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Is Facebook Shutting Down? Just Another Internet Hoax – The Epoch Times

By Mimi Nguyen LyEpoch Times Staff Created: Jan 9, 2011 Last Updated: Jan 9, 2011

Is Facebook shutting down? “I just want my old life back,” Mark Zuckerberg said, according to WeeklyWorldNews. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

“Facebook Ending on March 15” is the “news” that has spread quickly across the web—it is unclear whether the hoax began from rumours on Facebook or by a website called WeeklyWorldNews.

WeeklyWorldNews says “users will no longer be able to access their Facebook account” starting March 15, because “managing the site has become too stressful.” The article goes on to quote Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg saying, “I just want my old life back.”

The website, however, has made false claims in the past, including Michelle Obama being pregnant, and Michael Jackson being spotted on the moon after his death.

This online prank makes Facebook the latest victim in the line of recent Internet death hoaxes, such as Adam Sandler, Aretha Franklin and Owen Wilson.

And the “news” arrives barely a week after a $500 million investment in Facebook by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and a Russian investor.

But it’s not the first time the social network has faced a hoax—similar rumors were spreading back in 2007.“A hoax is an attempt to trick an audience into believing that something false is real. In Facebook several of these hoaxes are popping up all over the place,” says the description of a group called “Facebook Hoax” on Facebook.

The group suggests to save bandwidth and unnecessary misunderstanding and “use your common sense before you forward a message” to friends on Facebook, with a tip to “copy some of the text from the message into the Google search field and take a look at the search result that the search engine finds for you” as a starting point.

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Obama Picks William Daley For Chief Of Staff Post – NPR

William Daley, President Obama's pick for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned powerbroker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama's retooled administration.Enlarge Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

William Daley, President Obama’s choice for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned power broker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama’s retooled administration.

Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

William Daley, President Obama’s choice for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned power broker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama’s retooled administration.

President Obama on Thursday appointed William M. Daley — a former Clinton administration official and part of the famed Chicago political family — as his new chief of staff, calling him an “experienced public servant.”

Daley, a sometimes ally, sometimes critic of the president, will step into what is traditionally the most influential advisory job in the White House — acting as the president’s day-to-day sounding board, gatekeeper and scheduler.

Daley “possesses a deep understanding of how jobs are created and how to grow our economy,” Obama said at the White House. “Few Americans can boast the breadth of experience that Bill Daley brings to this job.”

Stepping down from the post is Pete Rouse, who has held the job on an interim basis since Rahm Emanuel resigned three months ago as chief of staff to run for mayor of Chicago.

Rouse, who did not want the job permanently and recommended Daley as his replacement, will remain as a counselor to the president, an elevated position from his former job as senior adviser. Daley is expected to start in the next couple of weeks.

Daley is the youngest of the late Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley’s seven children. He is credited with helping his older brother Richard win their father’s old office and hold on to it for the past 22 years.

On the national stage, William Daley helped craft successful campaigns to elect President Clinton and was named commerce secretary under Clinton in 1997.

At the White House announcement on Thursday, Daley thanked the president, praising him for his “proven leadership.”

Daley, who is currently Midwest chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in an interview with The New York Times last year that the administration had “miscalculated” on health care and moved too far to the left. He has strong centrist credentials and joins the White House just as it finds itself in need of making more bipartisan compromises to get things done.

Word of Daley’s appointment brought praise from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has frequently been at odds with the administration.

“This is a strong appointment. Bill Daley is a man of stature and extraordinary experience in government, business, trade negotiations, and global affairs. He’s an accomplished manager and strong leader. We look forward to working with him to accelerate our recovery, grow the economy, create jobs, and tackle America’s global challenges,” Chamber of Commerce President Thomas J. Donohue said in a statement.

The new job will thrust Daley, 62, into the heart of national politics just as Obama adapts to a new reality in Washington. Republicans now control the House and are working to gut his signature health care law, as well as pushing for major cuts in spending.

For Obama, the move comes amid other major shifts in White House staffing — among them the impending departure of White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, who said on Wednesday he would step down by early February. Senior adviser David Axelrod will also be leaving soon, and both of Obama’s deputy chiefs of staff, Jim Messina and Mona Sutphen, are exiting soon. David Plouffe, a key member of Obama’s inner circle as his former presidential campaign manager, will be joining the senior staff of the White House on Monday.

But the chief of staff position is considered the most consuming job in the White House, helping shape nearly everything that the president deals with — how he spends his time, how he pursues his strategies on foreign and domestic policy, how he deals with Congress and the public.

When Obama launched his presidential campaign, the Daley family put aside its deep connections to Bill and Hillary Clinton and endorsed the young Illinois senator. Until then, Obama and the Daleys had operated in mostly separate spheres of Illinois politics. After Obama’s victory, Daley helped oversee the presidential transition.

Daley laid out his political ideology last year upon joining the board of Third Way, a moderate Democratic think tank.

“We must acknowledge that the left’s agenda has not won the support of a majority of Americans — and, based on that recognition, we must steer a more moderate course,” he said at the time.

NPR’s David Schaper and Mara Liasson contributed to this report, which also contains material from The Associated Press

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Rodriguez hangs on amid reports of firing – Tampabay.com

Times wiresIn Print: Wednesday, January 5, 2011

For a while Tuesday, ESPN was reporting that Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez was fired. The school insisted that was not the case.

For a while Tuesday, ESPN was reporting that Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez was fired. The school insisted that was not the case.

[Getty Images]

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Rich Rodriguez has his job for at least another day.

Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon and Rodriguez met Tuesday afternoon and will get together today to discuss the embattled football coach’s future, the Associated Press reported.

ESPN reported Tuesday that Rodriguez had been fired but later backtracked. The Detroit Free Press had reported that Michigan had decided to fire Rodriguez, 47, but also reported that the sides were meeting again today.

Wolverines defensive back James Rogers said a Tuesday night team meeting was postponed until today, pushing back a gathering Rodriguez traditionally has the night before classes resume each semester.

Michigan officials declined comment amid the various reports.

“The definitive voice on this matter is Dave Brandon,” associate athletic director Dave Ablauf said in a statement. “And he has not and will not speak publicly until a final decision has been made.”

Brandon said Saturday — a few hours after Michigan lost by a school-record 38 points in a bowl game — that he would have more to say during the latter half of this week. If Rodriguez is fired, Michigan would owe him $2.5 million to buy out the final three years of his contract.

Speculation about Rodriguez’s job security has followed him almost since his first day in Ann Arbor, and it has only increased. Rodriguez is 0-6 against rivals Ohio State and Michigan State.

BYU: Coach Bronco Mendenhall promoted quarterbacks coach Brandon Doman to offensive coordinator and graduate assistant Kelly Poppinga to outside linebackers coach.

MIAMI: Junior cornerback Brandon Harris will skip his senior season to enter the NFL draft.

PENN STATE: Quarterback Rob Bolden’s father, Robert Bolden Sr., said coach Joe Paterno denied his son’s request to transfer. It’s unclear what Bolden will do next, with spring classes starting Monday.

STANFORD: Coach Jim Harbaugh returned to a rally on campus after the best season in school history and offered no insight to what’s next: staying put, bolting to the NFL or going elsewhere. Harbaugh said “no” when asked if he had considered his options during the flight home, then briefly addressed a crowd of several hundred cheering fans. Monday night, Stanford earned a 40-12 Orange Bowl victory over Virginia Tech in Miami to finish a program-best 12-1.

ANNOUNCER FRANKLIN FIRED: ESPN fired announcer Ron Franklin, who had been with the network since 1987, four days after his remarks to a sideline reporter caused him to be suspended from calling the Fiesta Bowl on radio. According to the website SportsByBrooks.com, Franklin, 68, said to Jeannine Edwards during a production meeting before the broadcast of Friday’s Chick-fil-A Bowl, “Listen to me, sweet baby, let me tell you something.” When she protested, Franklin reportedly used an obscenity.

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Kimberly Wyatt Goes From Pussycat Dolls to ‘Live to Dance’ – About – News & Issues

Kimberly WyattThere’s a Pussycat Doll at the judges’ table on Paula Abdul’s new reality show Live To Dance.

Kimberly Wyatt, who left the Pussycat Dolls  in 2010,  will share her dance expertise on the CBS competition starting tonight.  But why did she quit the hit pop group in the first place?

Kimberly has said in interviews that  she had differences with the group offstage and she chose to follow her heart.  Apparently, her heart has led her to the Live to Dance judges’ table.   “I have been dancing since I was 7 years old,” she said at the opening of the show. “As a professional dancer I have a lot of advice to give, and I’m not afraid to give it.”

What do you think of Kimberly Wyatt’s debut on Live to Dance? Let us know in the comments!

Photo by Roberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

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Natalie Portman Talks Working with "Flexible" Boyfriend Benjamin Millepied – CBS News

Natalie Portman and Benjamin Millepied at the 67th Venice Film Festival on Sept. 1, 2010 in Venice. (Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

NEW YORK (CBS) Along with a lean and poised dancer’s body, Natalie Portman landed a new beau while filming the psychological thriller “Black Swan.”

The 29-year-old actress, who plays prima ballerina Nina Sayers in the Darren Aronofsky film, reportedly became romantically linked with the film’s choreographer Benjamin Millepied, 32, a New York City Ballet principal dancer, while training for the film.

PICTURES: Natalie PortmanPICTURES: Holiday Movies

Portman and Millepied, who also has a small role in the movie, are often photographed in Los Angeles and were first spotted together at a New Year’s Eve party in New York City’s TriBeCa neighborhood, according to the New York Post.

Portman, who is generating Oscar buzz and recently received a 2010 Independent Spirit Awards nomination for her role, spoke highly of Millepied’s “creativity and intelligence” to People magazine at the film’s premiere at New York’s Ziegfeld Theatre Tuesday.

“He knows how to change when things aren’t working well,” Portman said. “Sometimes I just couldn’t do something. No matter how hard I worked, I couldn’t do it. He would fix it to make it something that I could do.”

“He was really flexible. Working with film and working with actors rather than dancers, that flexibility was key,” she added.

“Black Swan” opens on Friday in New York and Los Angeles.

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