Friday, July 12, 2013

Police investigating threat to Montreal Impact player on Twitter

Davy Arnaud
Montreal Impact forward Davy Arnaud is tackled by Colorado Rapids midfielder Brian Mullan during a game at Saputo Stadium on June 29. (QMI Agency)

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The Montreal Impact announced Wednesday an ongoing investigation into a profanity-laden tweet that threatened one of its first-team players.

?The Impact is taking this incident very seriously and will not accept threats of any kind made by individuals in regards to its players, coaches or administrative staff, in order to ensure their safety,? a press release read.

?I hope your family dies in a fire,? Twitter user @SBarbosa17 sent to Impact attacker Davy Arnaud.

Arnaud responded to the tweet: ?I know we lost and I made a mistake, but I deserve this? I forgive you.?

Arnaud?s mistake against the Colorado Rapids on June 29 was the deciding factor in a shocking 4-3 loss at Saputo Stadium in Montreal.

The Service ? la communaut? R?gion Sud, du Service de police de la Ville de Montr?al (SPVM) has opened an investigation and the individual in question will be interviewed by police.

It?s unclear if the above tweet is related to the matter ? as it?s not profanity-laden ? but it seems to indicate the nature of the abuse the 33-year-old sustained following the MLS fixture.

Was the tweet at Arnaud over the line?

Source: http://www.torontosun.com/2013/07/10/police-investigating-threat-to-montreal-impact-player-on-twitter

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Tornado confirmed in Reed Twp.

Authorities have confirmed a tornado touched down in Seneca County Wednesday.

Dan Stahl, the county's Emergency Management Agency director, said National Weather Service assessed the area in Reed Township and determined there was a weak EF1 tornado. The weather service determined it touched down, he said.

"It had some damage out there," he said.

According to a National Weather Service statement Stahl provided, tornadoes were confirmed in Seneca, Huron and Sandusky counties Wednesday. The statement contained preliminary information that was subject to change.

The tornado in Reed Township was estimated to have occurred at 2:24 p.m. and was labeled an EF1 with an estimated maximum wind speed of 90 mph and maximum path width of 50 yards. Its path length was slightly more than 10 miles.

The initial touch downs were near CR 27 and TR 122.

According to the weather service, several barns lost sections of roofing, a second-story wall partially collapsed on a home and an attached garage was lifted from its foundation. Evidence of extensive straight-line wind damage was noted.

Stahl said officials are doing preliminary damage assessment to find out what was damaged and need to get the information compiled and submitted to Ohio EMA.

"We worked on that this afternoon," he said.

Stahl said Community Emergency Response Team is trained in damage assessment and will be back out this morning and this afternoon if the work is not completed in the morning.

Officials are going to have the information in case a funding opportunity arises, he said.The situation is an emergency, he said.

"We got hit real hard," he said.

A tornado in Bellevue was estimated to be at 3:13 p.m. and was ranked an EF0 tornado with an estimated maximum wind speed of 75 mph and maximum path width of 50 yards. Its path length was 0.9 miles, according to the statement.

National Weather Service's statement indicated the initial touchdown occurred along Flat Rock Road, north of Kilbourne Street. Evidence of strong downburst winds in the city and throughout surrounding areas was noted.

According to the statement, nearly every street in the city had downed trees and power lines.

Source: http://www.advertiser-tribune.com/page/content.detail/id/556302.html

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Job Benefits Workers Want Most

Businesses trying to attract and retain employees with high-quality benefits shouldn't focus only on health care and vacation days, new research shows.

A study by job and career site Glassdoor revealed that more than 20 percent of employees think perks ? like free food and drinks, casual dress codes and pet-friendly offices ? are among the most important workplace benefits.

Specifically, the research shows that office perks are more important to women than men, as well as to employees in certain regions of the country, like the Midwest and the South.

Overall, more than 70 percent of workers rate medical coverage and holiday, vacation and sick time as the two most important benefits employers offer.

Glassdoor workplace and career expert Rusty Rueff said the research offers valuable insight into which benefits matter most to employees.

"While it's no surprise to see that medical coverage is an important benefit to the majority of employees, some employers may find it interesting to note that office perks, like free food or pet-friendly offices, are valuable, particularly to those in the Midwest and South, where employees report greatest interest ? likely because they do not receive as many perks as those in the West and Northeast," Rueff told BusinessNewsDaily. "Bottom line is, if employers are looking for ways to attract or retain employees as the employment market tightens, [the ?study] sheds light on what employees want and what is top of mind."

Other benefits employees view as valuable include 401(k), retirement and pension plans; employee development training; wellness programs; and tuition reimbursement.

When it comes to job security, employees have mixed opinions, the research shows. While more than 20 percent of employees are concerned about being laid off in the next six months, more than 40 percent are confident in their ability to find another job that fits their skill sets.

Rueff said employers should be aware that their employees are starting to feel better about their chances of finding a job elsewhere than they are about their current employment situation.

"Two in five employees feel they could find a job matched to their experience and compensation levels in the next six months ? the highest confidence reported in nearly four years," Rueff said. "There is still some concern that another shoe could drop, as one in five employees are concerned they could be laid off ? a high since the second quarter of 2011."

He said these are important warning signs for employers to note as the job market steadily improves.

The study was based on surveys of nearly 1,200 full-time, part-time and self-employed workers.

This story was provided by BusinessNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow Chad Brooks on Twitter @cbrooks76 or BusinessNewsDaily @BNDarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/job-benefits-workers-want-most-105556784.html

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Heated NYC mayor's race is a star-studded affair

NEW YORK (AP) - One makes a video with Steve Buscemi and rockers Vampire Weekend. Another gets shout-outs from Whoopi Goldberg and Brooke Shields. A third hobnobs over cocktails with an actor from "The Sopranos."

No, it's not an awards show weekend. It's the New York City mayor's race, featuring a cast of celebrities like few other municipal elections.

Last weekend, Democratic mayoral contender Christine Quinn unfurled a star-dusted list of pro-gay-rights backers of her bid to become the city's first female and first openly gay mayor. Among them: singer Lance Bass, actor Neil Patrick Harris, director Rob Reiner and "Project Runway" style czar Tim Gunn, who said Quinn would "make the position of mayor the bully pulpit it needs to be to fight for all New Yorkers. "

Ten days earlier, Alec Baldwin announced that he'd raffle off two dinner invites to any-amount donors to Democratic candidate Bill de Blasio.

"There are few things I enjoy more than a good meal with good company, particularly when an issue as urgent as the New York City mayoral election is up for discussion," the "30 Rock" actor told de Blasio supporters in an email, saying the candidate "understands the inequality crisis facing our city."

And in May, a fundraiser for Republican hopeful Joe Lhota spotlighted as "special guest" Steve Schirripa, best known as gentle-spirited goodfella Bobby "Bacala" Baccalieri on "The Sopranos."

With the super-competitive campaign to lead the nation's biggest city in high gear since spring, the day-to-day menu of candidate forums, policy speeches and endorsements from political figures and interest groups has increasingly been sprinkled with a healthy dash of glitz.

One day, it's a video from hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons praising de Blasio, now the city public advocate. Another day, it's Goldberg posting on her Facebook page to cheerlead for City Council Speaker Quinn, who also counts Shields as a backer. Or salsa star Willie Colon tweeting a link to a song he wrote lauding Democratic contender Bill Thompson, a former city comptroller.

Indeed, the race can sometimes seem like something of a ballot-box version of "Battle of the Network Stars." De Blasio's "LGBT for BdB" gala is headlined by Sarah Jessica Parker and Cynthia Nixon of "Sex and the City" fame and Tony Award-winning actor Alan Cumming? Well, here comes the "LGBT for Quinn" team, with actor-playwright Harvey Fierstein and actors Cheyenne Jackson and George Takei, along with Bass, Harris, Reiner and Gunn.

Republican candidate George McDonald, meanwhile, has links to actor Ethan Hawke, a longtime supporter of the Doe Fund, the homelessness-services nonprofit McDonald runs. GOP rival John Catsimatidis has been cultivating a theatrical tie of his own - the billionaire businessman has been underwriting performances of "The Little Flower," actor Tony Lo Bianco's one-man show about former New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia.

Entertainers, athletes and other pop culture icons have lent star power to national politics since at least 1920, when singer and comedian Al Jolson wrote a campaign song for Republican nominee Warren Harding and ushered dozens of theater performers to a rally at Harding's Ohio home. Later, show business would pave the path for several stars to win office themselves, most prominently President Ronald Reagan.

And celebrities' politics can be local, too, particularly in such fame havens as New York and Los Angeles, where the recent mayoral contest drew in Salma Hayek, Moby, Jimmy Kimmel and Magic Johnson, among other buzzerati.

In places where voter rolls are stuffed with boldface names, candidates can almost feel pressed to get celebs on their side, says former New York mayoral candidate Tom Allon, a newspaper publisher who dropped his campaign in March. He doesn't think stars' political opinions carry much weight with New Yorkers, but if he'd kept running and could tap some famous endorsers, "I'm sure I would have tried," he said.

While celebrities' imprimatur may not sway voters, stars can help campaigns more indirectly, political observers say.

"The crude notion that celebrities are persuasive, most of the time, for how people vote is just wrong. But I think celebrities are very important in certain situations: fundraising, attracting crowds and interest where it otherwise might not exist," says North Carolina State University political science professor Michael Cobb, who has researched whether celebrity endorsements affect voters.

A star might get more people to a rally or fundraiser, generate press coverage or write checks and round up wealthy friends to do likewise. (Several celebrities are bringing their pocketbooks to bear on the New York mayoral campaign, including Quinn donors Tom Hanks and Jon Bon Jovi and de Blasio contributors Paul Simon and John Turturro.)

And a celebrated backer can contribute to voters' view of a candidate, especially if the star's known for political activism.

Baldwin, for example, is so outspoken about city matters that he flirted with a mayoral run himself. Buscemi, a former city firefighter, got arrested alongside de Blasio in 2003 while protesting plans to close a firehouse - and in April appeared in a video with Vampire Weekend in which the candidate professes his love for the band and jokingly agrees they could write an official song for the city in return for their votes.

Such supporters "may be famous, but they are also progressive New Yorkers and passionate activists who care deeply about the future of our city and believe we need real change" after Mayor Michael Bloomberg's 12 years, de Blasio said in a statement. His campaign's famous friends also include Susan Sarandon.

Campaigns can run the risk that celebrity supporters will distract from their message instead of amplifying it. Just ask Mitt Romney about Clint Eastwood's Republican National Convention speech to an empty chair or query President Barack Obama about Robert de Niro's crack about some GOP candidates' wives at a fundraiser earlier in 2012.

De Blasio faced questions last week after Baldwin lashed out at a British journalist with a vulgar Twitter tirade using an anti-gay term. Baldwin apologized in a statement to the gay rights group GLAAD, and a de Blasio spokesman called the actor's language "clearly unacceptable."

And Quinn was on the spot when illustrious feminist Gloria Steinem publicly threatened to forsake Quinn's mayoral campaign if Quinn kept preventing the council from voting on requiring many businesses to provide paid sick time. Quinn ultimately backed the proposal, and Steinem endorsed her.

Some candidates say their campaigns aren't courting stars. Average New Yorkers' votes "are way more valuable than the endorsement of the `Sex and the City' cast," said Todd Brogan, a spokesman for Democratic contender Sal Albanese, a former city councilman.

Another candidate is well-known enough in his own right, for good or ill: Anthony Weiner, the Democratic former congressman felled by smutty tweets. Weiner hasn't announced any endorsements since he jumped into the race roughly six weeks ago.

Campaigns that are embracing luminaries say they're keeping fame in perspective.

"We're always so appreciative to have them," said Jessica Proud, a spokeswoman for Lhota, an ex-Metropolitan Transportation Authority boss. But ultimately, Proud said, "people want to know what you're going to do with them in office."

"You're not running for `American Idol,'" she added. "You're running for mayor."

(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://www.9news.com/rss/article.aspx?storyid=343995

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Istanbul's governor warns against new protest

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ? Istanbul's governor has warned that a planned gathering by protesters at the city's landmark Taksim Square is illegal and that police would disperse participants.

Gov. Huseying Avni Mutlu's warning comes hours before protesters were expected to converge on the square on Saturday, intending to enter the nearby Gezi Park whose redevelopment sparked anger and morphed into nationwide anti-government protests in June.

Gezi has been cordoned off since June 15, when police routed environmentalists who occupied it. Organizers said protesters would serve notice to authorities of a court decision that annulled the redevelopment plans and then attempt to break through the police cordon.

Mutlu said the protest is unauthorized and warned police would intervene. He said authorities planned to reopen the park on Sunday or Monday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/istanbuls-governor-warns-against-protest-145547218.html

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Guy Maddin recreating lost films of the silent era - Montreal Gazette

MONTREAL ? Guy Maddin was lying on the floor of the PHI Centre, showing Karine Vanasse and Gregory Hlady how he wanted them to play a scene. Just outside the makeshift train cabin stood crew members, photographers and journalists ? and on most days through July 20, you could join them, too.

The three were on the set of the acclaimed Canadian director?s ambitious new project Seances, an installation/performance/movie shoot during which Maddin will make 12 short films in 13 days, employing 66 Quebec actors including Roy Dupuis, C?line Bonnier, Carole Laure and Caroline Dhavernas. The event is open to the public, and free.

The concept? To recreate 12 lost films from the silent era. On this day, they were reviving Frederick Sullivan?s 1916 movie Saint, Devil and Woman, originally starring rumoured Qu?b?coise actress Florence La Badie (played by Vanasse).

?The facts are murky,? Maddin said, of both the film and La Badie?s backstory, ?but I prefer myths to facts. This one is a mad love story on the Bogota express, in which a psychiatrist falls in love with his patient, but it can?t be.

?These movies are exhumed from the dead, so it?s going to be a bit delirious.?

Other films to be revived include: Tsunekichi Shibata?s simply titled Tokyo?s Ginza District (1898, Japan); Elvira Notari?s Gabriele, the Lamplighter of the Harbour (1919, Italy); F.W. Murnau?s Der Januskopf (1920, Germany); Guan Heifeng?s Women Skeletons (1922, China); and Albert Tessier?s Journ?e scoute (1929, Quebec).

In making 10-minute versions of these movies, Maddin?s goal is not faithful recreation but to capture something more ephemeral ? the essence of a bygone era. Each day will begin with a seance, during which the director and his actors stand in a circle, holding hands, and summon the spirits of the original production team.

?I?m not exactly remaking it perfectly,? Maddin said. ?In some cases, I?ll be channelling the spirit of a lost F.W. Murnau movie. He?s maybe the greatest filmmaker of all time. I?m just Guy Maddin, the second- or third-best filmmaker in Manitoba at any given time.

?The way the muse visits and the spirits make their presence felt, imitation is the last thing that pops up. It?s always something coming through me. Mediums and seances were widely considered to be (performed by) charlatans and frauds. I consider all directors ? to be frauds, at the best of times. So who not just embrace it and enjoy.?

Known for his experimental, mostly silent, black-and-white films, Maddin was made a member of the Order of Canada in 2012. His 2007 movie My Winnipeg won best Canadian feature at the Toronto International Film Festival.

In 2009, the National Film Board commissioned him to make the 12-minute short Night Mayor (say it fast) to commemorate its 70th anniversary (the film can be viewed on the NFB website).

Asked about his attraction to silent films, Maddin got a glint in his eye.

?There?s something haunting about them,? he said, ?something more free. Just by dint of not having audible dialogue, they?re less literal-minded, that much closer to being fairytales. They can do what fairytales do, but better than fairytales ? they?re more allegorical and universal, about the human condition, more free.

?Not only that, they can embrace non-naturalistic acting performances. I?ve never been the kind of director who would know how to get a naturalistic acting performance. So I get silent movie fairytale performances and I?m a lot more comfortable with that.?

Seances is co-produced by the NFB, the PHI Centre and Buffalo Gal Pictures. This instalment follows a 17-film project he directed at Paris? Centre Pompidou in February and March. After Seances? run at the PHI Centre, a selection of the resulting short films will be combined into a feature.

There are also plans for an interactive website, in collaboration with the NFB, in which people will be able to watch and randomly combine different films for a unique viewing experience.

?Anyone on the Internet will be able to hold their own seance,? Maddin said.

Meanwhile, through July 20, Montrealers can experience the real thing first-hand, and maybe channel a few spirits of their own.

Guy Maddin?s Seances continues to July 20 (Tuesday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. ? except the July 9 shoot, which has been switched to July 8) at the PHI Centre, 407 St-Pierre St., in Old Montreal. Admission is free. Call 514-225-0525 or visit www.phi-centre.com

tdunlevy@montrealgazette.com

Twitter: tchadunlevy

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/Maddin+recreating+lost+films+silent+Seances+project/8617667/story.html

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Friday, July 5, 2013

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