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    World rings in 2012 and bids adieu to a tough year

    • Blessed Pedro Calungsod’s looks remain a mystery

      Blessed Pedro Calungsod’s looks remain a mystery

      Sun Star - 21 hours ago
      Blessed Pedro Calungsod’s looks remain a mystery

      CEBU CITY -- No one really knows what Blessed Pedro Calungsod looked like, but the image chosen to represent him “is that of every man,” said a church official.“Many people look like him,” said Msgr. Ildebrando Leyson, who has worked on the cause of sainthood for the Visayan catechist for more than a decade.He told Sun.Star Cebu that he once overheard two boys who visited the Beato Pedro Calungsod Shrine telling each other that they looked like Visayan martyr.But there was also a person who approached …

    • Vicki, Hayden: Off now, but.

      Vicki, Hayden: Off now, but.

      PhilStar - Sat, Feb 25, 2012
      Vicki, Hayden: Off now, but.

      As of now (6:24:30, Feb. 24, 2012), Dr. Vicki Belo insists that she and her (ex?-)beloved Hayden Kho are off. Her only concern is that Hayden, as is his wont, might resort to something drastic (you know what, don’t you?) to win her back. Hayden can be self-destructive, you know. This time, the duktora seems to have learned her lesson and means it when she said “It’s over!” but with “I hope” after it.

    • 'We leave everything to God'

      'We leave everything to God'

      PhilStar - Sat, Feb 25, 2012
      'We leave everything to God'

      BURGOS, Isabela, Philippines – The obscure Caliguian village in this farming town is mourning the death of one of its promising sons, who it would have wished to see as a future lawyer instead of a cold body in a casket.

    NEW YORK (AP) — With glittering fireworks and star-studded celebrations from New Zealand to Times Square, the world eagerly welcomed a new year and hoped for a better future Saturday, saying goodbye to a year of hurricanes, tsunamis and economic turmoil that many would rather forget.

    Revelers in Australia, Asia, Europe, South America and the South Pacific island nation of Samoa, which jumped across the international dateline to be first to celebrate, welcomed 2012 with booming pyrotechnic displays. Fireworks soared and sparked over Moscow's Red Square, crowds on Paris' Champs-Elysees boulevard popped Champagne corks at midnight, and up to a million revelers were expected to jam New York's Times Square for the famed crystal-paneled ball drop.

    But many approached the new year with more relief than joy, as people battered by weather disasters, joblessness and economic uncertainty hoped the stroke of midnight would change their fortunes.

    "Once the ball drops, I won't give 2011 another thought," said Kyralee Scott, 16, of Jackson, N.J., whose father spent most of the year out of work. "It was a pretty tough year, but God was looking after us and I know 2012 has got to be better."

    Some New York revelers, wearing party hats and "2012" glasses, began camping out Saturday morning, even as workers readied bags stuffed with hundreds of balloons and technicians put colored filters on klieg lights. The crowds cheered as workers lit the crystal-paneled ball that drops at midnight Saturday and put it through a test run, 400 feet above the street. The sphere, now decorated with 3,000 Waterford crystal triangles, has been dropping to mark the new year since 1907, long before television made it a U.S. tradition.

    In Times Square, hundreds of thousands people were crammed into spectator pens ringed by barricades, enjoying surprisingly warm weather for the Northeast this time of year. The National Weather Service said Saturday it was about 49 degrees in nearby Central Park. That's about 10 degrees warmer than the normal high temperature this time of year.

    As the country prepared for the celebration, glum wasn't on the agenda for many, even those who had a sour year.

    "We're hoping the next year will be better," said Becky Martin, a former elementary school teacher who drove from Rockford, Ill., to Times Square after spending a fruitless year trying to find a job. "We're starting off optimistic and hoping it lasts."

    Many expressed cautious hope that better times were ahead after a year in which Japan was ravaged by an earthquake and tsunami, hurricanes wreaked havoc across the country and a debt crisis devastated Europe's economy.

    "Everybody's suffering. That's why it's so beautiful to be here celebrating something with everybody," said Lisa Nicol, 47, of Melbourne, Australia.

    For all of the holiday's bittersweet potential, New York City always treats it like a big party — albeit one that now takes place under the watchful eye of a massive security force, including more than 1,500 police officers.

    Dick Clark, who suffered a stroke in 2004, was scheduled to return to help host his namesake New Year's Eve celebration with Ryan Seacrest, featuring performances by Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber and Santana, Pitbull and others. Lady Gaga will then join Mayor Michael Bloomberg to lead the 60-second countdown to the New Year.

    In Las Vegas, police shut down a four-mile section of the Strip to vehicle traffic six hours before midnight, letting revelers party in the street. Casino nightclubs touted pricey, exclusive bashes hosted by celebrities including Kim Kardashian and Fergie, and fireworks were expected to shoot from the rooftops of eight of the city's most famous casinos.

    Atlanta was welcoming thousands to its downtown, where a giant peach is dropped every New Year's Eve at midnight. Fireworks were to be launched from the top of the Space Needle in Seattle; in Houston, tens of thousands were celebrating at a party with country singer Delbert McClinton.

    In summer temperatures at Key West, Fla., three separate New Year's Eve drops were planned for midnight celebrations. A giant facsimile of a conch shell would be lowered at Sloppy Joe's Bar, Ernest Hemingway's favorite watering hole when he lived in Key West.

    At the Schooner Wharf Bar, the bar owner dressed as a pirate wench would drop down from a mast of a tall sailing ship. And at the Bourbon Street Pub complex, a drag queen named Sushi would descend in a glittering 6-foot red women's high heel.

    The town of Eastport, Maine, will lower an 8-foot-long wooden sardine from a downtown building at midnight, in celebration of its sardine canning and fishing history.

    In San Francisco, the waterfront is expected to be lined with revelers for the annual fireworks show. Though the city's fickle weather and persistent fog can never be counted on to cooperate, forecasters say the skies above the city should be clear overnight.

    The first worldwide celebrations started in the island nation of Samoa, which hopped across the international date line at midnight on Thursday, skipping Friday and moving instantly to Saturday.

    Samoa and the neighboring nation of Tokelau lie near the dateline that zigzags vertically through the Pacific Ocean; both sets of islands decided to realign themselves this year from the Americas side of the line to the Asia side to be more in tune with key trading partners.

    In Sydney, more than 1.5 million people watched the shimmering pyrotechnic display designed around the theme "Time to Dream." In London, some 250,000 people gathered to listen to Big Ben chime at the stroke of midnight.

    World leaders evoked 2011's struggles in their New Year's messages with some ambivalence.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy warned Europe's crisis is not finished and "that 2012 will be the year full of risks, but also of possibilities."

    Pope Benedict XVI marked the end of 2011 with prayers of thanks and said humanity awaits the new year with apprehension but also with hope for a better future.

    "We prepare to cross the threshold of 2012, remembering that the Lord watches over us and takes care of us," Benedict said. "In him this evening we want to entrust the entire world. We put into his hands the tragedies of this world of ours, and we also offer him the hopes for a better future."

    In Brazil, heavy rains didn't halt parties as upward of 2 million people gathered on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro and nearly as many on a main avenue in Sao Paulo, South America's biggest city. Massive fireworks displays and top music acts graced stages across the nation.

    Brazil has seen healthy economic growth in recent years, as the country prepares to host the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics in 2016. Growth, however, has stalled in recent months, and Brazilian leaders are trying to stimulate the economy in the new year.

    "This was a good year for Brazil and I think things are only getting better, it feels like we're making big advances," said Fabiana dos Santos Silva, an 18-year-old student who gathered with hundreds of thousands of others on a main avenue in Sao Paulo.

    Several people preparing to celebrate the holiday in the U.S. told the AP that they would usher in the New Year hoping the Congress would become a more cooperative place. Some talked about their hopes for the presidential election. Others said they hoped to hold on to their job, or find a new one to replace one they'd lost.

    An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted Dec. 8-12 found that 62 percent of Americans are optimistic that the nation's fortunes will improve in 2012, and 78 percent hopeful that their own family will have a better year. Most wrote off 2011 as a dud.

    Debbie Hart, 50, of Perry, Ga., called herself the "perpetual optimist" who believes each year will be better than the one before.

    "I married a farmer. 'Wait until next year. Next year will be better.' That's what I've been hearing for 30 years," said Hart. "I have faith."

    ___

    Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Chris Hawley and David B. Caruso in New York, Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas, Bruce Shipkowski in Jackson, N.J., Dorie Turner in Atlanta, Greg Keller in Paris, Harold Heckle in Madrid, Kristen Gelineau in Sydney, Ray Lilley in Wellington, New Zealand, Frances D'Emilio in Vatican City, Meera Selva in London, Bradley Brooks in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Jack Chang in Mexico City and Melissa Eddy in Berlin.

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    • Young Black JFK  •  Ellenwood, United States  •  1 month 25 days ago
      JUST SAW AN INTERESTING ANNOUCMENT

      A New Global Economic Restructuring

      Conscious Media Network has been approached by a representative of global leaders and financiers from 130 nations to broadcast a statement about a new global economic restructuring arising in 2012.

      This announcement is to serve as the introduction of a New Global Economic Structure that will begin surfacing in 2012. Those involved in this plan are calling it the “greatest humanitarian effort” in modern history. It will be for each of us to determine over time if this is a truthful statement.

      CMN is serving as a neutral party for this broadcast and what it claims, as the economic consortium does not wish to break this news through mainstream media at this time. Please give this your serious attention, as it may be heralding a new way of conducting commerce on the planet that will effect us all well into our future. It will be through our understanding and acceptance that this will happen.

      A portion of this plan does include a dissolution of debt in a carefully considered and planned way. The plan itself is paradigm shattering, and only hinted at in this video-taped statement.
      There will be more to come throughout the year.

      Read the announcement below:
      Neither banks nor public authorities (or mainstream academics, for that matter) calculated the economy’s realistic ability to pay – that is, to pay without shrinking the economy. Through their media and think tanks, they have convinced populations that the way to get rich most rapidly is to borrow money to buy real estate, stocks and bonds rising in price – being inflated by bank credit – and to reverse the past century’s progressive taxation of wealth.
      To put matters bluntly, the result has been junk economics. Its aim is to disable public checks and balances, shifting planning power into the hands of high finance on the claim that this is more efficient than public regulation. Government planning and taxation is accused of being “the road to serfdom,” as if “free markets” controlled by bankers given leeway to act recklessly is not planned by special interests in ways that are oligarchic, not democratic. Governments are told to pay bailout debts taken on not to defend countries in military warfare as in times past, but to benefit the wealthiest layer of the population by shifting its losses onto taxpayers.
      The failure to take the wishes of voters into consideration leaves the resulting national debts on shaky ground politically and even legally. Debts imposed by fiat, by governments or foreign financial agencies in the face of strong popular opposition may be as tenuous as those of the Habsburgs and other despots in past epochs.
    • Joe33417  •  1 month 25 days ago
      The greedy Zionist money changers and Republicans must be defeated in 2012 my brothers. Barack has much work yet to complete. Only with your vote for Barack Obama can you assure that the changes to the courts and tax laws needed for Barack's vision of a fair and just society can happen. Join Us, Blessed be to Barack Hussein Obama! Allahu Akbar!
    • Occam's Razor  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Well one thing is for certain. My family will still warm my soul, my dog will still warm my heart, and hope will still light a fire under my #$%$ Surround yourselves with that (and listen to great music while you do it) and I promise you all, it get's better everyday. Happy New Year everyone.
    • OOPS TRY AGAIN cause yaho ...  •  1 month 25 days ago
      eh big deal 2012 will be even worse: the year the world ends if the mayans and their modern day interpreters are right. And if not we will wish they were.
    • Ranjalahy  •  Antananarivo, Madagascar  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Happy new year My friends
    • James  •  Bessemer, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      I sincerely hope everyone has a wonderful New Year!..... I, for one, see my glass as half-full.
    • Terribles Twos  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Until human beings truly evolve and develop empathy and less ego, the world will continue to be the hideous death-worshipping dump it has always been.
    • George  •  Reseda, United States  •  1 month 25 days ago
      10 more months and the American voters will put an end to an error
    • nookiebear  •  Hershey, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      If the Republican Presidential hopefuls are the best in leadership that the greatest nation on earth has to offer, God help the rest of the world!
    • we're screwed  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Eat, drink and be merry tonight because the new year is going to be far worse than the last. 2011 was just a wake up call, which was mostly ignored. But yes, seize onto anything that offers an excuse to celebrate without politics and government intruding into our lives.
    • rehana  •  Islamabad, Pakistan  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Nw Year Resolutions:
      Live and let live.
      Be one human race.
      Love not hate.
      Unite not divide.
      Peace not violence.
      Anger is such a venom that kills you not your victim.
      Save lives not take.
      Make the world not break.
      The Wisdom of God that He has etched into every human conscience to take guidance from not from any human being.
      Money is not God made but human came up with money for their evil gains.
      The root cause of all violence is money.
    • WalterD  •  New Braunfels, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Each year, 2011 not excluded, is what we make of it. This goes for all of us as individuals, communities, countries and worldwide. I have a very strong belief that 2012 will not be any different. So, if 2011 was such a terrible year, then do something to make 2012 better for yourself, your neighbor and your country!
    • Soul Brotha  •  1 month 26 days ago
      It is funny how people are always optimistic when a new year approaches. They make all these promises and vows, but a few weeks into the new year they lose all enthusiasm and continue from where they left off from the previous year.

      Stop with the silly resolutions. You guys know it will be business as usual
    • Michael B  •  Palmerton, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Soon 2011 will be history and we begin 2012 hopefully this year will be better and maybe the people of the world will start thinking and stop being idiots we need to protect our world
    • -  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Actually it just got a little worse for all the people that fall for the "2012 will be the end of the world according to the Maya." Does anybody else find it funny that they could figure out the end of time but not when the demise of their empire would come about?
    • *American Patriot*  •  Baltimore, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Any guesses on which city will have the first homicide of 2012?
      I'll take Oakland, CA
    • Ben  •  Minneapolis, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      Americans want more taxes more naked body scanners and new laws for the slaves.
    • Pat Walsh  •  Gadsden, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      I will tell you how tough it was.I feel like I ripped my stomach out through my arse.
    • Its Time  •  1 month 26 days ago
      3 down and 1 year to go until we can start to heal.
    • mike  •  Petaluma, United States  •  1 month 26 days ago
      All the drunks will be out tonight pretending that all is well when in reality, they are just plain miserable! WHAT EXACTLY ARE WE CELEBRATING? IF IT IS HOPE FOR THE FUTURE THEN START ACTING LIKE IT!