KOF XIII ‘NESTS Kyo’ DLC delayed on PS3, netcode patch on the way


Originally slated for a simultaneous 360 and PS3 release on December 20, King of Fighters XIII‘s upcoming “NESTS Kyo” character DLC pack has been delayed for PS3 fighters until January 10. A fantastically vague “technical error” is to blame for the issue, according to the Atlus press release after the break. In order to make it up to you, SNK Playmore will be lowering the character’s cost to $2.99 for a limited time once it lands.

In somewhat sunnier KoFXIII news, Atlus is also planning a substantial netcode patch for both versions of the game which is said to “make the game’s network infrastructure more consistent for users, ensuring that the evaluation given connections is more accurate to the actual play experience.” The patch will also introduce minimum signal strength requirement settings on the host side of matchmaking, so players will be able to prevent users with poor connections from joining their open match. SNK Playmore plans on releasing the patch “as soon as possible.”

Oh, and if you’re wondering what the hell “NESTS” means, read this.Continue reading KOF XIII ‘NESTS Kyo’ DLC delayed on PS3, netcode patch on the wayKOF XIII ‘NESTS Kyo’ DLC delayed on PS3, netcode patch on the way originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 20 Dec 2011 07:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments

Thanks to video games

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By Christine Spines
Singer/actress/civil rights activist in 1942 was first African-American signed to big movie studio contract

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Explosion Hits Major Oil Pipeline In Syria

A major Syrian pipeline carrying oil to a refinery in the restive Homs province was blown up on Thursday, activists and the state-run news agency said, as violence stemming from the country’s 9-month-old uprising spirals out of control. No casualties were reported and it was not clear who was behind Thursday’s explosion. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the pipeline was “bombed,” while the state-run news agency SANA blamed terrorists. “An armed terrorist group on Thursday committed an act of sabotage,” SANA said. A government official said the blast caused a fire that has been burning for four hours. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. There were two similar blasts on Syrian pipelines in July, with no injuries. Nomair Makhlouf, the general director of the Syrian Oil Company, said the pipeline serves Syria’s domestic requirements and carries 140,000 barrels a day. Thursday’s reports could not be independently confirmed. Syria has banned most foreign journalists and prevented independent reporting. Syria is trying to crush a popular uprising, but the conflict is turning more violent as once-peaceful protesters increasingly take up arms. Meanwhile, sanctions from Turkey, the Arab League and the European Union are aimed at squeezing the ailing Syrian economy and forcing the regime to halt the bloodshed. The EU has banned oil imports from Syria in a move that costs the embattled regime millions of dollars each day. On Wednesday, in a rare interview, Syrian President Bashar Assad said he never ordered the brutal suppression of the uprising in his country, and insisted only a “crazy person” would kill his own people. Apparently trying to distance himself from violence that the U.N. says has killed 4,000 people since March, Assad laughed off a question in a rare interview broadcast Wednesday about whether he feels any guilt. “I did my best to protect the people,” he told ABC’s Barbara Walters during an interview at the presidential palace in the Syrian capital, Damascus. “You feel sorry for the life that has been lost, but you don’t feel guilty when you don’t kill people.” “No government in the world [kills] its people unless it is led by a crazy person,” Assad added in the interview, which was conducted in English. Assad, who trained as an ophthalmologist in Britain, speaks the language fluently. The interview offered a rare glimpse into the character of the 46-year-old Assad, who inherited power from his father in 2000. His brother — widely regarded as the chosen heir — had died in a car crash years earlier. Assad, who commands Syria’s armed forces, has sealed off the country to most outsiders while clinging to the allegation that the uprising is the work of foreign extremists, not true reform-seekers aiming to open the authoritarian political system. The United Nations and others dismiss that entirely, blaming the regime for widespread killings, rape and torture. Witnesses and activists inside Syria describe brutal repression, with government forces firing on unarmed protesters and conducting terrifying, house-to-house raids in which families are dragged from their homes in the night. “We’re talking about false allegations and accusations,” Assad said. When asked if Syrian troops had cracked down too hard on protesters, he said there had been no command “to kill or to be brutal.” “They’re not my forces,” he said. “They are military forces [who] belong to the government. I don’t own them. I’m president. I don’t own the country.” Assad said some Syrian troops may have behaved badly, but they faced punishment if so. He also said most of the people who died in the unrest were his own supporters and troops, slain by terrorists and gangsters an allegation disputed by most outside observers.

Explosion Hits Major Oil Pipeline In Syria

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An American Indian Physician Discusses Cancer in Indian Country …

0 An American Indian Physician Discusses Cancer in Indian Country and the Spirit of Eagles Program

Dr. Judith Kaur, an American Indian physician and Medical Director of Native American Programs at the Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, speaks about visiting reservations to help American Indian and Alaskan Native communities discuss cancer and treatment.

Meanwhile, she highlights her work with the Mayo Clinic and the Spirit of Eagles, an American Indian/Alaska Native leadership initiative on cancer. ?I think the emphasis on health and wellness, not disease and dying, is what is unique about our philosophy. It?s finding that balance, that spiritual core. That?s what the Spirit of Eagles symbolism means?there?s strength, spirituality, health, healing, and that?s what our communities need,? Dr. Kaur says.

Source: http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2011/12/03/an-american-indian-physician-discusses-cancer-in-indian-country-and-the-spirit-of-eagles-program-65567

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Lisa Belkin: Working Moms Multitask More, And Enjoy It Less (Huffington post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics – Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/168544277?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Nicolas Cage’s ‘Superman’ Comic Sells for $2.1 Million

Actor’s pristine copy of ‘Superman’ debut sets record for comic book sale.
By Gil Kaufman


Nicolas Cage at the “Kick-Ass” premiere
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images

It’s a good thing Nicolas Cage was able to get his rare copy of “Action Comics” No. 1 back in April after it was stolen from his house in 2000. Because in an online auction on Wednesday, the most sought-after comic in history sold for a record $2.1 million, after 50 people bid in an online auction on the June 1938 book in which Superman makes his debut.

Cage’s copy (though the identity of the owner has not been disclosed, many believe it still belongs to the actor), one of only 100 believed to remain in existence, was graded at 9.0 before the auction, making it the best condition of an Action #1 that has ever been graded by the leading comic book grading company, Certified Guaranty Company. Shattering the previous $1.5 million record for a less-well preserved copy of “Action Comics” No.1 sold last March, Cage’s comic became the most expensive to ever sell at auction
, when it went for $2,161,000.

And it almost didn’t happen. Cage’s comic was stolen from his house in 2000 and then recovered by Los Angeles police when an unidentified man bought the contents of an abandoned storage locker in the San Fernando Valley. Cage reported it stolen on January 21, 2000, after noticing that it, along with two other rare comics, had been stolen from security frames mounted on the wall of his Los Angeles home.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, experts believe that only five other No. 1′s with quality near Cage’s exist and all are in private hands. Cage bought his copy at auction in 1997 for around $150,000.

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1675197/nicolas-cage-action-comics-sale.jhtml

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Wall St slips, eyes Friday’s jobs report (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks treaded water on Thursday after the previous day’s massive gains, but traders worried that recent strong data could set the market up for a selloff should Friday’s jobs report fall short of hopes.

Both the Dow and the S&P 500 dipped and the Nasdaq ended with a slight gain following Wednesday’s rally of more than 4 percent on an agreement from central banks to provide cheap dollar loans to struggling European banks.

Sentiment was underpinned by stronger-than-expected figures on U.S. factory activity, which came one day after private-sector payroll data also exceeded forecasts. Further gains could be sparked by a significant jump in November payrolls.

“At this point in time we are definitely building for a better payrolls number,” said David Lutz, a trader at Stifel Nicolaus Capital Markets in Baltimore.

The U.S. economy is expected to have added 122,000 jobs in November. Some investors think even a number slightly better than that from the Labor Department won’t be enough to justify more buying.

“I can’t believe people are getting excited about 150,000 (new jobs) four years into this economic malaise,” said Chad Morganlander, portfolio manager at Stifel, Nicolaus & Co in Florham Park, New Jersey.

Despite the importance of the payrolls figure, the market will still focus on the borrowing costs of euro-zone nations. Spanish and French government bond yields fell after well-bid auctions on Thursday, but relief may be brief with no solution for the euro zone’s debt crisis in sight.

The financial sector, the strongest gainer on Wednesday, gave back some of its gains. The S&P’s financial index (.GSPF) slid 0.95 percent.

“Until there’s a proper resolution among European policy makers, wild fluctuations in equity markets will continue forward,” Morganlander said.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) fell 25.65 points, or 0.21 percent, to 12,020.03. The S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 2.37 points, or 0.19 percent, to 1,244.59. The Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) gained 5.86 points, or 0.22 percent, to 2,626.20.

All three indexes climbed more than 4 percent in Wednesday’s broad rally on heavy volume, with the Dow industrials gaining almost 500 points.

In the latest better-than-expected data, the pace of growth in the U.S. manufacturing sector picked up in November to its strongest since June and new orders rose, according to the Institute for Supply Management.

However, new claims for unemployment insurance rose last week in a reminder that any healing in the country’s battered labor market will be slow.

Barnes & Noble Inc (BKS.N) plummeted 16.3 percent to $14.59 on more than twice its recent daily average volume after it reported a quarterly loss. The bookseller was hurt by the cost for keeping competitive with Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O).

On the upside, Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) gained 3.3 percent to $16.23 after news that Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) and Bain Capital, along with Asian partners, were preparing a bid for the Internet company.

US Airways Group Inc (LCC.N) jumped 4.7 percent to $4.94 after Barclays Capital upgraded its rating on the stock. An index of airline stocks (.XAL) rose 1.8 percent.

About 6.8 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Amex and Nasdaq, below the current daily average of 7.97 billion shares traded per day.

Declining stocks outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a ratio of about 3 to 2, and despite the overall gains on the Nasdaq just under 7 shares fell for every four that rose.

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; additional reporting by Edward Krudy; Editing by Kenneth Barry.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111201/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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Economics and Investing: – SurvivalBlog.com

Be sure to listen to this! Jim Pulplava interviews Ann Barnhardt about institutional wickedness by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and MF Global: The Entire Futures/Options Market Has Been Destroyed by the MF Global Collapse. Barnhardt predicts systemic collapse and hence the need to shift into tangibles including long guns, ammunition, fuel, and precious metals. (Thanks to David W. for the link.)

Sometimes “Just In Time” inventory control has a nasty bite: Residents in Alaska city could get $9-a-gallon gas. (BTW, this adds credence to my advice to not choose Alaska as a retreat locale.)

Central Banks Augment Currency Swap Capabilities. (Even Switzerland has jumped in on this, since their currency is deemed “too strong” and that is hurting their exports.)

Recollections on living through Yugoslavia’s mass inflation: Interview with Milos Dedovic

Items from The Economatrix:

31 Banks The Fed Is Watching Like A Hawk

Abrupt Economic Collapse–The Time Draws Near

The Future Of Jobs

Holding The EU Together By Money Printing And Force

Stocks Leap On Central Banks’ Coordinated Actions. (Whoopeee! Billions and billions in new liquidity…)

Source: http://www.survivalblog.com/2011/12/economics_and_investing_1010.html

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iTether app skirts carrier tethering plans, sets up shop in iOS App Store

Ready to share your iPhone’s data plan with your laptop without springing for the requisite tethering plan? No, it’s not another brightly colored, data smuggling easter egg, it’s iTether, a USB tethering app that has apparently made its way through Apple’s approval process. The data sharing newcomer promises to pipe your existing data plan to your PC via a companion desktop application. If history is anything to go by, this $15 app won’t be available for long, so you’d better get while the getting’s good — it seems that high demand has already taken Tether’s website down.

Update: Aaaannnd, it has been yanked. ‘Twas great while it lasted!

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iTether app skirts carrier tethering plans, sets up shop in iOS App Store originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Nov 2011 02:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MacRumors, 9to5Mac  |  sourceiTunes, Tether  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/29/itether-app-skirts-atandt-tethering-plan-sets-up-shop-in-ios-app/

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Syracuse coach Boeheim silent day after Fine fired

Zach Tomaselli, 23, poses Monday, Nov. 28, 2011 in Lewiston, Maine. Tomaselli is the third man to accuse Syracuse Associate head coach Bernie Fine of sexual abuse. Tomaselli, who faces sexual assault charges in Maine involving a 14-year-old boy, said during a telephone interview with The Associated Press that he signed an affidavit accusing Fine following a meeting with Syracuse police last week in Albany. Tomaselli’s father, meanwhile, maintains his son is lying. (AP Photo/Joel Page)

Zach Tomaselli, 23, poses Monday, Nov. 28, 2011 in Lewiston, Maine. Tomaselli is the third man to accuse Syracuse Associate head coach Bernie Fine of sexual abuse. Tomaselli, who faces sexual assault charges in Maine involving a 14-year-old boy, said during a telephone interview with The Associated Press that he signed an affidavit accusing Fine following a meeting with Syracuse police last week in Albany. Tomaselli’s father, meanwhile, maintains his son is lying. (AP Photo/Joel Page)

Zach Tomaselli stands for a photo Monday, Nov. 28, 2011, in Lewiston, Maine. Tomaselli said Sunday that he told police that Bernie Fine, an assistant basketball coach at Syracuse, molested him in 2002 in a Pittsburgh hotel room. The third accuser to come forward, Tomaselli said Fine touched him “multiple” times in that one incident. Fine was fired Sunday. (AP Photo/Joel Page)

Zach Tomaselli, 23, poses Monday, Nov. 28, 2011 in Lewiston, Maine. Tomaselli is the third man to accuse Syracuse Associate head coach Bernie Fine of sexual abuse. Tomaselli, who faces sexual assault charges in Maine involving a 14-year-old boy, said during a telephone interview with The Associated Press that he signed an affidavit accusing Fine following a meeting with Syracuse police last week in Albany. Tomaselli’s father, meanwhile, maintains his son is lying. (AP Photo/Joel Page)

Syracuse basketball player Dion Waiters arrives for practice in Syracuse, N.Y., Monday, Nov. 28, 2011. Associate head coach Bernie Fine was fired the day before for child sexual abuse allegations. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

ESPN’s Mark Schwarz reports from the Syracuse University practice facility in Syracuse, N.Y., Monday, Nov. 28, 2011. Schwarz broke the story about associate head coach Bernie Fine and child sexual abuse allegations. Fine was fired yesterday. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

(AP) ? Syracuse men’s basketball coach Jim Boeheim ran a closed practice Monday as sex abuse victims’ advocates questioned whether he should still coach following the firing of longtime assistant Bernie Fine, who has been accused of molestation by three men.

As criticism swirled about Boeheim’s initial support of Fine and his verbal attacks on the accusers, the coach kept a low profile, seeking refuge in his office on the second floor of the Carmelo K. Anthony Basketball Center.

Boeheim, who had been sharply critical of the accusers, has softened his stance 10 days after an impassioned defense of Fine, who spent 35 seasons on the bench next to Boeheim and was fired Sunday.

The Rev. Robert Hoatson, president of Road to Recovery, a group that supports victims of sexual abuse, said the dismissal of Bernie Fine was appropriate but didn’t go far enough.

“I think Jim Boeheim should be fired or resign as well,” Hoatson said Monday. “These boys were members of the basketball program. Jim Boeheim’s responsibility is to oversee that program, and the children were not safe on his watch.”

Two former Syracuse ball boys were the first to accuse Fine, who has called the allegations “patently false.” And a third man came forward last week, accusing Fine of molesting him nine years ago.

Bobby Davis, now 39, told ESPN that Fine molested him beginning in 1984 and that the sexual contact continued until he was around 27. A ball boy for six years, Davis told ESPN that the abuse occurred at Fine’s home, at Syracuse basketball facilities and on team road trips, including the 1987 Final Four. His stepbrother, Mike Lang, 45, who also was a ball boy, told ESPN that Fine began molesting him while he was in fifth or sixth grade.

Zach Tomaselli, 23, of Lewiston, Maine, said Sunday he told police that Fine molested him in 2002 in a Pittsburgh hotel room. Tomaselli, who faces sexual assault charges in Maine involving a 14-year-old boy, said Fine touched him “multiple” times in that one incident. During a telephone interview with The Associated Press, he said he signed an affidavit accusing Fine following a meeting with Syracuse police last week in Albany.

As supporters of victims of sex abuse called for Boeheim to be fired, university trustees were largely silent.

“I don’t have anything to say about this,” said trustee H. Douglas Barclay, who earned his law degree from Syracuse in 1961 and was a New York state senator for 20 years.

Reached in Naples, Fla., trustee Marvin Lender, class of 1963, referred all calls to Chancellor Nancy Cantor.

“It’s a policy, and I want to adhere to it,” he said.

Calls to several other trustees seeking comment were not returned.

The allegations against Fine surfaced a week after Penn State school trustees fired Joe Paterno in the aftermath of child sex abuse charges against former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, who is accused in a grand jury indictment of sexually abusing eight boys over a 15-year period.

Amid that child sex-abuse scandal, Penn State’s trustees ousted Paterno and university President Graham Spanier. The trustees said Spanier and Paterno, who is not the target of any criminal investigation, failed to act after a graduate assistant claimed he saw Sandusky sexually abusing a young boy in a campus shower in 2002. And two school administrators were charged with not properly alerting authorities to suspected abuse and with perjury. They maintain their innocence.

When the allegations against Fine first became public Nov. 17, Boeheim adamantly defended his longtime assistant and attacked the accusers, saying he suspected they were trying get money.

“It is a bunch of a thousand lies that he has told,” Boeheim told ESPN, referring to Bobby Davis. “You don’t think it is a little funny that his cousin (relative) is coming forward?”

Those comments prompted a swift backlash from victims’ advocates, who were outraged by Boeheim’s attitude.

Ten days later, his stance had changed considerably.

In a statement released Sunday night after Fine’s firing, Boeheim expressed regret for his initial statements that might have been “insensitive to victims of abuse.”

“What is most important is that this matter be fully investigated and that anyone with information be supported to come forward so that the truth can be found,” Boeheim said in a statement released by the school. “I deeply regret any statements I made that might have inhibited that from occurring or been insensitive to victims of abuse.”

That apology did not appease all his critics.

Richard Tollner, a member of the New York Coalition to Protect Children, said even if the investigation finds Boeheim didn’t know anything before, during or after any abuses occurred, he should at least offer to quit. Tollner and other victims’ advocates have been sharply critical of comments Boeheim made when the scandal broke in which he said the accusers were lying to get money.

“We think he should offer his resignation to the Syracuse University Board and the let the board decide with a vote of confidence whether he should continue on or not,” said Tollner.

“Mr. Boeheim has a responsibility,” Tollner said. “He’s a leader. Kids follow what Jim Boeheim says these days. In that light, he should have been more responsible in his remarks.”

New York state Assemblywoman Margaret Markey, a Queens Democrat who has passed legislation increasing the age from 23 to 28 to bring a claim of sexual abuse, said if an investigation shows Boeheim was aware of the allegations against Fine and did nothing, he should be removed.

“But if he wasn’t aware of it, and there was no way of him knowing about it, that’s a different set of circumstances,” Markey said.

On Sunday, ESPN also played an audiotape, obtained and recorded by Davis, of an October 2002 telephone conversation between him and Fine’s wife, Laurie.

Davis told ESPN he made the recording, which also has been given to Syracuse police, without her knowledge because he knew he needed proof for the police to believe his accusations. ESPN said it hired a voice recognition expert to verify the voice on the tape and the network said it was determined to be that of Laurie Fine.

During the call to the woman, Davis repeatedly asks her what she knew about the alleged molestation.

“Do you think I’m the only one that he’s ever done that to?” Davis asked.

“No … I think there might have been others but it was geared to … there was something about you,” the woman on the tape said.

On the tape, she also says she knew “everything that went on.”

“Bernie has issues, maybe that he’s not aware of, but he has issues. … And you trusted somebody you shouldn’t have trusted … “

Federal authorities investigating Fine are not hampered by a statute of limitations should they turn up evidence Fine molested Tomaselli in Pittsburgh.

Under federal law passed in 2002, prosecutions for the sexual or physical abuse or kidnapping of a child under 18 can continue until the victim turned 25. Subsequent amendments changed that to the life of the child or 10 years after the offense, whichever is longer.

On Sunday, Tomaselli’s father said he was lying.

In a phone interview with the AP, Fred Tomaselli said: “I’m 100 percent sure that Bernie Fine was never in contact with Zach. He never went to Pittsburgh to a game, never been to that arena.”

Zach Tomaselli’s friend, Rose Ryan of Lewiston, Maine, defended him Monday against his father’s claim that he made up the story about being molested by Fine.

“He’s not lying,” said Ryan, who said Tomaselli provided detailed descriptions to police of the Pittsburgh hotel and of the interior of Fine’s home.

Ryan, who’s 31, said Tomaselli worked as a camp counselor and a baseball umpire but is currently unemployed and having difficulty finding work because of sex charges pending against him in Maine.

Tomaselli was arrested in April on 11 warrants charging gross sexual assault, tampering with a victim, two counts of unlawful sexual contact, five counts of visual sexual aggression against a child and unlawful sexual touching and unlawful sexual contact, Lewiston police said. They did not say what led to the charges. He has pleaded not guilty.

John Duncan, executive assistant U.S. attorney in Syracuse, said a search warrant was executed Friday by the U.S. Secret Service at Fine’s residence. He declined to say Monday what was sought or found, saying it remains under seal. “His home was searched,” he said.

U.S. Secret Service agent Tim Kirk in Syracuse declined to comment and referred questions to Duncan.

Lee Kindlon, a criminal defense attorney who practices in state and federal courts in upstate New York, said while the statute of limitations won’t bar federal prosecutors at this point, they have other issues including the credibility of the accuser and lack of physical proof.

“But these allegations are serious and I think the feds are doing the right thing and looking for proof to back up the accusations,” he said.

Also Monday, the Syracuse Police Department said it will provide details of its investigation to the Onondaga County District Attorney’s Office on Tuesday, heading off a court appearance that was scheduled for Tuesday morning. DA William Fitzpatrick had complained that the police were not sharing details and accused the police chief and others of leaking information to the media, a claim the police denied.

A two-paragraph statement from the city police noted that the case had entered a “new phase” with the U.S. Attorney and Secret Service taking the lead.

___

AP Writers Mike Virtanen, Mary Esch and Rik Stevens in Albany, Ben Dobbin in Rochester and David Sharp in Portland, Maine contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-28-US-Syracuse-Fine-Investigation/id-b159101c779f45df967b6d21ced137c9

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