Tuesday, March 31, 2015

The Death of Fake Reality Television, The Birth of 'Connected'

To celebrate the premiere of "Connected," a new docu-series premiering this week on AOL, some of the biggest reality television stars from the last decade participated in a mock funeral for the fledgling genre.

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The group, including Omarosa Manigault who officiated the event, gathered in Times Square to properly bid farewell to the reality television trends of yesteryear. The hope is that "Connected" will usher in a new, truer era of personal storytelling. The show, which was produced by Oscar-nominated documentarian Morgan Spurlock, focuses on six New Yorkers, all of whom were given a camera to document their lives over the course of six months. (Susan Sarandon, comic Derek Gaines and tech executives Eli and Ido Bendet-Taicher are among the show's stars.)

"This series pulls back the curtain on the world of over-produced, fabricated reality TV, and what emerges is raw emotion and real storytelling," Spurlock said in a statement in March. "The characters are truly brave and aspirational in what they share with the world." (The Huffington Post is owned by AOL.)

The first four episodes are available to watch right now. And to kick off the genre shift, Tila Tequila, Jon Gosselin and "Mob Wives" star Big Ang were among the participants in the fake funeral.

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Even former "Jersey Shore" star Ronnie Ortiz-Magro participated, saying goodbye to "GTL" (gym, tan laundry) by tossing a dumbbell, tanning lotion, and laundry detergent into the casket.

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More on "Connected" can be found here.

Amidst Data Flood, Treasurys Move Sideways

Tuesday’s trading is just the latest case in point: Despite three major economic releases, the Treasury market remained essentially flat. The 10-year Treasury yield hovered near 1.93% most of the day. This continues the trend from Monday’s and last Friday’s sessions which also were directionless compared to heightened volatility around Fedspeak earlier in the month. [...]

What Is The Difference Between a Tenant and a Lodger?

You're a landlord. You let someone rent your house or a room in your house. Is he a tenant or a lodger? Is there a difference? The rights and responsibilities of a landlord are many. However, if you don't know...

Uber Statement on NYC Driver-Partner

“The behavior in the video is wrong and unacceptable and we appreciate the NYPD investigating the incident. We are in touch with our driver-partner who was subjected to this terrible experience and will continue to provide any support he needs.”

UPDATE: Hostage situation at PA firehouse ends

Report of former firefighter taken into custody

Surfer Mark Healey Jumps Off Boat And Into A Monster Wave

Surfer Mark Healey has seen his share of hairy moments in the water, but not many will top this one.

While out on a boat in the rough waters of the famed Mavericks surf spot in California's Half Moon Bay, Healey spotted a big wave and jumped into it.

"Typically, in a potential maritime disaster, the best idea is to stay with the boat," the 33-year-old told Fox News. "But I really didn't feel like getting smashed around like an ice cube in a shaker, so I looked to my friends to the left and right of me and just told them, 'I don't know about you guys, but I'm jumping.'"

In addition to surfing, Healey is also a stuntman, spear fisherman, free-diver, skydiver and more, so he might be missing the gene that would keep most other people planted to the deck of the boat or avoiding rough waters in the first place.

Fortunately, both Healey and the boat seemed to come through the encounter just fine.

"I came up pretty much dying laughing, and then I checked to make sure everybody was OK on the boat," Healey told Fox News "There was some damaged equipment -- soaked cameras -- but everybody was pretty much in good shape."

The incident took place in December, which is when Healey initially posted the video to his Facebook page.

"This was the best wave I got, at Mavericks Saturday! Hahaha!" Healey wrote. "That's me flying through the air, trying to put as much space between myself and the potentially doomed boat. Enjoy......"

The clip has been going viral since being posted to YouTube earlier this month as a submission for the 2015 XXL Big Wave Awards, although it was his other epic wipeout that was eventually nominated.

Last year, Healey posted a video showing himself getting thrown around by a 25-foot wave, also at Mavericks.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Easy Cheese 3D Printer Not Yet Viable, Tests Show (VIDEO)

Futurists everywhere, brace yourselves: The technological singularity is postponed until further notice.

Robots can do amazing things. They can pole dance. They can virtually masturbate us -- and by us, we mean this guy. More importantly, they can solve complex, boring problems that only computers have the bandwidth or focus to deal with.

But what they can't do (yet) is build a simple structure out of Easy Cheese. And for that reason, we believe its unlikely that the machines will rise, take over humanity and end history anytime soon.


You call that a cheese fort? Pathetic.

Critics may be inclined to blame the medium. Clearly, Easy Cheese lacks the tensile strength to build even a basic four-sided structure. But that's besides the point, because a true AI overload would solve that problem.

Thank you, Andrew Maxwell-Parish, for demonstrating that puny humans aren't out of time just yet.






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AP: NSA weighed ending phone program before Snowden leak

Video still by PBS NewsHour

Video still by PBS NewsHour

WASHINGTON — The National Security Agency considered abandoning its secret program to collect and store American calling records in the months before leaker Edward Snowden revealed the practice, current and former intelligence officials say, because some officials believed the costs outweighed the meager counterterrorism benefits.

After the leak and the collective surprise around the world, NSA leaders strongly defended the phone records program to Congress and the public, but without disclosing the internal debate.

The proposal to kill the program was circulating among top managers but had not yet reached the desk of Gen. Keith Alexander, then the NSA director, according to current and former intelligence officials who would not be quoted because the details are sensitive. Two former senior NSA officials say they doubt Alexander would have approved it.

Still, the behind-the-scenes NSA concerns, which have not been reported previously, could be relevant as Congress decides whether to renew or modify the phone records collection when the law authorizing it expires in June.

The internal critics pointed out that the already high costs of vacuuming up and storing the “to and from” information from nearly every domestic landline call were rising, the system was not capturing most cellphone calls, and the program was not central to unraveling terrorist plots, the officials said. They worried about public outrage if the program ever was revealed.

After the program was disclosed, civil liberties advocates attacked it, saying the records could give a secret intelligence agency a road map to Americans’ private activities. NSA officials presented a forceful rebuttal that helped shape public opinion.

Responding to widespread criticism, President Barack Obama in January 2014 proposed that the NSA stop collecting the records, but instead request them when needed in terrorism investigations from telephone companies, which tend to keep them for 18 months.

Yet the president has insisted that legislation is required to adopt his proposal, and Congress has not acted. So the NSA continues to collect and store records of private U.S. phone calls for use in terrorism investigations under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. Many lawmakers want the program to continue as is.

Alexander argued that the program was an essential tool because it allows the FBI and the NSA to hunt for domestic plots by searching American calling records against phone numbers associated with international terrorists. He and other NSA officials support Obama’s plan to let the phone companies keep the data, as long as the government quickly can search it.

Civil liberties activists say it was never a good idea to allow a secret intelligence agency to store records of Americans’ private phone calls, and some are not sure the government should search them in bulk. They say the government can point to only a single domestic terrorism defendant who was implicated by a phone records search under the program, a San Diego taxi driver who was convicted of raising $15,000 for a Somali terrorist group.

Some fault NSA for failing to disclose the internal debate about the program.

“This is consistent with our experience with the intelligence community,” said Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich. “Even when we have classified briefings, it’s like a game of 20 questions and we can’t get to the bottom of anything.”

The proposal to halt phone records collection that was circulating in 2013 was separate from a 2009 examination of the program by NSA, sparked by objections from a senior NSA official, reported in November by The Associated Press. In that case, a senior NSA code breaker learned about the program and concluded it was wrong for the agency to collect and store American records. The NSA enlisted the Justice Department in an examination of whether the search function could be preserved with the records stored by the phone companies.

That would not work without a change in the law, the review concluded. Alexander, who retired in March 2014, opted to continue the program as is.

But the internal debate continued, current and former officials say, and critics within the NSA pressed their case against the program. To them, the program had become an expensive insurance policy with an increasing number of loopholes, given the lack of mobile data. They also knew it would be deeply controversial if made public.

By 2013, some NSA officials were ready to stop the bulk collection even though they knew they would lose the ability to search a database of U.S. calling records. As always, the FBI still would be able to obtain the phone records of suspects through a court order.

There was a precedent for ending collection cold turkey. Two years earlier, the NSA cited similar cost-benefit calculations when it stopped another secret program under which it was collecting Americans’ email metadata — information showing who was communicating with whom, but not the content of the messages. That decision was made public via the Snowden leaks.

Alexander believed that the FBI and the NSA were still getting crucial value out of the phone records program, in contrast to the email records program, former NSA officials say.

After the Snowden leaks, independent experts who looked at the program didn’t agree. A presidential task force examined NSA surveillance and recommended ending the phone records collection, saying it posed unacceptable privacy risks while doing little if anything to stop terrorism. The task force included Michael Morell, a former deputy CIA director, and Richard Clarke, a former White House counter terrorism adviser.

“We cannot discount the risk, in light of the lessons of our own history, that at some point in the future, high-level government officials will decide that this massive database of extraordinarily sensitive private information is there for the plucking,” the report said. Times, dates and numbers called can provide a window into a person’s activities and connections.

A separate inquiry by the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board concluded the same thing.

David Medine, chairman of that board, said the concerns raised internally by NSA officials were the same as theirs, yet when NSA officials came before the privacy board, they “put on a pretty strong defense for the program. Except their success stories didn’t pan out,” he said.

The post AP: NSA weighed ending phone program before Snowden leak appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

What Costco And Wegmans Have In Common With Google

What could Google possibly have in common with Wegmans and Costco?

The tech giant is working on big-idea projects like self-driving cars and “smart” contact lenses, along with its core search business. The other two are focused on, essentially, selling groceries.

Still, in one critical respect the three companies are getting one thing right: They offer workers “good jobs” -- not low-paying dead-end work where employers feel like cogs in the machine.

The three companies give their employees a certain amount of freedom and a feeling of ownership over their work, Laszlo Bock, Google’s head of human resources tells the Wall Street Journal. That makes workers “act like owners,” Bock says.

All three companies frequently wind up atop lists of the best companies to work for -- or companies everyone wants to work for -- thanks to competitive pay and solid benefits and perks. All three offer some level of flexibility and, especially, training that sends a message to workers that they’re valued.

Crucially, employees don’t feel stuck in their jobs. Wegmans and Costco both promote from within -- and devote real resources to training workers to move them up the ranks. Turnover is low.

Seventy percent of warehouse managers at Costco started at the lowest rungs of the company, according to BusinessWeek. At Wegmans, 66 percent of promotions are internal.

The stores also offer rational scheduling. Workers are happier when they can plan their schedules far out in advance and swap shifts with colleagues. This isn’t common in retail, where often workers don’t know when they’re working from week to week.

Google's perks are legendary. The company offers workers sabbaticals, mindfulness training and many other coveted benefits designed to keep employees motivated and happy.

All this pay and respect and freedom may cost the companies more at the outset. But research has shown that creating “good jobs” that offer more than simply zombie-like dead-end work is actually a win for employers.

“Higher investment in people leads companies to do really well,” M.I.T. professor Zeynep Ton told The Huffington Post in February. Ton’s research has shown that employers that offer “good jobs” -- work that’s engaging and offers opportunities for workers to think -- are more profitable.

It’s a win-win.

Uma experiência deliciosa na Páscoa

A Páscoa está quase chegando, e a Uber tem uma novidade. Nos dias 30 e 31 de março e 1º de abril, ao chamar um Uber, o usuário poderá encontrar deliciosas trufas de chocolate Milk Lindor Ball, com os cumprimentos da Lindt! Saiba mais.

Spotify Can Now Replace Your Game's Music On PlayStation

It just got a little bit easier to mix Slayer and "Dragon Age."

A new Spotify app is launching for PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 systems Monday that allows users to listen to albums, singles, custom playlists and everything else the music streaming service already offers on other devices. The move is the latest example of a media ramp-up on Sony's popular video game consoles, coming just weeks after the launches of PlayStation Vue, a streaming TV service, and HBO Go for PlayStation 4.

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Cycling through albums on PlayStation's new Spotify app.


You'll access Spotify via the PlayStation's menu like any other app or game. Once the program is started, you can cycle through music on your TV and control it with your DualShock controller. You can also control music using a connected device, such as a smartphone -- a standard Spotify feature.

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An example list of connected devices using Spotify on a Windows 8 computer.


There is a unique feature on the PlayStation Spotify app, however: It will allow you to select music and play it over a game's existing audio. If you were so inclined, you could blast some Drake over "Minecraft" or Johannes Brahms over "Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare."

dragon age inquisition
Imagine this climactic moment in "Dragon Age: Inquisition" set to "All About That Bass" as performed by the Kidz Bop Kids. Heaven.


Of course, just because you can do something doesn't mean you should. Tom Happ, developer and composer for "Axiom Verge," an upcoming PlayStation 4 title, told The Huffington Post that sound is a vital part of many games.

"I do personally feel that games tend to go hand in hand with their soundtracks, so it would be a little like watching the music video for one song while the audio from a different song plays," Happ told HuffPost.

That said, you might be forgiven for throwing on some interesting tunes if you're spending hours dodging lightning in the Thunder Plains of "Final Fantasy X." (Just trust us on this.)

Spotify will be available on your PlayStation Monday -- the app is "rolling out," meaning there's not a specific time you should expect it. It's launching in 41 different markets, including the United States, Canada and Mexico. If you already have a Spotify account, logging in is simple, and both the free and premium versions will work. If you don't have a Spotify account, you can sign up via PlayStation and use the credit card associated with your PlayStation Network account, a Spotify representative said. New users will be able to test Spotify Premium for 30 days at no charge.

Drei gute Gründe uberTAXI zu fahren

Viele Wege führen an's Ziel, mit uberTAXI bist du aber besonders clever unterwegs.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Rihanna Rocks 2015 iHeartRadio Music Awards In Versace Green Fur Coat & Thigh-High Boots

When Rihanna posted a photo of Lil' Kim on her Instagram account Thursday, we had no idea that she'd recreate the rapper's style at the 2015 iHeartRadio Music Awards.

Riri looked like she stepped straight out of the 1997 music video for "Crush on You" while performing her new single "Bitch Better Have My Money." Dressed in an emerald green Versace fur coat, thigh-high boots, nameplate necklace and oversized sunglasses, she oozed sex appeal and swagger.

The Barbadian singer even styled her jet black hair with blunt bangs that looked like the colorful wigs Lil' Kim wore in the '90s. #Nailedit

Check out Rihanna's glamorous green get-up from the iHeartRadio Music Awards below and tell us what you think.




White House To Benjamin Netanyahu: Your Move - POLITICO

A dozen Jewish House Democrats laid it out for deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes during a meeting in the Longworth House Office Building last week: Enough. They’re just as upset about what Benjamin Netanyahu said ruling out a two-state solution, but President Barack Obama didn’t need to keep reminding them and everyone else.

The UberFRESH Website Has Moved!

We're excited to announce that our new website is live. To view upcoming UberFRESH menus and FAQs moving forward, please visit www.uberfreshla.com.

As HIV epidemic rages in Indiana, some lessons from British Canada

Indiana Governor Mike Pence this week declared a public health emergency because of 79 H.I.V. cases among injection drug-users in the southern part of the state.

Pence has launched a 30-day needle-exchange program to stop the virus, which officials say is being spread by addicts sharing infected needles. Needle-exchange programs allow anyone to hand-in used syringes in exchange for clean, free ones.

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Pence has long opposed needle-exchange programs, which he argues promote drug use, but he said he was willing to temporarily reverse course.

“I do not enter into this lightly,” he said. “In response to a public health emergency, I’m prepared to make an exception to my long-standing opposition to needle exchange programs… I don’t believe effective anti-drug policy involves handing out drug paraphernalia.”

Back in the 1990s, Vancouver, British Columbia found itself grappling with a severe epidemic of HIV/AIDS among intravenous drug users.

“Vancouver experienced what has been described as the most explosive epidemic of H.I.V. ever observed outside of Sub-Saharan Africa,” said Dr. Thomas Kerr, an H.I.V. researcher in British Columbia.

Officials in British Columbia created what has been hailed as one of the most effective H.I.V. prevention programs in the world — one that’s being studied by China and the U.S. for its success containing the virus among a very hard-to-reach population.

PBS NewsHour Weekend traveled to Vancouver last year to examine how their program works, including a look inside a controversial facility where medical staff help addicts inject illegal drugs safely.

You can see that full report here below. [Editor’s note: This video report contains depictions of intravenous drug use that may be disturbing to some viewers.]

The post As HIV epidemic rages in Indiana, some lessons from British Canada appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Bikini-Clad Britney Spears Spends Spring Break With Her Sons

Britney Spears' spring break vacation was family-friendly.

The pop icon hit the beaches of Hawaii with her sons, 9-year-old Sean Preston and 8-year-old Jayden James. Spears shared adorable snapshots from the trip with her 41 million Twitter followers over the weekend:







The "Perfume" singer and her boys shared their own People magazine cover last week, and the proud mom spoke lovingly about watching her children grow up.

“Preston is very opinionated, very expressive, and if he doesn’t like something, he’s going to tell you, But he has a huge heart, he’s a good kid and he has manners," she told People. "Jayden is sweet, very soft-spoken, kinda funny. He’s adorable -- a momma’s boy,” she said.

Too cute!

WIN A GOLDEN TICKET TO THE F1 SHOWRUN

On the 1st of April, 2015, we’re giving you a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be a part of the ultimate Infiniti RedBull Racing experience and win your Golden Ticket to the Red Bull F1 Showrun on the 5th of April.

Looks Like Suri Cruise Had The Time Of Her Life At The Kids' Choice Awards

Living it up! Suri Cruise looked like she was having an amazing time at the 2015 Kids' Choice Awards in Inglewood, California, on Saturday. The 8-year-old, who attended the show with her mom, Katie Holmes, smiled as she watched everyone from the cast of "Modern Family" to host Nick Jonas get the royal Kids' Choice Award treatment -- getting slimed in green goo, obviously. Suri's proud mom looked just as happy to be there as they posed for photos together:

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katie holmes

katie holmes

Holmes and her daughter have been spending some adorable quality time together recently. Last week, the "The Giver" actress took to her Instagram account to share a black-and-white photo of the mother-daughter duo as Holmes applied makeup in the mirror:


#girltime

A photo posted by Katie Holmes (@katieholmes212) on




Pre-arrival video from Utah house fire

Home and car burn Saturday evening

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Gov. Mike Pence To Push For Clarification Of ‘Religious Freedom' Law

Gov. Mike Pence, scorched by a fast-spreading political firestorm, told The Star on Saturday that he will support the introduction of legislation to “clarify” that Indiana’s controversial Religious Freedom Restoration Act does not promote discrimination against gays and lesbians.

Australia To Join Negotiations On Chinese-Led Bank

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australia announced on Sunday that it would join negotiations to establish a new a Chinese-led Asian regional bank that has emerged as a potential challenge to United States influence in a part of the world where the Obama administration has tried to forge stronger ties.

The U.S. has expressed concern the new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, or AIIB, will allow looser lending standards for financial transparency, the environment and labor rights. The U.S. also worries the new bank will undercut the World Bank, where the U.S. has the most clout, and the Asian Development Bank, where it is the second-largest shareholder after Japan. Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Treasurer Joe Hockey said in a joint statement that the government will sign a memorandum of understanding that will allow Australia to participate as a prospective founding member in negotiations to set up the bank.

"Good progress has been made on the bank's design, governance and transparency over the past few months, but we still have issues that we will address through ongoing consultations," the statement said.

"Key matters to be resolved before Australia considers joining the AIIB include the bank's board of directors having authority over key investment decisions, and that no one country control the bank," it added.

Beijing has pledged to put up most of the initial $50 billion in capital for the bank, which is expected to be set up by year's end. It is intended to help finance construction of roads and other infrastructure.

Working with institutions such as the World Bank and the Asia Development Bank, the AIIB has the potential to play a valuable role in addressing infrastructure needs and boosting economic growth in the region, with potential benefits for Australia, the joint statement said.

India and all 10 members of Southeast Asia's regional bloc are among the more than 30 governments that have so far sought to join the bank before a March 31 deadline.

While Japan, which has tense relations with China, is still holding out, the Obama administration appears increasingly at odds with sentiment in the very region where it has tried to strengthen its relationships over the past five years.

Abbott said last week that he expected skeptical countries including the United States and Japan would also join if China gave required assurances on transparency and board management.

Calvin Harris Once Said Taylor Swift Was Not His Type

Before dating rumors started swirling about Taylor Swift and Calvin Harris, he actually revealed if he would date her!

Controversy surrounds new Indiana religious objections law

INDIANAPOLIS — The heat over Indiana’s new religious objections law spread Friday across social media and to the White House as many local officials and business groups around the state tried to jump in and stem the fallout.

Use of the hashtag #boycottindiana spread across Twitter, spurred on by activists such as “Star Trek” actor George Takei, who argued that the measure opens the door to legalized discrimination against gay people. Apple CEO Tim Cook also tweeted his objections, saying he was “deeply disappointed” in the Indiana law.

Supporters of the bill that Republican Gov. Mike Pence signed Thursday say discrimination claims are overblown. They maintain courts haven’t allowed that to happen under similar laws covering the federal government and in 19 other states. The measure, which takes effect in July, prohibits state and local laws that “substantially burden” the ability of people – including businesses and associations – to follow their religious beliefs.

Some national gay-rights groups say lawmakers in Indiana and about a dozen other states proposed such bills this year as a way to essentially grant a state-sanctioned waiver for discrimination as the nation’s highest court prepares to mull the gay marriage question.

White House press secretary Josh Earnest on Friday noted the negative reaction to the Indiana law from many businesses and organizations around the country.

“The signing of this bill doesn’t seem like it’s a step in the direction of equality and justice and liberty for all Americans,” he said.

The Arkansas Senate approved a similar proposal Friday despite opposition from home-state retail giant Wal-Mart. Another measure stalled Thursday in the Georgia Legislature after opponents cited the fallout over the Indiana law.

Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard, a Republican who opposed the law, said he and other city officials would be talking to many businesses and convention planners to counter the uproar the law has caused.

“I’m more concerned about making sure that everyone knows they can come in here and feel welcome,” Ballard said.

Groups such as the Indiana Chamber of Commerce have taken to social media with messages that the state is full of welcoming businesses. Democratic South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg touted on Twitter his city’s civil rights ordinance’s protections for gays and lesbians, while Republican Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke wrote that the law “sends the wrong message about Indiana.”

Stickers touting “This business serves everyone” have been appearing on business windows in many Indiana cities.

Pence, after signing the bill Thursday, said opponents had been mischaracterizing the measure and that it was solely a limit on government restricting people’s religious liberties.

Last year, Mississippi enacted a religious objection law just weeks after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, vetoed a similar effort there amid criticism from major corporations. Mississippi hasn’t had any high-profile instances of the law being used by businesses to deny goods or services to gays.

Indiana University law professor Daniel Conkle, who testified in favor of the bill in Indiana legislative committees, said he was a supporter of gay rights and that the predictions of negative implications from the law were unjustified.

Conkle, who has written extensively on religious legal issues, said he didn’t know of any cases under the similar state laws or the federal statute, which dates to 1993, where a court had sided with a religious objector in a discrimination case.

“This `license-to-discriminate’ argument that seems to have this relentless repetition is just legally wrong,” Conkle said Friday. “It is as if you just keep repeating something often enough it takes on a life of its own.”

Chris Gahl, a vice president of Visit Indy, said the tourism agency was pointing out to convention planners that cities such as Chicago, New Orleans and St. Louis are in states that already have religious objections laws.

That’s part of protecting city’s tourism and convention business, which is estimated to have a $4.4 billion annual economic impact with some 75,000 jobs.

“We know that their ability to work is largely dependent on our ability to score convention business and draw in events and visitors,” Gahl said.

This report was written by Tom Davies of the Associated Press.

The post Controversy surrounds new Indiana religious objections law appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Iran nuclear talks expand as deadline for deal approaches

US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (R) talk before a meeting at the Beau Rivage Palace Hotel March 28, 2015 in Lausanne. Talks have expanded as deadline for a nuclear deal looms. Photo by Brendan Smialowski/REUTERS

US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (R) talk before a meeting at the Beau Rivage Palace Hotel March 28, 2015 in Lausanne. Talks have expanded as deadline for a nuclear deal looms. Photo by Brendan Smialowski/REUTERS

LAUSANNE, Switzerland  — Negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program picked up pace on Saturday with the French and German foreign ministers joining U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in talks with Tehran’s top diplomat ahead of an end-of-March deadline for a preliminary deal.

With just four days to go until that target, negotiators in the Swiss town of Lausanne settled in for another round of lengthy sessions that they hope will produce an outline of an agreement that can become the basis for a comprehensive deal to be reached by the end of June.

Iranian negotiator Majid Takht-e Ravanchi denied a news report that the sides were close to agreement, and other officials also spoke of remaining obstacles.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters as he arrived that the talks have been “long and difficult. We’ve advanced on certain issues, not yet enough on others.”

Iranian nuclear agency chief Ali Akbar Salehi described one or two issues as becoming “twisted.” He told Iran’s ISNA news agency that the sides were working to resolve the difficulties.

Kerry met early in the day with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, ahead of talks with Fabius and Germany’s Frank-Walter Steinmeier. The foreign ministers of Russia, China and Britain also were expected in Lausanne over the weekend.

Diplomats at the talks said their presence does not necessarily mean a deal is almost done.

Steinmeier avoided predictions of an outcome, saying only that a nuclear deal could help ease Mideast tensions.

“The endgame of the long negotiations has begun,” he said.

Iran says its nuclear ambitions are purely peaceful; other nations fear it is seeking to develop weapons.

Progress has been made on the main issue: the future of Iran’s uranium enrichment program. It can produce material for energy, science and medicine but also for the fissile core of a nuclear weapon.

The sides tentatively have agreed that Iran would run no more than 6,000 centrifuges at its main enrichment site for at least 10 years, with slowly easing restrictions over the next five years on that program and others Tehran could use to make a bomb.

The fate of a fortified underground bunker previously used for uranium enrichment also appears closer to resolution.

Officials have told The Associated Press that the U.S. may allow Iran to run hundreds of centrifuges at the Fordo bunker in exchange for limits on centrifuge work and research and development at other sites. The Iranians would not be allowed to do work that could lead to an atomic bomb and the site would be subject to international inspections.

Instead of uranium, any centrifuges permitted at Fordo would be fed elements used in medicine, industry or science, the officials said.

Even if the centrifuges were converted to enrich uranium, there would not be enough of them to produce the amount needed to make a weapon within a year – the minimum time frame that Washington and its negotiating partners demand.

A nearly finished nuclear reactor would be re-engineered to produce much less plutonium than originally envisaged.

Still problematic is Iran’s research and development program.

Tehran would like fewer constraints on developing advanced centrifuges than the U.S. is willing to grant.

Also in dispute is the fate of economic penalties against Iran.

In addition, questions persist about how Iran’s compliance with an agreement would be monitored.

Fabius suggested that France was not yet satisfied on that point.

The post Iran nuclear talks expand as deadline for deal approaches appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

7 Shot And Injured At Florida Spring Break House Party

PANAMA CITY BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Seven people were injured, some critically, during an early-morning spray of gunfire Saturday at a spring break party on the Florida Panhandle, police said. An Alabama man was quickly apprehended and charged with attempted murder.

Multiple 911 calls flooded in just before 1 a.m., reporting the shootings at the house party in Panama City Beach, and deputies arriving on the scene found a sprawling crime scene with victims inside the home, outside and across the street from it, and in the street's median, the Bay County Sheriff's Office said.

Officers set up a perimeter and found a suspect matching witnesses' description. David Jamichael Daniels, 22, of Mobile, Alabama, was charged with seven counts of attempted murder and jailed awaiting a first court appearance. A .40-caliber handgun believed to have been used was found in the yard of a nearby home.

The sheriff's office said several of the victims were students from Alabama A&M University in Panama City Beach for spring break.

At least three were critically injured: Kearria Freed, 20, who was shot in the head; Devanta Moore, 21, who was shot in the chest; and Henton Franklin, 22, who was shot in the side. Three others were listed in stable condition: Jacole Young, 22, who police said was shot in the back three times; Kelli Curry, 21, who was shot in the leg; and Tykeria Ethridge, 22, who was shot in the neck and shoulder.

A seventh victim — Anesia Powell, 20 — was shot in the left arm, chest, and knee, and was undergoing surgery Saturday. No condition was given.

Legal and Financial Ramifications of Germanwing Plane Crash

After the shock of hearing about yet another airplane crash sinks in, many people start to wonder, "Who is responsible?" Germanwings flight 9525 was flying from Barcelona to Dusseldorf when it crashed into the French Alps. There were 144 passengers...

US rescues Saudi pilots from waters near Yemen

A CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter launches from the amphibious transport dock ship USS Mesa Verde during preparations for a field exercise in the Mediterranean Sea, October 24, 2011. US forces rescued two Saudi pilots from waters south of Yemen. Photo by US Navy/Josue L. Escobosa/Reuters

A CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter launches from the amphibious transport dock ship USS Mesa Verde during preparations for a field exercise in the Mediterranean Sea, October 24, 2011. US forces rescued two Saudi pilots from waters south of Yemen. Photo by US Navy/Josue L. Escobosa/Reuters

WASHINGTON — A Defense Department official says U.S. forces rescued two Saudi airmen after they ejected from an F-15 fighter jet over waters south of Yemen, where Saudi Arabia is leading airstrikes against Iran-allied Houthi rebels.

The official says a U.S. helicopter flew Thursday from neighboring Djibouti to the Gulf of Aden and rescued the airmen. Initial reports said the rescued airmen were “ambulatory.”

The destroyer USS Sterett took lead of the situation after Saudi Arabia requested U.S. assistance Thursday afternoon, coordinating assets from the U.S. naval base in Djibouti and the amphibious transport dock USS New York.

The official, who was not authorized to discuss the operation by name and requested anonymity, had no information on the two airmen’s status or why they ejected from their plane.

This report was written by Lou Kesten of the Associated Press.

The post US rescues Saudi pilots from waters near Yemen appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Cardinal Raymond Burke: Gays, Remarried Catholics Are Just As Sinful As Murderers

(RNS) When Pope Francis last year effectively demoted U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke by moving him out of a senior post in the Vatican to a largely cerem...

Read more: Christianity, Roman Catholic Church, Catholic Church, Catholics, Cardinal Raymond Burke, Raymond Burke, Gay Catholics, Remarried Catholics, Religion News

Hollywood Tackled Transition Dressing On This Week's Cheap Celeb Finds List

Transition dressing is awkward. Some days it's perfectly appropriate to be swaddled in an oversized scarf, while other days a denim jacket is all you need.

This week, we rounded up a slew of outfits that work for different types of weather. Lucy Hale modeled a $50 body-con dress that will be perfect come spring and Rachel McAdams kept it professional in a long-sleeve blouse, great for chilly March mornings.

Check out our favorite cheap celebrity finds of the week and let us know which ones you're coveting.

Ellen Pao Disrupts How Silicon Valley Does Business

Silicon Valley is enamored of “disrupters,” those shrewd, brave men — it is almost always men — who are hailed for enduring years of ridicule and risking everything to shake up the conventional order.

Now, in Ellen Pao, the Valley has found its newest disrupter.

Beginners' Workshop Series Continues in Lodi


San Joaquin Genealogical Society returns to the Lodi Public Library this Saturday with our next session on the beginners' genealogy series, "Grow Your Family Tree." The afternoon session, covering the basics of pursuing your own family history, will be held in the library's Community Room. In addition, the topic for this session will include how to find free resources online, and will introduce the Society's new program, First Families of San Joaquin.

Lodi Public Library is located at 201 West Locust Street in Lodi, California. Come join us this Saturday afternoon, from 2:00 to 4:00, and explore which resources will help you with your own family tree.

For more information, email the Lodi Public Library or call them at (209) 333-5503.

Friday, March 27, 2015

The Huffington Post Entertainment Is Hiring An Editorial Director

Location: New York City


Position Type: Full Time




About the Role:

The Huffington Post is seeking an Editorial Director to lead our multimedia-first approach to entertainment coverage. The ideal candidate will have vast knowledge and working experience in the realm of entertainment, which encompasses everything from celebrity and comedy to arts and sports. The candidate will have a profound understanding of what the media landscape lacks in those content areas and seek to fill them with quality, shareable content. Experience in new, creative ways of story telling -- video, graphics, GIFS, photos, etc. -- is a must, as are ideas about how to distribute multimedia content on emerging social platforms.

Requirements for Success:

* Have at least five years of editing experience

* Have at least two years of management experience

* Have advanced news judgement

* Web experience a must

* Be passionate and knowledgeable about entertainment and culture

* Be curious and involved in multimedia and innovative storytelling

* Strong or unique social media presence is a plus

Interested? Email a resume and cover letter to careers.entertainment@huffingtonpost.com with "Editorial Director" in the subject line.


Huffington Post Media Group is an AOL company. AOL is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of age, color, disability, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, veteran status or any other classification prescribed by applicable law.

About HuffPost:

The Huffington Post is a Pulitzer Prize-winning source of breaking news, commentary, entertainment, features and lifestyle content, as well as a platform for a highly engaged community of opinion and conversation. With nearly 130 million unique visitors each month (comScore), it is the largest news site in the US. The site has more than 85,000 bloggers -- from politicians, students and celebrities to academics, parents and policy experts -- who contribute in real time on the subjects about which they are most passionate. HuffPost is a global publication, with editions in the UK, Canada, France, Spain, Italy, Japan, Maghreb, Germany, Brazil, South Korea, Greece and India and more on the way, including Australia.

White House unveils plan to fight antibiotic-resistant germs

Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) bacteria is pictured in this medical illustration provided by the Centre of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The UCLA Health System said seven patients were infected with a potentially deadly, drug-resistant strain of bacteria and that nearly 200 more might have been exposed to it. Photo by Reuters.

Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, a drug-resistant strain of bacteria that patients at the UCLA Health System were exposed to in February, is pictured in this medical illustration provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Photo by Reuters.

WASHINGTON — The White House on Friday announced a five-year plan to fight the threat posed by antibiotic-resistant bacteria amid fears that once-treatable germs could become deadly.

Repeated exposure to antibiotics can lead germs to become resistant to the drugs, so that they are no longer effective. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that drug-resistant bacteria cause 23,000 deaths and 2 million illnesses each year in the United States.

The World Health Organization said last year that bacteria resistant to antibiotics have spread to every part of the world and might lead to a future where minor infections like strep throat could kill. Antibiotic resistance also threatens animal health, agriculture, and the economy.

In an interview with WebMD, President Barack Obama said over-prescribing antibiotics is a serious problem.

“Studies have consistently shown that a lot of America’s antibiotic use is unnecessary,” he said. He said he hopes his plan will create a system to show real-time rates of antibiotic use and where cases of drug resistance are being reported. “If we can see where these drugs are being over-prescribed, we can target our interventions where they’re needed most.”

The White House’s overall goal is to prevent and contain outbreaks of infections at home and abroad. It’s aiming to maintain the ability of current antibiotics to fight illnesses and develop new treatments.

The plan is the result of an order Obama signed in September forming a task force on the issue. Obama also has asked Congress to nearly double its funding to fight antibiotic resistance to $1.2 billion.

Critics said the White House needs to go further, particularly in terms of the antibiotics used in animals processed for meat. The Food and Drug Administration has already successfully encouraged many drug companies to phase out the use of antibiotics used for animal growth promotion. But advocacy groups have called on the agency to limit other uses of animal antibiotics as well, such as for disease prevention when holding animals in crowded conditions.

“Once again, the administration has fallen woefully short of taking meaningful action to curb the overuse of antibiotics in healthy food animals,” said New York Democratic Rep. Louise Slaughter, a microbiologist who has sponsored legislation to stop routine antibiotic use in animal farming.

“With 80 percent of the antibiotics produced in the United States being used in agriculture mostly for prevention, any meaningful solution to the looming antibiotic resistance crisis must begin with limits on the farm — and trusting a voluntary policy that lets industry police itself will not bring about real change,” she said.

The post White House unveils plan to fight antibiotic-resistant germs appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Comparing 20 Years of Housing Growth in American Cities

Here’s an interesting way to visualize how different regions are growing (or not). Using a tool developed by the University of Virginia Demographics Research Group, Michael Andersen at Bike Portland shares these charts showing where housing growth has happened relative to city centers. The dark brown lines show the number of occupied housing units at one-mile intervals […]

Funniest Parenting Tweets: What Moms And Dads Said On Twitter This Week

Kids may say the darndest things, but parents tweet about them in the funniest ways. So each week, we round up the most hilarious 140-character quips from moms and dads to spread the joy. Scroll down to read the latest batch and follow @HuffPostParents on Twitter for more!































































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Little vetting of pilots for mental health, U.S. experts say

A pilot sits inside the cockpit of Airbus A321 during boarding for the Germanwings flight 4U9441, formerly flight 4U9525, from Barcelona to Dusseldorf March 27, 2015. The German pilot believed to have deliberately crashed a plane in the French Alps killing 150 people broke off his training six years ago due to depression and spent over a year in psychiatric treatment, a German newspaper reported on Friday. Photo by Albert Gea/Reuters

A pilot sits inside the cockpit of Airbus A321 during boarding for the Germanwings flight 4U9441, formerly flight 4U9525, from Barcelona to Dusseldorf March 27, 2015. The German pilot believed to have deliberately crashed a plane in the French Alps killing 150 people broke off his training six years ago due to depression and spent over a year in psychiatric treatment, a German newspaper reported on Friday. Photo by Albert Gea/Reuters

WASHINGTON — Despite U.S. and international regulations requiring that airline pilots be screened for mental health problems, little effective, real-world checking takes place, pilots and safety experts say.

The crash of Germanwings Flight 9525 into an Alpine mountain, which killed all 150 people aboard, has raised questions about the mental state of the co-pilot. Authorities believe the 27-year-old German deliberately sought to destroy the Airbus A320 as it flew Tuesday from Barcelona to Duesseldorf.

In the U.S., the Federal Aviation Administration requires that pilots receive a physical exam from a flight surgeon annually or every six months depending upon the pilot’s age. The International Civil Aviation Organization, a U.N. agency that sets global aviation standards, also requires that pilots receive a periodic medical exam including a mental assessment.

Technically, doctors are supposed to probe for mental problems, but pilots said Thursday that’s usually not how it works.

“There really is no mental health vetting,” said John Gadzinski, a captain with a major U.S. airline and former Navy pilot. In 29 years of physicals from flight surgeons he’s never once been asked about his mental health, he said.

Bob Kudwa, a former American Airlines pilot and executive who maintains his commercial pilot’s license, said: “They check your eyes, your ears, your heart — all the things that start going bad when you get older. But they don’t do anything for your head, no.”

There also is no confidential reporting, Gadzinski said. “If you had a mental health issue, you certainly wouldn’t tell your flight surgeon about that because it goes right to the FAA,” he said.

Pilots are also required to disclose existing psychological conditions and medications on health forms they fill out themselves for the FAA. Failure to do so could result in a fine of up to $250,000. The forms include questions about whether a pilot is depressed or has attempted suicide, Gadzinski said.

“Is this really the best way? Ask the guy who is mentally ill if he’s mentally ill and if he says ‘no’ then, hey, we’re good to go?” he said.

Europe has a single standard for pilot medical exams. “These medical assessments are done by doctors with a specialty in aviation health. … They know what to look for, physically and mentally,” said Richard Taylor, a spokesman for the United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority.

Lufthansa, which owns the regional airline, has no knowledge about what have might have motivated co-pilot Andreas Lubitz “to take this terrible action,” said Carsten Spohr, the chief executive of Lufthansa.

Airlines typically ask pilots to take mental health screening exams when they apply for a job, but follow-up after hiring is cursory at best, experts say.

“If you’ve got 12,000 or 15,000 pilots like American Airlines has … every now and then you’re going to get a crackpot no matter how hard you try,” Kudwa said.

Video by PBS NewsHour

When that happens, other pilots who fly with the unstable pilot “sooner or later (are) going to let the boss know and then a check airman will be flying with him” to see if there is a problem, he said.

A check airman is an airline pilot who monitors the skills of other pilots by flying with them and watching how they perform. Still, check rides prompted by mental health concerns are rare, Kudwa said.

“You try to get these guys who are on the edge out of the program, but even in my career I ran into guys where I thought, ‘How did he get through the system?'” said Kudwa, who was with American for 28 years. “Or people change. Or, as we see in today’s environment, people get radicalized by social media.”

U.S. airline pilots generally receive training from their airlines about every six months to keep flying skills sharp. At that time, the chief pilot or check pilot monitoring their performance often asks pilots a few questions about their emotional stability, said John Goglia, a former National Transportation Safety Board member and aviation safety consultant.

“It’s very, very loose,” Goglia said. “It’s easy to get around that because it’s not a mental health professional who is asking the questions … ‘Is everything all right at home? Are you fighting with your wife? Are you kicking the kids and dog?’ It’s not much. It’s usually pilots looking at pilots.”


Associated Press writer Danica Kirka contributed to this report from London.

The post Little vetting of pilots for mental health, U.S. experts say appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Fourth Quarter GDP Remains at 2.2%

The government’s third revision of fourth quarter gross domestic product (GDP) was no revision. The reading remains at 2.2%, according to figures released Friday morning. This is of some note since economists were anticipating the number would be revised higher — to 2.4%. “Slightly stronger consumption (4.4% vs. 4.2%) was offset by less inventories ($80B [...]

Raw video & radio traffic from 3rd alarm in Mid-town Manhattan

Fire at 343 E. 66th Street

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Bowe Bergdahl Charged; What is Desertion?

Once welcomed home like a hero, Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl is now being labeled a deserter. Sergeant Bergdahl returned home last year after spending nearly five years in captivity with the Taliban. Bergdahl was released in exchange for the release...

Meet Matt: Operations & Logistics Manager

Matt specializes in reaching out to potential driver partners about the economic impact and benefits of working on the Uber platform, and has helped our team make strides in building reliability outside of NYC. Matt may still be new to the city, but he's already run the Brooklyn Half and explored more of NYC than some do in years. Read on for more about Matt!

Atlantic City Could Default, Warns Rating Agencies

After having a look at a state emergency budget plan released March 23, credit rating agencies are getting ready to downgrade Atlantic City again. The budget plan includes layoffs and budget cuts, but also allows for debt payment delays and restructuring. In the wake of casino closures that have devastated its tax base, the city’s bonds [...]

Is bureaucratic red tape hindering how special ops can do its job?

An Associated Press investigation reveals that bureaucrats have blocked several requests for software that Special Operations

An Associated Press investigation reveals that government bureaucrats have blocked several requests by Army special operations troops for software they say they need.

WASHINGTON — The military has been trying to force special operations troops heading to war zones to use flawed government software for intelligence analysis instead of a commercial alternative they say they need, according to government records and interviews.

Over the last four months, six Army special operations units about to be deployed into Afghanistan, Iraq and other hostile environments have requested software made by Palantir, a Silicon Valley company that has synthesized data for the CIA, the Navy SEALs and the country’s largest banks, among other government and private entities.

But just two of the requests have been approved, in both cases by the Army after members of Congress intervened with senior military leaders. Four other requests made through U.S. Army Special Operations Command in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and Tampa, Florida-based Special Operations Command have not been granted. The Army says its policy is to grant all requests for Palantir, while special operations officials say they are working through the requests on a case-by-case basis.

Email messages and other military records obtained by The Associated Press show that Army and special operations command bureaucrats have been pressing troops to use an in-house system built and maintained by traditional defense contractors. The Distributed Common Ground System, or DCGS, has consistently failed independent tests and earned the ire of soldiers in the field for its poor performance.

Special operations units have used Palantir since 2009 to store and analyze intelligence on information ranging from cultural trends to roadside bomb data, but has always been seen by top Pentagon officials as an interim solution until their in-house system is fielded. Those who have used the system say DCGS has yet to deliver on its promise of seamlessly integrating intelligence.

Pentagon officials say DCGS, despite its flaws, has broader capabilities than Palantir, and that in some cases it complements Palantir.

Intelligence officers say they use Palantir to analyze and map a variety of intelligence from hundreds of databases. Palantir costs millions, compared to the billions the military has been pouring into DCGS.

Special operations officials, in a statement to AP, said Palantir had been “extremely successful” in Iraq and Afghanistan and they are working to expand access to Palantir for units deployed in the fight against the Islamic State group. But records and interviews show a history of internal pressure against making and approving such requests.

One veteran special operations intel analyst, who is on his seventh deployment in 12 years, said his recent request for Palantir for a unit heading to Iraq had met with “pushback” both from his own headquarters and from bureaucrats who favor DCGS’s analytical component at the Pentagon, special operations command headquarters in Tampa, and Army special operations in Fort Bragg. Another special operations officer also used the term “heavy pushback” in an email about his request for Palantir.

Like most active duty Army personnel interviewed for this story, they declined to be quoted by name because they feared speaking out could put their careers at risk.

In their statement, special operations officials said their questions about Palantir requests should not be interpreted as resistance.

The failings of the Army’s version of DCGS has received significant public attention in recent years. The version tailored to special operations troops has even less capability, special operations command acknowledges in its records. Another version being offered to special operations troops working in remote areas, called DCGS-Lite, has received mediocre reviews from intelligence analysts, Army records show.

Intelligence officers say Palantir is easier to use, more stable and more capable than DCGS, which sometimes doesn’t work at all.

The Pentagon system is difficult to master, the veteran intelligence analyst said, while it takes him about 30 minutes to train a new analyst on Palantir.

Another officer wrote in an email that with Palantir, his analysts were able to easily mix open-source intelligence gleaned from social media or Web searches with classified reporting. DCGS makes that much harder, he said.

In February, an intelligence officer for the 5th Special Forces Group wrote in an email, “We still want Palantir because we think it is the best tool to meet the needs of our mission,” which includes operations against the Islamic State group in Iraq and training rebels in Syria.

The only reason the unit is using DCGS, the officer wrote, was because it came with much-needed laptops. “We do not plan to use any of the DCGS apps or tools for our mission,” the officer wrote. The person who provided the email asked that the author not be identified to spare him or her from retaliation.

All the commercial interests in the dispute have political clout. Palantir employs a bevy of lobbyists to press its case in Washington, as do the defense companies behind DCGS, such as Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and Booz Allen Hamilton, which have longstanding relationships with Pentagon buyers.

In addition to the professional lobbying, some members of Congress have been contacted by special operation officers who complained that they were being denied the tools they needed to do their jobs.

One of the lawmakers, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., grilled Army chief of staff Gen. Ray Odierno over the issue at a recent budget hearing. She asked about a request for Palantir by 1st Special Forces Group based at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state. Murray’s office had been lobbying behind the scenes for months.

“It’s been approved,” Odierno said, to Murray’s surprise.

In December, Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., wrote to Gen. Joseph Votel, the special operations commander, raising concerns that special operations command “has yet to provide tools to the warfighters in Afghanistan and Iraq despite spending six years and nearly $150 million to develop” the special operations version of DCGS.

In January, Votel responded to the congresswoman that the system was delivering “critical” capabilities through “numerous, highly capable components.”

Ken Dilanian is the AP’s intelligence writer.

The post Is bureaucratic red tape hindering how special ops can do its job? appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Germanwings co-pilot intentionally crashed plane, investigator says

Debris from the Airbus A320 that crashed into a mountainside in the French Alps on Tuesday, killing all 150 people on board. Eerie detail from the final minutes of the flight were released today by French investigators. Photo by Thomas Koehler/photothek.net/Pool/via Reuters

Debris from the Airbus A320 that crashed into a mountainside in the French Alps on Tuesday, killing all 150 people on board. Eerie detail from the final minutes of the flight were released today by French investigators. Photo by Thomas Koehler/photothek.net/Pool/via Reuters

The co-pilot of the Germanwings plane that smashed into the French Alps Tuesday deliberately crashed the plane, a French prosecutor said in a press conference Thursday.

Marseille public prosecutor Brice Robin said that the 28-year-old co-pilot, whom he identified as German citizen Andreas Lubitz, had locked the pilot out of the cockpit after he had left to use the bathroom, and pressed a button that triggered the plane to descend. “The intention was to destroy this plane,” Robin said. He reiterated that there is no indication of terrorism.

The Airbus A-320 was carrying 144 passengers and six crew members when it went down. There were no survivors.

The Guardian reporter Kim Willsher, who is in Paris, wrote of the disturbing details that emerged from Robin’s press conference:

Robin said the co-pilot could be heard breathing right up until the point of impact, suggesting he had not lost consciousness. However, he failed to respond to increasingly desperate calls from the commander trying to break down the cockpit door, or to air traffic controllers.

The Guardian is following the story in a live blog.

The passenger jet was flying from Barcelona, Spain, to Dusseldorf, Germany, before it crashed in the mountainous region of southern France.

Germanwings is a budget airline owned by Lufthansa, which is Germany’s biggest airline.

The post Germanwings co-pilot intentionally crashed plane, investigator says appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Audio Shows Germanwings Pilot Was Locked Out Of Cockpit

PARIS (AP) — An official with knowledge of the audio recordings from the Germanwings flight that crashed in the Alps says one of the pilots apparent...

Read more: Germanwings Flight 9525, Crash Germanwings, Plane Crash, French Alps, Germanwings Audio Cockpit, Transportation, Airplanes, Germanwings Plane Crash, Airlines, Video, World News

Really, High-Yield Outperforms When Rates Rise, Finds Fridson

It’s well understood by investors that high-yield bonds ought to have higher returns than investment grade bonds in a rising rate environment. This isn’t just due to their lower duration, or sensitivity to interest rate moves, finds Marty Fridson, chief investment officer of Lehmann, Livian, Fridson Advisors in a new report published by S&P Capital [...]

Josh Groban Addresses Rumors About His Sexuality

Along with a special hat tip to his gay fanbase, Josh Groban addressed longstanding speculation over his sexuality in a new PrideSource interview.

...

Read more: Josh Groban, Josh Groban Gay Rumors, Josh Groban Gay Fans, Josh Groban Broadway, Gay Voices News

Beware the Rise of the Unconstrained Bond Fund

Calling it, “The biggest mistake investors are making right now,” investment advisor Joshua Brown (widely known by his 102,000 followers on Twitter as Downtown Josh Brown @reformedbroker) wrote a scathing indictment of the newest, hottest breed of bond fund on Fortune.com Wednesday. Known as “unconstrained bond funds,” these are mutual funds that can invest in [...]

Jon Stewart Has The Perfect Response To Florida's Climate Change Denial

Florida Gov. Rick Scott insists there's no ban on the phrase "climate change" despite reports to the contrary -- and despite a bizarre exchange last week in which a member of his administration did everything he could to avoid using the words at a state senate subcommittee meeting.

But don't worry. If, like certain Floridians, you don't want to say "climate change," Jon Stewart has other options for you.

On Wednesday night's "Daily Show," Stewart broke out his copy of "Roget's Denial Thesaurus" and found some terms climate-change-denying Floridians can use.

“Nuisance flooding, moisture inconvenience, statewide jacuzzification,” Stewart said. “It appears by 2020, Miami will be involved in a surprise pool party."

Check out the clip above for more on how climate change is affecting the nation's "two most phallic states," Florida and California.

Watch 2 Guys Put Out A Fire Using Sound

It may seem outlandish, but George Mason University engineering students Seth Robertson and Viet Tran say they’ve developed a way to extinguish fire with sound waves.

The video above appears to prove them right.

sound-fire


How can this be?

Low-frequency sound waves in the 30 to 60 hertz range -- “the thump-thump bass in hip-hop" -- can apparently separate oxygen from fuel,” Tran said, in a GMU news release.

“The pressure wave is going back and forth, and that agitates where the air is. That specific space is enough to keep the fire from reigniting,” Tran told the Washington Post.

This isn’t the first time that sound waves have been used to manipulate fire. Experiments and research reportedly date back decades; in 2012, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) released a video showing how a “wall of sound” could put out flames.

However, as New York Magazine notes, DARPA’s setup was both “bulky” and “impractical.”

There’s “nothing on the market that works,” Robertson told the Post.

For now, the students’ extinguisher has only been utilized to put out small fires that use rubbing alcohol as fuel, but they hope their invention might one day be adapted for consumer or professional use.

Dwayne Johnson On Late 'Furious 7' Co-Star Paul Walker: 'I Miss Him'

The release of "Furious 7" is a mixed emotional bag for all of its stars, and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson is no exception. But as he noted on TODAY Wednesday, now that the movie's coming out in theaters, it gives him a great chance to talk about his co-star, the late Paul Walker.

Watch How A 32-Year-Old Drug Addict Gets Through The Day (VIDEO)

Tony, who spent 38 months in prison for trafficking drugs and says he's now a drug addict, lets Dr. Phil's cameras follow him as he serves his demons — even behind the wheel.

Need Dr. Phil's help in your life? Share your story here.

Like Dr. Phil | Follow Dr. Phil | Be on the Show

Zayn Malik Leaves One Direction For Good

Zayn Malik is leaving One Direction, the band announced via Facebook on Wednesday. The news comes a week after Malik decided to ditch the group's tour...

Read more: Zayn Leaving One Direction, One Direction, Zayn Malik, Zayn Malik Leaving One Direction, Entertainment News

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Cruz eyes insurance via Obamacare, a law he vows to scrap

Senator and presidential candidate Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, talks on political show With All Due Respect at Bloomberg headquarters in New York City on March 24. Photo by Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Senator and presidential candidate Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, talks on political show With All Due Respect at Bloomberg headquarters in New York City on March 24. Photo by Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images

WASHINGTON — GOP presidential candidate Ted Cruz could soon be buying his family’s health care coverage through the Affordable Care Act he has vowed to dismantle.

Cruz, whose Senate filibuster against the law he derides as “Obamacare” led to a partial government shutdown in 2013, is looking for health insurance because his wife, Heidi Cruz, took an unpaid leave from her job in the Houston office of Goldman Sachs as Cruz announced his presidential bid.

That meant the family would soon lose access to health insurance through Mrs. Cruz’s job, triggering a need for the Cruz family to find a new policy.

The first-term senator from Texas said he is looking at options available on a health insurance exchange, or a clearinghouse of policies available to Americans who don’t receive coverage through their employers. Obama’s health care law created the exchange system.

Under an amendment to the law crafted by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the government can only offer members of Congress and their staff health care insurance that’s sold through an exchange.

“We will presumably go on the exchange and sign up for health care, and we’re in the process of transitioning over to do that,” Cruz said in an interview with The Des Moines Register.

Cruz could go without insurance, or his family could get its coverage directly from an insurance company at what would likely be a far higher rate than is available via an exchange. Doing so would mean Cruz would not get the contribution from his employer to help offset the full cost of his coverage.

Asked about his plans for health care insurance on Tuesday, Cruz’s staff initial pointed reporters to his interview with the Register. Several hours later, Rick Tyler, a Cruz spokesman, said Cruz and his family had not yet settled on an option or the financial implications of such a choice.

“Let’s let them make a decision on what coverage they’ll get before we start speculating on every variable,” Tyler said.

Cruz has been a vocal critic of the health care law and, in 2013, set in motion a partial government shutdown as part of a 21-hour filibuster that partially shuttered the government in an attempt to sever funding for the law.

In his campaign kick-off speech Monday, Cruz pledged to dismantle the law. His advisers said that remains his plan and pointed to his comments to the newspaper from Iowa, which hosts the lead-off caucuses in early 2016.

“I believe in 2017, a new president, a Republican president, will sign legislation repealing every word of it,” Cruz told the Register.

Democrats highlighted that Cruz is now enrolling in a program he frequently criticizes.

“The Affordable Care Act, by design, helps Americans who have gaps in employment get coverage, and it’s working,” Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Holly Shulman said. “We encourage others to follow presidential candidate Ted Cruz to www.healthcare.gov and get covered.”

President Barack Obama, meanwhile, was marking the law’s fifth anniversary in remarks Wednesday at the White House.

The post Cruz eyes insurance via Obamacare, a law he vows to scrap appeared first on PBS NewsHour.