by companies who want to create similar versions of a biologic, but -- because they didn't invest in the initial research, which can run into the hundreds of millions -- can market the drug for cheaper.

A few key points come to mind. First, it's important to put patient safety first. By definition, there will be small differences between the proposed biosimilar and original biologic. The only way to ensure that these don't result in patient harm is to subject the biosimilar to similarly rigorous clinical testing as the original biologic.

Second, the U.S. has the advantage of not needing to reinvent the wheel: The European Union created a regulatory pathway for biosimilars in 2003, and that process can serve as a model for the U.S. to improve on.

Third, we've learned valuable -- sometimes, painful -- lessons from the traditional pharmaceutical industry. Heard of counterfeit medicines? "Track and trace" is the surveillance of a drug's performance and supply chain -- a process that helps identify and prevent fakes, and also monitors the medicine for unexpected adverse reactions. Before biosimilars are permitted in the U.S. market, a good traceability system should be in place that includes distinctive labeling, tracking codes and a way to report adverse medical events.

Today, too many families face President Reagan's "long goodbye" -- and too many Alzheimers' victims know, even as the disease begins to rob them of their memories, of the pain their families will face. A biologic medicine that will shorten or even eliminate this long goodbye is a reasonable hope and goal for our generation. But it requires a holistic approach to the innovation of not only new biologic medicines, but biosimilar medicines as well, that puts patient safety first.

John Horton, president of LegitScript in Portland, is the former Associate Deputy Director at the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy where he was the primary drafter of the Administration's National Synthetic Drug Control Strategy and co-drafted the President's National Drug Control Strategy from 2003 until 2007.

?

Follow John Horton on Twitter: www.twitter.com/legitscript

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-horton/alzheimers-_b_1151231.html

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Monday, December 19, 2011

German government party stays on course on euro (AP)

BERLIN ? Rebels in Germany's junior governing party on Friday failed to turn it against eurozone efforts to set up a permanent rescue fund, an outcome that averts a possible political crisis for Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Dissenters in the struggling pro-market Free Democratic Party had forced the ballot on whether lawmakers in the party should support the euro500 billion ($650 billion) European Stability Mechanism, which is due to take start work next year.

However, the party's embattled leader, Vice Chancellor Philipp Roesler, said that their motion was defeated by 10,841 votes to 8,809. There were 280 abstentions in the ballot, conducted by mail over recent weeks.

"The FDP is, and remains, a party with a clear pro-European direction, with the necessary economic policy good sense," said Roesler, who is also Germany's economy minister.

Leaders of the party have talked tough on Europe's debt crisis but support the rescue fund, a cornerstone of efforts led by Merkel to get the situation under control.

Health Minister Daniel Bahr, an FDP member, questioned earlier this month whether the governing coalition could continue to work if party members voted against the fund. No date has yet been set for a parliamentary vote on it.

Had the ballot gone the other way, rebels would have needed a third of party members, which number 65,000 in all, to participate for the result to be valid. But they also missed that target.

The rebels' failure gives Roesler, 38, a respite after a difficult week in which speculation swirled that his days as party leader were numbered.

Roesler took over only in May, promising that the FDP would "deliver," but he has failed to lift the party out of a poll slump.

Roesler annoyed dissenters by declaring on Sunday, two days before voting ended, that they had failed because it appeared too few votes had been cast in the ballot. A complicated voting system also attracted criticism.

One of the FDP's top officials, general secretary Christian Lindner, quit unexpectedly on Wednesday, saying that he wanted to "make possible a new dynamic."

The FDP joined Merkel's conservatives in government in 2009, winning nearly 15 percent of the vote after an election campaign focused heavily on income tax cuts ? a pledge that has been ground down to almost nothing.

The party has attracted much of the blame for frequent infighting in the coalition and has been punished by voters in state elections this year. Nationally, it regularly polls below the 5 percent needed to win seats in parliament.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_germany_financial_crisis

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Close family ties keep cheaters in check: Why almost all multicellular organisms begin life as a single cell

ScienceDaily (Dec. 15, 2011) ? Any multicellular animal, from a blue whale to a human being, poses a special difficulty for the theory of evolution. Most of the cells in its body will die without reproducing, and only a privileged few will pass their genes to the next generation.

How could the extreme degree of cooperation multicellular existence requires ever evolve? Why aren't all creatures unicellular individualists determined to pass on their own genes?

Joan Strassmann, PhD, and David Queller, PhD, a husband and wife team of evolutionary biologists at Washington University in St. Louis, provide an answer in the Dec. 16 issue of the journal Science. Experiments with amoebae that usually live as individuals but must also join with others to form multicellular bodies to complete their life cycles showed that cooperation depends on kinship.

If amoebae occur in well-mixed cosmopolitan groups, then cheaters will always be able to thrive by freeloading on their cooperative neighbors. But if groups derive from a single cell, cheaters will usually occur in all-cheater groups and will have no cooperators to exploit.

The only exceptions are brand new cheater mutants in all-cooperator groups, and these could pose a problem if the mutation rate is high enough and there are many cells in the group to mutate. In fact, the scientists calculated just how many times amoebae that arose from a single cell can safely divide before cooperation degenerates into a free-for-all.

The answer turns out to be 100 generations or more.

So population bottlenecks that kill off diversity and restart the population from a single cell are powerful stabilizers of cellular cooperation, the scientists conclude.

In other words our liver, blood and bone cells help our eggs and sperm pass on their genes because we passed through a single-cell bottleneck at the moment of conception.

The social amoebae

Queller, the Spencer T. Olin professor, and Strassmann, professor of biology, moved to WUSTL from Rice University this summer, bringing a truckload of frozen spores with them.

Although they worked for many years with wasps and stingless bees, Queller and Strassmann's current "lab rat" is the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, known as Dicty for short.

The social amoebae can be found almost everywhere; in Antarctica, in deserts, in the canopies of tropical forests, and in Forest Park, the urban park that adjoins Washington University.

The amoebae spend most of their lives as tiny amorphous blobs of streaming protoplasm crawling through the soil looking for E. coli and other bacteria to eat.

Things become interesting when bacteria are scarce and the amoebae begin to starve. They then release chemicals that attract other amoebae, which follow this trail until they bump into one another.

A mound of some 10,000 amoebae forms and then elongates into a slug a few millimeters long that crawls forward (but never backward) toward heat and light.

The slug stops moving when it has reached a suitable place for dispersal, and then the front 20 percent of the amoebae die to produce a sturdy stalk that the remaining cells flow up and there become hardy spores.

Crucially, the 20 percent of the amoebae in the stalk sacrifice their genes so that the other 80 percent can pass theirs on.

When Strassmann and Queller began to work with Dicty in 1998, one of the first things they discovered was that the amoebae sometimes cheat.

Dennis Welker of Utah State University had given them a genetically diverse collection of wild-caught clones (genetically identical amoebae). They mixed amoebae from two clones together and then examined the fruiting bodies to see where the clones ended up. Each fruiting body included cells from both clones, but some clones contributed disproportionately to the spore body. They had cheated.

How can a blob of protoplasm cheat? The answer, it turns out, is many different ways.

"They might," Queller says, "have a mutation that makes an adhesion molecule less sticky, for example, so that they slide to the back of the slug, the part that forms spores."

"But there are tradeoffs," Strassmann says, "because if you're too slippery, you'll fall off the slug and lose all the advantages of being part of group."

Natural born cheaters

Mulling this over, Strassmann and Queller began to wonder if it would be possible to break the social contract among the amoebae by setting up conditions where relatedness was low and each clonal lineage encountered mostly strangers and rarely relatives.

Together with then-graduate student, Jennie Kuzdzal-Fick, they set up an experiment to learn what happened to cheating as heterogeneous (low relatedness) populations of amoebae evolved.

"At the end of the experiment, we assessed the cheating ability of the descendants by mixing equal numbers of descendants and ancestors and checking to see whether the descendants ended up in the stalks or the spores of the fruiting bodies," Strassmann says.

They found that in nearly all cases, the descendants cheated their ancestors. What's more, when descendent amoebae were grown as individual clones, about a third of them were unable to form fruiting bodies.

Many of the mutants, in other words, were "obligate" cheaters. Having lost the ability to form their own fruiting bodies, they were able to survive only by freeloading, or taking advantage of the amoebae that had retained the ability to cooperate.

This result, Queller and Strassmann say, shows that cheater mutations that threaten multicellularity occur naturally and are even favored -- as long as the population of amoebae remains genetically diverse.

What happens in the wild?

But the scientists were aware that obligate cheaters are either very rare or altogether missing among wild social amoebae. They had not found any obligate cheaters in the more than 2,000 wild clones they have sampled.

They also knew that in the wild, the amoebae in fruiting bodies are close kin, if not clones.

What prevents cooperation in wild populations from degenerating into the laboratory free-for-all? Could the difference be that the amoebae in the laboratory were distant relations and those in the wild are kissing kin?

Suppose, the scientists thought, one amoeba ventured alone into a pristine field of bacteria. As it grew and multiplied, making copies of itself, how long would it take for cheating mutations to appear (what was the mutation rate) and how successfully would these mutations proliferate (how strongly would they be selected)?

To establish the mutation rate, Strassmann and Queller together with graduate student Sara Fox ran what is called a mutation accumulation experiment.

In this experiment, amoebae that mutated didn't have to compete against amoebae that were faithful replicators. In the absence of selection, all but the most severe mutations were also reproduced and became a permanent part of the lineage's genome.

The scientists allowed 90 different lines of amoebae to accumulate mutations in this way.

"At the end," Queller says, "we found that among those 90 lines not a single one had lost the ability to fruit. So that's almost 100 lines, almost a thousand generations, so 100,000 opportunities to lose fruiting and none of them did.

"That allowed us, using statistics, to put an upper limit on the rate at which mutations turn a cooperator into an obligate cheater," he says.

The rate was low enough that if fruiting bodies were forming in the wild from amoebae that were all descended from one spore, cheating would never be an issue.

What this has to do with elephants and blue whales

But the scientists were inquisitive enough to ask another, bigger question. They used calculations invented for population genetics to ask how many times the amoeba could divide -- theoretically -- before cheating became a problem.

What if, they asked, we let an initial single amoebae divide until there were as many of amoebae as there are cells as a fruit fly and then transferred one amoeba and allowed it to divide until the daughter colony reached fruit-fly size, and so on?

What if we let the colonies grow to human size? To elephant size? To blue whale size? Would the cheaters bring down the whale-sized Dicty colony?

The answer, it turned out, was no.

A whale-sized Dicty colony is not the same thing as a whale, but nonetheless the experiments suggest how organisms, over the course of evolution, have sidestepped the cheating trap and maintained the levels of cooperation multicellular bodies demand.

"A multicellular body like the human body is an incredibly cooperative thing," Queller says, "and sociobiologists have learned that really cooperative things are hard to evolve because of the potential for cheating.

"It's the single-cell bottleneck that generates high relatedness among the cells that, in turn, allows them to cooperate, " he says.

Our liver cells have no kick against our sperm or egg cells, in other words, because they're all nearly genetically identical descendants of a single fertilized egg.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis. The original article was written by Diana Lutz.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. J. J. Kuzdzal-Fick, S. A. Fox, J. E. Strassmann, D. C. Queller. High Relatedness Is Necessary and Sufficient to Maintain Multicellularity in Dictyostelium. Science, 2011; 334 (6062): 1548 DOI: 10.1126/science.1213272

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/3jT9zFFaOrg/111215141615.htm

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Ron Paul's economic views aren't completely off base

Some have attacked Ron Paul for his Austrian views of American monetary issues, but those views aren't necessarily wrong

Paul Krugman attacks Ron Paul for his Austrian views of monetary issues in his latest column.

Skip to next paragraph Stefan Karlsson

Stefan is an economist currently working in Sweden.

Recent posts

His main argument is that one advocate of Austrian economics, Peter Schiff, supposedly predicted hyperinflation 3 years ago, something that hasn't happened.
But Schiff's prediction error doesn't affect the validity of the Austrian view unless it could be shown that it was a necessary implication from the Austrian analysis. And it isn't.

That is because first of all, Austrian monetary analysis not only doesn't have to, but as far as I know haven't ever, said that increases in the monetary base directly create price inflation. It is only indirectly, to the extent it increases money supply, that it will have any effect. And while money supply has increased the last few years it has increased far less so than the monetary base.

And though some Austrians sometimes express themselves as if a higher money supply will necessarily raise prices that is not necessarily the case either if money demand increases. For example if money supply increased in the fictional Duckborg by $1 billion but went directly into Scrooge McDuck's money bin and he just kept it there then the effect on prices will be the same as if there had been no money supply increase, which is to say no effect. The same goes for money in the real world, even when it is many people that hold money and even if it is deposit money rather than physical cash.

And because of lower nominal interest rates as well as the European debt crisis, demand for dollars has increased, cancelling out much of the effect from the increase in money supply.

So no, the lack of hyperinflation doesn't in any way refute Austrian theory or vindicate Keynesian theory

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. This post originally ran on stefanmikarlsson.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/3rvS1ApN42w/Ron-Paul-s-economic-views-aren-t-completely-off-base

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