#UK At least 14 people killed in California shooting: police

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A crowd gathers behind police lines near the scene of a shooting on December 2, 2015 in San Bernardino, California

San Bernardino (United States) (AFP) – At least 14 people were killed and 14 others injured Wednesday in a mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, the city’s police chief said, adding that so far, the motive for the incident was unclear.

“The preliminary number we have right now is that there are 14 people that are deceased. And our count is another 14 people that have been taken to various hospitals for significant injuries,” Chief Jarrod Burguan told reporters.

Burguan said the suspects were still at large, and the motive was not yet known. The FBI said that so far, it was unclear if the shooting was a “terrorist incident.”

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#UK Carson says he’s faced discrimination as black conservative

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Republican presidential candidate, Dr. Ben Carson arrives on stage during a town hall meeting at Winthrop University, Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015, in Rock Hill, S.C. (AP Photo/Rainier Ehrhardt)

ROCK HILL, S.C. (AP) — Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson says he’s faced more discrimination because he’s a black conservative than because of his race alone.

“That’s an easy one: conservative ideology by a long shot,” he said, when asked which factor generated more prejudice.

“In this country, you are not supposed to be black and be a conservative,” added Carson, the only black candidate in the 2016 presidential field. “If you are, you are fair game for any vile thing, for lies and twisting your words.”

Carson’s comments came during an all-day campaign swing in South Carolina, the first of the early voting states with a significant African-American population. Black voters here and nationally trend overwhelmingly to Democrats.

Carson alluded to that disadvantage Wednesday. He did not specifically cite the Democratic Party, but argued that “secular progressives” — terminology he uses often when criticizing various aspects of U.S. liberalism — “are only interested in one thing, and that’s voting blocs. They don’t really care two hoots and a holler about people.”

A famed physician making his first bid for political office, Carson rarely mentions race as he campaigns, unless he is asked. But his race and the circumstances of his life story — rising from a poor, black neighborhood of Detroit to worldwide renown as a pediatric neurosurgeon — form a key part of his appeal among white conservatives who disapprove of government programs they often associated with minorities.

In the autobiographical pitch that anchors his standard speech to voters, Carson talks about the “culture of dependency” he observed growing up. He concedes that his single mother “sometimes accepted assistance,” but says she sought to avoid it.

He bemoans “race wars” perpetrated by “purveyors of division,” and he implicitly lumps President Barack Obama, the nation’s first black president, into that group. He traces public assistance programs to Democratic presidents going back to Woodrow Wilson and calls the efforts a failure because poverty remains.

At a recent South Carolina criminal justice forum organized by black civic leaders, Carson questioned widespread claims of blacks being mistreated by law enforcement in the U.S. “I’m still waiting for the evidence,” he said.

Carson drew laughs Wednesday with one of his standard lines, mentioning that the preamble to the Constitution calls for the government to “promote the general welfare … but that doesn’t mean put everybody on welfare.” As he does at many stops, he clarified that he doesn’t want to get rid of the social safety net, but wants to limit the programs “to people who need them.”

Separately, Carson repeated his call for the U.S. not to admit war refugees from Syria. Having recently traveled to the Middle East, Carson said the better solution is to aid neighboring nations like Jordan.

He argued that the cost of caring for Syrian refugees in the Middle East would be a fraction of what it would cost to resettle them in the U.S., and he maintained that allowing them come to the U.S. “exposes our population to danger” because Islamic State militants would “infiltrate” the program.

The State Department counters that its existing vetting process, in place well before the recent Paris attacks, is sound.

Carson’s South Carolina swing comes amid several new voter surveys that suggest he is slipping from his perch alongside Donald Trump atop the GOP presidential field. Carson did not mention the polls at his first two stops.

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Associated Press writer Skip Foreman contributed from Fort Mill, South Carolina.

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Follow Bill Barrow on Twitter at https://twitter.com/BillBarrowAP .

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#UK AP test: Rio Olympic water badly polluted, even far offshore

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FILE - In this Dec 16, 2011 file photo, Germany's Erik Heil and Thomas Ploessel compete in the men's 49er skiff gold fleet 1 race 10 at the Sailing Championships in Perth, Australia. Heil had to be treated at a Berlin hospital for MRSA, a flesh-eating bacteria, shortly after sailing in an Olympic test event in August at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where tests by The Associated Press have found high contamination in waters to be used in the 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Theron Kirkman, File)

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Olympic sailor Erik Heil floated a novel idea to protect himself from the sewage-infested waters he and other athletes will compete in during next year’s games: He’d wear plastic overalls and peel them off when he was safely past the contaminated waters nearest shore.

Heil, 26, was treated at a Berlin hospital for MRSA, a flesh-eating bacteria, shortly after sailing in an Olympic test event in Rio in August. But his strategy to avoid a repeat infection won’t limit his risk.

A new round of testing by The Associated Press shows the city’s Olympic waterways are as rife with pathogens far offshore as they are nearer land, where raw sewage flows into them from fetid rivers and storm drains. That means there is no dilution factor in the bay or lagoon where events will take place and no less risk to the health of athletes like sailors competing farther from the shore.

“Those virus levels are widespread. It’s not just along the shoreline but it’s elsewhere in the water, therefore it’s going to increase the exposure of the people who come into contact with those waters,” said Kristina Mena, an expert in waterborne viruses and an associate professor of public health at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. “We’re talking about an extreme environment, where the pollution is so high that exposure is imminent and the chance of infection very likely.”

In July, the AP reported that its first round of tests showed disease-causing viruses directly linked to human sewage at levels up to 1.7 million times what would be considered highly alarming in the U.S. or Europe. Experts said athletes were competing in the viral equivalent of raw sewage and exposure to dangerous health risks almost certain.

The results sent shockwaves through the global athletic community, with sports officials pledging to do their own viral testing to ensure the waters were safe for competition in next year’s games. Those promises took on further urgency in August, after pre-Olympic rowing and sailing events in Rio led to illnesses among athletes nearly double the acceptable limit in the U.S. for swimmers in recreational waters.

Nevertheless, Olympic and World Health Organization officials have flip-flopped on promises to carry out viral testing in the wake of the AP’s July report.

Now, the AP’s most recent tests since August show not only no improvement in water quality — but that the water is even more widely contaminated than previously known. The number of viruses found over a kilometer from the shore in Guanabara Bay, where sailors compete at high speeds and get utterly drenched, are equal to those found along shorelines closer to sewage sources.

“The levels of viruses are so high in these Brazilian waters that if we saw those levels here in the United States on beaches, officials would likely close those beaches,” Mena said.

Brazilian, Olympic and WHO officials now say Brazil needs only to carry out testing for bacterial “markers” of pollution to determine water quality. That’s the standard used by nations around the globe, mostly because it’s been historically easier and cheaper.

WHO said Wednesday that it had no comment on the AP’s latest findings.

The Rio 2016 Olympic organizing committee said in an emailed statement that “the health and safety of athletes is always a top priority and there is no doubt that water within the field of play meets the relevant standards.”

“Rio 2016 follows the expert advice of the World Health Organization, whose guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments recommend classifying water through a regular program of microbial water quality testing.”

However, in recent years technological advances have made it simpler and less expensive to monitor viral levels, too.

That’s why many in the scientific communities in the U.S. and Europe are pushing for legislation that would require viral testing of water. They argue that repeated studies dating back decades have shown little to no correlation between the levels of bacteria pathogens in water, which quickly break down in salty and sunny conditions like those in tropical Brazil, and the presence of viruses, which have been shown to last for months, and in some cases years.

That disparity has surfaced in AP’s testing in Rio, where the water often falls within safe levels of fecal bacteria, but the same water sample shows levels of viruses akin to raw sewage. Many of the testing points show spikes in bacterial contamination, too — especially in the Olympic lagoon and in the marina where sailors launch crafts.

Rio’s waterways, like those of many developing nations, are extremely contaminated because most of the city’s sewage is not treated, let alone collected. Massive amounts of it flow straight into Guanabara Bay. The Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon and the famous Copacabana Beach also are heavily contaminated.

Rio won the right to host the Olympics based on a lengthy bid document that promised to clean up the city’s scenic waterways by improving sewage sanitation, a pledge that was intended to be one of the event’s biggest legacies.

Brazilian officials now acknowledge that won’t happen.

The AP’s first published results were based on samples taken along the shores of the lagoon where rowing and canoeing events will be held. Other samples were drawn from the marina where sailors enter the water and in the Copacabana Beach surf, where marathon and triathlon swimming will take place. Ipanema Beach, popular with tourists and where many of the expected 350,000 foreign visitors will take a dip during the games, was also tested.

Since then, the AP expanded its testing to include offshore sampling sites inside Olympic sailing courses in Guanabara Bay and in the middle of the lagoon where rowing and canoeing lanes were located during recent test events.

The tests found the lagoon and bay to be consistently virus-laden throughout, but it also captured a spike in the bacterial fecal coliforms in the lagoon — to over 16 times the amount permitted under Brazilian law.

Mena, the waterborne virus expert, said it makes sense for athletes to think that deeper into the bay and lagoon would be safer, but the testing doesn’t bear that out.

“One would expect to see more fluctuations with the levels of any pathogen in the water, but it’s not there,” she said.

As a result, none of the venues are fit for swimmers or boaters, she said. Athletes who ingest three teaspoons of water have a 99 percent chance of being infected by viruses.

That assessment was echoed by Brazilian virologist Fernando Spilki, coordinator of the environmental quality program at Feevale University in southern Brazil, who is conducting monthly tests for the AP.

“Samples from the sailing courses and inside the lagoon prove that the viruses are present even away from the shore, away from the sources of pollution, and that they maintain extremely high viral loads,” he said.

Athletes in Rio test events have tried many tricks and treatments to avoid falling ill, including bleaching rowing oars, hosing off their bodies the second they finish competing, and preemptively taking antibiotics — which have no effect on viruses.

Despite those efforts, athletes at a competition in August still fell ill. The World Rowing Federation reported that 6.7 percent of 567 rowers got sick at a junior championships event in Rio.

The International Sailing Federation said just over 7 percent of sailors competing at a mid-August Olympic warm-up event in Guanabara Bay fell ill — but the federation has not conducted a full count of how many athletes got sick in the two weeks following the competition, the rough incubation period for many of the pathogens in the water.

Mena and other experts say it’s difficult to put those figures into international context as each geographic location has unique threats. But in the U.S., for instance, the Environmental Protection Agency’s maximum illness rate for swimming is 3.6 percent — and many experts say that is too high.

The German sailor, Heil, was one of those who got sick at the Rio test event.

“I’ve never had infections on my legs. Never!” he wrote on the German sailing team’s blog in late August as he underwent painful treatment to scrape the infections off his hips and legs. “The origin must be the Marina da Gloria. In the future, we will try to travel to Rio right before the start of any event, so that any diseases that show up only occur when we are already back home.”

In the year preceding the Olympics, AP is examining monthly water samples for three types of human adenovirus as well as enterovirus, rotavirus and bacterial fecal coliforms. The viruses are found in human intestinal and respiratory tracts. They cause digestive illnesses including vomiting, explosive diarrhea and respiratory problems — all of which would knock athletes out of competition. Serious heart and brain disease are also possible, though rare. One type of analysis tests for adenovirus types 2 and 5, markers for the sewage contamination.

Water quality experts say a virus count hitting 1,000 per liter in the U.S. or Europe would cause extreme alarm, leading in many cases to beach closures.

Viral levels were all 30,000 times higher than what is highly alarming in the U.S. or Europe at each of the AP’s new offshore sampling sites: at a point 600 meters (yards) offshore and within the Sugarloaf sailing race course; at 1,300 meters (yards) offshore within the Naval School sailing circuit; and at a spot inside the Olympic lagoon where rowing lanes are located, about 200 meters (yards) from shore.

In September tests at the Naval School race course and offshore lagoon points, the water was positive for enterovirus, a major cause of respiratory illness, gastrointestinal ailments and, less often, serious heart and brain inflammation.

Subsequent cell culture testing showed the viruses in the lagoon water to be “active and infectious,” but the samples taken from the sailing courses in the bay were not. Mena, the risk assessment expert, said several factors inhibit viruses from growing in a laboratory, but the sheer number of pathogens in Rio’s waters means the risk to human health is unacceptable.

Rio de Janeiro state authorities promised to complete sewerage infrastructure near the Marina da Gloria by the end of this year and are making progress. Authorities say Olympic venues will then be safe.

But the high levels of sewage-linked pathogens found in the offshore sailing courses “show that these viruses don’t just come from the marina — there are many, many points where sewage enters the bay,” Spilki, the Brazilian expert, said. “These pathogens we’re looking for, especially the viruses, are able to migrate in the currents in a big way.”

Those pollution points are mostly the dozens of rivers that crisscross metropolitan Rio and dump hundreds of millions of liters of raw sewage into the bay each day. By the government’s own estimate, just half of the city’s wastewater flowing into the bay is treated.

Since the AP report in July exposed the serious risk to athletes, Olympic and World Health Organization officials have flip-flopped over whether they would carry out their own viral testing.

The WHO, which acts in an advisory role to the IOC, took four different positions on whether or not viral testing should be carried out between July and mid-October. In an Oct. 24 email, the WHO told the AP that it didn’t feel Olympic officials needed to conduct “routine” viral testing, but added that it was not “unconcerned with viral pathogens in water” and that water quality and monitoring would be discussed in Brazil once again in late November.

Mel Stewart, an American who won two swimming gold medals and a bronze at the 1992 Barcelona Games, said if his daughter were a contender in an open-water swimming competition in Rio, he would tell her not to compete.

“A gold medal is not worth jeopardizing your health,” Stewart said. “Right now there are too many questions. I don’t see safety. It doesn’t appear at this point that the athletes are being thought of first.”

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Online:

Interactive, summary findings and methodology of AP’s study: http://ift.tt/1TtA0Yj

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Associated Press sports writer Stephen Wade contributed to this report.

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#UK Witness credibility a focus in ex-officer’s sex abuse trial

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Daniel Holtzclaw is led from a courtroom during a break in testimony in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015. Holtzclaw, a former Oklahoma City police officer, is facing dozens of charges alleging he sexually assaulted 13 women while on duty. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Prosecutors have concluded their case against a former Oklahoma City police officer being tried on charges of sexually assaulting women on his beat.

Thirteen women have testified against 28-year-old Daniel Holtzclaw. He faces 36 counts of rape, forcible oral sodomy, sexual battery and other charges that carry a possible sentence of life in prison.

The defense has questioned the women’s accounts and their backgrounds, including arrests and drug use. Attacking their credibility has been key to the defense strategy.

Two accusers have appeared in court wearing orange jail scrubs. Another admitted to using drugs the night before she testified.

Prosecutors haven’t tried to hide the witnesses’ backgrounds, and several of the women have pushed back. Most testified that they never reported the assaults because they thought they wouldn’t be believed.

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#UK Sinatra gets star-studded tribute for centennial birthday

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FILE - In this June 23, 1979 file photo, singer Frank Sinatra performs during his concert at the Nassau Coliseum, in Uniondale, N.Y. 100 is turning out to be a very good year for Sinatra. Wednesday night, Dec. 2, 2015, his birthday gets the star treatment with a live Grammy-produced concert at the Wynn resort-casino in Las Vegas. The two-hour concert airs Sunday from 9 to 11 p.m. EST/PST on CBS. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

LAS VEGAS (AP) — 100 is turning out to be a very good year for Frank Sinatra.

What would have been the musical icon’s centennial birthday on Dec. 12 has been celebrated with an HBO documentary about his life, a Grammy museum exhibit, even dinner specials at an old Las Vegas steakhouse.

A star-studded, Grammy-produced tribute show at the Wynn Las Vegas resort-casino on Wednesday night caps the festivities.

Among the stars paying tribute to Frank Sinatra are Tony Bennett, Garth Brooks, Alicia Keys, John Legend, Adam Levine, Carrie Underwood and Usher.

The two-hour concert airs Sunday from 9 to 11 p.m. EST/PST on CBS.

Daughter Tina Sinatra says the family had been developing plans for a tribute concert in the back of their minds since her father’s death in 1998.

“His legacy is the music, and his music is the legacy. And that’s what cannot die,” she said.

It was after the Grammy’s tribute to the Beatles last year that Tina Sinatra walked into the office of CBS chairman and CEO Les Moonves and her question was answered before she could even ask it.

“I know what you’re here for and the answer is yes,” she said Moonves said.

The same producer, AEG Ehrlich Ventures, responsible for The Beatles tribute and shows honoring Whitney Houston and Stevie Wonder is returning for the Sinatra concert.

Choosing a fitting location to honor the Hoboken, New Jersey-native came down to New York or Las Vegas, where he crooned often.

“Las Vegas seemed more on the nose,” she said.

Asked what Sinatra himself might think of the lineup and performances if he were sitting in the front row, Grammy president and CEO Neil Portnow said, “I hope he’d feel the love and the joy in the room about being able to celebrate all that he has provided for so many millions, for so many decades and will continue in the future,” adding that the crooner would have a blast. “Doobie-doobie do.”

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#UK This just might be the most beautiful roll of sushi ever created

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Cooking is an art, but chef Davy Devaux takes that notion to the next level.

For this video, he created a colorful sushi roll that looks like a mosaic.

To start, Devaux made a roll with white rice and cucumber, then added some rice that he dyed pink. He then cut the roll into quarters, using two of those pieces as a base for the mosaic, adding salmon and tuna sashimi as well as a bright carrot sauce. 

Devaux then topped the roll off with the other two quarters, rolling all of it up to make a beautiful mosaic.

You can click here for step-by-step instructions on how to create this roll, and here for more of Devaux’s mesmerizing sushi videos.

Story by Sarah Schmalbruch and editing by Stephen Parkhurst

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#UK THE DISRUPTION OF MOBILE VIDEO REPORT: How Facebook and Snapchat are changing the game

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Millennials are spending more time than ever watching short-form video content on their mobile devices, and players like Facebook and Snapchat are reaping the benefits. These platforms — which capture billions of video views each day — are competing to capture growing mobile audiences and challenge the historical dominance of YouTube. The ensuing bout will create a new set of opportunities for content creators and advertisers looking to cash in on the mobile video craze. 

NOTE:  The comprehensive research report on this topic is still being exhaustively compiled.  If you’re interested in getting this exclusive research as soon as it is released, reserve your spot now and get notified when it becomes available.

In BI Intelligence’s upcoming The Disruption Of Mobile Video report, we’ll look at how social platforms, particularly Facebook and Snapchat, are disrupting the future of mobile video. We’ll also examine the essential role that content creators and advertisers will play in that future. 

BII _DirectVideos YT v FB

Here’s a look at some of the key areas this report will explore:

  • The rise of mobile video viewing and how YouTube’s historical dominance has started to wane.
  • Facebook’s rise as a formidable opponent to YouTube and what we expect its mobile video platform to look like in the future. 
  • Snapchat’s emergence as a mobile video leader and how it has become an app of choice among younger generations of mobile users. 
  • The opportunities that the shift to mobile video viewing presents, both to content creators and advertisers. 

NOTE:  The comprehensive research report on this topic is still being exhaustively compiled.  If you’re interested in getting this exclusive research as soon as it is released, reserve your spot now and get notified when it becomes available.

 


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#UK Survey reveals 12 things people don’t know about their own country

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shrug complacency

The way we perceive the world around us can be completely wrong sometimes.

The research company Ipsos MORI just published the results of a new survey called “Perils of Perception” that reveals some of the biggest misconceptions people have about their own country.

The survey asked citizens from 33 countries to estimate things like the average age of people in their country, how many people live in rural areas, and the size of the immigrant population.

People were way off on most questions.

Keep scrolling to see how much people overestimated or underestimated on each question, or skip straight to the quiz to see how well you know your own country.

In the charts below, the answers are tabulated by country. Red bars are guesses that were too low, and green bars were guesses that were too high. To the far right of the chart the respondent’s average answer and the actual answer are shown for each country. 

Q: What proportion of the total household wealth do you think the wealthiest 1% own?

People tended to overestimate how wealthy the 1% are.

Q: What proportion of the total household wealth do you think the wealthiest 1% should own?

And they thought the 1% should own way less than they really do.

Q: Out of every 100 people aged 20 years or over, how many do you think are either overweight or obese?

People seriously underestimated the obesity rate in their countries.

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#UK Obama decries US mass shootings, says ‘no parallel anywhere else in world’

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Police work at the scene of a shooting on December 2, 2015 in San Bernardino, California

Washington (AFP) – President Barack Obama decried what he called the “pattern” of mass shootings in the United States after an incident in California Wednesday, and reiterated his call for tougher gun controls.

“The one thing we do know is that we have a pattern now of mass shootings in this country that has no parallel anywhere else in the world,” Obama told CBS News.

“There are some steps we could take, not to eliminate every one of these mass shootings, but to improve the odds that they don’t happen as frequently.”

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#UK 11 things that will trash your home’s value

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home

For many of us, a home is the biggest investment we’ll ever make — yet most Americans are clueless about their home’s value, including the things that can ruin it.

From unappealing renovations to an unfortunately-placed sinkhole, numerous factors can devalue your greatest investment.

We’ve rounded up 11 threats that could torpedo your home’s value:

SEE ALSO: 9 hidden costs that come with buying a home

Sinkhole damage.

While there’s insurance coverage specifically for sinkhole damage in case your property is hit by a sinkhole, they still hurt property values. 

“It definitely stigmatizes the property,” Rob Arnold, a Florida real estate investor and realtor who has bought and sold more than 30 sinkhole properties in the last five years, told CF13 News. He tells owners of damaged homes to knock 30% off their asking price, plus the cost of any repairs.

City dumps and power plants.

When researchers looked at five municipal landfills near residential property in Cleveland, Ohio, they found the stench was enough to drag down property values by 5.5% to 7.3%. Landfills are most hurtful in populated, expensive, residential areas. The effect was basically nonexistent in sparse, rural areas.

Likewise, the University of California at Berkeley found homes within two miles of a power plant drop 3% to 7% in value.

Hoarders or messy neighbors.

If your neighbors’ homes and yards look sloppy, home shoppers tend to put a lower value on your home.

A nearby property’s overgrown yard, peeling paint, and clutter can easily knock 5% to 10% off the sale price of your home, Joe Magdziarz, the president of the Appraisal Institute and a real-estate appraiser with 40 years of experience, told MSN Money

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