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Written By Unknown on Senin, 31 Desember 2012 | 10.46

Carlyle & Duff

A group of private equity firms, including the Carlyle Group, agreed to buy financial advisory and investment banking firm Duff & Phelps Corp. for about $665.5 million.

Sacre bleu

The French government is being forced to find another way of imposing a top income-tax rate of 75 percent on high-wealth individuals after the country's top constitutional authority killed the plan.

Merkel trickle

Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Germans that the nation's economy would experience a harder time next year than in 2012 and cautioned that the eurozone debt crisis was far from over.

Baer season

William Baer, a Washington antitrust lawyer and former FTC official, was confirmed to head the US Justice Department's antitrust division.

Galante is in

The head of the Federal Housing Administration, Carol Galante, was confirmed by the Senate despite mounting losses from souring loans at the mortgage funding agency that some fear could lead to a taxpayer bailout.

Reuters

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click For Restrictions


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Losing facebook

If 2012 taught young companies anything, it was — courtesy of Facebook: how not to conduct an IPO.

After a strong start, new offerings lagged in the second half as the social media giant's mismanaged debut in May made entrepreneurs think twice about going public. It's also the reason why unsung firms that bring solid returns are capturing Wall Street's attention heading into 2013.

The Facebook fiasco, which was supposed to usher in a new era for tech issues, cast a long shadow over Silicon Valley. The year started off promising with seven Internet IPOs pricing in the first quarter alone, but after Facebook there were just five more Internet deals for the year.

Upstarts raised $43 billion this year — the highest total since pre-recession 2007 — but the figure was skewed by Facebook's $16 billion haul. Without it, the average tech deal size shrank by 62 percent to $224 million.

Making matters worse, Groupon and Zynga, which went public in late 2011, suffered big declines this year. Both are down 75 percent, with investors unimpressed by their performance.

Sam Hamadeh, CEO of PrivCo, a research firm, is now looking at "less sexier names" for hot IPOs. TableauSoftware, one of the biggest data companies, is on everyone's hoped-for list after its peers were among the top performers this year.

"It's all about B-to-B enterprise and cloud-computing software companies," he said.

Fellow enterprise software companies Guidewire and Workday are up 140 percent and 80 percent, respectively, since going public.

"These companies did better because the business model of Internet can be volatile and revenue difficult to predict," said Stephanie Chang, a researcher with Renaissance Capital. "Software companies have contracts four or five years out and a lot more revenue visibility."

That helps explain why Facebook, which launched at $38 a pop, is now trading at $25.91. It went public at a time when ad growth was slowing and investors questioned whether it would be able to transition its desktop service to mobile devices.

Companies that have announced IPO plans include Auto Trader, Intelsat and GFI Software. Among the other firms that could surprise with a public push are SpaceX, Elon Musk's space shipping company, and AppSense.

Still, it's inevitable that Twitter, Facebook's social media rival, will draw a lion's share of attention.

The popular microblogging service could achieve for IPOs what Facebook failed to do: restore faith in the process for millions of everyday investors.

To do that, Twitter just has to take Facebook's IPO playbook and throw it out the window, said PrivCo's Hamadeh.

"Twitter will try to take every lesson from what Facebook did, every mistake, and try to do the opposite," he said.

An offering may not be ripe until 2014, but it is expected to lay the groundwork this year, Hamadeh expects.

"Twitter is just starting to introduce monetization," said Hamadeh. "It needs three to four quarters to show that it's working."

gsloane@nypost.com


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Sandy shutters South Street mainstay

Sandy is shutting down another kitchen in southern Manhattan.

Rustic Italian eatery Barbarini Alimentari at 225 Front St. in the South Street Seaport is closing its doors after the storm buried perishables and furniture under six feet of water.

"We had no flood insurance," said co-owner Stefano Barbagallo. "We lost $1 million and seven years of hard work."

Barbagallo said it would take another four to six months before the restaurant could re-open — the building dates from the early 19th century — and that's too long a wait.

The super storm has been a huge hit to restaurants, which operate on already thin margins, in the flood zone.

Barbagallo tells Side Dish that he loves the neighborhood and will stay in the Financial District but that he wants to be at least three blocks inland.

"I love the area and we built up a following but we can't risk being in Zone A again," Barbagallo said.

His next project will be without a partner: a smaller space that he will operate with his wife. His sister-in-law, Douglas Elliman broker Monica Luque, is looking for a new space, perhaps a small building to purchase or a piece of one, she said.

"He has a lot of faith in the area. He was a pioneer and brought so much happiness there with his restaurant," Luque said.

*

SIGHTING: Christy Turlington at Aamanns-Copenhagen on Laight Street, chowing down on house-baked rolls and coffee while Zac Posen and David Schwimmer popped in to check out the new Danish hot spot . . . Usher buying gumbo soup at Dean & DeLuca at Rockefeller Center over Christmas — and tipping $1.

jkeil@nypost.com


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The skinny on ’13

Bathing suit weather is just five months away. If you start your makeover today, you can be ready. These magazines can help you present a Happy View Year!

Health magazine is one of the more appetizing reads if you're thinking of getting fit. Trotting out the same advice — eat less sugar, eat more protein and exercise — can get tiresome, but Health entices with photos of ice-cream sandwiches and champagne flutes (just 100 calories, folks)! Elsewhere, Health has snack ideas for "8 Under 80 Calories," including Godiva chocolate parfaits and almondtini vodkas. This is our kind of diet magazine. This month's cover girl, Jennie Garth of the original "90210," said she coped with the pain of her divorce from "Twilight" star Peter Facinelli by putting up Post-It notes to remind her of her awesomeness. Better advice comes from a bunch of youthful-looking centenarians. One in particular, Charlotte Falk, kicks off her day on the treadmill before checking Facebook. Her advice for a healthy life? "Chatting up the barista in Starbucks."

Natural Health offers tips that echo those in every other healthy living magazine. We were immediately intrigued by the headline "Detox Your Skin" — a timely subject after the stress of the holidays. But we found the piece to simply reiterate the same old recommendation to scrub, mask and seal with lotions. We paid $5 for this? At least throw in a homemade egg mask or avocado scrub. The mag follows up with its promise for alternatives in other areas, though, including a piece on how to fight gum disease. Horsetail capsules anyone? We also like the piece on natural cold and flu fighters. Just one question: How does andrographis leaf taste?

Meredith's Fitness magazine is, as its title suggests, heavy on exercise tips. While most of these titles expound on the benefits of fitness regimens, we were relieved to find an essay on one yoga routine that resulted in a herniated disc. Proof that some exercise can be bad for you and not all yoga teachers know what they're doing. Making Fitness worth the money, though, was its main feature on how to listen to your gut, an indicator of emotional well-being and physical health. Not surprisingly, the advice is stay away from sugar and to eat probiotics. It seems that health mags while delivering harsh truths are aware of the realities of modern living. We also like this advice: "Bread is not the enemy and a burger won't kill you and red wine is tops for your ticker."

Want to get fit like Michael Phelps? Men's Fitness provides a mind-numbing chart of his one-hour workout (1x200m freestyle, 4x200m individual medley, 1x400m freestyle, etc., etc.). A bit more inspiring was the profile of Hollywood health freak Ryan Seacrest, which features an undated childhood photo in which he's wearing braces and geeky glasses and is, well, looking rather porky. In Seacrest's after-school routine growing up, he'd typically "make a plate of nachos on a cookie sheet," the "American Idol" host says. "I'd lay the cheese on top with some jalapenos and crank the oven up to broil, just to get the cheese brown." Nowadays, Seacrest has, of course, gone to the other extremes, and honestly, we're not sure which we prefer. "Even though they're not bad, I tend to eat the wrong amount of almonds," Seacrest frets, rather annoyingly.

Men's Health likewise treats food amounts, with a profile on Newark Mayor Cory Booker, who appears to be struggling with what doctors might call a tendency to pig out. "My goal is to eat five small meals" a day, says Booker, whose 6-foot, 3-inch frame lately had slimmed down to 267 pounds after it ballooned to an "embarrassing" 309 pounds this summer. Booker attributes his recent success to cutting out midnight snacks, which typically might consist of Ben & Jerry's Oatmeal Cookie Chunk — "possibly the whole pint," Booker admits. Elsewhere, we liked the advice on New Year's resolutions from celebrated author and former raging alcoholic Augusten Burroughs. "Take action. Start small. Make a goal for the day or even for the hour," Burroughs advises. "Minor victories will quickly accumulate."

Indeed, the New Yorker's piece on how to "climate-proof" cities reads somewhat like a daunting New Year's resolution: to prepare for future disasters like Hurricane Sandy looks like a big commitment without a clear payoff. Cash-crazy proposals have included building a $6.5-billion storm-surge barrier just north of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, or a five-mile gate that would stretch from Sandy Hook, NJ, to the Rockaway. "Yet, even if we managed to stop increasing global carbon emissions tomorrow, we would probably experience several centuries of additional warming, rising sea levels, and more frequent dangerous weather events," the mag admits. We can hear the campaign slogans now: "Don't just think about your kids. Think about your great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandkids."


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Pimco sees more job woes and slow going

Bond guru Bill Gross has spoken: he expects stocks and bonds to return less than 5 percent in 2013 as high unemployment persists, he wrote in a Twitter post.

The message from Gross, manager of Pacific Investment Management Co., the world's biggest bond fund, affirms what he wrote this month in his December investment outlook.

Newport Beach, Calif.-based Gross wrote yesterday in the post: "2013 Fearless Forecasts: 1) Stocks & bonds return less than 5 percent. 2) Unemployment stays at 7.5 percent or higher. 3) Gold goes up."

US bond markets are scheduled to close early today and remain shut on Jan. 1 for the New Year's Day holiday. Stock trading in New York will be closed tomorrow.

BILL GROSS - Slow motion mogul.

BILL GROSS
Slow motion mogul.

With globalization, technological and demographic changes restricting growth, investors should seek returns from commodities such as oil and gold, US inflation-protected bonds, high-quality municipal debt and non-dollar emerging market stocks, Gross wrote in his outlook article on Dec. 4, reiterating earlier recommendations.

"While there are growth potions that undoubtedly can reduce the fever, there may be no miracle policy drugs this time around to provide the inevitable cures of prior decades," Gross wrote in the article, posted on Pimco's website. "These structural headwinds cannot just be wished away."

The firm's Total Return Fund has gained 10.4 percent this year, ranking in the 95th percentile among its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

Pimco, a unit of the Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, managed $1.92 trillion as of Sept. 30.


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Syracuse plows through snow, West Virginia in Pinstripe Bowl

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 Desember 2012 | 10.46

Prince-Tyson Gulley ran for a career-best 208 yards and had three touchdowns, Syracuse scored twice on safeties and the Orange bid a snow-covered farewell to the Big East with a 38-14 victory over West Virginia in the Pinstripe Bowl on Saturday.

Syracuse (8-5) will enter the Atlantic Coast Conference on a roll after finishing this season with six wins in its last seven games, capped by its second postseason victory at Yankee Stadium in the last three years.

In a bowl game played in a baseball stadium with weather better suited for a playoff game in Green Bay, the team that plays in a dome ended up being better equipped to handle the elements.

The Orange leaned on their running game to plow through former Big East rival West Virginia (7-6) and the snow. Jerome Smith added 157 yards rushing, and Syracuse finished with a season-high 369 yards.

Geno Smith connected with Stedman Bailey for two touchdown passes, but the Mountaineers' quarterback also was sacked in the end zone in the first half and called for intentional grounding in the end zone in the second half as he tried to avoid another sack.

Smith, who was an early Heisman Trophy front-runner as the Mountaineers got off to a 5-0 start this season, was 16 for 26 for 197 yards in the final game of his record-breaking career. The NFL awaits.

Same goes for Ryan Nassib, though Syracuse didn't ask much of its talented senior quarterback. He threw two touchdown passes and an interception. His most impressive feat on this day was surviving being driven into the frozen turf by Terence Garvin on a sack in the first half. Nassib missed only one play.

Snow fell just about all game, giving most of the field a white dusting. Fans were bundled and players not in the game tried to do the same. It took a while for those potent offenses — both ranked in the top 25 nationally in yards per game — to heat up, which seemed appropriate considering the conditions.

A goal-line stand by West Virginia in the second quarter kept Syracuse out of the end zone, but set up the Orange for a scoring run.

Left at their own 1, the Mountaineers tried to pass out of their end zone, but Smith was smothered by blitzing linebackers Cameron Lynch and Siriki Diabate for a safety to make it 5-0 — a baseball score, of course.

The Orange followed that up with a 33-yard touchdown run by Gulley to make it 12-0 with 6:07 left in the second.

The Mountaineers responded with their first sustained drive and Bailey took a quick pass, darted and broke tackles, and scooted 32 yards to the end zone to make it 12-7.

The Orange extended the lead to 12 points with a touchdown drive to start the second half when the Orange caught a break — and touchdown pass. Nassib's throw was tipped around the goal line, but floated safely into the waiting arms of intended receiver Beckett Wales for a 10-yard score.

West Virginia appeared to answer with a touchdown of its own, when Andrew Buie broke free for a TD run on fourth-and-2. Not so fast. A holding call on the Mountaineers wiped out the play and sent coach Dana Holgorsen on to the field screaming at the officials.

It didn't help. Instead of a touchdown, a punt.

Moments later another close call, this time on a fumble by Smith which was reviewed to determine if it was an incomplete pass, went Syracuse's way, and again the Orange capitalized.

On the next play, Gulley broke through the line bounced to the outside and went 67 yards for a touchdown to make it 26-7 with 6:52 left in the third.

West Virginia wouldn't let Syracuse pull away. Smith found Bailey deep down the sideline beating one-on-one coverage for a 29-yard score 1:11 later.

Right back came the Orange, nine plays, 70 yards, with Gulley taking a swing pass from Nassib 10 yards for his third touchdown of the day.

A minute and half later, Brandon Sharpe was taking down Smith in the end zone, when the quarterback made a futile attempt to dump the pass off. The officials dropped the flag and the second safety of the day made it 35-14 with 1:08 left in the third.

The 60th meeting between these teams, but first in a bowl, ended up being a romp in the snow for Syracuse.


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Argentina asking court to revert order on debt holdouts

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina is asking a US appeals court to reverse an order for the country to pay $1.33 billion to "holdout" creditors who refused to join two swaps for the country's defaulted debt.

Argentine government lawyers said in papers filed late Friday that the order violates the country's sovereignty. The lawyers said the order also threatens service on at least $24 billion of the county's restructured sovereign debt, impairs the rights of third parties and puts global debt markets at risk.

"The Amended Injunctions have no basis in law, are inequitable, and threaten to wreak havoc on countless innocent third parties, which have already suffered losses due to the plunge in their bonds' value provoked by the insecurity that the Amended Injunctions have created in the market for Argentina's New York law-governed bonds," the briefing said.

"This harm to private and sovereign creditors, as well as to New York law and New York as a place to do business, will only grow if the Amended Injunctions are affirmed. "

The US 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ordered the country on Oct. 26 to pay the holdouts an equal amount whenever it makes payments on other debt that has been restructured since the country's economic collapse 11 years ago.

It agreed with US District Judge Thomas Griesa, who ruled that with more than $40 billion in foreign reserves, Argentina can afford to pay. The ruling gave Argentina a difficult choice: pay all bondholders equally, or pay none of them and risk going into default.

The court then returned the case to Griesa who ordered Argentina to pay the $1.33 billion into escrow for holders of its defaulted debt and banned banks and other third parties from intervening. Griesa based his ruling on the principle of "pari passu," or equal footing, which says debtors can't pick and choose between creditors.

President Cristina Fernandez called Griesa's ruling "judicial colonialism," and Argentina sidestepped the impending economic chaos when the order was suspended by the appeals court on Nov. 28.

But just the threat of the payment deadline set by Griesa had harsh outcomes. In the week after he issued his order, the cost of maintaining Argentina's overall debt soared in trading on U.S. and European bond markets and the cost of insuring those debts spiked.

"A court can arguably enjoin a foreign state from engaging in a commercial activity within the United States. But it cannot issue an order to force or preclude a foreign sovereign to act or not act within the limits of that sovereign's own territory," Argentina's brief said.


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Jackson, St. Peter's rally past Central Connecticut State

NEW BRITAIN, Conn. — Patrick Jackson scored 11 points and hit the game-winning jumper with 11 seconds left to rally St. Peter's past Central Connecticut State University 71-69 Saturday.

Desi Washington led St. Peter's with 15 points.

Trailing at halftime 36-29, St. Peter's (6-6) scored the first four points of the second half to make it 36-33 at the 18:36 mark. CCSU (4-6) then used a 24-14 run to take a 60-47 lead with 7:32 left to play. Adonis Burbage scored 14 points during the run.

The Peacocks answered with 22-9 run, with Washington's 3-pointer tying the game at 69 with 2:39 left in the game.

Both teams went cold from the field until Jackson's jumper with 11 seconds left.

Kyle Vinales missed a late jumper to tie the game for CCSU.

Burbage made 5 of 8 3-pointers and scored a career-high 25 points for the Blue Devils.


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Frankoski's 3s pace Columbia past Manhattan

Steve Frankoski came off the bench to score 18 points, leading Columbia to a 69-58 victory over Manhattan in a nonconference game Saturday.

The sophomore guard scored all of his points from 3-point range, making 6 of 11 shots behind the arc for the Lions (6-5). He also had six 3-pointers in Columbia's 70-69 loss to Elon on Dec. 22, when he scored 20 points.

Columbia made 12 of 23 overall from long range (52.2 percent) against the Jaspers (3-8), including 3 of 6 by Brian Barbour, who finished with 14 points and six assists.

Frankoski and Barbour each hit a 3-pointer during the Lions' 14-2 run to start the game. They never trailed, leading 34-17 at halftime and never by fewer than eight in the second half.

Rhamel Brown scored 25 points and grabbed nine rebounds to lead Manhattan.

Alex Rosenberg added 12 points and nine rebounds for Columbia.


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Woman charged with murder as hate crime after allegedly shoving man in front of subway

Michael Hicks

FIRST PIC: Erika Menendez in police custody tonight.

A Muslim-hating woman was charged with murder as a hate crime for senselessly shoving a Queens man to his death in front of the 7 train, officials said today.

Erika Menendez, 31, was hit with a second-degree murder charge after confessing to killing Sunando Sen, 46, following her arrest this morning.

"She is accused of committing a subway commuter's worst nightmare," Queens DA Richard Brown said. "(He was) suddenly and senselessly pushed into the path of an oncoming train, shoved from behind with no chance to defend himself.

Push victim Sunando Sen

The sketch the police used to bust Muslim-hater Erika Menendez.

"She told police that she pushed a Muslim off the train tracks. She said, 'I've hated Hindus and Muslims since 2001 since they put down the Twin Towers. I have been beating them up since.'"

Cops picked up Menendez in Brooklyn early this morning after spotting her wearing the same jacket seen in surveillance video the night that Sen was fatally shoved into the path of the 7 train at the elevated 40th Street-Lowery stop in Sunnyside, law-enforcement sources said.

Menendez was grabbed around 5 a.m. on the corner of Empire Boulevard and Bedford Avenue in Crown Heights, the sources said.

The incoherent suspect was mumbling as cops questioned her, and at one point asked where the R train was, the sources added.

Her relatives called cops last night after seeing her on the news, law-enforcement sources said.

Menendez could have a criminal background -- and possibly a history of mental health issues, the sources said. She has recently been living in homeless shelters.

The suspect was taken to the 112th Precinct in Forest Hills.

"All I know is that she's bipolar and as far as seeing the footage, I'm pretty sure it was her," said a cousin of the suspect who declined to give his name. "I don't know much about her whereabouts or what she's been up to these past few months."

Sen, an Indian immigrant from Calcutta who co-owned a Manhattan print shop, was waiting for the train around 8 pm on Thursday when a woman came behind him and shoved him onto the tracks, cops said.

The deranged pusher was seen mumbling to herself on the platform, and said nothing as she approached her victim from behind, witnesses told cops.

Sen's death marked the second fatal subway pushing this month after Ki Suk Han was allegedly shoved to his death by crazed drifter Naeem Davis.

The deaths drove fearful straphangers to hang back from the edge of subway platforms yesterday.


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The show must go on

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 29 Desember 2012 | 10.46

The passing this year of "Dallas" star Larry Hagman is a reminder that TV shows often find it difficult — and, in some cases, downright awkward — to replace beloved stars who pass away during a series run.

Here are a few ways in which shows from years past have handled the death of a cast member.

* "The Sopranos." Nancy Marchand's mother-from-hell, Livia, loomed large — both over the plot of the HBO show's first season and over the tortured soul of her son, mobster Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini). Marchand's death, prior to Season 3, prompted Livia's death as well — though not before a creepy CGI appearance.

©HBO/Courtesy Everett Collection

MOMMY ISSUES: "Sopranos" co-star Nancy Marchand (left, with James Gandolfini) died after the second season.

* "Hill Street Blues." Michael Conrad's fatherly Sgt. Esterhaus was the soul of the precinct. When Conrad passed away suddenly, Esterhaus was given a typical "Hill Street" sendoff (he died in bed with a high school cheerleader).

* "The West Wing." John Spencer's Leo McGarry was making his bid for the Vice Presidency when Spencer died suddenly in 2005 — leading producers to change the outcome of the VP race by letting McGarry's running mate, Matt Santos (Jimmy Smits), win the election despite Leo's death.

* "Cheers." Nick Colasanto's (Coach) health was declining rapidly by the third season; his death was revealed in the fourth-season premiere when Sam (Ted Danson) broke the news of Coach's demise.

* "NewsRadio"/"8 Simple Rules." The shocking deaths of Phil Hartman and John Ritter led to the demise of their sitcoms, too. In Hartman's case, Jon Lovitz replaced Hartman's Bill McNeal as the resident blowhard. It didn't work.

After Ritter's (and his character's) death, James Garner joined "Rules" as the family's grandfather, but the show didn't last past another season.


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Fruits of stop-and-frisk

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 28 Desember 2012 | 10.46

There have been fewer murders in New York City to date this year than at any time in the 50 years since the NYPD began tracking major-crime data.

For this, thank your local police officer.

And, of course, the enlightened — albeit sometimes controversial — anti-crime policies of Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Mayor Mike Bloomberg.

As of yesterday, there were 413 homicides in the city this year, according to police.

There were 511 at this time last year.

That marks a 19 percent plunge in a single year — a remarkable feat.

"I'm thankful for the fact that this year there will be the lowest number of murders that we've had since we started to record them in 50 years, even though the population is as high as it's ever been," said Kelly.

Dan Brinzac

Ray Kelly

Sad to say for other cities, New York is unique.

As Kelly noted on these pages in October, "If we had Chicago's murder rate, [New York's homicide] total would be 1,224. If we had Philadelphia's, 1,483; at Baltimore's rate, 2,338 — and at Detroit's, 3,635."

So New York clearly is doing something right . . . but what?

It's not just that hi-tech emergency rooms are saving more lives these days — there were also fewer shootings in New York in 2012 than there have been since cops started following that stat 20 years ago.

Kelly rightly attributes his success to aggressive law-enforcement tactics, including stop-and-frisk, the routine searching of people the police suspect are carrying illegal weapons or other contraband.

Chicago and Detroit don't perform stop-and-frisks; Philadelphia used the tactic, but its hands have been cuffed by the courts this year — to predictable results.

More could be done to protect New Yorkers, of course, and an outright ban on assault rifles is under serious consideration in the wake of the Sandy Hook shootings.

Still, of the 769 homicides statewide last year, just 5 were committed with rifles.

Nearly 400 involved handguns.

That helps explain why Kelly and Bloomberg are so adamant about clearing weapons, especially handguns, from city streets. And they understand that this requires enforcing the criminal statutes currently on the books.

The man who lured firefighters to his home outside Rochester last week and murdered two of them, apparently with a military-style rifle, had been convicted of killing his grandmother with a hammer years before. Why was he out of prison?

He was convicted of manslaughter for his first attack and released after 17 years behind bars. Had he been charged with murder, convicted and given a life sentence, he would not have been free to kill again.

The twin priorities sought by Bloomberg and executed by Kelly — locking up criminals and restricting the flow of weapons — have ushered in a stunningly low homicide rate compared to other big cities.

They are simple law-and-order policies, but the results are nearly miraculous.

That's something to be thankful for.

Have an opinion on this Post editorial? Send it in to LETTERS@NYPOST.COM!


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Ad big-wig’s manse sale: Skirting his tax duty?

The Issue: Jerry Della Femina's decision to sell his Long Island mansion before fiscal-cliff tax hikes set in.

***

What a sad and tragic story: Jerry Della Femina sold his home for only $25 million, as he was so worried he would have to pay more in taxes ("Ad Guru Reveals Why He Sold Hamptons Estate," Dec. 23).

That anyone expects sympathy for a man who has more now than 99 percent of Americans will ever see in their lifetimes is laughable at best, and truly insulting at worst.

This man should remember how lucky he is to live in a place where he can make a fortune doing something as simple as selling a home that he barely needs. The out-of-touch, mega-rich like him would do well to recall how laughably more well-off they are than nearly everyone.

Jerry Della Femina

Jerry Della Femina

My family is proud of the modest salary I make through hard work and would never dream of complaining, despite the difficulty we live with daily. It is just another example of why the rest of us feel such disgust with the 1 percent who run this country and believe they are entitled to even more than they already have or could ever need.Adam Intravia

Riverhead

Despite Della Femina's statement that he sold his house now because he wanted to avoid a possible tax increase, he made it quite clear that he had tried to sell the property for $40 million, was unable to do so and dropped the price to $25 million.

At this price, he finally found a buyer.

Rather than risk having to lower the price again, he took the offer.

That is the truth. Save opinions for the editorial page.Edythe Fishbach

Brooklyn

For the past 20 years, Della Femina probably paid a lower tax rate than the people he employed.

Now that it is time to pay up for all the tax relief he has gotten over the years, he wants to cry on the The Post's shoulder.

He needs to blame the do-nothing Congress and his representatives, not just Obama.

George H. Dixon

Reading, Pa.

Della Femina cites President Obama's fiscal policies as his reason for the sale when, in fact, this property has been on the market for years.

He says he's the loser, and had Mitt Romney been elected he could have kept his party house.

At the same time, he made millions of dollars in profit on the sale.

Had Romney been elected, the middle class would have had their taxes raised and benefits cut in order to continue to subsidize Della Femina's parties.

Elections have consequences.

John B. Corcoran

West Pittston, Pa.

Poor, rich, pitiful Della Femina.

When one of his former advertising clients had a product on sale, how did he feel when that product went back to its regular price?

That's what the change in tax rates would be — a return to the former fair rate.

The tax rate for the wealthy has been on sale for eight years, but now the bills for trillion-dollar wars are due.

As for leaving money for his kids and grandchildren, I would think a good portion of the $25 million sale of his summer home would suffice if Della Femina doesn't squander it on silly parties where he tries to influence other obnoxious, rich and powerful people.

As for his accusations about Obama's youthful marijuana smoking, how petty can he get?

Della Femina helped pay the medical bills of an employee who had HIV.

I would nominate him for the Nobel Peace Prize and Time magazine's person of the year: things Obama has already won. Pietro Allar

Manhattan

Let me get this straight: He put his mansion in the Hamptons on the market in 2010 knowing Obama would be re-elected and the capital gains tax was going to increase?

He says he wants to pay his fair share.

I wonder how many cars were leased and parties, renovations, vacations and other personal items paid for by his business.

Poor Jerry is crying all the way to the bank.

John Clifford

Orangeburg


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Over the cliff, cont’d

With the approaching fiscal cliff less than 100 hours away, things are getting awfully personal on Capitol Hill.

Which means that the chances of reaching a deal to avoid expiration of the Bush-era tax cuts are approaching slim to none.

And if they're allowed to expire, it would trigger the largest tax hike in US history — meaning lots of pain and suffering, especially in already tax-weary New York.

"My savings, my investments, my retirement contribution will be hit very hard," 26-year-old Mary Kaltenberg told The Post.

"My [tax] increase, almost $4,000, is what I pay on FreshDirect for the year," said 67-year-old John Gebhard. "I just buy the basics. It's my food for the year."

Bloomberg

Harry Reid

Never mind all that.

President Obama and legislative leaders prefer to play high-stakes political chicken — with neither side willing to blink.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid yesterday blasted House Speaker John Boehner as a "dictator" for refusing to allow a vote on a Senate measure that raises taxes on families making over $250,000 a year.

This, even as Reid insisted that his Democratic-majority body's measure is the only one he's willing to consider.

In other words, no meaningful give-and-take. In fact, no serious negotiations at all.

Yet, as Boehner noted, House Republicans have already passed their own measure that would avert fiscal calamity by keeping all the Bush tax cuts and shifting mandated spending cuts from the military to domestic programs.

"The House has already passed legislation to avoid the entire fiscal cliff," said the speaker. "Senate Democrats have not."

Democrats, however, refuse to consider the House bill — or any measure that seriously addresses spending cuts.

So much for dictatorships.

Underscoring the general non-communication, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said he was called Wednesday by Obama — "the first Democrat to do so on the fiscal cliff since Thanksgiving.

"This is a conversation we should have had months ago," he said, adding that new talks are planned for today.

Meanwhile, the country seethes.

"Regardless of your political position," 55-year-old George Hoban told The Post, "everyone would agree that something has to be done. People in Congress need to compromise."

Yes — but when?

Tick tock, tick tock.

Have an opinion on this Post editorial? Send it in to LETTERS@NYPOST.COM!


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Wish upon a star!

1. STOP WORRYING

Kelly Ripa, co-host of "Live! With Kelly and Michael"

"I have the same resolution every year — not to sweat the small stuff. So far it hasn't taken!"

2. BE THANKFUL

Kris Humphries, power forward for the Nets

"I resolved to express more gratitude in 2013 — and will start by inviting [TMZ founder] Harvey Levin and my friends at TMZ over for dinner to thank them for all of their support."

3. PLAY TENNIS

Carnie Wilson, musician and celebrity contestant on "Rachael vs. Guy: Celebrity Cook-Off"

"My New Year's resolution is to take up a sport with my husband, Rob. Tennis on Saturday morning every week would be great for our health and our relationship!"

4. MARRY RICH

Joan Rivers, comedian

"To marry a billionaire on life support. I had one all lined up this year, but unfortunately the rabbi tripped over the wire and pulled the plug before the wedding. It was very hard to stand by the bed and watch a billion dollars just disappear in an instant. Next time, I won't make the same mistake — I will make the rabbi marry us in the doorway!"

5. BRIGHTEN SOMEONE'S DAY

André Leon Talley, contributing editor at Vogue magazine

"To be kind, and to think everyday, 'How can I do something wonderful for someone else?' Life is better when you can smile inside from having generously made someone feel great in a normal day."

6. TRAVEL TO SPAIN

Hilaria Baldwin, fitness and wellness expert, co-founder of Yoga Vida, wife of actor Alec Baldwin

"My New Year's resolution is to visit my family in Spain more. I have lived in NYC for nearly 10 years, and have only been back to Spain twice during this period. I miss my parents, brother and nephew in Mallorca. When I go home, they stuff me with good food, wine and lots of love . . . Who wouldn't want to go there more often?"

7. BE A BETTER HUMAN BEING

Dustin Hoffman, actor

"Well, I've been in therapy for a long, long time — I even have a contract with my therapist that we continue after I die. All she has to do is bring a chair to my grave, and she'll hear me! So I tend to say the first thing that comes to mind, and that's, 'Be a better human being.' Because that's a never-ending quest. I think we need to bulls - - t ourselves less often. I think anything that's painful information about ourselves, we jump from — like sitting on a hot radiator. It's just the human condition."

8. GIVE UP SWEETS

Eddie Huang, chef

"I'm giving up gummy bears at night — 'cause I'm starting to look like one."

9. LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR

Porschla Kidd, Ford model, and her husband Jason Kidd, guard for the Knicks


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Russian parliament endorses anti-US adoption bill

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 27 Desember 2012 | 10.46

MOSCOW — Defying a storm of domestic and international criticism, Russia moved toward finalizing a ban on Americans adopting Russian children, as Parliament's upper house voted unanimously Wednesday in favor of a measure that President Vladimir Putin has indicated he will sign into law.

The bill is widely seen as the Kremlin's retaliation against an American law that calls for sanctions against Russians deemed to be human rights violators. It comes as Putin takes an increasingly confrontational attitude toward the West, brushing aside concerns about a crackdown on dissent and democratic freedoms.

Dozens of Russian children close to being adopted by American families now will almost certainly be blocked from leaving the country. The law also cuts off the main international adoption route for Russian children stuck in often dismal orphanages: Tens of thousands of Russian youngsters have been adopted in the U.S. in the past 20 years. There are about 740,000 children without parental care in Russia, according to UNICEF.

All 143 members of the Federation Council present voted to support the bill, which has sparked criticism from both the U.S. and Russian officials, activists and artists, who say it victimizes children by depriving them of the chance to escape the squalor of orphanage life. The vote comes days after Parliament's lower house overwhelmingly approved the ban.

The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it regretted the Russian parliament's decision.

"Since 1992, American families have welcomed more than 60,000 Russian children into their homes, providing them with an opportunity to grow up in a family environment," spokesman Patrick Ventrell said in a statement from Washington. "The bill passed by Russia's parliament would prevent many children from enjoying this opportunity ...

"It is misguided to link the fate of children to unrelated political considerations," he said.

Seven people with posters protesting the bill were detained outside the Council before Wednesday's vote. "Children get frozen in the Cold War," one poster read. Some 60 people rallied in St. Petersburg, Russia's second largest city.

The bill is part of larger legislation by Putin-allied lawmakers retaliating against a recently signed U.S. law that calls for sanctions against Russians deemed to be human rights violators. Although Putin has not explicitly committed to signing the bill, he strongly defended it in a press conference last week as "a sufficient response" to the new U.S. law.

Originally Russia's lawmakers cobbled together a more or less a tit-for-tat response to the U.S. law, providing for travel sanctions and the seizure of financial assets in Russia of Americans determined to have violated the rights of Russians.


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DC police investigating 'Meet the Press' incident

WASHINGTON - District of Columbia police say they are investigating an incident in which NBC News journalist David Gregory displayed what he described as a high-capacity ammunition magazine on "Meet the Press."

Gun laws in the nation's capital generally restrict the possession of high-capacity magazines, regardless of whether the device is attached to a firearm. Gregory held up the magazine as a prop for Sunday's segment, apparently to make a point during an interview, even though D.C. police say NBC had already been advised not to use it in the show.

Getty Images

David Gregory.

"NBC contacted (the Metropolitan Police Department) inquiring if they could utilize a high capacity magazine for their segment. NBC was informed that possession of a high capacity magazine is not permissible and their request was denied. This matter is currently being investigated," police spokeswoman Gwendolyn Crump said in a written statement. She declined to comment further.

While interviewing National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre for Sunday's program, Gregory held up an object that he said was a magazine that could hold 30 rounds.

"Here is a magazine for ammunition that carries 30 bullets. Now, isn't it possible that if we got rid of these, if we replaced them and said, 'Well, you can only have a magazine that carries five bullets or ten bullets,' isn't it just possible that we could reduce the carnage in a situation like Newtown?'" Gregory asked, referring to the December 14 shooting in which a gunman massacred 20 children and 6 adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut.

LaPierre replied: "I don't believe that's going to make one difference. There are so many different ways to evade that even if you had that" ban.

It was not clear how or where Gregory obtained the magazine, and an NBC News spokeswoman declined to comment Wednesday.

"Meet the Press" is generally taped in Washington.


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Repairs underway for collapsed wall in Chelsea building

Repairs are underway on a landmarked Chelsea building that was evacuated when part of a structural wall fell to the sidewalk.

The seven-story building at 655 Sixth Avenue was emptied on Tuesday night when the wall failed on the building's West 20th Street side.

Workers began constructing a sidewalk bridge around the collapsed area today. They don't expect to start working on the structure itself until tomorrow.

Residents of the wing of the building that fronts on West 20th Street were barred from returning to their homes.

Apartments and businesses on the Sixth Avenue side of the building were allowed back inside yesterday morning. The building, which dates to 1875, has retail on its first floor and condos upstairs.

R. Umar Abbasi

655 Sixth Avenue.

"The building won't fall. They don't build buildings like this anymore," said Maurice Laboz, 75, a real estate developer who has lived in the building's penthouse for five years.

No one was injured by the collapse.


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George H.W. Bush in intensive care

HOUSTON — Former President George H.W. Bush has been admitted to the intensive care unit at a Houston hospital "following a series of setbacks including a persistent fever," but he is alert and talking to medical staff, his spokesman said Wednesday.

Jim McGrath, Bush's spokesman in Houston, said in a brief email that Bush was admitted to the ICU at Methodist Hospital on Sunday. He said doctors are cautiously optimistic about his treatment and that the former president "remains in guarded condition."

No other details were released about his medical condition, but McGrath said Bush is surrounded by family. Bush has been hospitalized since Nov. 23.

Earlier Wednesday, McGrath said a fever that kept Bush in the hospital over Christmas had gotten worse and that doctors had put him on a liquids-only diet.

"It's an elevated fever, so it's actually gone up in the last day or two," McGrath told The Associated Press earlier in the day. "It's a stubborn fever that won't go away."

But he said the bronchitis-like cough that initially brought the 88-year-old to the hospital has improved.

Bush was visited on Christmas by his wife, Barbara, his son, Neil, and Neil's wife, Maria, and a grandson, McGrath said. Bush's daughter, Dorothy, was expected to arrive Wednesday in Houston from Bethesda, Md. The 41st president has also been visited twice by his sons, George W. Bush, the 43rd president, and Jeb Bush, the former governor of Florida.

Bush and his wife live in Houston during the winter and spend their summers at a home in Kennebunkport, Maine.

The former president was a naval aviator in World War II — at one point the youngest in the Navy — and was shot down over the Pacific. He achieved notoriety in retirement for skydiving on at least three of his birthdays since leaving the White House in 1992.


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Winslet weds again

"Titanic" star Kate Winslet quietly married her boyfriend of a year, Richard Branson's epically named nephew Ned Rocknroll in upstate New York earlier this month. According to reports the intimate "romantic private" ceremony took place at a barn with only a few close friends present, including her "Titanic" co-star Leo DiCaprio, who gave the bride away. While reps for Winslet and DiCaprio didn't immediately comment, it seems Winslet and Rocknroll, who changed his name from Abel Smith, have recently appeared deeply in love. They were spotted cracking open bottles of Champagne with pals at NYC restaurant Isola last month, but her reps denied an engagement at the time.

REUTERS

Kate Winslet and Rocknroll


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Pope decries slaughter of 'defenseless' Syrians

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Desember 2012 | 10.46

Pope Benedict XVI delivers his Christmas Day message to the faithful from the central balcony of St Peter's Basilica.

Getty Images

Pope Benedict XVI delivers his Christmas Day message to the faithful from the central balcony of St Peter's Basilica.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI wished Christmas peace to the world Tuesday, decrying the slaughter of the "defenseless" in Syria, urging Israelis and Palestinians to find the courage to negotiate and encouraging China's new leaders to allow more religious freedom.

Delivering the Vatican's traditional Christmas day message from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, Benedict also encouraged Arab spring nations, especially Egypt, to build just and respectful societies.

May China's new leadership "esteem the contribution of the religions, in respect for each other" to help build a "fraternal society for the benefit of that noble people," the pope prayed.

It was a clear reference to the Chinese government's often harsh treatment of Catholics loyal to the pontiff instead of to the state-sanctioned church. Earlier this month, the Vatican refused to accept the decision by Chinese authorities to revoke the title of a Shanghai bishop, who had been appointed in a rare show of consensus between the Holy See and China.

As the 85-year-old pontiff, bundled up in an ermine-trimmed red cape, gingerly stepped foot on the balcony, the pilgrims, tourists and Romans below backing St. Peter's Square erupted in cheers.

Less than 12 hours earlier, Benedict had led a two-hour long Christmas Eve ceremony in the basilica. He sounded hoarse and looked weary as he read his Christmas message and then holiday greetings in 65 languages.

In his "Urbi et Orbi" speech, which traditionally reviews world events and global challenges, Benedict prayed that "peace spring up for the people of Syria, deeply wounded and divided by a conflict that does not spare even the defenseless and reaps innocent victims."

He called for easier access to help refugees and for "dialogue in the pursuit of a political solution to the conflict."

Benedict prayed that God "grant Israelis and Palestinians courage to end long years of conflict and division, and to embark resolutely on the path to negotiation."

Israel, backed by the United States, opposed the Palestinian statehood bid, saying it was a ploy to bypass negotiations, something the Palestinians deny. Talks stalled four years ago.

Senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat said that in a meeting with the pope last week, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas "emphasized our total readiness to resume negotiations." The Palestinians have not dropped their demand that Israel first stop settlement activities before returning to the negotiating table.


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Nets' December struggles continue with Christmas loss to Celtics

Santa brought the Nets a hi-def TV appointment, sleek monochrome uniforms, an alarm clock (with snooze button) and a Kevin Garnett dartboard.

Brooklyn's nationally-televised noon Christmas Day showcase went from a gift to a hassle when the sleepy-looking Nets were shoved aside by the Celtics, 93-76, Tuesday in front of a sellout crowd of 17,732 at Barclays Center.

The sputtering Nets (14-13) fell to 3-9 in December with four games remaining in the final six days, beginning Wednesday night in Milwaukee, as they try to prevent their debut city campaign from going off the rails.

Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

12/25/12 - Boston Celtics Vs. New York Nets at Barclays Center: Celtics #30 Brandon Bass puts up a shot in front of Nets #45 Gerald Wallace and #11 Brook Lopez during the fourth quarter.

"[The Celtics] had that look in their eye like it was really, really important -- when things went bad on their end of the floor, they stuck with it," Nets coach Avery Johnson said. "We dropped our heads a little bit. That's something that I'll visit with our team about. When something goes wrong, that's when you really have to get tougher."

Things got testy with 9:31 remaining when Gerald Wallace got tangled up with -- who else? -- Garnett, the Hall of Fame instigator who was also in the thick of a melee when the teams last met Nov. 28. Wallace grabbed a fistful of Garnett's shorts as he stumbled after a whistle and the teams engaged in the customary pushing and posturing.

Wallace, Garnett, Andray Blatche and Courtney Lee were assessed offsetting technical fouls. Jared Sullinger added some more spice to the egg nog with a flagrant foul to take away a layup from Wallace with 6:03 left.

The Nets should have been more enraged by their futility on offense. They failed to crack 20 points in any of the final three quarters, shooting 40.6 percent from the field, missing 12 of 29 free-throw tries and committing a ghastly 20 turnovers. Deron Williams, facing waves of double teams, took just seven shots and finished with 10 points. Wallace and Brook Lopez shared the team-high with 15 points.

"We just couldn't get anything going offensively," Williams said. "Their defense picked up and made it hard for us. They were really physical with us. ... Our shots weren't going, I think because they were being so physical with us."

The game hinged on a 23-5 second-quarter Celtics run that turned a tentative three-point Nets lead into a 49-34 deficit in the span of 6:26. Though Johnson reinserted most of his starters about halfway through the spurt, Boston was able to shoot 9-of-13 from the field and grab 10 rebounds to take command.

"We've just had some issues when we try to sub our starters out," Johnson said. "We've had some inconsistency when we substitute, so we have to try to figure that out."

The Nets mounted a third-quarter comeback from the depths of a 21-point hole, tightening the game to 66-58 with a 15-2 run highlighted by two Joe Johnson 3-balls, the second of which he launched from the vicinity of Park Slope. But Rajon Rondo (19 points, six rebounds, five assists) drew a charge, handed out an assist and nailed a rare 3-pointer in the final 1:13 of the quarter to push the Celtics' cushion back to 15 and all but end it. The Celtics, the league's worst rebounding team, held a 41-36 advantage on the glass.

The Nets now turn around and head out of town to face the Bucks, looking to get out of their rut and trying to dispel the impression they are not ready for prime time after a dud in their holiday litmus test.

"We need a win to take away this loss," Williams said. "This leaves us a sour taste in our mouths, so hopefully we can come out and play with a little more energy and consistency."

jlehman@nypost.com


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Upstate NY madman left chilling suicide note before luring firefighters to death; cops say another body found

William H. Spengler Jr.A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.

William H. Spengler Jr.

A homicidal maniac -- bent to "do what I like doing best: killing people" -- left a chilling suicide note before torching his neighborhood and murdering two firefighters, police revealed this morning.

Cops also today said they've found a third victim of ex-con William Spengler Jr.'s murderous rampage, discovering a body, probably of his 67-year-old sister Cheryl, in the charred rubble of their home.

The Spengler siblings hated each other and lived on opposite ends of the house, neighbors said, and when she couldn't be found yesterday, police feared the worst.

"We did locate apparent human remains in the ruins of the house at 191 Lake Road. The medical examiner has removed those remains," Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said this afternoon.

UPSTATE MADMAN SETS BLAZE TO LURE FIREFIGHTERS TO DEATH

"The medical examiner will be working on the identification and I'm assuming that's going to take quite a period of time. The assumption is that is the shooter's sister."

Earlier today, cops disclosed that William Spengler -- a loser mama's boy who once spent 17 years in prison for beating his grandmother to death -- penned a murderous three-page missive, telling the world why he turned a quiet lakeside neighborhood into hell on earth.

"I still have to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down and do what I like doing best: killing people," Spengler wrote his suicide note, made public by police.

William H. Spengler Jr.A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.

REUTERS

A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.

Spengler, 62, set his home -- in the tight-knit, upstate town of Webster, just outside Rochester -- ablaze early yesterday morning to lure volunteer firefighters to the scene. The gutless killer then methodically shot four of those fireman, two fatally, before blowing his brains out.

"There was no motive in the note...there were some ramblings in there," Pickering said. "There was intelligence information that we obtained that our investigators need to follow up on. It spoke mainly that he intended to burn his neighborhood down and kill as many people as possible."

Four whiskey bottles, filled with gasoline, were found unspent against his house, law enforcement sources told WHEC-TV.

Spengler ignited his deadly blaze with a flare gun that was recovered at the scene, the local NBC affiliate reported.

The sadistic killer was found with a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver, Mossman 12-gauge shotgun and a Bushman semi-automatic AR-15 rifle with 30-shot magazine, police said. Crazed gunman Adam Lanza used the same make of Bushman rifle in the tragic Newtown, CT shooting earlier this month.

As a convicted felon, Spengler had no legal right to possess guns so cops want to trace those weapons.

Police are exploring connections Spengler and his late mom, Arline, had to the West Webster Fire Department, officials said.

Spengler first torched his family's home on Lake Road, where Irondequoit Bay meets Lake Ontario, at around 5:45 a.m. — then lay in wait for his unsuspecting prey.

Crouched like a sniper and armed with a rifle and a handgun, Spengler targeted responding firefighters from behind an earthen berm that gave him a clear shot, said Pickering.

"He took a position of cover to be a sniper to shoot the first responders . . . It does appear it was a trap that was set,'' a grim-faced Pickering said.

It's unclear why Spengler targeted the men, although he was having personal problems.

He lived with a sister he hated, neighbors said, in the same house where he had fatally bludgeoned his 92-year-old grandmother with a hammer in 1980.

Spengler's beloved mother, Arline died in October. In her obituary, donations were directed to the "West Webster Firemen's Association (Ambulance Fund).'' It wasn't immediately clear why.

"As far as motive, all kinds of speculation, and truthfully, we do not know. They're trying to draw a nexus, I know, between the donations of the mother to the fire department. There could be a nexus to 33 years ago when Webster police arrested him for murdering his grandmother," Pickering said.

"We are aware of it and trying to figure out the connection," said a source with the sheriff's office.

One of Spengler's victims yesterday, 43-year-old Michael Chiapperini, was a volunteer with the West Webster Fire District and a lieutenant in the town's police department, where he also served as a media liaison.

The selfless Chiapperini, who spent 20 years as cop, had spent time in Suffolk County last month, volunteering for Hurricane Sandy cleanup duty, officials said.

He had just been named a local "Firefighter of the Year."

He is survived by his wife, two daughters and a son who also worked with the volunteer fire department.

The other man killed was volunteer Tomasz Kaczowka, a 19-year-old 911 dispatcher and a community-college student with dreams of becoming a full-time firefighter.

"These people get up in the middle of the night to fight fires," said Pickering, choking back tears. "They don't expect to be shot and killed."

Two more volunteer firefighters, Joseph Hofstetter and Theodore Scardino, were wounded by bullets. A cop suffered injuries from shrapnel. All three were expected to survive.

Hofstetter, who also works full time for the Rochester Fire Department, was hit in the pelvis and the bullet lodged in his spine. Scardino was hit in the chest and knee.

The firefighters had to fall back after shots were first fired, allowing flames from Spengler's home to spread to neighboring houses.

Spengler then traded shots with officers who arrived with an armored truck they used to remove the injured, as well as people living nearby.

He was chased on foot from his perch, then killed himself before he could be subdued, cops said.

Four houses burned to the ground and four more were damaged by the time the blaze was brought under control.

Dozens of people had to be evacuated from the smoldering area on Christmas Eve.

During the gunfight, emergency radio communications captured someone frantically saying he "could see the muzzle flash coming at [him]," as Spengler fired.

The audio, posted on the Web site RadioReference.com, also had someone reporting, "Firefighters are down!" and saying, "Got to be rifle or shotgun — high-powered . . . semi or fully auto."

It would have been illegal for Spengler, as a convicted felon, to possess any firearm at all.

Sheriff Patrick O'Flynn said he couldn't help thinking about the school massacre in Newtown, Conn., and other mass shootings in recent years.

"It's sad to see this is becoming more commonplace . . . across the nation," O'Flynn said.

At West Webster Fire Station 1, there were 20 bouquets on a bench in front. Another bouquet had roses with three gold-and-white ribbons saying, "May they rest in peace," "In the line of duty," and, "In memory of our fallen brothers."

Gov. Cuomo asked New Yorkers to pray for the firefighters' families, victimized by this "senseless act of violence."

Last December, a 15-year-old boy doused his home in Webster with gasoline and set it ablaze, killing his father and two brothers, ages 12 and 16.


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Affleck won't run for Kerry's Senate seat

BOSTON -- Ben Affleck is taking his name off the list of possible candidates for U.S. Sen. John Kerry's seat, which would be open if the Democratic senator from Massachusetts is confirmed as secretary of state.

Affleck says in a Monday posting on his Facebook page that while he loves the political process, he will not be running for public office.

Speculation about the Cambridge, Mass., native rose slightly when he did not completely rule out a Senate bid during an appearance on CBS' Face The Nation on Sunday.

In his Facebook posting, Affleck says he would continue working with the Eastern Congo Initiative, a nonprofit organization that helps direct humanitarian aid to the war-torn region, and for other causes.

Getty Images

John Kerry (left) and Ben Affleck.

Affleck says Kerry would make a great secretary of state.


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Christmas tornado causes damage from Louisiana to Alabama

NEW ORLEANS -- A Christmas Day twister outbreak left behind damage from Louisiana to Alabama while holiday travelers in the nation's much colder midsection battled sometimes treacherous driving conditions from freezing rain and blizzard conditions.

In Mobile, Ala., a tornado or high winds damaged homes and knocked down power lines and large tree limbs in an area just west of downtown around nightfall, said Nancy Johnson, a spokeswoman for the Mobile County Commission. WALA-TV's tower camera captured a large funnel cloud headed toward downtown.

"We haven't verified what it was, but we have an area that we heard has damage to homes," she said.

AP

A house in Tioga, La., is severely damaged after an apparent tornado tore through the area.

Meanwhile, blizzard conditions were hitting the nation's midsection.

Earlier in the day, winds toppled a tree onto a pickup truck in the Houston area, killing the driver. Icy roads already were blamed for a 21-vehicle pileup in Oklahoma, and the Highway Patrol says a 28-year-old woman was killed in a crash on a snowy U.S. Highway near Fairview.

The snowstorm that caused numerous accidents pushed out of Oklahoma late Tuesday, carrying with it blizzard warnings for parts of northeast Arkansas, where 10 inches of snow was forecast. Freezing rain clung to trees and utility lines in Arkansas and winds gusts up to 30 mph whipped them around, causing about 71,000 customers to lose electricity.

Blizzard conditions were possible for parts of Illinois, Indiana and western Kentucky with predictions of 4 to 7 inches of snow.

No injuries were confirmed immediately, but fire crews were still making door-to-door checks in the hardest hit areas of Mobile. The Mobile Fire-Rescue Department, which was providing storm updates through Twitter, said Murphy High School was damaged and that there was a gas leak at a nearby apartment building.

Trees fell on a few houses in central Louisiana's Rapides Parish but there were no injuries reported and crews were cutting trees out of roadways to get to people in their homes, said sheriff's Lt. Tommy Carnline. Near McNeill, Miss., a likely tornado damaged a dozen homes and sent eight people to the hospital, none with life-threatening injuries, said Pearl River County emergency management agency director Danny Manley.

Fog blanketed highways, including arteries in the Atlanta area, which was expected to be dealing with the same storm system on Wednesday. In New Mexico, drivers across the eastern plains had to fight through snow, ice and low visibility.

At least three tornadoes were reported in Texas, though only one building was damaged, according to the National Weather Service. Tornado watches were in effect across southern Louisiana and Mississippi.

More than 400 flights nationwide were canceled by the evening, according to the flight tracker FlightAware.com. More than half were canceled into and out of Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport that got a few inches of snow.

Christmas lights also were knocked out with more than 100,000 customers without power in Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama.

In Louisiana, quarter-sized hail was reported early Tuesday in the western part of the state and a WDSU viewer sent a photo to the TV station of what appeared to be a waterspout around the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway in New Orleans. There were no reports of crashes or damage.

Some mountainous areas of Arkansas' Ozark Mountains could get up to 10 inches of snow, which would make travel "very hazardous or impossible" in the northern tier of the state from near whiteout conditions, the National Weather Service said.

The holiday may conjure visions of snow and ice, but twisters this time of year are not unheard of. Ten storm systems in the last 50 years have spawned at least one Christmastime tornado with winds of 113 mph or more in the South, said Chris Vaccaro, a National Weather Service spokesman in Washington, via email.

The most lethal were the storms of Dec. 24-26, 1982, when 29 tornadoes in Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee and Mississippi killed three people and injured 32; and those of Dec. 24-25, 1964, when two people were killed and about 30 people injured by 14 tornadoes in seven states.

The storm was moving quickly as it headed into through Louisiana and Mississippi and onto Alabama and eventually Georgia.

In Mississippi, Gov. Phil Bryant urged residents to have a plan for any severe weather.

"It only takes a few minutes, and it will help everyone have a safe Christmas," Bryant said.


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Jack Klugman dies at 90

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 25 Desember 2012 | 10.46

LOS ANGELES — Jack Klugman, the prolific, craggy-faced character actor and regular guy who was loved by millions as the messy one in TV's "The Odd Couple" and the crime-fighting coroner in "Quincy, M.E.," died Monday, a son said. He was 90.

Klugman, who lost his voice to throat cancer in the 1980s and trained himself to speak again, died with his wife at his side.

"He had a great life and he enjoyed every moment of it and he would encourage others to do the same," son Adam Klugman said.

Adam Klugman said he was spending Christmas with his brother, David, and their families. Their father had been convalescing for some time but had apparently died suddenly and they were not sure of the exact cause.

AP

Jack Klugman

"His sons loved him very much," David Klugman said. "We'll carry on in his spirit."

Never anyone's idea of a matinee idol, Klugman remained a popular star for decades simply by playing the type of man you could imagine running into at a bar or riding on a subway with — gruff, but down to earth, his tie stained and a little loose, a racing form under his arm, a cigar in hand during the days when smoking was permitted.

His was a city actor ideal for "The Odd Couple," which ran from 1970 to 1975 and was based on Neil Simon's play about mismatched roommates, divorced New Yorkers who end up living together. The show teamed Klugman — the sloppy sports writer Oscar Madison — and Tony Randall — the fussy photographer Felix Unger — in the roles played by Walter Matthau and Art Carney on Broadway and Matthau and Jack Lemmon in the 1968 film. Klugman had already had a taste of the show when he replaced Matthau on Broadway and he learned to roll with the quick-thinking Randall, with whom he had worked in 1955 on the CBS series "Appointment with Adventure."

"There's nobody better to improvise with than Tony," Klugman said. "A script might say, 'Oscar teaches Felix football.' There would be four blank pages. He would provoke me into reacting to what he did. Mine was the easy part."

They were battlers on screen, and the best of friends in real life. When Randall died in 2004 at age 84, Klugman told CNN: "A world without Tony Randall is a world that I cannot recognize."

In "Quincy, M.E.," which ran from 1976 to 1983, Klugman played an idealistic, tough-minded medical examiner who tussled with his boss by uncovering evidence of murder in cases where others saw natural causes.

"We had some wonderful writers," he said in a 1987 Associated Press interview. "Quincy was a muckraker, like Upton Sinclair, who wrote about injustices. He was my ideal as a youngster, my author, my hero.


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George H.W. Bush in hospital for Christmas

HOUSTON — Former President George H.W. Bush will spend Christmas with his wife and other family members in a Houston hospital after developing a fever and weakness following a monthlong, bronchitis-like cough, his spokesman said Monday.

A hospital spokesman had said the 88-year-old ex-president would be released in time to spend the holiday at home, but that changed after Bush developed a fever.

"He's had a few setbacks. Late last week, he had a few low-energy days followed by a low-grade fever," Jim McGrath, Bush's spokesman in Houston, told The Associated Press. "Doctors still say they are cautiously optimistic, but every time they get over one thing, another thing pops up."

EPA

Former US President George H. W. Bush

He said the cough that initially brought Bush to the hospital on Nov. 23 is now evident only about once a day, and the fever appears to be under control, although doctors are still working to get the right balance in Bush's medications. No discharge date has been set.

"Given his current condition, doctors just want to hang on to him," McGrath said, adding that he didn't know what had caused the fever.

Bush's wife, Barbara; his son, Neil, and Neil's wife, Maria, are expected to visit on Christmas, McGrath said.

Since he was hospitalized, Bush has been visited by many of his children and grandchildren, including former President George W. Bush, who came twice, and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, McGrath said. With 37 members in the immediate family, Bush has received many emails and phone calls, McGrath said.

Bush, the nation's 41st president, and his wife, Barbara, live in Houston during the winter and spend their summers in a home in Kennebunkport, Maine.

The former president was a naval aviator in World War II — at one point the youngest in the Navy — and was shot down over the Pacific. He achieved notoriety in retirement for skydiving on at least three of his birthdays since leaving the White House in 1992.

Being in the hospital for such a long time has not been easy for Bush, who is accustomed to being active, McGrath said. But the president has said he's determined "not to get grumpy about it."

"He's just the most relentlessly positive person," McGrath said, and "he does enjoy joking with the nurses."


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‘Parental’ viewer discretion advised

MOVIE REVIEW

parental guidance
Should be disowned. Running time: 105 minutes. Rated PG (some rude humor). At the Empire, the 34th St., others.

Regrettably arriving too late for The Post's annual Turkey Awards, the geezers-know-best comedy "Parental Guidance" kicks off with a mean-spirited joke about an overweight woman and heads downhill from there.

Artie (Billy Crystal) has just been canned from his longtime gig as a baseball announcer when he and wife Diane (Bette Midler) are called into service by their seldom-seen daughter Alice (Marisa Tomei). Her husband, Phil (Tom Everett Scott), is up for an award for the fully automated, voice-activated house he's designed.

While these ultra-modern parents fly out to the ceremony, Artie and Diane will watch the couple's three tightly wound kids (Bailee Madison, Joshua Rush and Kyle Harrison Breitkopf).

Playing like a big-screen adaptation of an Andy Rooney rant, the movie bravely takes on the scourge of today's wimp-ified parenting. "I think he breast-fed the kids," Artie cracks to his wife about Phil. Because guys who nurture their kids aren't real men! Hilarious! (Also, no huge mystery why Alice keeps her distance.)

Artie and Diane's initial gift of Super Soakers for the grandkids isn't received all that warmly by Alice and Phil. What kind of messedup parent doesn't want his or her kid to play with giant toy guns? Lunacy!

And when Alice informs her dad that they advise their children to "use your words" when they're upset, rather than telling them to quit whining, Artie's stupefied: How do you get 'em to shut up, then?

Yes, there are points to be made about how today's parents can run to tedious excesses, and the challenges of bridging the chasm between two generations' very different approaches to child-rearing.

Those points are obscured when you punctuate scenes with Crystal getting whacked in the crotch with a baseball bat and puking on a little kid's face.

Small roles are in equally poor taste: Gedde Watanabe shows up as the excitable owner of a Chinese-food joint, while skateboarding legend Tony Hawk's cameo has him wiping out in a puddle of pee.

And let's never speak again of the scene in which Crystal perches on a toilet with his grandson in a public bathroom, singing "Come out, come out, Mr. Doody."

Director Andy Fickman ("You Again," tellingly) amps up the Rooney vibe for the movie's resolution, where all kid problems can be solved by playing Kick the Can, listening to 1950s baseball announcer recordings and living in fear of a spanking. Just as they did in the good old days.

To quote the man himself, "Life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer you get to the end, the faster it goes."

Would that this were the case with "Parental Guidance."

sstewart@nypost.com


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What to watch

You can count on chestnuts of a different kind today if you're going to hunker down and watch some TV.

With Christmas Day in full swing, here are some of our choices —both holiday-themed and fun — that will help keep you in a festive holiday mood.

If you want to start your celebration early, FX will air the movies "Marmaduke," "Madagascar 2: Escape 2 Africa" and "Monsters vs. Aliens" back-to-back beginning 8 a.m.

The holiday fun kicks into high gear tonight, with the big-screen animated movie, "Horton Hears a Who!" starring the voices of Jim Carrey and Steve Carell (8 p.m. on Ch. 4).

HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS

Carrey returns, in live-action form, in "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas," the 2000 big-screen movie based on the classic cartoon about the Grinch trying to rob a small town of its holiday cheer. Look for a future "Gossip Girl" star Taylor Momsen in the cast.

There's also "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" (9 p.m. on ABC Family), which has become a holiday staple with stars Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo (who recently reunited for several Old Navy commercials based on this movie).

ABC Family's sister network, Disney Channel, offers up "Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas!" a special episode of "Good Luck Charlie" with series stars Bridgit Mendler and Jason Dolley, while sci-fi fans can revel in a Christmas special of "Dr. Who" called "The Snowmen" on BBC America (9 p.m.) and a marathon of the "Dr. Who" spinoff, "K-9" airing on Syfy (starting at 8 p.m.)

And, for those who want to cap off their holiday with some exciting NBA action, there are several options, including the Nets-Celtics game on ESPN at noon and the Knicks-Lakers on ABC at 3 p.m.

"Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas!"

8 p.m. on Disney

Duncan family goes on Christmas road trip.

"Dr. Who"

9 p.m. on BBC America

The Doctor (Matt Smith) and Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman) go on a mission to save Christmas.

"National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation"

9 p.m. on ABC Family

Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo reunited for Old Navy commercials (inset) based on this classic.

"How the Grinch Stole Christmas"

8 p.m. on ABC

Look for "Gossip Girl's" Taylor Momsen (below) as a tiny Cindy Lou Who


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From the Gospel according to Luke, chapter 2, verses 1 through 20:

And it came to pass in those days, that therewent out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed.

(And this taxing was first made when Cyrenius was governor of Syria.)

And all went to be taxed, every one into his own city.

And Joseph also went up from Galilee, out of the city of nazareth, into

Judaea, unto the city of david, which is called Bethlehem; (because he was of the house and lineage of david).

To be taxed with Mary, his espousedwife, being great with child.

And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered.

And she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.

And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night.

And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.

And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.

For unto you is born this day in the city of david a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.

And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying inamanger.

And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying,

Glory to God in the highest, and on Earth peace, good will toward men.

And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from them into Heaven, the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us.

And they came with haste, and found Mary, and Joseph, and the babe lying inamanger.

And when they had seen it, they made known abroad the saying which was told them concerning this child.

And all they that heard it wondered at those things which were told them by the shepherds.

But Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.

And the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard and seen, as it was told unto them.

Have an opinion on this Post editorial? Send it in to LETTERS@NYPOST.COM!


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Talk show guests

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Desember 2012 | 10.46

MONDAY

MATT DAMON - LIVE! with Kelly and Michael, 9 a.m., Ch. 7

ADAM LAMBERT, RADIO CITY ROCKETTES - The Wendy Williams Show, 10 a.m., Ch. 5 and 3 p.m., Ch. 9

BETTE MIDLER, BILLY CRYSTAL, BAILEE MADISON - The View, 11 a.m., Ch. 7

ROSIE O'DONNELL - Dr. Oz Show, 11 a.m., Ch. 5

GREGG ALLMAN, CAROLE KING - Tavis Smiley, 1 p.m., Ch. 13

JAMI GERTZ - The Chew, 1 p.m., Ch. 7

QUENTIN TARANTINO - Charlie Rose, 1:30 p.m., Ch. 13 and 3 p.m., Ch. 21

CARNIE WILSON, NEVE CAMPBELL, JACQUES HAERINGER - The Talk, 2 p.m., Ch. 2

PAULEY PERRETTE - Jeff Probst 2 p.m., Ch. 4

BARBRA STREISAND, SETH ROGEN - Dr. Phil, 3 p.m., Ch. 2

MARCUS SAMUELSSON - Katie, 3 p.m., Ch. 7

SONYA FITZPATRICK, SARAH CHARNESS - Steve Harvey, 3 p.m., Ch. 4

ROBERT PATTINSON, TAYLOR LAUTNER, KIRSTIE ALLEY - The Ellen DeGeneres Show , 4 p.m., Ch. 4

MARISA TOMEI, LIZ CAREY, SARAH COLONNA - Chelsea Lately, 11 p.m. and 12:30 a.m., (E!)

ANNE HATHAWAY, TOM HOOPER, HUGH JACKMAN - Charlie Rose, 11:30 p.m., Ch. 13

SAMUEL L. JACKSON - Jimmy Kimmel Live, 12:02 a.m., Ch. 7

TUESDAY

MARK CONSUELOS - LIVE! with Kelly and Michael, 9 a.m., Ch. 7

ALICIA KEYS - The Oprah Winfrey Show, 9 a.m., (OWN)

RACHEL ROY, DARA TORRES - The Wendy Williams Show, 10 a.m., Ch. 5 and 3 p.m., Ch. 9

AMELIA WARREN TYAGI - Dr. Phil, 11 a.m., (OWN)

ASHLEY GREENE, KATHIE LEE GIFFORD, HODA KOTB - Anderson Live, 12 p.m., Ch. 5

ANNE HATHAWAY, TOM HOOPER, HUGH JACKMAN - Charlie Rose, 1:30 p.m., Ch. 13

JAMIE LEE CURTIS, MICHELLE STAFFORD, MELODY THOMAS SCOTT - The Talk, 2 p.m., Ch. 2

JON CRYER - The Jeff Probst Show, 2 p.m., Ch. 4

HEIDI KLUM, NIKKI REED, MACKENZIE FOY - The Ellen DeGeneres Show , 4 p.m., Ch. 4

REESE WITHERSPOON, ANNIE LEDERMAN - Chelsea Lately, 11 p.m. and 12:30 a.m., (E!)

SCARLETT JOHANSSON, WILLIE NELSON - Late Show with David Letterman, 11:35 p.m., Ch. 2

CHELSEA HANDLER - Love You, Mean It with Whitney Cummings, 12 a.m., (E!)

HAYDEN PANETTIERE, JOHN GOODMAN - Jimmy Kimmel Live, 12:02 a.m., Ch. 7

REGIS PHILBIN, KATIE ASELTON - The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, 12:37 a.m., Ch. 2

DANNY WAY, COREY MAY - Last Call with Carson Daly, 1:36 a.m., Ch. 4


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Old ‘wives’ tale

headshot

Linda Stasi

TV REVIEW

"Wives With Beehives"
Thursday night at 10 on TLC Absolutely no stars

If greedy, mindless, blood-sucking modern "Real Housewives" who are famous for no reason aren't enough to make you pray for an earlier era, maybe you should tune in to see greedy, mindless, blood-sucking, modern housewives who pretend to be from another era.

I'm talking about a reality trial run "special" called "Wives With Beehives," which is so lame it may make you wish you'd never been born, or better yet, that these idiots had never been born. Not in this era nor the 1950s.

TLC has come up with the bright idea of a "special," which is clearly a test-run pilot for what they think is a clever idea: Find a bunch of self-promoting women who live the "vintage lifestyle" and make a reality show out of it.

NOT GOING ANYWHERE: Snooki

NOT GOING ANYWHERE: Snooki

VINTAGE:

TLC

VINTAGE: "Wives With Beehives" attempt to live the '50s lifestyle.

That means that these women dress in 1950s clothing, sometimes use 1950s appliances and dedicate themselves to having 1950s-style marriages. Or what they mistakenly perceive to be 1950s marriages.

They believe that everyone was happily and faithfully married in the '50s and that husbands were king, and wives were glamour-pusses who puttered around the kitchen in spike heels and sheath dresses all day.

To this end, TLC found a bunch of vintage-lifestyle wives in California and then had them do the same things that "Real Housewives" do except they do it in ridiculous clothing, stupid hairstyles and white gloves.

The set-up and delivery are all too familiar: Have the ladies throw a party so they can fight.

However, instead of being jealous of one another's hideous McMansions and Lamborghinis, these women are jealous of one another's 1950s tract houses and 1957 Buicks.

The stars of this dog are Dollie, Amber, Leslie and Shelly —ranging in age from 24 to 43. They fit in perfectly in California because it's the only place where people look like idiots for a living. It's usually for filming purposes though, which now that I think of it, these dames have just managed to do.

The ladies all maintain that in the 1950s image was everything. To that end Leslie, 43, says "Everything was done with such opulence!" Good thing she's married to a plumber. Who else can afford such opulence nowadays? Or even back then?

The new girl in the Beehive group is 24-year old Dollie, who is the blond rival of Shelby. Dollie is a nightmare of jealousy and bitterness while living the perfect contentment of the 1950's.

When Amber throws Shelby a birthday party, Dollie seethes and is so angry she won't pin up a pinata. Right.

Apparently these idiots have based their entire world on 1950s Douglas Sirk movies or on the homage to Douglas Sirk movies, "Far From Heaven," with Julianne Moore. I guess they forgot that inevitably in those movies while the wife was trying on clothes, her husband was about to come out of the closet.

This vintage show is old hat.

Twitter @lindastasi


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‘Mother’ goes on with Segel

It lives!

"How I Met Your Mother" will return to CBS for a ninth season — after star Jason Segel agreed to one more go-'round.

Segel, who has been with the show for all eight seasons, had "decided to bail and leave the cast hanging" — but said "Yes" at the last minute for one more season, according to deadline.com.

While "HIMYM" still performs strongly on CBS's Monday-night lineup, the show was thought to be dead in the water when Segel opted not to return to pursue his movie career.

Segel is starring in the just-released "This Is 40" after roles in "The Five-Year Engagement," "I Love You, Man" and "Forgetting Sarah Marshall."

BACK: Jason Segel

BACK: Jason Segel

"He just got turned around . . . at the last second," a source told deadline.com. "The show was literally dead."

"HIMYM" anchors a strong Monday-night lineup on CBS, which includes "Two Broke Girls" and "Mike and Molly."

Josh Radnor, Cobie Smulders, Neil Patrick Harris and Alyson Hannigan co-star in the series about a group of friends living in New York City.


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‘Cured’ for the common dessert

For Todd Fisher, the host of "United States of Bacon," almost everything goes well with bacon — except for bananas.

"For me, bacon and bananas don't work . . . just that tropical, robust sweetness that a banana has, with bacon, it sounds horrible in my mind. But I've met people who do bacon-wrapped bananas, and they say it's the best," Fisher tells The Post.

Fisher hosted "United States of Food" this summer, and the premiere episode, which focused on bacon dishes, was so popular that the second season of the show was reorganized to capitalize on the bacon craze.

Tamara Beckwith

"UNITED STATES OF BACON" HOST TODD FISHER

On the series, the California-based chef roadtrips around the country, similar to Guy Fieri on "Diners, Drive-ins and Dives," to discover what unusual things cooks are making with bacon — everything from cocktails to desserts.

One of his favorite unexpected bacon creations is the bacon bloody mary.

For those looking to ease their way into the bacon movement, Fisher suggests starting small.

"If you're going to try the dessert method, start with the classic chocolate chip cookie with crispy, crunchy bacon in it," he says. "It's like putting salted nuts into your cookie if it's chopped small enough. So, you don't necessarily know it's bacon until you sit back and focus on the smoke that comes through."

"United States of Bacon" premieres Saturday on Destination America.


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Go to Greg

With the horror in Connecticut, I am fearful, as a manager, of firing anyone because you just never know how someone is going to react. But some people just aren't cutting it and if I don't make changes it will reflect poorly on me. Help!

It's impossible to completely reassure anyone given the realities of these events. Horrible, heartbreaking, senseless don't even begin to describe these tragedies. As a manager, you need to help make sure that your employer has the proper security in place to create as safe a workplace as reasonably possible without feeling like you work in a maximum security prison. And, while nothing ever justifies workplace violence of any kind obviously, managers should remember to treat everyone with dignity and respect, even those who for one reason or another are being told they no longer have a job. Finally, it is also your responsibility to pay attention to warning signs. Employees who demonstrate any signs of threatening or aggressive behavior must be dealt with immediately — alert security and HR.

My colleague of five years just got promoted and is now my boss. I can't handle that — any tips?

Either put on the big-boy pants and handle it or look for a new job. Your situation isn't easy, and you have the right to say that you can't accept this and need to move on. You don't, however, have the right to stay in the job and complain. Take a holiday pause before doing anything rash. There might be something to learn here — did your colleague have some experience, skill or accomplishment that made him or her better qualified for the job? Your colleague is probably feeling a little awkward, too, so there might be an opportunity to forge a really strong alliance and put their concerns to rest. Congratulate them and demonstrate that you are on board to help them succeed. It's better to keep your options open, and besides 'tis the season for giving and wishing people well.


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No. 3 Syracuse upset by Temple at MSG

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 23 Desember 2012 | 10.46

Syracuse had trouble making shots at one line and behind the other.

The combination of poor free throw shooting and a weak effort on 3-pointers turned into the first loss of the season for the third-ranked Orange.

Temple used the inside-outside combination of Khalif Wyatt and Anthony Lee to beat Syracuse 83-79 on Saturday in the first Chevrolet Gotham Classic at Madison Square Garden.

The Orange (10-1) finished 19 of 34 from the free throw line and 2 of 12 on 3s.

"They made free throws, we didn't," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. "You don't like to say it comes down to that, but when you miss 15 free throws it's tough to win any game."

Point guard Michael Carter-Williams, who was 7 of 15 at the free throw line, took the heat.

"If I make free throws we win the game," he said.

Temple won because of free throws. The Owls (9-2) were 29 of 26 at the line with Wyatt going 15 of 15 and Lee 11 of 14.

The Orange led by two at halftime but never took a lead in the second half even though there were four ties, the last at 59-59 with 10:23 to play.

C.J. Fair had a career-high 25 points for Syracuse, which had its 52-game regular-season nonconference winning streak snapped. Boeheim remained at 900 wins, two behind Bob Knight for second place all-time among Division I men's coaches. Duke's Mike Krzyzewski has 938 wins.

"We have to stay confident and we will," said Fair, who wasn't part of the free throw problem as he went 8 for 8. ""It was one of those nights when it wouldn't fall," said Fair, whose only 3-point attempt of the game brought the Orange within 74-72 with 3:01 left but the Owls went 11 of 15 from the free throw line over the final 2:30.

Wyatt had a career-high 33 points and Lee added a career-high 21 for the Owls, who were coming off a 10-point home loss to Canisius.

"I don't think we would have won today without the loss in the last game," Temple coach Fran Dunphy said. "Our guys did a great job today. I wish it was worth more than one victory."

This is the fifth straight season Temple has beaten a top 10 team while being unranked.

The latest win in that stretch game with the combination of Wyatt from the outside and Lee inside.

"We wanted to go inside and out and that meant me going up strong and fighting for rebounds," said Lee, who had nine rebounds, five offensive, and worked the baseline again and again against Syracuse's vaunted zone. "That's playing the Temple game."

Dunphy said Wyatt challenged himself after a poor game against Canisius.

"He made some really good plays when we were struggling to score and had to stay in the game," Dunphy said.

The Orange led by two at halftime but never took a lead in the second half even though there were four ties, the last at 59-59 with 10:23 to play.

Temple hit three 3-pointers in an 11-3 run that gave it the lead for good. Scootie Randall started the run with a 3 that broke the 59-all tie. He closed the run with another 3, his only points of the game.

The 3-point line also hurt the Orange, who were 2 of 12 from behind the arc while Temple was 8 of 24.

Temple's last field goal was an offensive rebound by Quenton DeCosey with 5:41 left that gave the Owls a 72-66 lead.

Rahlir Hollis-Jefferson had four points and 10 rebounds for the Owls.

Brandon Triche had 17 points for Syracuse. Baye Moussa Keita added 12 and Carter-Williams, who leads the nation in assists at 10.7 per game, had 13 points and six assists.

"Wyatt was able to create a lot of contact and that got him to the free throw line," Carter-Williams said. "They didn't play off me and I have to get used to that. We have to learn from this. It's a long season."

Temple missed 10 of its first 12 shots in falling behind 19-10. The Owls, behind Wyatt who had 20 points in the first half, started hitting shots against the Orange's zone defense and they made nine of their next 14 shots and tied the game at 35. Syracuse scored five straight points but Wyatt capped his big half with a 3-pointer with 17 seconds left and Temple was within 40-38 at halftime.


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