Tuesday, January 29, 2013

US consumer confidence plunges on higher taxes

In this Thursday, Jan. 20, 2013, photo, a woman shops at a Nordstrom store in Chicago. U.S. consumer confidence plunged in January to its lowest level in more than a year, reflecting higher Social Security taxes that left Americans with less take-home pay. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

In this Thursday, Jan. 20, 2013, photo, a woman shops at a Nordstrom store in Chicago. U.S. consumer confidence plunged in January to its lowest level in more than a year, reflecting higher Social Security taxes that left Americans with less take-home pay. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

In this Thursday, Jan. 10, 2013, photo, a woman walks in front of a Victoria's Secret store in Chicago. U.S. consumer confidence plunged in January to its lowest level in more than a year, reflecting higher Social Security taxes that left Americans with less take-home pay. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

(AP) ? U.S. consumer confidence plunged in January to its lowest level in more than a year, reflecting higher Social Security taxes that left Americans with less take-home pay.

The Conference Board said Tuesday that its consumer confidence index dropped 8.1 points in January from December to a reading of 58.6, the lowest since November 2011.

The index has declined for three straight months since hitting a nearly five-year high of 73.1 in October 2012. It's still above the post-recession low of 40.9 reached in October 2011.

Conference Board economist Lynn Franco said the tax increase was the key reason confidence tumbled in January, making Americans less optimistic about the next six months.

For a worker earning $50,000 a year, take-home pay will shrink this year by about $1,000.

"It may take a while for confidence to rebound and consumers to recover from their initial paycheck shock," Franco said.

The index fell sharply in December as congressional Republicans and President Barack Obama moved closer to the fiscal cliff without reaching a resolution on sharp spending cuts and tax increases.

Congress and the White House ultimately struck a deal on Jan. 1 to prevent income taxes from rising on most Americans. But they delayed the spending cuts for only two months. And they allowed a temporary cut in Social Security taxes to expire.

The survey was conducted through Jan. 17, at which point most people began to realize their paychecks were lighter.

Consumers were less confident in January than December about current economic conditions, the survey showed. And their outlook for the job market also grew more pessimistic.

Most economists attributed the drop in confidence to the increase in payroll taxes.

Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc., also noted that sharp divisions in Washington over spending cuts and tax increases likely made consumers less optimistic about the economy, too.

"All the negative news about the dysfunction in Washington surrounding the fiscal cliff negotiations contributed to the December plunge, and ongoing shenanigans concerning the debt ceiling and fiscal sanity in general continued to weigh in January," Shapiro said.

Taxes are rising at a time when wages and salaries are barely growing. The combination is expected to hurt consumer spending and slow economic growth.

Many economists predict economic growth slowed in the October-December quarter to an annual rate of around 1 percent. That would be much weaker that the 3.1 percent rate in the July-September quarter. Most economists don't expect growth to pick up much in the first quarter of 2013.

The decline in confidence comes as the economy is signaling improvement elsewhere.

A recovery in housing market is looking more sustainable and is expected to strength this year.

A separate report Tuesday showed home prices accelerated this fall, pushed higher by rising sales and a tighter supply of available homes. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index rose 5.5 percent in November compared with the same month a year ago. That's the largest year-over-year gain in six years.

The U.S. auto industry and financial sector are also picking up.

Auto sales reached a five-year high of 14.5 million in 2012. Analysts expect sales will climb even higher this year, to 15.5 million.

Stocks are near their all-time highs. The Standard and Poor's 500 has more than doubled from its low in 2009.

Still, the job market remains sluggish. Employers have added an average of about 150,000 jobs a month for the past two years. That's enough for a gradual decline in the unemployment rate, which remains high at 7.8 percent.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-29-Consumer%20Confidence/id-d42451d1871044e08f022f794255c267

josh hamilton alicia keys Susan Rice American Airlines the Who jon bon jovi jon bon jovi

News in Brief: Gene variant makes flu particularly dangerous

People with one form of IFITM3 more likely to develop pneumonia

By Tina Hesman Saey

Web edition: January 29, 2013

Chinese people carrying a particular version of an immune system gene are up to six times more likely to develop severe influenza than those lacking the variant. In a previous study involving mostly people of European descent, scientists found that a few individuals carried a particular form of a gene known as IFITM3 and got hit especially hard by the flu. In China, the variant is much more common. About three-quarters of people carry at least one copy of the form of IFITM3 that is rare among Europeans, Tao Dong of Capital Medical University in Beijing and Oxford University in England and her colleagues have discovered. The researchers studied 83 people who were hospitalized with the H1N1 flu virus in 2009. Of the 35 people in that group who had two copies of the variant, 22 developed pneumonia or other severe flu symptoms, the researchers report online January 29 in Nature Communications.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/347926/title/News_in_Brief_Gene_variant_makes_flu_particularly_dangerous

2012 grammys foo fighters nikki minaj grammys album of the year grammy red carpet grammy award winners

Who are these guys at QB in Super Bowl?

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick talks with reporters during a news conference on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013, in New Orleans. The 49ers will face the Baltimore Ravens in the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game on Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick talks with reporters during a news conference on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013, in New Orleans. The 49ers will face the Baltimore Ravens in the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game on Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick talks with reporters during a news conference on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013, in New Orleans. The 49ers will face the Baltimore Ravens in the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game on Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco records a send-off rally for the team on Monday, Jan. 28, 2013 in Baltimore. The NFL football team is leaving for New Orleans to face the San Francisco 49ers in the Super Bowl. (AP Photo/Steve Ruark)

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco speaks at an NFL Super Bowl XLVII football news conference on Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in New Orleans. The Ravens face the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII on Sunday, Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? No Tom Brady. No Aaron Rodgers. No Ben Roethlisberger. Not a Manning in sight.

Super Bowl has a pair of fresh faces at quarterback, bona fide nobodies as far as the NFL title game goes. One will leave New Orleans as football's newest star.

For Colin Kaepernick and Joe Flacco, this is new territory. And, of course, exactly where they want to be.

"To be AFC champs feels good," Flacco said Monday. "We move on now to this challenge."

Flacco, the only quarterback to win a playoff game in each of his first five NFL seasons, will lead the Baltimore Ravens into Sunday's matchup against the NFC-winning San Francisco 49ers and Kaepernick, a backup for most of his two seasons.

It's the first time in a decade that the big game doesn't feature one of the big five household names in the glamour position.

You can't get much fresher than quarterbacks who never have gotten this far before.

"At the start of the season, I was just hoping to get on the field some way, somehow," said Kaepernick, the backup for Alex Smith, who took the 49ers to the conference final last season.

He got that chance after Smith sustained a concussion on Nov. 11, and hasn't seen the bench since.

Win this one and he'll have a piece of history, joining a heady quarterback club that includes Hall of Famers Joe Montana and Steve Young, who guided the 49ers to five NFL titles ? a victory every time they played. No. 6 would tie the team with Roethlisberger's Pittsburgh Steelers ? a record for most Super Bowl wins.

A second-round draft pick in 2011 out of Nevada ? not exactly Alabama ? Kaepernick has the shortest pro resume of any Super Bowl quarterback. It's impressive, nonetheless. His legs (181 yards rushing against Green Bay, a record for the position) and his arm (105.9 passer rating in the postseason) are the main reasons San Francisco is in its first NFL title game in 18 years.

"Anybody that is out there on the football field, you want to see them produce and get results," left tackle Joe Staley said. "With Colin, his first couple of starts, you did not know what to expect because we had not seen him out there as a starting quarterback. He did amazing and he has all season, as well as the playoffs. I think it was one of those things where we saw him in practice and we just wanted to see how he was going to handle the situation in the games. He has done that."

Still, he's new to this environment and that hardly seems to faze Kaepernick.

"One thing I've always said about him from the start is he comes off as a guy that has a lot of confidence," said center Jonathan Goodwin, who won a Super Bowl snapping for Drew Brees and the Saints three years ago. "I'm not just saying that. You can feel it by the way he acts and talks."

Flacco has that air of certainty, too, but at least it's built on a more substantial foundation, including an 8-4 mark in the playoffs, with six road wins ? the most for any quarterback, Montana and Young included. That goes for Baltimore's John Unitas, too.

Nobody is comparing Flacco to them just yet, except for the self-belief he brings to the job.

"You naturally become more of the guy when you spend a number of years in the league," he said at the Ravens' first Super Bowl news conference Monday. "As a quarterback, it's my job to lead from Day 1."

As a five-year starter, that's exactly what Flacco did after Baltimore drafted him out of Delaware ? yep, not exactly Alabama.

As has become the custom in the NFL, Flacco represents the high draft pick who steps behind center early in his career and, usually, stays there. Both Mannings did it, as did Roethlisberger. Just this season, the top two picks in the draft, QBs Andrew Luck and Robert Griffin III, were anointed starters at the outset and played sensationally.

Now Flacco and Kaepernick try to join those big-name quarterbacks who own all those Super Bowl rings.

"We try to pass tests every day," Flacco said.

That's how you become a Super Bowl quarterback.

___

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-28-Super%20Bowl%20QBs/id-44bdd8fbd47640d9a55960038ccbbee3

marinol flight attendant pau gasol trade michael madsen spring forward day light savings day light savings

Storage Wars Lawsuit: A&E Denies Show is Rigged

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/storage-wars-lawsuit-a-and-e-denies-show-is-rigged/

Isaac path Tropical Storm Isaac path Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Isaac Path Isaac Hurricane earthquake san diego Hurricane Isaac

Monday, January 28, 2013

For Friendship (closed)

OOC: Hey all,

This is a closed roleplay for myself and Modesty but you're welcome to poke around!

"Calm down, Darina. You are making yourself ill," Evin told the teenage girl hyperventilating as she sat at the edge of the bed while Evin fastened her forest green cloak around her own throat, "Treat this as a normal evening, just like any oth-"
"But it's not! What if something happens to you? What will I do?" All at once, the girl burst into tears, burying her face in her hands. Evin took a deep breath, her patience tested. She loved Darina like a sister, but often her dramatics were exhausting. Evin did not remember being so emotional when she was fourteen. Evin sat down next to the younger girl and put her arm around her. At once Darina's dark curls were in Evin's face as she buried her tears into Evin's shoulder. This was easier when Darina was younger, when she did not understand the situation so fully and when it was easier to hide the rebel's missions from her.

Evin had been taken in by the rebels eighteen years ago. She had been eight years old when her home, a village called Traydon, was destroyed by King Hadrain in an attempt to destroy any magic that he could not control. The village had been filled with some of the last magic-wielders. She was found by some rebels wandering in the forest, a child starving to death. They took her in, unaware of the advantage they would gain by doing so. They did not learn until several years later Evin was an ice mage. Once her talent was discovered, her life changed drastically. Instead of living with the rebel-supporting family that kept orphans, she was taken to what could be considered the headquarters of the rebellion, the disused mines of the Fabia Mountains. Once there, Evin trained with the other young mages the rebels had found in magic, fighting, and stealth until they were deemed "ready," but mostly because their presence was requested for missions. Those who trained the group of seven child mages all excelled in their areas of teaching, but their students did not always become as talented as the masters. Evin herself was a decent ice mage, but was told that in the past when there were many mages she only would have been considered a moderate talent. She knew this to be true as most of the other mages in her group were more talented than she. Evin favored daggers as her weapon of choice because she was quick. Not to mention, she could hide many of them on her person at once. The weight of swords tired her too quickly to make them useful to her. Evin's shot with an arrow was not dreadful, but they had never been her preference. As for stealth, none of the young mages were able to be up to par with the assassin that trained them and eventually decided that the basics would have to do.

Evin had not seen the other mages since they had left the mines, but she did know one of them was dead and another was supposedly a prisoner in King Hadrain's cells. The mages had all been kept separate after their training to make it difficult for King Hadrain to find them all at once. For the next five years, Evin traveled on various missions with a small group of rebels constantly. She was the only mage in the group, living a life of constantly moving from place to place to complete missions. It was on one of those missions that she found Darina much like the rebels had found her as an orphan. One of Darina's older siblings had magic and Hadrain's soldiers were in the process of slaughtering the whole family when Evin and her team burst in with enough time to save Darina, but not her parents or other siblings. She and Evin formed an attachment soon after. Evin refused to send her to the orphanage. She told the rebels that she would take care of the little girl and forced them to give her a new life where she no longer traveled so much. They pressured her to do otherwise, but Evin was firm. She had always done what the rebels told her to do. It was time to do something for herself. That was how the two ended up posing as the nieces of the secretly rebel-supporting innkeepers of The Wayward Traveler. It was fortunate that Evin and Darina looked similar enough to pass as sisters, both with dark hair, though Darina's was riddled with curls and Evin's was straight. Their skin tone matched well enough too, but their eyes were very different. Evin's eyes matched most, dark brown as they were. Darina's eyes, on the other hand, were an icy blue. Evin had always found that ironic, since she was the ice mage of the two.

"Darina," Evin put her hands on the younger girl's shoulder, pushing so Darina's head off of her shoulder would have to face her, "you know I love you. You also know that I have been doing this kind of work for a very long time. You cannot cry like this every time I do something that might be dangerous. You have to be stronger and if you cannot be stronger, you must pretend until you are." Evin kissed her on the forehead while Darina tried to hold back more tears.

Evin was careful to leave out the back door of the inn. No one needed to see The Wayward Traveler's barmaid wearing men's clothing as she disappeared into the forests surrounding the village of Doth. This was not the kind of evening where she worried much about being seen; chilly rain was pouring heavily from the skies combined with an unforgiving wind, making it possible to see only four arms-lengths ahead.

Before long, Evin arrived at the hollowed out tree that was their meeting spot. She was met with dissatisfied looks from the three people she set out to meet. "Darina held me back momentarily. I apologize," Evin told the group as she removed her soaked cloak.
"It's not that," the only other woman responded, "Our tail lost the soldiers in the storm. We have to cancel the mission."
"It's just like you to give up so easily, Juliana!" one of the men huffed, "This mission is perfect for Evin. She could use the water, freeze them! We need to find out what is in that letter! What if that is the key to beating Hadrain once and for all?" He was older, a burly beard covering his angry face.
"I am not sure I could do-" Evin put up her hands as if she could physically pause the conversation, but it continued on without her anyway.
"If we can't find them, we can't do anything!" The woman retorted. She was about the same age as the man she argued with. "It is pointless to risk us traveling out into this weather. They probably changed their course because of it!" Evin met eyes with the red-haired teenage boy that accompanied them and both of them sighed in unison. He was used to these arguments coming from his parents and so was Evin.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/p_gYAWSFces/viewtopic.php

Jill Kelly McKayla Maroney gronkowski jeremy renner best buy black friday deals breaking dawn part 2 breaking dawn part 2

The dead aren't always excused from trial

MOSCOW (AP) ? Sergei Magnitsky died more than three years ago in a Russian jail but authorities are moving to put him on trial in a Russian court. The whistle-blowing lawyer died in 2009 after being arrested on charges of tax fraud ? the same fraud in which he alleged that Interior Ministry officials had a hand.

The Russian government has faced harsh international criticism over its treatment of Magnitsky, and its plan to bring a dead man to trial beginning Feb. 18 can only increase that chorus.

Here's a look at other posthumous trials and actions.

POPE FORMOSUS

This was a grisly case in which the accused pope's corpse was put on the stand in the so-called Cadaver Synod of 897.

The Catholic cleric had long been involved in internecine church disputes and jockeying for power. One of his predecessors, John VII, accused him of conspiring with others to take the papacy and of trying to become bishop of Bulgaria even though he already held another bishopric. Formosus eventually was elected pope in 891 and served until his death in 896, but the previous quarrels had festered. His successor revived the charges and ordered that Formosus' corpse be exhumed and brought to the papal court for judgment.

Formosus was found guilty of perjury and violating canon law; some accounts say three fingers of his right hand, which were used in consecration, were cut off. Two subsequent popes annulled the Cadaver Synod, but Pope Sergius III reaffirmed the conviction.

JOAN OF ARC

The teenage French peasant girl who claimed divine guidance and led the French army to victories in Hundred Years War was tried for heresy and burned at the stake in 1431. But a quarter-century later, Pope Callixtus III ordered a new trial after requests by Joan's mother and a French official. The proceedings described her as a martyr and said she was falsely convicted. She was canonized as a saint in 1920.

OLIVER CROMWELL

As a towering figure in 17th century England, Cromwell attracted wide enmity -- signing the death warrant for King Charles I, taking harsh measures against Catholics and demonstrating brutal military brilliance. The resentment was such that although he never faced trial dead or alive, he did suffer a posthumous "execution." In 1661, after royalists returned to power, Cromwell's corpse was exhumed and decapitated, and his head was displayed on a pole for years.

MARTIN BORMANN

Bormann, the personal secretary to Adolf Hitler, was tried in absentia at the Nuremberg tribunal and sentenced to death ? which in the end proved to be superfluous. At the time of the 1946 trial, the whereabouts of the powerful Nazi official were unknown ? and for decades after the war he was considered one of the most-wanted Nazi war criminals.

In 1972, during construction work in downtown Berlin, bones were unearthed that were identified as having belonged to Bormann through dental records. The location fit with an account that Bormann had committed suicide to avoid falling into enemy hands as he attempted to flee Berlin in the final days of the war in May 1945.

But rumors persisted that Bormann had found his way to South America until DNA tests done in 1998 conclusively proved that the remains in Berlin were those of Bormann.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dead-arent-always-excused-trial-152356308--finance.html

us supreme court breaking dawn part 2 trailer mississippi state chris carpenter chris carpenter dick cheney hcg drops

Wall St Week Ahead: Bears sleep as U.S. stocks near record highs

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks have been on a tear in January, moving major indexes within striking distance of all-time highs. The bearish case is a difficult one to make right now.

Earnings have exceeded expectations, the housing and labor markets have strengthened, lawmakers in Washington no longer seem to be the roadblock that they were for most of 2012, and money has returned to stock funds again.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> is up 5.4 percent this year and above 1,500 - climbing to the spot where Wall Street strategists expected it to be by mid-year. The Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> is just 2 percent away from all-time highs reached in October 2007. The Dow ended on Friday at 13,895.98, its highest close since October 31, 2007.

The S&P 500 has risen for four straight weeks and eight consecutive sessions, the longest streak of days since 2004. On Friday, the benchmark S&P 500 ended at 1,502.96 - its first close above 1,500 in more than five years.

"Once we break above a resistance level at 1,510, we dramatically increase the probability that we break the highs of 2007," said Walter Zimmermann, a technical analyst at United-ICAP, in Jersey City, New Jersey. "That may be the start of a rise that could take equities near 1,800 within the next few years."

The most recent Reuters poll of Wall Street strategists estimated the benchmark index would rise to 1,550 by year's end, a target that is 3.1 percent away from current levels. That would put the S&P 500 a stone's throw from the index's all-time intraday high of 1,576.09 reached on October 11, 2007.

The new year has brought a sharp increase in flows into U.S. equity mutual funds, and that has helped stocks rack up four straight weeks of gains, with strength in big- and small-caps alike.

That's not to say there are no concerns. Economic growth has been steady, but not as strong as many had hoped. The household unemployment rate remains high at 7.8 percent. And more than 75 percent of the stocks in the S&P 500 are above their 26-week highs, suggesting the buying has come too far, too fast.

MUTUAL FUND INVESTORS COME BACK

All 10 S&P 500 industry sectors are higher in 2013, in part because of new money flowing into equity funds. Investors in U.S.-based funds committed $3.66 billion to stock mutual funds in the latest week, the third straight week of big gains for the funds, data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service showed on Thursday.

Energy shares <.5sp10> led the way with a gain of 6.6 percent, followed by industrials <.5sp20>, up 6.3 percent. Telecom <.5sp50>, a defensive play that underperforms in periods of growth, is the weakest sector - up 0.1 percent for the year.

More than 350 stocks hit new highs on Friday alone on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Transportation Average <.djt> recently climbed to an all-time high, with stocks in this sector and other economic bellwethers posting strong gains almost daily.

"If you peel back the onion a little bit, you start to look at companies like Precision Castparts , Honeywell , 3M Co and Illinois Tool Works - these are big broad-based industrial companies in the United States and they are all hitting new highs, and doing very well. That is the real story," said Mike Binger, a portfolio manager at Gradient Investments, in Shoreview, Minnesota.

The gains have run across asset sizes as well. The S&P small-cap index <.spcy> has jumped 6.7 percent and the S&P mid-cap index <.mid> has shot up 7.5 percent so far this year.

Exchange-traded funds have seen year-to-date inflows of $15.6 billion, with fairly even flows across the small-, mid- and large-cap categories, according to Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at the ConvergEx Group, in New York.

"Investors aren't really differentiating among asset sizes. They just want broad equity exposure," Colas said.

The market has shown resilience to weak news. Last week, the S&P 500 held steady on Thursday despite a 12 percent slide in shares of Apple after the iPhone and iPad maker's results. The giant tech company is heavily weighted in both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 <.ndx>. In the past, Apple's drop has suffocated stocks' broader gains.

In the last few days, the ratio of stocks hitting new highs versus those hitting new lows on a daily basis has started to diminish - a sign that the rally is narrowing to fewer names - and could be running out of gas.

Investors have also cited sentiment surveys that indicate high levels of bullishness among newsletter writers, a contrarian indicator, and momentum indicators are starting to suggest the rally has perhaps come too far.

THE FED AND JOBS ON THE AGENDA

The Federal Reserve's policymakers will meet this week for the first time this year. The Federal Open Market Committee's meeting will start on Tuesday and end on Wednesday. Most economists polled in late January expect the Fed's ultra-loose monetary policy to stay in place well into next year despite the modest growth forecast for the U.S. economy.

The market's resilience could be tested this week with Friday's release of the January non-farm payrolls report. About 155,000 jobs are forecast to have been added in the month, a Reuters poll showed. The U.S. unemployment rate is expected to hold steady at 7.8 percent.

"Staying over 1,500 sends up a flag of profit taking," Jerry Harris, president of asset management at Sterne Agee, in Birmingham, Alabama, said in reference to the S&P 500. "Since recent jobless claims have made us optimistic on payrolls, if that doesn't come through, it will be a real risk to the rally."

A number of marquee names will report earnings this week, including bellwether companies such as Caterpillar Inc , Amazon.com Inc , Ford Motor Co and Pfizer Inc .

On a historic basis, valuations remain relatively low. The S&P 500's price-to-earnings ratio sits at 15.66, just a tad above the historic level of 15.

Worries about the U.S. stock market's recent strength do not mean the market is in a bubble. Investors clearly don't feel that way at the moment.

"We're seeing more interest in equities overall, and a lot of flows from bonds into stocks," said Paul Zemsky, who helps oversee $445 billion as the New York-based head of asset allocation at ING Investment Management. "We've been increasing our exposure to risky assets."

For the past week, the Dow climbed 1.8 percent, the S&P 500 rose 1.1 percent and the Nasdaq advanced 0.5 percent.

(Wall Street Week Ahead runs every Sunday. Questions or comments on this one can be sent to ryan.vlastelica(at)thomsonreuters.com)

(Reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Additional reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-st-week-ahead-bears-sleep-u-stocks-175614373--finance.html

gladys knight private practice deion sanders creutzfeldt jakob disease the lone ranger yu darvish mad cow