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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Valentine's Day Gift Ideas

Valentine's

NEW YORK - Valentine's Day is a week away, and if you're thinking of getting your special someone some chocolate - who isn't?! - why not get a little creative and think outside the proverbial - and actual box?

On "The Early Show" Monday, Kimberly Kennedy, author of "The Art and Craft of Entertaining," pointed to a variety of ways you can make your gift special and outside the norm:

Of course, a box of chocolates is nice, but there are so many new/fun options out there today. Why limit yourself?

A  GIRAFFE!.

It's so much more fun when it's cleverly packaged. The truffles are actually hidden inside. The ones on the set were from Teuscher , on Madison Avenue in Manhattan. When you think of some of the world's best chocolate, you think of them, and this is such a fun take on truffles. Also, the great thing about these boutique chocolatiers is most of them have an online presence now.

ANOTHER PACKAGING IDEA THAT'S KIND OF COMING BACK IN STYLE IS THE BAR

The bars on the set were by Olive Sinclair, and from Tennessee. It's a beans-to-bar company, which means they source, roast and grind their own beans in house.

Their most unique flavor was actually an accident, and it's called salt and pepper. But it was so tasty, they started selling it!

A NEW TREND: CHOCOLATES WITH CRAZY FLAVORS

Savory chocolates are everywhere right now, whether it's salt or spices or heat. And one of the craziest I've seen is chocolate with bacon inside. Yes, bacon! Bacon's having a moment right now, so it's the perfect time to give it as a gift. The one on the show was from Vosges. It's a little pricey at $69, but it comes with many concepts: shapes, packaging, flavors. Also - pancakes!

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Forget the classic combo of fruit and chocolate. Everyone thinks of chocolate-covered strawberries, like these from Godiva. But Godiva also has some new skewers with strawberries and bananas and cute little berry boats, which look like tarts, but are all chocolate and fruit.\

STRAWBERRIES, AND CHAMPAGNE

On the set was a sparkling rose by Banfi, called Rosa Regali, and it's actually meant for being enjoyed with chocolate. It transforms the flavor. On the show was some from a local chocolatier in Atlanta, called Sugar Coated Radical, but I recommend doing this wherever you live. I found a woman who makes everything hand-rolled, and a lot of it is seasonal with unique ingredients, like pepper. And for the tasting, you'd get an assorted box and break them up or group them just like you'd do with cheese pieces.

YOU DON'T HAVE TO SPEND A LOT OF MONEY TO HAVE FUN WITH CHOCOLATE ON V-DAY
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I brought along an example of a fun craft for adults and kids. All you need it paper and Hershey chocolate and you can create your own fancy-looking valentine. It's also a great way to get kids more involved in the valentines they give out at school.

ANOTHER CUTE, QUICK INEXPENSIVE WAY TO CELEBRATE VALENTINE'S DAY IS TO CREATE A VALENTINE'S DAY BUFFET

All you need is one trip to the grocery store to buy whatever candy you like. And then you can fill up jars or vases bowls or whatever with candy, and also create cute small trays that turn everyday drugstore candy into a really cute decoration for parties or just to have out during the holiday.

Source: cbsnews.com

Monday, February 7, 2011

World's oldest woman died of 115 years age


She buried three husbands and her only son, and now it's her turn. Eunice Sanborn The U.S. has taken in stride their way through life. No hurry to checking whether there is another. According to her family, the world's oldest woman died yesterday at six o'clock local time in the Texas town of Jacksonville. The Gerontology Research Centre from Los Angeles, who has an account of the 'supercentenarians' the planet, has registered her birth on July 20, 1896 in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Therefore would have lived 114 years, 6 months and 12 days. Average life and an ordinary mortal mill, which allowed him to witness two changes of the century. Her aides argue that she was still a year older. Not to take off years, but the U.S. Census Bureau mistakenly scored 1896 in the box of birth, where should have written 1895. Eunice over from the head of global survivors now takes another American, Bessie Cooper, born in Georgia on August 26, 1896.
Source: allvoices.com

Ousting Mubarak: The constitutional battle

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Photographed by Al-Masry Al-Youm
As Egyptian protesters continue to insist that President Hosni Mubarak resign, legal experts say his remaining in power might be crucial to introduce urgent pro-democratic constitutional amendments.
“If he resigns, the situation will be dangerous because we will have a constitutional vacuum, which means that we will have no chance to amend the Constitution,” says Ibrahim Darwish, professor of constitutional law at Cairo University.
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Under the Constitution, if the president resigns, he should be replaced by the head of the People’s Assembly or the justice of the Supreme Constitutional Court. Neither is entitled to amend the Constitution. The president’s substitute must also call for early presidential elections within 60 days, explains Darwish.

“In this case, the elections will be held in light of Article 76, which is a real catastrophe,” adds Darwish. “This article makes it impossible for anyone but Mubarak and his son to run for president.”

In 2005, Mubarak amended Article 76 to introduce multi-party presidential elections and put an end to a decades-old presidential referendum. Yet the changes imposed tremendous restrictions that the opposition saw as an an attempt to thwart the candidacy of any presidential hopeful who does not come from within Mubarak’s ruling National Democratic Party.

The current article stipulates that an independent presidential nominee must garner the support of at least 250 elected members of the parliament’s lower and upper houses as well as municipal councils. Reaching such a number is next to impossible for a non-NDP candidate, since the ruling party continues to boast a sweeping majority in all legislative bodies.

As for political parties, they are entitled to field candidates as long as they have been founded at least five consecutive years before the starting date of candidature and have been operating uninterruptedly for this period. Eligible parties must have obtained at least at least three percent of the elected members of the parliament’s two chambers in the last election, or an equivalent percentage of such total in one of the two assemblies. None of the existing parties meet these conditions.

As an exception to this provision, Article 76 goes on to say that political parties who have obtained at least one seat in parliament will have the right to field a candidate until 2017. The next presidential elections are set to be held this fall.

Last week, Mubarak announced that he would not run for a sixth term and promised to relax candidacy restrictions without elaborating on details. If Mubarak resigns before easing these limitations, many potential presidents might be excluded from the race, experts contend.

Yet youth-led opposition groups that sparked the uprising refuse to relinquish their demand that Mubarak step down. For 14 days, young cadres have been mobilizing hundreds of thousands of Egyptians behind two main slogans” “Mubarak! Depart!” and “The people want to out the president.”

“The president’s resignation is our primary demand,” says Zyad al-Alemay, a youth leader. “The president can order the amendments and then resign. Or delegate his powers to someone else. This should not take more than 15 minutes.“

To satisfy revolutionaries and at the same time avoid constitutional bumps,  the newly-formed "committee of wise men," which includes a number of independent writers, lawyers and businessmen, has recently suggested that Mubarak remain a nominal leader but delegate all his authorities to his vice, Omar Suleiman, intelligence chief. Despite unprecedented local and international pressure, the army has been reluctant to push Mubarak out, on the grounds that he should be allowed to complete his term.

“The committee is trying to find a way out that would satisfy all parties. This solution would respect the demands of the protesters and preserve the dignity of the president,” says Nasser Amin, director of the Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and Legal Prosecution and a member of the “Wise Men” committee.

In such a case, Suleiman can introduce constitutional amendments, says Amin.

Yet, Darwish dismisses Amin’s suggestions as unconstitutional, referring to Article 82, which stipulates that the vice president has no right to propose constitutional amendments, dissolve the parliament or sack the cabinet.

The only way out is to have the president delegate only his “executive” authorities to his deputy and to pressure the existing People’s Assembly to pass the amendments, says Darwish.

Under the Constitution, the president is not the only agent who can reform the Constitution. At least one third of the People’s Assembly can propose constitutional amendments. 

Nevertheless, all constitutional maneuvers suggested by constitutional experts still fall short of convincing some radical opposition voices that argue that the president should step down immediately and a new Constitution be put in place.

According to Mohamed Farahat, professor of jurisprudence at Zagazig University, the abrogation of the old Constitution is contingent upon the strength of the revolutionaries.

“If protesters are strong enough to dictate their will, the abrogation of the old Constitution and the declaration of a new one can be a good option,” says Farahat. “But if protesters are not strong enough and all they can do is bargain with their regime, they will have to accept amendments introduced by the president to the existing Constitution.” 
The negotiation process between the opposition and the military--represented by Suleiman--has already started. Representatives of different opposition groups, including the official Wafd and Tagammu parties and the banned Muslim Brotherhood, engaged Sunday in the first session of talks with Suleiman. Discussions revolved around the reforms required without delving into the question of Mubarak’s future. 

Such talks were not endorsed by youth-led groups. As Suleiman was meeting with formal opposition groups, young activists held a press conference contending that they would not take part in any negotiations with Suleiman before Mubarak leaves office.

Given the fragmentation of their position, the opposition will most likely settle for constitutional concessions made by the regime rather than abrogate the existing Constitution, according to Farahat. “So far, we are still talking about a protest movement with no leadership. It expresses its rejection of what already exists but does not offer an alternative for what will come in place of that,” says Farahat.

For Darwish, abolishing the existing Constitution would be a dramatic scenario. It could pave the way for full-fledged military rule and abort democratic transition.

“If you touch the Constitution, Egypt will fall apart,” says Darwish. “The army will find a pretext to monopolize power and abrogate the Constitution altogether."

“If this happens, we will go back to July 1952,” he warns.

A few months after the 1952 coup d’etat, the military abrogated the 1923 constitution, promising to establish a more democratic order.  Yet these promises were never delivered. All powers became concentrated in the hands of the military junta.

If the same scenario is repeated, “the whole state will collapse, we will have transfer of power, no democracy and we will be ruled by the Emergency Law,“ says Darwish.

For historian Sherif Younis, fears of the army monopolizing power along the lines of the 1952 coup d’etat seem unjustified, however.

“The 1952 scenario was very exceptional. The coup d’etat was not led by the army but by a political faction within the army known as the Free Officers. These officers hijacked the state as well as the military,” explains Younis, history professor at Helwan University.

In today’s situation, according to Younis,  the military has been summoned by the conflicting parties to act as an arbitrator and maintain stability. If the army is to assume a greater political role, it will have to negotiate with the forces behind the democratic uprising.

“The army needs to ally itself with a civil entity that would represent this revolutionary legitimacy,” says Younis.

Reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei has also called for the army to secure the democratic transition along with civilian forces, arguing that the new Constitution should derive its legitimacy from the ongoing uprising.      

Following bloody clashes between riot police and protesters, Mubarak called on the military to intervene and preserve public order on 28 January. Since then, senior military representatives have come to the fore to negotiate reform demands with the opposition.
source:almasryalyoum.com

X-47B UCAS Demonstrator Makes First Flight

X-47B

X-47B successfully completed its maiden flight on 4 February.

US Navy/Northrop Grumman team move closer to carrier trials

05:25 GMT, February 7, 2011 defpro.com | The US Navy is one large step closer to introducing its first carrier-based unmanned combat aircraft. On Friday, 4 February, the Northrop Grumman-built X-47B successfully completed its first flight at Edwards Air Force Base, California. The X-47B is an unmanned combat air system (UCAS) technology demonstrator designed as a stealthy long-range reconnaissance and strike aircraft.

According to Northrop Grumman, the tailless, delta-shaped aircraft took off at 2:09 pm PST and performed a 29-minute maiden flight above Rogers Dry Lake. This flight was an important milestone to prove the aircraft’s basic aeronautical capabilities and performance. Friday’s successful test flight allows the team to move ahead in the process of demonstrating its technological abilities to develop an operational fighter-sized unmanned aircraft that can safely operate from a US Navy aircraft carrier.

Janis Pamiljans, vice president and UCAS-D program manager for Northrop Grumman's Aerospace Systems sector, confirmed that “designing a tailless, fighter-sized unmanned aircraft from a clean sheet is no small feat.” Indeed, the US Navy and Northrop Grumman face two considerable challenges: having to integrate an unmanned combat aircraft into routine carrier operations, as well as solving the problem of landing a tailless aircraft on a carrier – with many firsts still to come when carrier trials begin in 2013.

Northrop Grumman was selected as the US Navy’s UCAS-D prime contractor in August 2007 when it was assigned to develop two X-47B demonstrators. The first prototype X-47B was rolled-out in December 2008. The X-47B’s maiden flight represents the “culmination, verification and certification” of the rather theoretical work, which since was carried out by the UCAS-D team. Northrop Grumman explains, “the aircraft will remain at Edwards AFB for flight envelope expansion before transitioning to Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md. later this year.” The latter will witness the programmes next major milestones, preparing the aircraft for demanding naval operations. However, Friday’s first flight marks the beginning of a year-long envelope expansion test programme at Edwards AFB.

After having completed all trials, the technology demonstrator is expected to result in the development of a prototype of a production vehicle, which may then become part of the US Navy’s future carrier-based aircraft fleet. Similar in size to an F/A-18, it is designed to support manned combat aircraft or to carry out reconnaissance and strike missions that might be too dangerous for manned fighters. It will feature a twin weapons bay which opens under its flat belly with a capacity to carry a 4,500lb payload.

Major partners on Northrop Grumman's industry team include GKN Aerospace (substructure and skins), Lockheed Martin (control surfaces, leading edges, engine inlet) and Pratt & Whitney (F100 engine), as well as Eaton, GE, Hamilton Sundstrand, Dell, Honeywell, Goodrich, Moog, Wind River, Parker Aerospace and Rockwell Collins. (nvk)

Top News Photos | Sit and Lie Inside the Tracks of Egyptian Army Tanks

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Top News Photos - An Egyptian army soldier reads a newspaper inside an armored vehicle in Tahrir Square, the center of anti-government demonstrations, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011. Egypt's vice president met a broad representation of major opposition groups for the first time Sunday and agreed to allow freedom of the press and to release those detained since anti-government protests began, though Al-Jazeera's English-language news network said one of its correspondents had been detained the same day by the Egyptian military.

Top News Photos - Anti-government protesters sit and lie inside the tracks of Egyptian Army tanks, both to prevent them from moving and to shield themselves from the rain, at the protest site opposite the Egyptian Museum near Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo, Egypt Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011. Egypt's vice president met a broad representation of major opposition groups for the first time Sunday and agreed to allow freedom of the press and to release those detained since anti-government protests began, though Al-Jazeera's English-language news network said one of its correspondents had been detained the same day by the Egyptian military.-Top News Photos-

Top News Photos - An anti-government protester takes a rest inside a burnt out vehicle near Tahrir Square, the center of anti-government demonstrations, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011. Egypt's vice president met a broad representation of major opposition groups for the first time Sunday and agreed to allow freedom of the press and to release those detained since anti-government protests began, though Al-Jazeera's English-language news network said one of its correspondents had been detained the same day by the Egyptian military.

source : daylife.com , apimages.com

Top News Photos | Black Eyed Peas: Super Bowl Halftime Show!

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Top News Photos - The Black Eyed Peas rock Cowboys Stadium during the Super Bowl Halftime show on Sunday (February 6) in Arlington, Texas.
The group was joined by hundreds of dancers in suits covered in lights, which created designs all across the field!
The show started off with “I Got a Feeling” before Fergie was joined by Slash to perform Guns N’ Roses‘ “Sweet Child O’ Mine.” Next, Usher joined will.i.am onstage for “O.M.G.”
The BEP finished off the show with “Where is the Love” and “The Time (Dirty Bit).”
FYI: Fergie is wearing over $2 million worth of Harry Winston diamonds!-Top News Photos-

source: justjared.buzznet.com

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Top News Photos | Christina Aguilera Sings The National Anthem At Super Bowl XLV







Top News Photos | Christina Aguilera Sings The National Anthem At Super Bowl XLV
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Top News Photos - As football fans gathered on Sunday night (February 6) to watch the match-up between the

Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers at Super Bowl XLV, Christina Aguilera took to the stage to

perform the national anthem. Moments earlier, "Glee" star Lea Michele performed "America the Beautiful"
before kickoff in chilly Dallas.
Top News Photos - Wearing her hair down and donning a black suit, Aguilera belted out the song as both the Terrible Towels and Cheese Heads counted down the moments until kickoff began. The Grammy winner got the crowd hyped as she hit the crescendos of the song, while celebrities and players looked on, many of the players nervously looking to the sky or holding back tears as they prepared to take the field.
Although her voice never wavered as she paid tribute to the country in song, Aguilera did briefly flub the
lyrics, but she handled it like a pro, rendering the mistake barely noticeable. Aguilera grew up outside of Pittsburgh and is presumably a Steelers fan. "I have been performing the anthem
since I was 7 years old and I must say the Super Bowl is a dream come true," Aguilera said recently. "I am
really excited to be part of such an iconic event." Top News Photos - http://topnewsphotos.blogspot.com/

Source : mtv.com

Top News Photos | Captain America Trailer

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Topnewsphotos.blogspot.com

Studio   : Paramount Pictures
Release  July 22, 2011
Director : Joe Johnston
Writer    : Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely, Richard LaGravenese, Michael Petroni
Cast: Chris Evans, Hayley Atwell, Hugo Weaving, Sebastian Stan, Toby Jones, Samuel L. Jackson, Dominic Cooper, Tommy Lee Jones, Stanley Tucci, Neal McDonough
Genre    : Action, Adventure