BP must cover some Transocean oil spill damages (Reuters)

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Published on: January 27, 2012

(Reuters) ? A federal judge on Thursday said BP Plc must indemnify Transocean Ltd for some compensatory damage claims over the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier, who oversees multistate litigation over the spill, agreed with Transocean that the Swiss driller was not responsible for compensatory damage claims raised by third parties for oil spilled below the ocean surface.

He also ruled, however, that London-based BP need not indemnify Transocean for punitive damages, or civil penalties imposed by the U.S. government under the federal Clean Water Act.

Thursday’s decision reduces the potential liability Transocean faces over the April 20, 2010 Deepwater Horizon drilling rig explosion that caused 11 deaths and the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

Transocean owned the rig, while BP owned a majority of the Macondo well whose blowout led to the spill.

Shares of Transocean rose 8.9 percent in after-hours trading, and BP shares fell 0.6 percent.

“Indemnification from compensatory damages is key for Transocean,” whose litigation exposure is now “materially diminished,” UBS Securities LLC analyst Angie Sedita wrote in a research note. She has a “buy” rating on Transocean.

Sedita said BP has estimated its Clean Water Act liability at $3.5 billion, but that other estimates are as high as $6 billion. She also said Transocean has $950 million of insurance coverage for personal injury and third-party claims.

Barbier oversees several hundred cases related to the spill, including a $40 billion lawsuit that BP filed against Transocean last April.

Both companies welcomed parts of the judge’s decision.

“This confirms that BP is responsible for all economic damages caused by the oil that leaked from its Macondo well, and discredits BP’s ongoing attempts to evade both its contractual and financial obligations,” Transocean spokesman Lou Colasuonno said in an email.

BP spokesman Daren Beaudo said in an emailed statement that the decision “holds Transocean financially responsible for any punitive damages, fines and penalties flowing from its own conduct. As we have said from the beginning, Transocean cannot avoid its responsibility for this accident.”

Transocean had argued that its drilling contract obligated BP to defend it from claims over subsurface pollution, even if Transocean was found grossly negligent or “strictly liable.”

BP countered that its responsibility to indemnify Transocean did not extend that far.

Barbier did not decide whether Transocean will be liable for punitive damages or the civil penalties, or rule on BP’s claim that Transocean breached its drilling contract.

The New Orleans-based judge has set a February 27 start date for a trial to apportion blame.

Transocean shares rose $4.19 to $51.45 in after-hours trading in New York, after closing regular trading down 10 cents at $47.26.

BP’s American depositary receipts fell 27 cents to $44.50 after hours, after dropping 13 cents to $44.77 during the day.

The case is In re: Oil Spill by the Oil Rig “Deepwater Horizon” in the Gulf of Mexico, on April 20, 2010, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana, No. 10-md-02179.

(Reporting By Jonathan Stempel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120127/bs_nm/us_bp_transocean

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Prenatal testosterone linked to increased risk of language delay for male infants, study shows

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Males at greater than twice the risk of language delay than females

New research by Australian scientists reveals that males who are exposed to high levels of testosterone before birth are twice as likely to experience delays in language development compared to females. The research, published in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, focused on umbilical cord blood to explore the presence of testosterone when the language-related regions of a fetus’ brain are undergoing a critical period of growth.

“An estimated 12% of toddlers experience significant delays in their language development,” said lead author Professor Andrew Whitehouse from the University of Western Australia. “While language development varies between individuals, males tend to develop later and at a slower rate than females.”

The team believed this may be due to prenatal exposure to sex-steroids such as testosterone. Male fetuses are known to have 10 times the circulating levels of testosterone compared to females. The team proposed that higher levels of exposure to prenatal testosterone may increase the likelihood of language development delays.

Professor Whitehouse’s team measured levels of testosterone in the umbilical cord blood of 767 newborns before examining their language ability at 1, 2 and 3-years of age.

The results showed male infants with high levels of testosterone in cord blood were between two-and-three times more likely to experience language delay. However, the opposite effect was found in female infants, where high-levels of testosterone in cord blood were associated with a decreased risk of language delay.

Previous smaller studies have explored the link between testosterone levels in amniotic fluid and language development. However, this is the first large population-based study to explore the relationship between umbilical cord blood and language delay in the first three years of life.

“Language delay is one of the most common reasons children are taken to a Paediatrician,” concluded Professor Whitehouse. “Now these findings can help us to understand the biological mechanisms that may underpin language delay, as well as language development more generally.”

###


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[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman
Scholarlynews@wiley.com
44-124-377-0375
Wiley-Blackwell

Males at greater than twice the risk of language delay than females

New research by Australian scientists reveals that males who are exposed to high levels of testosterone before birth are twice as likely to experience delays in language development compared to females. The research, published in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, focused on umbilical cord blood to explore the presence of testosterone when the language-related regions of a fetus’ brain are undergoing a critical period of growth.

“An estimated 12% of toddlers experience significant delays in their language development,” said lead author Professor Andrew Whitehouse from the University of Western Australia. “While language development varies between individuals, males tend to develop later and at a slower rate than females.”

The team believed this may be due to prenatal exposure to sex-steroids such as testosterone. Male fetuses are known to have 10 times the circulating levels of testosterone compared to females. The team proposed that higher levels of exposure to prenatal testosterone may increase the likelihood of language development delays.

Professor Whitehouse’s team measured levels of testosterone in the umbilical cord blood of 767 newborns before examining their language ability at 1, 2 and 3-years of age.

The results showed male infants with high levels of testosterone in cord blood were between two-and-three times more likely to experience language delay. However, the opposite effect was found in female infants, where high-levels of testosterone in cord blood were associated with a decreased risk of language delay.

Previous smaller studies have explored the link between testosterone levels in amniotic fluid and language development. However, this is the first large population-based study to explore the relationship between umbilical cord blood and language delay in the first three years of life.

“Language delay is one of the most common reasons children are taken to a Paediatrician,” concluded Professor Whitehouse. “Now these findings can help us to understand the biological mechanisms that may underpin language delay, as well as language development more generally.”

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/w-ptl012312.php

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Gingrich unloads on Romney, ads, in Florida speech (AP)

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MOUNT DORA, Fla. ? Newt Gingrich on Thursday dramatically ramped up his attacks on Mitt Romney, saying the former Massachusetts governor is guilty of lies, desperation and hypocrisy that should make “every American angry.”

Gingrich, the former House speaker, said he was infuriated by a barrage of attack ads that are blistering him on Florida TV stations ahead of Tuesday’s GOP presidential primary. Most are funded by an outside organization backing Romney, but some are from Romney’s own campaign. Unable to match Romney’s money machine, Gingrich implored Florida Republicans to punish his chief rival for what Gingrich called callously dishonest ads.

“This is the desperate last stand of the old order,” Gingrich told an outdoor crowd of more than 1,000 northwest of Orlando. “This is the kind of gall they have to think we’re so stupid and we’re so timid.”

The nature and volume of the attack ads are similar to those that badly damaged Gingrich in Iowa a month ago.

“I think all the weight of his negative advertising and all the weight of his dishonesty has hurt us some,” Gingrich said. But “I am not going to allow the moneyed interests that are buying those ads to come in here and to come into other states to misinform people and then to think we are too dumb to fight back.”

Romney steered clear of his rival during a subsequent campaign appearance.

Gingrich later told reporters he decided to sharpen his criticisms after Romney’s tax returns showed investments held in Cayman Island accounts, the government-backed mortgage company Freddie Mac and other entities.

“Here’s a guy who owns Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae stock,” Gingrich said. “He owns a Goldman Sachs subsidiary, which is foreclosing on Floridians. And on that front he decides to lie about my career? There’s something about the hypocrisy that should make every American angry.”

Romney has been hammering Gingrich for consulting work he performed for Freddie Mac and telling Florida voters that Gingrich was paid by a company that contributed to the state’s poor housing market.

The acerbic remarks came three days after Gingrich took a much more moderate tone in a televised debate in Tampa, when Romney sharpened his own attacks. Gingrich strongly hinted he will be more aggressive in a CNN debate scheduled for Thursday night in Jacksonville.

Romney, meanwhile, toured a Jacksonville factory that is closing because of the economy before he addressed several hundred people gathered outside. He acknowledged that the live audience at Thursday’s debate may be fairly raucous, a dynamic that seems to favor Gingrich and his populist, us-against-the-media and us-against-the-establishment style.

“There may be some give and take,” Romney said. “That’s always fun and entertaining, I know. If you all could get there, we’d love to see you all there cheering.”

In his remarks, Romney criticized President Barack Obama and steered clear of Gingrich. He called Obama’s administration a “Groundhog Day” presidency in which nothing gets better.

Polls suggest the Florida primary is close, coming 10 days after Gingrich beat Romney by 12 percentage points in South Carolina. Asked if he felt Florida was slipping toward Romney, Gingrich said, “I feel that it’s useful for people to look at the totality of his record and ask yourself, `How can a guy who literally owns stock in a Goldman Sachs investment fund that forecloses on Floridians run the ads he’s been running?’”

Goldman Sachs employees and their families contributed $367,200 to Romney’s campaign through Sept. 30, his largest source of campaign contributions, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and Texas Rep. Ron Paul also were participating in Thursday’s debate, the final one before the GOP presidential primary in Florida on Tuesday. But both candidates have set their sights elsewhere and have largely stayed away from the Romney-Gingrich drama.

Whoever wins Florida will score something no one has yet claimed in a tumultuous primary season: a second victory. The first three contests have been won by three different candidates. Only Paul has yet to score a win.

The hits for Romney and Gingrich were coming from many directions.

The “super” political action committees backing them have spent more than $10 million combined on ads to date in Florida, far more than their respective campaigns. The Romney-leaning Restore Our Future has spent $8.8 million in ads as of late Tuesday, bringing to $14 million the total spent on ads supporting Romney in the state. That doesn’t include money already spent on radio and Internet advertising.

As of late Tuesday, the Gingrich-backing Winning Our Future had booked $1.8 million in television ads in Florida, a check made possible by a new donation from Miriam Adelson. She and her husband, Sheldon, this month gave $5 million apiece to the group, which supports Gingrich but legally must remain independent.

Santorum, meanwhile, seemed to be recognizing that he stood almost no chance of winning Florida. He and his advisers planned no advertising in the state and instead were focused on raising money and calling potential supporters in upcoming states. He all but gave up trying to woo a network of pastors and was scaling back his schedule in Florida.

Chuck Laudner, an influential adviser who helped Santorum score an upset victory in the Iowa caucuses, was returning to the Midwest to start piecing together coalitions in Missouri and Minnesota. Both states have media markets that overlap with Iowa, where Santorum proved to be the big story.

Paul, virtually absent from Florida except for appearances built around the debates, was concentrating instead on caucus states where his loyal backers can carry a louder voice.

___

Associated Press writers Charles Babington, Philip Elliott, Kasie Hunt and David Espo in Florida contributed to this report. Jack Gillum contributed from Washington.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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Defense: Stanford’s empire “wasn’t a fraud” (AP)

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Published on: January 27, 2012

HOUSTON ? Texas financier R. Allen Stanford’s financial empire was real, his attorney says, and not, as prosecutors contend, built on a foundation of lies, theft and bribes as part of an effort to rob investors of more than $7 billion through a vast Ponzi scheme that spanned more than 20 years.

“It wasn’t a fraud. It wasn’t a pie in the sky. It was an investment he hoped would make a real return,” Robert Scardino, one of Stanford’s attorneys, said as he prepared to defend the financier at his fraud trial in Houston federal court.

Prosecutors, who are set to present their first witness Wednesday, contend the financier ruined the dreams of people who deposited money in his Caribbean bank as part of efforts to save for retirement or for their children’s education. Stanford is on trial for 14 counts, including wire and mail fraud.

“He told them lie after lie after lie. He stole from them, taking their hard earned savings so he could live the lavish lifestyle of a billionaire,” federal prosecutor Gregg Costa told jurors Tuesday during his opening statement in Stanford’s trial.

Stanford faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. The 61-year-old is expected to testify during the trial, which will likely last at least six weeks.

Costa told jurors that Stanford’s business empire was built on a scheme centered on sales of certificates of deposit from a bank Stanford owned on the Caribbean island of Antigua, which promised substantially higher rates of return on the CDs than U.S. banks and promised investors their money was safe.

The prosecutor said Stanford instead sank investors’ money in a variety of his own businesses, including two airlines, and that many of these businesses failed. Costa also accused Stanford of using up to $2 billion of investors’ money as personal loans to buy homes and yachts and fund cricket matches.

“He treated depositors’ savings like it was his own personal piggy bank,” he told the jury.

Once considered one of the United States’ wealthiest people, with an estimated net worth of more than $2 billion, Stanford became so prominent in his adopted country of Antigua, where he took on dual citizenship, that he was knighted by the Caribbean island’s government and became known as “Sir Allen.” His financial empire spanned the U.S., the Caribbean and Latin America.

Stanford’s business empire was run through the Houston-based Stanford Financial Group, but at its heart was Antiguan-based Stanford International Bank.

Prosecutors say Stanford used money from the sale of the CDs, which were sold to clients from more than 100 countries, to pay off those purchased earlier once they matured and to support his other businesses.

Costa said more than $300 million of depositors’ savings was funneled to two airlines Stanford ran in the Caribbean, $20 million to an entity whose purpose was to pay expenses related to Stanford’s yacht and $37 million to a company whose purpose was to promote cricket tournaments in which Stanford gave out million-dollar prizes.

The prosecutor said Stanford and three former executives at his companies covered up their misdeeds by fabricating the bank’s records and bribing Antiguan regulators and auditors with more than $3 million and with perks such as Super Bowl tickets.

Stanford’s scheme fell apart in 2008 when his bank was running out of money and investors couldn’t be paid back, Costa said.

But Scardino told jurors the financier was a clever businessman who for 22 years paid investors every penny he promised them. Scardino said Stanford didn’t need to steal depositors’ money and use it as personal loans.

Scardino suggested that the ex-chief financial officer for Stanford’s company, James Davis, is the real culprit behind the financial fraud alleged by prosecutors. Davis has pleaded guilty and is expected to testify on behalf of prosecutors during the trial.

Scardino said Stanford had been paying back his investors but that stopped when authorities seized his companies and began selling them off.

Stanford has been in jail since his arrest 2 1/2 years ago. His trial was delayed after he was declared incompetent due to an addiction he developed in jail to an anti-anxiety drug and he underwent treatment. He was also evaluated for any long-term effects from being injured in a September 2009 jail fight. Stanford was declared fit for trial last month.

Once Antigua’s richest citizen, primary banker and its largest private employer, Stanford had his assets seized and now has court-appointed attorneys.

The three other indicted former executives are to be tried in June. A former Antiguan financial regulator was also indicted, and he awaits extradition to the U.S.

Stanford and the former executives are also fighting a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit filed in Dallas that makes similar allegations.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_re_us/us_stanford_trial

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Google?s Motorola seeks an injunction against the iPhone 4S and iCloud

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Published on: January 27, 2012

Motorola has filed an injunction against Apple, claiming the iPhone 4S and iCloud infringe on six different patents. The six patents included in the suit are:



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/YUoqybFODwA/story01.htm

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Nation’s oldest federal judge dies at age 104 (AP)

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WICHITA, Kan. ? As the nation’s oldest sitting federal judge in history, U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown allowed himself few concessions to his advancing age as he insisted on presiding over significant and often complex cases right up until his death at 104.

Brown died Monday night at the Wichita assisted living center where he lived, his law clerk, Nanette Turner Kalcik, said Tuesday.

During his long tenure, the senior judge in Wichita repeatedly tried to explain why he had not yet fully retired from the federal bench.

“As a federal judge, I was appointed for life or good behavior, whichever I lose first,” Brown quipped in a 2011 interview with The Associated Press. How did he plan to leave the post? “Feet first,” Brown said.

He came to work at the federal courthouse every day until about a month ago when his health deteriorated, U.S. District Judge J. Thomas Marten said. Undeterred, the ailing Brown then had his law clerks bring work to the hospital and later to the assisted living center while he recuperated. His law clerks were with him virtually non-stop, taking turns to be there except at night during the past few weeks.

Brown was appointed as a federal district judge in 1962 by then-President John F. Kennedy.

“When Judge Brown spoke, we listened because_ while nobody has seen it all ? he certainly came closer to it than anybody I have ever known,” Marten said. “And his message was always the same: remember who you are and what your job is.”

In 1979, Brown officially took senior status, a type of semiretirement that allows federal judges to work with a full or reduced case level. He continued to carry a full workload for decades.

“I do it to be a public service,” Brown said in the AP interview. “You got to have a reason to live. As long as you perform a public service, you have a reason to live.”

His long tenure on the federal bench surpasses even that of Joseph Woodrough, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit who, until Brown, had been the longest practicing judge in the federal judiciary when he died in 1977 shortly after turning 104.

“Judge Brown always said he hoped he would be remembered as a good judge, not just an old judge ? and I think it was a sincere concern of his,” U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren said.

As a federal judge, Brown could have retired at full salary, but he never had a real interest in that, Melgren said.

“He frequently encouraged ? or, you know, frankly even admonished us ? to remember that our duty as judges was to take the responsibility for the administration of justice in our courtrooms and collectively in our district court,” Melgren said. “He was very committed to it.”

Brown’s stooped frame nearly disappeared behind the federal bench during hearings. His gait was slower, but his mind remained sharp as he presided over a tightly run courtroom even after turning 104 last June.

Brown removed himself from the draw for assignment of new criminal cases in March, and by the time he died he was no longer presiding over hearings. He kept an active civil caseload, but during the last months of his life referred evidentiary hearings on his remaining civil to magistrate judges for their recommendations before making a decision.

“I will quit this job when I think it is time,” Brown said last year. “And I hope I do so and leave the country in better shape because I have been a part of it.”

Another of his law clerks, Michael Lahey, said he took a turn for the worse just a week before his death.

“He finally wore out,” Lahey said. “He maintained his abilities right up to the end.”

Among the cases he was still handling when he died is a constitutional challenge to a new Kansas law restricting insurance coverage for abortions. He also was presiding at the time over a multi-defendant lawsuit filed by Omaha-based Northern Natural Gas Co. in its bid to condemn more than 9,100 acres in south-central Kansas to contain gas migrating from an underground storage facility.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Brent Anderson has practiced law in Brown’s courtroom for 20 years as a federal prosecutor and for more than seven years before that as a private attorney.

“Judge Brown ran his courtroom in a firm and fair manner so you knew when you were going into Judge Brown’s courtroom you had better know the rules and you had better follow the rules,” Anderson said. “On the other hand, there was no more compassionate judge than Judge Brown.”

Anderson recalled an incident that occurred when Brown was about 98. A cell phone started ringing in the courtroom ? twice. Nervous lawyers pulled out their cell phones to make sure they were turned off. Then, while sorting through some paperwork on the bench, the judge realized it was his own cell phone that had gone off.

“He immediately fined himself $100 and held himself in contempt and said, `I guess I learned my lesson,’” Anderson recalled.

Brown ? who was born on June 22, 1907, in Hutchinson, Kansas ? was six years older than the next oldest sitting federal judge. At least eight other federal judges are in their 90s, according to a federal court database.

Brown started his career with the law firm of Williams, Martindell and Carey in Hutchinson. He graduated from the Kansas City School of Law, which later became the law school for the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Except for two brief breaks from the firm ? one at age 27 when he was elected Reno County attorney and the other at age 37 when he joined the Navy ? Brown spent his Hutchinson career practicing law there. In 1939, he became a partner.

He moved to Wichita at age 50 after receiving his first federal appointment as a bankruptcy judge in 1958. Four years later, he was appointed a federal district judge.

He outlived two wives and only moved into an assisted living center in recent years.

“His impact is more than he lived to be 104,” Melgren said. “He was a model for us for how we are to conduct ourselves as judges.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_brown

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Hollywood’s ‘startling’ behind-the-scenes gender gap: By the numbers (The Week)

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Published on: January 27, 2012

New York ? Only 5 percent of movie directors in 2011 were women ? a steep decline from 1998′s already-paltry 9 percent figure

When the breakout success last year of Bridesmaids proved once and for all that women are commercially viable stars, movie industry insiders began heralding a new era for Hollywood actresses. But behind the scenes, the Hollywood gender gap is as prevalent as ever. According to a new report by the San Diego State University Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film, of all the directors, producers, writers, cinematographers, and editors working on the top 250 highest-grossing movies last year, a scant 18 percent were women. Here, a numerical look at how Hollywood’s “startling” women problem breaks down:

18
Percent of behind-the-scenes Hollywood jobs held by women last year. Considering that women make up 51 percent of the American population, this gap “impoverishes our culture,” Martha M. Lauzen, the study’s author, tells The Wrap.

SEE ALSO: Megan Fox’s ‘bizarre’ Brazilian language school ad

?

17
Percent of?behind-the-scenes Hollywood jobs held by women in 1998, the first year the center began compiling data

5
Percent of last year’s films directed by women

SEE ALSO: Petty controversy: Did The Artist ‘rape’ Vertigo by stealing its music?

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9
Percent of films directed by women in 1998

13.4
Percent of the Directors Guild of America comprised of women

SEE ALSO: 4 reasons critics hate Rob Schneider’s new sitcom

?

38
Percent of films last year that either employed no women, or only one, in the roles of director, producer, writer, cinematographer, or editor. “Women were most likely to work in the documentary, drama, and comedy genres,” says Rebecca Ford at The Hollywood Reporter. The least likely genres: Horror, action, and animated.

4
Percent of last year’s cinematographers who were women

SEE ALSO: 30 Rock finally returns: 4 talking points

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14
Percent of writers who were women

18
Percent of executive producers who were women

2:1
Ratio of men to women on screen in the top 100 box office films of 2009, according to a 2011 study from the USC Annenberg School of Communication

SEE ALSO: CBS This Morning‘s first episode: A ‘snooze’?

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48
Percent of characters in last year’s female-directed films who were women

33
Percent of characters in last year’s male-directed films who were women. “The mirror that Hollywood holds up to culture reflects back a distorted image,” says Carrie Rickey at Truthdig.

SEE ALSO: Haywire: Finally, a believable female action star?

?

4
Women who have ever received Academy Award nominations for Best Director

1
Woman who has ever won that Oscar: Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker in 2010

SEE ALSO: 6 ‘ridiculous’ reasons moviegoers asked for their money back

?

413
Best Director nominees in Oscar history

$665.7 million
Worldwide box office haul for Kung Fu Panda 2, the highest-grossing film directed by a woman (Jennifer Yuh Nelson), eclipsing Phyllida Lloyd’s $609.8 million tally for 2008′s Mamma Mia!

SEE ALSO: Who will Ricky Gervais insult at the Golden Globes? 7 likely targets

?

Sources: Box Office Mojo, Entertainment Weekly, Hollywood Reporter, LA Times, SDSU, TIME, Truthdig, Wikipedia, Wrap

View this article on TheWeek.com
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    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20120126/cm_theweek/223694

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    Discrimination complaints hit all-time high

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    Published on: January 26, 2012

    By Allison Linn

    The government received more complaints of worker discrimination its last fiscal year than ever before, but it was only a slight increase over 2010.

    The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Tuesday that it received 99,947 complaints of worker discrimination during its 2011 fiscal year, which ended in September. That?s an increase of 25 complaints over the 2010 fiscal year.

    Discrimination complaints surged in the 2008 fiscal year, when the agency received 95,402 complaints as the Great Recession was getting under way. They number of complaints fell somewhat in 2009, the year the recession officially ended, but they rose again in 2010 as the economy was?recovering slowly.

    Justine Lisser, a spokeswoman for the EEOC, said the agency can?t?say for certain that the weak job market has caused the spike in complaints, although there may be a correlation.

    The unemployment rate remains unusually high, at 8.5 percent, more than two years after the recession officially ended and the economy began?growing again.

    Lisser also noted the agency has been working harder to inform employees and employers about its claims process, and?has made it easier to research claims criteria on its website.

    In 2011, about 35 percent of the workers complained of race discrimination, according to the EEOC. Gender discrimination accounted for about 29 percent of the complaints, while age discrimination complaints made up about 24 percent.

    About 26 percent charged employers with discriminating on the basis of a disability.

    Many people charge more than one form of discrimination, so the percentages exceed 100 percent.

    The government also said it resolved 112,499 complaints in fiscal year 2011. About 18 percent of those claims received a ?merit resolution,? meaning the person received some sort of settlement.

    About two-thirds of those were found to have no reasonable cause for auction. Another 16 percent were closed for administrative reasons, such as that the person who charged discrimination didn?t respond to further requests from the EEOC.

    Related:

    Age bias complaints surge in weak economy

    Do you think employee discrimination has become more commonplace since the recession began?

    Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/24/10225036-discrimination-complaints-reach-all-time-high

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    5 things not in the State of the Union (Politico)

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    Published on: January 26, 2012

    What gets into a State of Union matters. What doesn?t matters too ? sometimes just as much.

    President Barack Obama embraced his base Tuesday night by affirming his commitment to Israel, clean energy, economic equality and immigration. He also placated his supporters by avoiding a few sensitive subjects.

    Continue Reading

    Here?s POLITICO?s list of the top 5 things that didn?t make Tuesday?s State of the Union.

    Israeli-Palestinian Peace Negotiations

    Obama took time out to talk about Israel ? key for securing Jewish support in November.

    ?Our iron-clad ? and I mean iron-clad ? commitment to Israel?s security has meant the closest cooperation between our two countries in history,? Obama said, adding the second ?iron-clad? to the prepared version of the speech. He?s also likely to get applause for the tough line he took against Iran over its nuclear program.

    But Obama avoided any mention of peace negotiations ? and of the trouble he faced for his unsuccessful effort to jump-start them.

    Since Palestinians formally applied for statehood at the United Nations in September, despite pleas from the U.S. not to do so, Obama could have addressed the topic this year. He did in his 2009 message to Congress, when he referred to the special envoy appointment of former Sen. George Mitchell, who ultimately resigned last May.

    Obama did pay tribute to the Arab Spring democracy movement, welcoming the demise of Libya?s Muammar Qadhafi and warning that Syria?s Bashir Assad?s government ?will soon discover that the forces of change can?t be reversed.? But he left discussions of the negotiations over the region?s thorniest problem to another day.

    Keystone XL Pipeline

    Obama?s speech Tuesday night was chock-a-block with mentions of energy ? 23 in all. Not one of them was about the major decision he made just last week to reject ? at least for now ? plans to build a massive, 1700-mile long pipeline to carry oil sands from Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

    The Keystone project pits two major Democratic constituencies ? environmentalists and labor ? against one another. Greens oppose the pipeline not just because of the acquifer issue, but because processing and burning the oil sands has a heavy greenhouse gas impact. Unions are eager for the thousands of jobs involved in constructing it. Obama chose to incite neither.

    But Republicans wouldn?t let the night go by without mentioning it. The party views the pipeline rejection as a perfect example of Obama?s unwillingness to make job creation a priority. In the official GOP response to the president?s speech, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels warned against ?the extremism that?cancels a perfectly safe pipeline that would employ tens of thousands.?

    Anti-piracy legislation

    The showdown over the Stop Online Privacy Act and the Protect Intellectual Property Act consumed both chambers of Congress last week. But there wasn?t a peep about it from the president?s podium Tuesday night.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories0112_71935_html/44296058/SIG=11mo6bolb/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/0112/71935.html

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    La Scala projects tough finances in 2012

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    Published on: January 26, 2012

    (AP) ? La Scala general manager Stephane Lissner’s first goal when he arrived at the renowned opera house in 2005 was to balance the budget, which he did that year and every year since. This year could be different, he warned Tuesday.

    Lissner expects a drop in both public and private contributions will hurt the balance sheet, even as it increases attendance and the number of performances.

    “It will be difficult to balance the budget in 2012,” Lissner told foreign reporters. “We are facing a moment of great difficulty.”

    Despite the crisis, the number of subscriptions increased 7 percent this season to 17,400, and in another sign of success, the Milan opera house hit its all-time record box office for a single performance: euro281,154 ($365,584) for “Death in Venice” on March 19. The nightly box office usually runs around euro250,000, depending on the performance.

    La Scala will stage 253 performances this year, including 21 on tour, up from around 180 total in 2004.

    While Lissner has welcomed signs of support from the new government of Premier Mario Monti, he bemoans a relative lack of state support for Italian cultural institutions, compared with other European countries, emphasizing La Scala’s role as a public theater and the importance of such outlets, especially in times of crisis.

    “The more things are difficult, and the more they go badly, the more the public wants to go to the cinema and to the theater,” Lissner said. “They don’t only need a distraction. They need above all to be together, under the same roof, in the same theater, to share something together.”

    La Scala’s budget for 2012 is euro110 million ($150.8 million), down slightly from 2011. Of that, 40 percent comes from national, regional, provincial and city administrations combined, and 60 percent from private donors, ticket sales and sponsorships.

    Lissner compared that with the Paris Opera, which he said received more than 60 percent state support, and the Vienna State Opera, which is around 55 percent state-funded.

    Lissner took it as “a strong signal of support” the fact that both the head of state, President Giorgio Napolitano, and the head of government, Premier Monti, attended the gala premiere of La Scala on Dec. 7, the first time both of the nation’s top officials attended La Scala’s opening night in some 15 years.

    But he also said he hoped that support to cultural institutions will not be cut, and that the government will look upon culture as something as necessary “as health or research.”

    “It is difficult, but it would be wrong to sacrifice culture,” Lissner said, then adding: “There is not much more to sacrifice.”

    When Lissner arrived from France, where among other things he had been directing the international opera festival in Aix-en-Provence, La Scala had closed the previous year with an euro8 million shortfall, and the management was in shambles following a very public dispute between his predecessor and the music director, Riccardo Muti, who left La Scala in acrimony over artistic and programming differences.

    Lissner said he decided to be both general manager and artistic director to help the opera house transition out of the crisis, but the Anglo-Saxon world in particular questioned whether La Scala needed to have more balance in its management. Last fall, Lissner succeeded in persuading Daniel Barenboim to take the position of musical director, after five years as chief guest conductor, a sign of renewed stability at La Scala.

    The orchestra at the end of 2005 had asked Lissner to persuade Barenboim to take the post after the Argentine-born conductor performed Beethoven’s “Ninth Symphony,” he recalled.

    But Barenboim had too many commitments outside of Italy to accept, and Lissner said he had to wage battle to get Barenboim to conduct the gala opening of Wagner’s “Tristan and Isolde” in 2008, another success.

    “Maybe I am not very good. It took five years to convince Daniel Barenboim to become musical director, until the day he said yes instead of no,” Lissner said. “Why? Because I think he truly discovered this theater, which grabs you, if you are a human being with an open heart and sensitivity.”

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-24-EU-Italy-La-Scala/id-52e45c4a6f6f4da0820dcd0aef47fcd7

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