|
MR. ROGERS NEIGHBORHOOD RADIO LIVE THIS IS A LIVE GOSPEL STATION ENJOY.
| BLESS YOU AND YOUR FAMILY ENJOY |
|
|
God Bless Haiti with continued blessings.
TOP NEWS STORIES
LET US FORGIVE
THOSE WHO LACK THE ABILITY TO SEE ANOTHER DAY COMING. GOD
BLESS!

|
| Stop Poverty and Homelessness |

|
| No more needed to be said! |

|
| This is it for me day or night! |

|
| Help Me I Need Food and Shelter |

|
| Hunger! Why me? |

|
| You are not alone |

|
| Urban Poverty |

|
| This is no laughing matter! |

|
| The Wealthy Class This is no Joke! |

|
| Addiction can land you in the street |

|
| The truth has been posted for all to see |

|
| Crime Fighters of Poverty and homelessness |
Rogers Pest Control understands running a service business is not easy, but building
an effective web site can make a huge difference in increasing responsiveness and customer satisfaction.
Rogers Pest control the custodian of the
1blessingatatime.com web site was established in 1991, and we pride ourselves on providing customers with high-quality
products and personal service. Our office is conveniently located in the heart of suffolk county, 159a Washington Street,
Dorchester, MA 02121, but we will support all who come with good intentions and cause. Providing good customer service means taking the time to listen. We will work with you every step of the
way to make sure you receive the services you need without the fat. Our business is client-oriented, and we maintain strict
confidentiality. We hope you'll find the information you need on this
site and our affiliated sites helpful about our company and the products and services we provide. We look forward to
working with you to promote awareness of the needs of our communities.
Rogers Pest Control has set-up this site for the religous community @ n/c (It's
Free!) to promote there agenda and to give back to the community we love and hold dear. The site will allow
the food pantries and the church communities to get out there requests for support for the much needed goods and services
to make there programs more helpful and allow for greater supply to needed individuals that might be suffering from drug and
alcohol addition along with domestic violence and a wide range of other support needs to the community.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR PEOPLE TO TESTIFY AND PREACH AND RELEASE THOSE PRESSURES OF
THE EVERYDAY. I KNOW THAT THE WORKING POOR FEEL THE PAINS OF THE STRUGGLE TO CONTINUE THE EVERYDAY, WE WANT YOU
TO SHARE YOUR TESTIMONIAL TO HELP OTHERS CONTINUE BECAUSE WE CAN LIFT EACH OTHER UP BY SHARING THESE
EVERYDAYS . I SET THIS WEB SITE UP TO CHECK OURSELVES AND IDENTIFY THE NEEDS OF THE COMMUNITY THAT WE CALL OURS
AND TRY TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE BECAUSE IT STARTS WITH EACH ONE OF US. THIS WEB SITE IS SET-UP TO DO TESTIMONIALS IN AUDIO
MP3 FORMAT AND SEVERAL OTHERS AND ALSO YOU CAN SEND YOUR TESTIMONIAL IN THE FORM OF AN E-MAIL WE WANT TO HERE IT SO WE CAN
POST IT FOR THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY BECAUSE THE WORKING POOR AND HOMELESSNESS AND DRUG AND ALCOHOL ADDITION HAS NO SPECIFIC LOCATION.
THIS WEB SITE IS FREE TO POST!! Sincerely, Kenneth J. Rogers Giving Back why not you!
From CBS News:
A daughter of Malcolm X has been sentenced to five years of probation
for stealing the identity of an elderly family friend to run up big credit card bills. Prosecutors say Malikah Shabazz
(shuh-BAHZ') made $55,000 in illegal purchases. South Sudan Enters the World StageWith
the birth of a nation comes the birth of its embassy. Phil Moore/AFP/Getty ImagesWritten by Emily WaxIt's 9 p.m. and Sarah Chan's high heels are clacking at top speed across
this Woodley Park hotel lobby. She's rushing hundreds of her South Sudanese brethren into cabs so they won't miss President
Salva Kiir, who's speaking at a hotel a mile away.With
the birth of a nation comes the birth of its embassy, a powerful emblem of its legitimacy and an assertion of the country's
identity on the world stage. South Sudan will soon officially join Washington's 190 embassies, and Chan is one of 14 employees
working for the fledging mission, whose first big undertaking is Kiir's mid-December visit here as part of a U.S. government-hosted
South Sudan development conference.It was a grand,
two-day coming-out party for the world's newest nation, with a speech by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and meetings with
a lineup of elites from Washington's international, political, diplomatic and aid-and-trade communities.Kiir's location wasn't announced until the very last minute, a reminder
that not everyone was eager to welcome the new country, whose July 9, 2011, independence redrew the map of the world."Sisters, brothers -- hurry! Our president has arrived! We have to go!" Chan called out.Tonight, Chan commands attention. That's partly because she's the daughter
of Sudan People's Liberation Army commander Chan Dak, who was killed while fighting in the region's long struggle for independence.Newly emerged from a brutal 25-year conflict that killed an estimated
2 million people, South Sudan is still building its foreign diplomatic service. While some of the Washington mission's top
envoys are trained in diplomacy, others, like Chan, are homespun talent.What they lack in polish, they make up for in pathos. Remembering Etta
JamesFrom doo-wop to soul to gospel to blues, her 50-year
career was the mature sound track for several generations. Getty Images Music has lost another icon, the miraculously voiced Etta James, whose sultry soul, going back to the 1950s, provided a mature sound track for several
generations.The 73-year-old singer died Friday, Jan.
20, of complications from leukemia, her friend and manager, Lupe de Leon, told CNN. She would have turned 74 on Jan. 25. Her leukemia was declared incurable in early December, according to a report by the Associated Press. Court records in a probate
case indicated that she also suffered from dementia and kidney failure.Known for her incomparable ballad skills, James could also sing the heck out of the blues, not to mention gospel. The heyday of her music career was in the late 1950s and early 1960s, although after she was
thrust back into the spotlight by the 2008 biopic Cadillac Records, in which her character was played by Beyoncé
Knowles, James had begun to receive the recognition that was long overdue. (Her influence spanned the pop-and-rock spectrum.
Check out young Christina Aguilera singing "Sunday Kind of Love" in 1988.)While
the film, which depicted the rise of Chess Records, didn't put up spectacular numbers at the box office, James' music ("At
Last" in particular) certainly found a new audience and was rescued from the lucrative purgatory of overplay in commercials.
The disassociation of her mega-hit "At Last" from the many products it's been used to sell couldn't have hurt, either.And yet when Beyoncé sang "At Last" as Barack and Michelle
Obama danced at their inaugural ball in 2009, James stepped back into the spotlight for the wrong reason. It was probably
a poor choice of song, given its overuse in advertising, coupled with Desiree Rogers' infamous statement about Obama being
a "brand."James reacted by saying she couldn't "stand Beyoncé" for singing the song she'd been "singing
forever" on "big ol' President Day." This was so unfortunate (not to mention unfair to Beyoncé, who
needed James less than James needed her in terms of contemporary music promotion). It prompted James' son, Donto, to tell CNN a year later that his mother had been suffering from "drug-induced dementia" at the time. As the
singer's health faded, her offspring and her husband battled over control of her $1 million estate.Etta James was born Jamesetta Hawkins (now, there's a cool stage name: the reverse of a real name) in Los Angeles
in 1938 to a 14-year-old single mother, Dorothy Hawkins. James would later claim that her father was the infamous white pool
hustler Rudolph Wanderone, first known as "New York Fats" and later known as "Minnesota Fats" after
the character Jackie Gleason made famous in The Hustler.There is strong circumstantial evidence, not to mention an oral tradition, to back the unusual claim. James' mother
had told her that her father was a white boy, "one of those real slick white boys." The actor Willie Best later confirmed that it was Minnesota Fats. The billiards historian
R.A. Dyer, who has written two books about Wanderone, seems to support the idea. Dyer writes, "In photographs both [Wanderone and James] look startlingly alike with their wide faces,
their tiny tulip mouths, their small but piercing eyes."I don't know if I'd go so far as to co-sign "startlingly" alike, but the plausibility is there. If true,
it's another sad chapter in the long history of mixed-race children in America unacknowledged by their white fathers. But
at least young Jamesetta seemed to have inherited some swagger. But without a father, she surely struggled mightily with her
teenage mother until she was discovered by the great Johnny Otis.Unfortunately, she became close to Best, who gave her the lowdown about her father but who was also someone she
got to know through drug addiction. Heroin plagued her and so many musicians of those years (so memorably captured by Jamie
Foxx in Ray).But her addiction also led
her to be immortalized in what many critics have called one of the best books of 2010 (and best books of many years), the
exceptional memoir Life, by Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones. (James mentions her respect for Richards in her 1995 memoir The Rage to Survive: The Etta James Story.) Richards memorializes her lovingly in his book, and his statement will surely, along with her music, outlast the Beyoncé controversy:Another great singer and a girl after my own heart -- as well as my bride
in a rock-and-roll "marriage" -- is Etta James. She'd been making records from the early '50s, when she was a doo-wop
singer. She's expanded into every range since then ... Now, Etta had been a junkie. So we found reciprocation almost immediately
... It takes one look in the eye for one to know another. Incredibly strong, Etta, with a voice that could take you to hell
or take you to heaven. And we hung in a dressing room, and like all ex-junkies, we talked about the junk. And why did we do
this, the usual soul-searching. This culminated in a backstage wedding, which in show business terms is like, you get married
but you're not really married. You exchange vows and stuff, on the top of the backstage stairs. And she gave me a ring, I
gave her a ring, and actually that's where I decided her name's Etta Richards. She'll know what I mean. Obama Croons to Harlem Supporters'
DelightAt the Apollo to raise funds, he treated them
to a little Al Green -- and a pitch for four more years.President Obama (Getty Images)Who
knew President Obama could sing?He caught a sold-out
audience of Democratic supporters off guard last night at the historic Apollo Theater in New York's Harlem community when
he broke out into a bar of Al Green's "Let's Stay Together." Following opening acts by india.arie and Green, President
Obama began his remarks by crooning -- on-key -- "I'm so in love with you." As the gathering of more than 1,500
cheered with delight, he looked around and noted with a grin that the Apollo's beloved Sandman hadn't come with his hook to
shoo the president offstage.As if. Even if the beloved
tap dancer of Showtime at the Apollo had somehow been resurrected (he died in 2003) to let President Obama know his
time was up, he'd have had to tackle a phalanx of Secret Service agents and an audience that fell solidly in the president's
political base. The racially diverse gathering of uptown movers and shakers had come to see history: the first time a sitting
president has appeared at the Apollo Theater.Democratic
Reps. Charlie Rangel and Jerrold Nadler were among those on hand to enjoy the added treat of an impromptu presidential performance,
which followed a concert featuring india.arie's upbeat set ("There's Hope" and the new "6th Avenue"
were among her selections) and soul legend Green, who kept the crowd on its feet with "I'm Still in Love With You"
and "Let's Stay Together."
Heidi Klum And Seal Divorce Over This 'Deal Breaker,' What's
Yours? First Posted:
01/23/2012 2:07 pm Heidi Klum is leaving Seal, her husband of seven years, but
not for the reason many celebrities split. According to TMZ, individuals close to the couple say infidelity was not to blame, but rather Seal's temper: "Seal's inability to control his anger has become too much for Heidi to take, in no small
part because it's affecting their children." The two were raising four kids together: Leni, 7, from Klum's previous relationship,
Henry, 6, Johan, 5 and Lou, 2. The couple was known
for their public displays of affection, lavish Halloween parties and annual renewal of their marriage vows, so news of the separation was received with shock, the Telegraph reported. If it's true that Seal's temper caused the split, it sounds like anger,
for Klum, was a deal breaker that outweighed her spouse's good points. Dr. Bethany Marshall argued in her 2007 book, "Deal
Breakers," that recognizing what you can't take is a good thing. "Identifying your deal breaker ... holds out the possibility of helping you to understand where the relationship has gone wrong,
what needs to be done in order to make it better, and when to walk away because you're doing more work than him to fix it,"
she wrote. It's worth noting, however, that a person's deal breakers can change based on her experiences, at least according to dating expert April Beyer. Beyer told CBS News
in a 2009 interview: "If you are looking for, at 45, what you were looking for at 25, then you might have a problem."
She identified the most common deal breakers for men as a woman who who is extremely independent (interesting, considering
that TMZ also suggested Klum's entrepreneurial success might be a factor in the split), inflexible, or who doesn't take care of her appearance (probably not the issue here). Women's most common deal breakers, Beyer said, are a man being too frugal, lacking an overall plan, and cheating or lying. Drake At Sundance: Three Hours Late, Stars Party Hard At Performance First Posted: 01/22/2012 10:41 am There was a blizzard in Park City, Utah on Saturday night,
but Drake kept a celeb-packed party blazing hot -- once he was finally able to show up, anyway.It was an internet-favorite extravaganza at the Bing Bar, Microsoft's branded hangout at
the Sundance Film Festival, as the hip hop star headlined a buzzy event that featured the standup comedy of "Parks and
Rec" star Aziz Ansari as his opening act. Ansari
was the victim of a rowdy crowd whose pitch threatened to drown out his act; according to Twitter witnesses, as the crowd began to boo the normally beloved comedian, "Red Tails" star Cuba Gooding
Jr. rushed the stage to admonish the audience.Ansari's
response? "I'm not that upset, Cuba Gooding Jr."The crowd was kept waiting for Drake -- Ansari's publicist, Lewis Kay, tweeted, "Drake is to punctuality as Casey
Anthony is to good parenting" -- and about three hours later than scheduled, the "Degrassi" alum finally arrived.
He had a good excuse, too, telling the crowd, "I almost lost my life 6 times getting here. My flight was delayed 6 hrs. Some of the
curviest roads I've ever been on."Immediately,
his trademark style was critiqued. GQ senior editor Logan Hill tweeted, "Drake arrived at his dundanve party in middle of a near-blizzard and is NOT WEARING A
SWEATER"; Vulture also noted his lack of warm overshirt, but did add that he was wearing a parka.Stars such as "Breaking Bad's" Aaron Paul, Ansari's "Parks and Rec"
co-star Aubrey Plaza, "Man on a Ledge" star Anthony Mackie, and "SNL" alums Will Forte and Chris Kattan
were on hand to revel in the scene; check out the photos of the event below.
State Of The Union Guest List: Michelle Obama Continues A 30-Year
Tradition Of Extraordinary Americans First
Posted: 01/24/2012 1:23 pm When Sara Ferguson, an elementary school teacher from Pennsylvania, and Alicia B. Davis, a General Motors plant
manager from Michigan, join First Lady Michelle Obama in her viewing box during Tuesday's State of the Union Address, they
will be taking part in 30 years of presidential history.Every president since Ronald Reagan has looked up during his speech and into the rafters to give
a shout-out to special invited guests. These guests have included everyday Americans, war heroes, schoolteachers,
celebrities and small business owners."For nearly
three decades, extraordinary Americans who exemplify the themes and ideals laid out in the State of the Union Address have
been invited to join the First Lady in her viewing box," Kevin Lewis, a White House spokesman told The Huffington Post's
Black Voices via e-mail Tuesday morning. Tuesday
night, as President Barack Obama uses his speech to lay out his plan for moving America forward and beyond these tough economic times, he will be joined by Ferguson and Davis, as well as Bryan Ritterby, a lab technician from Grand Rapids, Mich., and Debbie Bosanek, the secretary of multi-billionaire Warren Buffet, who famously proposed "The Buffet Rule," which calls for the wealthiest Americans
to pay their fair share of taxes. Mark Kelly, the former astronaut and husband of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (R-Ariz.), is also among the president's invited guests. Ferguson, who teaches
literacy and math at Columbus Elementary in Parkside, Pa., is a third generation educator who vowed to continue teaching her
students as the school district faced bankruptcy earlier this year when the state made drastic cuts to education. "We are adults; we will make a way," she said, according to
Lewis, the White House spokesman. "The students don't have any contingency plan. They need to be educated, so we intend
to be on the job."Davis, who was recently appointed
plant manager at General Motors Orion Assembly and Pontiac Stamping, rose through the ranks of General Motors and was the
company's first African American woman to be appointed a general manager when she headed its Arlington assembly plant.Ferguson and Davis are the latest
in a string of African Americans to be honored with a special invitation to the White House during the speech, perhaps more
of an honor under the country's first black president. Last year's black guests included Ursula M. Burns, the CEO of Xerox
Corporation, tapped by the president to help lead a White House campaign on science, technology, engineering and math; and
Brandon Ford of Philadelphia, then a junior at West Philadelphia High School who lead a team of young engineers to the final
rounds of a national automotive engineering contest which pitted them against corporations, universities and other well-funded
organizations.The tradition of inviting everyday Americans to hear the president address the nation during
the State of the Union dates back to 1982 when President Reagan invited Lenny Skutnik, a Congressional Budget Office
employee. Skutnik dove into the icy Potomac River to rescue passengers of a downed airplane.Reagan invited Skutnik to sit with First Lady Nancy Reagan during his speech, and heralded him
for exemplifying "the spirit of American heroism at its finest."The presidential guests have since been called "Skutniks."In the early 1990s, President George H.W. Bush invited Alma Powell and
Brenda Schwarzkoph, whose husbands, Gens. Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkph, were heading up military operations in Iraq.President Bill Clinton invited baseball great Hank Aaron and now-sullied
home run legend Sammy Sosa, as well as Richard Dean, a Social Security Administration employee who searched through the rubble
of the Oklahoma City bombing to rescue survivors.Later,
President George W. Bush also invited war heroes and their families and people who helped thwart terror attacks against the
United States, including a pair of flight attendants who helped foil "shoe-bomber" Richard Reid.Obama has used his invitations to also highlight American heroism, perseverance and ingenuity
during these tough economic times. Last year's guests included Daniel Hernandez, Giffords' former congressional intern, who is
credited with helping to save her life after a shooting in her district. "The guests of the First Lady each have uniquely American stories to tell, and in many cases their
stories highlight not only the challenges we've overcome," Lewis said, "but some of the ways in which we can move
forward together as a nation and create an America built to last."
Racial Disparity In Presidential Pardons: What Can Be Done?
Remarks from CBS
Sunday Morning, A Must Read If You Are Human! Only
hope we find GOD again before it is too late!
 The following was written by Ben Stein and recited by him on CBS
Sunday Morning Commentary:
My confession: I am a Jew, and every single one of my ancestors was Jewish.
And it does not bother me even a little bit when people call those beautiful lit up, bejeweled trees, Christmas trees.
I don't feel threatened. I don't feel discriminated against. That's what they are, Christmas trees. It doesn't bother me a bit
when people say, 'Merry Christmas' to me. I don't think they are slighting me or getting ready to put me in a ghetto.
In fact, I kind of like it. It shows that we are all brothers and sisters celebrating this
happy time of year. It doesn't bother me at all that there is a manger scene on display at a key intersection near my
beach house in Malibu. If people want a creche, it's just as fine with me as is the Menorah a few hundred yards
away.
I don't like getting pushed around for being a Jew, and I don't think Christians like getting pushed around
for being Christians. I think people who believe in God are sick and tired of getting pushed around, period. I
have no idea where the concept came from, that America is an explicitly atheist country. I can't find it in
the Constitution and I don't like it being shoved down my throat.
Or maybe I can put it another way: where did
the idea come from that we should worship celebrities and we aren't allowed to worship God as we understand Him? I guess that's
a sign that I'm getting old, too. But there are a lot of us who are wondering where these celebrities came from and
where the America we knew went to. In light of the many jokes we send to one another for a laugh,
this is a little different: This is not intended to be a joke; it's not funny, it's intended to get you thinking.
Billy Graham's daughter was interviewed on the Early Show and Jane Clayson asked her 'How could God let something like this
happen?' (regarding Hurricane Katrina). Anne Graham gave an extremely profound and insightful response. She said, 'I believe
God is deeply saddened by this, just as we are, but for years we've been telling God to get out of our schools, to get out
of our government and to get out of our lives. And being the gentleman He is, I believe He has calmly backed out.
How can we expect God to give us His blessing and His protection if we demand He leave us alone?'
In light of recent
events...terrorists attack, school shootings, etc., I think it started when Madeleine Murray O'Hare (she was murdered, her
body found a few years ago) complained she didn't want prayer in our schools, and we said 'OK'. Then someone said you better not read the Bible in school.
The Bible says 'Thou shalt not kill', 'Thou shalt not steal,' and 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' And we said 'OK'.
Then Dr. Benjamin Spock said we shouldn't spank our children when they misbehave, because their little personalities would
be warped and we might damage their self-esteem. We said an expert should know what he's talking about. And we
said 'okay'. (Dr. Spock's son committed suicide.)
Now we're asking ourselves why our children have no conscience,
why they don't know right from wrong, and why it doesn't bother them to kill strangers, their classmates, and themselves.
Probably, if we think about it long and hard enough, we can figure it out. I think it has a great deal to do with 'WE
REAP WHAT WE SOW.'
Funny how simple it is for people to trash God and then wonder why the world's going to hell.
Funny how we believe what the newspapers say, but question what the Bible says. Funny how you can send 'jokes' through
e-mail and they spread like wildfire, but when you start sending messages regarding the Lord, people think twice about sharing.
Funny how lewd, crude, vulgar and obscene articles pass freely through cyberspace, but public discussion of God is suppressed
in the school and workplace.
Are you laughing yet? Funny
how when you forward this message, you will not send it to many on your address list because you're not sure what they believe,
or what they will think of you for sending it. Funny how we can be more worried about what other people think of us than what God thinks of us.
Pass it on if you think it has merit. If not,
then just discard it . . . no one will know you did. But, if you discard this thought process, don't sit back and complain
about what bad shape the world is in.
My best regards, honestly and respectfully, Ben Stein
By Boyce Watkins, PhD on Nov 29th 2010 2:02PM Filed under: News Cedric Miller is known nationally as "the Facebook Pastor," after
telling his congregation to ban Facebook in order to save their marriages. Miller went as far as telling his church leaders
that if they didn't give up their Facebook accounts, he would remove them from their posts. It turned out that
Pastor Miller may have had his own reasons for fearing Facebook. The popular social-networking site may have been linked to
the affair the pastor had involving his male assistant and his wife. Whether it was swinging, bisexual activity or something else, most of us know that a preacher shouldn't be "getting
freaky" at bible study (which is where much of the sex allegedly took place, according to court testimony). Pastor Miller took his humiliation like a man. In a public display of what seemed to be sincere contrition, the pastor told
his church that he would step down in response to his being exposed for living a double life. The problem was that his reaction
was only temporary: Rather than giving up his post permanently, the pastor plans to leave for just a little while and return
in 90 days. In other words, it seems that he plans on stepping down long enough for the controversy to cool itself off, and
then it may be back to business as usual. Miller, who is the pastor at the Living Word Christian Fellowship
Church in Neptune Township, N.J., received a vote of confidence as the church's spiritual leader before making his
decision public. He also said that he came to his conclusion after "prayer and thoughtful consideration" by the
members of the board, according to the church's spokesperson. Miller must be given credit for attempting to take
a stand against something that does play a role in undermining the sanctity of the marital bond in quite a few families across
America. There is nothing wrong with a person learning from his mistakes and using that as credibility when admonishing the
actions of others. It would have been better had Miler "fessed up" from the beginning, rather than trying to appear
holier than thou. The challenge for Pastor Miller, however, is that he can't stop people from using Facebook. Facebook,
and sites like it, are never going to go away. The only thing we can do is learn to live in a world where human beings are
interconnected. Telling people to stop using Facebook and other sites is like telling men to stop going to work because women
are going to be there. As for his own personal choices, I openly wonder if Pastor Miller might be perceived to
be a hypocrite for having a zero-tolerance policy toward members of his church who possess flaws that are not nearly as dramatic
as his own. I also fear for the black community, which puts a tremendous amount of faith in quite a few spiritual leaders
whose spirits are not nearly as pure as we are led to believe. Rather than being told what to believe by our so-called spiritual
leaders, perhaps it makes sense for us to simply think for ourselves.
Mr. Rogers Personal Opinion; I think the pastor is gay and his wife is covering for him it happens all the time and will come out eventually .
I am so tired of people hiding behind the collar and doing dispicable acts daily luring people and making them feel guilty
and stripping them of all they have. I am not condeming the clergy but some of these parasites should not
be allowed to continue. Sincerely, Mr. Rogers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Saturday
|
24hrs
|
|
Sunday
|
Emergency Only
|
|
|
By joining our mailing list, you will be the first to know about:
- Breaking news about our business
- Helpful tips
- Exclusive special offers
To join, type your name and email address below and then click the Go button:
|
|
First Posted: 12/ 9/11 06:56 PM ET Updated: 12/ 9/11 07:37 PM ET