Secretary of State Hillary Clinton got a pass last week from President Obama to skip Wednesday night’s State of the Union speech. (We had heard she begged to be excused, but apparently it didn’t come to that.)

Seems that there’s an important international meeting in London Wednesday on battling radicalization in Yemen and then another, long-planned, conference on Thursday on development and security in Afghanistan.

When the Wednesday meeting was “locked in” recently, we were told, the State Department and the National Security Council staffs agreed she had to be in London. These are both big administration priorities. Key allies will be gathering there for Yemen, an uber-concern of late, especially since the Christmas airplane bombing attempt.

And everyone who’s anyone — including maybe the neo-Soviets and the Chicoms and possibly even the Iranians — will be there for the Afghanistan confab.

Clinton laid out the situation in a meeting last week with Obama and he agreed she should go.

But London does not qualify as an “undisclosed location.” So this means there will be two Cabinet officers not attending the speech: Clinton and the designated hold back in case of terrorist attack. (Or in case everyone falls asleep at the same time.)

Thanks Washington Post.

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North Dakota residents and others relying on a new calendar issued by the city of Grand Forks will get a jump-start on February.

The recently issued City of Grand Forks 2010 Calendar is missing Sunday, Jan. 31.

City spokesman John Bernstrom says the error was noticed when boxes of the calendar printed by Fine Print of Grand Forks were opened before Christmas.

Bernstrom says if Jan. 31 had been a weekday in which there was garbage or recycling collection, the city would have issued a correction or public statement. Feb. 1 appears on the calendar as a Monday so the rest of the year is correct.

Fine Print President Kevin Kuntz says January is the coldest month of the year and having one day less works for him.

Thanks My Way.

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A 29-year-old woman was arrested after allegedly using a stun gun on a woman who tried to hug her on Christmas night. Deborah Downing has been jailed $15,510 bond. She was charged with aggravated battery, petty theft and violation of pretrial release. It’s unclear if she already has an attorney.

According to a Pasco County Sheriff’s Office report, Sheri Brennan was picking up a friend Dec. 25 when the incident occurred. Brennan’s friend told investigators that she was shocked after trying to hug Downing and offer a holiday greeting. Brennan wasn’t seriously injured.

Brennan told authorities that she had a rocky past with Downing, but thought the two had resolved their differences.

Thanks My Way.

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A southwestern Pennsylvania man received a Christmas Eve lesson in the old adage, “Let the buyer beware.” Billy Joe Sanders, of Pittsburgh, said he bought a home in Canonsburg during a Washington County tax sale in August. When he went to check on the property on Christmas Eve, he learned that it had been torn down by the county’s redevelopment authority – and has since learned his $5,500 won’t be refunded.

County officials said tax sales all include a “buyer beware” clause, and owners are responsible for doing a title search and otherwise checking on the property’s status.

Officials said buyers of homes slated for demolition are usually notified, but sometimes it doesn’t happen.

Sander said he plans to bill the county or sue to get his money back.

Thanks My Way.

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English police released a tape of a woman with slurred speech calling the 999 emergency line to report her cat was giving her a headache.

Greater Manchester Police said the call, one of many among the 1,377 calls to the emergency line during Christmas and Boxing Day that were not based on actual emergencies, came from a woman who was upset that her cat was playing with string and the noise was “doing her head in,” the Daily Mail reported Tuesday.

The woman said the situation was an emergency because it had “been going on for two hours now.”

Police said they released the tape to remind people not to call 999 for non-emergencies ahead of the upcoming New Year’s Eve holiday.

“I don’t want a person to call 999 and be delayed because someone else is calling to report something that is not an emergency or, worse still, a deliberate joke,” said Superintendent Karan Lee, head of call handling for Greater Manchester Police.

Thanks UPI.

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A British woman says she is selling still-wrapped Christmas presents from her cheating ex-boyfriend on eBay to benefit a hospice.

Leanne Joseph, 24, of Huddersfield, England, said she dumped her 29-year-old ex-beau, identified only as Mark, three days before Christmas when she was made wise to his philandering ways, The Sun reported Tuesday.

“I was out with friends from work and one of them said, ‘I’ve slept with your boyfriend,’” Joseph said. “I was gobsmacked. We’d been together for three years. I thought she was a good friend, so I’ve lost a mate, too.”

Joseph said she decided not to open the Christmas gifts Mark gave her and is instead selling the items, which she theorized might include perfume, jewelry and a thong, on eBay. She said the money from the auction will be donated to a local hospice.

“Things are still really raw, so I don’t want anything from him. I hope someone else can enjoy them,” she said.

The auction had topped $75 Tuesday.

Thanks UPI.

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A Nevada couple letting their SUV’s navigation system guide them through the high desert of Eastern Oregon got stuck in snow for three days when the GPS unit sent them down a remote forest road.

On Sunday, atmospheric conditions apparently changed enough for their GPS-enabled cell phone to get a weak signal and relay coordinates to a dispatcher, Klamath County Sheriff Tim Evinger said.

“GPS almost did ‘em in and GPS saved ‘em,” Evinger said. “It will give you options to pick the shortest route. You certainly get the shortest route. But it may not be a safe route.”

Evinger said the couple got stranded Christmas Day and a Lake County deputy found them in the Winema-Fremont National Forest outside the small town of Silver Lake on Sunday afternoon and pulled their four-wheel-drive Toyota Sequoia out of the snow with a winch.

John Rhoads, 65, and his wife, Starry Bush-Rhoads, 67, made it home safely to Reno, Nev.

“It will be (a Christmas) we remember the rest of our lives,” Starry Bush-Rhoads said in a telephone interview from her home. “They said if they didn’t find us ’til this time next spring, we wouldn’t be happy.”

The couple was well-equipped for winter travel, carrying food, water and warm clothes, the sheriff said.

“Their statement was, being prepared saved their life,” he said.

The couple had been in Portland and followed their GPS as it directed them south on U.S. Highway 97 to Oregon Highway 31, which goes through Silver Lake and Lakeview before connecting with U.S. Highway 395 to Reno, Evinger said.

In the town of Silver Lake, the unit told them to turn right on Forest Service Road 28, and they followed that and some spur roads nearly 35 miles before getting stuck in about 1 1/2 feet of snow near Thompson Reservoir, the sheriff said.

“For some reason, they finally got a weak signal after 2 1/2 days,” Evinger said. “They called in. They alternated between two different cell phone numbers.”

A GPS-enabled phone is able to send its coordinates to 911, and eventually one of the couple’s phones sent its location to the dispatcher’s console, the sheriff said.

Thanks Yahoo.

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Swedish cellphone users were busy on Christmas Eve, sending more than 76 million text message greetings to set a record, phone company officials said.

Cellphone customers sent an average of eight text messages each on Christmas Eve this year, news Web site thelocal.se reported.

A survey by Swedish mobile service providers found that 80 percent of users sent holiday greeting via text this year.

Cellphone messages incorporating photos were up this year as well. Almost 700,000 such messages were sent, up 60 percent from 2008, thelocal said.

“More and more (users) are discovering the possibility of making greetings more personal with images and sound,” said Mattias Ringqvist, head of marking for Telenor Mobile.

And there’s more to come, say mobile providers.

“Christmas Eve is the day with the second-largest volume of text messages sent in a single day. New Year’s Eve is the most intense,” said Annika Kristersson of provider Tele2. “We are hoping for a new record then.”

Thanks UPI.

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Several neighbors in the University Estates neighborhood in east Orange County are angry after thieves snatched at least six baby Jesus figures from their Christmas nativity scenes.

Some neighbors thought it was a prank at first, but were shocked to learn they weren’t the only ones.  “I couldn’t believe it, it’s ridiculous, I mean why just go and steal just the baby Jesus?” said Scott Gerry.Gerry’s nativity scene is no longer produced, so he won’t be able to find a matching replacement.

One family in the neighborhood replaced their missing Jesus with a drawing. Another family borrowed a neighbor’s doll to make their Christmas scene complete.Bob Cekala was the first neighbor to notice the heist. “The cradle was turned over and, when I looked at the cradle, there was no Jesus in it,” Cekala said.  All of the victims say Christmas will go on, but they would be happy to have their baby Jesus figures returned with no questions asked.One neighbor, Lauren Gallow, was even able to joke about her misfortune. “If someone needs Jesus in their lives that badly, they can have the whole manger set if they want it,” she said.

Thanks wftv.

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Nice holiday gift! A pair of Waffle House waitresses in Tennessee said four men who ordered only coffee left them a $400 Christmas gift to share.

Karla Lauv, 26, a waitress at the Franklin eatery, said the group of middle-aged men came into the Waffle House at about 3 p.m. one day this week and ordered coffee, The (Nashville) Tennessean reported Friday.

Lauv said one of the men wished her a “Merry Christmas” and gave her $100 after asking how business has been.

She said the other three mean each left $100 for her to share with fellow waitress Diane Galbraith.

Lauv said she is grateful to the men, who did not give the women their names.

“I’ve bought some more Christmas gifts,” Lauv said. “I bought a new phone. I’m going to use it to pay some bills.”

Thanks UPI.

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A Chicago man could be unwrapping the hundreds of Christmas gifts spread around his apartment for days, even weeks.

Trouble is, they aren’t really presents. They’re his own belongings meticulously wrapped by friends as a prank while he was out of town.

Louie Saunders’ packages contain everything from couch cushions to the beer in his refrigerator.

His friend Adal Rifai masterminded the scheme after Saunders gave him a spare key. It took 16 people, 35 rolls of wrapping paper and eight hours to finish the job.

Saunders tells the Chicago Sun-Times he’s only been able to unwrap about 10 percent of the packages.

He jokes that the upside is that, with each package he unwraps, he finds something inside that’s just what he needs.

Thanks My Way.

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In scary news on this Christmas eve…. Senate Democrats passed a landmark health care bill Thursday that could define President Barack Obama’s legacy and usher in near-universal medical coverage for the first time in the country’s history.

The 60-39 vote on a cold Christmas Eve morning capped months of arduous negotiations and 24 days of floor debate. It also followed a succession of failures by past congresses to get to this point. Vice President Joe Biden presided as 58 Democrats and two independents voted “yes.” Republicans unanimously voted “no.”

The tally far exceeded the simple majority required for passage.

The Senate’s bill must still be merged with legislation passed by the House before Obama could sign a final bill in the new year. There are significant differences between the two measures but Democrats say they’ve come too far now to fail.

Both bills would extend health insurance to more than 30 million more Americans.

Vicki Kennedy, the widow of the late Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy, who made health reform his life’s work, watched the vote from the gallery.

“This morning isn’t the end of the process, it’s merely the beginning. We’ll continue to build on this success to improve our health system even more,” Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said before the vote. “But that process cannot begin unless we start today … there may not be a next time.”

At a news conference a few moments later, Reid said the vote “brings us one step closer to making Ted Kennedy’s dream a reality.”

The Nevadan said that “every step of this long process has been an enormous undertaking.”

Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Finance Committee, said he “very happy to see people getting health care they could not get.”

The House passed its own measure in November. The White House and Congress have now come further toward the goal of a comprehensive overhaul of the nation’s health care system than any of their predecessors.

The legislation would ban the insurance industry from denying benefits or charging higher premiums on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions. The Congressional Budget Office predicts the bill will reduce deficits by $130 billion over the next 10 years, an estimate that assumes lawmakers carry through on hundreds of billions of dollars in planned cuts to insurance companies and doctors, hospitals and others who treat Medicare patients.

For the first time, the government would require nearly every American to carry insurance, and subsidies would be provided to help low-income people to do so. Employers would be induced to cover their employees through a combination of tax credits and penalties.

Republicans were withering in their criticism of what they deemed a budget-busting government takeover. If the measure were worthwhile, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., contended before the vote, “they wouldn’t be rushing it through Congress on Christmas Eve.”

The occasion was moving for many who’d followed Kennedy, who died in August.

“He’s having a merry Christmas in Heaven,” Sen. Paul Kirk, D-Mass., appointed to fill Kennedy’s seat, told reporters after the tally.

Kirk said he was “humbled to be here with the honor of casting essentially his vote.”

Thanks Breitbart.

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