May 14, 2012

Nepal plane crash

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Nepal plane crash kills 15; six survive

5/14/2012bylatimes
NEW DELHI– A small  plane with 21 people aboard crashed in Nepal Monday morning, killing 15, including the pilot and co-pilot. The accident, involving a Dornier 228 aircraft operated by Agni Air, occurred near mountainous Jomsom Airport some 200 kilometers northwest of Kathmandu. 
M408kkpdThe charter flight from Pokhara city to Jomsom carried 16 Indian tourists, two Danish tourists and three Nepali crew. Two Indian children, aged 6 and 9, and their 45-year-old male Indian relative, all surnamed Kidambi, survived in critical condition, along with a Danish man and woman who were not immediately identified and a flight attendant, according to the Indian and Danish embassies in Kathmandu.
The survivors, in serious condition, were flown by helicopter to nearby Pokhara and admitted to the Manipal College of Medical Sciences, according to Apoorva Srivastava, an Indian Embassy official.
Narayan Dattakoti, a deputy inspector general of police, told media that early indications were the aircraft

May 13, 2012

Inside Sofia...

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Inside Sofia Vergara and Nick Loeb's Split

Sunday May 13, 2012
Inside Sofia Vergara and Nick Loeb's Split | Sofia VergaraFrom the outside, Sofia Vergaraand boyfriend Nick Loeb – who have reportedly split – seemed to be in it for the long haul. 

The vivacious Modern Family star remained a constant by Loeb's hospital bedside as he recovered from a serious car accident in Aug. 2010. A year after the injury, Vergara also stood by her man when he considered runningfor the Florida U.S. Senate. 

But behind the public appearances and PDA was an argumentative pair of opposites, who sources say had incredible chemistry, but were plagued by problems from day one. 

One source close to Vergara's inner circle, who tells PEOPLE the couple have broken up and gotten back

California budget



California budget hole deepens to $16 billion: governor

5/13/2012
California Governor Jerry Brown speaks in front of a California flag in Long Beach, California March 14, 2012. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
(Reuters) - California's budget deficit will swell to nearly $7 billion greater than expected due to weak tax revenues and slow progress in cutting budgets, Governor Jerry Brown said on Saturday.

Brown said the projected shortfall for the fiscal year ending on June 30 now stood at $16 billion, up from a previous estimate of $9.2 billion made in January.

"We are now facing a $16 billion shortfall, not the $9 billion we thought in January," Brown announced in a video posted on YouTube. "This means we will have to go much further and make cuts far greater than I asked for at the beginning of the year."

Brown is due to present on Monday a new budget proposal for the next fiscal year starting in July. In it, he said, he will outline how to eliminate the deficit.

California could receive a windfall from the planned initial public offering of online social media firm Facebook, which is aiming to raise as much as $12 billion when launched next week.

Revenues from Facebook stock options held by people living in California could reach around $2 billion, according to municipal bond analysts who say that the final amount will depend on how the shares trade on the market.

Facebook is expected to reveal its final pricing on Thursday for what would be Silicon Valley's largest market debut, then begin trading on Friday.

California, the most populous U.S. State, is still recovering from the 2008-2009 financial crisis that induced the worst recession since the 1930s. In April, California's tax revenues came in $2.44 billion below the state's estimate, largely due to weaker-than-expected revenue from personal income taxes.

Spending cuts have also been below what was projected, Brown said, blaming legal and federal constraints. "The federal government and the courts have blocked us from making billions of necessary budget reductions," he said.

The Democratic governor did not detail how he will fill the $16 billion budget hole, but he highlighted in his video a referendum scheduled for November on tax hikes for the wealthy.

"We can't fill this hole with cuts alone without doing severe damage to our schools. That's why I am bypassing the gridlock and asking you the people of California to approve a plan that avoids cuts to schools and public safety."

California is expected to raise $7 billion in new revenue if voters approve a ballot measure in November that would increase the state tax rate on earnings above $250,000 and the state sales tax.

Original measures which were expected to balance the budget were cuts of $4.2 billion in health, welfare and education spending.

If the tax increases are rejected by voters, Brown had suggested further spending cuts for another $5.4 billion mainly focusing on schools, communities colleges and state's two university systems.

S&P rates California's general obligation bonds A minus with a positive outlook which was reviewed from stable in February.

(Reporting By Tiziana Barghini, Editing by William Schomberg and Philip Barbara)


Opposition: Shelling...

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Opposition: Shelling, gunfire torment residents across Syria

By the CNN Wire Staff
updated 9:50 AM EDT, Sun May 13, 2012


Monday night, Anderson Cooper reports live from the Syria/Turkey border on the turmoil in the country. Watch "Anderson Cooper 360°"at 8 ET.
(CNN) -- Terror gripped cities across Syria on Sunday as residents came under attack by shelling and gunfire, opposition activists said.
Many homes caught fire as Syrian forces stormed Hama, the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. At least eight people were killed in the western city, according to Local Coordination Committees of Syria, an opposition network.
Explosions were also heard near the southern city of Douma and near a government security branch in the eastern Deir Ezzor province, the observatory said.

Lakers wasn’t easy

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Lakers finally eliminate Nuggets, but it wasn’t easy
By Mike Bresnahan / The Los Angeles Times
Sunday, May 13, 2012
The Los Angeles Lakers lolled and lurched against the Denver Nuggets before finally prevailing in Game 7, 96-87, to end their first-round series Saturday at Staples Center.
In a season where nothing came easy, where unpredictability easily beat out the sane and rational, the Lakers lost a 16-point third-quarter lead but came back to win.
It was nonsensical, Steve Blake leading the way with 19 points and outscoring Kobe Bryant (17 points) and Andrew Bynum (16).
It was chaotic, Pau Gasol capturing the night on one fourth-quarter possession, taking six rapid-fire offensive rebounds and missing five shots before finally scoring on a tip-in of his own miss.
It was official: Game 1 in the Western Conference semifinals is Monday in Oklahoma City. The Lakers, not the Nuggets, will be there.
Game 2 is Wednesday, followed by a highly unusual back-to-back Friday and Saturday at Staples Center.
Oklahoma City has been watching and waiting. The Thunder will have gone nine days between games before Monday’s tip-off.
The Lakers, though, could exhale for one night.
Gasol had 23 points, 17 rebounds and six assists, finally playing the part of a four-time All-Star.

assassinated

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Second Afghan peace broker assassinated

Gunmen killed a senior member of Afghanistan's High Peace Council Sunday morning, in yet another signal that some elements within the insurgency are against talks.

By Tom A. Peter, Correspondent / May 13, 2012
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN
In yet another blow to the Afghan peace process, gunmen assassinated a senior member of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council on Sunday morning. The attackers reportedly pulled up next to Maulvi Arsala Rahmani while he was stuck in Kabul’s rush hour traffic and opened fire killing the peace broker.
The murder of Mr. Rahmani comes less than a year after insurgents managed to kill the then head of the High Peace CouncilBurhanuddin Rabbani, in his own home using a suicide bomber disguised as a Taliban messenger.
Negotiating a settlement with the insurgency has long been seen by the US and NATO as the best way to

May 12, 2012

Carroll Shelby

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Carroll Shelby dies at 89; cult classic car designer

He retired from racing and built the Cobra, which married Ford V-8 engines with a lightweight British chassis. He later worked with Ford on the Mustang.



Winner's circle Carroll Shelby, the charismatic Texan who parlayed a short-lived racing career into a specialized business building high-performance, street-legal cars, died Thursday. He was 89.

Shelby died at Baylor Hospital in Dallas, according to an announcement by his company, Carroll Shelby Licensing. A cause was not disclosed.

He led a colorful, outsized life that touched virtually every corner of the automotive world, said Leslie Kendall, curator of the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles.

"He was the only individual to influence the designs of all three major American automakers. Everything he touched became legendary," Kendall said. "Even recently he was working on an experimental engine."

Time Magazine

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Time Magazine breast-feeding cover: Its art historical origins, and what makes the image so sensational

5/12/2012

Time Magazine’s sensational cover may have made a few subscribers squirm — and it’s ignited a fervent discussion about attachment parenting and breast-feeding. Beyond that, photographer Martin Schoeller’s image of 26-year-old mom Jamie Lynne Grumet breast-feeding her three-year-old son has inspired conversations about what makes a good cover, and what pushes the boundaries of taste.
Schoeller said in Time’s “Behind the Cover” article that he looked to religious imagery of the Madonna and Child for inspiration in creating this provocative contemporary image.
Pushing the boundaries is what makes a cover great, according to the Post’s visuals editor, David Griffin. He’s guided National Geographic and U.S. News & World Report in their cover designs previously, and was intrigued by Time’s arresting image.
“[A good cover] should always be what contemporary social norms can barely handle,” Griffin said. “My feeling is, you want to produce enough covers each year that people will remember you as a publication. When they look to renew, you risk the chance that they will forget about you.”

Vince Young

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Vince Young signs with Bills, but not as starter


Wal-Mart.com USA, LLCBills general manager Buddy Nix had no difficulty assessing Vince Young's attributes after agreeing to a one-year contract with the free-agent quarterback Friday.
Strong arm. Great mobility. And then there's his winning record as an NFL starter.
When it came to projecting Young's role with the Bills, Nix offered no guarantees except to say the starting job's already taken by Ryan Fitzpatrick, leaving Young competing for a backup job.
"We're looking always to try to improve our team," Nix said. "It's a competition for the backup quarterback job and not the starter. ... He knows it. That's the way it is."

Weekend book

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Weekend book pick: John Irving's 'In One Person'

5/12/2012

By USA TODAY

What should you read this weekend? USA TODAY's picks for book lovers include
The covers for this weekend's picks.
In One Person
By John Irving; Simon & Schuster, 425 pp., $28; fiction
Ever since that car coasted up the driveway with the lights out in The World According to Garp, you could craft an epilogue to the Kinsey Report with all the unusual impulses, desires and peculiarities that John Irving has tenderly humanized.
In One Person is a plea for acceptance. Novelist Billy Abbott, the bisexual narrator, grows up in

Greek exit not fatal for euro zone ...


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UPDATE 1-Greek exit not fatal for euro zone - ECB's Honohan

5/12/2012Reuters

* Greek euro exit could be managed technically-ECB's Honohan

* Would be blow to euro zone, not necessarily fatal

* EU's Rehn says Europe loans to Greece generous

TALLINN, May 12 (Reuters) - A Greek exit from the euro zone would damage confidence in the single currency bloc but not necessarily be fatal, Irish central bank chief and European Central Bank policymaker Patrick Honohan said on Saturday.


Facebook Co-Founder...

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Facebook Co-Founder Saverin Gives Up U.S. Citizenship Before IPO

By Danielle Kucera, Sanat Vallikappen and Christine Harper - May 11, 2012


Facebook Co-Founder Saverin Gives Up U.S. Citizenship Eduardo Saverin, the billionaire co- founder of Facebook Inc. (FB), renounced his U.S. citizenship before an initial public offering that values the social network at as much as $96 billion, a move that may reduce his tax bill.
Facebook plans to raise as much as $11.8 billion through the IPO, the biggest in history for anInternet company. Saverin’s stake is about 4 percent, according to the websitewhoownsfacebook.com. At the high end of the proposed IPO market capitalization, that would be worth about $3.84 billion. His holdings aren’t listed in Facebook’s regulatory filings.
Saverin, 30, joins a growing number of people giving up U.S. citizenship ahead of a possible increase in tax rates for top earners. The Brazilian-born resident of Singapore is one of several people who helped Mark Zuckerberg start Facebook in a Harvard University dormitory and stand to reap billions of dollars after the world’s largest social network holds its IPO.

Maritime tensions

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Maritime tensions with China bonds Philippines closer to US but brings its own risks

5/12/2012Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — China's assertive behavior is breathing life into America's historically tumultuous relationship with the Philippines.

With Washington turning its attention more to the Asia-Pacific region, the U.S. and the Philippines last week held the first joint meeting of their top diplomats and defense chiefs. The U.S. increased military aid and resolved to help its ally on maritime security.
The steps came with the Philippines locked in a standoff with China over competing territorial
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Viewpoints: Election impact on eurozone

5/12/2012
The elections in France and Greece have reverberated across Europe, with voters challenging the eurozone's austerity drive.
France now has a Socialist President, Francois Hollande, while in Greece the left-wing Syriza group came second.
The European Parliament, given more muscle by the Lisbon Treaty, is a big player in the debate. So BBC News asked a range of MEPs for their opinions on the election results and the eurozone crisis.

Markus Ferber (Germany), centre-right European People's Party

Markus Ferber MEP