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2010年12月1日星期三

US deploys 'game-changer' weapon to Afghanistan

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – It looks and acts like something best left in the hands of Sylvester Stallone's "Rambo," but this latest dream weapon is real -- and the US Army sees it becoming the Taliban's worst nightmare.
The Pentagon has rolled out prototypes of its first-ever programmable "smart" grenade launcher, a shoulder-fired weapon that uses microchipped ammunition to target and kill the enemy, even when the enemy is hidden behind walls or other cover.

After years of development, the XM25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement System, about the size of a regular rifle, has now been deployed to US units on the battlefields of Afghanistan, where the Army expects it to be a "game-changer" in its counterinsurgency operations. "For well over a week, it's been actively on patrols, and in various combat outposts in areas that are hot," said Lieutenant Colonel Chris Lehner, program manager for the XM25.
The gun's stats are formidable: it fires 25mm air-bursting shells up to 2,300 feet (700 meters), well past the range of most rifles used by today's soldiers, and programs them to explode at a precise distance, allowing troops to neutralize insurgents hiding behind walls, rocks or trenches or inside buildings.
[With Afghan control by 2014, Obama sees combat end]
"This is the first time we're putting smart technology into the hands of the individual soldier," Lehner told AFP in a telephone interview.
"It's giving them the edge," he said, in the harsh Afghan landscape where Islamist extremists have vexed US troops using centuries-old techniques of popping up from behind cover to engage.
"You get behind something when someone is shooting at you, and that sort of cover has protected people for thousands of years," Lehner said.
"Now we're taking that away from the enemy forever."
PEO Soldier says studies show the XM25 is 300 percent more effective than current weapons at the squad level.
The revolutionary advance involves an array of sights, sensors and lasers that reads the distance to the target, assesses elements such as air pressure, temperature, and ballistics and then sends that data to the microchip embedded in the XM25 shell before it is launched.
Previous grenade launchers needed to arc their shells over cover and land near the target to be effective.
[U.S.: Special forces operations down by half in Iraq]
"It takes out a lot of the variables that soldiers have to contemplate and even guess at," Lehner said.
If, for example, an enemy combatant pops up from behind a wall to fire at US troops and then ducks behind it, an XM25 gunner can aim the laser range finder at the top of the wall, then program the shell to detonate one meter beyond it, showering lethal fragmentation where the insurgent is seeking cover.
Use of the XM25 can slash civilian deaths and damage, the Army argues, because its pinpointed firepower offers far less risk than larger mortars or air strikes.
The result, the Army says, is "very limited collateral damage."
The Pentagon plans to purchase at least 12,500 of the guns -- at a price tag of 25,000 to 30,000 dollars each -- beginning next year, enough for one in each Infantry squad and Special Forces team.
Lehner said the XM25 was special in that it requires comparatively little training, because the high-powered technology does so much of the work.
"This system is turning soldiers with average shooting skills into those with phenomenal shooting skills," he said.


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What If Hugh Jackman Had Been Jack Sparrow?

We're trying to picture him with a bandanna. Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Worldwide Orphans Foundation There was a time when Johnny Depp wasn't a superstar. He's been a star and a respected actor for quite some time, but it wasn't until he donned a bandanna and put on eyeliner to play the colorful Captain Jack Sparrow in "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl" in 2003 that he graduated to the level of a Will Smith or Tom Cruise. Well, it turns out that if things had worked out differently, Depp would never have gotten the opportunity. If one of the film's writers had had his way, the part would have gone to Hugh Jackman.
Johnny Depp gushes over new costar >>
Speaking at the Advance Lounge Chair series this week, Stuart Beattie (who is credited as one of the "Story By" writers for "Black Pearl") said, "I initially wrote that character with Hugh Jackman in mind." Just how committed was he to the idea of casting Jackman? He named the character Jack in his honor. But according to Beattie, Disney didn't think Jackman was a big enough star, eventually going with Depp, who at the point had only had one $100 million movie to his credit: "Sleepy Hollow."
Blockbuster role Matt Damon regrets turning down >>
Whenever a film becomes enormously successful and launches a lucrative franchise, there will be that inevitable moment down the road when we learn who was originally meant to play the characters we've come to know and love. (Honestly, how many paragraphs into Tom Selleck's obituary will it take before they mention that he was almost Indiana Jones?) Usually, people tend to favor the actor who ended up getting the part because that person is so ingrained in our consciousness as that character. But in the case of Jackman, we actually think it could have worked with him in the role. As he's demonstrated in the "X-Men" series, he has the right combination of brawn, swagger and humor that would have served him well as Captain Jack.
But whereas in earlier cases of an actor getting passed over for a big role -- like Eric Stoltz in "Back to the Future" -- we don't need to feel sad for Jackman or lament the glorious career he could have had. Jackman's doing just fine: He's busy currently working on "Wolverine" with "Black Swan" director Darren Aronofsky and is a Tony-winning Broadway actor. (Ironically, one of his biggest duds was "Australia," which was co-written by Beattie.)
Photos: The striking style of Johnny Depp >>
As for Depp, Captain Jack will probably end up being his signature role, for better or worse. Genuinely funny and compellingly larger-than-life in a way that movie stars rarely are anymore in blockbuster films, Depp helped make the first "Pirates of the Caribbean" as supremely entertaining as it was. (Amazingly, it was that role that finally earned him his first Oscar nomination after a decade of underappreciated work in everything from "Ed Wood" to "Donnie Brasco." Not bad for a performance that Depp recently said the Disney bigwigs initially hated, insisting he was "ruining the movie.") At a time when most A-list stars weren't actually great actors, it was really satisfying to see Johnny Depp become part of Hollywood's upper echelon. Sadly, the subsequent "Pirates" sequels got progressively lamer, and Depp's hammy shtick grew tiresome. In the end, though, both actors arrived at the same place: Depp will forever be linked with Captain Jack, and Jackman shall always be Wolverine. It's the trade-off you have to make to become a superstar. And, really, isn't that better than ending up a cinematic footnote like Tom Selleck?

2010年11月24日星期三

Wozniak Says Sorry, Apple Isn't Buying Nuance, but Shares Jump Anyway See full article from DailyFinance: http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/wozniak-apple-nuance-deal-error/19732061/?icid=sphere_copyrightrade

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak pulled a mea cuppa Tuesday, backpedaling from an earlier statement that Apple (AAPL) was purchasing voice recognition software maker Nuance Communications (NUAN).

But despite proclaiming he was "totally wrong," according to a Reuters report, Nuance's shares jumped as high as 12.2% to a new 52-week high of $19.19 during intraday trading before settling back at the close to end the day at $17.75 a share. Reuters notes that Nuance Communication's shares hit levels not seen in more than two and a half years.


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In pre-market trading Wednesday, the shares continued to gain steam, rising 1.41% to $18 a share.

This time, Woz can't claim he was misquoted. There's a TVDeck.com video showing Woz mentioning an Apple-Nuance merger. Last week, the Woz said in an exclusive Engadget interview that he was misquoted in a Dutch publication as saying Google's (GOOG) Android mobile operating system was better than Apple's iOS.

The Woz isn't shy when it comes to making comments relating to products and services coming out of the iconic company he helped to found. Earlier this year, Woz made an appearance at a California college, where weighed in with his opinions, both positive and negative, on Apple's new toy, the iPad, according to a TechCrunch report.

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2010年11月20日星期六

America's Worst Cities for Finding a Job

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Bad interviews or a lack of experience may not be the reason you can't land a job. Your location may be to blame. If you're seeking employment, consider moving to Washington, San Jose, or New York. Those are the three best places in the nation for finding a job, according to Juju.com.
Juju, a site that aggregates job listings, releases a monthly Job Search Difficulty Index, which measures how tough it is to find employment in 50 major cities around the country. To gauge the level of difficulty, Juju divides the number of unemployed workers in each city, as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, by the number of jobs in their index of millions of online job postings.
[Click here to find an online degree program]
"If you look back to November 2009, the average number of unemployed people per job posting was 6.5. This year it is 3.19," says Juju vice president Brendan Cruickshank. "This indicates that the market has gotten significantly better."
The hiring environment may be improving, but job seekers in cities that rely on unstable industries should know that they may each be competing with six, seven or eight other idle workers for one advertised job. "The cities that have continued to underperform rely on jobs from lagging industries such as manufacturing, tourism and construction," Cruickshank says. "Detroit and Las Vegas have improved from this time last year, but they continue have more unemployed individuals per open job than other large metropolitan areas."
[See Who's Hiring Now: Inquire Within]
Unemployment in Las Vegas is at 15%, almost six points above the national average. There are now nine unemployed individuals for every advertised job in Sin City, making it the nation's hardest place to find a job. Sunbelt cities like Las Vegas dominate the list of the most difficult metro areas for finding a job. Large metropolitan areas like Los Angeles, Miami and New Orleans continue to suffer as their tourism remains weak.
For every job posting in Miami, there are 8.5 unemployed people. Los Angeles and New Orleans have about 6.3 and 4 idle workers per advertised job, respectively.
There is far more hope if you're seeking employment in a city with stronger industries. Washington, D.C., is the best metropolitan area in the U.S. for finding a job, with only one unemployed person per job listing. Unemployment in the nation's capital sits at 5.9%, thanks to its stabilized job market and bounty of government, education and health care related jobs.
Other capital cities do well, too. Seven of the 15 metropolitan areas that are best for finding a job are state capitals.
[See 20 Industries Where Jobs Are Coming Back]
"We are seeing some consistent trends from the cities at the top and bottom of our rankings," Cruickshank says. "The cities that are strong performers have a large concentrations of jobs in industries that have held steady during the economic downturn, such as health care, education and government. State capitals such as Hartford and Austin perform well as a result."

Mike Amerson/istockphoto
1. Las Vegas, Nev.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 8.86






Cristian Lazzari/istockphoto
2. Miami, Fla.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 8.46






David Liu/istockphoto
3. Riverside, Calif.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 7.31






Agnieszka Gaul/istockphoto
4. Detroit, Mich.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 7.05








Eric Hood/istockphoto
5. Los Angeles, Calif.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 6.27







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Contrarians Pour On the Concrete

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Concrete House
Avid fliers who love cars, airplanes, hangars and barns, Shawn and Sherrie Parry are no shrinking violets. "We're both the kind of kids who were described as bulls in a china shop," said Mrs. Parry.
The culmination of their interests, vision and nonconformity is a house that doesn't look anything like the others in this quiet, lakeside neighborhood-or like most other houses, for that matter. Amid tightly spaced Nantucket-style cottages and 1950s ranches sits an 8,000-square-foot conglomeration of concrete, rusted steel and glass geometric shapes.
Slide Show: Inside the Concrete House Inside the 'Slide Show: See More Photos of the Concrete House'
A heavy steel door painted glossy wasabi green swings open to reveal a 75-foot-long bridge suspended 10 feet off the lawn below, creating an inner courtyard. Along one side a few feet away is a wing resembling a railroad car, with rusty burnt orange steel and gray concrete siding. The bridge ends in a door, which opens to another narrow steel bridge, almost a catwalk, overlooking the main room below. That room is mostly bare concrete walls, concrete floors and walls of steel columns and glass windows that look out over a back yard and Lake Washington beyond. Along the ceilings runs exposed pipe that pumps in geothermal heat.
Concrete House

The furniture is sufficiently sparse that the couple's two daughters, 10 and 14, have been allowed to hit tennis balls against the wall in the front hallway and ride scooters along the floors (the scooter has since been banned). An enormous concrete fireplace rises from the floor up to the 24-foot ceiling. Bright red and yellow paintings on wood and canvas break up the one vast white wall.
"It's not for everyone. But it's perfect for us," said Mr. Parry, age 51. A commercial real-estate developer who acted as general contractor, Mr. Parry loves that the house has a view of Renton Municipal Airport, where he and his wife met when she gave him flying lessons. It also has views of Mt. Rainer and the Boeing factory where the couple can see the new 737s emerge.
Posted on design blog contemporist.com, the home attracted praise but also comments like it had "all the warmth of an oil refinery." When the Parrys left a dinner party early one night, noting they had to get up early to meet the concrete truck in the morning, a woman exclaimed "You're pouring more concrete?" Some acquaintances loved it; others asked when the home would be finished long after it was complete.
Some neighbors expressed unhappiness, particularly when 40-ton cranes started erecting 30-foot concrete walls and big pump concrete trucks showed up at 5 a.m. (one neighbor phoned the police, citing a disturbance of the peace).
Concrete House

The couple takes the criticism in stride. "We wanted our house to be strong and a piece of art in itself," Mr. Parry said.
The project's high-profile architect-Tom Kundig of Seattle firm Olson Kundig, known for his steel, concrete and glass homes that expose the guts of their construction-says he's used to what he calls insulting remarks. "This kind of design is scary to some people. It's different. But I still get offended. It's like someone saying you are ugly," he says.
Living in a more traditional house in the suburb of Bellevue, the Parrys purchased the Mercer Island lot for $750,000 in 2001 and tore down its tri-level ranch-style house in 2006. They said they knew exactly the style of house they wanted to build in its place, and mapped out their vision, using words like "strong" and "drama" and taking it to several architects before they worked up the courage to ask for a meeting with Mr. Kundig, whom they considered a rock star out of their league.
Concrete House

The house took a year and cost a little over $200 per square foot to build, considerably less time and money than average because of the Parrys' experience, contacts, participation and skills. Mrs. Parry, 47, acted as the project manager, carrying 60-pound bags of concrete up a 30-foot ladder and overseeing the work from sunrise to sunset. During construction, the family lived in a 500-square-foot beach hut owned by the beach club next door; at one point the hut ran out of power for 10 days. (A shingled, four-bedroom, 3,500-square-foot house down the street with a lake view is for sale for $3 million.)
The beach-club parking lot has a clear view into the Parrys' master bedroom-something that doesn't bother them. Friends often wave to them from below. "In this day of mass-produced cookie cutter houses, they have a unique style," says neighbor and friend Susie Cero, an orthopedic surgeon. "They like things straightforward. What you see is what you get."



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Nov. 15-22: Pink, Ne-Yo, Daughtry, And Alanis Embrace Parenthood

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http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-26165829-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDBDM89In9Alanis Morissette, Pink, Ne-Yo, and Chris Daughtry have more reasons to be grateful this Thanksgiving. Each of the musicians and their mates are welcoming children into their family.
This week, Us Weekly revealed photos of Morissette's bare pregnant belly, save for an elaborate henna tattoo. According to the website Henna Caravan, it is common for expectant mothers in Morocco and India to have the temporary tattoos painted on their stomachs during the third trimester.
"Henna is believed to protect and bless the mother and child from any evil or malicious spirits that may be near during delivery," reads a statement on the Henna Caravan website.
Morissette, 36, and husband MC Souleye are expecting their baby boy next year.
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-409392871-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDHDZamBJSPink confirmed on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" Wednesday that she and her husband, Carey Hart, are also preparing for a special arrival. The fearless pop singer said she was actually hesitant to share their good news.
"I didn't want to talk about it, because I was just really nervous and I have had a miscarriage before," she said.
Pink doesn't know the sex of the baby on the way but said her mother wants her to have a girl. "My mom has always wished me a daughter just like me," Pink said. "I'm terrified one of us will go to jail."
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-822371246-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDIaMsUdkhChris Daughtry and his wife, Deanna, have graduated from the nervous pregnancy stage to the sleep-deprived phase of newborn parenting. Fraternal twins, Adalynn Rose and Noah James, were born Wednesday.
The Daughtrys are excited about their new additions. "Our family is overwhelmed with joy by these two precious gifts from God," the proud father said in a statement on his website. "The babies are both healthy and resting. Thanks to everyone for their love and prayers."
The Daughtrys have two other children, Hannah and Griffin, according to "Access Hollywood."
Baby making music R&B singer Ne-Yo has found inspiration for a new ballad. Ne-Yo and girlfriend Monyetta Shaw had a baby girl, Madilyn Grace, last Friday (November 12).
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-780046304-1290213081.jpg?ymZrKHEDQvWJnTCiThe hit-maker confirmed the birth via Twitter. "Salutations all," Ne-Yo wrote. "As my life transforms due to the new life that sprung up on me last night, it's good to know my folks support."
The artist born Shaffer Smith said he felt like he was in love for the first time. "I promise I'll do my best or die tryin'," he wrote.
In other music-family news this week, Jessica Simpson confirmed her engagement to former NFL player Eric Johnson. The Beatles catalog went on sale on iTunes. Bruce Springsteen and Jimmy Fallon performed Willow Smith's "Whip My Hair." And a Los Angeles Superior Court judge praised Chris Brown for his diligence in completing his probation requirements.
Looks like a lot of folks are going to have a great Thanksgiving this week. The folks at That's Really Week wish the same to you and yours. See you next week.


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Actor Wesley Snipes headed to prison for tax evasion

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"The defendant Snipes had a fair trial ... The time has come for the judgment to be enforced," U.S. District Judge Terrell Hodges said in his ruling.
Revoking bail for the 48-year-old star of the "Blade" trilogy, the judge ordered him to report to prison as directed by the U.S. Marshals Service or Bureau of Prisons.
It was not clear when or where Snipes would begin serving his time behind bars, however. His lawyer, Daniel Meachum, has said he would appeal if a new trial was denied.
Meachum told the Orlando Sentinel the ruling was shocking.
"Wesley is very disappointed but staying strong and positive," the newspaper quoted Meachum as saying.
Snipes had already lost his appeal of the prison sentence stemming from his 2008 conviction in Hodges' Ocala, Florida, court on three counts of "willful failure to file tax returns" for 1999 through 2001.
Snipes was found not guilty of five other counts in the high-profile felony tax case.
In seeking a new trial, Meachum had argued that jurors in the original trial were biased and that the prosecution's star witness had his own criminal problems.
At his sentencing, prosecutors said Snipes, a resident of Windermere, Florida, had earned more than $38 million since 1999 but had filed no tax returns or paid any taxes through October 2006.
Although he is best known for his roles in action films, Snipes has also had critical success in comedies like "White Men Can't Jump" in 1992. He played the lead in director Spike Lee's interracial drama "Jungle Fever" in 1991 and also played the jazz saxophonist in Lee's "Mo' Better Blues" in 1990.
Eric Thompson, a supervisor in the U.S. Marshals Service office in Orlando, Florida, said the Bureau of Prisons would notify Snipes and his lawyer of a surrender date.
"He'll probably get it by certified mail," Thompson said.
He declined to say what prison was likely to be selected for Snipes except to say that it would not be in Florida.
A listing for Snipes already posted on the Federal Bureau of Prisons website says his prisoner ID or registration number as 43355-018, his location is "in transit" and his release date is "unknown."




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After 30 years, Iowa opponents still think pink at Kinnick Stadium

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Jim Weber runs LostLettermen.com, devoted to keeping tabs on former college football and basketball players and other bits of nostalgia. Today he tracks down former Iowa coach Hayden Fry for the origins of Iowa's pink locker rooms, on display Saturday against Ohio State.
For over three decades, opponents entering the locker room at Iowa’s Kinnick Stadium have felt like they just walked into a dollhouse. The space is coated floor to ceiling in bubblegum pink, even in the bathrooms, from pink sinks to lockers that look better suited for Barbies than 300-pound linemen.
What is a program decked in black and gold doing with a pink locker room? As the familiar legend has it, former Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry, a psychology major, ordered the makeover when he took over in 1978 in an effort to create a soothing effect on opponents. Jails have employed the same technique.
But the psychological edge is only part of the reason.
“Frankly, the only color paint we could find at the stadium was pink,” Fry said this week from his home in Mesquite, Nev.
Whatever the motivation, the motifs have become a cherished part of Iowa tradition and a constant annoyance for opponents. Former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler hated it so much he had his assistants put paper over the walls to cover it.
[Photos: Oregon's crazy new basketball floor]
The Iowa athletic department took things to a new level in 2005 when, as part of an $89 million renovation to the stadium, it added pink to just about everything else left in the locker room – shower floors, carpet, sinks, toilets, down to the urinals.
Not everyone was laughing. A visiting law professor at the school set off a media firestorm when she said the over-the-top makeover was offensive because it promoted sexism and homophobia by attempting to emasculate opponents. Suddenly, seven years after retiring from coaching, Fry found himself caught in the middle of a dispute in which he wanted no part. Supporters pointing out that sexism and homophobia had nothing to do with why Fry originally painted the locker room pink. Critics said that didn’t matter because sexism and homophobia were implied.
[Related: Wisconsin head football coach's awkward Iowa tattoo]
It came to a head when the coach ended up on a radio station with the irate head of a lesbian organization. 
"This lady started in on me saying a lot of bad things about the pink locker room," said Fry, never short on knee-slapping stories in his Texas drawl. "And I finally had to interrupt her and I said, 'Lady, I don’t care how bad you have to go to the bathroom, I wouldn’t let you use my pink locker room.' And I hung up. And the radio station called me back and said, ‘Coach, you can’t do that.’ And I said, ‘I just did.’ And I hung up on him."
Five years later, the debate has died down and the pink locker room remains, with its legend only growing.
"I honestly don’t know anything about Iowa, the state or just anything to be honest,” Ohio State kicker Devin Barclay told the OSU student newspaper, The Lantern, ahead of Ohio State's visit to Kinnick Stadium on Saturday. “I know that they have a pink locker room, that’s about it."
[Rewind: The coolest stadiums of the 2010 World Cup]
Sadly, Fry’s health has been an issue in recent years. He retired from coaching in 1998 because of prostate cancer and has had an ongoing battle with the disease since. Fry, 81, says if it weren’t for cancer, he'd still be coaching alongside Penn State's Joe Paterno, who turns 84 next month.
But cancer certainly hasn’t stripped the coach of the quirky sense of humor that sparked the pink locker room, player sing-alongs during practice, stand-up comedy routines prior to games and, occasionally, a team-wide rendition of the Hokey Pokey after big wins.
“I’ll give you my secret formula,” Fry said of his health. “Every morning when I wake up and realize I’m still on the right side of the grass, I do two things. I thank the good Lord, that’s number one. And number two, I reach over and chug a quart of WD-40 that keeps my metal knees lubricated."


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Daniel Day-Lewis Will Be Steven Spielberg's Abraham Lincoln

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Ladies and gentlemen, here's your Lincoln. Francois Durand/Getty Images For what seems like forever, director Steven Spielberg has talked about wanting to do a biopic on Abraham Lincoln from a script by "Angels in America" playwright Tony Kushner. But for the past decade, Spielberg has instead focused on other projects while Liam Neeson remained committed to playing our 16th president. When Neeson announced this summer that he was finally leaving the project, that seemed to be the end of it ever happening, but now the film is very much back on track: Daniel Day-Lewis is going to play Lincoln.
While Neeson would have a made a great Lincoln, we think Day-Lewis is just about a perfect choice: He has just the right amount of humanity, gravitas and charisma to play the most admired and worshipped (and therefore scrutinized) of all presidents. It's a major role in a major film by a major filmmaker, which means that audience expectations will be set ridiculously high, so you want someone who's got the chops to pull it off. He proved himself in Oscar-winning roles in "My Left Foot" and "There Will Be Blood," picking up additional Oscar nominations for his work in films including "In the Name of the Father" and "Gangs of New York." And after the debacle of "Nine," Day-Lewis needs to return to the type of full-bodied character portrayals he's known for, like "There Will Be Blood." This Lincoln project should do just that for the notoriously reclusive actor who has been known to go into seclusion for years following a film (he took off four full years after "My Left Foot").
Related: 'Jerry Maguire' child star finds new role >>
The film, based on Doris Kearns Goodwin's "Team of Rivals" biography about Lincoln's battles with his White House Cabinet during the Civil War between 1861-1865, profiles the clashes brought about by the nation's turmoil. The Wrap reports that Spielberg will be shooting the film in the fall of next year. In other words, Spielberg will start the Lincoln project just before his next two movies will be coming out: the World War I drama "War Horse" and "The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn." There had been some thought his next assignment after those two would be the apocalyptic sci-fi film "Robopocalypse", but it appears Spielberg will now be focusing on 19th century history before he turns his attention to the dystopian future. And now he's got arguably the best actor on the planet by his side to make this long-awaited film finally happen.


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2010年11月19日星期五

Are the New Airport Scanners Safe?

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If you haven't seen the new screening machines that are popping up at U.S. airports, chances are you will soon. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is replacing most metal detectors with imaging devices that reveal items hidden underneath passengers' clothing. But some experts worry that the new machines could expose travelers to health risks. And there are obvious concerns about privacy issues, too.
There are actually two types of scanners, both of which require you to step into a booth and raise your arms. Millimeter wave machines use electromagnetic waves to create an image of the body, while the more controversial backscatter devices beam low-energy X-rays to produce a picture. The government says the radiation emitted from those devices is minimal, equal to the natural exposure during 2 minutes of flying, though some research suggests it's higher.
Because the backscatter machines use low-energy X-rays, most of the radiation is absorbed by the skin and doesn't penetrate the body, as medical X-rays do. But some experts think that could raise the risk of skin cancer or sperm mutations, especially in frequent flyers.
Other concerns involve cancer patients, children, pregnant women, and anyone with a compromised immune system, all of whom are more vulnerable to radiation risks. But perhaps the biggest fear about using X-ray scanners at airports is the possibility of a software glitch or operator error that exposes passengers to excessive doses of radiation.
Although the TSA says the scans are safe, you’re allowed to skip them and pass through a metal detector instead. But if you choose that option you’ll be subject to a hand search, which can take extra time. And some people consider them to be more intrusive.
You might encounter resistance from airport screeners when declining to be scanned, so print the FAQs from the TSA's website, which state that you have that right. You can also ask at the airport if the device uses the more worrisome X-ray technology.


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Smith's 'Just Kids' is award winner for nonfiction

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Patti Smith is a literary star.
The singer-poet's memoir about life in New York City in the 1960s, "Just Kids," won the National Book Award for nonfiction. "Just Kids" is a bittersweet look back at her deep friendship with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe and at a revolutionary time in the country.
A tearful Smith, 63, recalled working decades ago at a Scribner's bookstore and stacking up the National Book Award winners, wondering if she would ever receive such a prize.
"So thank you for letting me find out," said Smith, who now claims an honor previously given to Rachel Carson, Gore Vidal and Joan Didion.
The fiction prize Wednesday night was a surprise, Jaimy Gordon's "Lord of Misrule," a wry, hard-luck racetrack comedy chosen over such better known works as Lionel Shriver's "So Much for That" and Nicole Krauss' "Great House."
Gordon, who for 20 years has been releasing books through small publishers, spoke briefly. Currently published by McPherson & Co., Gordon acknowledged she had not expected to win and cited friends who had told her that she had given them hope just by being nominated. Gordon's fate has already changed. Her next novel will be published by an imprint of Random House Inc.
Kathryn Erskine's "Mockingbird," inspired in part by "To Kill a Mockingbird" and by the Virginia Tech shootings, was cited for young people's literature. Cited for a story featuring an 11-year-old girl with Asperger's, Erskine praised parents who encourage their children to ask questions and teachers who inspire students to read and to "think for themselves."
Terrance Hayes' "Lighthead" won for poetry and thanked his wife and his editor for being "the best kind of partner," one "who lets you be imperfect."
Winners in the competitive categories for the 61st annual awards each received $10,000.
Honorary medals were presented to "Bonfire of the Vanities" novelist Tom Wolfe and to one of the creators of "Sesame Street," Joan Ganz Cooney.
Smith did not sing Wednesday, but there was music on stage, as Wolfe crooned a few lines from "The Girl of Ipanema," part of a long, leisurely speech that included memories of his early newspapers days and of the party thrown by Leonard Bernstein and attended by members of the Black Panthers, a gathering immortalized by Wolfe as "radical chic."



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Forget the Axe: Cal, Stanford face off for Hogwarts’ favorite game

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 Jackie Burrell
Quaffle? Check.
Bludgers? Check.
"Harry Potter" fanatic racing by the Campanile with a tube sock bobbing behind? Got that, too.
As any Hogwarts-loving Muggle knows, Quidditch is the wizarding sport played astride flying brooms. What many don't know is that here in the non-magical world a land-based version is the hottest sport to hit college campuses in years.
View a slide show of the hot sport.
What began as a scrimmage at Vermont's Middlebury College in 2005 has grown to include more than 400 collegiate teams at schools that include Harvard, Yale, USC and universities from Peru to Perth. More than 300 high schools participate, too. There's even talk of a bid for NCAA membership, which is pretty remarkable for a fictitious sport -- a cross between soccer, one-handed basketball, dodge ball and tag -- that involves flying brooms and magical balls.
It's a big enough deal that with the premiere of the seventh "Harry Potter" movie just days away, 46 of those Muggle Quidditch teams congregated in New York City last weekend for the Quidditch World Cup.
The West Coast was the site of its own epic matchup Sunday, in the shadow of UC Berkeley's Campanile, when Cal and Stanford -- two universities whose traditional rivalry equals Gryffindor's and Slytherin's -- went broomstick to broomstick before a crowd of hundreds.

The warm fall weather made it a perfect afternoon for flying or, more accurately, scampering around a field with a broom, dodging bludgers and seeking the Snitch, the golden winged ball whose capture ends the game.
In Muggle Quidditch, the role of Snitch is played by a runner -- in this case, Cal co-captain Sean Robbins, dressed in shiny gold leggings and a neon yellow shirt, with a tube sock-encased tennis ball dangling from his waistband.
Of the two teams, Berkeley's is more established. Stanford had no choice but to join, said co-captain Stewart, once students saw a YouTube video of a Cal scrimmage, in which players repeatedly described their desire to beat their age-old rival. As the Cardinal were snitch-less, the Scotland-born Stewart MacGregor-Dennis and his co-captain Madison White -- a sophomore who has read Rowling's books "about 50 times" -- fielded a team.
As game time neared Sunday, students, faculty, parents and kids gathered on the sidelines. They discussed ticket availability for midnight screenings of the latest "Harry Potter" film. (Stanford's players will be seeing the movie in dorm groups; Cal's will go as a team, wearing their jerseys.) And they debated whether the Snitch, who was warming up by doing handstands in the middle of the field, could elude capture.
"Quidditch is one of those things you can't talk about without a smile on your face," MacGregor-Dennis said, gazing around at the hundreds of spectators and athletes.
Stanford's small team toted red brooms from Ikea, a departure from the international league's official brooms, $50 movie-set-ready, handcrafted models made by Alivan's.
Cal's 50-person team wore custom-designed navy blue shirts emblazoned with a golden bear holding a golden snitch. Ace Hardware is their broom vendor of choice.
It was a spectacle made more spectacular by the cast of characters that floated past. Across the pitch, Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody joined the spectators. Albus Dumbledore hawked butterbeer -- a nonalcoholic brew made with vanilla ice cream, butterscotch syrup and something fizzy.
Cal senior Jace Meierhenry took his place behind the microphone, channeling Gryffindor commentator Lee Jordan.
"Don't worry about the applause. I hear it in my head constantly," he assured spectators, as the teams took the field astride their brooms, dropping to one knee and closing their eyes as the Snitch was released into play. Robbins took off, like a streak of neon yellow.
The refs stepped forward and the game was on.
Beaters sent red bludger balls soaring, knocking out players, dodgeball-style, as beaters raced to throw the quaffle, a slightly deflated volleyball, through one of the three hoops poised at each end of the pitch. Players who were hit with a bludger raced it back to their own goal to tag up before returning to play.
Cal's Gavin Saldanha raced for the hoops and lobbed the quaffle through one of them, notching the first 10-point goal of the game.
Every few minutes, the Snitch streaked back across the field, two seekers in pursuit, as the crowd roared with delight.
Armed with a campus map, Stanford's seeker, Minh Nguyen, chased Robbins up and down hills and around Doe Library, as Cal's seeker, Donovan McNiff, closed in from the other side.
Then it was over. McNiff hoisted the tube sock triumphantly and, for just a moment, he was Harry Potter. He grinned, his hair damp with sweat and his glasses slightly misty, as friends rushed up.
"I think my wrestling talents helped," he said later.
When all was said and done, Cal had won two games (90-0 and 100-0) and lost one (40-60), and taken home its first Big Sweep trophy. All that was left was the celebrating -- and planning for future matches.
Robbins and Wurden dream of a West Coast tournament on the field in front of Bowles Hall. Teams at San Jose State, UC Santa Cruz, USC and Berkeley's Graduate Theological Union have expressed interest.
And Stanford is demanding a rematch.
"Next time," MacGregor-Dennis said, "it's a home game."
Photo caption: Cal's Calvin Saldanha scores against Stanford on Nov. 14, 2010. (Carlos Fajardo / Bay Area News Group)


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AP Exclusive: Raising retirement age hurts poor

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WASHINGTON – Raising the retirement age for Social Security would disproportionately hurt low-income workers and minorities, and increase disability claims by older people unable to work, government auditors told Congress.
The projected spike in disability claims could harm Social Security's finances because disability benefits typically are higher than early retirement payments, the Government Accountability Office concluded.
The report, obtained by The Associated Press ahead of its scheduled release Friday, provides fodder for those opposed to raising the eligibility age for benefits, as proposed by the leaders of President Barack Obama's deficit commission.
[Related: Get a bigger Social Security check]
"There's more to consider than simply how much money the program would save by raising the retirement age," said Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging. The report shows an unequal effect on certain groups of people, he said Thursday, and many of them "would have little choice but to turn to the broken disability program."
Under current law, people can start drawing reduced, early retirement benefits from Social Security at age 62. Full benefits are available at 66, a threshold gradually increasing to 67 for people who were born in 1960 or later.
The deficit commission's leaders, Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Alan Simpson, last week proposed a gradual increase in the full retirement age, to 69 in about 2075. The early retirement age would go to 64 the same year.
Under their plan, the new thresholds wouldn't be fully phased in until today's 4-year-olds are ready to retire.
AARP criticized the recommendations and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called them "unacceptable." Experts, however, warn that Social Security is on a financially unsustainable path that will worsen as people live longer and collect more benefits.
For many workers, reducing early retirement payments or delaying eligibility would provide an incentive to put off retiring, resulting in more earnings and potentially more savings for later in life, according to the watchdog agency's report.
But it "could create a financial hardship for those who cannot continue to work because of poor health or demanding workplace conditions," the report said.
The report, requested by Kohl's committee, draws on research by outside groups as well as interviews with Social Security officials and data from the Social Security Administration. Researchers also analyzed data from the Health and Retirement Study, a continuing study of older Americans by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research.
About one-fourth of workers age 60 and 61 — just under the early retirement age — reported a health condition that limited their ability to work. Among those older workers, blacks and Hispanics were much more likely to report fair or poor health than whites, according to the report.
Less healthy older workers had lower incomes, less accumulated wealth and were much less likely to have attended college.
"Some people just can't continue to work beyond age 62 for either health reasons or they're just not able to find jobs," said David Certner, legislative policy director for AARP. "Just because we tell people they should work longer doesn't mean that there are employers out there willing to hire people."
Workers older than 55 are less likely than younger workers to lose their jobs, the report said. But when older workers get laid off, they are less likely to find other employment.
[Related: Ways to save money in retirement]
Nearly 54 million retirees, disabled workers, surviving spouses and children now get Social Security. Payments for retired workers average $1,020 a month; disability benefits average $929 a month. In 75 years, 122 million people, or one-fourth of the population, will be drawing benefits.
On its current path, Social Security is projected to run out of money by 2037, largely because of aging baby boomers reaching retirement. The longer action is delayed, the harder it will get to shore up the program.
The GAO report says that raising the age when workers qualify for full benefits would save money. But raising the age when workers can get early benefits would hurt the program's finances because of the expected increase in disability claims.
The plan from Bowles and Simpson promotes shared sacrifice: High-income workers would pay more in payroll taxes to support the system; current retirees would get smaller annual increases in benefits; future retirees have to wait longer to qualify for full benefits.
"We put a hardship exemption in there for people who have, what people are always talking about, backbreaking jobs, people that really need to retire at 62," Bowles said. "We think it is balanced."
___
Online:
Social Security: http://www.ssa.gov
Obama's deficit commission: http://www.fiscalcommission.gov
(This version CORRECTS the agency's name to Government Accountability Office, not General Accountability Office.)



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Kate's Royal Prison

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NEW YORK – Millions of young women may envy of Kate Middleton’s engagement to Prince William, but Andrew Roberts says they should be relieved to miss out on the onerous, boring, and unending life of being a royal.
Across the globe, socially ambitious young ladies are sighing over the fact that Prince William, the world’s most eligible bachelor, has finally gotten engaged. Their wild hopes that perhaps he might have repeated his April 2007 breakup, leaving Kate in the lurch once again, are now irrevocably dashed. As their gaze now swivels elsewhere—to pop stars, hedge-funders, social networking tycoons, even Prince Harry—they are awaking from the dream of marrying the tall, blond Adonically handsome cavalry officer prince at Westminster Abbey. Yet even as they cross off Prince William from their little black address books, they can console themselves with this thought: being a royal in the 21st century is appallingly hard work, where the disadvantages easily equal, and probably outweigh, the advantages.
In the calendar year 2009, Her Majesty the Queen undertook no fewer than 409 official engagements, i.e., more than one a day. She is 84 years old. Except for Christmas Day and Easter Day, she never has a day away from her government red boxes, which follow her everywhere. Although Kate will obviously not be head of state, it is an indication of how busy her husband will be, and she will be expected to be with him on all the most important engagements. Yet she will also be expected to undertake hundreds of engagements on her own as well, and will be minutely judged on each of them.  
She cannot say anything controversial, or indeed particularly interesting, for the rest of her life, otherwise she will be castigated in the press. She can never again express a political opinion of any kind whatsoever, because the most important constitutional duty of the royal family is to be above politics. Even if she winds up knowing much more about a subject than government ministers—as is often the case with the royal family regarding conservation, environmental, agricultural and heritage issues—she must keep resolutely silent about them in public. Even in private she must be highly circumspect, otherwise the politicians or civil servants will leak her letters, as has happened recently to Prince Charles.  
William & Kate: Photos, News, and More
Her income will be publicly picked over to the last pound sterling in House of Commons committees, and she cannot spend lavishly even her own private money. Every item of expenditure at her wedding will be subjected to intense media scrutiny, especially at this time of austerity. Almost every holiday—and there are precious few—will be a “working” holiday of some kind where she will have to meet and greet local worthies. If she is ever once caught yawning during an interminable tribal dance in Papua New Guinea, the photo will haunt her for decades.  


Everything she wears every single day will be commented on and picked over and judged in the newspapers day in, day out. In this era of the telephoto lens, she can have no bad hair days for the rest of her life. The days of mildly malicious gossipy lunches with friends are over, as are nightclubbing, flirting, and drinking more than two glasses of wine, for fear of the paparazzi snapping a flushed face. Yet however glamorous she dresses and lovely she looks, it could be decades before she is allowed to emerge from the shadow of her iconic mother-in-law, as she will be reminded whenever she looks at her engagement ring.
[Related: Prince Harry's response to Kate]
When she visits her in-laws in Scotland, she must pretend to enjoy being woken up at 6:15 every morning by bagpipers at Balmoral, and enjoy the cold and damp and Wellington boots of the House of Windsor’s hearty outdoors life. She must deal with the inanities, bitchiness, and pettiness of life at court, and she must also be a role model for millions of women, who will look up to her and expect her to say the right thing all the time. She must personify honor, duty, and diligence, otherwise she will be compared unfavorably to the present queen, who promised on her 21st birthday to dedicate her life to her people, and then spent the next 63 years doing exactly that.   

So Kate must open schools, hospitals, and community centers, whether she feels up to it or not, scores of times every year for the rest of her life, and be seen to enjoy it. She must be bland when she does so, but also compassionate, interested, and caring. She must shake hands with hundreds of thousands of complete strangers and show interest in their lives, even though she will never see them again.    She must have at least two healthy photogenic offspring, preferably more, of whom at least one is expected to be male, whom she must try to bring up as normal children even though patently obviously they are not. She and her husband and children could well be the target of assassination attempts, and will certainly receive constant death threats. She will almost never be praised in public except by oleaginous flatterers desperate for social advantage. She will not genuinely know how she is doing in her new job; there are no objective career assessment programs for royals.    
[Related: All about Kate Middleton]
When, after half a century of not putting a foot wrong in this most taxing of public roles, Queen Catherine of England becomes a national treasure—as I am certain she will—she will have more than deserved it. But in the meantime, all those young women around the world who were dreaming of becoming princesses should instead be thanking providence that Prince William chose someone else.
Historian Andrew Roberts' latest book, Masters and Commanders, was published in the UK in September. His previous books include Napoleon and Wellington, Hitler and Churchill, and A History of the English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900. Roberts is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Society of Arts.

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What to Call Kate?

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Kate Middleton's engagement to Prince William has sparked an avalanche of Web interest. Top of mind now -- what will Kate's new title be? Is she in line to be queen? And how does Prince Harry figure into all this?
Figuring all this out can be a royal pain, so we did the legwork for you. Here's a quick summary of everything you ever wanted to know about royal marriages but were too common to ask.
Kate's title
Once married, Kate Middleton will unofficially become "Princess Catherine." The official title will likely be Her Royal Highness Catherine of Wales. Eventually, after many years and barring any unforeseen tragedy or divorce, she and William will become the Queen and King of England. But! She won't have that title until her father-in-law to-be, Prince Charles of Wales, has had his turn.
The future Queen?
Kate being queen is a ways away. In the meantime, she and William will likely earn an honorary title after marrying. An article from People magazine speculates that some possible titles include the "dukedoms of Clarence, Cambridge and Sussex." These titles are "eminently suitable" for the couple. Why? HowStuffWorks explains that the titles of Duke and Duchess are among the highest order of nobility. If things go according to plan, eventually she will be the Queen. First, though, the title of duchess is most likely.
Who decides on the titles?
The Queen does, who else? An excellent article from the Sydney Morning Herald explains that if "the Prince surprises all and turns down a title, Kate would become HRH (Her Royal Highness) Princess William of Wales or Princess Catherine or Kate of Wales." Again, though, this is highly unlikely. When Prince Charles becomes king, it is believed that he will name William Prince of Wales, thus making Kate the Princess of Wales. Confused yet?
What about Harry?
Prince William's younger brother Harry is also in line to be King of England, but he is behind William. So, if and when he does marry, he won't be able to promise his bride-to-be the lofty title of queen. Sigh, the perils of being the younger brother. Still, we imagine that Harry is pleased to remain a prince. After all, it's a pretty sweet life. And as for what title Prince Harry's future wife will have, that's anybody's guess.
What about Prince Philip?
If your entire sum knowledge of royal lineage comes from "King Ralph," you might not understand why the Queen's husband, Prince Philip is not the King. Some online sources explain that this "the husband of a female monarch does not have any recognized special status, rank, or privileges." However, other sources argue that if the Queen wanted to appoint Philip as King she could. Sheesh, and we thought "Lost" was confusing.


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Hate the Black Friday Lines? Score Deals Online

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It has become as traditional as turkey, stuffing and pumpkin pie: On the day after Thanksgiving, shoppers bundling up and heading out before dawn for retailer's eagerly awaited Black Friday doorbuster deals.
More from CNNMoney.com:

Holiday Money 2010

Hottest Toys of 2010

CNN's 2010 Holiday Shopping Guide
[Click here to check savings products and rates in your area.]
And after two years of dismal holiday sales, retailers are upping the ante to bring shoppers into the stores this season. This year the National Retail Federation estimates that holiday sales will increase 2.3% to $447.1 billion, much improved from last year's 0.4% uptick and the dismal 3.9% sales decline in 2008.
[See 5 Ways to Cash In on Cyber Monday]
But for those who don't want to face the stores, don't despair. Many of the doorbuster deals will be available online, too.
"This Black Friday, I would like to stay in the comfort of my bedroom possibly online bargain shopping for maybe a table and some things to decorate my new apartment," said Kaitlynn Blyth, who waited outside last year from 7 p.m. until midnight to get Zhu Zhu pet accessories for her younger sister.
Here's where to score the deals:
Best Buy (NYSE: BBY - News): The same products promoted in its Thanksgiving Ads -- including doorbusters -- will be available on BestBuy.com starting Thanksgiving Day. Best Buy is also offering free shipping on online orders through Dec. 21, excluding laptops, iPads, iPods and some major appliances.
Macy's (NYSE: M - News): Doorbusters, like a KitchenAid Mixer for $179.99, will also be sold both online and in stores on Black Friday.
Amazon (NasdaqGS: AMZN - News): Here's another reason to avoid the Black Friday stampede: The online retailer is matching other retailer's doorbuster prices. Plus, it's offering free shipping.
Toys R Us: The popular toy store will preview more than 60 "Mystery Deals" on its site starting Tuesday, Nov. 23 at 12:01 a.m. But those savings will only be available in Toys R Us stores from 10 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day until 1 p.m. on Black Friday. The toy retailer will also give out free Crayola 64-Packs and coloring books with any purchase, while supplies last.
Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT - News): The country's largest retailer is offering online-only specials on Thanksgiving Day in addition to free online shipping with no minimum purchase. However, the doorbuster deals that shoppers camp out for, like a Nintendo Wii for $199 plus a $50 gift card, will be in-store only starting at 12 a.m. on Nov. 26.
Target (NYSE: TGT - News): Online-only deals start on Thanksgiving Day before the company's popular two-day sale. But the discounter's doorbuster deals are only available at in stores starting at 4 a.m. on Black Friday. In order to get free shipping on the online orders, consumers must spend $50 or more.
[See 7 Black Friday Deals Worth Buying Now]
The same is true for Sears (NasdaqGS: SHLD - News) and Kmart, where there will be online discounts of 30-40% off on Thanksgiving Day, but the deeper discounts of 50-60% will only be in stores on Black Friday. Web shoppers can then pick up their purchases in stores to save on the shipping.


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Leonardo DiCaprio Gives 'Red Riding Hood' the 'Twilight' Treatment

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The trailer for "Red Riding Hood" makes it seem the classic fairy tale has received the "Twilight" treatment.
This isn't surprising. The director of "Red Riding Hood" -- Catherine Hardwicke -- also shot the first installment of the world's most profitable sparkly vampire franchise. What might be surprising, though, it is that the idea for an amped-up fairy tale bursting with adolescent angst didn't come from her.

Instead, it came from Leonardo DiCaprio.
According to Hardwicke, who was recently interviewed for the Los Angeles Times, DiCaprio thought, "Wouldn’t it be cool to do a Gothic twist on Red Riding Hood, with the wolf being a werewolf, and just have a cool, sexy romantic thriller?" Soon his company, Appian Way, began to develop the idea.
Star Amanda Seyfried's rumored beau >>
Judging from the trailer, which you can see below, Leo got exactly what he asked for. By the looks of it, "Twilight" fans are going to be very pleased with the results.

 It opens with Amanda Seyfried gamboling in an autumnal glade with a handsome young suitor, Peter (Shiloh Fernandez), who sports an anachronistic faux-hawk. As they embrace, we hear Seyfried say, "I’ll do anything to be with you." And then, suddenly, the trailer makes a left turn into Gothic! There’s talk of killer wolves, there’s foreboding music, there’s Gary Oldman.
From what I can piece together, Amanda is in love with Peter though she's betrothed to Henri (Max Irons), another handsome young suitor in a faux-hawk. Someone in the village is a lupine supernatural killer, but, in spite of Oldman's glowering looks, no one is 'fessing up. Somewhere along the lines, Seyfried dons her red cloak and goes to grandmother's house.
The 'Twilight' story that never was >>
So -- Is this flick like "Twilight?" Or has this trailer been edited to remind everyone of "Twilight?" On the one hand, the set-up does seem remarkably familiar, with one or both of Seyfried's paramours most likely werewolves. That sounds a lot like that other lycanthrope love triangle Hardwicke is associated with. On the other hand, there's a claustrophobic paranoia here that feels much more akin to horror movies like "The Thing."
So which is it? To find that out, you'll have to wait until the movie comes out in March 2011.

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