jeudi 14 novembre 2013

LSU Fan Acts Like A Dinosaur On National TV

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A Lousiana State University student acted like a dinosaur on national television this weekend.

After a touchdown in the LSU game against Alabama, CBS cameras switched to a celebrating Tigers fan section and slowly focused on engineering student Caleb Bates. He wasn't cheering, he was just pretending to be a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

We're guessing this is one of the ways Bates strives to serve as a "role model for students in every aspect of University life," per his LinkedIn page.

It was inevitable that people would begin making .GIFs of Bates' dinosaur imitation spliced with footage from "Jurassic Park."

Now, of course, Bates is milking his new reputation as a faux-dino.

Apparently no one told Bates it wasn't possible for him to a dinosaur.

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mercredi 13 novembre 2013

Ben Roethlisberger Denies Trade Rumors: 'I Don't Know Where That Came From'

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PITTSBURGH (AP) — Ben Roethlisberger isn't going anywhere. Not if he has anything to say about it.

The Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback called a report he may seek a trade in the offseason "ridiculous."

NFL.com reported early Sunday the Steelers expected Roethlisberger to ask the team to explore trade options in the offseason. Roethlisberger's agent, Ryan Tollner, called the speculation "completely wrong" and added the 31-year-old quarterback is "100 percent committed to winning a championship with the Steelers."

Roethlisberger went even further after passing for 204 yards with a touchdown and an interception in a 23-10 win over Buffalo on Sunday.

"I don't know where that came from," he said. "It is one of the most (untrue) stories that I've ever heard of. I've always said that I want to be a Steeler for life. I love it here. I'm happy here."

The report called Roethlisberger "very frustrated" by his team's ugly start. The Steelers improved to 3-6 after drumming the Bills, but still remain well out of the mix in the AFC North.

Roethlisberger, who has won two Super Bowls in 10 seasons, agreed he's "unhappy" when Pittsburgh fails to produce, but welcomed his share of the blame. Roethlisberger and offensive coordinator Todd Haley have struggled to communicate at times since Haley was hired nearly two years ago. The quarterback and the coach have spent much of the season trying to find common ground.

Steelers president Art Rooney II added "the Pittsburgh Steelers have not explored trading quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and have no plans to do so."

Roethlisberger's current contract will expire at the end of the 2015 season. He is due a base salary of $12.1 million next season, with a salary cap number of nearly $19 million. That alone would could make it difficult for the Steelers to move Roethlisberger even if there was interest.

Apparently, there's not. Tollner said Roethlisberger's roots are "firmly" planted in western Pennsylvania. Roethlisberger and his wife are expecting their second child next spring.

"I'm a Pittsburgher," Roethlisberger said. "I've told people that. I'm so proud to raise my kids here. I want to finish my career here, however long that is. I don't want to play for anybody else. This is it for me."

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

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Miley Cyrus Smokes A Joint On Stage At The EMAs

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miley cyrus smokes joint emas AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS - NOVEMBER 10: Miley Cyrus accepts award onstage during the MTV EMA's 2013 at the Ziggo Dome on November 10, 2013 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

Miley Cyrus kept her MTV Europe Music Awards performances pretty tame, but we're guessing she knew she'd get people talking with her EMAs acceptance speech.

All eyes were on the 20-year-old singer as she went to collect the award for Best Video for "Wrecking Ball," telling the crowd she didn't think she would be able to fit the award in her purse as she put the trophy on the ground.

Cyrus went on to thank her fans for making the award happen, before she started digging through her bag and pulled out what appeared to be a joint. "I couldn't fit this award in my bag, but I did find this," she said holding up the joint before sparking it up.

Cyrus isn't shy about her love of marijuana. In September she told Rolling Stone, "I think weed is the best drug on earth," and since she's been in Amsterdam for the EMAs, she's reportedly been hitting up the city's famous coffee shops that allow patrons to enjoy all the weed they want.

Though it's sold openly in cafes, marijuana still isn't legal in the Netherlands, however smokers in possession of less than five grams of cannabis have no fear of prosecution, according to the Associated Press.


CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story misspelled the song "Wrecking Ball" by Miley Cyrus.

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Jonathan Martin's Threatening Text Message To Richie Incognito Was This Meme, Claims His Lawyer

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jonathan martin text Miami Dolphins guard Richie Incognito (68) and tackle Jonathan Martin (71) stand on the field during practice in Davie, Fla. on July 24, 2013.

Attempting to provide context for his treatment of teammate Jonathan Martin, Richie Incognito claimed he also received a threatening text message. The suspended Miami Dolphins guard made this revelation when he sat down with Jay Glazer of FOX Sports to discuss the Dolphins' bullying scandal involving him and Martin. A second-year offensive tackle, Martin abruptly left the Dolphins on Oct. 28 to receive treatment for emotional distress. Incognito, once named the NFL's dirtiest player in a poll of his peers, was subsequently suspended by the Dolphins on Nov. 2 for unspecified misconduct related to alleged mistreatment of Martin.

"People don't know how John and I communicate to one another," Incognito explained to Glazer. "For instance, a week before this went down, Jonathan Martin texts me on my phone: 'I will murder your whole effing family.' Now, did I think Jonathan Martin was going to murder my family? Not one bit. I knew it was coming from a brother. I knew it was coming from a friend. I knew it was coming from a teammate."

Hours after the interview aired on FOX on Sunday afternoon, David Cornwell, an attorney for Martin, shared a profane Internet meme featuring a smiling woman and a dog on Twitter and indicated this was the message that Incognito mentioned to Glazer.

WARNING: Image Below Contains Strong Language

Is that what viewers had in mind as Incognito recalled the text message?

Incognito referenced the text from Martin when asked about the threatening voice and text messages he had reportedly sent that included racial slurs. Speaking with Glazer, Incognito confirmed leaving the following voicemail for Martin, who is bi-racial.

“Hey, wassup, you half n—– piece of [expletive] . . . I saw you on Twitter, you been training ten weeks. [I want to] [expletive] in your [expletive] mouth. [I'm going to] slap your [expletive] mouth. [I'm going to] slap your real mother across the face (laughter). [Expletive] you, you’re still a rookie. I’ll kill you.”

Although he did expressed embarrassment over the voicemail, Incognito cited the text from Martin as evidence that both players traded similar threats in jest. He portrayed a locker room culture where such language was acceptable.

"When I see that voicemail, when I see those words come across the screen, I'm embarrassed by it," Incognito said after he was presented with a transcript of the offensive voicemail he left for Martin. "I'm embarrassed by my actions. But what I want people to know is, the way Jonathan and the rest of the offensive line and how our teammates, how we communicate it's vulgar. It's not right."

[H/T Deadspin]

World War II Reunions Poignant For Dwindling Veterans

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DAYTON, Ohio -- DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Paul Young rarely talked about his service during World War II — about the B-25 bomber he piloted, about his 57 missions, about the dangers he faced or the fears he overcame.

"Some things you just don't talk about," he said.

But Susan Frymier had a hunch that if she could journey from Fort Wayne, Ind., with her 92-year-old dad for a reunion of his comrades in the 57th Bomb wing, he would open up.

She was right: On a private tour at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force near Dayton, amid fellow veterans of flights over southern Europe and Germany, Young rattled off vivid details of his plane, crewmates, training and some of his most harrowing missions.

"Dad, you can't remember what you ate yesterday, but you remember everything about World War II," his daughter said, beaming.

When Young came home from the war, more than 70 years ago, there were 16 million veterans like him — young soldiers, sailors and Marines who returned to work, raise families, build lives. Over the decades, children grew up, married, had children of their own; careers were built and faded into retirement; love affairs followed the path from the altar to the homestead and often, sadly, to the graveyard.

Through it all, the veterans would occasionally get together to remember the greatest formative experience of their lives. But as the years wore on, there were fewer and fewer of them. According to the Department of Veteran Affairs, just a little over 1 million remain. The ones who remain are in their 80s and 90s, and many are infirm or fragile.

So the reunions, when they are held, are more sparsely attended — yearly reminders of the passing of the Greatest Generation.

—When veterans of the Battle of the Bulge gathered in Kansas City this summer, only 40 came, according to organizers, down from 63 last year and 350 in 2004.

—Of the 80 members of Doolittle's Raiders who set out on their daring attack on mainland Japan in 1942, 73 survived. Seventy-one years later, only four remain; they decided this year's April reunion in Fort Walton Beach, Fla., would be their last, though they agreed to meet Nov. 9 for a final toast in honor of those who have gone before them.

—A half-century ago, when retired Army First Lt. Frank Towers went to his first reunion of the 30th Infantry Division — soldiers who landed at the beaches of Normandy and fought across France and Germany — he was surrounded by 1,000 other veterans.

"Now if I get 50, I'm lucky," said Towers, who is working on plans for a reunion next February in Savannah, Ga. "Age has taken its toll on us. A lot of our members have passed away, and many of them who are left are in health situations where they can't travel."

So why persist?

"It's a matter of camaraderie," Towers said. "We spent basically a year or more together through hell or high water. We became a band of brothers. We can relate to each other in ways we can't relate to (anyone else). You weren't there. These guys were there. They know the horrors we went through."

___

As many as 11,000 people served in the 57th Bomb Wing that flew missions over German-held Europe from North Africa and the island of Corsica during most of the war. Hundreds survive, according to wing historians and reunion organizers. Only nine veterans made it to this fall's event.

George Williams, 90, recalled earlier reunions with his comrades, "having a great time yukking it up and talking about things." No one else from his squadron came to this one.

"All of a sudden, it's lonesome," said Williams, a native of Visalia, Calif., who moved after his wife's death to Springfield, Mo., where his son lives. "All of the people you ran around with are on the wrong side of the grass. You wonder why you're so lucky."

But in a Holiday Inn hospitality suite with patriotic bunting, bowls of pretzels and chips with soft drinks at their tables, the stories flowed easily.

Williams remembered the tension of his first mission, his hand ready at the tag that would release him to bail out if necessary. It went without incident, and upon their return to base, a flight surgeon measured out two ounces of whiskey for each crewman. "Sixty-nine to go," he said then, because 70 missions was considered the tour of duty. Sometimes on later missions, he would pour the two ounces into a beer bottle to save up for a night when he needed numbing.

Robert Crouse, of Clinton, Tenn., is 89 years old, but he remembers as if it happened yesterday the time a shell blew out the cockpit windshield ("you could stick your head through it"), disabling much of the control panel. Another plane escorted the bomber, its pilot calling out altitude and air speed as Crouse's plane limped back to base, riddled with holes.

Young recalled flying a damaged plane back to base, hearing his tail gunner's panicked yells as Plexiglass shattered over him. "You could feel the plane vibrate; you fly through the smoke, you smell the smoke and you hear the flak hitting the plane like hail on a tin roof."

Not all the memories are bad ones. There was the late-war mission when they hit a spaghetti factory instead of the intended target ("Spaghetti was flying everywhere," recalled Crouse, chuckling). There was Williams' first Thanksgiving meal overseas: a Spam turkey, spiced and baked to perfection by an innovative cook.

"I still love Spam," he said.

Then there was R&R in Rome, hosted by the Red Cross. Young men not long removed from high school toured the Colosseum and other historic sites they had read about. They visited the Vatican; some met Pope Pius XII. Williams got a papal blessing of a rosary for his engineer's fiancee.

"It was pretty good," Williams said of his war experience, "except when they were shooting at us."

___

Some of the veterans fear that their service will be forgotten after they are gone. Crouse and others have written memoirs, and many of the reunion groups now have websites, magazines and other publications in which they recount their stories.

"You just hope that the young people appreciate it," said Young. "That it was very important, if you wanted to continue the freedom that we have."

Their children remember. Some are joining them at the reunions; others keep coming after their fathers are gone.

At this year's reunion, Bob Marino led a memorial service and read the names of 42 members of the 57th Bomb Wing who died in the past year. A bugler played "Taps."

Marino, 72, a retired IRS attorney and Air Force veteran from Basking Ridge, N.J., helped organize the gathering. His Brooklyn-native father, Capt. Benjamin Marino, died in 1967 and left numerous photos from the war, and Marino set about trying to identify and organize them. To learn more about his father's experiences, he corresponded with other veterans — including Joseph Heller, who was inspired by his wartime experiences with the 57th to write his classic novel "Catch-22."

"He never talked about any of this," Marino said, turning the pages on a massive scrapbook as veterans dropped by to look at the photos. "Once in a while, something came out. I wish I had sat down and talked to him about it."

This was precisely the gift Susan Frymier received at the reunion in Dayton.

She watched as the father who had long avoided talking about the war proudly pulled from his wallet a well-worn, black-and-white snapshot of the plane he piloted, nicknamed "Heaven Can Wait" with a scantily clad, shapely female painted near the cockpit.

She listened as he described German anti-aircraft artillery fire zeroing in on his plane. "I had to get out of there. All the flak ... they were awfully close." He described "red-lining" a landing, running the engines beyond safe speed. His voice suddenly choked.

"Oh, Dad!" said his daughter, and she hugged him tightly.

___

Contact reporter Dan Sewell at http://www.twitter.com/dansewell

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Cory Booker Goes To Washington A Celebrity And Senator

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WASHINGTON -- WASHINGTON (AP) — When the U.S. Senate passed a bill to ban job discrimination against gay and transgender people, its newest member's first impulse was to yell with joy. Then he remembered where he was.

Instead, Cory Booker reached into his pocket for his phone.

"I got it all out via Twitter," said Booker, who has 1.4 million followers.

Booker, the 44-year-old Democratic former mayor of Newark, N.J., came into Congress as a rare freshman senator with celebrity status. He has been dubbed a rock star mayor by Oprah Winfrey, been called a hero for pulling a neighbor out of her burning home in 2012 and hobnobbed with Matt Damon.

During his first week in Congress, Booker tried to balance immersion in his new job with already standing out from his 99 colleagues on the staid Senate floor. Booker allowed The Associated Press to shadow his comings and goings.

"The model I've encouraged him to follow is Al Franken or Hillary Clinton," said Delaware Sen. Chris Coons, a Democrat and a friend of Booker's. "People who came to the Senate with big national profiles but demonstrated a willingness to do the work, dig in, go visit every corner of their state and really focus on home-state interests."

Coons came into the Senate after a special election in 2010. He is helping Booker, who also won a special election, navigate and knows what it's like to start the job with no orientation and a skeleton staff.

After a swearing-in Oct. 31 filled with media and supporters, Booker has mostly stayed out of the spotlight. He's studying the minutiae of Senate rules and has attended multitudes of meetings. He has worked out at the Senate gym to meet colleagues and attended a bipartisan prayer breakfast.

Known for his soaring oratory and confidence, he is now listening and asking questions, sometimes seeming overwhelmed or confused — and showing glimmers of his cheeky sense of humor amid the business of the day.

In his first committee hearing Wednesday, he joked that "I still have that new senator smell" after telling the leader of the Federal Emergency Management Agency that higher flood insurance rates would devastate parts of New Jersey.

He asked Vice President Joe Biden if he could crash on his couch. And he answered a Twitter question about his thoughts on workplace romances with: "Don't! Especially if u have 99 colleagues in 1 of the world's most august bodies."

He went to the White House twice. He joined a group of Democratic senators Wednesday and, hours after being sworn in, had a private visit with President Barack Obama.

"There was a guy with a football, and I grabbed it, and the president and I had a little catch," said Booker, who played football at Stanford. Obama, he said, complimented his spiral.

Booker was the first to arrive at a Democratic caucus lunch Tuesday, piling his plate with greens and vegetables. He peeled plastic wrap off of a bowl of dressing as Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu arrived. The two headed toward the back of the room and sat down.

"Sen. Menendez came in and said, 'That's my seat.' And of course I panicked," Booker said. "At first I'm like, 'Oh my God, did I really sit in his seat?' And another senator came in and tried to play the same trick on me."

Booker and his mother, Carolyn, met privately with Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. Booker's father, Cary, suffered a stroke in August shortly after moving to Las Vegas and days before Booker's Democratic primary. Reid visited his bedside, and when he died Oct. 10, Reid reached out to Booker and his family.

In many ways, Booker is just another guy getting used to a new job — learning the rules and his colleagues, just as they've all had to do at some point.

He took his first vote minutes after being sworn in and thought votes were cast by pushing a button or pulling a lever. Instead, he learned, "you raise your hand." On one vote, Booker missed his name while chatting with colleagues and flagged down the Senate clerk, voting yes with a thumbs-up.

He brought a congressional directory Thursday morning and watched each speaker intently, occasionally flipping through to match a senator with a photo. He is also learning how to navigate the labyrinth that is the Capitol and its office buildings.

"Is this the way home?" he asked his chief of staff as the two traversed the Senate basement.

He said he plans to advocate for New Jersey residents, hoping to ensure they receive unclaimed earned-income credits and helping victims of Superstorm Sandy. He met with an ethics officer to see how he can leverage private-public partnerships for New Jersey, as he did in Newark — most famously with a $100 million donation from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to the city schools.

And though he's been minding his manners, he's still the same Cory Booker. A stalwart supporter of gay rights, he finally let out that yell upon walking into his office after the job discrimination vote.

"Call everybody in New Jersey," Booker said to his staff, "and tell them we're one step closer to an equal nation."

___

Follow Zezima at www.twitter.com/katiezez

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U.S. Dispatches Aid For Philippine Typhoon Recovery

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MANILA, Philippines -- MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A US military plane carrying relief supplies and a contingent of Marines has left the Philippine capital en route to the country's typhoon-devastated eastern seaboard.

The C-130 left Manila's Vilamor air base on Monday loaded with bottled water, generators wrapped in plastic, a forklift and two trucks.

It was the first American relief flight to the region, where thousands are feared dead and tens of thousands more homeless as a result of Friday's typhoon.

The flight was headed for Tacloban, a city badly hit by the storm and in desperate need of assistance.

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mardi 12 novembre 2013

'60 Minutes' Apologizes For Benghazi Report: 'We Are Very Sorry'

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"60 Minutes" issued a brief on-air apology and correction on Sunday for its botched and mishandled report on the Benghazi attacks, but gave few details about the failures that led to its retraction of a piece it had staunchly defended.

Speaking about Dylan Davies, the discredited man at the heart of her piece, correspondent Lara Logan told viewers, "We realized we had been misled, and it was a mistake to include him in our report. For that, we are very sorry."

The venerable program was forced into an embarrassing retreat after it had defended itself for a week about the reliability of Davies, a British security officer. On Thursday night, it emerged that Davies—who had already admitted to lying to a superior about his whereabouts on the night of the attack—had also told the FBI he had been nowhere near the American compound when it took place, a statement completely at odds with the detailed, harrowing tale he told "60 Minutes."

It was the second on-air apology delivered by Logan. On Friday, she went on television to say that she was "wrong" to have put Davies on air.

Predictably, her Sunday mea culpa offered little insight into why Davies was chosen as the key source for the report, and why "60 Minutes" had so fervently defended him, even amid mounting evidence of his unreliability. Also unmentioned was what role, if any, corporate ties played in placing Davies at the heart of the piece. A conservative imprint of Simon and Schuster, which is also owned by CBS, had published a book about Benghazi by Davies. That book has since been recalled.

Many media observers pronounced themselves to be less than impressed:

Media Matters, which led the charge against the report, issued a statement from its founder David Brock, who called the apology "wholly inadequate and entirely self-serving."

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Texas And 5 Other States Resist Processing Benefits For Gay Couples

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On the morning of Sept. 3, the first day the Pentagon said they could, Alicia Butler and her spouse, Judith Chedville, who is a Texas Army National Guard officer, went to Austin’s Camp Mabry so Ms. Butler could get a military spouse identification card and register for the same federal marriage benefits provided to wives and husbands of heterosexual service members.

Read the whole story at The New York Times

Parental Control: 5 Shows You Shouldn't Watch With Your Parents

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This article was written by teen reporters from The Mash, a weekly publication distributed to Chicagoland high schools.

By Nikki Pietrus, Whitney Young

Let’s be honest, some of the best shows on TV might not be as squeaky clean as your parents would like to think. But is that going to stop you from watching these gems? Heck no!

OK, now imagine this: You’re sitting down to watch Netflix with your parents and your mom starts talking about that new show everyone’s been raving about, “Orange Is the New Black.” Before you can say anything, she turns it on and you’re stuck in the most awkward situation of your life.

Don’t put yourself in this situation ever again. Here are five fantastic shows that are awesome for watching on your own --- but not so much with your parents. We ranked them on a scale of one to five -- one being slightly awkward, and five being painfully weird.

1. “Breaking Bad”
If you weren’t on the “Breaking Bad” bandwagon before, you’re probably curious about it now. The series follows the story of Walter White, an overqualified high school chemistry teacher who turns to cooking meth after learning he has terminal cancer. Despite the obvious theme of drugs, the show is also filled with lots of violence, gore and downright scary scenes.

“At first, my parents saw me watching ‘Breaking Bad’ and thought it was kind of inappropriate, but the show is so good that they got hooked too. Now we watch it as a family,” said Marist senior Kendall Maddix.

Awkward factor: 2/5

2. “Weeds”
The name of this show should be an immediate indicator of what to expect. “Weeds” stars Mary-Louise Parker as a suburban mother who turns to selling pot after her husband dies. This may sound similar to “Breaking Bad,” but “Weeds” takes a more comical approach to the drug-dealing plot line.

“‘Weeds’ is hilarious, but I always make sure I watch it late at night or when my parents aren’t home,” said Whitney Young senior Joey Albarran. “You never know what you might see.”

You can expect heavy profanity, drug use, sex scenes and nudity -- all things that might be a tad awkward if you’re watching with mom and dad.

Awkward factor: 3.5/5

3. “South Park”
Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s hilarious creation is still producing new episodes on Comedy Central. But if you find the show on Netflix, you can watch the unrated versions, which are packed full of profanity and crude humor.

“My brother was watching an episode of ‘South Park’ on our family room TV and I didn’t think much of it,” said Whitney Young senior Cortny Trueba. “That is, until some colorful language shocked my mom, dad and even my grandma.”

Awkward factor: 4/5

4. “Shameless”
“Shameless” focuses on the dysfunctional Gallagher family. Led by an alcoholic father and an absent mother, the six Gallagher children are left to navigate the world on their own. Unfortunately, their moral compasses aren’t leading them in the right direction.

“This show should really be called ‘Shameful’ because that’s how I feel after watching,” said Nazareth Academy junior Courtney Urzen. “There is always a lot of profanity, sex, drugs and alcohol in each episode.”

Awkward factor: 4/5

5. “Orange is the New Black”
Netflix hit a home run with its new series. Socialite Piper Chapman is in for a shock after being sentenced to 15 months in prison, convicted of transporting dirty money for her drug dealer girlfriend. “Orange Is the New Black” is sprinkled with intense sex scenes, nudity and profanity.

“I was even shocked by how bad some of the scenes are,” said Whitney Young sophomore Jessica Lathan. “But the show is so good, I don’t mind it anymore, I’m addicted.”

Awkward factor: 5/5

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Trans Fats Ban Could Have Devastating Effect On Popcorn Industry

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By Curtis Skinner

NEW YORK, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Microwave popcorn makers could face a long and difficult task ridding their snacks of trans fats, if a U.S. Food and Drug Administration proposal to ban the additives goes into effect. Just ask Orville Redenbacher.

Redenbacher's, a division of ConAgra Foods Inc, spent six years changing its leading line of popcorn, company scientists said on Friday, a day after the FDA made its proposal, which the government said would save 7,000 lives a year.

The Popcorn Board, an industry trade group, said Americans munch 16 billion quarts of popped popcorn a year, and more than two-thirds of that is eaten in the home. $985.7 million worth of unpopped kernels were sold in 2010, down 2.2 percent from five years earlier. Popcorn also is the source of a substantial amount of the trans fats consumed by Americans.

Diamond Foods Inc - owner of Pop Secret - and American Pop Corn Company - owner of Jolly Time - still use the suspect fat in some products. Diamond Foods fell 4.6 percent from its open on the news Thursday, but pared losses before Friday's close. American Pop Corn Company is not publicly traded.

Redenbacher's ditched the fats in all of their products starting in 2006, because of the health concerns.

Initial research and development of switching to a trans fat free oil was four years. It took two years more to change the entire product line.

"We've mastered it, and I'm not going to tell you how we did it," laughed Pamela Newell, a senior director of product development at ConAgra. It took "a lot of money," she added, since many replacement oil blends limited or reduced the flavor of the popcorn.

Partially hydrogenated oils, the primary source of the fats in foods, have long been prized by microwavable popcorn companies for their high melting point. The fat keeps oil solid until the package is heated, so unpopped bags don't ooze.

It also provides a taste and texture in the mouth which isn't easy to replicate, popcorn makers say. But when consumed, trans fats increase bad cholesterol, a leading cause coronary artery disease.

Since 2005, trans fat usage has fallen precipitously - the Grocery Manufacturers Association said manufacturers have voluntarily lowered the amounts of trans fats in their food products by more than 73 percent. But further reduction could prevent 20,000 heart attacks as well as the 7,000 deaths from heart disease a year, the FDA said.

Sales from ConAgra's consumer food segments rose 8 percent in fiscal 2013, due in part to Redenbacher's, according to the company's most recent annual report.

Diamond Foods' Pop Secret still produces a half-dozen products - including the Movie Theatre Butter and Homestyle varieties - that carry between 4.5 and 5 grams of the harmful fat per serving.

The brand, which was purchased from General Mills in 2008, has been central to the company's 3.3 percent growth in its core snack sales segment, said Diamond CEO Brian Driscoll during the most recent quarterly conference call.

Diamond Foods said it was reviewing the FDA plan and declined to make executives available for interview on Friday.

American Pop Corn Company, which owns the Jolly Time brand also has trans fats in some of its products.

The company works closely with Boulder Brands Inc's Smart Balance, an early developer of trans fat-free food products, including microwavable popcorn.

Smart Balance executive vice president, John Becker, said that he hadn't talked with the American Pop Corn Company about the FDA's proposal, and American could not be reached for comment on Friday.

The ban would follow more limited restrictions across the country. New York City banned the use of trans fats in restaurants, including their use for deep-frying foods, and many restaurants and fast food chains, including McDonald's Corp , have eliminated their use.

Veterans Day Ceremony for Japanese-American Soldiers of World War II

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Ceremonia al atardecer anual de d?a de los veteranos del USS Missouri Memorial de la asociaci?n en Pearl Harbor honrar? el 70 ? aniversario de la Nisei veteranos de la II guerra mundial. Los veteranos Nisei veinticinco — octogenarios y mayores — estar? entre los 450 participantes que se espera en el evento.

"Este a?o hemos decidido honrar a los Nisei como un foco, mientras sigue honrando a todos los veteranos,", dijo Jackie McCormick, director de eventos en la Asociaci?n Memorial USS Missouri.

La ceremonia del lunes en la popa del acorazado Missouri coincidir? con la apertura de una nueva exposici?n Nisei a bordo del buque, para honrar su legado.

Estas segunda generaci?n nacidos en Estados Unidos japoneses americanos son soldados que lucharon por los Estados Unidos después de que Jap?n atac? Pearl Harbor en 07 de diciembre de 1941, a pesar de la desconfianza de gobierno de Estados Unidos de ellos debido a su ascendencia.

Eran considerados a "enemigos" y s?lo se puede servir en las unidades del ejército segregadas; la armada y los Marines no les permitan en sus filas.

A pesar de ello, m?s de 20.000 japoneses americanos lucharon en el batall?n de infanter?a n?mero 100, el equipo de combate del regimiento 442, el servicio de inteligencia militar y el 1399th batall?n de ingenier?a y construcci?n. Eran los soldados m?s condecorados en la historia del ejército de Estados Unidos.

"Hace setenta a?os nuestros soldados Nisei entr? en la segunda guerra mundial y superaron los desaf?os duales de prejuicios en casa y las amenazas a las libertades de nuestra naci?n en el extranjero con servicio impertérrito e incre?bles haza?as de valent?a," dijo Bob Kihune, jubilado vicealmirante de la Armada de Estados Unidos y ahora presidente de la Junta Directiva de la Asociaci?n Memorial USS Missouri.

Los asistentes notables incluyen el orador, Jiro Yukimura. Yukimura estaba a bordo del Missouri cuando rendici?n japonesa documentos fueron firmados en 02 de septiembre de 1945.

Sus logros

Retirado el general de brigada James Hirai, Subdirector del centro de Asia y el Pac?fico para estudios estratégicos de Fort DeRussy, elogi? a los soldados Nisei.

"Son gente abundante," dijo Hirai, se?alando la importancia de 25 veteranos aparecer cuando los m?s j?venes son alrededor de 88. "Los que estar?n all? voluntad definitivamente muestran".

Hirai se?al? que los Nisei son un grupo importante en Hawai m?s all? de su servicio militar durante la guerra. "Ayudaron realmente transformar Hawaii desde una econom?a de plantaci?n a uno que es muy parecida a la par con las econom?as florecientes en la regi?n de Asia y el Pac?fico, teniendo Hawaii desde un territorio a un estado".

El batall?n de infanter?a n?mero 100 fue la primera unidad de combate compuesta por japoneses americanos; unos 1.400 fue a combatir en Italia y Francia entre 1943 y 1945, y sufrieron muchas bajas que son referidos como el "batall?n de coraz?n p?rpura". Ellos también se incorporaron a la Tionne Regimental equipo de combate mientras que en Italia, sirviendo como uno de sus batallones de tres infanter?a. Recibieron tres citaciones presidenciales de unidad.

La unidad de combate Tionne fue creada en 1943. La mayor?a eran de Hawaii, mientras que algunos eran del continente. Unos 14.000 sirvi? durante la segunda guerra mundial y fueron recompensados con siete menciones presidenciales de unidad (que incluye los tres dados al batall?n n?mero 100).

El servicio de inteligencia militar ha estado involucrado en cada batalla militar estadounidense en Asia y el Pac?fico, con la obligaci?n de comunicaci?n traducci?n del japonés. No sirven en unidades, pero como individuos o en pares; No s?lo ten?an que enfrentarse a los peligros de guerra habituales, pero ten?an el problema a?adido de posiblemente ser confundido con un enemigo de los Estados Unidos y ser golpeado por fuego amigo. Aquellos que sirvieron fueron los destinatarios de una citaci?n presidencial de la unidad.

El 1399th batall?n de ingenier?a y construcci?n se constituy? en 1944 y es responsable para la construcci?n de 54 proyectos de defensa importantes en Oahu. Eran considerados tan vitales para la seguridad de Hawai que solicita el Departamento de guerra neg? que tenga a las Filipinas durante la guerra. Fueron honrados con el premio de servicio meritorio.

"De las unidades de combate, sus éxitos son legendarias... Ellos definitivamente ayud? a velocidad arriba o reducen los aspectos negativos de las campa?as largas y largas batallas,"dijo Hirai.

Herencia viva

Muchos, incluyendo Hirai, dicen que el mayor impacto de los veteranos Nisei es que probaron a los militares y a los ciudadanos estadounidenses que la segregaci?n en cualquier forma no trabaja o tiene sentido en una instituci?n estadounidense.

"Ese legado, m?s all? de sus éxitos militares, es probablemente m?s universalmente significativo. No es s?lo con las unidades militares segregadas, sino puntos de vista generales estadounidenses de integraci?n, respetando, acceso y oportunidades de las personas de todas las razas,"dijo Hirai. Hoy en d?a, agreg?, su impacto va m?s all? de raza, religi?n y cultura a las preferencias sexuales.

"Los tipos como yo que sirvi? en el servicio activo en el ejército en las ?ltimas décadas, fuimos beneficiarios de la obra revolucionaria hicieron estas unidades," dijo Hirai. "Estas oportunidades estuvieron aqu? para nosotros que pueden no haber estado all? para ellos en las décadas antes de. Somos beneficiarios de su trabajo".

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New Round Of Negotiations Needed As Iran Nuclear Deal Hits A Snag

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GENEVA -- GENEVA (AP) — France raised questions Saturday about whether a proposed deal to temporarily curb Iran's nuclear program went far enough, complicating negotiations with the Iranians and casting doubt on whether an agreement could be reached during the current round of negotiations.

Chances of that appeared to diminish as the day went on.

A Western diplomat in Geneva for the talks told The Associated Press it appeared that a new round of negotiations would be needed to agree on all points of a startup deal meant to lead to a comprehensive agreement ensuring that Tehran's nuclear work remains peaceful.

He said preparations were being made by both sides for an announcement later in the day of a new meeting within a few weeks. He said earlier that the French were holding out for conditions on the Iranians tougher than those agreed to by the U.S. and France's other negotiating partners, diminishing hopes of a done deal Saturday.

However, the talks in Geneva were still underway, with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, and foreign ministers from Britain, France, Germany and Russia meeting with one another, and some of them with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.

Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Baodong Li also arrived Friday evening.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius spoke of "several points that ... we're not satisfied with compared to the initial text," telling France-Inter Radio his nation does not want to be part of a "con game."

He did not specify, but his comments suggested France thought a final draft of any first-step deal was too favorable to Iran, echoing concerns raised by Israel and several prominent U.S. legislators.

The French position was confirmed by another Western diplomat. Both gave no specifics and demanded anonymity because they were not authorized to comment on the diplomatic maneuvering.

Iranian state TV strongly criticized the French position, calling France "Israel's representatives at the talks."

The United States and the five other powers in negotiations with Iran aimed at freezing its nuclear program normally keep disputes among themselves, so the public show of French disagreement was unusual.

Optimism about an interim agreement had been high when the talks were extended for a third day on Saturday and raised to a ministerial level.

Fabius' remarks by telephone from Geneva were the first to provide some specifics on the obstacles at the talks.

Fabius mentioned differences over Iran's Arak reactor southeast of Tehran, which could produce enough plutonium for several nuclear weapons a year once it goes online. He also said there was disagreement over efforts to limit Iran's uranium enrichment to levels that would require substantial further enriching before they could be used as the fissile core of a nuclear weapon.

French Foreign Ministry spokesman Romain Nadal pointed to "rather large cohesion" among the negotiators and said France wanted "the international community to see a serious change in the climate" of talks with Iran.

"There have been years of talks that have led to nothing," Nadal said, alluding to the need for tough terms on Iran.

Iran, which denies any interest in nuclear weapons, currently runs more than 10,000 centrifuges that have created tons of fuel-grade material that can be further enriched to arm nuclear warheads.

It also has nearly 440 pounds (200 kilograms) of higher-enriched uranium in a form that can be turned into weapons much more quickly. Experts say 550 pounds (250 kilograms) of that 20 percent-enriched uranium are needed to produce a single warhead.

Iran says it expects Arak, the plutonium producing reactor, to be completed and go online sometime next year. It would need additional facilities to reprocess the plutonium into weapons-grade material, and the U.N's nuclear agency monitoring Iran's atomic activities says it has seen no evidence of such a project.

Fabius said Iran is opposed to suspending work on Arak while nuclear negotiations go on in an attempt to reach a first-stage agreement, then a comprehensive final deal limiting Tehran's atomic work. He said that "for us" suspension was absolutely necessary, but it was unclear if that meant France was alone in seeing the issue as non-negotiable or whether he was speaking for the rest of the negotiating group.

Iran also is being asked to blend down "a great part of this stock at 20 percent, to 5 percent," Fabius said. Uranium enriched to 5 percent is considered reactor fuel grade and upgrading it to weapons-level takes much longer than for 20 percent enriched uranium.

Fabius suggested that the six powers were looking for an Iranian commitment to cap future enrichment at 5 percent.

"We are hoping for a deal, but for the moment there are still issues that have not been resolved," he said.

Signaling that the talks could end without agreement, British Foreign Secretary William Hague spoke of unresolved issues and told reporters "there is no fixed time for us to reach a conclusion."

Any agreement would be a breakthrough after nearly a decade of mostly inconclusive talks, but would only be the start of a long process to reduce Iran's potential ability to produce nuclear arms, with no guarantee of ultimate success.

Kerry and his European counterparts arrived in Geneva on Friday with the talks at a critical stage following a full day of negotiations Thursday, and he said some obstacles remained in the way of any agreement offering sanctions reductions for nuclear concessions.

The presence of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and the Chinese deputy foreign minister provided fresh hope for at least an interim deal.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted Friday that any agreement in the making was a "bad deal" that gave Iran a pass by offering to lift sanctions for cosmetic concessions that he said left intact Tehran's nuclear weapons-making ability. Israel is strongly critical of any deal that even slightly lifts sanctions unless Iran is totally stripped of technology that can make nuclear arms.

Asked about Netanyahu's criticism, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Friday "any critique of the deal is premature" because an agreement has not been reached.

The White House later said President Barack Obama called Netanyahu to update him on the ongoing talks and that Obama affirmed he's still committed to preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. The White House said Obama and Netanyahu would stay in close contact.

On Friday, Kerry tempered reports of progress, warning of "important gaps" that must be overcome. But Lavrov's deputy, Sergei Ryabov, was quoted then as saying that Moscow expects them to produce a "lasting result expected by the international community."

The talks primarily focus on the size and output of Iran's enrichment program, which can create both reactor fuel and weapons-grade material suitable for a nuclear bomb. Iran insists it is pursuing only nuclear energy, medical treatments and research, but the U.S. and its allies fear that Iran could turn this material into the fissile core of nuclear warheads.

___

Associated Press writers Jamey Keaten in Paris; Ali Akbar Dareini in Tehran, Iran; and George Jahn in Geneva contributed.

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lundi 11 novembre 2013

After Super Typhoon Haiyan, Filipino-American Community Bands Together To Send Aid To Philippines

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Maryam Bermudez, a humanitarian worker in the Philippine province of Bohol, braced herself Friday before venturing into towns devastated by super typhoon Haiyan.

She knew the people had not yet recovered from last month's 7.2-magnitude earthquake when the storm hit.

"I'm scared about what I might see," she said via Skype. "But I have to be strong because people are waiting for assistance."

Fortunately, help is on the way.

Filipinos and Filipino-Americans across the greater Los Angeles area are mobilizing fund drives and relief efforts to help their family, friends and compatriots -- or kababayan -- back home.

There are an estimated half a million Filipinos and Filipino-Americans in the greater Los Angeles area, making them the second largest Asian group after the Chinese.

Ruth Stewart, founder of the nonprofit Renew Our Minds and Heart (ROMAH) Foundation in Encino is preparing to fly to the Philippines this month to distribute aid alongside nuns, missionaries and other volunteers in remote villages ravaged by the storm.

"Shelter is a dire need for them right now," she said. "It takes people years to recover from a catastrophe like this. For us to provide immediate response would alleviate a lot of their stress."

Bing de la Vega, co-founder of the Philippine Disaster Relief Organization said his organization would hold a 5K walk at Woodley and Balboa Park in Van Nuys on Sunday to raise funds that would benefit victims of both the super typhoon and last month's earthquake.

"I'm sure there will be people in refugee camps," de la Vega said. "Food and medicine and blankets are needed for emergency relief," he said.

The Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles said monetary donations may also be sent through the National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council , the Department of Social Welfare and Development and the Philippine Red Cross.

Pastor Elbert Moralde of the Waterman Visayan Filipino Seventh-Day Adventist Church in San Bernardino said many of his parishioners have relatives affected by the storm and are eager to help.

"Tomorrow, during our church service, we will ask for donations from the entire congregation," he said.

Petita Virata, administration director of St. Denis Catholic Church in Diamond Bar, welcomed checks made out to Catholic Relief Services, which has deployed humanitarian workers to the Philippines.

She said some members of the congregation don't yet know the fate of their relatives because the storm knocked out power lines and phone lines.

"I'm hoping that most of us will be able to communicate with them by FaceTime or Skype," Virata said. "Our prayers are with all of them."

Marc Lawrence, head instructor at the South Bay Filipino Martial Arts Club, is worried about friends on the island of Cebu, which was in the path of the storm.

"Oh my God, I hope that they're all right," he said.

Ashley Sta. Ana of Torrance is fretting about her aunt, whom she has not been able to contact, despite many attempts.

"I'm scared and worried because we don't really know what's going on," she said.

Ashley's father, Von Sta. Ana, plans to put together packages and donate money to storm victims.

"After a storm that bad, then for sure nothing is going to be left," he said. "The housing there is not that sturdy and there are old people and I'm wondering what is going to happen to them after this storm." ___

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Sex Offender Group Homes Are Cause For Concern, According To LA City Council

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Citing concerns over illegal residences that serve as group homes for sex offenders, the Los Angeles Police Department was asked Friday to look into what other cities are doing to house the criminals and, from that, increase its efforts to limit their concentration in certain areas.

The City Council's Public Safety Committee asked for the report in 60 days, prompted by concerns that some landlords have illegally been housing too many sex offenders, often near parks and schools.

"State law allows six or fewer, but we have some buildings with 20, 30 or 40 people living in a home," Councilman Mitch Englander said. "Many of them are sex offenders. We end up with some very shady characters that are housing these people. They don't register, and we need to look at a way we can provide protection for the community."

Capt. William Hayes, commanding officer of the Robbery-Homicide Division, said the LAPD has a program where it checks on sex offenders to make sure they are complying with the terms of their probation and that they have registered.

Of the 12,000 registered sex offenders believe to be living in Los Angeles, Hayes said last year the department reached out to more than 8,400.

In addition to routine compliance checks, he noted officers respond to citizen complaints regarding the housing of sex offenders. Procedurally, the department coordinates with Parole and Probation to ensure there is no over-saturation of sex offenders in a particular part of the city.

However, Hayes cautioned about creating too tight of a residency requirement that could render the offenders homeless and thus required to re-register every 30 days.

"Making it more stringent turns this population into transients rather than living in homes with specific addresses," Hayes said. "They can register as transients, but what that means is we have no idea where they are until they register again. And they can register anywhere in the state, so you don't know where they are." ___

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Navy Christens The USS Gerald Ford, Its Newest Aircraft Carrier

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navy uss gerald ford Washington, UNITED STATES: Government officials and family members of former US President Gerald Ford salute a model of a new aircraft carrier named the USS Gerald R. Ford during a naming ceremony at the Pentagon in Washington, 16 January 2007. The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier CVN 78, which Cheney said will go into service in 7-8 years, will be the first in the new Gerald R. Ford class of aircraft carriers in the US Navy. (From L) are Secretary of the Navy Donald Winter, U.S. Vice President

NORFOLK, Va. -- NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — The Navy has christened its newest aircraft carrier, which will join the fleet in 2016.

The USS Gerald R. Ford is the lead ship in the Navy's next class of aircraft carriers. It was christened Saturday at the Newport News shipyard where it was built.

The Ford class represents the first new aircraft carrier design in more than 40 years. Among other things, it will be able to launch jets faster than previous aircraft carriers and will require fewer crew members. The Navy anticipates that having fewer crew members on board will save $4 billion over the ship's 50-year life span.

Former president Ford's daughter, Susan Bales Bord, is the ship's sponsor. She performed the ceremonial breaking of a bottle of American sparkling wine across the ship's bow Saturday.

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Obama t-shirts in the 'Caddyshack' course

FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida, FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) - President Barack Obama is hitting the Greens with a basketball star in golf club private Florida where "Caddyshack" was filmed.

Obama plays through intermittent showers at the Oaks Golf Club big in Fort Lauderdale. It is a private course, 18 holes where Bill Murray, Chevy Chase, Rodney Dangerfield and an unruly squirrel got into all kinds of mischief in the 1980 film golf.

Joining Obama for the start of Saturday was former player of the NBA Alonso of mourning. The White House said the former representative of trade in United States Ron Kirk, a frequent Obama and Cyrus Walker golf partner, the cousin of the senior presidential adviser Valerie Jarrett, completed the Quartet.

Earlier this year, Obama caused a stir when golfed in another Florida golf and yacht club exclusive with Tiger Woods.

Obama headlined three Democratic fundraisers in South Florida on Friday. The Saturday afternoon returns to Washington.

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'Star Wars' Casting Call In Chicago: Open Call For Young 'Episode VII' Leads Comes To Park West Nov. 14

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May the force be with you, hopeful Chicago-area padawans.

Reports emerged Friday that the production team behind the J.J. Abrams-directed "Star Wars: Episode VII" will be holding an open casting call for two "lead" roles in the latest addition to the sci-fi franchise from 3-8 p.m. at Park West, 322 W. Armitage Ave., on Nov. 14.

The Chicago Tribune first reported the film's casting director Maryellen Aviano is seeking a 17-18-year-old female who is "street smart, independent, athletic, natural beauty… all ethnicities, multi & bi-racial" as well as a male who can play 19-23 years old who is "athletic, smart, handsome, independent spirite [sic]." The characters have been named Rachel and Thomas.

Hopeful cast members younger than 18 need to be accompanied by a parent or guardian. Acting experience is not required.

The descriptions mirror those for a casting call being held in the United Kingdom this weekend and in other U.S. cities including St. Louis, Nashville, Austin, Troy, Mich. and Bloomington, Minn. in the weeks ahead. Applications can also be submitted online.

Earlier this week, Disney announced the highly-anticipated film will be released on Dec. 18, 2015.

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Bikers Involved In Alleged SUV Brawl Indicted By NYC Grand Jury

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NEW YORK (AP) — A grand jury has indicted 11 bikers, including an undercover New York City police detective, on various charges related to a motorcyclist-SUV highway melee.

The indictment Friday says undercover detective Wojciech Braszczok (VOY'-chek BRAZH'-ahk) was charged with gang assault, criminal mischief, riot and other counts.

Prosecutors have said Braszczok participated in the Sept. 29 attack by shattering the SUV's back window. He was off duty at the time. Attorney John Arlia (ahr-LEE'ah) didn't immediately return a message seeking comment.

Police say that after the SUV driver bumped a bike that had slowed in front of the vehicle, motorcyclists converged on the vehicle. Police say the driver, while trying to get away, ran over a biker then motorcyclists caught up with the driver and beat him. The driver hasn't been charged.

dimanche 10 novembre 2013

Do World Bank plans to eliminate extreme poverty, increase the incomes of poor people by the year 2030


By Anna Yukhananov

WASHINGTON, September 16 (Reuters) - the World Bank, facing a tight budget and greater competition for development funds, aims to become more selective in their lending, focusing on fragile States, sub-Saharan Africa, Asia South and other areas where it can have greater impact, according to a draft of strategy gathered by Europa Press.

The role of 42 pages, submitted to the Executive Board of the Bank last week, is the first major strategic revision under Jim World Bank President Yong Kim.

It offers the first concrete details of how the Bank plans to meet their goals of eliminating extreme poverty by the year 2030 and increase revenues of the 40 per cent poorer population in each country.

However, the strategy document is still vague about exact Bank programs are cut or reinforce and how to change your budget to reflect new priorities and loss of income.

When asked for comment, spokesman David Theis World Bank refused to elaborate further on the plan.

Founded after World War II to help rebuild Europe, the World Bank later focused on lending money to developing countries in order to improve the lives of the poor.

The global lender is praised for its scope in all over the world, strict rules and long-term approach. But has also been criticized for avoiding risks, delaying the approval of projects, does not respond to enough to what countries want and focusing more on pushing money towards outside the door instead of program outcomes.

Kim, who came to the helm of the multilateral institution for the development a little more than one year, it has launched a major reorganization to change all that, driving an emphasis on flexibility, a measurable impact and testing, or what he calls "the science of delivery".

The draft of the strategy recognizes the World Bank has become less important for the growth of many middle-income countries, that can rely more on private funds and bilateral loans from emerging markets like China.

The World Bank also admits to having a limited funds to address the needs of developing countries, where new infrastructure projects alone will require $1.5 trillion in funding a year.

On the other hand, the World Bank wants to repositioned as a "solutions", offering not only financing but also his knowledge of how to solve common development challenges.

"Role of the Group of the World Bank in knowledge, call and global has increased in relation to its role in the provision of funding", said the newspaper.

Keep the media relevant Bank focusing on areas where other donors are reluctant to go, as the fragile and countries affected by conflict, by the year 2015 to half of the world's poorest people.

The World Bank also said it plans to use its global presence and projects to share data and to promote better policies in areas such as climate change.

To help countries address needs and better coordinate development policies, the Bank also plans to work more closely with other development partners such as the United Nations, and philanthropic organizations.

And you want to promote more partnerships public - private to basic services such as health, education and housing - to the dismay of some non-profit organizations that argue that such programs has mixed records to help the poor.

BUDGET CUTS

As part of the new strategy, the World Bank also plans to make some cuts to its budget. They operate in fragile States, collection of data to measure the progress of countries and to ensure a global presence have strained administrative funds of the Bank.

And also less stable or medium-income countries lending means less income, since the Bank has made loans with interest money.

"Maintain a minimum scale of operation is important if the World Bank group influence the political agenda and support clients in the delivery of effective development solutions," said the newspaper.

"Although the World Bank Group is not facing immediate financial concerns, financial capacity will have to be strengthened", added the newspaper.

The Bank said that it will have to be selective in what it does and make cuts to certain programs, without specifying any more. It is also considering relying more on fees for advisory services and money from trust funds, or funds dedicated to the Governments for specific projects.

Trust funds already account for one of every $10 that the Bank disburses the Governments, according to the newspaper.

The new budget will be implemented for the next fiscal year, which begins in July, 2014, and can be one of the most thorny for the Bank resolve as it decides which programs and departments must shrink.

Changing the internal culture of the Bank also may represent a threat to the success of the new strategy, according to several external analysts who reviewed the document.

Part of this new approach means to integrate the work of the Bank with the activities of the private sector lending arm, the International Finance Corporation and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, which ensures investments in difficult environments.

The three agencies of working with different customers and may have different approaches to specific projects, create conflicts of interest.

The details of how it will change its internal organization to align with the Bank's new strategy will be presented later in an "implementation document".

For now, the draft strategy will be to the Governments of the members of the World Bank for approval, before being formally presented during the annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund at the beginning of October. (Presentation of reports by Anna Yukhananov; Edited by Andrea Ricci)

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Get off a train is better when received by this friendly Russian boy (VIDEO)

This Russian guy does not know any of these people, but that does not prevent you to say hello to each one of them left the train, and is very cute. He definitely has a future as a politician.

But what that kind of shirt?

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A Lot Of People Are Very Upset That An Indian-American Woman Won The Miss America Pageant

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Sunday night Nina Davuluri, Miss New York, was crowned the winner the 2014 Miss America Pageant. She is the first contestant of Indian descent to be crowned Miss America.

When her win was announced, Twitter immediately exploded with hateful tweets, with people calling her Arab.

Read the whole story at BuzzFeed

Lawrence Rothman's '#1 All Time Low' Video Is The Creepiest Thing You'll See Today

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Lawrence Rothman doesn't do everything the same way you do things. In the video for his lead single, "Montauk Fling," Rothman dressed himself as Elizabeth Taylor and seduced himself in a hotel room, and he returns with the haunting visuals for "#1 All Time Low" -- premiering exclusively on HuffPost Entertainment.

In the new dystopian video, a battered and bruised Rothman meanders through various scenes of a certain type of hell that make the grislier scenes in "Trainspotting" look like "Smurfs 2." Blood, dirty bathwater -- it's all there. David Bowie favorite Floria Sigismondi directed the video for the song.

"What I try to do during the 14 to 17 hours that i'm awake, and are participating in this rat race, is aim to experience shit that blows my mind and rattles the mundane cage of cynical normalcy," Rothman said. "Why? So that when I finally get chewed up and spit out on the other end I can say, 'Fuck it, that was great, those where the days of my life. This idea is the theme of my music."

"This video to cut to the chase, as everyone including myself, attention spam is about as long as a gif," he adds. "It's about me trying to do away with my adult jaded, cynical, self and push through a rebirth of sorts or a actually a reintroduction to my inner 'tween spirit' -- the part of me that doesn't give a fuck and goes with the flow, like when you're a kid and your parents are having a bitch-fest, but it doesn't phase you because you're too enthralled with building LEGO city."

Take a look below and let us know what you think in the comments. Viewer discretion is advised. Select tour dates follow.

10/29 - The Sebright Arms - London, UK
11/5 - Casbah - San Diego, CA (w/ Active Child)
11/23 - El Rey - Los Angeles, CA (w/ Active Child)

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Hoda Kotb says someone sent her porn

Hoda Kotb accidentally shared his cell phone number with the world, and at least one person used to text her a picture of your "trash".

The "Today" host was recently in a New York fashion week presentation and told the New York Post that he changed his number. The newspaper gave a look to some of the 2,000 texts received, saying that he was confident that you were not porn. "There was only one porn I saw", Kotb said. "Someone had to text their trash because that is what they do."

Kotb accidentally showed her phone number on the air last week while I was trying to demonstrate the new Samsung smartwatch. Your phone immediately began to fly with text messages and phone calls from viewers.

(h/t page 6)

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Looking for the bed of your dreams? Think outside the box-spring with these fanciful roosts

We all know that a bed should be comfortable. But there is something more that a bed should be: welcome. At the end of a long day, when you enter your room, your heartbeat should slow as you look at this refuge of a hurry-up world. Perhaps I expected too much of my bed; But, unless you are Insomniac, one third of every day is spent on it. It must be very calmingly. Maybe even quite outrageously great, pulling at him, like a magic carpet in your dreams. At least, is what do the following beds for their owners.

Read the full story at www.houzz.com

samedi 9 novembre 2013

Health surveys are unpopular Obamacare on the eve of the launch

The Affordable Care Act is unpopular that ever, with whom they disapprove divided about if the law should be reformed or scrapped, according to a Pew Research/USA Today survey released on Monday.

Forty-two percent of Americans approved of the law, while 53 percent disapproved. It is the highest rate of disapproval that Pew has found since the enactment of the law in 2010. Attitudes among the uninsured were somewhat more positive, with 49 percent approval and 46 percent disapproval.

A survey of NBC/Wall Street Journal, also published on Monday, found similar opposition, with 44 per cent of Americans calling the attention of health law a bad idea and 31 percent call it a good idea. NBC released a series of explanations of the respondents by their opinions, fears about "death panels" and rising costs, the happiness that pre-existing conditions are covered and young adults can be covered by the insurance of their parents.

Average of HuffPost pollster of all of the available public polls put disapproval of Obamacare in approximately 53 per cent.

In the Pew poll, those who did not approve of the law on health care divided into what lawmakers should do next: 27 per cent of respondents said that lawmakers should try to make Obamacare work best, and 23 percent said that they seek to derail it.

"This strategic issue is a particular point of conflict within the Republican party," said the Pew report. Republicans as a whole were only slightly more likely to fail law want improved, while 64 percent of tea Republicans wanted the right to fail.

Americans are divided almost evenly over which party trusted more to handle health care. Forty percent said that they believe that the Republican Party would do a better job dealing with health care, while 39 percent preferred Democrats. It is the first time that a Pew poll found GOP ahead in health care since 1990 at least. While the size of the edge of the Democrats has varied widely in the past, a survey of December 2012 had put 10 points ahead of Republicans on the issue.

More than three years later became the Affordable Care Act, 34 percent said they do not yet have a good understanding of does them the law. Only 51 percent knew that a health insurance Exchange will be available in your state. Awareness of the exchanges was significantly higher in the States that chose to run their own bags, or partnering with the federal Government that in States where trade will be led by the federal Government.

The NBC/WSJ survey also found that only 30 percent said that they understand the law of "very well" or "fairly good" health.

"As it turns out, that 30 per cent has more positive views about the health law (42 per cent good idea, bad idea of 45 percent), against 34 per cent do not understand it very well (17 percent good idea, bad idea 44 percent)," Mark Murray of NBC wrote.

The Pew/USA Today survey interviewed 1,504 adults between September 4 and September 8, while the NBC/WSJ poll surveyed 1,000 adults between September 5 and September 8. Both use telephone interviews live.

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NBC, CBS retracted the identity of the Navy Yard shooter

NBC and CBS were forced to withdraw the initial reports on the identity of the shooter responsible for the deaths and injuries in the naval arsenal of Washington on Monday.

Both networks identified the same man as the shooter and then they had to walk these reports back:

NBC's Pete Williams said that the error came from sources that found an identification card that looked like the alleged gunman:

False reports were perhaps errors in a day of confusing and contradictory information.

The killer was later identified as Aaron Alexis, a 34-year-old from Fort Worth, Texas.

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' Science self-portraits ' scientific focus, Geeks doing what they like best (photos)

This Science around us, and almost everyone can participate, to carry out a critical laboratory experiment to stroll through a Museum of natural history to simply navigate through a book on the Big Bang.

If you are a science nerd or a scientist Nobel Prize winner, we wanted to highlight doing or simply enjoy science. So we asked readers to share their science"self-portraits" - and here are our favorites. Click to see if the girl can detect it captured a bat... or the man holding a real human brain!

Please share your own science self-portraits by adding them to the slideshow below.

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"Catch crabs in Scotland."

"For all of my nerds bird companions out!"

"When the hands of our scientists are busy with science, helps you with your #scienceselfies". Here, physical Farid El Gabaly ranks a sample of electrode battery for analysis using x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.

Halloween Celebration at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, CA.

The Junior high school students experiment with fire in science class.

"I analyzed the assimilable organic carbon in drinking water samples. "

A look behind the scenes in a quarantine area.

Posing as Einstein at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, CA.

"This is how your holiday, in Costa Rica bats capture + Beach in the Middle time!"

"We spend a day doing fieldwork for the research Electrofishing. A brook trout caught!"

"I doing an extraction of basic drugs!"

"Medicine is a science, and, therefore, meet Jack Sexton, ACC!"

"Talkin bout autopsies all day."

"Very close and in the exploration of the distance. Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. ? Carl Sagan. "Taken from the Liberty Science Center.

"I love my job." At the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.

"Data data data data data today's data".

"My kids a few years back @ spark!Laboratory in Washington".

"This #realtimechem video summarizes a standard day in a chemistry laboratory of synthesizer".

"Hello only extracted a human brain."

"Inside a cage of faraday with a human brain."

This is what looks like a lot of science in reality ... "Reading / correct the chapter of the thesis of my student methods."

"My cells under the fluorescent microscope imaging".

"This weekend was playing with Dublin Bay prawns and a ROV. The ROV before using."

Of Washington University in St. Louis: "@WUSTLdbbs and @WUSTLmedschool have a lot of #scienceselfies".

"I am a bookworm, a scientist and World Traveler".

In a science classroom.

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jeudi 17 octobre 2013

How to encrypt your email and other lessons learned in a Cryptoparty (VIDEO)

From Edward Snowden retired curtain in cyberspying of the national security agency, there has been an improvement in "cryptoparties", where experts offer guidance on keeping private online communications.

Josh Zepps of HuffPost Live spoken with some technology specialists to get the scoop of what exactly happens at these parties. According to Brian Penny, a blogger at Brnetten, is an opportunity for inexperienced Web users learn easy ways to protect themselves with techniques such as encrypt e-mail messages.

"It is for people to know that when you're sending a normal email, it is the equivalent of sending a postcard by mail - no one can see what is there", said. "But when you use a... encryption, it's like putting the postcard in an envelope and sealing it so no one can see it except you and the recipient".

Cryptoparties typically also advocates measures like using online chat applications unofficially and leveraging networks such as Tor, which lets users browse the Internet anonymously.

"Applications in the real world which is what brings the digital technology and bridge the gap", said Penny.

Check out a look and the entire segment on how to evade the NSA in HuffPost living here.

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Dormideros de gallo azul gigante en la Plaza Trafalgar de Londres

London (AFP) - a huge blue Rooster descended on the Trafalgar Square in London on Thursday, but the work of art has ruffle feathers by placing the symbol of France on a site marked a famous British victory over Napoleon.

4.7 Meters (15.5 feet) in height and foot colors lived overseas, the fiberglass Rooster blue was carved by the German artist Katharina Fritsch and monitor the famous square for 18 months.

Entitled Hahn/cock, was officially launched by Mayor Boris Johnson Londres, who said that he would abstain from making any "double meanings" rude about the erection of a giant cock at the monument in London.

"I had a brilliant artist, Katharina, emergency meeting," joked.

"She said it was all related to the interpretation of a woman of a man... or something. I think that it is one of those occasions where politicians have to resist any kind of artistic interpretation."

It is the latest work of art to Ponte tourist hotspot "fourth plinth".

Fritsch, 57, said she didn't know the Rooster was a French non-official symbol, and that she sought to represent the strength and regeneration.

"But is a good humorous side effect to have some French in a place that celebrates victory over Napoleon", said The Guardian newspaper, adding: "It has become like a cock!"

Trafalgar Square is named after the victory of the British Royal Navy on the French and the Spanish fleets at the battle of Trafalgar in 1805, a conflict is key in the Napoleonic wars.

The Rooster will be located on the other side of the square of the column of Nelson, a monument that commemorates the English naval hero Admiral Horatio Nelson, who was killed during the battle.

A group of conservationists had tried to get bird forbade the square, saying that it was "completely inappropriate, however fanciful and dramatic might seem".

There are four sockets of large stones in each corner of the Trafalgar Square, three of whom have statues. The fourth was to hold a statue of a horse in 1841, but due to insufficient funds was never completed.

Since 1998 the fourth plinth has been used to display temporary art pieces and so far has been host of artworks, including a giant ship in a bottle and a huge nude statue of the English artist Alison Lapper, who was born without arms, during her pregnancy.

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Paul Rand: nobody in Congress 'has a strong belief in the rights of minorities that I do'

Senator Rand Paul (R - KY) is pushing with efforts at the Republican voters black and Hispanic, stating in an interview that Yahoo News not "believes there is someone in the Congress, which has a strong belief in the rights of minorities to me."

Reviews were given as a result of the controversy in the lathe to Assistant of Senator Jack Hunter, who resigned last week. Hunter, co-author of the book from Paul The Tea Party Goes to Washington, was attacked by its last radio commentary supporting the ideology neo-Confederate and denouncing the possibility of "a majority of non-whites in America".

Paul has addressed this controversy front, defending the Hunter as reflection and a talented writer whose previous work was designed to shock political.

"If I thought it was a white supremacist, he would be dismissed immediately," Paul told The Huffington Post earlier this month. "We will not tolerate, and I have not seen any evidence of that."

During an appearance at the University historically black Howard University earlier this year, Paul described his efforts to revamp the image of the Republicans to make it more appealing to minority voters.

"Frankly, it's an uphill battle, to try to convince him that we have not changed," said Howard students, referring to the older history of the Republican party as a defender of civil rights. "But that's part of me."

Paul, recognizing the scope of such an enterprise, is optimistic about his chances for points in common between the Republicans and minority communities.

"[The image of Republicans is] not something to change overnight, so I'm not realistic," the Senator said that Yahoo News. "If you were to poll American Africans only on issues without party, you'll find that they are actually sympathetic to Republican problems on many fronts [social]."

While critics often point out the ambivalence he expressed in an interview Louisville Courier-Journal's 2010 on whether he would have voted for the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Paul posture against the imprisonment for non-violent drug offences has gained favour with civil rights groups.

"Many African Americans, particularly young men, make mistakes like children and I do not think that they should be punished for the rest of their lives," he said, referring to mandatory minimum penalties for non-violent drug offences.

At the beginning of this year, Paul, and Senator Patrick Leahy (D - VT) presented a draft law that give judges more flexibility to cancel those minimums and dictate sentences more appropriate.

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House Republicans shifted right by primaries

WASHINGTON - House Republicans feel increased pressure to head firmly on the issues, thanks to changes in the policy of the primary election that is complicating the ability of Congress to solve large problems.

Independent research supports the belief of these lawmakers they owe their jobs to more conservative activists, and is more secure that never turn right on many issues, instead of seeking compromise with the Democrats.

On the other hand, the Democrats of the House facing an electorate leaning more liberal in their own primaries. But the trend is less dramatic for the Democrats, whose supporters are more open to compromise to help government work, polls show. And Republican control of the House makes more consistent dynamic GOP.

The recent struggles of the House to handle routine tasks once - such as passing a bipartisan bill in the farm and raise the federal debt limit - in part come from the millions of Republican primary voters who elect representatives with severe warnings not to compromise with the Democrats. It is also one reason that efforts to rewrite immigration laws in the nation face problems in the House, where Republicans quickly dismissed the Senate's bipartisan approach.

In interviews, House Republicans often cite concerns about a possible challenge from the right in their next primary. Many of them represent Republican districts so strongly that it is almost impossible for the party's candidate to lose a general election to a Democrat. Also, these lawmakers say, it is very unlikely that a moderate Republican can wrest the nomination from an incumbent conservative party.

"There are a lot of moderate Republicans who participate in primaries in a conservative district," said representative Kenny Marchant, r-Texas.

That leaves many Republicans of the House with the only requirement to ensure his re-election: never give a room pretty conservative hard-charging right to mount a viable challenge in the primary.

In practice, the task does not seem so difficult. Only six Republican House lost primaries of his re-election last year. Half of them fell to fellow holders in districts redrawn forcing two colleagues who oppose each other. The other three lost to rivals with strong tea party support.

Loss of the Deputy Jean Schmidt was instructive. A conservative by almost any measure, the Ohioan three periods was attacked however to vote to raise the federal debt ceiling and give a kiss on the cheek to President Barack Obama as the House by its 2012 of the direction of the Union State.

Memories of what happened to Schmidt--and for veteran Republican senators like Bob Bennett and Richard Lugar, who also lost the primary to tea party-backed rivals--will rise several times in political debates, House of extradition. Republican legislators regularly take the temperature of conservative activists in their districts, which are crucial in the primary elections, which often attract modest turnouts.

"The members of the House are better in the reading of their districts than anyone else," said Republican lobbyist and pollster Mike McKenna.

McKenna said that it is not unusual to discuss immigration reform with Republicans House that says, "I'm getting e-mails from people who voted in the primaries. "" They say ' I don't care what the Farm Bureau, say I hate these things. ""

Representative John Fleming, R - LA, tracks such e-mails and phone calls. He said that his Office recently received 80 calls about immigration, "and all of them were against Senate Bill."

The Senate Bill would create a path to citizenship - or what many conservatives call "Amnesty" - for millions of immigrants living here illegally. Fleming, you wondered if he is always concerned about going too far for the Republican party primary voters in his district, said: "What is the chance that a moderate Republican coming in and saying, 'Oh, I'm for amnesty'?"

Marchant, the Congressman from Texas, said that it is a permanent conservative seen by voters the Republican party in his district oeste-Dallas primary lean more and more to the right. Tea partiers once voted for the nominees of the libertarian party, said, they are now full-fledged Republicans.

"The Republican mainstream, as a result, have become more conservative," said Marchant. The tea party activists, he said, "found that they could enter the Republican primary and make a real difference."

The representative of the Republican party, Howard Coble, chosen by 15 of central North Carolina, data change in the behavior of primary voters in the middle of the 1990s. Conservative groups, said, "were challenging Bob Dole for not being sufficiently pure."

"That opened the doors to primary races" against Republican incumbents, said Coble.

Surveys of voters support the view that Republican voters are becoming more conservative.

On average, from 1976 to 1990, 47 per cent of the people who voted Republican in House races were considered to be conservative, according to exit polls. A slightly smaller participation had called moderate politicians.

During Clinton presidency - which includes bruising fights over the care of health, gun control, taxes and the uprising began his impeachment - Republican conservatism. From 1992 to 2006, the voters of the Republican party were on average 52% conservative and moderate 41 percent.

And in the most recent elections for the House, 2008-2012, more than 6 in 10 voters who supported a candidate of the party Republican described as conservative. Approximately one-third called themselves moderate.

Meanwhile, those who vote for the Democrats in the House more Liberals have become. But self-proclaimed Liberals understand still less than half of that group. In the years pre-Clinton, 25 per cent is considered to be liberal; on average 33% did so from 1992 to 2006; and it stands at 40 percent in the last three elections.

Michael Dimock, which tracks these trends by the Pew Research Center, said several years ago, there was a noticeable difference between social conservatives and business conservatives of the Republican party. Today, he said, are more Republican voters unified - and solidly conservative.

"The socially conservative right has adopted that you principle anti-Government, pequeno-gobierno and consolidates to a large extent", said Dimock.

House Speaker John Boehner, r-Ohio, put a positive spin on Sunday in what many see as the paralysis of Congress.

"We should not will be judged by how many new laws that we created," Boehner said on CBS "face the nation". "We should be judged on how many laws repeal".

___

Associate Director of press polling Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

___

Follow Charles Babington on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cbabington

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mercredi 16 octobre 2013

Birthday of Edward Hopper: The iconic American painter would 131 today (photos)

In honor of the birthday of Edward Hopper, a post originally published the year we are reviewing past honor the life and work of the artist.

Today is the birthday of the painter and engraver Edward Hopper. The artist who created the "Nighthawks", one of the best-known American paintings, would make the 131 if he were miraculously alive today.

nighthawks"Nighthawks", 1932


Hopper was born in Nyack, New York to a strict Baptist family. It is said that they have developed a talent for drawing at the age of five years, as well as a love of French and Russian culture. Encouraged by his parents, the young artist explored the media pen, charcoal, watercolour and oil, that they represent scenes of nature, as well as create their own humor political cartoons. Around the age of 18 years, he moved his conservative home on the Hudson River to study at the Institute of New York's Art Design, where he began to work with models live and paint in the style of Edouard Manet and Edgar Degas.

In 1905, Hopper began working for an advertising agency to earn money, covers magazines of design despite his dislike for the illustrations. It was during this time that he was able to travel to Europe to study artists like Rembrandt and Impressionists. Briefly inspired by the soft blades of the French painters, hopper finally settled in the scheme of dark color that would be known, painting urban scenes of street crowds and cafes through the dark lens of signature. After returning from abroad, hopper reluctantly continued to work on the illustrations, and it was not until 1913 that was able to sell his first picture, "Sailing", at the Armory Show in New York.

Hopper turned to engraving urban scenes of Paris and New York while living in Greenwich Village. In 1923, met his future wife Josephine Nivison, the woman who would serve as his manager, primary model and companion of a lifetime. From there, he began his career at foot, showing the newly created oil paintings and engravings throughout New York.

edward hopper"Night train", 1918


After a brief period of inactivity during the late 1940s, hopper continued to create works throughout the next two decades, focusing on American issues par excellence such as railways, gas stations, motels and restaurants. Hopper lived through a series of artistic movements in the United States, but his style remained constant, incorporating saturated colors and higher contrast to create dark, cinematic moods of film noir. It should not be a surprise, then, Alfred Hitchcock and Sam Mendes cited frequently as an influence.

On May 15, 1967, Hopper died in his Studio near Washington Square in New York, followed soon by his devoted wife ten months later. His body of work was donated in the Whitney Museum of American Art, with some famous parts find permanent homes at the Museum of modern art in New York, The Des Moines Art Center and the Art Institute of Chicago.

Don't forget to raise your glass to today the birthday of Edward Hopper.

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O.J. Simpson On 'Anger Management'? It's A Possibility

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O.J. Simpson could head from prison to "Anger Management."

According to The New York Post, Norman Pardo, Simpson's promoter, pitched the idea to a production executive in advance of Simpson's release from prison. Pardo said the show is interested.

"O.J. would play a thinly veiled version of himself -- a famous con who’s pissed off about being unjustly incarcerated," Pardo said.

UPDATE: According to a source close to the network, Simpson on "Anger Management" is never going to happen.

Charlie Sheen stars in "Anger Management" as a former minor league baseball player who becomes a therapist specializing in ... anger management.The New York Post reports the deal with Simpson is far from finalized, the network still needs to sign off on the idea and Simpson has yet to be released from prison.

"Anger Management" has been home to a few attempted comeback stories. Lindsay Lohan appeared in an episode and former "Grace Under Fire" star Brett Butler has a recurring role on the series. The FX comedy recently went through a cast shakeup. Selma Blair left the show and Brian Austin Green was promoted to series regular. "Anger Management" is looking for a new female co-star to play opposite Sheen.

Simpson's acting credits include the "Naked Gun" film series, "In the Heat of the Night" and "The Towering Inferno."

Click over to New York Post for more.

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