Monday, October 8, 2012

Shyne Says Rick Ross Is 'Obsessed' With Him

'I have no respect for what he represents, for who he is,' former Bad Boy rapper tells MTV News of Black Bar Mitzvah.
By Rob Markman


Rick Ross' Black Bar Mitzvah cover art
Photo: Maybach Music Group

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1695140/shyne-rick-ross-black-bar-mitzvah.jhtml

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The Personal Finance Takeaway From Bobbi Kristina's Massive ...

Whitney Houston's mother Cissy is desperate to keep her granddaughter Bobbi Kristina away from her multi-million dollar inheritance, fearing it could send her down the same rabbit hole as the late singer.?

The estate is estimated at $20 million?a big enough fortune for Bobbi, 19, to fall victim to negative influences like her estranged father, Bobbi Brown, and reported boyfriend, Nick Gordon, who also happens to be her adopted brother. Last month, Gordon famously demolished the entire front of his Camaro?with Bobbi in the passenger seat.?

According to TMZ, Cissy and Whitney's sister-in-law, Pat Houston, filed a request last week to modify Whitney's will so Bobbi wouldn't receive the estate in one fell swoop, but in a series of payments over time. It's called the slowing the distribution schedule, or being put on allowance, and AARP Bulletin columnist Jane Bryant Quinn says it's a brilliant idea.?

"I think Grandma is right," she told Business Insider in an email. "That's a lot of money to pass to a young woman who might not be ready to manage it well. Bobbi will get it eventually, and will be free to use it or blow it, as she chooses. But for now, a prudent person would try to conserve the money until she grows up."?

Though we couldn't find details on Houston's distributions, most trusts "name a year, or series of years when the money can be distributed," says Quinn. "For example, the will might say?25% of the money when the child is 21, 25% more when the child is 29, the remainder when the child is 30. Or, half at 21, half at 30."?

If Bobbi disagrees with Cissy, she can lawyer up and argue for full distribution. But if she's content to let Cissy, the will's trustee, alter the schedule, then Grandma must win the agreement of the court and show there's a serious threat to Whitney's estate.?

"Trusts usually give the trustee the power to withhold payments if there's reason to believe the money will be dissipated," says Quinn. "The child might be in a guru's thrall, heavily into drugs or booze, getting divorced, or shows no ability to handle money. The purpose is to protect the child from him/herself and ensure that money is around for her later years."?

SEE ALSO: How to turn your family into old money >?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-personal-finance-takeaway-from-bobbi-kristinas-massive-inheritance-2012-10

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Wasps that eat maggots from inside out discovered

Little is known about tropical parasitic wasps in the subfamily Orthocentrinae besides their gruesome lifestyle. They lay their single egg in the body of a fly maggot and as the baby wasp larva grows, it eats the body of its host from the inside out.

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Now researchers say they've discovered a surprising diversity of the group in South and Central America.

Scientists examined 1,549 Orthocentrinae wasps that were collected in Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Amazon rain forests of Ecuador. From this group, they identified at least 177 distinct species ? far more than the 14 currently described in the region and more than the 151 species known in North America, where they have been more thoroughly studied.

These parasitic wasps, which are just a few millimeters long, were believed to be more diverse in temperate climates. But study researcher Gavin Broad said the new findings challenge that assumption.

"We now have good evidence that these wasps are very diverse in the tropics, and we should take that into account when looking at patterns of biodiversity across the globe," Broad, a wasp expert with the Natural History Museum in London, said in a statement. He added that the diversity of species could reveal more about the subfamily's place in the ecosystem.

"Considering the numbers of these wasps that can be found in forests, they must be playing an important role in the complicated cycle that breaks down dead wood," Broad explained.

"The fungi break down wood, as well as leaves and other organic debris. The flies eat the fungi and the orthocentrines feed on the flies ? there is a complicated and delicate pyramid of interactions supported by the presence of dead wood and leaf litter in the forests."

Broad and his colleagues identified the wasps through DNA tests and differences in the specimens' physical characteristics. Their findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B Wednesday (Oct. 3) and they say their next step is to properly name and describe the new species.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49322592/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Budget Resolution Omits Iraq Training Authority

The Pentagon says the temporary budget resolution that took effect Monday fails to authorize the U.S. military to continue training Iraqi security forces.

Congress did not include the Iraqi Security Forces Fund in the short-term spending measure it passed last month to fund the government.

Defense officials say none of the military trainers will be called back to the U.S. immediately while the Pentagon works through the issue.

Officials say there are fewer than 200 U.S. troops in Iraq, and fewer than 100 other Defense Department civilians and contractors. They say the Pentagon is exploring ways to possibly continue the training.

The U.S. Embassy's police training program has been touted as a key effort to continue supporting Iraqi security forces after the American military withdrew from Iraq last year.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/budget-resolution-omits-iraq-training-authority-230113054.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Typhoon lashes southern Japan,?

TOKYO (AP) ? A powerful typhoon is heading to Tokyo after injuring dozens of people, causing blackouts and paralyzing traffic in southern Japan.

Japan's Meteorological Agency says Typhoon Jelawat is expected to hit the Tokyo region Sunday evening. It warns of torrential rain and sudden wind gusts, urging Tokyo residents to stay indoors.

At noon Sunday, the storm was packing winds of up to 144 kilometers (90 miles) per hour.

The typhoon left more than 50 people with minor injuries on the southern island of Okinawa on Saturday. Thousands of homes were without electricity.

Dozens of trains were suspended Sunday in coastal areas around Tokyo, and some 300 domestic flights were to be grounded throughout the day.

Up to half a meter (20 inches) of rain is expected in central Japan through Monday.

Source: http://www.wpri.com/dpp/news/world_news/Typhoon-lashes-southern-Japan-approaches-Tokyo_45039445

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Xstrata gives cautious blessing to $33 billion Glencore bid

LONDON (Reuters) - Mining group Xstrata gave its long-awaited blessing on Monday to a revised $33 billion bid from trader Glencore, bowing to investor pressure by changing the deal to ensure it isn't sunk by a payment plan to retain top managers.

Xstrata dropped its insistence that the overall deal be tied to a shareholders' vote on the controversial package, which offers over 70 top executives a total of roughly 140 million pounds ($226 million) to dissuade them from quitting.

Now, through a complex structure of votes, investors will be able to express views against the retention plan without endangering the merger, bringing the deal closer to a conclusion almost eight months after it was announced.

"I am glad that they have recommended the deal and also very pleased that they have unbundled the remuneration issue," said one of Xstrata's 40 largest institutional investors.

"As much as I, personally, think that the two companies will be better off merged, it would have been hard to vote in favor of the retention packages."

In the original all-share agreement, backed by Xstrata's board in February, shareholders had to support both the retention plan, then worth more than 170 million pounds, and the Glencore offer itself - or neither.

Xstrata argued its executives would be responsible for achieving the bulk of future profit. The board members later said changes to Glencore's bid last month - which put the trader's own chief executive at the helm instead of Xstrata's veteran boss Mick Davis - made the plan even more necessary to stop its top executives leaving.

But after months of public and private grumbling from institutional shareholders such as BlackRock, Legal & General and Schroders, Xstrata has agreed to split the issues.

For some shareholders, this is still not enough - Threadneedle Investments, the 25th largest shareholder in Xstrata, said even Glencore's revised, higher deal was giving away the miner "on the cheap" and it remained "firmly opposed".

Threadneedle holds 0.4 percent of Xstrata stock, but in a complex deal that could still be blocked by shareholders accounting for just 16.5 percent of shares, every vote counts.

"No one should be in any doubt that this is effectively seen as a takeover, which will ultimately see a significant change in culture, leadership, quality and risk profile for Xstrata shareholders," Iain Richards, head of governance and responsible investment at Threadneedle, said in a letter to Xstrata's board.

Activist fund Knight Vinke, a top-20 shareholder and a vocal opponent of the deal so far, also argued the deal involved a change of control and was not a merger of equals, criticizing what it said was an insufficiently robust Xstrata board.

"We will now consult with other shareholders with a view to taking steps that will strengthen the independence of the Xstrata board," it said in a statement.

The major unknown, however, remains Qatar, Xstrata's second-largest shareholder and an unexpected kingmaker in one of the largest ever mining deals. A source familiar with the matter said the Gulf state's sovereign wealth fund, which owns over 12 percent of Xstrata, was considering its position.

HIGHER BID

Glencore, Xstrata's largest shareholder, had to raise its offer last month to 3.05 new shares for every Xstrata share it does not already hold, up from 2.8, after Qatar rejected the initial terms and threatened to sink the plan to create a mining and trading powerhouse.

Glencore's conditions for the higher price, however, included naming its boss and top shareholder, Ivan Glasenberg, as chief executive, ousting South African rival Davis.

Xstrata's non-executive directors had been expected to support the higher, revised bid, having supported the original - but they said on Monday that their recommendation for the deal was conditional on the approval of the retention plan.

Without it, and given the imminent replacement of Davis, the deal could see Xstrata's team depleted at an important time for its development, they said. The miner is shifting from an acquisition-heavy first decade to a phase of self-generated growth, which should boost volumes by 50 percent by 2014.

"This view was reaffirmed by major shareholders, in particular in the light of the change of CEO, and remains the rationale for retention arrangements," Xstrata Chairman John Bond, set to retain the role in the enlarged group, said.

"Nonetheless, some other shareholders remain opposed either to the principle of retention payments or to the originally proposed inter-conditional nature of the merger resolutions."

NOT IN THE BAG YET

Shares in Xstrata rose on Monday after the announcement, trading up 2.5 percent at 1220 GMT at 982 pence, while Glencore was flat. The prices implied a ratio of almost 2.9 - closer to the revised ratio and up from 2.8 at Friday's close, meaning the market considers the deal more likely to happen as a result of Monday's changes.

"(To say it is) in the bag is probably too strong. The merger ratio is probably going to be found adequate to get the deal done," Macquarie analyst Jeff Largey said.

"I think the new vote structure is unique, to say the least, and we'll see if, perhaps from a corporate governance point of view, this ruffles a few feathers."

Under the structure unveiled on Monday, Xstrata shareholders will be called to vote on two resolutions at a court meeting this month. The first is on supporting the merger, subject to the retention plan being approved at a later general meeting, while the second is on supporting the deal only if the pay plan is rejected. Shareholders who back the deal regardless of the retention issue can vote in favor of both options.

Shareholders will then hold a general meeting to vote on the incentive scheme for managers. Based on the results of that meeting, where a straightforward majority will be enough to approve the plan, one of the two court votes will be applicable.

Xstrata added that Davis would be replaced on the board by an Xstrata executive when he leaves next year, retaining the current balance. Xstrata will have six out of 11 board members.

Glencore's Glasenberg, who is also Glencore's largest shareholder, has given an "irrevocable undertaking" that he will support the current structure for at least two years.

Xstrata said Davis, one of the best paid CEOs among FTSE 100 companies, had waived his right to his 2012 retention award but would receive 9.6 million pounds on terminating his contract - equivalent to annual salary, 2011 bonus and other benefits.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/xstrata-board-backs-glencores-33-billion-bid-conditions-062248079--finance.html

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Ncaa hockey

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