April 24, 2012

asante samuel


AP source: Falcons hope to acquire Asante Samuel


The Atlanta Falcons were in negotiations on Tuesday to acquire cornerback Asante Samuel from the Philadelphia Eagles.
A trade for Samuel would provide a highlight to what has been a relatively quiet offseason for the Falcons, who have worked to retain their free agents instead of making a splash through trades or free agency.
The Falcons have six picks but no first-round selection in the NFL draft. They hope to acquire Samuel before the draft, according to a person familiar with the talks.




Grassley questions 'credibility' of White House review clearing staff in prostitution scandal


   A top Republican senator is raising doubts about the internal review that apparently cleared all White House staff of wrongdoing in the Colombia prostitution scandal.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, told Fox News on Tuesday that he wants an inspector general or some other third party to retrace the White House review, questioning the "credibility" of the assessment conducted by the White House counsel.
Press Secretary Jay Carney announced a day earlier that the counsel had determined the White House advance team was not engaged in "any inappropriate conduct" in Colombia. Carney announced the results of the review after initially claiming Friday it would not be necessary.

winning

Boehner on 2012 House elections: Democrats have a ‘one in three chance’ of winning



In what he called a "frank" interview Monday, House Speaker John Boehner, Republican of Ohio, said there's a "one-in-three chance" that Democrats could take control of the House of Representatives in the next election.
"I would say that there is a two-in-three chance that we win control of the House again," Boehner said during a Fox News interview Monday night, "but there's a one-in-three chance that we could lose and I'm being myself, frank."
Lawmakers, especially those in leadership positions, are rarely this candid about their thoughts on their party's odds.
Republicans won a majority in the chamber in 2010 after four years of Democratic control. Democrats need to net 25 seats to take back the House.

By Chris Moody | The Ticket
How to Beat Government Bonds — Using Social Security
By Jack Hough | The Wall Street Journal 

For an investment return that tops those offered by hedge funds, insurance firms or Wall Street banks, baby boomers should look to Social Security.
That's right: The same math that is driving Social Security costs higher can provide fat returns for people approaching retirement. All you need is a way to make ends meet while delaying the start of Social Security benefits from age 62 to as late as 70.

Winning the lottery

Virginia Woman Wins $1 Million Lottery Twice in the Same Day


By CHRISTINA NG | Good Morning America
PHOTO: Virginia Fike, a Berryville, Virginia woman won the lottery twice in the same day with  two winning tickets for $1 million each, so she won $2 million.


Winning the lottery once in a lifetime is pretty lucky. Winning the lottery twice in the same day? Virginia Pike is one of the few people that can describe that feeling.
The Berryville, Va., resident had two tickets that matched five of the six Powerball numbers in an April 7 drawing so that each ticket was

Home prices???!!!

US home prices drop for 6th straight month
Home prices fall in most US cities for sixth straight month, as housing struggles to recover
By Christopher s. Rugaber, AP Economics Writer | Associated Press

Do all signs point to a healthier housing market?WASHINGTON (AP) -- Home prices dropped in February in most major U.S. cities for a sixth straight month, a sign that modest sales gains haven't been enough to boost prices.
The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home-price index shows that prices dropped in February from

Chinese Banks


Analysts Question Chinese Banks’ Efforts to Raise Funds

By NEIL GOUGH | New York Times
HONG KONG — Chinese banks are among the biggest and most profitable financial institutions in the world. But the state-backed banks are also in need of capital, after an aggressive lending spree that was encouraged by Beijing.
Within the past year, seven of the biggest Chinese banks have tapped the markets for 323.8 billion renminbi, or about $51 billion, in new funds, according to Citigroup. Several financial firms are expected to raise an additional 111.9 billion renminbi in the next few months,

World stocks rise ahead


World stocks rise ahead of Federal Reserve meeting
World stock markets rise as traders turn their attention to Federal Reserve meeting


By Pamela Sampson, AP Business Writer | Associated Press

BANGKOK (AP) -- World stock markets rose modestly Tuesday following sharp losses the day before as investors looked to the Federal Reserve for new steps to help the U.S. economy.
News about Europe's debt crisis continues to overshadow markets with stocks swinging between positive and negative territory from one day to the next.

Nets say farewell to New Jersey



Nets say farewell to New Jersey
A rare sellout crowd showed up at the Prudential Center to soak in the memories
By Ohm Youngmisuk | ESPNNewYork.com

NEWARK, N.J. -- The New Jersey Nets played their final game in the Garden State on Monday night, and the occasion was enough to bring out a sellout crowd.

Rapper and part-owner Jay-Z came. So did former Nets Michael Ray Richardson, Derrick Coleman, Kenny Anderson and Kendall Gill, among others.

There were video messages from Jason Kidd, Kenyon Martin, Vince Carter, Buck Williams and even fan favorite Brian Scalabrine. And there was a Bruce Springsteen "Born to Run" video played with Nets highlights at the end.

Kidd wanted to be here in person, but he has a championship to defend in Dallas.

The 10 Greatest Nets

North Korea and China


North Korea and China reaffirm ties after rocket test
Chinese President Hu Jintao met with a top North Korean envoy in a reaffirmation of traditional ties following Chinese concern over Pyongyang's recent attempted rocket launch.
North Korea and China reaffirm ties after rocket test

State broadcaster CCTV made no mention of the failed April 13 launch in its report on Hu's meeting on Monday with Workers' Party international relations chief Kim Yong-il at the Great Hall of the People

April 23, 2012

US stocks


US stocks slide on economic tremors from Europe
Stocks fall on European debt worries, disappointing US earnings




US stocks slide on economic tremors from EuropeNEW YORK (AP) -- A collection of worrying news out of Europe sent stocks sharply lower on Monday.
The Dutch government collapsed Monday, a day after French President Nicolas Sarkozy lost the first round of that country's presidential election. A new report showed that European government debt continues to pile up despite severe budget cuts, which have led to unrest and political upheaval across the continent.
Europe's major stock markets plunged. In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average lost 102.09 points to close at 12,927.17. The Dow had dropped as many as 183 points in morning trading then spent the rest of the day climbing back.

Facebook


 Facebook reveals revenue, profit slide ahead of IPO

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook Inc said its revenue declined sequentially in the first quarter, the weakest top-line performance by the world's largest social media network since at least 2010.
"It was bound to happen. You are going to see a slowdown," said Anupam Palit, an analyst at GreenCrest Capital LLC, noting that it is harder to double revenue when the base is larger.

Secret girls of all countries in the mysterious boudoir



U.S. Military Academy

U.S. Military Academy at West Point exposed the scandal woman said that the school was a classmate rape are ignored


Xinhua News Agency for the newspaper feature articles on the 20th, two women, former director of the U.S. Naval Academy and Military Academy (West Point) report to court, the reason they attended was the rape of the other participants, the school ignored.
Was a classmate of rape
Plaintiff Carly - Markert, now 20 years old, Pennsylvania, West Point, former participants. The complaint said Markert suffered roommate's boyfriend raped in 2011, report to the school, the school failed to protect her rights or to take appropriate action, high-grade male students still in the Markert where the unit.
The complaint said Markert report was the scoff of the other participants. The school did not

Bad News for Bulls

Bad News for Bulls: So Goes Europe, So Goes the Market


By Aaron Task | Daily Ticker

A string of disappointing developments in Europe put heavy pressure on global markets Monday morning.
In recent trading, the Dow was down 150 points while major bourses in Germany and France were off by nearly 3% as Europe's crisis completed its migration from the back burner to the forefront of the market's consciousness.
Last week, financial markets became fixated on Spain's debt crisis and then turned to focus on French elections heading into the

CBS News

Zimmerman attorney: Apology was ill-timed


 Form(CBS News): The attorney for George Zimmerman apologized for the apology his client offered to the parents of Trayvon Martin during his bond hearing last Friday, saying he did not understand the victim's family would find the timing of his remarks inappropriate.


"We had reached out to see if we could do it privately," attorney Mark O'Mara said on "CBS This Morning."

Mark Strassmann reported that Zimmerman had asked for a private meeting with Martin's parents before Friday's hearing, which was rejected. Their lawyer, Benjamin Crump, said Thursday that requesting a meeting a day before the bond hearing was "self-serving."

Metta World Peace



Ron Artest, 'Metta World Peace,' ejected after elbowing James Harden during Los Angeles Lakers game


Lateef Mungin, CNN

(CNN) -- As the world knows, peace can sometimes be fleeting.
One-time basketball bad boy Ron Artest, who changed his name to Metta World Peace and said it was meaningful and inspirational, was ejected Sunday from the Los Angeles Lakers-Oklahoma City Thunder game for hitting James Harden in the head with his elbow.
After scoring against the Thunder in the second quarter, World Peace was cheering his own shot when he inexplicably hit the

April 22, 2012



UFC 145 Results: Winners And Losers


 by Tim Burke


After fourteen months of leadup to the showdown between UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and Rashad Evans at UFC 145, it was going to be tough to live up to the hype. So it's not really surprising that it didn't. The bout was fine for what it was, but it certainly didn't deliver the kind of closure that a finish would have. And while the rest of the card was decent, eight fights going to decision (including the first five in a row) definitely muted fan excitement to a degree. It will be interesting to see how well the pay-per-view does, and if it affects the UFC's promotion of one-fight cards. Anyway, let's get onto the fighters.

Winners



Jon Jones: It wasn't the home run that Jones was looking for, but it was enough for people to immediately start crowning him as the best light heavyweight in UFC history. Evans got to him more than anyone else has and made him look human at times, but it's clear that Bones was just on another level. The elbows were beautiful, and he showed off some other new facets of his game last night. This was the biggest victory of his career on both a personal and professional level. A lot of eyes were on him tonight, and he delivered. It will definitely aid his goal to be a mainstream star and get bigger endorsement deals.



Rory MacDonald: Rory Mac wasn't in an enviable position in Atlanta last night. If he won (and he did), people will just say he beat a nobody and he needs to fight stronger contenders. If he had lost or was ever in trouble against the relative unknown, his stock would have plummeted. Fortunately for him, he shook off 30 seconds of offense from Che Mills to start the bout and just mauled him the rest of the way. The UFC is grooming his as a star by using him in the co-main event, and he's holding up his end. "The next GSP" is premature, but he's definitely a contender.

Ben Rothwell: The expression "hard work pays off" is very fitting here. Rothwell transformed himself from a blob of a man into a svelte, athletic-looking heavyweight (okay, that might be a little bit over the top), then stepped into the octagon and had Brendan Schaub asking the heavens what the hell just happened to him in seventy seconds. He effectively resurrected his career with one left hook, and left fight fans with a moment that will live in infamy. Oh, and he picked up a knockout of the night check for $65,000 dollars too. I respect people that have the inexhaustible will to succeed, and Ben Rothwell proved he has just that.

Michael McDonald: Mayday made the leap from prospect to contender with his knockout of Miguel Torres. All the questions about his lack of killer instinct in the octagon should be silenced now. The UFC bantamweight division had just one real contender that might face the winner of the third bout between Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber, and his name is Renan Barao. Now there are two. Should the UFC match up Mayday and Barao? Or allow them to take separate paths to a title shot? The 135 pound division got a lot more interesting tonight.

Travis Browne: Hapa's double flying knee on Chad Griggs had me in awe. That's a big, big man, and that type of athleticism is great to see from a heavyweight. He walked right though Griggs, and deserves a shot at a name opponent. There aren't many guys the UFC can throw in there with him that can match his length and explosiveness, and it's time for him to move up the card.

Dan Henderson: I know he didn't even fight on the card, but he got two big presents tonight - a confirmed shot at the UFC light heavyweight title, and a champion that looked somewhat vulnerable for the first time in the octagon. Fan support for Hendo will be through the roof, and many people think the ageless wonder is now the man that can knock Jones off his perch. Is that realistic? I'm not sure, but I can't wait to see him try.

Losers after the jump!

SBN coverage of UFC 145: Jones vs. Evans



Losers

Rashad Evans: It's tough to see where Rashad goes from here. He has already fought everyone near the top of the UFC light heavyweight division except for Mauricio "Shogun" Rua. He confirmed at the post-fight press conference that he has no interest in moving to middleweight, and he's probably not going to be getting a rematch anytime soon. Evans is clearly an excellent fighter that can take out just about any light heavyweight on any given night. But sitting one step below his former friend Jones in the UFC pecking order is going to be tough for Evans.

Che Mills: I almost left him out of this category. Yes he lost a bout co-main event bout, but he wasn't expected to win it anyway. His lack of a ground game was exposed, but it's not like he's going to fall way down the welterweight rankings or anything. He wasn't on them to begin with. He'll just settle in as a mid-level 170-pound fighter, and will probably engage in some good undercard fights in the future. It wasn't a major setback, it was a lost opportunity. That's how I look at it.

Brendan Schaub: From top prospect to goofy gif fodder in no time. Schaub is a skilled fighter, but his chin is continually failing him. Ben Rothwell is a big boy and he hits hard, but he's not exactly known for one-punch KO's. Neither was Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. He's turning into the new Andrei Arlovski, which is really not a good thing. I'm not sure where Schaub goes from here, but I think he's going to be hearing about his post-knockout crazy arm thing for quite a while.

Miguel Torres: I thought Torres beat Demetrious Johnson in their UFC 130 bout. He was clearly still a contender, and his new fighting style had suited him well until he ran into Mayday. That was just the second knockout of Torres' career, but he's been in a lot of wars and the former WEC bantamweight champion suffered a huge, huge setback tonight. The division is still fairly thin and he's only 31, so there's plenty of time for him to climb back up the ladder. But it's going to take a while.

Mark Hominick: Hominick was probably the first guy that was still a 6-1 favorite in his next bout despite getting knocked out in seven seconds. Eddie Yagin was no Korean Zombie though, that's what people thought. It turns out that the problem wasn't the opponent, it's Hominick's chin. With 31 MMA bouts and 21 kickboxing bouts under his belt, maybe Hominick just can't hang with the heavy hitters anymore. It's heartbreaking to see many of Shawn Tompkin's former fighters struggling since he suddenly passed away last year. Mark will be back, but he'll likely never be in the title picture ever again.

Stephen Thompson: Wonderboy was a victim of hype. His sick knockout of Dan Stittgen had fans clamoring for more, but the man had just six MMA bouts coming in to a fight with the tough-as-nails Matt Brown. It's clear that he has some major work to do on his takedown defense and cardio, but all is not lost. The fans might move onto the next flavor of the month, but that will give Thompson time to balance his game out and come back stronger without the magnifying glass on him. Thompson will most definitely be winning more bouts in the UFC
How revealed the American agents to defend the Austria Pama recently, protected Austria Pama

president the duty the American agents blew out the excessive drinking, the move of prostitute scandal, some 20 foreign female was involved in the American Secret service to summon at least the prostitute scandal. Along with the media widespread involvement, some more and more details were disclosed that lets the White House and the Austria Pama is even more embarrassed. How does below let us have a look at the American agents is defends the Austria Pama security. Picture shows on April 13, 2012, the American Florida Tanzania handkerchief, the Austria Pama rides the Air Force One to arrive at the airport, the agent accompanies. Picture origin: Eastern IC

Weekend Lyrid meteor shower visible from Earth, space and ... balloon?
Image: Sky Map
By Tariq Malik


Lyrids display of "shooting stars" occurs late Saturday night and early Sunday

April 21, 2012

Yankees post back-to-back 7-run innings, win 15-9




By JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) — New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi found little to get excited about after Mark Teixeira's solo homer in the sixth inning.
After all, the Yankees still trailed by eight runs.
"You're down 9-0 and Tex hits what looks like an innocent home run. Then we come back with back-to-back seven-run innings," Girardi said after New York rallied to beat Boston 15-9. "I don't think I've ever been a part of that."
Nick Swisher hit a grand slam in the seventh to help the Yankees
UFC 145 live results: Rashad Evans vs. Jon Jones
UFC 145: Evans vs. Jones

By Todd Martin
April 21, 2012
UFC 145 takes place from Atlanta Saturday night, headlined by a grudge match for the UFC light heavyweight title between champion Jon Jones and challenger Rashad Evans. We'll be providing ongoing coverage throughout the evening, beginning at around 4PM Pacific.


 Rapid Reaction: Valentine's Day Massacre
By Gordon Edes

BOSTON -- The tweet came from a New Yorker (@jdubs88), and it’s a winner. Something the Red Sox are decidedly not. 


“The Bobby Valentine’s Day Massacre,” he called it

If this is what Fenway Park has to look forward to in its second century, it might prefer that someone hang a condemned notice at 4 Yawkey Way. 


One hundred years and one day into its existence, Fenway bore witness to what will make anyone’s short list of worst Red Sox losses ever. 

       In his weekly address, Obama pushes for lower student loan rates


By Leigh Ann Caldwell

CBS THIS MORNINGGeorge Zimmerman's release could be imminent1 of 9CBS THIS MORNINGNYPD close to finding Etan Patz remains?2 of 9CBS THIS MORNINGSecret Service sex scandal keeps growing3 of 9GALLERYMexico's Popocatepetl

        Orrin Hatch to face run-off in primary






By Leigh Ann Caldwell

(CBS News) Orrin Hatch of Utah overcame Tea Party-tied opposition to advance his quest for a seventh term in the Senate, but did not perform well enough at the Republican Party's state convention to avoid a run-off election.

Obtaining 59.2 percent of the vote of delegates at Saturday's state convention, Hatch will face Dan Liljenquist, a former member of the State Senate, in a run-off on June 26.

Although the veteran lawmaker easily obtained 40 percent of delegates' support to advance, he fell a hair short of obtaining the 60 percent support of state delegates necessary to avoid a run-off.


  Watergate figure Charles Colson has died at 80
By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON—He was described as the "evil genius" of the Nixon administration, and spent the better part of a year in prison for a Watergate-related conviction. His proclamations following his release that he was a new man, redeemed by his religious faith, were met with more than skepticism by those angered at the abuses he had perpetrated as one of Nixon's hatchet men.

But Charles "Chuck" Colson spent the next 35 years steadfast in his efforts to evangelize to a part of society scorned just as he was. And he became known perhaps just as much for his efforts to minister to prison inmates as for his infamy with Watergate.

Colson died Saturday at age 80. His death was confirmed by Jim Liske, chief executive of the Lansdowne, Va.-based Prison Fellowship Ministries that Colson founded. Liske said the preliminary cause of death was complications from brain surgery Colson had at the end of March. He underwent the surgery to remove a clot after becoming ill March 30 while speaking at a conference.

Colson once famously said he'd walk over his grandmother to get the president elected to a second term. In 1972 The Washington Post called him "one of the most powerful presidential aides, variously described as a troubleshooter and as a `master of dirty tricks.'"

"I shudder to think of what I'd been if I had not gone to prison," Colson said in 1993. "Lying on the rotten floor of a cell, you know it's not prosperity or pleasure that's important, but the maturing of the soul."

He helped run the Committee to Re-elect the President when it set up an effort to gather intelligence on the Democratic Party. The arrest of the committee's security director, James W. McCord, and four other men burglarizing the Democratic National Committee offices in 1972 set off the scandal that led to Nixon's resignation in August 1974.

But it was actions that preceded the actual Watergate break-in that resulted in Colson's criminal conviction. Colson pleaded guilty to efforts to discredit Pentagon analyst Daniel Ellsberg. It was Ellsberg who had leaked the secret Defense Department study of Vietnam that became known as the Pentagon Papers.

The efforts to discredit Ellsberg included use of Nixon's plumbers -- a covert group established to investigate White House leaks -- in 1971 to break into the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist to look for information that could discredit Ellsberg's anti-war efforts.

The Ellsberg burglary was revealed during the course of the Watergate investigation and became an element in the ongoing scandal. Colson pleaded guilty in 1974 to obstruction of justice in connection with attempts to discredit Ellsberg, though charges were dropped that Colson actually played a role in the burglary of Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Charges related to the actual Watergate burglary and cover-up were also dropped. He served seven months in prison. Before Colson went to prison he became a born-again Christian, but critics said his post-scandal redemption was a ploy to get his sentence reduced. The Boston Globe wrote in 1973, "If Mr. Colson can repent of his sins, there just has to be hope for everyone."

Ellsberg, for his part, said in an interview that Colson never apologized to him and did not respond to several efforts Ellsberg made over the years to get in touch with him. Ellsberg said he still believes that Colson's guilty plea was not a matter of contrition so much as an effort to head off even more serious allegations that Colson had sought to hire thugs to administer a beating against Ellsberg -- an allegation that Colson states in his book was believed by prosecutors despite his denial.

"I have no reason to doubt his evangelism," Ellsberg said of Colson. "But I don't think he felt any kind of regret" for what he had done, except remorse that he had been ineffective and got caught.

Colson stayed with his faith after Watergate and went on to win praise -- including the prestigious Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion -- for his efforts to use it to help others. Colson later called going to prison a "great blessing."

He created the Prison Fellowship Ministries in 1976 to minister to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families. It runs work-release programs, marriage seminars and classes to help prisoners after they get out. An international offshoot established chapters around the world.

"You can't leave a person in a steel cage and expect something good to come out of him when he is released," Colson said in 2001.

Michael Cromartie, director of the Evangelical Studies Project at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, worked with Colson at Prison Fellowship Ministries. He said he's certain Colson's faith was genuine.

"Before he went off to prison he had a born again evangelical experience, a conversion experience," he said. It produced guffaws in official Washington, Cromartie said, but Colson demonstrated he was serious.

When Colson emerged from prison, "he had a lot of offers to do other things that would have made him a lot of money", but he wanted to serve people who had been "forgotten" in society, Cromartie said.

"I think if he's going to be remembered for anything, he's going to be remembered as a person who had a complete turnaround in his life," he said.

While faith was a large part of Colson's message, he also tackled such topics as prison overpopulation and criticized the death penalty, though he thought it could be justified in rare cases. He said those convicted of nonviolent crimes should be put on community-service projects instead of being locked up He wrote more than 20 books, including "Born Again: What Really Happened to the White House Hatchet Man," which was turned into a movie.

"(W)ho was I to moralize, to preach to others?" Colson wrote. "I'd botched it, was one of those who helped bring on Watergate and was in prison to prove it. Yet maybe that very fact ... could give me some insights that would help others."

Royalties from all his books have gone to his ministry program, as did the $1 million Templeton prize, which he won in 1993.

Colson also wrote a syndicated column, and started his daily radio feature, BreakPoint, which airs on more than 1,000 radio networks, according to the PFM Web site.

While he admitted he'd been wrong to do so much of Nixon's dirty work, he remained embittered at one of the sources who'd exposed the wrongdoing. In 2005, when it was revealed that Mark Felt was the infamous "Deep Throat" responsible for the fall of the Nixon administration, Colson was disgusted, having worked so closely with Felt. "He goes out of his life on a very sour note, not as a hero," Colson said.

Colson, a Boston native earned his bachelor's degree from Brown University in 1953 and served as a captain in the Marine Corps from 1953 to 1955. In 1959, he received his doctorate with honors from George Washington University.

He spent several years as an administrative assistant to Massachusetts Sen. Leverett Saltonstall. Nixon made him special counsel in November 1969.

In the mid-1990s Colson teamed up with the Rev. Richard Neuhaus to write "Evangelicals and Catholics Together: The Christian Mission in the Third Millennium," calling for Catholics and evangelicals to unite and accept each other as Christians.

In February 2005, Colson was named one of Time magazine's "25 Most Influential Evangelicals in America."

Time commended Colson for helping to define compassionate conservatism through his campaign for humane prison conditions and called him one of "evangelicalism's more thoughtful public voices."

"After decades of relative abstention, Colson is back in power politics," Time wrote.

Mark Earley, a former Virginia attorney general who became president and chief executive officer of Prison Fellowship Ministries after his failed gubernatorial run in 2001, said the influence of Colson's work in his ministry is a different kind of power from what he had as Nixon's special counsel.

"Yet, it wasn't until he lost that power, what most people would call real `power,' that Chuck began to make a real difference and exercise the only kind of influence that really matters," Earley said on BreakPoint.

"Prison Fellowship is possible only because its founder, Chuck Colson, was forced to personally identify with those people who hold a special place in God's heart: prisoners and their families."

In October 2000, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush restored Colson's civil rights, allowing him to vote, sit on a jury, run for office and practice law. Colson had a home in Naples, Fla., and Bush called him "a great guy ... a great Floridian."

Ultimately, Colson credited the Watergate scandal with enriching his life.

God "used that experience -- Watergate -- to raise up a ministry that is reaching hundreds of thousands of people," Colson said in the late 1990s. "So I'm probably one of the few guys around that's saying, `I'm glad for Watergate.'"

‘Pregnant Man’ Thomas Beatie Separates From Wife

By Jennifer Abbey
gty thomas beatie jp 111031 wblog Pregnant Man Thomas Beatie Separates From Wife
Thomas Beatie, the female-to-male transgender who caused controversy in 2007 when he became pregnant, has separated from his wife of nine years, according to People magazine.
Beatie, who has had three children with wife Nancy, announced the separation during a taping of CBS’ “The Doctors.”
“Like all marriages, we have our ups and downs, and we’re going through a rough patch right now. At the moment, we’re separated,” Beatie said on the show, according to People magazine.
Also during the taping, Beatie revealed that he had the final female-to-male gender reassignment surgery, People reports.
“Nancy hasn’t seen the new me yet,” Beatie, 38, says.
Beatie, who was born female in 1974 and named Tracy Lagondino, had sex-reassignment surgery in 2002 and legally changed from female to male in Hawaii. But Beatie had never undergone “bottom” surgery, known as phalloplasty, to create an artificial penis, until now. He also left his female reproductive organs in place and said the decision to bear children came after his wife, Nancy, found out she could not.
Beatie first made headlines in 2007 when he appeared in photos, bearded with a pregnant belly. He was then known as “the world’s first pregnant man.”
Beatie’s three children, daughter Susan and sons Austin and Jensen, were all born between June 2008 and July 2010 through artificial insemination using donor sperm.
In October, Beatie, Nancy, and their three children appeared on another episode of “The Doctors” in which Beatie revealed he was considering a hysterectomy.
The new episode of “The Doctors” airs Monday, May 7.

Flyers again can’t seal the deal as Penguins triumph

By Frank Seravalli / Philadelphia Daily News


Flyers’ Danny Briere is sent to...PITTSBURGH — Drenched and dragging, the Flyers left the ice on Friday night with nothing left in the tank after a furious push in which they tried to end the Pittsburgh Penguins’ season.

With a sea of white towels cheering their exit, the Flyers, who outshot and outchanced Pittsburgh by a healthy margin in the third period, left behind a rambunctious crowd as the series heads back to Philadelphia for Game 6 on Sunday at noon.

Pittsburgh’s Jordan Staal and Tyler Kennedy went top shelf on goalie Ilya Bryzgalov just three minutes apart in the second period, and the Flyers were thwarted by goalie Marc-Andre Fleury’s newfound brilliance in the final period in a 3-2 loss at Consol Energy Center in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals.

                  Earth, better or worse?
3 ways our environment is healthier after the creation of Earth Day, and 3 ways it's not
By Naomi Nix, Chicago Tribune reporter

Graphic: Three ways our environment is healthier, and 3 ways it's notSunday is Earth Day, and Chicagoans are marking the occasion.

Local high school students will display a pop-up art exhibit at two city locations Sunday, weather permitting, through a program at the Field Museum focused on how Chicago families can help the Earth.

A yacht club is donating some of its proceeds from electric boat ride memberships on the Chicago River this month to the Earth Day Network. Clergy will deliver sermons on the importance of environmental sustainability.

After it began in 1970, Earth Day buzz eventually led to the founding of the Environmental Protection Agency and passage of the clean water, clean air and endangered species acts.

More than 40 years after the movement began, scientists say there are reasons to celebrate the health of Mother Nature, and also some reasons to worry.

Positives

Air quality

In the early 1970s, the newly-created Illinois Environmental Protection Agency began to enforce pollution restrictions on municipalities, private organizations and businesses. As lead and mercury levels lessened, so did pollution-related illnesses.

"It was really remarkable how quickly lead levels in the air declined," said Susan Kidwell, a geophysical science professor at the University of Chicago.

Green space

Experts say that green space in cities brings wildlife, clears pollution and has a positive effect on children's well-being.

"What we did is we added new types of spaces, because what we valued changed," said Kathleen Dickhut, deputy commissioner of the city's Department of Housing and Economic and Development.

Clean water

Soon after it was created, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency began to regulate what gets dumped into Lake Michigan and the Chicago River. The toxins, sewage and industrial waste that were regularly discarded in local rivers became better regulated, resulting in rivers that are not only cleaner but less likely to make residents sick.

Negatives

Invasive species

Quagga and zebra muscles, for instance, have been making their way to the Great Lakes. The finger-nail size sea critters filter out plankton that smaller fish eat, disrupting the normal ecosystem. The influx of these species also results in clearer waters, which means more sunlight can get through and creates more algae.

"If you were going to the border of Illinois (from) Michigan you would likely find a carpet of quagga muscles," said Todd Main, deputy director of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. "I guess that's one way of saying it's a big problem."

Carbon dioxide

Increased output of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, due to increased electrical production, creates changes in the Earth's temperature and weather patterns.

Climate Change

Climate change is a global environmental issue. Experts say regions such as Chicago will have to plan for how to deal with hotter summer, heavier rains and bigger snowstorms.

"People look at global climate change and they think of polar caps ... (but) there are local impacts too," said Aaron Durnbaugh, director of sustainability at Loyola University Chicago.


Jose Canseco not a 'gimmick' for Worcester Tornadoes
By Jim Wilson TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF

PictureWORCESTER —  The Worcester Tornadoes made their biggest — and most controversial — move in franchise history yesterday with the signing of Jose Canseco.

Canseco, the 1988 American League MVP, played 17 seasons in the major leagues, including a stint with the Boston Red Sox in 1995 and ’96, and hit 462 home runs. The 47-year-old Canseco last played in the majors in 2001 and may be more famous for his admission of anabolic steroid use in 2005. The six-time all-star has written two books about his controversial life in baseball and in his 2005 book “Juiced” he claimed 85 percent of major league players used banned substances.

Canseco was in Boston yesterday taking part in the 100th anniversary celebration at Fenway Park. He was among the former Red Sox players honored during a pregame ceremony, and he played to the crowd by flexing his biceps during his entrance.

“I can’t wait. It’s what I love to do,” Canseco said after yesterday’s celebration. “I’ll play anywhere, any time for any team that wants me. I’ll play until I can’t find a place to play. It’s my addiction.”

The Tornadoes start their season on May 17 at Newark, with their home opener on Monday, May 21, at 7:05 p.m. against defending Can-Am League champion Quebec.


A Fenway Park Celebration Ends When the Yankees Step on the Field


By DAVID WALDSTEIN

BOSTON — In what was surely the largest number of Red Sox ever assembled, 212 former players gathered Friday afternoon to help 36,770 fans celebrate the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park. But, as has often happened here, 25 Yankees spoiled the party.

They hit five home runs — two by Eric Chavez — to beat the Red Sox, 6-2, and ruin a long-anticipated day for the hosts.


DIARY-IMF, World Bank Spring 2012 meetings in Washington
From:reuters


Finance ministers and central bankers from around the globe are in Washington this week for the semiannual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
Following is a schedule of the top events. All times listed are in EDT/GMT.

Saturday, April 21

0800/1200 - The IMF's steering panel, the International Monetary and Financial Committee, meets. IMFC Chair Tharman Shanmugaratnam and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde hold news briefing following the meeting

Time TBD - The joint IMF/World Bank Development Committee meets. A news briefing follows

1100/1500 - Finance ministers from Africa holds news briefing

1700/2100 - The Bank of France hosts a panel discussion on financial stability

Sunday, April 22

Time TBD - IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde holds news briefing following a meeting of the African Consultative Group

     'Think Like A Man:' The Reviews Are In!
By Fallon Prinzivalli
Meagan Good and Romany Malco in "Think Like a Man"Critics agree the cliché and 'disposable' plot is strengthened by its ensemble cast.

The story line for "Think Like a Man" is nothing groundbreaking. Every rom-com touches on men wanting sex and women wanting a man to sweep them off their feet — with both unsatisfied until everything is tied into a neat bow in the last five minutes.

Based on the Steve Harvey book "Act like a Lady, Think like a Man," the film follows a group of men who realize their relationships are being infiltrated by Harvey's self-help book. The women are highlighting away at the pages and using every tactic to get what they want out of their affairs. And while many critics claim the movie looks more like an infomercial, what saves the film is the ensemble cast of attractive, talented actors — Michael Ealy, Meagan Good, Kevin Hart, Taraji P. Henson and Regina Hall, to name a few — who deliver mild lines with wit and perfectly hit the punch lines of
Phillies win a strange one, continue domination in San Diego



SAN DIEGO -- Two balks on their starting pitcher. Their leadoff man called out for hitting outside the batter's box. Their No. 5 hitter told to stay in the box after being hit with a pitch.


It was a strange game for the Phillies, but it would end like their previous 12 games in San Diego: They walked off winners, 4-1 over the Padres, extending the club record for consecutive wins in any ballpark.


"Baseball is a weird game," said Phillies manager Charlie Manuel, whose team hasn't lost in Petco Park since a defeat there on Aug. 16, 2008.


Shane Victorino singled to begin a three-run rally in the seventh inning. An inning later, batting right-handed, the switch-hitter hit his second home run of the season. It came a few pitches after umpire Dan Bellino told him to continue batting because he'd leaned into a pitch that him in the shoulder.


"I hit a home run; that's all I need to say," Victorino said.


Cole Hamels (2-1) held the Padres (3-13) to one run over six innings despite two balks, the first multi-balk game by a Phillies pitcher since Paul Quantrill also had two in July 1995.


Hamels agreed with the first balk call, but he yelled in disagreement after umpire Bob Davidson called him for a second balk in the fourth.


The lefty escaped after each balk.


"You're got to take it for what it was and keep pitching," said Hamels.


Brian Schneider's first hit of the year, an RBI single off Padres reliever Andrew Cashner with none out and the bases loaded, tied the score 1-1 in the seventh. One out later, Juan Pierre's two-run single put the Phillies ahead 3-1.


The Padres' Edinson Volquez (0-2) took a 1-0 lead into the seventh, but Victorino hit a leadoff single and advanced to second base on Ty Wigginton's single. When Freddy Galvis bunted the ball between the mound and third base, neither Volquez nor third baseman Chase Headley moved toward the ball. The result was a single that loaded the bases.


"I screwed up," Headley said.


Cashner replaced Volquez and began with a 99 mile-per-hour fastball to Schneider, who was in the starting lineup because catcher Carlos Ruiz had a sore wrist. Schneider pulled the fastball into right field for a base hit to score Victorino.


Pierre yanked a slider into right field for his third and fourth RBI of the season.


"I got the groundballs I wanted," Cashner said. "They just didn't find the right spots."


Jonathan Papelbon allowed no baserunners to get his fifth save and improve the Phillies' Petco record to 24-4 while lifting the team's 2012 record to 7-7.


A Padres fans who grew up in San Diego, Hamels entered the game as Petco's all-time leader in ERA (1.23) with at least five starts. But the lefty needed Petco's large outfield and a strong defense to keep the Padres in check.


"It's nice pitching in a big ballpark," Hamels said. "I wasn't able to locate with too many pitches. Fortunately with the ballpark, you're able to get away with a lot of pitches down the middle."


In the third, the Phillies' defense stepped up. Galvis, the second baseman, made a difficult play to his left, and right fielder Hunter Pence made a running catch in deep right-center.


In the fourth, it was Hamels who made a stellar defensive play, using his glove creatively to retire Yonder Alonso at home plate. With one out, Volquez put down a safety squeeze bunt toward Hamels, who raced off the mound and with a scoop-and-flip of his glove sent the ball about 10 feet to his catcher, Schneider, well before the slow-footed Alonso arrived.


"I know I couldn't have gotten the ball with my bare hand," Hamels said.


The Padres took a 1-0 lead in the fifth on Cameron Maybin's leadoff triple and Jesus Guzman's RBI groundout to shortstop. The run ended a 21-inning scoreless streak by Phillies starters.


Volquez overcame a leadoff double by Hamels off the center-field fence in the third.


NOTES: Hamels had three career balks entering the game. ... Phillies catcher Carlos Ruiz was out of the lineup because of a wrist injury suffered on Thursday when he jammed his wrist while tagging out the Padres' Will Venable. "The wrist was swollen," said manager Charlie Manuel. Brian Schneider started for Ruiz and might start Saturday's game as well. ... Phillies leadoff man Juan Pierre was called out for stepping outside of the batter's box while putting a bunt in play in the third inning.

Form: chicagotribune.com

      'Idol' Dixon looks forward to Murfreesboro homecoming



Colton Dixon, right, says goodbye to his fellow contestants after learning he had been eliminated Thursday on ‘American Idol.’ He will rejoin them on a summer tour in July.
Colton Dixon, right, says goodbye to his fellow contestants after learning he had been eliminated Thursday on ‘American Idol.’ He will rejoin them on a summer tour in July. / Photo courtesy of Fox

MURFREESBORO — Less than 24 hours after being eliminated from “American Idol,” Colton Dixon is on his way to New York. While his time on the show has come to a close, he is on to the next steps of promoting his career.

On Friday, the 20-year-old Murfreesboro native spent time with the media doing interviews, then he was off to the East Coast for an appearance on “Live with Kelly” Monday morning.

“I should be home later next week. I can’t wait. I’m super excited to be home,” Dixon said.

Although he has not had any meetings about record deals, he isn’t concerned.

“I’ll do one myself. I want to do one that bad,” he said.

Of course, Dixon is already signed on to the “American Idol” tour this summer from July to September.

Things definitely looked brighter in the morning, but Thursday night, Dixon was startled by his elimination.

“I knew I was going to be in the bottom three,” Dixon said. “I deserved to be.”

Dixon watched his performance along with those of his fellow contestants. He felt he was not as good, so he expected to be lower in the voting, but he never expected to go home.

“Once I heard I was eliminated, I just took a breath. My final song (“Everything” by Lifehouse) was totally a worship moment, totally a connection between me and God,” he said.

In between other obligations, Dixon took some time to answer reader-submitted questions from The Daily News Journal readers and DNJ.com Facebook friends.

Is there anything between you and (fellow Idol contestant) Skylar Laine?

Dixon: (Laughs) I get that all the time. No, I don’t have anything with Skylar. We are just friends, but I can talk to her about anything. That’s how close the Idol family gets. It’s funny though, when I got eliminated, she said, “Well, I guess we are not dating anymore. I guess we have to break up.”

Was it hard to keep your Christian faith being in Hollywood and getting so much attention?

Dixon: There were times I was so busy, but I always made a point to take time because I knew if I strayed, I would be lost. On stage was my time to be a reflection of God.


How is your relationship with your sister, Schyler after the audition situation?

Dixon: Schyler and I are doing just fine. Our family is such a tight knit one. She was enjoying (Los Angeles) life as much as I was. But I’m ready to be home and a normal family again.

Do you plan on pairing with your sister on a future album or are you pursuing solo careers?

Dixon: Schyler and I are doing solo careers, but I do think we should do a duet. I think that would be sic!

What kind of album do you plan to record?

Dixon: I really like (the bands) Switchfoot and The Line that crosses the line with Christian and secular music. I would love to do the best of both worlds, but whatever genre I go into, I won’t water down the message.

If you could change one thing about your journey on “American Idol,” what would it be?

Dixon: I would change the song choice from this week. Nothing against Lady Gaga, (he sang her single “Bad Romance”) but I think I would have chosen something with a more positive message.

Do you think your comment “I don’t care” on Wednesday, April 18, had a part in you going home? What did you mean by it?

Dixon: I hated the way they edited that. I didn’t see it until I was backstage with Jessica (Sanchez). What I said was “Ouch, that hurt,” and that I didn’t care because I was not singing for the judges or anybody else in the audience but for myself and God. When I saw how they edited it, that’s why I apologized. I appreciate the judges and their constructive criticism and all I learned from them. Yeah, it was kinda weird.

Did you expect to go home?

Dixon: I expected to be in the bottom three, but no, I didn’t think I would go home. I thought I would have a chance to redeem myself.

What is the one thing you learned from your experience on “American Idol”?

Dixon: Always be yourself, no matter what suggestions are put in your ear. Never waver from who you are, whether it is your faith or what style of music you choose.



Form:  DNJ EXCLUSIVE

April 20, 2012


  Pat Summitt To Receive Presidential Medal Of Freedom
WASHINGTON -- The White House says former Tennessee women's basketball coach Pat Summitt will receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor.
President Barack Obama says Summitt is an "inspiration" as the coach who has won more games than anyone else in NCAA college basketball history and for her willingness to "speak so openly and courageously about her battle with Alzheimer's."
The White House says Summitt was notified last week of Obama's decision to present her with the award. It will be presented later this year.
Summitt announced Wednesday she was stepping aside as Tennessee's head coach after 38 seasons. Summitt said in August that she had been diagnosed with early onset dementia.
Summitt has won eight national titles and 1,098 games during her coaching career at Tennessee.
APPat Summitt Presidential Medal Of Freedom


by:http://www.huffingtonpost.com
Wall Street up on earnings but tech, banks weigh


Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, April 20, 2012. REUTERS/Brendan McDermidNEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks mostly rose on Friday, led by solid earnings from McDonald's, General Electric and Microsoft, but declines in banks and technology shares pulled indexes from their day's highs.
The Nasdaq Composite fell as SanDisk Corp (NSQ:SNDK - News) led a drop in semiconductor shares with an 11.3 percent slide after its second revenue warning in as many quarters.
Apple Inc's (NSQ:AAPL - News) more than 2.4 percent fall also weighed, as shares continue to struggle ahead of earnings next week. Apple shares posted back-to-back weekly declines of more than 4 percent for the first time since late December 2008.
As earnings season moves into high gear, the first wave of corporate results has been substantially stronger than expected. About 81 percent of S&P 500 companies that have reported so far have beat expectations, according to Thomson Reuters data.
The impressive rate of beats comes amid lowered expectations, but the earnings have helped stocks regain their footing after a recent pullback on less-than-inspiring U.S. economic figures and renewed worry about Europe's debt crisis.
Analysts said the weakness heading into Friday's close was in part because of caution ahead of an early indicator of China's industrial activity, expected late Sunday.
"We already know earnings are coming in better, and the market has been up quite a bit," said Doreen Mogavero, president and chief executive of Mogavero Lee & Co. in New York.
"The private-sector manufacturing data from China will be setting the pace for next week, so people are taking some profits off the table," she said.
A weaker level in China's HSBC flash purchasing managers index late in March sent equity and other risk markets lower.
The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI - News) rose 65.16 points, or 0.50 percent, to 13,029.26. The S&P 500 Index (MXP:^GSPC - News) gained 1.61 points, or 0.12 percent, to 1,378.53. The Nasdaq Composite (NAS:^COMP) dropped 7.11 points, or 0.24 percent, to 3,000.45.
For the week, the Dow gained 1.4 percent, the S&P 500 added 0.6 percent and the Nasdaq fell 0.4 percent, down for a third week running.
Bank of America Corp (NYS:BAC - News) fell 4.7 percent to $8.36 after a downgrade from CLSA analyst Mike Mayo. The shares led declines in the S&P financials group (.GSPF), the second-worst performing among the S&P 500 top 10 sectors.
Microsoft Corp (NSQ:MSFT - News) jumped 4.5 percent to $32.42 and was the top boost to the Dow on Friday, a day after its profit report beat Wall Street's expectations.
General Electric Co's (NYS:GE - News) results drove buying in industrial shares. The company said it expects double-digit earnings for the year, which helped shares rise 1.1 percent to $19.36.
Industrial conglomerate Honeywell International Inc (NYS:HON - News) reported higher quarterly profit and raised its 2012 earnings forecast. The stock rose 2.4 pct to $59.39.
The S&P industrial sector index (REU:^GSPII), up 0.8 percent, was a top boost to the S&P 500.
McDonald's Corp (NYS:MCD - News) edged up 0.7 percent to $95.94 after the world's No. 1 fast-food chain reported higher quarterly profit, helped by strong U.S. sales.
About 6.68 billion shares changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and NYSE Amex, just shy of the 6.78 billion daily average so far this year.
Almost two issues rose on the NYSE for every one that fell, and despite the day's decline, three issues rose for every two that fell on the Nasdaq.
(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos, editing by Padraic Cassidy)
             Rare 1792 penny sells for $1.15M
  This photo combination made with images provided by Heritage Auctions shows the front and back of a copper and silver 1792 experimental penny that sold at auction in Schaumburg, Ill. on Thursday, April 19, 2012. Officials with Heritage Auctions say Kevin Lipton of Beverly Hills, Calif., bought the penny on behalf of a group of unnamed investors for $1 million and must also pay the auction house's 15 percent commission. It was never actually put into circulation and only 14 examples of the coin are known to exist. (AP Photo/Heritage Auctions)

Rare pennyRare penny

         Syrian forces fire on anti-regime protesters



By BASSEM MROUE, Associated Press 
BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian troops fired tear gas and bullets on thousands of protesters who spilled out of mosques after noon prayers Friday, activists said. State media reported that bombs and shootings killed 17 soldiers as the latest diplomatic efforts failed to halt more than 13 months of bloodshed in the country.
Opposition activists reported that at least 11 Syrian civilians were killed in regime shelling and other attacks Friday, the main day of the week for protests calling for the ouster of President Bashar Assad.
The United Nations hopes to have 30 observers in Syria next week to monitor the tenuous cease-fire between regime troops and opposition, and plans are being made for the deployment of up to a total of 300. An advance team of seven monitors, whose presence set off anti-Assad marches that prompted gunfire from security forces in at least two areas earlier this week, did not venture out Friday.
The U.N. is also trying to ramp up its humanitarian response and send more food, medicine and aid workers to Syria, said John Ging, the head of emergency response at the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
"The whole infrastructure of the country is under strain," Ging said. He added that the Syrian regime has finally acknowledged that there is a "serious humanitarian need" and that he hopes this will ease the aid mission.
Ging said the idea is to help one million people over six months with food, medical assistance and emergency supplies.
U.N. deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey said the World Food Program, through the Syrian Red Crescent, had given food to about 100,000 Syrians in need, a figure expected to double in a month.
The U.N. estimates some 230,000 Syrians have been displaced and more than 9,000 killed since the uprising against President Bashar Assad erupted more than a year ago. The revolt began with largely peaceful protests, but has grown increasingly violent as the opposition has taken up arms in response to a brutal regime crackdown.
A U.N.-brokered cease-fire that technically went into effect last week has been steadily unraveling, with regime forces continuing to shell rebel-held neighborhoods in the central city of Homs and opposition fighters ambushing government troops. Still, the truce is still seen as the most viable way to end the bloodshed, simply for a lack of other options.
Western powers have called for Assad's ouster, but the Syrian leader has dug in, unleashing his military on an ill-equipped and fractured opposition, and there appears to be little appetite in the international community to try to dislodge him by force with an operation similar to the one that helped topple Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi last year.
Instead, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called Thursday for the U.N. Security Council to adopt an arms embargo and other tough measures against Syria. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon took a hard line against Damascus, saying Syria was not honoring the cease-fire and that violence was escalating.
As part of the truce, Assad was to withdraw troops and tanks from urban centers and allow peaceful anti-regime marches, which the opposition has staged every Friday since the uprising began. He has ignored both provisions and continued attacking opposition strongholds, though the overall level of violence is down compared to the period before the truce.
On Friday, protests were reported in the capital Damascus and its suburbs, as well as in the northern city of Aleppo, the central regions of Hama and Homs, in eastern towns near the border with Iraq and in the southern province of Daraa. Demonstrators spilled out from mosques onto the streets, calling for Assad's downfall and chanting in support of the country's rebel forces, activists said.
"Security is extremely tight in Damascus," said activist Maath al-Shami, adding that despite the heavy presence of plainclothes security agents, there were protests in the capital's neighborhoods of Qaboun,            Midan, Barzeh and Mazzeh.
He said troops fired in the air to disperse the protesters. Activists also said troops fired bullets and tear gas at protesters in Aleppo, Syria's largest city, as well as the central city of Hama. They had no immediate word on casualties.
In the rebel-held Khaldiyeh neighborhood in the central city of Homs, which has become the heart of the uprising, a mortar round was striking every five minutes, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. An amateur video posted online by activists showed thick black smoke billowing as shells fell in a residential area.
The Observatory said eight civilians were killed in Homs on Friday, including a family of three whose home was struck by a shell. The group reported three more civilians were killed by army fire in other parts of Syria.
Citing its network of sources on the ground, the group said explosions and the crackle of gunfire rang out in the town of Qusair, near the border with Lebanon. Activists said the government was sending reinforcements to the town.
Meanwhile, Syria's state-run news agency SANA said a large roadside bomb went off in the southern village of Sahm al-Golan, near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, killing 10 soldiers. A separate explosion, also in southern Syria, killed five troops, the agency said, adding that two more soldiers were killed in separate shooting attacks.
In Paris, France's Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Friday that the international community has to live up to its responsibilities in Syria and prepare for the possible failure of an increasingly fragile cease-fire. He told France's BFM television that if special envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan "doesn't function, we have to envisage other methods."
Clinton referred during the Paris meeting to a resolution under the U.N. Charter that would be militarily enforceable.
"We need to start moving very vigorously in the Security Council for a Chapter 7 sanctions resolution, including travel, financial sanctions, an arms embargo, and the pressure that that will give us on the regime to push for compliance with Kofi Annan's six-point plan," she said.
Her comments were welcomed by the Syrian opposition Friday.
"The fact that Mrs. Clinton talked about this resolution (Chapter 7) shows that the international community is preparing to take stronger action against this cruel regime," said Fawaz Zakri, an Istanbul-based member of the Syrian National Council.
Any attempt to push for U.N. sanctions on Syria would likely meet resistance from Syrian allies Russia and China, which hold vetoes in the Security Council. Moscow and Beijing have already twice shielded Syria from U.N. sanctions over the crackdown.
Ban has recommended the Security Council quickly approve a 300-member U.N. observer mission to Syria, a number larger than what was originally envisioned. But he said he will review ground developments before deciding when to deploy the mission.
Associated Press writers Frank Jordans in Geneva, Switzerland, and Peter James Spielmann at the United Nations contributed to this report.

Brothels will offer robot prostitutes by 2050, researchers predict
News Corp Australian Papers

In the future brothels will serve-up robot prostitutes offering clean, guilt-free sex, say researchers.
The prediction was made in a research paper examining what the sex industry will be like in the year 2050.
Ian Yeoman and Michelle Mars of the Victoria Management School in Wellington, New Zealand, wrote about an imaginary brothel in Amsterdam's red-light district called Yub-Yum.
The research paper titled Robots, Men And Sex Tourism describes the brothel as being "modern and gleaming with about 100 scantily clad blondes and brunettes parading around in exotic G-strings and lingerie," io9 reported.
fembots.JPG





They said clients would pay $9,500 for an "all-inclusive service," featuring lap dances and intercourse from "a range of sexual gods and goddesses of different ethnicity, body shapes, ages, languages and sexual features."
The lifelike sex robots would offer people a guilt-free sexual experience devoid of sexually transmitted diseases, the researchers wrote.
They also predicted robot prostitution would put a stop to human trafficking associated with the sex industry.
“In 2050, Amsterdam's red light district will all be about android prostitutes who are clean of sexual transmitted infections,” the researchers wrote.
"All androids are made of bacteria-resistant fiber ... guaranteeing no sexually transmitted diseases are transferred between consumers."
They said the city council would have direct control over android sex workers – including prices, hours of operations and sexual services.
Android sex workers may also provide a "guilt free" experience for men, with prostitution gaining a new level of respectability, the paper said.
“Clients feel guilt free as they actually haven't had sex with a real person and therefore don't have to lie to their partner," researchers said, according to the Daily Mail.
However, the paper said the introduction of sex bots would force human sex workers out of work.
In 2007 Netherlands university student David Levy said humans will be marrying and having sex with robots by 2050.
He completed a PhD on the subject of human-robot relationships and said robots would become so human-like in appearance, function and personality that many people would fall in love with them, have sex with them and even marry them.






It News:     WRAPUP 1-Lagarde sees deal in making on IMF f...

It News:
    WRAPUP 1-Lagarde sees deal in making on IMF f...
:     WRAPUP 1-Lagarde sees deal in making on IMF funding WASHINGTON, April 19 | Thu Apr 19, 2012 11:17am EDT ( Reuters ) - International...
McDonald’s Worker Spits in Tea: How Gross is Fast Food?
By Sarah B. Weir


Police in South Carolina say that a McDonald's worker spit in two customers' cups of iced tea after they returned them because they weren't sweet enough. A video shows the employee,19-year-old Marvin Washington Jr., leaning over the open cups before giving them back. The fast food chain patrons claim they discovered phlegm in the drinks when they removed their tops. He was arrested Wednesday and charged with malicious tampering with food.
Related: The 11 Worst Burgers in America
Eating out can be an exercise in suspended disbelief. Wide eyed, we assume the food is fresh and wholesome and that workers have followed the "employees must wash hands" decree posted in the bathroom. Nevertheless, the McDonald's incident is so sickening because it actually bears out the urban legend that a disdainful waiter can and will contaminate your food if you tick him off.
Kitchen Confidential
Chef and television personality Anthony Bourdain's bestseller, Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly, exposed the grungy side of the culinary world over a decade ago. Not only is the book a rollicking memoir about coming of age in the 1970s and 80s, it's a veritable primer for how not to get food poisoning on date night. Bourdain rudely threw open the kitchen doors and exposed restaurants' dirty little tricks such as filtering cigarette ash out of used butter to make a sauce and serving old beef to the customers who ordered it well done.
Chicken scandals
There are many more recent examples of restaurants serving contaminated food and having unsanitary kitchens, especially by fast food joints. Most recently, a lawsuit by the former manager of a Kentucky Friend Chicken franchise in Oregon alleges the owner fired other employees for refusing to serve chicken that had turned green and passed its expiration date. According to the lawsuit, he resigned because he "couldn't stand serving rotten chicken to families anymore."
Related: Fast Food Saltier in US than Overseas
The website kfcmademesick.com chronicles a not-so-finger-lickin'-good list of other health code violations associated with the fried chicken franchise. They include rodent infestations, salmonella contamination, and foreign objects such as bandages and cock roaches showing up in cooked food.
Fast food dangers
Not to single out one business, an undercover NBC Dateline investigation revealed that 60% of restaurants in the nation's top 10 chains had received critical health code violations in the year-and-a-half prior to the report. Caroline Smith-Dewaal who works for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a food safety watchdog group, explained, "A critical violation is something that happens in a restaurant that may result in the food becoming contaminated."
Some of the recurring problems at franchises such as McDonalds, Taco Bell, Wendy's, and Burger King were rodent droppings, insects, food borne illnesses, debris and grime on counters and in prep areas, and poor employee sanitation. Given that about 25% of Americans eat fast food everyday, that's millions of opportunities to be exposed to something nasty, or worse, a pathogen that could make you sick.
The Huffington Post catalogs a revolting list of items reported to have been found in customers' fast food. Some of the gruesome highlights: maggots in Wendy's fries, saliva on a Whopper, a bloody band-aid in a Pizza Hut pizza crust, and a fried mouse in a basket of Popeye's chicken.
As for independent restaurants, Bourdain claims that kitchens are more sanitary than when he was working on the line. "Things are much better now—with fish markets, with the quality of food handling in general," he told WebMD. "There is a sense of pride and raised expectations in kitchens now that didn't exist when I started out." The availability of restaurant inspection reports online may also be pushing owners to clean up their acts.
Nevertheless, restaurant report cards have no control over the impulsive nature of human beings. Maybe it would be better just to sweeten that tea yourself.