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Archive for the ‘Press Releases’ Category

(CIM, GLW, EMC, SLE) by CRWEPicks.com

Chimera Investment Corporation (NYSE: CIM) declined by 0.25%, closed at $3.98 while overall traded volume was 3.57 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $3.82.

Corning Incorporated (Public, NYSE:GLW) advanced by 0.18%, closed at $16.64 while total traded volume was 3.42 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $17.20.

EMC Corporation (NYSE: EMC) declined by 0.90%, closed at $19.73 while overall traded volume was 12.89 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $19.40.

Sara Lee Corp. (NYSE: SLE) reported the loss of 2.00%, closed at $14.23 while total volume was 12.50 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $14.61.

THIS IS NOT A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY SECURITY!

Disclaimer: Never invest in any stock featured on our site or emails unless you can afford to lose your entire investment.The CRWEPicks.com publisher and its affiliates and contractors are not registered investment advisers or broker/dealers. Our disclaimer ( http://crwepicks.com/disclaimer ) is to be read and fully understood before using our site, reading our newsletter or joining our email list. Release of Liability: Through use of this website viewing or using, you agree to hold CRWEPicks.com report and Crown Equity Holdings, Inc. CRWE, its operators, shareholders, employees and/or contractors harmless and to completely release them from any and all liability due to any and all loss (monetary or otherwise), damages (monetary or otherwise) that you may occur. ( read more) Rule 17B requires disclosure of payment for investor relations. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) is a newswire as well as an IR and PR firm. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB), in some cases, provides media advertising and public awareness for both public and private companies, as well as disseminating news. As such, in some cases, when Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) advertises for a particular client, Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) charges an advertising fee which it must disclose under 17B. The fee may be in cash, in free trading stock or in restricted stock. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB), if paid in stock, can and may sell those securities during the advertising period.

 
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(MGM, CX, ARNA, CMCSA) by CRWEPicks.com

MGM Resorts International. (NYSE: MGM) declined by 2.74%, closed at $9.57 while total traded volume was 14.86 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $10.14.

emex SAB de CV (ADR) (NYSE: CX) reported loss of 0.47%, closed at $8.43 while overall traded volume was 14.71 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $9.14.

Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: ARNA) advanced by 7.00%, closed at $7.34 while total traded volume was 14.34 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $5.80.

Comcast Corporation (NASDAQ: CMCSA) declined by 2.25%, closed at $17.80 while overall traded volume was 14.25 million shares and 50 days average price stood at $18.28.

THIS IS NOT A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY SECURITY!

Disclaimer: Never invest in any stock featured on our site or emails unless you can afford to lose your entire investment.The CRWEPicks.com publisher and its affiliates and contractors are not registered investment advisers or broker/dealers. Our disclaimer ( http://crwepicks.com/disclaimer ) is to be read and fully understood before using our site, reading our newsletter or joining our email list. Release of Liability: Through use of this website viewing or using, you agree to hold CRWEPicks.com report and Crown Equity Holdings, Inc. CRWE, its operators, shareholders, employees and/or contractors harmless and to completely release them from any and all liability due to any and all loss (monetary or otherwise), damages (monetary or otherwise) that you may occur. ( read more) Rule 17B requires disclosure of payment for investor relations. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) is a newswire as well as an IR and PR firm. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB), in some cases, provides media advertising and public awareness for both public and private companies, as well as disseminating news. As such, in some cases, when Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) advertises for a particular client, Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) charges an advertising fee which it must disclose under 17B. The fee may be in cash, in free trading stock or in restricted stock. Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB), if paid in stock, can and may sell those securities during the advertising period.

 
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ISAF Deputy Commander Confesses It Will Get Worse Before It Gets Better

By Soha, CRWENewswire Middleast Correspondent

The deputy commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, Lieutenant General Sir Nick Parker, has said that the situation in Afghanistan will get worse before it gets better.

General Nick said that the allied forces were making progress against Taliban insurgents but it was “hard, slow, and variable.”

Lt General Parker told BBC 4 “we are going up the hill into the enemy at the moment.” “This is a complex counter-insurgency. There are a large number of different actors and it is a resilient enemy.

“Over the course of this summer, the momentum of the campaign has continued much as we predicted it would earlier in the year. We are seeing progress but it is hard, it is slow and it is variable.

“But I am convinced that we are showing consistently persistent security in areas where the insurgency has dominated in the past and the people who live in those areas are beginning to realize not only that we are serious, but also – importantly ­– but also that the Afghan government is beginning to bring more governance and development to those areas”.

Lt General Parker said further “all our inputs right, and all our forces and systems in the right place”.

 

 

 

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article. CRWEnewswire is not liable for the contents of this news, as well as not being liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

 
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Horse Advocates Pull for Underdog in Roundups

Reprinted With Permission From Wildhorsepreservation.org

http://www.wildhorsepreservation.org/news/?p=1919

By JESSE McKINLEY Published: September 5, 2010

More than 1,200 wild horses have been captured during the current roundup.

OUTSIDE RAVENDALE, Calif. — It is horse versus helicopter here in the high desert.

The current roundup in northeastern California and neighboring Nevada has been going on for a month

On one side are nearly 40,000 horses spread over 10 states, whose presence on the range is a last vestige of the Old West. On the other is a group of crusty cowboys whose chosen method of roundup involves rotors more than wrangling, using high-tech helicopters to drive galloping mustangs into low-tech traps.

“When they get in here, they know something’s going on,” said Dave Cattoor, 68, a straight-talking roundup expert who has been herding horses since he was 12. “The chips are down.”

Over the last month, Mr. Cattoor and his feral quarry have been doing battle under the dry, horizon-to-horizon skies of northeastern California and a neighboring Nevada county, with humans the inevitable victor.

More than 1,200 horses have been captured during the current roundup, much to the chagrin of people like Simone Netherlands, an animal rights advocate who says that the roundups — part of a nationwide push to take some 12,000 horses off public lands — are cruel, expensive and unnecessary.

“They’re running at full speed for miles and miles for hours, with babies, little babies, and they don’t let up on them,” Ms. Netherlands said. “They’re stressing them out to the max.”

The Bureau of Land Management, which is overseeing the roundup, disputes that, saying that the roundups are humane and that it must reduce the wild horse population to more sustainable levels, both for their health and for that of the other animals that live in this harsh terrain.

“Some advocate groups would like us to leave the horses out there and let nature take its course,” said Bob Abbey, director of the bureau. “We don’t believe that’s a sound option.”

The debate over roundups dates back decades, to the passage of the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act, a federal law that protected what was then a faltering wild horse population and made it illegal for cowboys like Mr. Cattoor to round up horses on their own for sport or profit.

“A cowboy really wasn’t a cowboy if you didn’t rope a wild horse,” Mr. Cattoor said. “But they stopped that. They stopped the maintenance, which costs nothing, and turned it into a multimillion-dollar deal. It’s crazy.”

Dave Cattoor says the current method of rounding up wild horses is “the best we can do.”

Questions about the roundups have intensified in recent years as costs have mounted, both in dollars and in dead horses. Seven horses have died in the current operation, and last winter, a roundup in Nevada resulted in over 100 horse deaths, prompting more than 50 members of Congress to ask Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to look for independent analysis of the bureau’s Wild Horse and Burro Program. Late last month, the bureau did just that, asking the National Academy of Sciences to conduct a technical review of the program.

Horses that are captured are offered for adoption, but with demand for horses low and the cost of feed high, the government often ends up quartering them on large private ranches, primarily in Kansas and Oklahoma. In 2009, about 70 percent of the entire program’s $40.6 million budget was spent holding 34,500 horses and burros, a system that the Government Accountability Office has concluded will “overwhelm the program” if not controlled.

“They are a symbol of the American West,” said Nathaniel Messer, a professor of veterinary medicine at the University of Missouri and a former member of the federal Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Committee. “But do we need 35,000 symbols of the American West?”

For critics like Deniz Bolbol, the pattern of roundup, removal and stockpiling is an example of the bureau’s catering to private interests on public lands, namely by favoring livestock ranchers — who pay the government for the right to graze and who can sell their animals — over wild horses, which cannot be sold for slaughter.

“We remove wild horses from the public lands so private livestock can graze, and then we ship the wild horses to private ranchers in the Midwest where we stockpile them and pay private ranchers,” said Ms. Bolbol, a spokeswoman for the group In Defense of Animals, which has sued to stop the roundups. “This is what you call a racket.”

And while Mr. Cattoor calls Ms. Bolbol and other protesters “fanatics,” he does not think the government’s reliance on big, periodic roundups makes much sense either, saying the bureau needs more steady maintenance of the wild herds, which can double in size every four years.

Animal advocates like Denise Constantinide think the roundups are cruel, expensive and unnecessary

Perhaps the only other thing the two sides can agree on is that the horses — whose estimated populations range from about 120 in New Mexico to more than 17,000 in Nevada — are magnificent. Art DiGrazia, the operations chief for one of the bureau’s wild horse and burro offices in California, said that some of the mustangs on the range were descended from Army cavalry horses, which were bred for size, speed and strength and left here or given to ranchers.

“They have the intelligence and endurance to work out in this country,” said Mr. DiGrazia, a bearded New Jersey native who speaks in a hoarse whisper. “They’ll know before you know that there’s something out there going on.”

The method of capture is simple: horses are located from helicopters, which have been used in roundups since the mid-1970s, and pushed toward the trap site, essentially a funnel shaped by two netted walls that lead into a temporary corral. Once the herd runs into the funnel, Mr. Cattoor lets loose a so-called Judas horse, which is trained to lead the rest into the trap, where — uncombed, unshod and often stomping and biting — they slowly settle into their new lives as kept animals.

All of which is more humane than the old days, said Mr. Cattoor, who recalls cowboys using rope and brawn to bring in a herd, often injuring horses and horsemen alike.

“You have to really put the pound on them,” he said. “You’d have to get them sore footed and tired, and there’s a lot of problems with getting them really tired. Today, at this point, this is the best we can do.”

One recent morning, Mr. Cattoor and his team conducted several successful runs — 10 horses in one, a handful in another — before a small herd of four horses, their black manes and wild tails flying, came running full-tilt across the desert. The helicopter was close on their heels, whipping up curlicues of dust in the horses’ wake.

They were headed straight for the trap, when suddenly the herd broke, with three horses escaping across a field, while a single stallion — the leader — galloped in another direction. The pilot, perhaps 50 feet up, chose to follow the larger group, but horse sense had its way; the three headed into a patch of trees, where helicopters cannot pursue. The stallion, meanwhile, disappeared up a ridge and back into the wild.

The aim of the roundups is to reduce the horse population to more sustainable levels

Mr. Cattoor watched it all, standing near his Judas horse with a resigned smile, as roundup opponents watched happily from a public viewing station several hundred feet away.

“These wild horse advocates love it when the horse beats the helicopter,” Mr. Cattoor said. “And they do sometimes win.”

Watch the related video

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CRWEnewswire is not liable for the contents of this news, as well as not being liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

 
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Hezbollah Says It’s “Not Concerned” In UN Court on Hariri Murder

By Soha, CRWENewswire Middleast Correspondent

Lebanese Shiite militant organization Hezbollah has said that it is not concerned in UN court on Hariri murder. Hezbollah chief, Syed Hassan Nasrallah, said that a UN court investigating the murder of Lebanese ex-premier Rafiq Hariri did “not concern” him, because it had dismissed data provided by his group.

In a televised speech, marking Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day, Hassan Nasrallah said “we have said that the tribunal and its prosecutor do not concern us and subsequently we are not concerned with answering the questions or requests of the prosecutor.”

“Weeks ago we said the resistance feels that it is being targeted, and we proposed a few ideas and revealed some evidence”.

“The prosecutor commented on this evidence by saying …it was insufficient”.

Nasrallah presented some aerial footages of the Hariri assassination site saying that they were intercepted from unmanned Israeli surveillance drones.

But the UN-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon said the evidence was incomplete and called for any remaining material to be submitted without delay.

 

 

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The Views and Opinions Expressed by the author are his or her opinions only and do not necessarily reflect those of this Web-Site or its agents, affiliates, officers, directors, staff, or contractors. The author at the time of this article did not own any shares or receive any consideration financial or otherwise from any company or person mentioned or referred to in the article.

 
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