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truesee's Blog

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Today, 7:14 amFree food giveaways offered by the big chains

Who Could Eat All This?

Joseph De Avila
Wednesday, March 17, 2010

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The chains with free food prizes and the people (600,000!) who want them.

Next month, Denny's will pick the winners of its "Grand Slam for a Year" promotion. Each can order 52 servings of a Denny's Grand Slam breakfast, or two eggs, two strips of bacon, two sausage links and two pancakes. That's a stack of pancakes four feet high, with 17,680 calories, not counting the syrup.

Denny's Corp. hopes the contest brings more customers through the door, especially since people can't necessarily eat this much themselves and often bring along their friends. "Consumers still respond to free," says John Dillon, the company's vice president of marketing.

Doughnuts, popcorn chicken and foot-long sandwiches are free for the taking, too. Among the chains with giveaway contests and other promotions: Subway, Chick-fil-A Inc., Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. and KFC Corp.

Giveaways are an inexpensive way for companies to stretch their marketing dollars during the recession. Contestants also tend to brag about the sport of entering free food contests, something that's easier than ever with social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. That spreads the restaurants' marketing message even further.

Out of the 600,000 people who entered the Denny's contest, 450,000 opted to join the Denny's Rewards program, which regularly emails updates on new menu items and specials. Denny's bets these emails will draw more loyal customers to its 1,545 restaurants, Mr. Dillon says.

 

Jesse Martin camped out overnight this month outside a San Marcos, Texas, Chick-fil-A for a chance to win a year's worth of chicken sandwiches. The Atlanta-based fast-food chain gives away free meals for a year to the first 100 customers at new stores' grand openings. So far, Mr. Martin, a 34-year-old college pastor from Austin, Texas, has been to five Chick-fil-A grand openings and won at four of them.

Chicken, More Chicken

What the chain calls a year's supply, or about $300 in store credits, lasts about two or three months in the hands of Mr. Martin. "I eat there sometimes two or three times a week. Sometimes I eat there three times a day and eat free all day," he says. He typically orders the chain's classic chicken sandwich and nuggets. Mr. Martin shares his winnings with friends and with his 9-year-old son Josiah and 6-year-old daughter Kelli.

Even when he doesn't have free gift certificates, he typically eats at Chick-fil-A once or twice a week either by himself or with others. In May, he plans on taking his wife to the next grand opening in a nearby town so she can get her own gift certificates for the family to share. "I'm a raving, craving fan," says Mr. Martin, adding that Chick-fil-A has been his favorite fast-food chain since he was 10.

A Chick-fil-A spokeswoman declined to comment.

The public and governmental pressure on restaurant chains to make their menus healthier and encourage adults to stay in the 2,000-daily-calorie range hasn't appeared to dampen the food giveaways.

Free-food offers first gained in popularity during the 1970s, when America was hit hard economically by the energy crisis, says Burt Flickinger III, managing director of consulting firm Strategic Resource Group. "The worst of times economically are the best of times for establishments offering something free," he adds.

ShopRite grocery stores, which are members of Wakefern Food Corp., a Keasbey, N.J.-based cooperative, began offering buy-one-get-one-free offers in 1979, a spokeswoman says. In the early 1980s, the company started giving away free turkeys for Thanksgiving and free hams for Easter. Later restaurants began offering all-you-can-drink beverages and then all-you-can-eat buffets, Mr. Flickinger says.

 

Subway in February announced a food giveaway to promote its "Five Dollar Footlong" sandwich. In it, 71 winners will win free sandwiches for a year, amounting to a $260 gift card. Subway was able to add 400,000 customers to its marketing database with the promotion, says Tony Pace, the company's chief marketing officer.

Krispy Kreme offers a dozen free doughnuts a week for a year to the first customer at new store openings. The next 11 customers get one dozen free doughnuts a month for a year, but the terms vary by location.


Giving away free food for a year to 100 people at a restaurant opening costs a national fast-food chain at least $30,000 per opening, says Lori Walderich, principal of IdeaStudio, a marketing company specializing in chain-restaurant marketing and promotion. This includes food costs, security, advertising and other expenses. "It's an inexpensive way to build customer loyalty," she says.

Denny's, based in Spartanburg, S.C., says that its Grand-Slam-for-a-year prizes are worth about $311 per customer, and that winners are selected at random by a computer.

Fighting for Stomachs

"Our customers are looking to stretch their dollar as much as it can go," says Mr. Dillon, the marketing executive. The competitive landscape has become more cutthroat during the recession. "We are each fighting for a share of the stomach."

An estimated 30% to 40% of free-food coupons are redeemed, says Mr. Flickinger. By contrast, just 1.5% to 2% of coupons offering discounts are used.

And winners rarely dine alone -- they're likely to bring friends who maybe have never dined at the restaurant or who may pay for their own meal, says Stowe Shoemaker, associate dean of research at the Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management at the University of Houston.

Donna Feild has just $100 remaining of the $1,000 in free meals she won by entering an online contest at KFC Corp. last year. The pharmacist from Brush Prairie, Wash., expects to keep going to KFC after her winnings are up. Her teenage sons have developed a taste for KFC's popcorn chicken and chicken strips. "We've gotten in the habit. Teenagers, they don't tend to change, they want the same thing over and over," Ms. Feild, 49, says.

KFC, a subsidiary of Yum Brands Inc., runs promotions like the one Ms. Feild won, which also included a trip to Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., two or three times a year, says Laurie Schalow, a KFC spokeswoman. The chain typically uses a year's worth of free food to bring in customers to promote a new product. Last Mother's Day, the company sponsored a sweepstakes to promote its new grilled chicken, for example.

Last year, Ryan Leer won a video contest sponsored by sandwich-maker Quiznos. For creating a clip that features a fake rocket-launcher shooting the chain's "Toasty Torpedo" sandwiches, Mr. Leer won $10,000 and a year's worth of sandwiches.  Quiznos sent customers to its Web site so they could vote on winning videos, giving them valuable exposure in return.

This video contest helped add about 68,000 new customers to Quiznos marketing database. "That's the best way to advertise," says Trey Hall, chief marketing officer for Quiznos.

While Mr. Leer entered the video contest for the cash, the year's supply of sandwiches -- actually $260 worth of gift certificates -- was a nice bonus, he says. The 23-year-old video-production major at the University of Wisconsin-Superior and his friends made about 40 trips to the sandwich shop in six months. "It is supposed to be a year supply, but that went pretty quick," he says. "I have been there a couple times since with my own money, so they did their job."

Joel Levinson, 29, from Los Angeles was a runner-up behind Mr. Leer. For coming in second, he won a year's supply of Quiznos sandwiches. For his video, Mr. Levinson went to New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Atlanta and compared Quiznos sandwiches to the skyscrapers.

Despite making a video about Quiznos and winning a year's worth of free sandwiches, Mr. Levinson has yet to cash in a single gift certificate. "I'm trying to move away from fast food" and eat more organic food at home, he says.

Last Edited: Today, 7:15 am

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Today, 6:34 amIntruder gets into bed with sleeping resident

Cold intruder gets into bed with sleeping resident

Wednesday March 17, 2010

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Michael Karanja Kamau

A Mount Washington man was sleeping in his apartment early this morning when he felt someone get into bed with him.

Figuring it was his girlfriend, he called out her name.

A deep male voice replied, "No it's not."

The unidentified resident jumped out of bed and called 911 as he held the intruder at bay with an aluminum baseball bat.

Police arriving around 5:30 a.m. found doors to the apartment building and the victim's unit had been forced open.

They took Michael Karanja Kamau, 33, of Cranberry, into custody. The suspect told them he was cold and wanted to get inside to get warm.

Police, in a news release, said Mr. Kamau was intoxicated but not to the point that he didn't understand what was going on.

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Yesterday, 11:46 pmWoman sends text about drugs to drug agent

Woman arrested after texting Drug Task agent

Altus Times

March 16, 2010

Mindy Lynn Neugebauer, 26, of Mangum, was been arrested after a Drug Task agent received a text from her about drugs.

According to reports, agent Chris Counts of the Distirct III Drug Task Force received a text message that said, “if you want a hit of this stuff (reference to illegal narcotics) before it is all gone, you better get over here.” He texted back asking the address and got an answer. Counts checked the utility registration and found it to belong to Neugebauer.

Officers went to the address and told Neugebauer about the text message, and she said she thought she had sent the message to a friend. She said the hits she was talking about were from a blunt marijuana rolled inside a cigar, and that was all she had in the residence.

She allowed officers to search the house where they found a loaded .22 caliber pistol in the bathroom closet, and a small plastic sack containing suspected cocaine uner her mattress. A field test determinied the presence of cocaine from the powder.

The evidence was submitted to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation laboratory for further testing.

A felony warrant was issued for Neugebauer on charges of possession of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of a controlled drug with the intent to distribute. Bond was set at $25,000.

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Yesterday, 10:42 pmPolice send 123 bags of illegal drugs to store

 

Dallas police mistakenly send 123 bags of illegal drugs to store



7:33 AM CDT on Wednesday, March 17, 2010

SCOTT GOLDSTEIN

The Dallas Morning News 

 

At the Dallas CityStore, customers can find affordable furniture, bikes, electronics and other merchandise from the police property room and other city departments.

But a city employee was recently surprised to stumble upon a different product: 123 bags of illegal drugs mistakenly shipped over in a file cabinet by the Dallas Police Department Property Unit.

"It was a terrible oversight," said Sgt. Warren Mitchell, a department spokesman. "We're going to see where we went wrong and try to fix that problem."

The discovery last week came before the cabinet was moved from a back storage room of the store at 3131 Irving Blvd. Police say the public never came in contact with the heroin, cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine.

"The property room immediately went over there and retrieved a file cabinet of the drugs, and they weighed each bag and each bag weighed the same that was listed on there," Mitchell said.

"Every seal was still sealed. They did not appear to be tampered with and they put them back in the vault" in the property room.

The case was referred to the Police Department's internal affairs division, and the people responsible could face discipline.

The mistake apparently happened in January as employees in the police property room were cleaning out file cabinets used to store drugs from criminal cases.

Officials were making room to build shelves, and the empty cabinets were sent to the CityStore.

The bags were connected to cases dating between 1994 and 2005, and police say it's unlikely any of those cases are still pending.

This is not the first sign of trouble for the Dallas police property room.

A 2008 city audit found that it was disorganized and lacked proper climate control and security.

Department officials largely agreed with those findings.

They said at the time that the division was understaffed, overworked and struggling in an aging facility with flooding and electrical problems.

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Yesterday, 10:24 pmJuror steals fellow juror's credit card

Jennifer Mercado allegedly swipes fellow juror's credit cards - during trial of credit card thief!

BY Brendan Brosh and Kerry Burke
DAILY NEWS WRITERS

 

Originally Published:Tuesday, March 16th 2010, 11:47 PM
Updated: Wednesday, March 17th 2010, 8:27 AM

 

Jennifer Mercado of the Bronx hides her face. She used the credit cards of fellow juror John Postrk (inset) for a $500 shopping spree.

Florescu for NewsJennifer Mercado of the Bronx hides her face. She used the credit cards of fellow juror John Postrk (inset) for a $500 shopping spree. Jennifer Mercado is accused of swiping a fellow juror's American Express card and using it at to buy four pairs of shoes, including Nike Air Jordans.

Chu for News

Jennifer Mercado is accused of swiping a fellow juror's American Express card and using it at to buy four pairs of shoes, including Nike Air Jordans.

There was more than one criminal in this courtroom.

The Bronx trial of an accused credit card thief was thrown into turmoil when a juror's plastic was stolen and used for a shopping spree - allegedly by another juror!

Jennifer Mercado, 20, went from sitting in judgment to sitting in a cell after she brazenly waltzed in from lunch breaks loaded down with bags.

The prosecutor of the trial - which also involved a stolen credit card - helped nail her by reviewing the store's security video.

Mercado doesn't deny she used fellow juror John Postrk's American Express card to buy more than $500 worth of loot, but she apparently didn't learn much about reasonable doubt while doing her civic duty.

"The guy did give me permission to use his credit card," she told the Daily News.

Asked why Postrk would do that, Mercado came up with an alibi worthy of "Law & Order."

"He came on to me," she said. "It's a he-said, she-said situation. In court, they will find out he's lying."

Postrk, 49, who works for the Children's Aid Society, said prosecutors asked him not to talk about the case.

He and Mercado were sitting on the trial of Warren Stewart, arrested in 2006 for burglary, grand larceny and possessing a stolen credit card.

On March 8, Postrk's American Express cards and MetroCard were swiped from his coat, court documents charge.

That day, and the next two days, his card was used at local stores during jurors' lunch hour.

When Postrk reported the theft to the judge on March 10, he already had a suspect in mind because the charges on his American Express account came from stores where Mercado had been shopping.

"It's the person that came back with the baggage," Postrk told Judge Barbara Newman.

He noted that a court officer commented on Mercado's bags.

"As we were leaving one of the court officers mentioned, 'Oh, that's a really nice bag,' " Postrk said. "And I just happened to look. And she did a double-take back, like I scared her."

Assistant District Attorney Jacob Kaplan, who was prosecuting Stewart, investigated Postrk's claims during a recess.

With another prosecutor and investigator, he went to stores across from the Bronx Hall of Justice and viewed videos of a woman who appeared to be Mercado using Postrk's card, court transcripts say.

Twenty minutes later, Mercado came back to one of the stores and tried to make a purchase. A manager asked her for ID and she apparently got spooked.

"She pulled out what [the manager] believed to be another American Express card in what he believed was John Postrk's name," Kaplan told the judge.

"And when he turned around, she dropped the credit card and walked out of the store."

At the Jeans Plus shop, Mercado made quite an impression, buying four pairs of shoes, including a pair of Nike Air Jordans.

"She was talking nice to me, asking for a discount," manager Jason Ayoub said.

Mercado was arrested March 12 and charged with grand larceny, stolen property, identity theft and unlawful use of a credit card. She faces four years.

Her lawyer declined comment.

Mercado was removed from the Stewart case but Postrk stayed. The jury acquitted Stewart of having a stolen credit card, but convicted him of burglary.

Stewart's lawyer, Soraya Hurtado, asked for a mistrial because of the incident but was denied.

The district attorney's office declined to comment, but word of the case spread quickly.

"You've got to be really stupid to do that in front of a judge, court officers, law enforcement and all the cameras in this building," said one courthouse employee.

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Yesterday, 4:30 pmHawaii's law to ignore people asking about Obama's birth

Hawaii considering law to ignore Obama 'birthers'

AP 

MARK NIESSE

Associated Press Writer 

Wed Mar 17, 2:48 am ET

HONOLULU – Birthers beware: Hawaii may start ignoring your repeated requests for proof that President Barack Obama was born here.

As the state continues to receive e-mails seeking Obama's birth certificate, the state House Judiciary Committee heard a bill Tuesday permitting government officials to ignore people who won't give up.

"Sometimes we may be dealing with a cohort of people who believe lack of evidence is evidence of a conspiracy," said Lorrin Kim, chief of the Hawaii Department of Health's Office of Planning, Policy and Program Development.

So-called "birthers" claim Obama is ineligible to be president because, they argue, he was actually born outside the United States, and therefore doesn't meet a constitutional requirement for being president.

Hawaii Health Director Dr. Chiyome Fukino issued statements last year and in October 2008 saying that she's seen vital records that prove Obama is a natural-born American citizen.

But the state still gets between 10 and 20 e-mails seeking verification of Obama's birth each week, most of them from outside Hawaii, Kim said Tuesday.

A few of these requesters continue to pepper the Health Department with the same letters seeking the same information, even after they're told state law bars release of a certified birth certificate to anyone who does not have a tangible interest. Responding wastes time and money, Kim said.

Both Fukino and the state registrar of vital statistics have verified that the Health Department holds Obama's original birth certificate.

The issue coincides with Sunshine Week, when news organizations promote open government and freedom of information.

"Do we really want to be known internationally as the Legislature that blocked any inquiries into where President Obama was born?" asked Rep. Cynthia Thielen, R-Kaneohe-Kailua. "When people want to get more information, the way to fuel that fire is to say, 'We're now going to draw down a veil of secrecy.'"

Nobody at the hearing questioned the fact that the president was born in Hawaii.

Attorney Peter Fritz asked why the state would pass a law punishing repetitive requests for open records. Instead, the state could simply say it would only answer each person's question once.

If the measure passed, the state Office of Information Practices could declare an individual a "vexatious requester" and restrict rights to government records for two years.

The committee will schedule a vote on the measure, said Chairman Jon Riki Karamatsu, D-Waipahu-Waikele.

___

The measure is SB2937.

____

On the Net:

Hawaii Legislature, http://capitol.hawaii.gov/

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Yesterday, 4:12 pmToyota Doubts Runaway Prius Driver's Story

Toyota Doubts Runaway Prius Driver's Story

9:35am UK

Tuesday March 16, 2010

 

Alison Chung

Sky News Online

 

Toyota says it has found no evidence to support a driver's claim that the accelerator pedal on his Prius jammed at 94mph, sparking a dramatic police chase.

The carmaker said its technicians found the car's accelerator pedal and back-up safety system were working correctly on the 2009 gas-electric hybrid vehicle.

A Toyota spokesman said 61-year-old James Sikes' account of racing out of control on a motorway in San Diego, California, did not correspond with a series of tests.

"We have no opinion on his account, what he's been saying, other than that the scenario is not consistent with the technical findings," Mike Michels said.

US safety investigators have also carried out separate tests but have failed to recreate the sudden, unintended acceleration that Mr Sikes said he encountered.

"We would caution people that our work continues and that we may never know exactly what happened with this car," said the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).

The highway patrol said the initial findings of Toyota and NHTSA did not constitute sufficient grounds to re-open an inquiry into the incident.

We're not saying Mr Sikes is wrong or that he lied, we're saying that questions have arisen in the investigation.

Kurt Bardella, speaking about the US government's report into the incident

"Up until now, they've presented no physical evidence that's like a smoking gun to disprove Mr Sikes' statement," said spokesman Brian Pennings.

"We have to take Mr Sikes at his word until there's evidence to discount his statement."

Mr Pennings said that observations of the highway patrol officer who came to Mr Sikes' aid supported his claim.

When the state trooper caught up with Mr Sikes' Prius on the motorway, the car was travelling at break-neck speed with the smell of burning brakes in the air.

Mr Pennings added that even when Mr Sikes managed to slow the car by following the officer's instructions to apply the footbrakes and emergency brake, the driver appeared to be "literally standing on the brakes".

But Toyota said it had found no evidence that Mr Sikes had been applying the brake forcefully and said he should have been able to stop the Prius by doing so, or by shifting into neutral or turning off the electronic power switch.

The drama on March 8 added to the headaches for Toyota which has been struggling to reassure the public that it is dealing with safety issues that sparked a recall of 8.5 million vehicles.

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Yesterday, 10:46 amMan's gold grill ripped from mouth while in jail

Grill ripped from man's teeth at Tenn. jail

Lawyers reach $95,000 settlement deal; sheriff's lieutenant suspended

 In an undated handout photo provided by attorney D...                                 

In an undated handout photo provided by attorney David Raybin, Anthony McCoy shows the damage done to his teeth after a sheriff's lieutenant at the Davidson County, Tenn. Jail allegedly ripped the gold grill off his teeth. (AP Photo/ via David Raybin)
4:55 p.m. ET, 3/16/10

 updated 5:08 p.m. ET, Tues., March. 16, 2010

  NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When a Tennessee jailer ripped the gold grill from a new inmate's teeth two days before Thanksgiving last year, it left the 31-year-old man in excruciating pain and left taxpayers on the hook for nearly $100,000 in damages.

Anthony McCoy spat out blood and teeth in a trash can and was in agony for more than a week after Davidson County Sheriff's Lt. Tanya Mayhew reached into his mouth and yanked out the grill, along with the cement attached to his teeth, said his lawyer, David Raybin.

The forced extraction pulled the enamel off McCoy's front teeth and left him with a damaged mouth that still isn't fixed, Raybin said.

City lawyers were planning Tuesday night to ask the Nashville Metro Council to approve a $95,000 settlement to avoid a lawsuit over the incident.

It happened Nov. 24, a day after McCoy was admitted to the Metro Jail on charges of contempt of court for failure to pay child support, two counts of violation of an order of protection and harassment.

When a guard asked McCoy to remove his grill while he was being processed in the jail, he said it was permanently cemented to his teeth years earlier.

 

  $10,000 damage to teeth


In a legal analysis, the Metro Council's office acknowledges that Mayhew then reached into McCoy's mouth and ripped off the grill, causing an estimated $10,000 worth of damage to McCoy's teeth.

McCoy made repeated but futile requests for medical treatment," Raybin said.

"There was no urgency at all," Raybin said of the Metro Jail officials and Correct Care Solutions, the company that Nashville contracts with to provide inmate medical care. "This guy was in agony for over a week and a half." The inmate's claim is based on pain and suffering, as well as the dental damage.

 

 

Image: Grill ripped from inmate Anthony McCoy's mouth.
APThe grill ripped from inmate Anthony McCoy's mouth.

CCS has agreed to pay $20,000 because of the "unwarranted delay" in receiving treatment, the Metro Council's legal analysis says. It also says Mayhew broke sheriff's office policy by reaching into the inmate's mouth. The paperwork also acknowledges that McCoy waited 10 days before ever receiving medical treatment beyond Tylenol, in spite of repeated pleas for help.

 

  It's not clear why McCoy had to wait so long to get treatment or how many times he asked for help. It's also not clear whether jail officials ever requested that CCS see him sooner.

A Sheriff's Department spokeswoman said that since the incident, a new policy specifically prohibits jailers from removing inmates' grills. The Sheriff's Department referred other questions about the case to the county Health Department, which oversees the contract with CCS.

A Health Department spokesman said that federal privacy laws barred officials from saying whether McCoy sought medical treatment while in the jail.

 

  'Reprehensible act'


City officials have previously been happy with the quality of care CCS has provided to the inmates, but are going to closely monitor the agency, said Health Department spokesman Brian Todd. "We don't ever want to see something like this happen again."

  "This appears to be an unusual and pretty reprehensible act," Councilman Ronnie Steine, chairman of the budget and finance committee, told The Tennessean newspaper of Nashville. "My hope is that the employee has had the appropriate disciplinary action for something that seems to be an egregious act."

The lieutenant who pulled out the grill was demoted and received five days suspension.

McCoy was later convicted on the harassment charges and released from jail on Feb. 2.

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Yesterday, 6:35 amDentist Used Paper Clips In Root Canals

AG: Dentist Used Paper Clips In Root Canals

Fall River Dentist Accused Of Billing Patients For Steel Posts

POSTED: 12:58 pm EDT March 16, 2010
UPDATED: 6:38 pm EDT March 16, 2010

BOSTON -- A Fall River dentist has been indicted for allegedly using paper clips in dental work and then billing Medicaid for the stainless steel posts he should have used.

Michael Clair, 51, formerly of Fall River and now of Maryland, was also indicted on a charge of submitting additional false claims to the Medicaid program using other dentists’ provider numbers and illegally prescribing prescription drugs.

Clair was indicted on two counts of assault and battery; three counts of larceny over $250; five counts of filing false Medicaid claims; two counts of illegally prescribing a Class B substance; and one count of prescribing a Class C Substance.

Clair is accused of inserting pieces of paper clips into patients’ mouths as a post in root canals instead of utilizing standard posts made of stainless steel, then billed the Medicaid program for the costs of the post using other dentists’ provider numbers, Attorney General Martha Coakley's office said.

Officials said Clair was suspended by Medicaid in 2002. He allegedly hired other dentists for his clinic and filed Medicaid claims using their numbers totaling approximately $130,000 between August 2003 and June 2005.

Clair will be arraigned on April 8

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March 16, 2010, 11:09 pmGravestone enables the deceased to communicate from the grave

RosettaStone gravestone enables the deceased to communicate from the grave

Caitlin O'Connell
DAILY NEWS WRITER

 

Tuesday, March 16th 2010, 4:00 AM

 

Kids are texting.  Parents are texting. Even grandparents are texting.  But we'd never heard of the deceased texting - until now.

A new high-tech device that can be implanted into a headstone will allow the deceased to speak from the grave through text messages sent to other people's cell phones.  The company claims the headstone can send messages for up to 3,200 years.

Personal RosettaStones, launched by Objects LLC last month, are small stone tablets embedded with Radio Frequency Identification tags that can store up to 1,000 words and a picture, ABCNews.com reports.

Before he/she passes away, the consumer will write a message on the Personal RosettaStone. The message then can be transmitted to anyone who has a web-enabled cell phone. The information is stored on a microchip and is beamed via text message when the tag recognizes compatible technology on a visitors phone.

But that's not all the Personal RosettaStone can do.  The front face of the RosettaStone is engraved with hieroglyphic-style symbols known as Life Symbols that are selected during the ordering process. Life Symbols are chosen from a list of options, and are intended to convey the purchasers "key life associations" or "milestones."

According to the RosettaStone Web site, the tablets are intended for mature adults who have reached a stage in life with identifiable milestones and associations so that they can adequately identify the Life Symbols that will best represent their earthly experience.

So how can the Personal RosettaStone send messages for a whopping 3,200 years? Rather than use a battery, which might die, the devices uses internal microchips that utilize the magnetic fields of a passerby's phone to power up just long enough to communicate the preprogrammed message before returning to a sleep state.

Although some may shudder at the thought of a texting gravestone, since the RosettaStone concept went public, Objects tells ABCNews.com, the company has been flooded with inquires. As technology continues to play a more integral role in the funeral industry with such advances as funeral webcasts and memorial Web sites, the RosettaStone could appeal to families looking for a novel way to remember their dearly departed.

 



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/money/2010/03/16/2010-03-16_hightech_gravestone_enables_dead_people_to_communicate_with_living.html#ixzz0iOpVdbC1

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March 16, 2010, 10:51 pmNude Art Exhibit Aims For Uncomfortable

Nude NYC Art Exhibit Aims For Uncomfortable

Artist Marina Abramovic Known For Her Thought-Provoking Works

KAREN MATTHEWS, Associated Press Writer

POSTED: 3:43 am EDT March 16, 2010
UPDATED: 6:47 am EDT March 16, 2010

  NEW YORK --

Laurence Lallier slipped carefully between two naked women facing each other in a narrow doorway at the Museum of Modern Art.

"I didn't want to step on their feet," said Lallier, a student from Montreal. "We feel shy and they don't, and they're the ones that are naked."

When the artist Marina Abramovic and her then-companion Ulay first performed the piece, called "Imponderabilia," in Bologna, Italy in 1977, the police showed up. New York's finest are unlikely to interfere with the version that opened at MoMA on Sunday, though some museum-goers may choose not to do the sideways limbo between bare bodies.

Elsewhere in the exhibit two clothed people touch fingertips, two others sit back to back with their hair entwined and a naked woman reclines with a skeleton (not a real one) lying on top of her. The performers, re-enacting pieces originated by Abramovic alone or with Ulay, are statue-still.

"It's neat seeing someone naked but not in a sexual way," said Steven Crossot of Philadelphia, watching the skeleton rise and fall with the woman's breathing. "It doesn't even feel voyeuristic. It feels like you're looking at a Renaissance piece, but live."

The Yugoslavian-born Abramovic, 63, is a performance art grande dame who has pushed the limits of physical endurance since the late 1960s.

In front of audiences, she has taken medication that made her lose consciousness, and stabbed herself repeatedly in the left hand.

Videos screens at MoMA show other pieces that could not be re-enacted, such as 1988's "The Great Wall," in which Abramovic and Ulay started at opposite ends of the Great Wall of China and walked for three months until they met each other. The couple then ended their artistic and personal collaboration.

New York Times critic Holland Carter called the exhibit uneven but rarely uninteresting; he was skeptical about re-creating ephemeral performance art.

The show is called "Marina Abramovic: The Artist is Present," and she is. Abramovic sits on silent display while the museum is open. Members of the public are invited to join her, silently, across a small table.

"It's an act of extreme generosity," said curator Klaus Biesenbach. "You are completing the piece together with the artist on an equal basis."

On Monday, Abramovic wore a long blue dress as she sat opposite a young man. Both were motionless; Abramovic's face was expressionless.

"It's a great opportunity to contemplate two people just looking at each other," said spectator Vanessa Lodigiani.

Lodigiani, herself an artist, had attended a preview for MoMA members. She was amused that even some museum members wouldn't pass between the naked people of "Imponderabilia."

"It's quite shocking to me that people are shocked by nudity," she said.

The exhibit continues through May 31.

LINK TO SLIDE SHOW:

 

http://www.wbaltv.com/slideshow/entertainment/22850882/detail.html

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March 16, 2010, 3:55 pmSyringe used in Michael Jackson's death to be auctioned for $5,000,000

Syringe used in Michael Jackson’s death may be auctioned for $5M

March 16, 2010 • 9:00 am

The syringe that allegedly administered the fatal dose of drugs to Michael Jackson is set to be auctioned for as much as $5 million. 

The syringe that was obtained secretly is being touted around Las Vegas auction houses to go under the hammer on the first anniversary of Jackson’s death June 25, the Mirror reports. 

One source claimed the syringe is no longer needed in the inquest or trial of Jackson’s personal doctor, Conrad Murray, who has been charged with involuntary manslaughter. Murray has pleaded not guilty. 

The Jackson family is said to be furious that someone is yet again trying to profit from the pop star’s death. 

The man in possession of the needle has been in meetings with his legal team to make sure it is legitimate and his to sell. He may have to sell it in a country that does not have reciprocal legal agreements with the U.S. such as Brazil or Libya. 

 

He’s bad, he’s bad

Last Edited: March 16, 2010, 10:52 pm

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March 16, 2010, 12:25 pmMicheal Jackson's estate signs record deal worth $250,000,000

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March 16, 2010, 6:45 amWoman wins weekend with Oprah

http://www.wbaltv.com/video/22847921/

Last Edited: March 16, 2010, 6:46 am

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March 16, 2010, 5:29 amMan marries pillow

Tom Phillips

9th March, 2010

Man marries pillow

Metro UK

True love can take many forms. In this case, it has taken the form of a Korean man falling in love with, and eventually marrying, a large pillow with a picture of a woman on it.

Lee Jin-gyu pillow wedding

Lee Jin-gyu kisses his new bride, a pillow with a picture of anime character Fate Testarossa on it

Lee Jin-gyu fell for his 'dakimakura' - a kind of large, huggable pillow from Japan, often with a picture of a popular anime character printed on the side.

In Lee's case, his beloved pillow has an image of Fate Testarossa, from the 'magical girl' anime series Mahou Shoujo Lyrical Nanoha.  

Now the 28-year-old otaku (a Japanese term that roughly translates to somewhere between 'obsessive' and 'nerd') has wed the pillow in a special ceremony, after fitting it out with a wedding dress for the service in front of a local priest. Their nuptials were eagerly chronicled by the local media.
 
'He is completely obsessed with this pillow and takes it everywhere,' said one friend.
 
'They go out to the park or the funfair where it will go on all the rides with him. Then when he goes out to eat he takes it with him and it gets its own seat and its own meal,' they added.

The pillow marriage is not the first similarly-themed unusual marriage in recent times - it comes after a Japanese otaku married his virtual girlfriend Nene Anegasaki, a character who only exists in the Nintendo DS game Love Plus, last November.

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