Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Dozens killed in Bangkok nightclub during New Years party


Rescue officials work at the scene of the fire in Bangkok, Thailand. At least 59 people were killed when a fire that broke out early Thursday at one of Bangkok's most upscale nightclubs, where about 1,000 revelers were ringing in the new year, Thai police said.

The fire, at a club called Zantika, broke out at about 12:35 a.m. (1735 GMT)

The blaze started near a stage where fireworks were being used as part of a performance, according to authorities.

Most of those who died in the building died from smoke inhalation or were trampled in a rush to get out of the club, they said.

The club is located in one of Bangkok's busiest commercial districts. Most of the fatality victims were Thai, but foreigners have been identified from Australia, the Netherlands, Nepal and Japan, police said.

Users baffled as Zune MP3 players freeze up en masse


Many Mp3 music consumers are left baffled and griping about a mysterious glitch that appeared to cause thousands of Zune music players to simultaneously stop working late Tuesday and early Wednesday.

message boards across the internet have been flooded with complaints about Zune's 30GB model Mp3 players freezing, prompting Y2K-like speculation about end-of-year hardware or software problems.

"It seems that every Zune on the planet has just frozen up and will not work," posted a Mountain Home, Idaho, user on CNN's iReport.com site. "I have 3 and they all in the same night stopped working."

Another on the same site said he was working the night shift at a Toys R Us store in Puerto Rico when his Zune player and the Zunes of four co-workers all failed about 1:30 a.m. ET Wednesday

"It froze and there was no way to turn it off so you just have to wait until the batteries went dead. You can't push any buttons or anything," says Carlos Colon. Colon said he owns a first-generation 30GB model.

Other users report their Zunes reboot but freeze when the startup status bar reaches 100 percent. A post on Zune.net titled "Help-frozen zune!!!!" had attracted more than 19,000 comments by Wednesday afternoon.

Some Zune users have dubbed the crisis "Y2K9" or "Z2K9," a reference to New Year's Eve and concerns over potential widespread computer failures on January 1, 2000 -- fears that ultimately were proved to be unfounded.

Zune users were still trying to discover the cause of the problem Wednesday afternoon.

Microsoft Corp., maker of the Zune, posted this statement Wednesday morning on the Zune Web site: "Customers with 30gb Zune devices may experience issues when booting their Zune hardware. We're aware of the problem and are working to correct it. Sorry for the inconvenience, and thanks for your patience!"

Contacted Wednesday morning by e-mail, a Zune spokeswoman said, "We are actively working now to isolate the issue and develop a solution to address it. We will keep customers informed on next steps via the support page on zune.net.

Microsoft released its first Zune 30GB music player, as a competitor to Apple's popular iPod mp3 player, in 2006. No widespread glitches have been reported this week in its second-generation 80GB or 120GB models.


After some more digging around on the issue, I was able to find a posting from a user who seemed to have discovered a fix for the problem:

IF ANYBODY STILL HAS NOT BEEN ABLE TO GET THEIR ZUNE TO WORK, THERE IS A SIMPLE SOLUTION: PRESS AND HOLD THE BACK BUTTON AND UP ON THE TOUCH PAD TO REBOOT YOUR ZUNE.


I personally do not own a Zune player, but for anyone reading this posting that may be having the same problem.. Give the fix a shot, hopefully it works for you as well... leave a reply post and let us know if it or anything else you've tried, does.....

Lawsuit seeks to take God out of Presidential inauguration



A number of atheists and non-religious organizations want Barack Obama's inauguration ceremony to leave out all references to God and religion.

In a lawsuit filed Tuesday in Washington, the plaintiffs demand that the words "so help me God" not be added to the end of the president's oath of office.

In addition, the lawsuit objects to plans for ministers to deliver an invocation and a benediction in which they may discuss God and religion.

An advance copy of the lawsuit was posted online by Michael Newdow, a California doctor and lawyer who has filed similar and unsuccessful suits over inauguration ceremonies in 2001 and 2005.

Joining Newdow in the suit are groups advocating religious freedom or atheism, including the American Humanist Association, the Freedom from Religion Foundation and atheist groups from Minnesota; Seattle, Washington; and Florida.

The new lawsuit says in part, "There can be no purpose for placing 'so help me God' in an oath or sponsoring prayers to God, other than promoting the particular point of view that God exists."

Newdow said references to God during inauguration ceremonies violate the Constitution's ban on the establishment of religion.

Newdow and other plaintiffs say they want to watch the inaugural either in person or on television. As atheists, they contend, having to watch a ceremony with religious components will make them feel excluded and stigmatized.

"Plaintiffs are placed in the untenable position of having to choose between not watching the presidential inauguration or being forced to countenance endorsements of purely religious notions that they expressly deny," according to the lawsuit.


Among those named in the lawsuit are Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, who is expected to swear in the new president; the Presidential Inauguration Committee; the Joint Congressional Committee on Inauguration Ceremonies and its chairwoman, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California; and the Armed Forces Inaugural Committee and its commander, Maj. Gen. Richard Rowe Jr.

The two ministers scheduled to participate in the ceremony also are named: the Rev. Rick Warren and the Rev. Joseph Lowery. The document includes a quotation from Warren on atheists: "I could not vote for an atheist because an atheist says, 'I don't need God.' "

Newdow said that he didn't name President-elect Barack Obama in the suit because in addition to participating as a government official at the ceremony, he possesses rights as an individual that allow him to express religious beliefs.

"If he chooses to ask for God's help, I'm not going to challenge him," Newdow said. "I think it's unwise."

Newdow said that as a member of a racial minority, Obama should have respect for atheists, who also are members of a minority.

Newdow said religious references in the inauguration ceremony send a message to non-believers.

"The message here is, we who believe in God are the righteous, the real Americans," he said.

Newdow said it's unconstitutional to imply that atheists and others are not as good.

He acknowledged that his suit is unlikely to be successful.

"I have no doubt I'll lose," he said, adding that he hoped to eventually succeed through appeals and hoped future inauguration ceremonies would exclude religious references.

I'm wondering what my readers thoughts on this are? leave your comments on this topic.

Tokarski to get the nod


http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Canadian goalie Dustin Tokarski, seen stretching at Tuesday's practice, will face a U.S. squad with several top forwards.
Dustin Tokarski calling it "the biggest game of his career."

Dustin Tokarski will be starting in goal when Canada plays the United States at the 2009 world junior hockey championship on Wednesday night and although it is not a must-win game, the stakes are still high.

The winner will advance directly to the semifinals, while the loser heads to the quarter-finals on Friday.

Tokarski won a Memorial Cup last season playing with the Spokane Chiefs of the Western Hockey League and head coach Pat Quinn felt that big-game experience counts for something. Tokarski was named the Memorial Cup tourney's most valuable player as well as the top goalie.

"He was rated No. 1 coming in by our scouting and that is probably the biggest reason [he's starting]," said Quinn early Wednesday. "He has a Memorial Cup under his belt and he knows about the pressure playing in big games."

Tokarski was in goal in Canada'a 8-1 tournament-opening victory over the Czech Republic and afterward Quinn said he thought his goalie lost concentration on the goal he allowed and one that was disallowed.

"Eventually you push that off. He is aware of what happened and he did not like it, and it is not something he experienced too often before and now it is gone," said Quinn. "Now is the time to move on and if it is a lesson learned, he will be a better player because of it."

Tokarski feels he has nothing to prove.

"I am not worried about that one too much," he said.

The final game of the preliminary round is the first time both the Canadians and Americans will be tested and it is a game that players on both sides have been looking forward to for months.

Coach Quinn was asked whether he has a read on the Canadians and how they might respond in a big game.

"This will be a test and I can't guarantee we will win but we will try to do the things we have been talking about that will allow us to win and now is the time for execution and we will find out."

U.S. forward Colin Wilson is looking forward to playing in front of a partisan crowd in Ottawa on New Years' Eve.

"I think he atmosphere will make it more special," said Wilson, whose father Carey played for Canada's 1984 Olympic team. "We are [staying] right beside Parliament and it makes you more into it. But just being in Canada makes it more special."

Canada is 27-5-3 all-time against the United States at the world junior championship.

Hall of Fame selection would net O'Ree hat trick of honours


http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Fredericton Ontario's Willie O'Ree has earned a long list of honours, but the man who broke the NHL's colour barrier still dreams of one more: the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Willie O'Ree already has New Brunswick's highest honour, He has been selected to receive The Order of Canada, Canada's highest honour, Now the man who broke hockey's colour barrier 50 years ago has his eye on the sport's highest honour.

After being named by Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean on Tuesday to the Order of Canada, the soft-spoken O'Ree was asked about any future goals.

"I'd like to get into the Hockey Hall of Fame. And I think if I do I think it will be through the work that I am doing now with the diversity program," O'Ree said.

O'Ree was recognized by the Governor General for his "pioneering contributions to the development of professional hockey, and for his tireless dedication to promoting the sport to minority youth in Canada and the United States."

O'Ree was 22 when he pulled on a Boston Bruins jersey on Jan. 18, 1958.

He played for Boston extensively in the 1960-61 season, scoring his first goal on New Year's Day in 1961. He would record four goals and 10 assists in 45 games with playing with Boston.

Those aren't the prolific scoring statistics that normally open the door to hockey's shrine. Even O'Ree acknowledged that any trip to the Hall of Fame will likely come because of his contribution to the sport over the decades since he's hung up his skates.

O'Ree is the director of youth development for the National Hockey League's diversity program. In the decade since he took the job, the league says he has helped introduce 40,000 kids from diverse backgrounds to hockey.

"I only played 45 games in the NHL and breaking the colour barrier was a moment that I will never forget," he said.

But he also points to his work "over the past 10 years with the diversity program, going out and talking to these boys and girls, not only helping them with hockey skills but life skills, helping them set goals for themselves and working towards their goals and believing in yourself."

The Hockey Hall of Fame stipulates for election into the elite group as a player, an individual must have concluded a career as an active player for a minimum of three playing seasons. In the builder category, a person can be selected to the hall of fame for "coaching, managerial or executive ability, sportsmanship, character and their contribution to their organizations and to the game of hockey in general."

Gary Bettman, the NHL's commissioner, issued a statement on Tuesday that praised O'Ree's appointment to the Order of Canada and his contribution to hockey in the last half century.

"For more than 50 years, Willie has been a pioneer to the game of hockey. As a player, he paved the way for countless others to play the game of hockey," Bettman said.

"As director of youth development, he continues to provide opportunity to youth. I cannot think of a more deserving individual to receive this award and a better ambassador for Canada and the game of hockey.

In O'Ree's hometown of Fredericton, many of his friends were celebrating his latest accomplishment.

John Mazzuca grew up with O'Ree, playing shinny with the hockey legend on local rivers.

Mazzuca said O'Ree was always a gifted athlete in any sport he suited up for, but he said giving back to the community has always been a top priority for his friend. And Mazzuca said it's obvious that children are inspired by O'Ree.

"He works hard with the children and he wants to make a future for them," he said. "When he talks, they just sit there and listen, you don't hear a pin drop."

Can consumers own their internet connections?


http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Internet users could boost the value of their homes by buying fibre connections to them, according to a report
What's the best way to ensure "net neutrality?"

Tim Wu, the Columbia Law School professor and Toronto native who first coined the term, has a simple suggestion: customer ownership of internet connections.

In a study released last Thursday, the same day that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission issued a verdict allowing Bell Canada Inc. to continue slowing certain internet uses, Professor Wu suggested an access model that would allow home owners to purchase high-speed connections rather than renting them from service providers.

Under the "homes with tails" model (might want to work on that name...but that's just me) , customers would purchase a fibre wire connection to their home that would provide speeds far in excess of what is generally available in North America today. The fibre would be connected to existing open exchange buildings where a large number of telecommunications pipeline providers have equipment that forms the backbone of the internet.

Customers could therefore bypass cable and telephone companies, who today provide the "last mile" of connection between the exchange and the home, to access the internet and thereby video, voice and other services.

The model would also result in significant monthly cost savings because customers would only have to pay service providers for the true price of their services and not for infrastructure investment, the report said. The bulk of the monthly internet bill your receive today are to help cable and phone companies recoup the costs of building their networks.

Derek Slater, a policy analyst at Google Inc. who co-authored the report with Professor Wu, says the most important effect of fibre ownership would be that customers could pick their internet connection from more than the two choices they currently have — typically a phone and a cable company.

That increased choice at the exchange level would guarantee net neutrality because if one provider started interfering with connections, customers could switch to one that did not, he says.

"Competition would ensure that consumers were in control of what they choose to use, access and share without any undue interference," Slater says. "Competition would be a bulwark against interference by network operators."

(Although Google has an interest in increased internet usage, it should be noted that the company did not fund the report. Slater says he helped Professor Wu co-author it out of his own interest.)

The idea could have specific relevance in Canada, where service providers are increasingly introducing network management measures that critics say are running afoul of net neutrality principles.

In Ontario alone, the two largest internet service providers — Bell and Rogers Communications Inc. — are both slowing peer-to-peer file-sharing applications such as BitTorrent, Bitcomet, Shareaza, Kazaa and so on. Last week's CRTC ruling ensured that many internet customers in the province will be unable to find unthrottled service at least until a net neutrality probe concludes a year from now.

Test project underway in Ottawa

As such, the fibre ownership idea is currently being tested in Ottawa under a pilot project headed by Bill St. Arnaud, the chief research officer for CANARIE, Canada's non-profit advanced internet research network. The Ottawa project is adding an additional incentive for consumers to buy their own fibre by tying its cost to energy usage.

About 300 internet users rallied on Parliament Hill in May to protest companies such as Rogers and Bell.About 300 internet users rallied on Parliament Hill last May to protest companies such as Rogers and Bell. ( source: Peter Nowak/CBC)Under St. Arnaud's "green broadband" plan, the cost of the fibre connection is amortized over a five-year period and added to the owner's monthly energy bill.
The fibre costs the consumer two cents per kilowatt hour of electricity they use, or the equivalent amount per cubic metre of gas, whichever the case may be.

"Based on typical energy expenditures in Ottawa, a consumer would rack up a fibre cost of between $200 and $300 per year, or about $1,000 to $1,500 over the five-year lifetime," he says.

"The scheme would encourage lower energy consumption" St. Arnaud says, "because the fibre would effectively get cheaper as the consumer used less gas or electricity."

"Owning is not going to be sufficient incentive for the customer to make that investment," he says. "If we encourage them by this attraction of reducing their energy bill, saving them money and still giving them fibre, it's a bigger inducement."

"Monthly savings on internet bills would also be significant," St. Arnaud says. He estimates the true cost of service from Bell and Rogers to be between $2 and $15, with the remainder of the monthly $40-plus bill going to recouping infrastructure investment and profit.

Finally, fibre would count as an asset to a home owner. According to the Wu and Slater report, studies have found that homes with fibre connections are worth about $4,000 (U.S.) more than those without them.

Concept faces obstacles

The idea faces a number of obstacles, however, not the least of which is convincing consumers to change their mindset toward ownership rather than rental of their internet connection.

That's not an intractable barrier, the report said, since precedents have been set. Computers, for example, were rented out to businesses before companies such as Apple introduced the idea of an "owned" personal computer.

"It will be strange to people at first, but the line between consumer property and businesses has changed over time," Slater says. "What may seem strange or challenging today may become much easier tomorrow or a few years from now."

Industry analysts, however, say that's not such an easy obstacle to overcome because ownership also means unwanted hassles. "I can buy a water heater for a couple hundred bucks from Home Depot but I don't want the problem of it," says telecommunications industry consultant Mark Goldberg. "If I rent it, it's not my problem."

Maintenance of the fibre connections would also be an issue. Under the current system, cable and phone companies fix any problems that occur on their networks. With the consumer-ownership model, a "condominium" system where households pay monthly maintenance fees would likely be necessary, which would cut into costs savings earned through bypassing a cable or phone provider.

"It's not a free ride after you've paid for the fibre," Goldberg says. "You need to have a fibre manager, and they're not going to do it for charity."

Incumbents likely to resist

The concept's other major problem would be getting service providers to sign on. Cable and phone companies are likely to resist getting cut out of monthly internet access revenue while the backbone service providers at the exchanges may not be willing to go into competition with those firms.

"That's exactly what's happening in Ottawa," St. Arnaud says. "Despite already having strung fibre, mostly from streetside poles, to about 400 households, the project has been unable to find an exchange-based service provider willing to connect customers and go up against Bell and Rogers."

"The retail internet business in Canada has been destroyed. All you've got left in Ontario is Bell and Rogers," he says. "Nobody wants to make that kind of investment."

One possible solution lays in convincing a big internet service provider from one region to expand into another. Vancouver-based Telus Corp., for example, could get into the business of selling fibre connections in Ontario, where it has no residential internet customers. The problem there for Telus, however, would be the threat of repercussions from Bell or Rogers.

"Their concern is that they'll come back and invade them on their own territory," St. Arnaud says. "They like the idea in somebody else's territory, but not their own."

Still, both Slater and St. Arnaud believe the concept can fly if only one service provider can be convinced to give it a try. The point of the report, Slater says, was to get discussion of the concept moving and to encourage more experiments like the one in Ottawa.

"It's a chicken-or-the-egg problem. How do you get the service providers in on it if they're not used to this model, and how do you get people to want to buy the fibre if there aren't service providers there to begin with?" he says. "These kinds of attitudes can change over time. It's not an insurmountable obstacle."

Online children's game helps build real homes for the unfortunate


If children are playing video games, why not do some good while they're at it right?

Elf Island, a virtual world created by Atlanta-based Good Egg Studios, ties online games to charity construction in the real world. The more "virtual" homes the children build by completing mini-mazes, the more real homes that are built by Habitat for Humanity.

Liz Kronenberger, who founded the company with her husband, Craig, said they started the site to promote positive social values online.

"We're really giving kids the proper motivation and the right tools to empower them to make a difference in the real world," she said.

The couple recently unveiled Elf Island's first GoodQuest, challenging gamers to build 10,000 virtual homes in a month. If they do, the couple will pay for four new homes to be built in a dilapidated community in Honduras.

The quest is harder than it might sound. It took an Associated Press reporter about 30 minutes — and several heart-pounding attempts — to lead a lumbering giant through a series of timed mazes and around bad guys to build a virtual home.

More quests will follow in the months to come, aiding charities that build playgrounds, preserve endangered species, promote green initiatives and boost music education. Kronenberger said much of the site's direction will depend on what the gamers decide.

"Elf Island's vision will be run by the kids," she said.

Elf Island includes chat rooms and scores of games in addition to the GoodQuests. Membership is now free. But the developers hope to raise revenue in 2009 to help pay for the good deeds with a monthly fee that will likely be about $6 US.


I think it's a great idea, doing something worthwhile, helping others, at the same time having fun... I recommend checking this game out, If any of my readers have any children, I suggest you have this game turned on for them, let them play as long as they like... The membership cost right now? free? can't beat that!! the proposed monthly fee of $6US a month? we spend more then that on our lunch (just A lunch) right? give this game a try....


Inuit seal hunters exempt from proposed new rules



To follow up on a posting I did on December 29th 2008, It appears that Inuit seal hunters in Nunavut won't need to worry about the rule changes being proposed by the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans, an official says.

The new regulations, quietly posted in a government publication over the weekend, propose banning the use of a traditional hakipik — a spiked club — on seals over one year old unless they had been shot first with a firearm.

The rules would also force Canadian sealers to ensure the mammals are dead before hooking and skinning them.

But Barry Rashotte, director general of resource management for DFO in Ottawa, reported on CBC News that "the proposed rules apply only to sealers hunting with commercial licences, not to beneficiaries of land claims or those hunting for cultural or subsistence reasons".

"The current regulations exempt in Areas 1 to 4 — which is basically southern Labrador north — it exempts Inuit and Indians and beneficiaries of land claims and residents of the area from holding a licence to fish for food, social or ceremonial purposes," Rashotte said Tuesday.

"Whereas in the southern areas, you need a licence to do that."

Stakeholders have 30 days to comment on the proposed new rules.

The department will then decide whether to incorporate those comments into the proposed rules before making them official.

Rashotte said the goal is to implement the new rules before the commercial seal hunt on Canada's East Coast begins in March, and before the European Union imposes a ban on importing seal products.


Wacky things that get dropped on New Year's Eve


Everyone knows about the ball that gets dropped on New Year's Eve in Times Square. Maybe you've even heard about the 800-pound peach that gets dropped in Atlanta at midnight on Dec. 31.

http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Celebrate New YearsBut you may not have heard about the dropping of the sausage, or the gumbo pot, or the giant Peep, an 11-kilogram fibreglass replica of the famed marshmallowy candy made in Pennsylvania.

TripAdvisor.com assembled a list of these and other quirky New Year's Eve events to create a top 10 list of wacky things that get lowered on Dec. 31 around the country to mark the arrival of the new year.

The Peep show is in Bethlehem, Pa., marking the third time the city has dropped the illuminated treat from a crane at midnight as part of a family-friendly First Night celebration.

Also in Pennsylvania, in the town of Lebanon, a 2.3-metre edible bologna made by the Weaver-Kutztown Bologna Company is lowered at midnight and then donated to area charities.

In Key West, Fla., there are three such countdown celebrations: a conch shell lowered on a pole to the roof of Sloppy Joe's Bar, the lowering of "Drag Queen Sushi'' in a two-metre-tall shoe at the Bourbon Street Pub, and the descent of a costumed pirate ``wench'' from a schooner in the harbour.

In Port Clinton, Ohio, the self-proclaimed ``Walleye Capital of the World'' drops a six-metre, 272-kilogram fibreglass walleye fish at midnight.

In Elmore, Ohio, there's a sausage fest, inspired by a local business,Tank's Meats. A lit-up 5.5-metre sausage drops to welcome in the New Year, but there's also a sausage toss and a sausage-eating contest.

Mount Olive, N.C., has a pickle drop with a metre-high glowing pickle plunging down the Mount Olive Pickle Company's flagpole into a tank.

Raleigh, N.C., lowers a massive copper acorn weighing 567 kilograms from atop the city's civic centre as part of a First Night event.

A giant gumbo pot is lowered in New Orleans to mark the New Year, along with fireworks on the Mississippi.

In Easton, Md., a giant crab is what gets lowered as part of a First Night celebration, and in Plymouth, Wis., it's a great big hunk of cheese - though not an edible hunk.

What about where you live? any weird or wacky customary things happening on new years eve??

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Girl, 11, dies walking 10 miles in snow


Daughter was sent on 10-mile trek after truck got stuck on Christmas Day

http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Robert E. Aragon, 55, appeares in court Monday in Shoshone, Idaho. He has been charged with second-degree murder and felony injury to a child.
TWIN FALLS, Idaho - The father of an 11-year-old girl who died, likely of hypothermia, after trying to walk 10 miles in the snow on Christmas Day has been charged with second-degree murder and felony injury to a child.

Robert Aragon, 55, of Jerome, made an initial appearance Monday in 5th District Court, where Judge Mark Ingram appointed a public defender for him. The judge denied Aragon's request to lower his $500,000 bond. He was being held in the Blaine County Jail.

Aragon was emotional during the short hearing. He banged his head on the defendant's table as Ingram read the charges against him, The Times-News reported. After Ingram noted that second-degree murder carries a maximum penalty of life in prison, Aragon said "Oh my God" as he banged his head on the table one final time.

Sage Aragon and her 12-year-old brother, Bear, were with their father on Thursday when his truck got stuck in a snow drift on a highway north of Shoshone in South Central Idaho, according to the Lincoln County sheriff's office.

The children live with Aragon in Jerome and he was taking them to visit their mother, JoLeta Jenks, in West Magic.

After the truck got caught in the snow, authorities allege Aragon let the children out to walk to their mother's house while he and another adult stayed behind to free the vehicle.

Jenks said she called Aragon because she was concerned after no one arrived at her home on Thursday. Aragon had driven back to Jerome after letting the kids out to walk to her house, Jenks said.

"They didn't even call me, telling me they were walking," she told the Times-News.

Jenks called the police and a Blaine County search and rescue team found the boy at a rest area near the highway shortly before 10 p.m. on Thursday night.

Adults in the search effort described the snow as knee-deep for them.

The boy was found wearing only long underwear, Blaine County Sheriff Walt Femling said in a news release. Apparently delusional from hypothermia, the child had discarded his jacket, pants and shoes, the sheriff's office said. He was treated and released at a nearby hospital.

The rest area was about 4.5 miles from where the children started walking.

At some point the children separated and their mother said her son told her they disagreed about whether to keep going or turn back.

"(Bear) kept on telling her: 'Let's go, Sage, let's go, Sage,'" Jenks said, recalling what her son told her. "She said, 'No, I'm going back.'"

Pajama pants
The little girl was found about 2.7 miles from where the two set out, barely visible under windblown, drifting snow when search dogs located her along a local road about 2 a.m. Friday. She was wearing a brown down coat, black shirt, pink pajama pants and tan snow boots, the sheriff's office statement said.

"I thought she was alive because they said they found her," Jenks said. "I was excited."

The girl was pronounced dead at a Ketchum hospital; preliminary autopsy results indicate she died of hypothermia.

Officials say temperatures in the area at the time the girl was missing ranged from 27 degrees above zero to minus 5 Fahrenheit (minus 20 to minus 3 Celsius).

Jenks and Aragon are not married. While she said she doesn't understand the decision Aragon is accused of making in letting the children walk to her house, Jenks added, "I don't need to sit and yell. I know he's going through hell right now."

How important is internet access to you?


You might have read the reports online recently that a high percentage of women prefer surfing the net to sex, and you may not agree with the findings. but other results from the same Intel-commissioned study is probably easier to, um, swallow.

Last week, Intel Canada released findings from a recent U.S.-based Harris Interactive survey on the theme "Internet reliance in today's economy."

Interestingly, 71 percent of those surveyed said it is either "important" or "very important" to have access to Internet-enabled devices -- such as laptops, notebooks and other mobile tools -- for real-time updates on important news, such as the state of the economy.

Roughly 65 percent of adults said they felt they "couldn't live" without Internet access.

So, what about you?

Me personally, I would sooner give up my TV, radio, magazines, books and newspapers than the Internet. It is, without question, my news medium of choice and ranks pretty high when it comes to entertainment (just trailing behind video games). What about you, do you think you could you go a year without Internet access?

Common food additive linked to lung cancer in mice


A common food additive has been found to increase the risk and speed of spread of lung cancer in mice, say South Korean researchers.

While previous studies show results of animal trials cannot always be replicated in humans, the researchers say dietary restrictions of the additive may be critical for lung cancer treatment as well as prevention.

The Seoul National University study suggests a diet high in inorganic phosphates could speed growth of cancerous tumors and contribute to the development of tumors in those predisposed to the disease.

Inorganic phosphates are found in a variety of processed foods, including meats, cheeses, beverages and bakery products. They are added to increase water retention and improve food texture.

Moderate levels of phosphate play an essential role in living organisms, but the rapidly increasing use of the chemical as a food additive has resulted in significantly higher levels in average daily diets.

The Seoul study appears in the first issue for January of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Lung cancer is the No. 1 cause of cancer deaths in the world and is also the most frequently diagnosed solid tumor.

Earlier studies showed that about 90 per cent of the most common form of lung cancer cases were associated with a disruption of signaling pathways in lung tissue that can cause normal cells to become malignant. This study revealed that high levels of inorganic phosphates may disrupt those same pathways, said study co-author and veterinary medicine professor Myung-Haing Cho.

He and his team used mice genetically engineered to be susceptible to lung cancer. They randomly assigned the mice to receive a diet of either 0.5 or 1.0 per cent phosphate, a range roughly equivalent to modern human diets. After four weeks, they analyzed the mice's lung tissue.

"Our results clearly demonstrated that the diet higher in inorganic phosphates caused an increase in the size of the tumors and stimulated growth of the tumors," Cho said in a release.

Cho said future studies will help refine what constitutes a "safe" level of dietary inorganic phosphate.

Peruvian Jesus born to Virgin Mary on Christmas



Virgin Mary, a 20-year-old Peruvian woman, gave birth to a baby boy on Christmas day and named him Jesus, Peru's state news agency said on Friday.

The baby's father, Adolfo Jorge Huamani, 24, is a carpenter. Religious Peruvians compared him to Joseph the Carpenter in the Bible.

"Two thousand years later the story of Bethlehem is relived," read the headline about the birth in El Comercio, the main newspaper in Peru, a predominantly Catholic country.

The mother, Virgen Maria Huarcaya, delivered the 7.7 pound (3.5 kg) boy, Jesus Emanuel, in the early hours of Christmas at the central maternity hospital in Lima, the capital.

"A few days ago we had decided to name my son after a professional soccer player," the father said. "But thanks to a happy coincidence this is how things ended up."


British custodians of time prolong 2008 gloom with 'leap second'


10...9...8...7...6...5...4...3....2....1.....1....Can't wait to kiss the worst economic year to hit the planet since the great depression good-bye? You'll have to wait a second.

That's because the British custodians of time are preparing to tack a "leap second" onto the clock Wednesday to account for the minute slowing of the Earth's rotation - meaning champagne toasts, Auld Lang Synes and of course, that kiss, will have to come a second late.

The leap second has been used sporadically at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich since 1972, an adjustment that has kept Greenwich Mean Time the internationally agreed time standard.

Some scientists now say GMT should be replaced by International Atomic Time - computed outside Paris - because new technologies have allowed atomic time to tick away with down-to-the-nanosecond accuracy.

But opponents say atomic time's very precision poses a problem.

A strict measurement, they say, would change our very notion of time forever, as atomic clocks would one day outpace the familiar cycle of sunrise and sunset.

The time warp wouldn't be noticeable for generations, but within a millennium, noon - the hour associated with the sun's highest point in the sky - would occur around 1 o'clock. In tens of thousands of years, the sun would be days behind the human calendar.

That bothers people like Steve Allen, an analyst at the University of California at Santa Cruz's Lick Observatory.

"I think (our descendants) will curse us less if we choose to keep the clock reading near 12:00 when the sun is highest in the sky," Allen said.

Atomic time advocates argue that leap seconds are onerous because they're unpredictable.

Since the exact speed of the Earth's rotation can't be plotted out in advance, they're added as needed. Sometimes, like this year, they're added on Dec. 31, sometimes they're inserted at the end of June 30.

Those willy-nilly fixes can trip up time-sensitive software, particularly in Asia, where the extra second is added in the middle of the day.

Critics say everything from satellite navigation to power transmission and cellular communication is vulnerable to problems stemming from programs ignoring the extra second or adding it at different times.

When the extra second is added, the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colo., which provides the time standard for computers and appliances across the United States, will probably be busy fixing bugs starting at 5 p.m. Mountain Time, predicted Judah Levine, a physicist at the institute's Time and Frequency Division.

"There's always somebody who doesn't get it right," Levine said. "It never fails."

Britons seemed less concerned about the remote prospect of having tea at 3 a.m. than the notion of leaving a France-based body in control of the world's time.

"I think there's some kind of historical pride we might feel in Britain about Greenwich being the point around which time is measured," 50-year-old telecoms executive Stephen Mallinson said as he waited to board a Eurostar train for Paris at London's St. Pancras Station.

"But in practice, does it make a difference? No."

At the Royal Observatory, 53-year-old homemaker Susie Holt was adjusting her wristwatch to match the digital display above the meridian. She said it would be a pity if GMT were made obsolete. Her daughter, 15-year-old Kirsty, was more forthright.

"We don't want the French to control time," she said. "They might get it wrong or something."

Meanwhile, Elisa Felicitas Arias, a scientist at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, which computes atomic time at a facility outside Paris, has been busy lobbying to scrap the leap seconds that have given the 17th century Royal Observatory pride of place.

"GMT is out of date," she sniffed.

She said she has been garnering considerable support, with the International Telecommunications Union - the arbiter of international time standards - considering a vote on a switch as early as next year, with a 2018 target to implement it.

The U.S., France, Germany, Italy, and Japan were all on board, she said.

But David Rooney, the Royal Observatory's curator of time, defended leap seconds, saying they give everyone "the best of both worlds."

The arrangement, he said, allows satellites, physicists, and high-frequency traders to benefit from the accuracy of atomic time while keeping our clocks consistent with the position of the sun in the sky - and with GMT.

The American Astronomical Society is officially neutral on the proposal to switch to atomic time, which is calculated based on readings from more than 200 atomic clocks maintained across the world.

Perhaps predictably, Britain's Royal Astronomical Society has come out in favour of conserving leap seconds. While spokesman Robert Massey said star-watchers could cope no matter what happened, he urged caution on such an important change.

"It's not just a matter for the telecommunications industry to tell everybody to get rid of the leap second," Massey said. "It would be a big cultural change at the very least. Abandoning the connection between time and solar time is really a big shift."

Ottawa police officer shoots 2 people with 1 bullet



Ontario's police watchdog is looking into an incident in Ottawa in which a police officer shot two people Monday with one bullet.

Two officers were called to a 12th floor apartment to check out reports of a distraught woman and were confronted by a woman with a knife. The Special Investigations Unit says during an incident that followed, 25-year-old Samantha Soderlind was shot in the chest by one of the officers.

The bullet then passed through her body, went through a bedroom wall and struck a 27-year-old man in the face.

The SIU says Steven Lindsey had gone to the unit to assist the woman and was told to wait in the bedroom as police tried to control the situation.

The injuries to both Soderlind and Lindsey were not life-threatening.

The SIU investigates all cases of serious injuries and deaths involving the police and the public.

WWII Hero dies, 68 years after 'posthumous' honour


A Second World War hero who fought valiantly in North Africa despite severe wounds has died 68 years after he was "posthumously" awarded Britain's highest combat honour by officials who thought he had been killed.

Eric Wilson, who had been the oldest living holder of the Victoria Cross, died at age 96, according to obituaries published Tuesday in the Times and the Daily Telegraph. Jenny Hunt, a warden of St. Mary Magdelene church in Stowell, where Wilson lived, said he died Dec. 23.

Wilson had been reported killed in North Africa in 1940, but was later found alive and trying to tunnel his way out of a prison camp. He went on to further service in Africa and Burma.

His family was notified in August 1940 that he was killed while staying with his machine-gun, though wounded and ill, in a futile effort to repel a larger Italian force. The Victoria Cross was awarded two months later.

Wilson was commanding a company of the Somaliland Camel Corps when Italian forces attacked their position in what was then British Somaliland. Italy had declared war only the day before.

"The enemy attacked Observation Hill on 11th August 1940," the citation read. "Capt. Wilson and Somali gunners under his command beat off the attack and opened fire on the enemy troops attacking Mill Hill, another post within his range."

"He inflicted such heavy casualties that the enemy, determined to put his guns out of action, brought up a pack battery (artillery) to within 700 yards, and scored two direct hits through the loopholes of his defences which, bursting within the post, wounded Capt. Wilson severely in the right shoulder and in the left eye, several of his team also being wounded. His guns were blown off their stands but he repaired and replaced them and, regardless of his wounds, carried on, while his Somali sergeant was killed beside him.

"On 12th and 14th August, the enemy again concentrated field artillery fire on Capt. Wilson's guns, but he continued, with his wounds untended, to man them. On 15th August two of his machine-gun posts were blown to pieces, yet Capt. Wilson, now suffering from malaria in addition to his wounds, still kept his own post in action. The enemy finally overran the post at 5 p.m. on the 15th August when Capt. Wilson, fighting to the last, was killed."

In April 1941, however, he was found alive in a prisoner of war camp in Eritrea. Wilson and his fellow prisoners had nearly finished digging an escape tunnel when the Italian soldiers fled the camp ahead of the arrival of British troops.

Wilson later served in North Africa as adjutant of the Long Range Desert Group, a motorized force that harassed Italian positions; he also served in Burma as second-in-command of the 11th King's African Rifles.

Two years ago, Wilson commented: "What is bravery? I don't know. You just did what you had to do."

Retiring from the army in 1949 with the rank of lieutenant colonel, Wilson became a colonial officer in Tanganyika (now part of Tanzania), which became independent in 1961.

On returning to London, he was deputy warden and then warden of London House, a residence for foreign students. He was honorary secretary of the Anglo-Somali Society from 1972 to 1977 and helped organize relief for Somalia when it was hit by famine in 1975.

He is survived by his wife and three sons.

Iran jails Iranian-Canadian blogger



The long-suspected arrest of a controversial Iranian-Canadian political blogger has been confirmed by Iran.
http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Hossein Derakhshan, a well-known Iranian-Canadian blogger, is seen in this undated photo from his website.
Hossein Derakhshan, known in the blogosphere by the name of his controversial website Hoder.com, hasn't posted since October, prompting many to assume that he had been arrested.

Earlier in December, Derakhshan's family told The Globe and Mail that he had been locked up, and on Tuesday the Iranian judiciary confirmed Derakhshan was in custody.

Judiciary spokesperson Ali Reza Jamshidi told local media that Derakhshan is being held, and his case is under "preliminary investigation."

Jamshidi said the 34-year-old blogger was arrested over remarks he allegedly made about key Shiite Muslim holy figures.

No information was given about where or when Derakhshan was picked up, but earlier reports suggested he had been arrested on November 1, shortly after arriving in Tehran.

Some reports said he was accused of spying for Israel.

Derakhshan has been dubbed the "blogfather" for writing and distributing instructions in 2001 that allowed Iranians to create their own Persian-language blogs.

The movement caught fire in the restrictive Muslim country, with an estimated 70,000 Iranians now maintaining their own blogs, in Persian.

He has never been afraid to express himself freely on his blog -- usually from outside of Iran.

In many of his postings the former newspaper reporter turned "citizen journalist" criticizes Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. But he also gives the controversial president credit for actions he approves of.

In the recent years leading up to his arrest, Derakhshan even seemed to lean towards supporting Ahmadinejad and his hardline stance towards the West. He also defended Iran's nuclear ambitions and criticized U.S. and Israeli opposition to it.

In 2006, Derakhshan described travelling in Israel on his Canadian passport, musing that going there could have serious consequences.

"This might mean that I won't be able to go back to Iran for a long time, since Iran doesn't recognise Israel... and apparently considers travelling there illegal. Too bad, but I don't care."

"As a citizen journalist, I'm going to show my 20,000 daily Iranian readers what Israel really looks like and how people live there," he said.



Willie O'Ree named to the Order of Canada


Sixty Canadians were appointed the Order of Canada on Tuesday, including two of Canada's most famous singers, a former deputy prime minister and the NHL's first black player.

Fredericton,Ontario native Willie O'Ree made his professional hockey debut with the Boston Bruins on Jan. 18, 1958, and was the first black player to play in the NHL.

The 73-year-old became a Member of the Order of Canada on Tuesday, along with 41 others.

Sometimes referred to as "The Jackie Robinson of Hockey" for breaking the NHL color barrier, O'Ree was inducted "for his pioneering contributions to the development of professional hockey and for his tireless dedication to promoting the sport to minority youth in Canada and the Untied States," according to a release on the Governor General's website.

After O'Ree, there were no other black player in the NHL until fellow Canadian Mike Marson was drafted by the Washington Capitals in 1974. There are 17 black players in the NHL as of the mid-2000s, the most prominent including Canadians Jarome Iginla and Anson Carter and American Mike Grier (who is currently on the San Jose Sharks).

Retired Liberal senator Allan MacEachen, 87, was one of 14 Canadians awarded the Officer of the Order of Canada -- the second-highest level of recognition within the Order of Canada.

MacEachen, who is also a former deputy prime minister, was recognized "for his highly distinguished career of public service, notably as a long-serving senator and as a cabinet minister, where he played key roles in instituting important changes to national health, pension and social security policies."

His Trudeau-era colleague and fellow cabinet minister Iona Campagnolo, 76, was also awarded the Officer of the Order of Canada "for her contributions to her province and to the nation as a former lieutenant governor, member of Parliament and cabinet minister, and for her continued work and dedication as a volunteer, notably in the areas of human rights and the environment."

Canadian chanteuse Celine Dion and famed tenor Ben Heppner each were awarded the Companion of the Order of Canada -- the highest level of membership that can be awarded to any Canadian.

Dion was recognized for "having won over audiences worldwide with her extraordinary talent as a pop singer, and for her commitment to numerous humanitarian causes at the national and international levels."

And Heppner received the award "for his continued role as a premier musical ambassador for Canada, who has reached the pinnacle of his profession and who is equally renowned for his generosity of spirit as for his abilities as a tenor."

Investors Stephen Jarislowsky and Peter Munk also became Companions of the Order of Canada, each being recognized for their philanthropic efforts.

In total, 60 new appointments to the Order of Canada were made on Tuesday, including four Companions, 14 Officers and 42 Members.

Happy Kwanzaa!!


10 Things you didn't know about Kwanzaa

Kwanzaa was conceived in 1966 by Maulana Karenga, who launched the holiday in the midst of the Black Power Movement and a year after the Watts riots tore open the wounds of racial division in Los Angeles. (Karenga later served time in prison in an assault case related to his opposition to the Black Panthers. After being released from prison, Karenga became an Africana studies professor at California State University at Long Beach.) According to The Complete Kwanzaa by Dorothy Winbush Riley, Karenga said he started Kwanzaa as "a necessary minimum set of principles by which Black people must live in order to begin to rescue and reconstruct our history and lives." The holiday is celebrated from Dec. 26-Jan. 1 every year. Estimates about the number of Americans who celebrate Kwanzaa vary widely, with some figures in the millions.

First Fruits
Kwanzaa is not a religious holiday. It is a cultural holiday based on African harvest festivals and the word "Kwanzaa" is based on a Swahili phrase "matunda ya kwanza" (“first fruits”). It's most popular among African Americans, but has also been embraced by black Caribbeans and other subsets of the African diaspora as a way to celebrate Pan-African history and encourage pride in the black community.


Seven Principles
The celebration of Kwanzaa is organized around the number 7. There are Seven Principles of Kwanzaa, each celebrated on a different day. The principles, in order, are unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility, cooperative economics, purpose, creativity, faith. There are also seven symbols: fruits/nuts/vegetables, place mats, ears of corn, candles, candle holders, communal cups, and gifts. These seven symbols are arranged on a table at the beginning of Kwanzaa. On each day, members of celebrating households gather together to discuss the principles and sometimes read poems or perform music or dance.


On the Calendar
By the 1990s, Kwanzaa was being celebrated alongside Christmas and Hanukkah as a mainstream national holiday, with Hallmark creating Kwanzaa cards and the U.S. Postal Service introducing an official Kwanzaa stamp in 1997. The stamp has been reissued in various denominations four times.



"What's Up?" Swahili Style

Each day of Kwanzaa, participants greet each other with the phrase "Habari Gani", which translates to "What's the News?" in Swahili. The answer, that day’s Kwanzaa Principle.





It's the thought that counts
Expensive gift giving is not a major tenet of the holiday. Although the seventh symbol of Kwanzaa is "gifts," exchanges mostly happen between immediate family members, and often include handmade gifts or books that celebrate African culture. According to The Complete Kwanzaa, the purpose of this modest gift giving is "to avoid the chaos of shopping and conspicuous consumption during the December holiday season."


Colorful symbols
The official colors of Kwanzaa are red, symbolizing the struggles of the African people; black, symbolizing Earth and the African people; and green, symbolizing hope and the future. The Kwanzaa candles are arranged in a holder with a black candle in the middle and red and green candles on the sides. One candle is lit each day of Kwanzaa.



Merry Christmas Kwanzaa
Kwanzaa and other December holidays, including Christmas, are not mutually exclusive. Kwanzaa's official edicts say that it was specifically created as a cultural, and not a religious, holiday, although the holiday's official web site states that "one can accept and revere the religious message and meaning [of Christmas] but reject its European cultural accretions of Santa Claus, reindeer, mistletoe, frantic shopping, alienated gift-giving, etc." Most early practitioners of Kwanzaa did not celebrate Christmas, but the division between the two holidays has faded in recent decade.


A Marketing Opportunity
Despite its organizers' best efforts, Kwanzaa has verged into commercialized territory long occupied by Christmas, with annual marketing campaigns geared specifically for the Kwanzaa holiday. Every year, various "Kwanzaa Expos" are held in cities all over the country. Dancers and musicians perform at the events, while vendors sell Kwanzaa and African-related merchandise.


Fit For A Poet
In 2008, Maya Angelou narrated a documentary called The Black Candle, the first full-length film to be made about Kwanzaa. Directed by M.K. Asante, Jr., the film includes interviews with rapper Chuck D., Kwanzaa founder Maulana Karenga, and NFL star Jim Brown.


HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!


Well it's another year....

But for what reason??


"Happy New Year!" That greeting will be said and heard for at least the first couple of weeks as a new year gets under way.

But the day celebrated as New Year's Day
in modern America was not always on January 1st.

ANCIENT NEW YEARS The celebration of the new year is the oldest of all holidays. It was first observed in ancient Babylon approximately 4000 years ago. In the years around 2000 BC, the Babylonian New Year began with the first New Moon (actually the first visible cresent) after the Vernal Equinox (first day of spring).

The beginning of spring is a pretty logical time to start a new year.
After all, it is the season of rebirth, of planting new crops, and of blossoming. January 1, on the other hand, has no astronomical nor agricultural significance. It is purely arbitrary.

The Babylonian new year celebration lasted for eleven days. Each day had its own particular mode of celebration, It's safe to say that modern New Year's Eve festivities pale in comparison.

The Romans continued to observe the new year in late March, but their calendar was continually tampered with by various emperors so that the calendar soon became out of synchronization with the sun.

In order to set the calendar right, in 153 BC, the Roman senate, declared January 1 to be the beginning of the new year. But tampering continued until Julius Caesar, in 46 BC, established what has come to be known as the Julian Calendar. It again established January 1 as the new year. But in order to synchronize the calendar with the sun, Caesar had to let the previous year drag on for 445 days.

THE CHURCH'S VIEW OF NEW YEAR CELEBRATIONS
Although in the first centuries AD the Romans continued celebrating the new year, the early Catholic Church condemned the festivities as paganism. But as Christianity became more widespread, the early church began having its own religious observances concurrently with many of the pagan celebrations, and New Year's Day was no different. New Years is still observed as the Feast of Christ's Circumcision by some denominations.

During the Middle Ages, the Church remained opposed to celebrating New Years.
January 1 has been celebrated as a holiday by Western nations for only the past 400 years (give or take).


NEW YEAR TRADITIONS
Other traditions of the season include the making of New Year's resolutions.

That tradition also dates back to the early Babylonians. Popular modern resolutions might include the promise to lose weight or quit smoking. The early Babylonian's most popular resolution was to return borrowed farm equipment to there rightful owners.


The Tournament of Roses Parade, dates back to 1886. In that year, members of the Valley Hunt Club decorated their carriages with flowers. It celebrated the ripening of the orange crop in California.

Although the Rose Bowl football game was first played as a part of the Tournament of Roses in 1902, it was replaced by Roman chariot races the following year. In 1916, the football game returned as the sports centerpiece of the festival.


The tradition of using a baby to signify the new year was begun in Greece around 600 BC. It was their tradition at that time to celebrate their god of wine, Dionysus, by parading a baby in a basket, representing the annual rebirth of that god as the spirit of fertility. Early Egyptians also used a baby as a symbol of rebirth.

Although the early Christians denounced the practice as pagan, the popularity of the baby as a symbol of rebirth forced the Church to re-evaluate its position. The Church finally allowed its members to celebrate the new year with a baby, which was to symbolize the birth of the baby Jesus.


The use of an image of a baby with a New Years banner as a symbolic representation of the new year was brought to early America by the Germans.
They had used the effigy since the fourteenth century.

FOR LUCK IN THE NEW YEAR
Traditionally, it was thought that one could affect the luck they would have throughout the coming year by what they did or ate on the first day of the year. For that reason, it has become common for folks to celebrate the first few minutes of a brand new year in the company of family and friends.

Parties often last into the middle of the night after the ringing in of a new year. It was once believed that the first visitor on New Year's Day would bring either good luck or bad luck the rest of the year. It was particularly lucky if that visitor happened to be a tall dark-haired man.

Traditional New Year foods are also thought to bring luck. Many cultures believe that anything in the shape of a ring is good luck, because it symbolizes "coming full circle," completing a year's cycle. For that reason, the Dutch believe that eating donuts on New Year's Day will bring good fortune.

Many parts of the U.S. celebrate the new year by consuming black-eyed peas. These legumes are typically accompanied by either hog jowls or ham. Black-eyed peas and other legumes have been considered good luck in many cultures. The hog, and thus its meat, is considered lucky because it symbolizes prosperity. Cabbage is another "good luck" vegetable that is consumed on New Year's Day by many. Cabbage leaves are also considered a sign of prosperity, being representative of paper currency. In some regions, rice is a lucky food that is eaten on New Year's Day.

AULD LANG SYNE
The song, "Auld Lang Syne," playing in the background, is sung at the stroke of midnight in almost every English-speaking country in the world to bring in the new year.
At least partially written by Robert Burns in the 1700's, it was first published in 1796 after Burns' death. Early variations of the song were sung prior to 1700 and inspired Burns to produce the modern rendition. An old Scotch tune, "Auld Lang Syne" literally means "old long ago," or simply, "the good old days." Can't remember the words? The lyrics can be found here.