Total Pageviews

Police Arrest Suspect in Washington Court Attack

A 34-year-old man suspected of stabbing a judge and shooting a sheriff's deputy with her own weapon in a courthouse struggle and then calling his mother for a ride has been arrested in Washington State Saturday.

"After we sent out information this morning, the suspects mothers contacted Thurston County officers who are now on scene trying to communicate with the suspect," Sheriff Rick Scott of Grey's Harbor County said.

The suspect has been identified as Steven Daniel Kravetz, the lone assailant in Friday's attack in Montesano, Wash., which injured Judge David Edwards and Deputy Polly Davin.

"He acted alone and we know him to be the assailant," Scott said. "We're operating under the belief that he's still armed."

Kravetz fled the courthouse with the officer's .45-caliber handgun after the attack and showed up about an hour or so later at the office of his former attorney and asked to the use the phone, Scott said.

The attorney had represented Kravetz a number of years ago and "didn't know anything was up," Scott said.

Investigators believe Kravetz called his mom, identified as Roberta Dougherty, at about 3 p.m. and that she apparently gave him a ride out of the area, Scott said.

"We don't know what her knowledge or involvement is," the undersheriff said, adding: "We're concerned for her welfare. We don't know what his mental, emotional state was following the incident."

Around noon Friday, the deputy responded to a report of a suspicious person at the courthouse and confronted a man, Scott said. During a struggle, she was stabbed with either a small knife or scissors.

The judge intervened, striking the assailant, who then stabbed him, authorities said.

Davin reached for her gun, but it was wrestled away by the man, who shot twice, striking her in the shoulder before fleeing, Scott said.

Both the judge and the sheriff's deputy were treated and released from a hospital hours after the attack.

"Why he was at the courthouse yesterday remains a mystery," Scott said, adding that his motive is unclear.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Fistfight over seating breaks out at Chicago Symphony Orchestra

CHICAGO (AP) - It was an unusual backdrop for a fistfight: Maestro Riccardo Muti was nearly through the second movement of Brahms Symphony No. 2 at the normally staid Chicago Symphony Orchestra when two patrons went at it.

Concert-goers at Orchestra Hall were all the more stunned Thursday because the two men were fighting in one of the boxes where the well-to-do normally sit in decorous self-restraint.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported Saturday (http://bit.ly/xLhvAL ) that the ruckus began when a man in his 30s started punching a 67-year-old man in one of the boxes.

"We heard a rather loud thump," said Steve Robinson, general manager of Chicago's classical and folk music station 98.7 WFMT, who was at the performance but didn't see the fracas. "It wasn't so loud that everyone jumped up and ran for the exits."

Police said the fight was the result of an argument over seats. The older man had a cut on his forehead; the other left before officers arrived.

All the while, the concert went on. Though patrons said Music Director Muti gave the two men a sharp, irritated look - one person called it "dagger eyes" - before continuing on with the third movement.

"Mind you, he never stopped conducting," Robinson said. "He very gracefully, without missing a beat - literally - he brought (the second movement) to a very quiet and subdued close, while still looking over his left shoulder."

___

Information from: Chicago Sun-Times, http://www.suntimes.com/index

"Iodized salt" and the 294 other terms that will get you in trouble with Chinese Web censorship: http://t.co/YoO2sD3O
Governor Chris Christie loses his temper, calls student an 'idiot': http://t.co/XvwpZ1Ei
Rant on American Airlines flight ends with flight attendant in hospital: http://t.co/ohad3v6V


Article from YAHOO NEWS


Obama says new jobs report is proof of economic rebound

PRINCE GEORGE, Va. - President Barack Obama seized on news of another burst of job growth as proof the U.S. economy is rebounding on his watch from a disastrous recession.

The struggling economy has haunted the president as he seeks a second four-year term in November, and his Republican opponents have hammered the issue in their campaigns. But Obama's approval ratings have been rising along with the economic numbers.

"America is coming back," he told a fundraising event in Texas.

In the latest good economic news, the monthly jobs report released Friday showed employers created 227,000 jobs in February. The unemployment rate held steady at 8.3 per cent, the result of more Americans looking for work as job growth takes hold month by month.

Obama, making a campaign-like stop at a Rolls-Royce manufacturing plant in Virginia, warned factory workers and campaign donors that Republicans would offer only the policies "that got us into this mess."

"I did not run for this office just to get back to where we were. I ran for this office to get us where we needed to be," Obama said. "And I promise you, we will get there."

The jobs report and split loyalties among Republican voters give Obama's team renewed confidence about winning re-election and rebuilding the economy. But privately, his advisers know that outside factors in the United States and abroad - from high gasoline prices to instability in the Middle East - could still derail his political and economic ambitions in coming months.

Republican front-runner Mitt Romney, facing a new batch of voting Saturday after winning six of 10 states in this week's Super Tuesday contests, reminded the public that the country's unemployment remains above 8 per cent.

Despite his constant campaign message of having the business background to fix the economy - by far the biggest issue in this election - Romney has not been able to pull away from top challenger Rick Santorum and the trailing Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul for good.

The Republican race to pick up delegates, and the party's nomination, could continue for months. On Saturday, Romney won the Republican caucus in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana islands, picking up nine delegates from the U.S. territory. He picked up nine more delegates when he won unanimous backing at the Republican convention on the U.S. terriotry of Guam. Romney's son Matt visited both Guam and the Northern Marianas to campaign for his father.

Kansas and the U.S. Virgin Islands also have voting Saturday, and Wyoming wraps up its caucuses.

Romney, campaigning in Mississippi before it and Alabama next week kick off a series of state-by-state voting in the heavily conservative and evangelical South, looked at the new economic report with skepticism.

"This president has not succeeded; this president has failed - and that's the reason we're going to get rid of him in 2012," Romney said.

The former Massachusetts governor continues to fight skepticism as well among Republican voters about his past, more moderate, views on such sensitive social issues as abortion. Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, styles himself as the true conservative in the race, but he lacks the campaign cash and organization that the multimillionaire Romney has at hand.

This year's presidential campaign is expected to be the most expensive ever, and Obama was in Houston Friday evening for two fundraisers.

Political calculations are not far from the surface in the president's trips. Virginia is expected to be a major election battleground. Texas is a reliably Republican state, but changing demographics and an influx of Hispanic voters have given Democrats hopes of competing in the state beyond the 2012 elections.

___

Associated Press writer Ken Thomas in Prince George, Virginia, contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Suspect arrested in Washington courthouse attack

SEATTLE (AP) - Police in Washington state have arrested a 34-year-old man accused of stabbing a judge and shooting a sheriff's deputy in a courthouse struggle, ending a manhunt that spanned two counties.

Grays Harbor County Undersheriff Rick Scott says Steven Daniel Kravetz was taken into custody without incident Saturday afternoon by authorities in Olympia. He did not have further details.

Scott identified Kravetz earlier in the day as the lone assailant in Friday's courthouse attack in Montesano, Wash., that wounded a judge and a deputy. Investigators believe he called his mother for a ride out of the area after the attack.

"Iodized salt" and the 294 other terms that will get you in trouble with Chinese Web censorship: http://t.co/YoO2sD3O
Governor Chris Christie loses his temper, calls student an 'idiot': http://t.co/XvwpZ1Ei
Rant on American Airlines flight ends with flight attendant in hospital: http://t.co/ohad3v6V


Article from YAHOO NEWS


Bus station blasts in Kenya\'s capital kill 4, wound 40

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - A grenade attack at one of the main bus stations in Kenya's capital killed at least four people and wounded 40 others Saturday, officials said, in the latest bloodshed blamed on sympathizers of Somalia's al-Qaida-linked insurgency.

Witnesses reported that people in a moving car hurled three grenades at the outdoor terminal, police spokesman Charles Owino said. Government minister Esther Murugi, who spoke after visiting Nairobi's main hospital where the wounded were brought, said six needed emergency surgery. Earlier, a Red Cross official said 12 people were in critical condition.

The blasts are the latest in a string of small arms, bomb and grenade attacks that have killed scores of people since Kenya sent troops across the border into neighboring Somalia in October. The incursion followed a string of attacks by Somali gunmen on Kenyan soil. Somalia's al-Qaida-linked insurgency vowed revenge and incited sympathizers to carry out attacks in Kenya.

"The more you attack us, the more we will become aggressive," Owino said.

Witness Ruben Otsembo was filling up his motorcycle at a nearby gas station when a man covered in blood ran up shouting about an explosion and bodies, and then collapsed and died in front of him. Another man, who was wounded in the arms and legs while he was buying a bus ticket, said he heard two explosions.

"It was the second one that got me," said Frederick Shikutu, 36, as he was being loaded into an ambulance.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Japan still grapples with unfinished business

OFUNATO, Japan (Reuters) - With a minute of silence, tolling bells and prayers, Japan will on Sunday mark the first anniversary of an earthquake and tsunami that killed thousands and set off a nuclear crisis that shattered public trust in atomic power and the nation's leaders.

A year after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake unleashed a wall of water that hit Japan's northeastern coast, killing nearly 16,000 and leaving nearly 3,300 unaccounted for, the country is still grappling with the human, economic and political costs.

Along the coast, police and coastguard officers, urged on by families of the missing, still search rivers and shores for remains even though the chances of finding any would appear remote. Without bodies, thousands of people are in a state of emotional and legal limbo.

Koyu Morishita, 54, lost his 84-year-old father, Tokusaburo, as well as his home and family-run fish factory in the port of Ofunato. Tokusaburo's body has not been found.

"I do cry a little bit every once in a while, but my true tears will come later, when I have time," Morishita said while visiting a memorial for his father at a hilltop temple above Ofunato, accompanied by his dog, Muku.

Like the rest of the country, Ofunato will observe a moment of silence at 2:46 p.m. (05.46 a.m British time) when the quake struck and then again, 33 minutes later when a 23-metre (75-foot) wall of water hit the town, killing 340 of its 41,100 residents and leaving 84 missing.

A "bell of hope" will toll and mourners will sail out to sea to release lanterns.

The Japanese people earned the world's admiration for their composure, discipline and resilience in the face of the disaster while its companies impressed with the speed with which they bounced back, mending torn supply chains.

As a result, the economy looks set to return to pre-disaster levels in coming months with the help of about $230 billion (146.75 billion pounds) in rebuilding funds agreed in rare cooperation between the government and the opposition.

"In recent history, Japan seized rapid economic expansion from the ashes and desolation of World War Two, and we built the most energy-efficient economy in the world in the aftermath of the oil shock," Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said in an article published in the Washington Post.

"On the anniversary of the Great East Japan Earthquake, we remember that today we face a challenge of similar proportions."

"100 PEOPLE, 100 OPINIONS"

Yet people are increasingly sceptical about whether the political establishment is up to the task.

Politicians and bureaucrats drew fire for the chaotic response to the crisis at the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant and their failure to seize the moment and tackle a myriad of ills that have dogged Japan for two decades.

"If there are 100 people, there will be 100 opinions," said Morishita. "We are hoping that someone can lead us and show us hope and dreams. But that doesn't exist."

After a brief truce, politicians resumed business as usual: parliamentary squabbles that gave Japan its sixth leader in five years and now threaten to block important tax and welfare reforms and stall progress in dealing with other business.

"There is no leadership," said Hiroaki Oikawa, 56, another Ofunato resident who lost his two fish factories and his home.

Nine people from three generations of his family now live under one roof in temporary housing. Oikawa resumed operations at one of his factories last September and he is leading efforts to rebuild a shopping arcade.

"There are no politicians to whom we can leave things."

Anti-nuclear demonstrations planned across the country for the anniversary also serve as a reminder that many want bolder action than the government's preferred scenario of a gradual reduction in reliance on nuclear power.

Not a single community has agreed to restart reactors taken off line since the disaster, meaning all of Japan's 54 reactors may be shut by the middle of the year.

Slow progress in drawing up plans for the tsunami and radiation tainted region is deepening the misery of survivors, about 326,000 of whom are still homeless, including 80,000 evacuated from the vicinity of the Fukushima plant.

While the government declared the plant's reactors had reached "cold shutdown" in December, its dismantling and the clean-up of an area the size of Luxembourg will take decades at an incalculable cost using technologies yet to be developed.

Taxpayers, facing proposed sales tax increases to help fund the country's debt, will need to cough up tens of billions of dollars to prop up Fukushima plant operator Tokyo Electric Power - widely attacked for ignoring the possibility of a disaster and for what critics say has been arrogance since.

(Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Linda Sieg and Robert Birsel)



Article from YAHOO NEWS


People Food for Dogs

In Roman mythology, the master of the hunt was the goddess Diana. She was praised for her strength, athletic grace, beauty, and hunting skills. 

In Freemasonry, she was a symbol of sensibility and imagination, of poets and artists. Shrines were erected in her honor; stags followed her wherever she went; she ruled the forest and the moon.

I like to think that Diana's influence has never entirely waned, that hunting was never just about men getting together in the woods. Hunting is for all of us, an extension of our being both humans and animals-our first work and craft, one of our original instincts.

Today I am entirely different than the girl and chef who set out four years ago to learn how to hunt a turkey. 

There are the obvious differences, such as the fact that I can shoot a deer through the heart without batting an eye, and then promptly take out the innards on the forest floor with only a pocketknife and my bare hands. 

I can skin it and then run the knife along the contours of the muscle until it is broken down into manageable parts. 

Then, if I want to, I can portion the meat into those elegant pieces we see neatly wrapped up in plastic in the grocery store meat section, with no signs that it was ever a living thing. Except that for me, I will always know. 

I will have looked my food in the eye and made a choice; I will have felt the warm innards in my hands as I pulled them out and laid them on the forest floor for the coyotes and the mountain lions to eat.

It was a struggle to get here, mostly a mental struggle. 

It required a slap on the ass and a horseback-riding escapade with a poacher. 

It required humility, frustration, hundreds of skeptical looks, and waking up in the dark for most of the fall and winter months-all in the name of sausage, venison meat loaf, and whiskey-glazed turkey breast. 

It required run-ins with airport security that wanted to know why there were frozen animal parts in my suitcase, and with border patrol dogs sniffing my car wildly where Texas meets Mexico.

But the journey over field and stream to understand where my food comes from was, simply put, amazing. Even the so-called bloody bits.

There were the irreplaceable meals, the incomparable vistas, the fine cigars and scotch, the almond cakes and gourmet chocolates. But most of all, I am now more awake than I ever was when working in fast-paced four-star kitchens, or on a high-pitched trading floor. 

It is as if I have realized again those first pleasures I knew as a child sitting beside my creek in the Hudson Valley, watching the orange fishing bobbin float by under the willow tree. 

I am a more thoughtful eater, a more thoughtful chef, and a more awake human being. 

I am a fuller woman and in a way, as I step out into the still, clean morning, I am much more like Diana than I ever was.

Your first instinct may be to say “I don't think I could do it.” The good news is that you don't have to. 

But if you want to feel what it is like to be human again, you should hunt, even if just once. Because that understanding, I believe, will propel a shift in how we view and interact with this world that we eat in. And the kind of food we demand, as omnivores, will never be the same.

Georgia Pellegrini is a chef, hunter and author. Her most recent book is "Girl Hunter." Visit her website at GeorgiaPellegrini.com.



Article from FOXNEWS


No-Bake, Easy Truffles

  • Ed Ritger Photography/Houzz

If you live in a small apartment, skip the built-in shelves (sigh, someday…) and focus on multifunctional pieces and storage using drawers, doors and baskets. Awkward layouts that renters aren't likely to fix also can benefit from clever placement of storage furniture. Bonus: Less visible clutter means your place will look bigger.

1. Even the tiniest spare closet can become a home office with the addition of a desk and some lighting. Simply close the door when you're done working and keep those paper piles out of sight.

2. Choose a coffee table with hidden storage; just lift the top and store blankets, magazines or board games. Corral remotes and snack dishes in a tray on top so they're easy to remove in a jiffy.

More: Browse photos of home storage ideas on Houzz

Link: http://www.houzz.com/storage/

3. Tuck baskets into any “dead space,” like under a bench or table. Since the furniture itself is already taking up square footage, you might as well squeeze some extra function out of the floor underneath. In a kid's room, add a basket or bin under the play table for hiding toys and craft supplies.

4. A bed with built-in drawers is perfect for kids' toys or in an office that doubles as a guest room. In an office, you can stash extra file folders and envelopes in one drawer and guest linens in the other.

5. Rental kitchens are often tiny and cramped or medium-size but with lots of unused space (tiny countertops with an awkward empty corner, for example). If yours is the latter, take cues from a grander home and bring in an armoire. It offers wonderful storage and its doors help hide the clutter. Use the shelves as a makeshift pantry or as desk space.

6. Get a drop-leaf table for the dining room. When not entertaining, fold down the sides, turn it 90 degrees, and tuck it under a window.

7. Choose a nightstand with drawers. It can hide just about anything. Besides the usual bedside items, you can stash spare linens, photo albums or even socks and other small items.

8. Add a credenza in the living room creates a surface for lighting and a place for hidden storage. In an open living room/dining area it can serve both spaces and act as a room divider that helps define different activity zones. Or place one against the wall to store books, games and off-season decorations.

9. A beautiful dresser or chest in the entry (even if your entry is just a hallway) can be a great place to stash gloves, hats, leashes and spare change. It could even be a good place to charge your phone and camera.

10. Put your furniture on wheels. Since everything needs to be multifunctional in a small studio or apartment, pieces that move around are a bonus. A little cart in the kitchen can serve as a prep and storage area when you're cooking, then wheeled to another area for use as a serving table or bar.

More:

Full story and photos on Houzz

Find bookcases and storage cabinets

Browse thousands of inspiring home design photos



Article from FOXNEWS


Stars Without Face Paint

These no-bake truffles are made from the newly popular cookie-based Speculoos spread.  (For those of you who haven't heard, it's a caramel ginger spread that has the consistency of peanut butter made from ground Belgian cookie.) These truffles only require four ingredients and make a great go-to treat straight from the freezer.

Ingredients

  • 3 Tablespoon unsalted butter, softened at room temperature
  • 1 Cup Speculoos Cookie Butter or Biscoff Spread
  • 2/3 Cup finely ground gingersnap crumbs (~11 cookies)
  • 4 Ounce semi-sweet or dark chocolate finely chopped

Preparation

Step 1:

Beat butter and cookie butter with an electric mixer on high speed until light and creamy. Add cookie crumbs and combine on high speed until thoroughly mixed. Refrigerate mixture for at least two hours.

Step 2:

Once chilled, scoop mixture by the teaspoon and roll each scoop into a ball. Keep dough in refrigerator while scooping individual truffles.

Step 3:

Once all balls are rolled, place them back in refrigerator or freezer.

Step 4:

Melt chocolate: place chocolate in a microwaveable bowl and place in microwave for thirty second increments stirring in-between until chocolate is melted and smooth. Drizzle melted chocolate over chilled balls and freeze until ready to serve.



Article from FOXNEWS


Picking a Mutual Fund

Investing alone can be as awkward as singing karaoke - it might make you feel self-conscious and unsure if you're doing the right thing. That is why many small investors opt for mutual funds, which grant them access to professional money managing services. 

Investing in a mutual fund is a big decision, with many factors to consider. Here is a guide to choosing the right mutual fund for you:

Understanding a fund's investment style. A strong mutual fund should have an explicit investment strategy from the start. A lack of strategy could result in a style drift - straying from the stated investment objectives. A style drift could happen for a number of reasons, such as a changes to the portfolio, management restructuring or company growth. Investors tend to prefer more consistent funds with limited drift, as managers may start to take larger risks in order to avoid underperformance. However, you still want an element of style drift because completely sticking to the plan limits the fund's ability to respond dynamically to market forces. When choosing a mutual fund, keep an eye out for those that are consistent and leave room for inevitable, natural divergence.

Assessing risk and returns. When it comes to investing, the level of risk usually corresponds to the level of returns. That is, higher risk can translate to greater returns. Of course, it also means a bigger chance for loss. Determining the amount of risk you should take on is a unique decision, but there are common factors to consider. Ask yourself how long you are willing to keep your assets tied up in the mutual fund. Low-risk investments are more likely to yield conservative returns over the long run, which would work well if you are seeking long-term capital gains. High-risk investments are more volatile and rely on a shorter time frame, but if they are successful, they produce high-yield returns. This strategy may be more appropriate if you're going after immediate income. Wherever you fall on the risk-return spectrum, there will be a mutual fund for you. When considering these funds, just make sure to take a good look at each one's risk/reward profile.

Types of funds

There are several tiers of mutual fund classification. At the most basic level, there are three main types, divided by the type of assets they manage: equity funds, fixed-income funds and money market funds. Equity funds invest in stocks. As they make up most of the mutual fund market, there is a wide variety of equity funds. They differ in size and style, ranging from small to large funds that focus on finding undervalued companies, growing with established companies, or investing in a blend of the two.

As the name implies, fixed-income funds provide a steady stream of income. They are also called bond funds and are mainly invested in government or large corporate debt. They provide a consistent, conservative return for investors.

Finally, money market funds have little risk because you hold on to your principal. However, this also means money market funds will not provide spectacular returns. Treasury bills are the most marketable security in this group.

Other types of funds to consider are global funds for international investments, socially-responsible funds, which only invest in companies who meet a certain ethical standard, or sector funds that focus on specific sectors of the economy like agriculture or healthcare. Whatever asset you may settle on, one type of fund you always want is the “no-load” - a fund in which shares are sold without a commission fee.

Finding the right mutual fund. With thousands of funds to choose from, it would be impossible to collect the pertinent data for all of them yourself. Luckily, there are companies dedicated to producing digestible mutual fund reports. 

These reports provide all the data you need to evaluate the quality of a fund. Two companies that provide this service are Morningstar and Value Line. Many public libraries grant access to Morningstar Mutual Funds, which means you can read these reports for free. All this research may seem like a lot of work, but it's always better to invest time before investing your money.



Article from FOXNEWS


Philippe Stark Electric Car

FoxNews.com


Article from FOXNEWS


World\'s first nuke-powered aircraft carrier, USS Enterprise makes final voyage

When the makers of "Top Gun" were filming on board the USS Enterprise, they donated a set of black fuzzy dice to liven up the ship's otherwise drab interior.

A quarter-century later, the dice will still be dangling inside the tower of "the Big E" as the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier sets sail on its final voyage Sunday.

The trinket is a reminder of the ship's storied 50-year history that includes action in several wars, a prominent role in the Cuban missile crisis and serving as a spotter ship for John Glenn's historic orbit of the earth.

"To serve on this ship, certainly in this capacity, you certainly have to be a student of the ship's history," said Rear Adm. Walter Carter, commander of the Enterprise strike group. "Fifty years of service, in our nation's history, we've never had a warship in service that long."

The Enterprise is the longest aircraft carrier in the U.S. fleet. It is also the oldest, a distinction that brings pride as well as plenty of headaches for the ship's more than 4,000 crew members. The ship is effectively a small city that frequently needs repairs because of its age. It was originally designed to last 25 years, but a major overhaul in 1979 and other improvements have extended its life.

The ship largely looks like any other carrier on the inside and has modern amenities like gyms, a coffee shop and a television station with dozens of channels. It even produces its own daily newspaper while at sea.

But even the best-maintained ship faces challenges as it ages.

"It's kind of like when you get older and you know it's harder to get out of the bed in the morning.

It takes you a couple hours to kind of really get up and then you're fine. Well, it's the same sort of thing here with Enterprise," Capt. William Hamilton, the ship's commanding officer, said days before the ship was set to deploy from Naval Station Norfolk.

Hamilton acknowledged all aircraft carriers have problems they're supposed to anticipate, but he said the Enterprise is more likely to have "unknown unknowns" than newer ships.

Machinists in charge of fixing unexpected problems say the things that can break down range from critical air conditioner units to elevators that lift fighter jets from the hangar bay to the flight deck not working. Moreover, the Enterprise has eight nuclear reactors to maintain -- six more than any other U.S. carrier.

The problems are so notorious that sailors reporting to work aboard the Enterprise are often given joking condolences by their colleagues on shore and on other ships.

The ship regularly has to make its own parts from scratch when something breaks down. Spare parts for much of the ship, which is the only one of its class, simply don't exist.

"Life is hard on Enterprise," Hamilton said. "But when they leave here, they leave knowing if they can do this, they can do anything."

The challenges aboard the ship and the need to keep spirits up were highlighted last year, when former commanding officer Capt. Owen Honors was fired for airing raunchy videos that he said were intended to boost morale. During a hearing in which Honors was trying to avoid being kicked out of the Navy, he and his lawyers frequently referenced the difficult conditions on board. Honors was found to have committed misconduct, but ultimately allowed to stay in the service. He is retiring in April.

Hamilton acknowledged that maintaining morale on the ship -- which has unofficial mottos like "There's tough, and then there's Enterprise tough" and "We eat pain like candy" -- is still vital.

"As much as anything, it's just telling them face to face that you appreciate, the Navy appreciates, the nation appreciates what they're doing and then that goes a long, long way," he said.

There's also the added bonus of the ship's crew members feeling particularly proud to serve on a ship whose name has a distinguished place in naval history and pop culture.

Crew members who weren't even alive when "Top Gun" was in theaters in 1986 use the film to explain what it is they do on the ship, as well as exactly where it is they do it.

For Petty Officer 1st Class Brian Dennis, there's also pride in his ship having the same name as the ship featured in the "Star Trek" series. He's from Cairo, Ga., the same home town as "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry.

"In a way I wanted to be part of this ship, to be on the last deployment, to be a part of that. Being from Cairo, that's real huge," he said. "I always wanted to be a part of history, so being on this last deployment it'll be something I can definitely tell my children and grandchildren."

The Enterprise is heading to the Middle East on its seven-month deployment, where it will be on standby in case of conflict with Iran or piracy threats off Somalia, among other things. The ship has experience with both scenarios, participating in a retaliatory strike against Iran for mining the Arabian Gulf in 1988 and responding last year to the hijacking of a sailing vessel by Somali pirates, during which all four Americans on board were shot and killed.

The deployment will be the ship's 22nd. Following its return to Virginia in the fall, tens of thousands are expected to be on hand for a deactivation ceremony Dec. 1 that President Barack Obama has been invited to attend. But if "Top Gun" producer Jerry Bruckheimer wants to film a sequel, he'll have to find another ship.

The following summer, Enterprise will be towed to the shipyard where it was built in nearby Newport News so its nuclear fuel can be removed, a process that will take until 2015. What remains of the ship after that will then be taken to Washington state so it can be scrapped.

The ship, among the first to respond after the Sept. 11 attacks, won't be turned into a museum like some other carriers. Crews have to cut large holes in the vessel to remove the nuclear fuel, and it would be too expensive to repair, said Lt. Cmdr. Sarah Self-Kyler, the Enterprise's public affairs officer.

Instead, many of the ship's alumni want another carrier to be named Enterprise in the future, which is not uncommon, she said.

This is the eighth ship to bear the name Enterprise, and there's a room on board dedicated as a museum to past incarnations. The preceding USS Enterprise was the most decorated ship in World War II, while the first Enterprise joined the U.S. fleet after it was captured from the British in 1775.

If a future carrier is renamed Enterprise, it's unclear if the fuzzy dice will make journeys on board that ship, too, or remain in a Navy museum.



Article from FOXNEWS


Senators Propose Rules to Protect Vets From Colleges

For-profit schools would be required to meet new standards covering everything from drop-out rates to transparency, under a proposal by senators who claim the colleges are exploiting members of the U.S. military for their government education benefits. 

Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., introduced the bill this past week, claiming the Post-9/11 GI Bill and the education benefits it provides are "at risk" because of concern over abuses. 

"Some for-profit institutions are providing our students a great education, but with the significant federal dollars being spent, we owe it to taxpayers and our veterans to carefully monitor and provide adequate oversight," Webb said in a statement. 

Webb is among a group of senators who say the federal government needs to step in, as studies show for-profit colleges raking in veterans' benefits with, according to critics, questionable results. 

Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, has led the campaign on Capitol Hill against certain corners of the for-profit college industry. 

A report last month from committee Democrats showed about half of the military's tuition assistance dollars were going toward for-profit colleges. Another report in late 2010 looked at 20 such education companies, and claimed the amount of Veterans Affairs and Defense Department benefits they received soared from $67 million in 2006 to $521 million in 2010. 

The proposal from Webb would apply to all schools -- not just for-profit colleges -- that receive education dollars through the Veterans Affairs and Defense departments. It would require the schools to be properly accredited and have an undergrad withdrawal rate at 33 percent or below. 

The bill would require many schools to offer support services to military students, and require the federal government to provide those students one-on-one education counseling. It also would require schools to disclose graduation rates, loan default rates and other information to prospective students. 

Harkin, as well as Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., and others, co-sponsored the proposal. 

For-profit educational leaders claim the schools provide America's veterans with opportunities at success that fit their needs. For-profit colleges cover everything from technical schools to online universities and have become a booming industry. 

"Today, almost 200,000 veterans achieve access to post-secondary education opportunities through private sector colleges and universities," Steve Gunderson, president of The Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, said in a statement earlier this week. "The flexibility and focus of our academic delivery often fits the family and academic needs of these veterans." 

Harkin and other Democratic senators also recently sent a letter to the Department of Veterans Affairs urging the department to trademark the phrase "GI Bill" -- claiming some recruiters for for-profit schools were using the phrase on their websites to "wrongly imply" that the benefits can only be used at those institutions.



Article from FOXNEWS


US Officials: Assad Allies Hold Under Pressure

Top U.S. officials all the way up to President Obama are predicting the Syrian regime's days are numbered, but recent U.S. intelligence reports suggest that the Syrian leader commands a formidable army that is unlikely to turn on him, an inner circle that has stayed loyal and a Syrian elite that still supports his rule.

While intelligence officials would not be drawn on a timeline for the regime's possible collapse, their sober assessment hinted at a continuing campaign lasting several months, if not longer, with an inevitable continued loss of life. For the past year, the Syria's government has tried to crush a popular uprising inspired by the Arab Spring movements. The U.N. says more than 7,500 people have been killed.

A worsening economy could ultimately drive Syrian President Bashar Assad from power, with food prices recently doubling, unemployment rising and refined fuel products running out. But so far, there have been no mass protests over food or fuel shortages nor any discernible slowing in military activity because of a lack of supplies, according to three senior intelligence officials, speaking Friday on condition of anonymity to provide a snapshot of recent intelligence reports and analysis of the crisis.

Satellite imagery shows a new ferociousness to the embattled regime's attacks, including artillery shelling of multiple mosques, schools, playgrounds and a hospital, in the Sunni neighborhood of Homs, the officials said. The continuing violence, they said, has driven some 2,000 refugees over the Lebanese border and displaced up to 200,000 more Syrians inside the country.

It also has spurred new Syrian defections, including by the deputy oil minister, and the reported departure of two army generals, though none of them, nor previous defectors are regarded as part of Assad's inner circle. And not all of the defectors have joined the opposition. Nor are there indications of the broader Syrian elite abandoning their support for their leader. That includes not just Assad's Allawite clan, but the minority Christians, Kurds and Druze, who all fear persecution under the possible rise of a post-Assad Sunni Islamic regime.

Asked about his approach to Syria this week, President Obama called the bloodshed heartbreaking and inexcusable, but he made clear that he does not favor military action now. "The notion that the way to solve every one of these problems is to deploy our military, that hasn't been true in the past and it won't be true now," Obama said. He suggested Assad will leave without an outside military shove, but he gave no indication when.

"We are going to continue to work on this project with other countries," Obama said at a White House news conference. "And it is my belief that, ultimately, this dictator will fall, as dictators in the past have fallen."

On Friday, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta reiterated that the goal is an international pressure campaign against Syria. He claimed that sanctions and such diplomatic pressure are already "having a significant impact on Assad" and weakening his regime. He gave no estimate of how long that might take to succeed.

Intelligence analysts have concluded that the disorganized Syrian opposition is providing little challenge to the regime, with political leaders of the Syrian National Council proving more apt at picking ego-driven fights among themselves than working as a team. The self-styled Syrian Free Army is made up of a ragtag "Star Wars" bar of disparate local groups, lightly armed with rifles, rocket-propelled grenades and homemade improvised explosive devices. The fighters arm themselves by seizing weapons from military warehouses, staging raids on army outposts or smuggling the weapons in. The rebel army has thus far rejected the political leadership of the rebel political movement.

Arrayed against them is a highly professional, 330,000-man army plus reserves that was built and trained to invade Israel. While under strain, it is nowhere near collapse, the officials said.

One reason for the relatively few defections could be that departing troops would not only be out of a job and a country, but their extended families would be at risk of retaliation. In addition to troops, the army has 4,500 tanks and some 500 aircraft, including armed helicopters. While intelligence officials have no proof those helicopters have been used in the urban fighting that has so far typified the revolt, they say the deadly aircraft could be called in if the fighting moves to rural areas.

Setting up a no-fly zone to help the rebels would mean challenging Syria's formidable air defenses. Adding details to testimony by top government officials this week, the intelligence officials said Syria has hundreds of anti-aircraft artillery batteries and thousands of shoulder-fired missiles, making up for their lack of technical sophistication through sheer numbers.

Syria also has extensive chemical and biological weapons stockpiles, at more than two dozen locations, other officials said. The U.S. intelligence officials would not confirm that number but said they believe the Syrian military is currently in control of all those sites. While the U.S. does not believe Syria will employ the weapons in the revolt, intelligence officials fear a worst-case scenario in which the regime falls and the weapons fall into the hands of the few hundred Al Qaeda operatives thought to be operating within the country. Iran continues to aid the Assad regime, now providing small arms and other weapons. Initially, the Iranians provided nonlethal aid, from crowd-suppressing equipment like tear gas and water cannons to technology to jam cellphones and block or monitor the social networking sites rebels would use to organize demonstrations.

Iran also historically provided Syria with unmanned aerial vehicles that it is using for surveillance as well as intercepting phone and radio transmissions.
Syrian leader Assad continues to see himself as a hero of the Arab world, besieged by what he believes is a foreign extremist plot to unseat him. That could be why the Al Qaeda operatives inside Syria have stayed relatively quiet, rather than laying claim to a series of sophisticated bombings in Damascas and Aleppo -- because they don't want to give Assad ideological ammunition to rally his people against the extremists he has long claimed were behind the entire revolt.



Article from FOXNEWS


Woman gives birth to son weighing nearly 14 pounds

SAN DIEGO -- A Southern California woman says doctors predicted she would give birth to a big baby boy, but nobody was prepared for just how big.

The North County Times reports Saturday that Jayden Sigler weighed in at 13 pounds, 14 ounces, when he was delivered by cesarean section Thursday.

His mother, Cynthia Sigler of Vista, says it took a photo of the scale readout to convince her cousin that the birth weight wasn't a joke.

The mother says doctors initially estimated that Jayden would weigh about 9 pounds. By March 6, the estimate jumped to about 11 pounds.

Dr. Jerald White says Jayden, at nearly 14 pounds, is the biggest baby he's delivered since his career began in 1961.



Article from FOXNEWS


Historic U.S. aircraft carrier makes final voyage

NORFOLK, Virginia (AP) - When the makers of "Top Gun" were filming on board the USS Enterprise, they donated a set of black fuzzy dice to liven up the ship's otherwise drab interior.

A quarter-century later, the dice will still be dangling inside the tower of "the Big E" as the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier sets sail on its final voyage Sunday.

The trinket is a reminder of the ship's storied 50-year history that includes action in several wars, a prominent role in the Cuban missile crisis and serving as a spotter ship for John Glenn's historic orbit of the earth.

"To serve on this ship, certainly in this capacity, you certainly have to be a student of the ship's history," said Rear Adm. Walter Carter, commander of the Enterprise strike group. "Fifty years of service, in our nation's history, we've never had a warship in service that long."

The Enterprise is heading to the Middle East on its seven-month deployment, where it will be on standby in case of conflict with Iran or piracy threats off Somalia, among other things. The ship has experience with both scenarios, participating in a retaliatory strike against Iran for mining the Arabian Gulf in 1988 and responding last year to the hijacking of a sailing vessel by Somali pirates, during which all four Americans on board were shot and killed.

The Enterprise is the longest aircraft carrier in the U.S. fleet. It is also the oldest, a distinction that brings pride as well as plenty of headaches for the ship's more than 4,000 crew members. The ship is effectively a small city that frequently needs repairs because of its age. It was originally designed to last 25 years, but a major overhaul in 1979 and other improvements have extended its life.

The ship largely looks like any other carrier on the inside and has modern amenities like gyms, a coffee shop and a television station with dozens of channels. It even produces its own daily newspaper while at sea.

But even the best-maintained ship faces challenges as it ages.

"It's kind of like when you get older and you know it's harder to get out of the bed in the morning. It takes you a couple hours to kind of really get up and then you're fine. Well, it's the same sort of thing here with Enterprise," Capt. William Hamilton, the ship's commanding officer, said days before the ship was set to deploy from Naval Station Norfolk.

Hamilton acknowledged all aircraft carriers have problems they're supposed to anticipate, but he said the Enterprise is more likely to have "unknown unknowns" than newer ships.

Machinists in charge of fixing unexpected problems say the things that can break down range from critical air conditioner units to elevators that lift fighter jets from the hangar bay to the flight deck not working. Moreover, the Enterprise has eight nuclear reactors to maintain - six more than any other U.S. carrier.

The problems are so notorious that sailors reporting to work aboard the Enterprise are often given joking condolences by their colleagues on shore and on other ships.

The ship regularly has to make its own parts from scratch when something breaks down. Spare parts for much of the ship, which is the only one of its class, simply don't exist.

"Life is hard on Enterprise," Hamilton said. "But when they leave here, they leave knowing if they can do this, they can do anything."

The challenges aboard the ship and the need to keep spirits up were highlighted last year, when former commanding officer Capt. Owen Honors was fired for airing raunchy videos that he said were intended to boost morale. During a hearing in which Honors was trying to avoid being kicked out of the Navy, he and his lawyers frequently referenced the difficult conditions on board. Honors was found to have committed misconduct, but ultimately allowed to stay in the service. He is retiring in April.

Hamilton acknowledged that maintaining morale on the ship - which has unofficial mottos like "There's tough, and then there's Enterprise tough" and "We eat pain like candy" - is still vital.

"As much as anything, it's just telling them face to face that you appreciate, the Navy appreciates, the nation appreciates what they're doing and then that goes a long, long way," he said.

There's also the added bonus of the ship's crew members feeling particularly proud to serve on a ship whose name has a distinguished place in naval history and pop culture.

Crew members who weren't even alive when "Top Gun" was in theaters in 1986 use the film to explain what it is they do on the ship, as well as exactly where it is they do it.

For Petty Officer 1st Class Brian Dennis, there's also pride in his ship having the same name as the ship featured in the "Star Trek" series. He's from Cairo, Georgia, the same home town as "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry.

"In a way I wanted to be part of this ship, to be on the last deployment, to be a part of that. Being from Cairo, that's real huge," he said. "I always wanted to be a part of history, so being on this last deployment it'll be something I can definitely tell my children and grandchildren."

The deployment will be the ship's 22nd. Following its return to Virginia in the fall, tens of thousands are expected to be on hand for a deactivation ceremony Dec. 1 that President Barack Obama has been invited to attend. But if "Top Gun" producer Jerry Bruckheimer wants to film a sequel, he'll have to find another ship.

The following summer, Enterprise will be towed to the shipyard where it was built in nearby Newport News so its nuclear fuel can be removed, a process that will take until 2015. What remains of the ship after that will then be taken to Washington state so it can be scrapped.

The ship, among the first to respond after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, won't be turned into a museum like some other carriers. Crews have to cut large holes in the vessel to remove the nuclear fuel, and it would be too expensive to repair, said Lt. Cmdr. Sarah Self-Kyler, the Enterprise's public affairs officer.

Instead, many of the ship's alumni want another carrier to be named Enterprise in the future, which is not uncommon, she said.

This is the eighth ship to bear the name Enterprise, and there's a room on board dedicated as a museum to past incarnations. The preceding USS Enterprise was the most decorated ship in World War II, while the first Enterprise joined the U.S. fleet after it was captured from the British in 1775.

If a future carrier is renamed Enterprise, it's unclear if the fuzzy dice will make journeys on board that ship, too, or remain in a Navy museum.

__

Online: USS Enterprise http://www.enterprise.navy.mil/

Brock Vergakis can be reached at www.twitter.com/BrockVergakis

"Iodized salt" and the 294 other terms that will get you in trouble with Chinese Web censorship: http://t.co/YoO2sD3O
Governor Chris Christie loses his temper, calls student an 'idiot': http://t.co/XvwpZ1Ei
Rant on American Airlines flight ends with flight attendant in hospital: http://t.co/ohad3v6V


Article from YAHOO NEWS


Rules aim to block colleges from exploiting vets

For-profit schools would be required to meet new standards covering everything from drop-out rates to transparency, under a proposal by senators who claim the colleges are exploiting members of the U.S. military for their government education benefits. 

Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., introduced the bill this past week, claiming the Post-9/11 GI Bill and the education benefits it provides are "at risk" because of concern over abuses. 

"Some for-profit institutions are providing our students a great education, but with the significant federal dollars being spent, we owe it to taxpayers and our veterans to carefully monitor and provide adequate oversight," Webb said in a statement. 

Webb is among a group of senators who say the federal government needs to step in, as studies show for-profit colleges raking in veterans' benefits with, according to critics, questionable results. 

Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, has led the campaign on Capitol Hill against certain corners of the for-profit college industry. 

A report last month from committee Democrats showed about half of the military's tuition assistance dollars were going toward for-profit colleges. Another report in late 2010 looked at 20 such education companies, and claimed the amount of Veterans Affairs and Defense Department benefits they received soared from $67 million in 2006 to $521 million in 2010. 

The proposal from Webb would apply to all schools -- not just for-profit colleges -- that receive education dollars through the Veterans Affairs and Defense departments. It would require the schools to be properly accredited and have an undergrad withdrawal rate at 33 percent or below. 

The bill would require many schools to offer support services to military students, and require the federal government to provide those students one-on-one education counseling. It also would require schools to disclose graduation rates, loan default rates and other information to prospective students. 

Harkin, as well as Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., and others, co-sponsored the proposal. 

For-profit educational leaders claim the schools provide America's veterans with opportunities at success that fit their needs. For-profit colleges cover everything from technical schools to online universities and have become a booming industry. 

"Today, almost 200,000 veterans achieve access to post-secondary education opportunities through private sector colleges and universities," Steve Gunderson, president of The Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, said in a statement earlier this week. "The flexibility and focus of our academic delivery often fits the family and academic needs of these veterans." 

Harkin and other Democratic senators also recently sent a letter to the Department of Veterans Affairs urging the department to trademark the phrase "GI Bill" -- claiming some recruiters for for-profit schools were using the phrase on their websites to "wrongly imply" that the benefits can only be used at those institutions.



Article from FOXNEWS


Mother, son arrested after trying to mail drugs

BEAR, Del. -- A Delaware woman and her son were in police custody Saturday after authorities found a cache of drugs and guns in their home following the recovery of a drug-filled package the woman tried to mail.

Residents of Bear, Del., told WTXF-TV they were stunned to learn that 63-year-old Marilyn Howell and her 32-year-old son Robert Howell had been arrested.

Investigators went to the Howells' house after they tracked a package containing methadone, Ritalin, Soma, Xanax and hallucinogenic mushrooms to Marilyn Howell.

Police said she had intended to send the package to her daughter in Colorado, but the parcel was returned because the postage had not been paid for properly at a self-serve kiosk.

Detectives found the substances wrapped in dryer sheets, bubble wrap and a perfume-doused T-shirt.

A search warrant was executed for Marilyn Howell's home on Feb. 24, and police found marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms, as well as drug paraphernalia including pipes, scales, grinders and packaging materials.

Five firearms were recovered from inside the home, including a 9mm handgun and a modified AK-47 rifle.

Marilyn Howell was taken into custody and charged with multiple counts of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance and possession of a firearm by a person prohibited, among other related charges.

Robert Howell was charged with possessing a destructive weapon and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Click here for more on this story from MyFoxPhilly.  



Article from FOXNEWS


Marine Trying to Adopt K-9 Comrade Hits Red Tape

A former Marine from New York is hitting bureaucratic red tape in her quest to adopt the military service dog she served with in Iraq before it is put down, My Fox New York reports.

Marine Seeks to Adopt Military Dog: MyFoxNY.com

Former Corporal Megan Leavey, 28, wants to take in a German shepherd named Sergeant Rex, who she calls her partner. The pair hunted for IEDs in Iraq during two tours of duty, amounting to over 100 missions, and were both severely injured when an IED exploded near them. 

"He's done his duty. It's time for him to relax," Leavey says.

Since being discharged from the military in December 2007, Leavey has campaigned to adopt the bomb-sniffing canine so he can enjoy a civilian life with her, the Daily mail reports.

"This is not (the Marines) first priority. A lot of times it gets lost in the shuffle," Leavey told My Fox New York. 

But time is running out for the faithful dog. 

Sergeant Rex, the oldest active service dog at Camp Pendleton, was recently diagnosed with facial palsy and can no longer serve, the Daily Mail reports.

Sen. Charles Schumer has stepped in and has asked the military to expedite Leavey's application to adopt Sergeant Rex before he is put to sleep.

"The Marines don't have a reason against reuniting them, it's just a slow bureaucracy," Shumer says.

"It's life or death," Leavey says for her former partner.

Click here for more on this story from MY Fox NY.

Click here for more on this story from the Daily Mail. 



Article from FOXNEWS


Santorum: \'We have to do well here in Kansas\'

Kansas caucus results coming in big for Santorum... http://t.co/KDO2Q8dg

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Keep Your Eyes Healthy

At the front of each eye lies the cornea, a rounded bulge that allows light inside. That light passes through the pupil, a transparent space in the center of the colored iris. Behind the pupil is the lens, which is connected to the zonules (ligaments that tighten and slacken to focus). Light goes through the lens and hits the retina, the tissue at the back of the eye, which sends a message through the optic nerve to the brain, telling it what you're looking at.
 

From Birth Through Your 30s

When you are born, the lenses inside your eyes are generally crystal clear and flexible, and the zonules connected to them are strong. With age, the lenses become less flexible, and the zonules are not as effective. Your eye shape, which is genetically determined, may mean that you need corrective lenses. If your eyeballs are too long, you're nearsighted. If they are somewhat short, you're farsighted. Whenever you notice a change in your vision, schedule an appointment with an ophthalmologist or an optometrist.

In Your 40s

“This decade is when we begin to lose our ability to focus up close, which is called presbyopia,” says Dr. Andrew Iwach, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the executive director of the Glaucoma Center of San Francisco. Thank those thicker, harder lenses and weaker zonules. The remedy? Reading glasses. (Don't feel bad―everyone needs them eventually.) How quickly you develop presbyopia depends on where your vision started. 

If you have always had perfect eyesight, you'll probably need reading glasses in your early 40s. Nearsighted people have an edge and often won't notice a change until their late 40s, says Jill Koury, an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the Duke University Eye Center, in Durham, North Carolina. If you're farsighted, you'll probably need those specs in your late 30s. This is also the time to schedule a comprehensive baseline eye exam (aim to go in at age 40 if you haven't already). Among other things, a doctor will test the pressure inside your eyes and look at the optic nerves to be sure they are intact.

In Your 50s and Beyond

The lenses continue to harden, and you may find you need stronger corrective lenses or even bifocals, which are lenses that have two prescriptions built into them (they are now available in contact lenses, too). You are also at greater risk of developing the following eye diseases.

Cataracts. These form when the lenses of the eyes become cloudy. More than 20 million Americans have cataracts, and everyone, if he or she lives long enough, will develop them. Age is the number one culprit, says Carol L. Karp, a professor of clinical ophthalmology at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, in Florida. Smoking and sun exposure are also contributors.

Glaucoma. This disease affects more than 2 million people in the United States and is typically associated with pressure building up in the eyes, resulting in damage to the optic nerves, says Emily Bedrick Graubart, an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the Emory Eye Center and the Emory University School of Medicine, in Atlanta. Glaucoma causes peripheral-vision loss and can eventually lead to blindness. It's one of the most common reasons worldwide why adults lose their sight.

Macular degeneration. If the macula (a part of the retina) deteriorates due to heredity or environmental factors, the central line of sight becomes impaired. Blurred vision is often the first sign. Macular degeneration affects almost 2 million people in the United States and is the leading cause of vision loss in Caucasians over the age of 65. Ultraviolet (UV) light can speed its development, as can smoking.
__________________________________________________

More From Real Simple:
7 Ways to Protect Your Vision

Should You Dump your Doctor?

A Thorough Examination of Medical Clinics
_________________________________________________

Eye Q's

Answers to the questions that patients commonly ask their doctors.

Q. Whom should I see for my exam, an ophthalmologist or an optometrist?

A. Either. An ophthalmologist is a doctor of medicine (M.D.), which means he or she went to medical school and had an internship and a residency in ophthalmology. An optometrist is a doctor of optometry (O.D.) and has completed four years of optometry school. Both can give comprehensive examinations and prescribe glasses and contacts. But only an ophthalmologist can perform surgery.

Q. How often should I have my eyes examined?

A. According to Dori Carlson, an optometrist and a spokesperson for the American Optometric Association, a child should have his first screening, generally done by a pediatrician, anywhere from birth to age one. A second screening should be done at age three and another before the child starts school. Carlson suggests yearly exams after that, unless a doctor tells you otherwise. Most important, experts recommend having a comprehensive examination at age 40. If you start to notice changes in your vision, see a doctor, regardless of your age.

Q. Do I need to have my eyes dilated during an exam?

A. Probably. It's the most common way a doctor can see deep inside the eyes to ensure that the optic nerves are healthy and to check the retinas. Schedule an appointment late in the day, when outdoor light isn't too bright and you can avoid reading and computer work afterward, says Carlson. However, some ophthalmologists use a machine that lets them see into the eye without dilating.


Q. Why do my eyes start stinging when I'm tired?

A. The most likely culprit is dryness. When your eyes have been open for many hours, their surfaces dry out. And if you've been watching TV or using a computer, the problem can occur even more quickly, since when you look intently at something, you blink less and so lubricate your eyes less. Also, as you age, your ability to produce tears decreases. When your eyes are dry, they can't flush irritants from the surfaces, so they may sting or feel scratchy. The solution: Use preservative-free artificial tears when you feel that burning sensation. (They're safe to use with contacts.)

Q. Sometimes I see little squiggles in my vision. What are these?

A. They're called floaters. Each eye is filled with a jellylike substance called the vitreous humor. It's crystal clear and firm when you are young, but as you age, it liquefies. Floaters are simply little clumps of this jelly that cast shadows on the retina. They can be perfectly normal, says Koury, and you should worry only if they increase dramatically in number or if you see flashes of light, too.

Q. Can two brown-eyed parents have a blue-eyed child?

A. Yes. Eye color is determined by the amount of melanin in the irises. A bunch of genes control how much melanin develops. “Because eye color isn't dependent on one gene, it's possible for two people with brown eyes to have a baby with blue eyes or for two parents with blue eyes to have a brown-eyed child,” says Graubart. Many babies are born with blue eyes, as the genes responsible for iris pigmentation haven't yet kicked in. If the genes end up telling the irises to produce more melanin, the eyes darken.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Name That Tune\' Returns?

If you could recognize Kanye West's "Runaway" from that first tinkling piano note in the Bud Lite Platinum Super Bowl commercial, then you might be in luck.

FremantleMedia has secured the rights to the classic game show "Name That Tune" for a reboot, Vulture reports. The company has a good track record for reviving game shows such as "Family Feud" and "Let's Make a Deal."

Fall TV Scorecard: Is your favorite show in danger?

"Name That Tune" is a song-guessing quiz show that pits two contestants against each other to name songs based on the fewest notes played. The one who advances to the Golden Medley bonus round tries to name seven songs in 30 seconds or less. The show first debuted in 1953 and was seen in various incarnations throughout the '70s and '80s.

In 2001, VH1 debuted their version, "Name That Video." MTV also tried to launch other versions for its flagship network and CMT, but neither got off the ground. CBS also tried but failed at a reboot in 2006.

Check out this classic clip from a 1977 episode featuring Kathie Lee Gifford:

Would you "tune" into a revamp of "Name That Tune"?

Related Articles on TVGuide.com



Article from FOXNEWS


Get Revved Up: Car Apps

Rev up your engine. Here are a few apps to hit the road with.

Viper SmartStart
Remotely start, unlock, and monitor your cars location and speed with Viper SmartStart. This app can save you from elements of weather, and the GPS locator comes in handy especially when you forget where you've parked.

A new feature, SMartSchedule, using Cloud technology will run through your daily schedule and will send push notifications to your phone-- alerting you it's time to move to your next appointment-- and with warm up your car if it's cold out.

The vehicle diagnostics part of the app hold information on the health of your car, conveniently on hand at all times.

And you may want to use this feature if  you have a teen driver-- receive alerts to when the car goes outside of set proximity areas or speeds above a set limit.

The keyless entry version of the app is free, but the in car system costs $299 at authorized dealers like Best Buy.

Download Viper SmartStart: iTunes.

Download Viper SmartStart: Android.

Mobilewalla score: 85 out of 100.

Here's how it works:

iOnRoad
Mount your smartphone on your dashboard loaded with iOnRoad. The app warns you of traffic up ahead, distance between you and the car ahead of you, speed limit changes, and will read your text messages for you. 

Using the camera, GPS, and other sensors, the app will send warnings to you through audio and visual alerts. Driving directions, maps, your music, texts and emails are made easier to access with the help of iOnRoad. The app keeps you hands free, by reading your data out loud.

Download iOnRoad: Android.

Mobilewalla score: 83 out of 100.

Here's how it works:

Alternative Fuels
If you drive a hybrid-- the Alternative Fuels app can direct you to fueling stations along your route and has a list of roadside assistance numbers, just in case of an emergency. 

For vehicles that run on fuel other than that made from petroleum include the following:

-    Alcohols - ethanol and methanol.
-    Compressed natural gas (CNG) - natural gas under high pressure.
-    Electricity - stored in batteries.
-    Hydrogen - a very special type of gas.
-    Liquefied natural gas (LNG) - natural gas that is very, very cold.
-    Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) (also called propane) - hydrocarbon gases under low pressure.
-    Liquids made from coal - gasoline and diesel fuel that doesn't come from petroleum.
-    Biodiesel - a lot like diesel fuel, but made from plant oil or animal fat.

Download Alternative Fuels: Android.

Enjoy the ride!



Article from FOXNEWS


I Just Hit Your Car. Sorry!

You just bumped the car behind you. Do you leave a note or make a run for it?

Leave a note. It's what your mother wants you to do, but it's also what government says you must do. In most states, you're breaking the law if you hit and run, even if it's a minor fender-bender in a mini-mall lot.

"Hit-and-run can occur not only in parking lots as part of a backing-up accident, but can also happen on the street by those either speeding, driving erratically or driving under the influence," says Tully Lehman, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Network of California (IINC). "So, it can happen in other circumstances as well; and, in some cases, can result in drivers not stopping to leave information."

What can happen if you don't leave that information? Lehman says California is typical when it comes to a misdemeanor hit-and-run: If caught, a motorist can be fined $1,000, jailed for up to six months and have his license suspended.

Despite these consequences, a remarkable number of drivers choose to flee the scene. Loretta Worters, spokesperson for the Insurance Information Institute, points to numbers gathered by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) showing that, on average, there are usually more than 700,000 hit-and-run accidents a year.

Making the correct moves after the fact

So, you're a conscientious motorist and a good citizen -- but you dinged up another car and the owner isn't around. Get out that pen and paper and start writing.

What should the note say?

Make it simple, says Worters: Just give your name and number. It's not necessary to apologize or admit any fault; leave that up to the insurance companies to determine later.

"Well, you are admitting fault by (leaving a note) saying you hit the car," Worters says. "I wouldn't put the policy number down on the paper but provide it to the person when they call. That should satisfy your responsibility at that time." (Many car insurance companies offer an accident and claims checklists as part of their mobile apps.)

She also underscores the car insurance ramifications if you flee. "Hit-and-run incidents are more serious than regular at-fault accidents," Worters says. "It could stay on your driving record for five to seven years, depending on your state. And if your car insurance company discovers it's a hit and run, they may also cancel your coverage. This would mean even higher premiums (when you finally secure coverage) at your next carrier."

Lehman agrees that saying you're sorry or confessing how distracted you were is not necessary. What is, he points out, is making sure the owner can easily find the note. In fact, Lehman says, California is like most states in requiring you to put it in "a conspicuous place on the vehicle." The obvious -- secured under a windshield wiper -- is a good place to start.

Need a note example? Here's Lehman's suggestion:

To Vehicle Owner:

On date and time, I backed into your car, a color, make, model with license plate number 1ABC234. My car's (rear bumper/right rear/left rear/front left/front right/driver door/passenger door, whichever part) contacted your (bumper, door, quarter panel, etc). Please contact me so that I may provide you with my insurance company information.

John/Jane Doe. Phone number

Don't forget to notify the cops

Both Worters and Lehman add that drivers are legally required to contact the authorities where the mishap occurred. Most states have a reporting threshold of $500 to $1,000, but it doesn't take much damage to reach that level.

If you're the one with the damaged car, Worters says, you need to take this step.

"Some insurers require that any hit-and-run damage be reported to the police within 24 hours for the claim to be considered a not-at-fault accident,” she says. “Otherwise, the claim may be considered a chargeable loss.”

If you're the at-fault driver, a police report can document the damage and circumstances in a way that's difficult to dispute later on. And, if the police don't come to the scene, you're at least able to tell your insurer that you called.

Danny Miller, spokesperson for Esurance, adds that you should document the damage to your auto and the parked car by taking photos, possibly with a smartphone if you have one. That will help facilitate any repair claims you or the other motorist make later, he says. (See “Can a parked car be at fault?”)

That's advice echoed by most insurance and accident claims experts. If you don't have a camera in your phone, a disposable version in your glove box might be worth the investment.

What's the damage to your checkbook?

You can either pay for the damage yourself, or you can give the other car owner the information needed to make a claim against your property damage liability coverage.

You'll pay less out of pocket by using your liability coverage, because there is no deductible. The downside is that you'll have a claim on your record. Most minor incidents won't raise your rates if it's your first claim, says CarInsurance.com consumer analyst Penny Gusner. (See “Sorting out a parking-lot scrape.”)

If you're the one whose car was damaged by a hit-and-run driver, repairs will come through your collision policy, not through your uninsured motorist, and you'll have to pay a deductible.

But your rates shouldn't rise, Worters says. "Hit-and-run accidents are common and car insurance companies usually do not fault the (victimized) driver for the incident," she says.

Gusner warns, though, that if you have a couple or more hit-and-run claims within a few years your rates could rise due to the amount of claims. That and your insurer may begin to wonder what makes your car so attractive that people keeping hitting it without leaving a note.

The original article can be found at CarInsurance.com:
I just hit your car. Sorry!



Article from FOXNEWS


COPO Camaro Ready to Race

At last year's SEMA show, Chevrolet showed off a concept version of the 2012 Camaro in COPO drag racing trim. Now, the company has announced it will produce it--but in very limited numbers.

Aimed at racers in NHRA's Stock Eliminator and Super Stock classes, the 2012 COPO Camaro will see just 69 units built. It will take on the likes of the Drag Pak Dodge Challenger and Ford Mustang Cobra Jet as a factory-built ready-to-race special.

The 69 cars to be built matches the number of 1969 ZL-1 COPO Camaros originally built.

Those interested in taking one of these Central Office Production Order Camaros home, and ultimately to the track, should probably get in contact with their nearest dealer ASAP--though if you miss the boat, the COPO models are built off the same body-in-white shell available to all racers as part no. 19243374--but there'll be a lot of work between getting the shell and racing it.

Deliveries of the COPO Camaro will start in early summer.

Key specs of the drag racers are below:

-A sequenced build number matched to the engine but sold without a Vehicle Identification Number and cannot be registered for highway use

-Three racing-class engine are available, including a naturally aspirated 427 (7.0L) and two supercharged 327 (5.3L) V-8 engines

-Engine assembly at GM's Performance Build Center, where the buyer can opt to participate in the engine assembly similar to Chevrolet's Corvette Engine Build Experience and the Chevrolet Performance Build Your Own Crate Engine programs

-Engines pairing with a Powerglide automatic transmission designed for drag racing

-Five colors: Flat Black, Summit White, Victory Red, Silver Ice Metallic and Ashen Gray Metallic

-A COPO graphics package similar to the one introduced on the concept vehicle  available in Metallic White, Semi-Gloss Black, Inferno Orange Metallic and Chevy Racing Blue

-Pricing starting at $89,000

-A special collector's package offering the purchase of all three engines with the COPO Camaro â€" including one  installed in the car at delivery â€" with each engine serial number matched to the car

Click here for more from MotorAuthority



Article from FOXNEWS


Judge, deputy wounded in Wash. courthouse attack

Dozens of law enforcement officers joined the hunt for a man who stabbed a judge and shot a sheriff's deputy with her own weapon in a courthouse struggle.

A team that included the State Patrol as well as officers from five counties has made "significant headway in identifying the suspect," Grays Harbor County Undersheriff Rick Scott said late Friday night. "We believe we have some good leads."

The attacker apparently ran from the county courthouse with the officer's .45-caliber handgun. The motive for the Friday attack in the coastal town of Montesano, about 90 miles southwest of Seattle, wasn't clear.

Judge David Edwards and Deputy Polly Davin were treated and released from a hospital hours after the attack, which prompted a lockdown of the small town of about 4,000 residents. The lockdown on schools was later lifted, but afterschool activities were canceled.

As many as 100 officers joined in the manhunt at its peak Friday, Scott said.

Davin responded to a report of a suspicious person at the courthouse and confronted a man, Scott said. During a struggle, she was stabbed with either a small knife or scissors.

The judge intervened, striking the assailant, who then stabbed him, authorities said.

Davin reached for her gun, but it was wrestled away by the man, who shot twice, striking her in the shoulder before fleeing, Scott said.

"He doesn't know me and I don't know him," Edwards told reporters Friday night from his home, saying the attacker was a stranger.

The judge said he was on the third floor of the courthouse when he saw the deputy being attacked on the first floor and ran to help.

"He had a weapon in his hand, a knife or something, and he was stabbing her, and that's what I got stabbed with," Edwards said.

After the shooting, the judge said the attacker turned and looked at him and ran out the door with the deputy's gun.

"I'm OK, she's OK, that's what's important right now," Edwards said.

The attack comes less than three months after Edwards had joined a lawsuit filed over county budget cuts he said were making the courthouse less safe. The courthouse is not equipped with a metal detector and there was no on-site security on Friday, Scott said.

"Our courthouse is one of the few of its size that doesn't have full-time security," he said. "We just had a discussion about courthouse security less than a week ago. The need for that is certainly illustrated by situations like this."

The judge put it even more bluntly, saying, "You can't get less security than we have."

There have been a number of dangerous episodes inside the courthouse over the last two years, including a defendant charging at one judge in a courtroom and a man armed with a knife asking directions to the office of a judge, the lawsuit filed in December said.

"Anyone can enter the courthouse carrying weapons," the lawsuit said.

According to budget information from the county, the superior court budget was cut from $733,320 in 2010 to $645,818 for 2012.

Edwards was appointed to Grays Harbor County Superior Court in 2007 by Gov. Chris Gregoire. He had been a private attorney, and had also served as a prosecutor in the late 1970s.

Davin is a former Daily World reporter who became a sheriff's deputy in 1998.

___

Associated Press writers Doug Esser and Manuel Valdes in Seattle, Shannon Dininny in Yakima, Wash., and Rachel La Corte in Olympia, Wash., contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS