Thursday, October 17, 2013

For Medal of Honor recipient, award is a long time coming (CNN)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334259338?client_source=feed&format=rss
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U.K. TV Indie Giants Merge to Create Regional Powerhouse



YouTube


"Splash" is a Twofour Broadcast production.



LONDON – Plymouth-based indie production giant Twofour is merging with former BBC One controller Lorraine Heggessey and Huw Eurig Davies' year-old production venture Boom Pictures in Cardiff.



The merger will create what the duo claim will be a "major new nations and regions player" in indie media production.


The deal sees Twofour Group's global business -- comprising Twofour Broadcast, Twofour Rights and Twofour Digital -- joining Boom Pictures, with its senior executives taking key roles in the enlarged Boom Pictures group.


This merger fuels the growth of Boom Pictures in line with plans set out by co-founders Heggessey and Davies when they launched the group in July 2012.


Twofour greatly expands Boom's network programming, moving the company into key genres such as entertainment and features. The deal also brings in international distribution for output with Twofour Rights, and a growing production presence in the U.S. In addition, Twofour's thriving digital arm serves blue chip brand clients and a growing hub in Abu Dhabi.


The merger has been supported by U.K. private equity firm LDC, which invested in the creation and development of Boom Pictures in 2012.


The merging of the two businesses puts Boom Pictures group firmly among the top 10 U.K. indie production outfits.


The freshly merged entity will operate from Boom's Cardiff headquarters and Twofour's headquarters in Plymouth.


Heggessey, executive chair and co-founder of Boom Pictures, said: "We're on an exciting journey and it's the right time for us to join up with such an excellent creative and executive team who have already built a hugely successful company. Boom and Twofour fit together perfectly and have a similar positive culture, firmly rooted in the nations and regions."


Twofour Group founder and CEO Charles Wace said: "In looking at the future of Twofour's business, the attraction was the backing of LDC, one of the U.K.'s leading and most experienced private equity firms, combined with Lorraine's leadership and vision. This ambitious partnership is the ideal platform to help take Twofour to the next stage in its life."


Davies, deputy chair and co-founder of Boom Pictures added: "The strategic value of this deal, at this stage in our development, is that it fulfills several key business growth ambitions. It gives us real scale, a base from which to grow in the U.S. and brings distribution in-house so we can benefit from the rights that come from our creativity."


Twofour Broadcast has produced over 200 hours of original broadcast programming across all major U.K. broadcasters with shows such as ITV's hit Splash! and the forthcoming The Alpine Games (w/t) for Channel 4.


It also brings successful factual entertainment titles including Alex Polizzi's The Hotel Inspector and The Fixer as well as fixed-rig factual hit Educating Yorkshire.


The inclusion of Twofour Digital with its blue chip clients including DuPont/Ogilvy Entertainment and the award-winning Horizons series on BBC Global News, will build on Boom Pictures' digital and branded content expertise.


Boom group currently boasts award-winning work with major brands through the Boomerang label, which produces GT Academy for Nissan and Playstation and The Clare Balding Show for U.K. telecom giant TV venture BT Sport.


Twofour's postproduction banners in Plymouth will complement Boom Pictures' own offering through Cardiff-based Gorilla and The Joint in Soho, London, expanding the group's ability to keep its post-production in-house.


The deal also gives Boom Pictures a greater international footprint and global reach.


Twofour Rights, which launched in 2012, becomes the group's in-house distribution arm, Twofour Broadcast's Los Angeles office gives Boom Pictures a base in the U.S. from which to build on its relationships with American networks and cable channels.


Twofour Digital's Abu Dhabi office adds a presence in the growing Middle East market.


The Twofour labels will retain their names and branding, with the senior management continuing in their current roles or taking on Boom Pictures Group roles.


The management changes will include Wace stepping back from his role as CEO of Twofour Group "to pursue other interests," but he will remain involved through his new roles on the Boom Pictures board as nonexecutive chairman of Twofour and a nonexecutive director of Boom Pictures.


Melanie Leach will continue in her role as managing director of Twofour Broadcast, and will become an exec director of Boom Pictures with a seat on the board.


Leach said: "Twofour's slate has continued to strengthen under the current management team and we're excited to work alongside Lorraine and Huw as we build what we hope will become one of the U.K.'s most admired media groups."


Boom Pictures launched with a strategy "to support the organic growth of the companies within the group, to attract leading creative talent, to back startups, and to acquire companies that extend the group's portfolio and capabilities."


The first Boom deal was with Graham Linehan and producer Richard Boden for comedy label Delightful Industries, and this was followed in January 2013 by the backing of former ITV drama heads Laura Mackie and Sally Haynes' new company Mainstreet Pictures.


Boom Pictures companies also include Boom Pictures Cymru, which produces over 400 hours of Welsh language programming for S4C, Boomerang, Oxford Scientific Films and Indus Films.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/international/~3/iimLyyX2cO4/story01.htm
Category: randall cobb   Jonas Brothers   Eiza Gonzalez   houston texans   George Duke  

Budget deal thwarts Sarah Palin’s secret plan to impeach Pres. Obama (Americablog)

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Category: Common App   miami dolphins   eric decker   Brant Daugherty   denver post  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

What Does Giuliana Rancic Think About Having Twins?



By Victoria Moorhouse

A lover of Mad Men, #ManicureMondays, statement shoes, and anything Boy Meets World.




Is the #Twinning idea a winner for Giuliana Rancic? Having a baby times three (baby Duke is still a little one, you know!) seems like a lot to handle, but Giuliana isn’t totally opposed to the idea of having two little babes arrive at once. Would it be work? Most definitely. But the always cheery celeb who just celebrated her son’s 1st birthday explains why it’d be OK.


giuliana-rancic-breast-cancer


OK! News: How Will Giuliana and Bill Celebrate Baby Duke’s First Birthday?


Watch: Giuliana and Bill’s Cutest Family Moments 


The celeb recently opened up to Your Tango about parenting, love, and how her husband Bill helped her through her battle with breast cancer. When asked if she’d “freak out” if she had twins, she responded, “I mean … yeah. I used to always want twins and then I had one and went, ‘Whoa, that was hard.’ I don’t know how people with twins do it, but they find a way. To me, the more the merrier. So if we heard we were having twins, we’d high-five and then go, ‘Oh crap. What are we going to do now?’”


Click here to read the rest of the report from Your Tango!


Do you watch Giuliana and Bill’s show? Tweet @OKMagazine and leave a comment below! 


More From Our Friends at Your Tango:


Must-Read Celebrity Sex Quotes


5 Moves Men Can Learn From Christian Grey  


Sandra Bullock: Louis Wanted ‘Man Time’ With His Friend George 



Source: http://okmagazine.com/get-scoop/what-does-giuliana-rancic-think-about-having-twins/
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Good Cop, Bad Cop Routine Gets A Result For Obama And Reid





President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., shared the same goals but had notable stylistic differences in their approaches to the fiscal fight.



Carolyn Kaster/AP


President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., shared the same goals but had notable stylistic differences in their approaches to the fiscal fight.


Carolyn Kaster/AP


Since the start of the fiscal standoff that led to a government shutdown and a flirtation with a historic debt default, Democrats have been led by the tag team of President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.


At times, their tactics resembled the good cop, bad cop routine where one officer offers the suspect a cup of coffee and the other smacks it from the suspect's lips. Reid, of course, is the smacker.


Obama played the good cop, inviting all 232 members of the House Republican Conference to the White House so they could just sit down and reason together. (GOP leadership ended up paring that list way back to just the leaders.)


And Obama hasn't publicly gone to great lengths to undermine Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. About the roughest thing Obama has said about Boehner and House Republicans overall is that they are being overly influenced by "extremists" in the conference.


Reid, by contrast, has very publicly — and repeatedly — branded the House GOP's Tea Party wing as "anarchists." He's also called them "wacky" and "weird." Reid later conceded to CNN's Dana Bash that perhaps he overstepped with "weird." But he would keep throwing around the term anarchists.


The Nevada Democrat, who will never be accused of subtlety, has also repeatedly thrown Boehner under the bus. First, he alleged that Boehner had reneged on a deal for legislation to keep the government open without any attached policy riders.


Then Reid's office leaked emails that arguably made Boehner look hypocritical. The emails between his office and the speaker's office seemed to show that Boehner worked behind the scenes to ensure that members of Congress and their staffs got an employer contribution to health care — a provision that the GOP conference later opposed and made an issue in the fiscal fight.


None of this is to suggest that Obama and Reid, while stylistically different, have varied on ultimate goals. Indeed, most observers have noted how much Democrats, who once were known for disunity, have stuck together in recent weeks.


"The entire Democratic Party said 'enough is enough,' " said William Galston, a scholar with the center-left Brookings Institution who was a Clinton White House policy adviser. "The White House and the congressional Democrats decided pretty early on not to give any appreciable ground, and they were fortified" by the sense that the Tea Party strategy would only continue if Democrats made significant concessions as they had in past fiscal fights.


In the battles surrounding the fiscal cliff in 2012 and the debt ceiling in 2011, it was Vice President Biden, not Reid, who played a central role in getting deals done.


But Biden was viewed by many Democrats, including Reid, as having given away too much in the fiscal cliff deal — especially by agreeing to make permanent the Bush tax cuts for more high-income taxpayers than Obama had originally proposed.


This time it was Reid, not Biden, at the table in the end. And he appeared to get results Wednesday. Reid and Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, announced a bipartisan agreement to end — for now at least — the shutdown and debt ceiling impasse. House Republicans got little of what they demanded when the fight started.


Asked what Reid's contribution to the Obama-Reid tandem was, Rodell Mollineau, president of American Bridge political action committee and a former senior aide to Reid, told me: "Sen. Reid is a tactician. He is a master of the Senate and its workings. ...


"Also, Sen. Reid can be very blunt, both in the way he speaks and the way he does his work," Mollineau said. "And while that might not always come out publicly as him being a great orator, I think it makes him a very effective legislator and I think there are many people in the Senate who appreciate his bluntness." Reid is a legislative workhorse who gets results like the economic stimulus and the Affordable Care Act.


For his part, Obama offered the more diplomatic approach, Mollineau said.


"And while sometimes that can be frustrating to Democratic insiders, congressmen, senators ... I think it has served the president well in certain cases because he's been able to make a case to the American people that he's the one being reasonable, he's the one being rational."


And for those frustrated Democrats who wanted to see more belligerence from their side, there was always Reid.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/10/16/235407944/good-cop-bad-cop-routine-gets-a-result-for-obama-and-reid?ft=1&f=1006
Category: Malala Yousafzai   NASA   seahawks   big brother   nbc  

Curiosity confirms origins of Martian meteorites

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Earth's most eminent emissary to Mars has just proven that those rare Martian visitors that sometimes drop in on Earth -- a.k.a. Martian meteorites -- really are from the Red Planet. A key new measurement of Mars' atmosphere by NASA's Curiosity rover provides the most definitive evidence yet of the origins of Mars meteorites while at the same time providing a way to rule out Martian origins of other meteorites.Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/10/131016134028.htm
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Michael Fassbender Talks About His Longest Relationship With GQ!


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Michael Fassbender looks like a God among insects on the cover of GQ, and never let anyone tell you differently!


We all know Fassy has a huge, long…helmet whenever he plays Magneto (always wear protection), but the metal bending actor (who can manipulate our hard objects) talked about the longest relationship he's had:




“I think the longest relationship that I’ve been in was two years. I started doing this when I was 17, so I guess in my dating, adult life, that kind of covers it.”



Wow, Michael might be in 12 Years a Slave, but he's only been 2 years a boyfriend tops! What a Shame!


We hope one day Michael share the rest of his days of future past with the love of his life! He's so mutantly charming!


[Image via Peggy Sirota/GQ.]



Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,


Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-15-michael-fassbender-long-relationship-ever-had-gq
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Libyan Pleads Not Guilty To Terrorism Charges


NEW YORK (AP) — A Libyan charged in the deadly 1998 al-Qaida bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa pleaded not guilty Tuesday to terrorism charges in a brief proceeding that followed a familiar script in a courthouse that has hosted numerous terrorism cases in the past two decades.


A frail looking Abu Anas al-Libi entered the plea in a heavily guarded federal courtroom in Manhattan 10 days after he was captured during an Oct. 5 military raid in Libya. The 49-year-old al-Libi was interrogated aboard a U.S. Navy warship for a week before being brought to New York on Saturday.


Al-Libi, who has a thick gray beard, kept his hands folded on his lap as the judge read the charges. His court-appointed federal defender, David Patton, entered the plea on his behalf.


Al-Libi was handcuffed and led out of court after the judge ordered him detained as a flight risk. Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas Lewin had requested detention, calling al-Libi a "clear danger."


Early in the proceeding, Judge Lewis A. Kaplan asked the defendant how he wanted to be addressed in court. Al-Libi, who spoke in Arabic and listened to the proceeding with help from a translator, said he preferred to be known as Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai.


There was no reference in court to al-Libi's longstanding health issues, except for a request that the judge sign a medical order, which Kaplan said he had already done. Al-Libi had signed an affidavit to say he could not afford to hire a lawyer.


Al-Libi is charged in a Manhattan indictment in bombings that killed 224 people, including a dozen Americans. Known as one of al-Qaida's early computer experts, he is accused of helping plan and conduct surveillance for the bombings of U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Al-Libi is believed to have used an early-generation Apple computer to assemble surveillance photographs in Kenya.


Al-Libi's family and former associates have denied he was ever a member of al-Qaida and said he has lived an ordinary life since coming home in 2011.


"The presumption of innocence is not a small technicality here," Patton said in email sent after the hearing. "In a 150-page indictment, Mr. al-Ruqai is mentioned in a mere three paragraphs relating to conduct in 1993 and 1994 and nothing since. The allegation is that he met with al-Qaida members about a possible bombing of the American embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, that ended up taking place five years later in 1998. There is no allegation that he had any connection to al-Qaida after 1994, and he is eager to move forward with the legal process in this case."


Al-Libi's prosecution in the United States continues a policy of bringing suspected al-Qaida sympathizers and operatives to civilian courts rather than military tribunals.


The civilian court prosecutions have continued before and after President Barack Obama's administration was forced to reverse its plans to prosecute admitted 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and several others in federal court in Manhattan and instead bring them before military tribunals.


Al-Libi has been on the FBI's most wanted terrorists list since it was introduced shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. A reward of $5 million was offered for his capture.


He is the sixth man to appear in a Manhattan court to face charges in the embassy bombing attacks. The other five are serving life sentences.


___


Associated Press writer Eileen Sullivan in Washington contributed to this report.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234569322&ft=1&f=
Tags: act   liberace   aaron hernandez   taylor swift   Mackenzie Rosman  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Five best Tina Fey-Amy Poehler moments

Celebs











3 hours ago

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler go together like chocolate and peanut butter. And they'll be making more sweet moments together — on Tuesday, it was announced that they'll be co-hosting the Golden Globe Awards both in 2014 and 2015.

What can viewers expect from the comedic chemistry of the two ex-"Saturday Night Live" pals? These classic Fey-Poehler moments might give a few hints.

Golden girls at the 2013 Globes
Hosts Fey and Poehler managed to get in some deft jibes without leaving the audience feeling like they'd turned into the "Mean Girls" from Fey's 2005 movie. They even poked fun at the event's sponsor, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, with Poehler pretending to confuse it with HPV, saying, "When left untreated, HFPA can lead to cervical cancer."

Channeling their inner Sarah Palin and Hillary Clinton on 'SNL'
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin didn't actually say, "I can see Russia from my house," (she said: "you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska"), but Fey delivered that "SNL" line so perfectly in an iconic 2008 skit that some are actually confused about who said what. Poehler was equally memorable as Sen. Hillary Clinton, eventually blowing up at the very idea that Palin was closer to the White House than she was.

Behind the Weekend Update desk
In 2004, Fey and Poehler became the first all-female team to anchor fake newscast Weekend Update on "SNL." (On their first broadcast, Horatio Sanz as Elton John referred to Poehler as "the other girl.") They fell into the swing of things just as anyone would expect from two old friends, whether it was one-upping each other's Ray Charles impression or "interviewing" old clips of actor Robert Blake after his 2005 acquittal on murder charges. ("He's free, but he's still mad!" cracked Poehler.)

IMAGE: Weekend Update

NBC

Fey and Poehler made history as the first all-female anchor team on Weekend Update.

Hangin' at the Jersey Floor
Jimmy Fallon's show has a mysterious elevator with a button labeled "Jersey Floor" that turns elevator occupants into tanned-and-moussed "Jersey Shore" residents. And when Fey and Poehler visited in 2011, the elevator transformed them as well, hiking their hair and their hemlines and turning them into nightclub stalkers of Fallon and crew. "I wanna make babies with you!" a mega-made-up Fey shouts at Fallon on the dance floor. The ensuing bleep-filled fight was all too real for anyone who ever watched Snooki and crew.

Crying with laughter at 'Baby Mama'
In 2008, Fey and Poehler co-starred in the big-screen comedy "Baby Mama," with Poehler playing an obnoxious surrogate mother carrying a child for Fey's character. Poehler is stumped by Fey's child-proofed toilet, appalled by her healthy dietary suggestions, and horrified as labor approaches. They feud, they fight, but in the end, they end up friends, just as the actors are. 

What's your favorite Fey-Poehler moment? Vote in our poll.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/palin-photobombs-tina-fey-amy-poehler-keep-making-classic-comedy-8C11397541
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Dozens Die In Philippines After Powerful Earthquake





People inspect damage to the Church of San Pedro in the town Loboc, Bohol, after a powerful earthquake struck the region early on Oct. 15, 2013. The earthquake hit near one of the Philippines key tourist hubs, the United States Geological Survey reported.



Robert Michael Poole/AFP/Getty Images


People inspect damage to the Church of San Pedro in the town Loboc, Bohol, after a powerful earthquake struck the region early on Oct. 15, 2013. The earthquake hit near one of the Philippines key tourist hubs, the United States Geological Survey reported.


Robert Michael Poole/AFP/Getty Images


A powerful earthquake has left dozens of people dead in the Philippines. The quake, whose magnitude was first reported as 7.2 and then downgraded to 7.1, struck near the city of Catigbian in the inland area of Bohol, one of the central Visayas Islands.


At least 93 people have been reported dead, and the casualty count is likely to grow as rescue and recovery teams reach areas that were cut off by rubble and other obstructions.


The earthquake struck just after 8 a.m. local time Tuesday, a national holiday observing the Muslim Eid al-Adha festival. At least 10 quakes with a magnitude of 5 or higher were detected in the hours that followed, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.


"Low-rise buildings collapsed on at least two islands and historic churches cracked and crumbled during the quake," Reuters reports, "which sparked panic, cut power and transport links and forced hospitals to evacuate patients."


The quake also damaged tourist attractions, such as the famed Chocolate Hills of Bohol. A photo of the damage to one hill that was posted to Twitter by tourist Robert Michael Poole.


Churches that have stood for hundreds of years also suffered damage, including the 16th-century Basilica of the Holy Child in Cebu, the AP reports.


The death toll was worsened by at least two stampedes of panicked people who had gathered to receive payments in a social welfare program for families with young children; a government agency says a four-year-old child died in one of the incidents, and that at least 35 people were injured.


The U.S. Geological Survey gives us some background on the area's tectonics:




"The Philippine Islands straddle a region of complex tectonics at the intersection of three major tectonic plates (the Philippine Sea, Sunda and Eurasia plates). As such, the islands are familiar with large and damaging earthquakes, and the region within 500 km of the October 15 earthquake has hosted 19 events of M6 or greater, a dozen of which have been shallow (0-70 km). One of these, a M 6.8 earthquake 70 km to the east of the October 15, 2013 event in 1990, caused several casualties."







Patients are treated at a temporary shelter following a 7.1-magnitude quake that struck near Cebu, in the Philippines, Tuesday. Many churches and hospitals were damaged by the quake.



Jay Directo/AFP/Getty Images


Patients are treated at a temporary shelter following a 7.1-magnitude quake that struck near Cebu, in the Philippines, Tuesday. Many churches and hospitals were damaged by the quake.


Jay Directo/AFP/Getty Images



Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/15/234650489/dozens-die-in-philippines-after-powerful-earthquake?ft=1&f=
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Madonna Banned From Theater After Texting Incessantly During “12 Years A Slave” Film



1x1.trans Madonna Banned From Theater After Texting Incessantly During 12 Years A Slave Film


Madonna has been banned from watching movies at the Alama Drafthouse movie theater chain after texting on her phone during the screening of “12 Years A Slave”.


The singer annoyed other attendees that showed up to see the Steve McQueen biopic and called one woman an “enslaver” for daring to call her on it.



Was Madonna not entertained by the movie?


Film critic Charles Taylor revealed on Facebook that one attendee overheard a blonde woman in black lace gloves snap at the woman who tapped her on the shoulder while she texted, saying, “It’s for business… ENSLAVER!”


The woman was later revealed to be Madonna and she was seen standing at the side of the theater when the movie was over.


Alamo CEO Tim League wrote on Twitter, “Until she apologizes to movie fans, Madonna is banned from watching movies.”


The cinema chain has a zero tolerance policy about phone use during their screenings, with their website proclaiming, “We aren’t afraid to kick anyone rude enough to start texting their friends during a show right out of the theater.”



One eyewitness wasn’t sure what to make of the incident, but stated, “Some people are shocked by this, because Madonna was visibly tearing up, everybody there thought that she was very moved by it.”


Click thumbnails for larger pictures



Images: wenn.com


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/0ykEcKU754M/
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Best Buy promises $100 trade-in credit for new iPhone buyers

Customers who trade in a smartphone can score at least $100 in credit good toward the purchase of an iPhone 5S or 5C.


The iPhone 5S and 5C.

The iPhone 5S and 5C.


(Credit: CNET)

Smartphone owners willing to give up their current phone for a new iPhone can save a few dollars through Best Buy's latest trade-in program.


Starting October 13 and ending October 19, you can trade in any working smartphone for a $100 credit. If the phone is judged to be worth more than $100, Best Buy will dole out the remaining amount through a gift card. Your current smartphone must be able to power on and be free from water damage and cracks in the screen, according to Best Buy.


You can then apply that credit toward the purchase of an iPhone 5S or 5C, giving the 16GB 5S a price of $99 and making the 5C free. If your desired 5S or 5C model isn't available, Best Buy will hand out a raincheck that you can apply when it's back in stock.


The deal is good for AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon subscribers who are eligible for an upgrade and carries with it the usual two-year contract. Participating Best Buy Mobile specialty stores wil start the 5C deal on October 11. But the guaranteed $100 trade-in offer for both phones officially begins October 13 and will be available at all 1,400 Best Buy and Best Buy Mobile stores in the US.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57607073-37/best-buy-promises-$100-trade-in-credit-for-new-iphone-buyers/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple
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Charlie Hunnam Gives Up Christian Grey Role! Who's Next?

The search is on -- again! -- for Christian Grey.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/charlie-hunnam-drops-out-50-shades-grey-casting-choices-trending-twitter/1-a-549577?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acharlie-hunnam-drops-out-50-shades-grey-casting-choices-trending-twitter-549577
Category: Why Did The Government Shut Down   The Crazy Ones   trent richardson   Whodunnit   teresa giudice  

Monday, October 14, 2013

Lac-Mégantic Blast Leaves Impact On Town, Rail Industry





Crews are scrambling to clean up toxic contamination in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, and many locals have been forced out of their homes and businesses for at least a year.



Brian Mann/NCPR


Crews are scrambling to clean up toxic contamination in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, and many locals have been forced out of their homes and businesses for at least a year.


Brian Mann/NCPR


Three months ago, a train carrying American crude oil derailed and exploded in the heart of Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, killing 47 people.


Local leaders now say recovering from the disaster will take much more time, effort, and money than they expected.


Industry experts say the accident could change the way oil and other dangerous chemicals are transported on trains in North America.


An Empty Village


"It's been left for weeks, everybody quit so fast," says Robert Mercier, head of Lac-Mégantic's environment department, as he walks down his town's main street.


He grew up here. In a normal year, he says, the street cafes and tourist shops would have been busy with visitors who come to see the colorful fall leaves. Now, it's a ghost town.


People fled in the early morning of July 6 as massive fireballs rolled into the sky. Mercier says he was sleeping in an apartment nearby when the first tank car erupted in flames.





People fled Lac-Mégantic early the morning of July 6 as massive fireballs rolled into the sky.



Quebec Provincial Police


People fled Lac-Mégantic early the morning of July 6 as massive fireballs rolled into the sky.


Quebec Provincial Police


"We just didn't know what it was — volcano, meteorite, what is that? Once you don't know, you're just afraid. You just run. You run," he says.


A few weeks ago, locals loaded computers, mementos, and furniture onto U-Haul trucks before the city was closed off for at least a year.


Contaminated


Parts of the city were flattened by the blast. Underneath the remaining buildings, cleanup crews have discovered that much of Lac-Mégantic's downtown is saturated with heavy metals — lead, arsenic, copper — and that thick crude oil. Three months after the explosion, they are still pumping spilled crude oil and chemicals from underneath what used to be a gorgeous lakefront street.


In his office, Mercier spreads out a map on his desk, showing the vast scope of the cleanup.


"So, the petroleum mostly flew on the ground, on this side to the lake. So, the lake was burning for a big part," he says. "That was something to see, yeah? You can see here, all the landscape in this area is destroyed ... all these houses are gone now. Nothing there, nothing there."


A New Downtown


A fleet of huge trucks and backhoes is laying the foundation for an entirely new downtown. Officials have decided that a new business district is needed to replace what's been destroyed or contaminated.


About $116 million has been pledged for that effort, but no one's sure what the final price tag will be. The province of Quebec and Canada's national government are feuding over how much to spend and who should pay.


Caught up in this turmoil are people like Guy Boulet, who owns a furniture store just outside the contaminated zone. His sister, Marie-France, died in the fire-storm.





Guy Boulet owns a shop in Lac-Mégantic. His sister, Marie-France, died in the explosion.



Brian Mann/NCPR


Guy Boulet owns a shop in Lac-Mégantic. His sister, Marie-France, died in the explosion.


Brian Mann/NCPR


Weeks later, Boulet sits behind the counter in his shop. He looks exhausted. Marie-France's remains have never been recovered from the wreckage.


After a long day spent making deliveries, trying to get his life back to normal, his family is finally preparing for his sister's remembrance.


"It's a simple ceremony right at the church," he says. "She was a really good person."


Boulet says people here are resigned to the idea that the healing process will take a long, long time.


"We have to be really patient. Because nobody knows exactly how long it will be. We hope nobody forgets, you know, because we will need help. We need help," he says.


Warning Signs


Adding to the pain and frustration, a growing number of experts and government officials in the U.S. and Canada say that there were plenty of warning signs long before disaster struck.


Robert Mercier, Lac-Mégantic's environment officer, says his office tried to raise questions about the Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway and its growing shipments of hazardous oils and chemicals.


"We were very worried about the conditions of the rail — we were talking about that many times," Mercier says. "It was a great concern about the train and the condition of the rail and all these tanks that were passing every day."


A Sub-par Freight Car


Since July, investigators in the U.S. and Canada have focused on a wide range of red flags — from the condition of the tracks, to the staffing level of these big industrial trains, to new evidence that the hazardous chemicals aboard the Lac-Mégantic train were mislabeled.





The workhorse of the rail industry, a DOT 111A tank car sits on the outskirts of Lac-Mégantic's destroyed downtown.



Brian Mann/NCPR


The workhorse of the rail industry, a DOT 111A tank car sits on the outskirts of Lac-Mégantic's destroyed downtown.


Brian Mann/NCPR


But much of the scrutiny has fallen on the type of freight car that erupted that day — the big, sausage-shaped tank car known in the industry as a DOT-111A.


"It's rigid, it's prone to derailment, and when it derails because of the coupling design, they're prone to puncture," says Lloyd Burton, a professor at the University of Colorado who studies rail transport of hazardous materials.


It turns out DOT-111A's make up two-thirds of the tank cars used in the U.S. and Canada — they're like the workhorse of the rail industry.


Thousands of them roll through towns and cities across America every day. And Burton says they're carrying increasing amounts of increasingly volatile crude oil and chemicals produced by North America's booming energy industry.


"The most dangerous crude, the highest sulfur crude, the most explosive and most flammable materials are being carried in tank cars," he says, "And they're being carried in tank cars that are simply not equal to the task."


Changing The Tanks


For decades, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board has been issuing strongly worded reports about the safety of these very same DOT-111A's, calling them "inadequate" for carrying "dangerous products."


Despite those warnings, the rail industry has resisted replacing its tank car fleet.



Newer double-hulled cars are expensive and railroad executives have argued that freight trains overall have a strong safety record. But last month, the CEO of one of North America's biggest railroads signaled a major shift.


Speaking on the Business News Network, Hunter Harrison — head of Canadian Pacific — said the disaster in Lac-Mégantic had changed the debate over DOT-111A's.


"Well, I think they'll be phased out as far as dangerous commodities. We're much more, rightfully so, sensitive about the environment today than we were when these cars were built," he said. "Shame on us as society."


Experts say phasing out DOT-111A's in North America would take at least five years.


Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation launched a new rule-making process that could determine once and for all whether the industry will be forced to replace its tanker fleet. That review is now on hold because of the government shutdown in Washington.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/14/227840021/lac-m-gantic-blast-leaves-impact-on-town-rail-industry?ft=1&f=1006
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

Williams fined £50,000 after Maldonado loses wheel | 2013 Japanese Grand Prix


Pastor Maldonado, Williams, Suzuka, 2013Williams have been fined €60,000 (£50,801) for releasing Pastor Maldonado’s[1] car from the pits in an unsafe fashion during the first practice session.


Maldonado’s left-rear wheel worked loose as he approached Spoon Curve and detached from the car as he spun off. It was collected by two marshals.


The stewards claimed Williams had allowed a “serious safety issue” to arise.


“Examination of the parts concerned revealed that the wheel fastener had not been completely fastened, thus not engaging the first retaining plunger,” the stewards ruled. “This is a breach of Article 23.12 of the FIA Formula One Sporting Regulations.”


“The secondary retaining plunger failed to keep the wheel in place. This is a breach of Article 14.7 of the FIA Formula One Technical Regulations.”


Williams assured the stewards that “appropriate measures will be immediately implemented to ensure compliance”.


2013 Japanese Grand Prix


Browse all 2013 Japanese Grand Prix articles[2]

Image © Williams/LAT



References

  1. ^ Pastor Maldonado (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  2. ^ Browse all 2013 Japanese Grand Prix articles (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Samsung Leaps Ahead of the Curve With New Galaxy Round

The fact that the Galaxy Round is curved doesn't mean that it's flexible or bendable -- at least not yet. "At present this is still a curved display on a rigid device," said Wayne Lam, senior analyst for mobile devices at IHS iSuppli. "To truly be bendable or flexible would require all the components inside to be bendable or flexible, and we're not really there yet."


Hard on the heels of LG's announcement earlier this week that it is planning flexible-display handsets of its own, Samsung Electronics on Wednesday announced the release of the Galaxy Round, which it says is the world's first smartphone featuring a curved screen.


New features enabled by the device's curved design include the "Roll Effect," which enables the user to check information such as the date, time, missed calls and battery easily when the home screen is off, and the "Gravity Effect" for creating visual interaction with the screen by tilting the device, Samsung said.


Samsung Galaxy Round


Both Samsung and LG also offer curved OLED, or organic light-emitting diode, technology in large-panel TVs, but now the South Korean companies are aiming to put the curve in users' hands.


The 5.7-inch Galaxy Round is now being rolled out in South Korea in "Luxury Brown," with more colors coming soon. Samsung has not given any indication so far on whether the device would be released in other markets, however.


Samsung did not respond to our request for further details.


'We're Not Really There Yet'


The fact that the Galaxy Round is curved doesn't mean that it's flexible or bendable -- at least not yet.


"At present this is still a curved display on a rigid device," said Wayne Lam, senior analyst for mobile devices at IHS iSuppli. "If you look at Samsung and LG, these are both display manufacturers, and overall this is more a way to feed development of flexible display technology, but it could be at least a decade before these devices are truly flexible.


"To truly be bendable or flexible would require all the components inside to be bendable or flexible, and we're not really there yet," Lam told TechNewsWorld.


Apart from its curved display, the Samsung Galaxy Round doesn't introduce any significant new hardware.


"There aren't any major component advancements beyond the curved screen, so this way it is really kind of model expansion of the Galaxy devices," said Chris Hazelton, research director for mobile and wireless at 451 Research. "They are using the Galaxy components where it makes sense. That is driven by cost. They aren't looking to develop too many components for this device."


A Showpiece Device


Instead, the Galaxy Round "is more of a showpiece for the company," Hazelton told TechNewsWorld. Samsung's display division "has created the ability to create the curved display, and it is using this product to show it off.


"They have the funding to deliver the technology even if it is just a marketing demonstration," Hazelton added. "It shows that they can provide curved displays for vendors."


Of course, the Galaxy Round will be available at retail, so it does go a step beyond the usual "proof of concept" stage. However, it isn't expected that this is a device for the masses.


"The market is pretty small, as people don't know what the benefits are," Ramon Llamas, research manager for the mobile phones team at IDC, told TechNewsWorld. "What we are seeing is that Samsung is flexing its R&D muscle."


Coming as it does so soon after LG's announcement, "this is really about the competition between the two companies," Llamas added.


'What Is a Smartphone'?


The curved display of this new handset is not without its benefits, however, even as questions remain as to who its target audience might be.


"One of the most interesting effects of providing a curve of the display is it shrinks the width," noted IHS iSuppli's Lam. "This is a 5.7-inch display, which can be larger to hold in the hand, so by bending the device it allows it to be held easier."


It can be a difficult form factor to get right, however.


"Not everything will be conforming to the curved screen," Lam explained. "So you have to think about what problem this is trying to solve. It isn't addressing anything anyone is asking for at this point, but this is really about trying to get it out there and stir up the conversation about the curve."


There's also the fact that when Samsung launched its first Galaxy Note, "it was a bit of head-scratcher at the time, as it sat between two categories," Hazelton suggested. "This new device could see the same fit. It points to the future of capabilities but it also speaks to the fact that it is hard to define what is a smartphone.


"These are not like laptops, where all the devices have the same form factor," added Hazelton. "There is a lot more variety among devices. Samsung deserves credit for taking this in a new direction."


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79146.html
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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Sikh temple attack united victim's son, ex-racist

OAK CREEK, Wis. (AP) ? Six weeks after a white supremacist gunned down Pardeep Kaleka's father and five others at a Sikh temple last year, Kaleka was skeptical when a former skinhead reached out and invited him to dinner.

But Kaleka accepted, and he's grateful he did. Since then, the grieving son and repentant racist have formed an unlikely alliance, teaming up to preach a message of peace throughout Milwaukee. In fact, they've grown so close that they got matching tattoos on their palms ? the numbers 8-5-12, the date the gunman opened fire at a Milwaukee-area Sikh temple before killing himself minutes later.

It wasn't easy for Kaleka to meet Arno Michaelis, a 42-year-old who admits he contributed so heavily to the white-power movement that he might have helped influence the shooter. Kaleka knows Michaelis' history ? his lead singing in a white supremacist band, the white-power and swastika tattoos, the countless fights and more than a dozen arrests.

But he also saw the good work Michaelis has done since he quit the racist movement in the mid-1990s. Kaleka, 37, wanted his father's death to be a catalyst for peace, and he saw in Michaelis a partner whose story could reinforce the message that it's possible to turn hate into love.

"We were both hoping ... we could take something tragic and turn it into something positive ? a learning experience for the entire community," Kaleka said. "We were both on that same mission, in our different ways."

Michaelis had written a book called "My Life After Hate," in which he describes how he lashed out at the world starting in kindergarten and how the birth of his daughter made him realize he needed to change. He also works with kids on community service projects.

Kaleka still has lingering fears that Michaelis might relapse and return to his old ways. But as he's gotten to know Michaelis, he says the boulder of doubt has become a pebble.

Michaelis, an information technology consultant, understands the skepticism. He knows he hurt so many people during his seven years in the white-supremacy movement that his sincerity will always be questioned, which is why he works even harder to regain people's trust.

The two men have teamed up to create Serve2Unite, a community group that works to counter violence with peace. Kaleka, Michaelis and others visit middle schools and high schools, where Kaleka describes how gunman Wade Michael Page walked into the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin last year and killed six people he didn't know. Then Michaelis describes how the gunman's white-supremacist background was nearly identical to his own.

Invariably, the children are riveted, Kaleka said. Afterward several will come up and ask how they can get involved.

Kaleka and Michaelis look nothing alike. Kaleka is a clean-cut Indian who teaches high school social studies. Michaelis, who's white, has both arms covered in tattoos that mask earlier racist messages. But as they sat together in the temple recently, just down the hallway from the bedroom where Kaleka's father was shot, they seemed like brothers, insulting each other good-naturedly and arguing over who was more handsome.

That brotherhood began at their first dinner. Sitting in his car outside the restaurant, Kaleka watched Michaelis walk inside and wondered if he was crazy to be meeting with a former skinhead. Still, he summoned the courage to do it.

Michaelis immediately asked about a bandage on Kaleka's eye, the temporary remnant of a mishap Kaleka suffered while bathing his daughter.

"There was no, 'Hi, how you doing?' He went straight from seeing me to showing concern," Kaleka said. After Kaleka told him what happened, Michaelis admitted that he too was a klutz, and a friendship was born.

Michaelis doesn't shy away from discussing his past. He grew up in an alcoholic, emotionally cold household. He began to rebel as early as kindergarten, bullying other kids on the bus and picking fights on the playground. He eventually got into the white-power movement for the shock value, but the more he associated with haters, the more he began to hate.

But hating was exhausting. He couldn't watch Green Bay Packers games because black and white players were playing together. He couldn't watch TV because Hollywood was a Jewish conspiracy. He loved "Seinfeld" but he had to record it on a videotape labeled "Amber's second birthday party" so his white-power friends wouldn't know he thought a Jew was hilarious.

Eventually, the combination of his daughter's birth and a friend dying in a street fight was the catalyst for him to move on.

His past never really left him, though. When he heard that the gunman who killed six people at a Sikh temple was a white supremacist, he lay awake that night agonizing that the gunman might have been someone he'd recruited into the white-power movement or inspired as the lead singer of the hate band Centurion. It turns out he hadn't known Page but he still felt responsible for his actions.

"We were both white-power skinheads. We were both in white-power bands," Michaelis said. "In just about every sense, I used to be him."

That's why his message now is one of peace. He tells kids they're not being tough when they counter aggression with aggression ? what takes real strength is walking away. He acknowledges that his younger self would have ignored that message, but he still hopes to make a difference with a new generation.

Connecting with children became so much easier after he and Kaleka teamed up. When kids hear from someone who used to be a violent hater, and then from someone whose father fell victim to that very hatred, the message is sobering.

"We realized the reason this (temple shooting) happens is that we magnify the differences between people. We don't magnify the similarities," Kaleka said. "So one of our main goals is to magnify those similarities and say, 'Hey, I'm not so different from you. So let's come together in a common cause."

___

Dinesh Ramde can be reached at dramde@ap.org.

___

Online:

Serve2Unite: http://serve2unite.org

My Life After Hate: http://mylifeafterhate.com

Sikh Temple of Wisconsin: http://www.sikhtempleofwisconsin.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sikh-temple-attack-united-victims-son-ex-racist-151739382.html

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Inhabitat's Week in Green: zero-distortion mirror, stem cell hamburger and a tent that fits in a sneaker

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week's most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us -- it's the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's Week in Green TKTKTK

It's been a big week for planes, trains and automobiles as California (finally) announced plans to break ground on the US' first high-speed rail and we speculated on just how Elon Musk's 600MPH Hyperloop train will work. Inhabitat also brought you the scoop on BMW's 2014 i3, which is the world's first electric vehicle made mostly from carbon fiber. Green vehicles proved they could go the distance as a 65-year-old man embarked on a 1,200-mile journey in a solar-powered tricycle, and a crop of green-roofed buses brought lush air-purifying plants to congested city centers. And if you're planning an outdoor adventure this summer, you won't want to miss this caravan that doubles as a boat, Mini's new ultra compact luxury campers and the full-sized tent that fits in a pair of sneakers.

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Egypt warns pro-Morsi protesters to leave sit-in

A supporter of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi holds a banner with Morsi's image, during a march against Egyptian Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

A supporter of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi holds a banner with Morsi's image, during a march against Egyptian Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi sit in a tent they set up during a protest near Cairo airport in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Authorities outlined plans Friday to break up two sit-ins by supporters of deposed President Morsi, saying they would set up a cordon around the protest sites, and riot police used tear gas to disperse demonstrators threatening a TV complex. Morsi backers also showed their defiance by briefly setting up a third camp near the airport, but later folded their tents and left. Arabic writing on Morsi poster reads: "Yes for the legality, no for the coup." (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy speaks during a meeting with foreign media in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013. Fahmy said Saturday that the Egypt's foreign ministry focuses during this transition period on "re-correcting" its foreign policy to Egypt's national interests, from an ideologically driven one last year. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy speaks during a meeting with foreign media in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013. Fahmy said Saturday that the Egypt's foreign ministry focuses during this transition period on "re-correcting" its foreign policy to Egypt's national interests, from an ideologically driven one last year. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's Interior Ministry warned supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi on Saturday for a second time to abandon their protest encampments as a senior U.S. diplomat was meeting with officials on both sides of the political divide to try to find a peaceful resolution to the standoff.

Egyptian authorities have outlined plans in recent days to break up the two main sit-ins by Morsi's supporters as they seek to end the political stalemate that has paralyzed the country since the military overthrew the Islamist leader on July 3. Morsi's backers say they will not disperse until he is returned to power, setting the stage for a potential bloody showdown if security forces move in on the two main sites that are home to tens of thousands of protesters.

In a bid to avoid more bloodshed, Deputy Secretary of State William Burns held talks Saturday with interim Egyptian President Adly Mansour as well as Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei. Burns, the No. 2 American diplomat, was also scheduled to meet with Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood and their Islamist allies. The Europeans Union's special envoy, Bernardino Leon, was also involved in the talks.

Amr Darag, one of the Brotherhood representatives who was expected to meet with Burns, told The Associated Press that the group and its allies are looking for "confidence-building measures" before they will come to the table for talks with their rivals. Such measures could include releasing detained Brotherhood leaders, unfreezing the group's assets, lifting the ban on its TV stations and ending violence against its protests.

Ahead of his visit, the State Department said Burns would be discussing "the importance of avoiding violence and helping to facilitate a peaceful and inclusive political process."

The trip by Burns, his second to Cairo since the military overthrew Morsi, comes amid heighted fears of more bloodshed after more than 80 Morsi supporters were killed in clashes with police a week ago near their main Cairo sit-in. In total, more than 280 people have been killed nationwide in political violence since Morsi's removal.

The ousted president's supporters have vowed to continue their protests until he is reinstated. They have held several mass rallies across the country and daily protests outside security buildings, demanding that the crackdown on Islamists stop. They have also kept up their vigils at two main sites: one outside the Rabaah al-Adawiya Mosque in eastern Cairo and another in a large square outside Cairo University's main campus.

But a month after Morsi's ouster, many Egyptians have grown weary of the protests, complaining that they snarl traffic, prolong the nation's instability and are calling for the authorities to put an end to the sit-ins.

On Friday, authorities outlined plans to break up the encampments, saying they would set up a cordon around the protest sites while at the same time offering "safe passage" to those willing to leave.

In nationally televised remarks Saturday, Interior Ministry spokesman Hany Abdel-Latif again urged Morsi's supporters to end their protests, saying it would pave the way for the Brotherhood's return to an official role in the political process. He repeated the offer from the ministry, which is charge of police, to protect those who abandon the demonstrations.

The Brotherhood's role in Egypt's post-Morsi politics is one of the most pressing questions in the country.

In his first visit to Cairo last month, Burns signaled that while Washington was calling for an inclusive transition, it had moved on from Morsi and his Brotherhood group. But he also stressed that Egypt's "second chance" at democracy could not happen without the Brotherhood's participation.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy, who met Burns on Saturday, said Egyptian officials have made clear to their Western counterparts "that there is no moving back" and that the roadmap adopted by the country's military-backed interim leaders, which calls for elections next year, is open to the Brotherhood for participation.

"The roadmap adopted is the roadmap for this country for the upcoming period," he told reporters after meeting Burns. "Ceasing incitement and violence is, I believe, an extremely important step to take if we have any chance at achieving reconciliation in the short-term."

While Egypt's interim leaders have voiced an interest in reconciliation, they have simultaneously pursued a crackdown on the Brotherhood and its allies, arresting its senior leadership and shuttering their television stations.

In remarks published in the state-run Ahram newspaper Saturday, interim Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi said the United States is mostly focused on how to restore stability to Egypt.

"I don't think the United States was fond of the Muslim Brotherhood or wanted them to come (to power), and I don't think it is happy either to see them out of the picture now" he was quoted as saying "All that is asked now is that the situation stabilizes."

Morsi's supporters say their sit-ins are peaceful protests. The Interior Ministry alleges that some of the protests' participants are involved in "killings, torture and abductions." Last weekend, the ministry said 11 bodies were found near both protest sites, with some showing signs of torture. It is not clear who was behind the killings.

The London-based rights group Amnesty International also said it had testimony of alleged killings and torture at the hands of Morsi supporters inside the sit-ins, including a witness who said he saw one man stabbed and another have his throat cut.

In a new allegation, Egypt's state news agency reported Saturday that a 25 year-old worker was detained and violently beaten at one of the sit-ins. It quoted a security official as saying that the young man, identified Ahmed Abdel-Aaty Mahmoud, was found late Friday near a military factory south of Cairo with severe bruises and injuries. He told police he was abducted two days ago by pro-Morsi protesters who were participating in a march after he criticized them.

___

Associated Press writers Tony G. Gabriel and Mariam Rizk contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-08-03-ML-Egypt/id-270a250f87bb4e0382b927db0e277939

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Efimova breaks 50 breaststroke world mark in heats

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Yuliya Efimova of Russia has broken the 50-meter breaststroke world record during the morning heats at the swimming world championships.

Efimova clocked 29.78 seconds in the one-lap race Saturday, shaving 0.02 off the previous record set by American Jessica Hardy in 2009 at the height of the rubberized suit era.

Hardy qualified second in 29.99, and 100 breast world record holder Ruta Meilutyte of Lithuania advanced third in 30.07.

The 50 breast is not an Olympic event.

Efimova won gold in the 200 breast Friday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/efimova-breaks-50-breaststroke-world-mark-heats-090926177.html

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Congress Vacations, Leaves Tasks Undone (ABC News)

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