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1 reportedly killed after bus collides with truck

One person was killed and several others injured Wednesday when a school bus collided with a tractor-trailer near Rockford in western Pennsylvania, WPXI-TV reported.

Pennsylvania State Troopers did not have details about the crash but The Daily American reported on its website that the bus and the truck collided around 2:45 p.m. Wednesday.

Rhonda Hoover, secretary to the superintendent of the Turkeyfoot Area School District, said there were students on the bus but she did not know how many. She said they had been taken to Somerset Hospital after the accident, which occurred on Route 281.

Twenty-two students who were not injured in the accident were taken from the accident scene to another bus, WPXI-TV reported.

Hoover said superintendent Darlene Pritt had gone to the scene of the accident.

It was not immediately known if the fatality was from a passenger on the bus or the truck.

NewsCore and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Archer Who Uses Teeth Shoots for Olympic Gold

Jeff Fabry is one of the world's best archers. He's a five-time Special Games world champion, a three-time Paralympic medalist and he's aiming for gold at the 2012 Olympics in London this summer.

What makes his talent unique is that Fabry, who has only one arm, has mastered the art of firing arrows with his teeth. Your dentist might advise against it, but Fabry, who will compete on the U.S. Paralympics Team in London, says his chompers are holding up just fine.

“I've been doing this for 13 years and my teeth still look and feel the same the first day I started. Everything is going good, luckily,” Fabry said.

But the road to firing arrows with precision was not a straight one. At 15, Fabry lost his arm and a leg in a motorcycle accident.

“My buddies were out hitting the hills hunting and I was stuck at home and I was like, no, I don't like this, so I figured out a way to shoot and it happened to be with my teeth,” he said.

Fabry pulls the arrow back by biting on a mouthpiece that he made from a nylon dog leash.

“It was trial and error to find what I considered to be the perfect mouthpiece, where I could be proficient,” he said.

Fabry is sharing his passion with our armed forces. He teaches the sport he loves to members of the Wounded Warriors Project, the nonprofit whose mission is to help injured service members cope in civilian society.

“What I'm really proud of is being able to work with our vets who are coming back from the sandbox with different disabilities,” he said.

Jim Castaneda, a member of the Wounded Warriors, said he is thankful that Fabry introduced him to the sport. While serving in the Navy and stationed in the Philippines, Castaneda suffered a traumatic brain injury and a stroke.

“It's changed my life completely … I found something that I can do and I really enjoy it and love something now,” Castaneda said.

“I'm not just sitting there anymore, like watching my life go by and feeling sorry for myself. Now I'm actually getting up and doing something for myself and trying something else.”

That kind of feedback is a bull's-eye for Fabry.

“That makes me feel good about myself,” Fabry said. “I got hurt before I could join the military, and this is kind of a way that I can give back to my country by helping our heroes.”

Will Wilson, who works for Navy Safe Harbor, the Navy's Wounded Warrior Program, says Fabry is a coach and mentor for his team.

“Jeff is absolutely fantastic. He has a great demeanor and is able to communicate clear and concise direction,” Wilson said.

Fabry is gearing up to coach Team Navy Coast Guard in archery at the Warrior Games in Colorado Springs. Teams from the Marines, Navy and Coast Guard, Army and Air Force compete against each other in a U.S. Department of Defense competition that is similar to the Olympics.



Article from FOXNEWS


White House puts a cork in state dinner wine list

Table settings in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, March 14, 2012, ahead of tonightOf all the things to keep secret about British Prime Minister David Cameron's visit to the White House, what kind of wines will be served at the state dinner in his honor on Wednesday might not seem to be a big deal.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


U.S. quietly deports Iranian arms dealer nabbed in sting

Passport for Amir Hossein Ardebili, an Iranian arms broker, who the U.S. deported to Iran March 13, 2012 after …The United States on Tuesday quietly deported an Iranian arms dealer back to Iran. The man was snagged in a controversial 2007 Immigration and Customs Enforcement sting that some lawyers contend set up a disturbing legal precedent.

If the United States can accuse an Iranian inside Iran of breaking U.S. law, abduct and jail him, can Iran then accuse Americans inside the United States of breaking Iranian law, abduct and jail them? That's the issue the case raises.

In all, Amir Hossein Ardebili, served four-and-a-half years in U.S. federal prison, including more than two years during which he was held in secret-a move that stirred controversy.

Ardebili "completed serving his prison sentence last month and was turned over to ICE for deportation," Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd told Yahoo News by email Wednesday. "Whenever a foreign national is convicted/pleads guilty to federal crimes and completes his or her prison term, they are typically then turned over to ICE for deportation from the U.S."

Ardebili, 38, an Iranian procurement agent from Shiraz, was lured to the former Soviet state of Georgia by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents in 2007 in a sting targeting illegal Iranian imports of western defense technology.

Deported to the United States, Ardebili was held in secret for 22 months before the Justice Department revealed the case against him ahead of his sentencing hearing in December 2009.  Ardebili was sentenced to five years in prison, including time served, after pleading guilty to having attempted to purchase "restricted military-grade radar, gyroscopes and cockpit computers deployed in the F-4 fighter jet," Reuters writes.

On Tuesday, Ardebili was escorted by U.S. agents to "Europe, where he was scheduled to catch a KLM flight to Tehran," Reuters writes. "Two U.S. officials briefed on the matter said that Ardebili's deportation moved with unusual swiftness."

There's "nothing unusual" in Ardebili's swift deportation, the Justice Department's Boyd said.

But some observers of the case wondered if his swift transfer to Iran is meant to put pressure on Iran to facilitate the release of a former U.S. Marine currently being held in the country on spy charges. Iranian authorities announced this month that they had overturned a death sentence for the former U.S. Marine, Amir Hekmati, 28, of Flint, Michigan, and were ordering a retrial.

And then there's the potential legal angle.

"What would be the response if Iranian agents abducted the CEO of Twitter while he was in, say, the UAE, dumped him into solitary confinement in an Iranian prison, and secretly indicted him with aiding and abetting sedition by Iranian dissenters?" Clif Burns, an export control attorney with Bryan Cave, told this reporter when Ardebili was sentenced in 2009.

"The U.S. government and the general U.S. population would be apoplectic," Burns said.

More popular Yahoo! News stories:

- Obama hosts UK's Cameron at 'March Madness,' but Afghanistan casts pall on upbeat visit

- Will Afghanistan massacre accelerate U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan?

- Kony 2012 filmmaker speaks out: 'We can all agree to stop him this year'

- Iran repeals death sentence for former U.S. Marine

Want more of our best national security stories? Visit The Envoy or connect with us on Facebook or on Twitter.

Want more of our best political stories? Visit The Ticket or connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, or add us on Tumblr. Handy with a camera? Join our Election 2012 Flickr group to submit your photos of the campaign in action.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Can you spare $5? Romney looks to woo small donors

Mitt RomneyJust minutes after polls closed in Mississippi and Alabama Tuesday, Mitt Romney's campaign sent an email to his supporters under the former Massachusetts governor's name.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


Panetta safe after truck charges airfield while plane landing

Actor George Clooney testifies during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing in Washington D.C.We found children filled with shrapnel. We were there when we saw a nine-year-old boy get both of his hands blown off," the actor and activist said.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


1 reported dead, 4 injured in Texas shooting

A shooting at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Beaumont, Texas, has left one person dead and four injured, according to the Beaumont Police Department.

Five people were shot, including the gunman. The gunman has been taken into custody, but police have not yet disclosed his identity.

Rod Carroll, a Jefferson County Sheriffs Department deputy, told ABC News the shooting was part of a hostage situation at the courthouse.

A county employee told ABC News' Beaumont affiliate KMBT that the victims were visitors, not courthouse employees.

Beaumont Police Officer Doug Kibodeaux declined to identify the suspect, but told ABC News' Houston affiliate KTRK that the gunman was going to court with his family this morning when he opened fire and shot several rounds. Kibodeaux could not say whether any of the victims were related to the suspect.

The shooting reportedly occurred outside the courthouse, near the entrance.

This is the second courthouse shooting to happen in the past week. On March 7, a shooting outside the Tulsa County Courthouse in Oklahoma left one deputy and three others injured. A barefoot man went to the courthouse plaza and began shooting randomly.

Deputies inside the courthouse who heard the gunfire rushed outside and fired at the suspect. The suspect was hit at least once and a deputy was also shot.

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Article from YAHOO NEWS


What comes next for banks after stress tests?

It may be a long, hard slog for shareholders of Citigroup (C) and the other three companies that failed the Federal Reserve's stress tests. Without any hope for returning capital to shareholders for this year, the four banks run the risk of falling behind.

There's still good news, though: 15 of the 19 banks passed the tests, meaning they might start being more aggressive in how they use their money. 

The bad news is, the big banks have been hitting their profit numbers by using all sorts of accounting moves to paper over losses. Without these moves, and with real estate and European debt still hamstringing their balance sheets, banks like Citigroup and Bank of America (BAC) will have a tough time trying to raise their dividends or do stock repurchases. Bank shares trade well below asset values, some at 40% of tangible book value, like Bank of America, meaning investors may expect big writedowns in the future.

The accounting moves include wonky sounding things like debt valuation adjustments, sluicing loan loss reserves back into income, and relying heavily on tax losses to lower tax bills to the IRS and thus boost reported profits. Two-thirds of Citigroup's $21.9 billion in total net income for the last two years came from accounting moves.

To do its stress test, the Fed used a U.S. unemployment rate as high as 13% and a 20% drop in home prices, as well as an 8% drop in U.S. GDP -- which the U.S. saw in the 2008 downturn, and prior to that, in 1931-1932, notes bank analyst Richard Bove.

Insiders at Citigroup have told FOX Business that the bank has wanted to increase its dividend from a penny to a dime, and also execute a stock repurchase plan. Citi's chief executive, Vikram Pandit, said last week at an investor conference that a stock buyback plan looks “attractive.” Nomura Securities had also forecast a dividend hike and new stock repurchase plan at Citi. One of the bank's biggest investors, Prince Al-Waleed bin-Talal, has publicly endorsed a bigger dividend.

But Citi is still loaded down with first-lien mortgages, home equity loans, commercial and industrial loans, and credit card debt. All told, the Fed projected $134 billion in loan losses at Citi from 2011 through 2013 in its worst-case scenario.

For all the banks, the Fed estimated $324 billion in total post-provision losses in its stress-test scenario. Banks still have to deal with 11 million homes in negative equity, with some $700 billion in possible losses there, according to CoreLogic -- showing the recent $26 billion mortgage settlement is a drop in the bucket.

And overall, the U.S. banking system faces hundreds of billions of dollars in problematic home equity loans, too, says bank analyst Christopher Whalen.

A Citi exec says the bank is still operating in “an incredibly bureaucratic manner -- our operating expenses are still way too high because we have too many layers.”

Citi is stuck trading at the same levels before it split its stock one for ten; back that split out, and at around $3.50 it's less than the cost of a Starbucks latte. Citi also received an historic bailout from the U.S. government valued at $306 billion, and has had three near-death experiences since 1980.

The Federal Reserve nixed Citigroup's capital plan, which caused it to fail the central bank's stress tests. Citi's tier one capital ratios fell short by 0.1 percentage point, coming in at 4.9% versus the 5% minimum. Citi's minimum stressed tier one common ratio was 5.9% before its proposed capital actions, vs. 5.7% for Bank of America and 6.3% for JPMorgan Chase (JPM).

Shares of Citi promptly fell 5% after hours on the news it failed the test, wiping out the 5% runup in the final minutes of yesterday's trade.

Citi blasted an email to the media yesterday, and put up this statement on its bank blog:

“Simply put, the Federal Reserve's objection to our capital plan does not equate with 'failing' the stress test. As of the end of 2011, Citi had a Tier One Common ratio of 11.8% and remains one of the best capitalized banks in the world.”

But again, what's missing here is how Citigroup has deployed accounting moves to help paper over its losses from its equity trading desks and investment banking division, as well as its sour assets housed at its bad bank, Citi Holdings.

Specifically, Citi drew down a total of $13.9 billion out of its cookie jar loan-loss reserves over the past two years, letting them flow into its bottom line. It reported $21.9 billion in total net income for 2011 and 2010.

Its $1.2 billion reported net profit for the fourth quarter 2011 would have been a deeper loss without this move. Also, Citigroup says its fourth quarter total provisions for credit losses and other claims dropped 41% from the fourth quarter of 2010, to $2.9 billion. That figure includes a $1.5 billion drawdown from its loan loss reserves.

Citigroup's 2011 results also benefited from a paper gain of $1.8 billion, reflecting a sharp increase in the perceived riskiness of its debt -- a move that JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America have also used.

And Citi has benefited mightily from its losses, which it has built into an asset to reduce its tax bills to the U.S. government. In turn, that makes its profits look better.

Companies including Citi get to book these losses as assets, called “deferred tax assets,” on their balance sheet. They then can use these losses to lower their taxes in the future, meaning, when they start making taxable profits again. But normally, companies that go bankrupt can't use those assets to reduce their tax bills. However Citi, as did Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, got a pass here when Congress rescued these companies and essentially kept them bankruptcy, allowing the use of these DTAs for insolvent companies.

But what's funky here too is that Citi and other companies get to include these DTAs in their tier one regulatory capital, a highly questionable practice.

Capital should be solid capital, not paper gains.  

Moreover, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods notes there's another game here for banks on the brink with their DTAs.   Banks often book reserves against their DTAs, in case they can't use them. When they can't use them, then they get to sluice right back into earnings those reserves, too. Again, not solid, organic earnings growth.

Separate from the moves, banks have been struggling to make money ever since the Federal Reserve has had a virtually zero interest rate policy, which means the central bank has effectively nationalized the yield curve to save the U.S. economy from the plunging housing market.

The Federal Reserve noted that the 19 banks would generate a paltry 2.5% of their assets in net revenue in its bombed out stress scenario, or $294 billion in pre-provision net revenue, largely because of the “low interest rate, flat yield curve environment.”

Low rates have wrecked the banking system's incentive to create credit by reducing the opportunity for banks to leverage a positively sloped yield.

And banks still face all sorts of write downs from real estate. Whalen estimates the Fed's projection of $56 billion in total losses for all the banks it stress tested “is way, way too small” if housing is going to fall another 20%. He says: “Try more like $200 billion.”

In fact, “you could haircut Wells Fargo and Citigroup's second lien portfolios by $50 billion each today,” given where the housing stands, he says.

And, he questions the “mere $62 billion loss on first lien mortgages in the supervisory stress scenario,” since “real estate is half the total $13 trillion balance sheet of the US banking system and more like three-quarters of total exposure if you include RMBS (residential mortgage-backed securities), how does the Fed manage to keep total real estate losses below $150 billion in the stressed scenario?”

Of course, there's more coming from exposure to Europe. And it's not just because US banks face tremendous pressure because a number of European Union countries have banned short selling against their banks, while at the same time they've effectively nationalized their big banks. 
That's sent the short sellers running to U.S. banks, putting pressure on stocks.

But more so, U.S. banks have an estimated loan exposure to German and French banks in excess of $1.2 trillion and direct exposure to the PIIGS valued at $641 billion, according to the Bank for International Settlements, so a collapse of a major European bank would be a significant hit to the U.S. banking system.

Which was a scenario under the Fed's stringent stress tests.

What comes next for banks after stress tests?



Article from FOXNEWS


What comes next for banks after stress tests?

It may be a long, hard slog for shareholders of Citigroup (C) and the other three companies that failed the Federal Reserve's stress tests. Without any hope for returning capital to shareholders for this year, the four banks run the risk of falling behind.

There's still good news, though: 15 of the 19 banks passed the tests, meaning they might start being more aggressive in how they use their money. 

The bad news is, the big banks have been hitting their profit numbers by using all sorts of accounting moves to paper over losses. Without these moves, and with real estate and European debt still hamstringing their balance sheets, banks like Citigroup and Bank of America (BAC) will have a tough time trying to raise their dividends or do stock repurchases. Bank shares trade well below asset values, some at 40% of tangible book value, like Bank of America, meaning investors may expect big writedowns in the future.

The accounting moves include wonky sounding things like debt valuation adjustments, sluicing loan loss reserves back into income, and relying heavily on tax losses to lower tax bills to the IRS and thus boost reported profits. Two-thirds of Citigroup's $21.9 billion in total net income for the last two years came from accounting moves.

To do its stress test, the Fed used a U.S. unemployment rate as high as 13% and a 20% drop in home prices, as well as an 8% drop in U.S. GDP -- which the U.S. saw in the 2008 downturn, and prior to that, in 1931-1932, notes bank analyst Richard Bove.

Insiders at Citigroup have told FOX Business that the bank has wanted to increase its dividend from a penny to a dime, and also execute a stock repurchase plan. Citi's chief executive, Vikram Pandit, said last week at an investor conference that a stock buyback plan looks “attractive.” Nomura Securities had also forecast a dividend hike and new stock repurchase plan at Citi. One of the bank's biggest investors, Prince Al-Waleed bin-Talal, has publicly endorsed a bigger dividend.

But Citi is still loaded down with first-lien mortgages, home equity loans, commercial and industrial loans, and credit card debt. All told, the Fed projected $134 billion in loan losses at Citi from 2011 through 2013 in its worst-case scenario.

For all the banks, the Fed estimated $324 billion in total post-provision losses in its stress-test scenario. Banks still have to deal with 11 million homes in negative equity, with some $700 billion in possible losses there, according to CoreLogic -- showing the recent $26 billion mortgage settlement is a drop in the bucket.

And overall, the U.S. banking system faces hundreds of billions of dollars in problematic home equity loans, too, says bank analyst Christopher Whalen.

A Citi exec says the bank is still operating in “an incredibly bureaucratic manner -- our operating expenses are still way too high because we have too many layers.”

Citi is stuck trading at the same levels before it split its stock one for ten; back that split out, and at around $3.50 it's less than the cost of a Starbucks latte. Citi also received an historic bailout from the U.S. government valued at $306 billion, and has had three near-death experiences since 1980.

The Federal Reserve nixed Citigroup's capital plan, which caused it to fail the central bank's stress tests. Citi's tier one capital ratios fell short by 0.1 percentage point, coming in at 4.9% versus the 5% minimum. Citi's minimum stressed tier one common ratio was 5.9% before its proposed capital actions, vs. 5.7% for Bank of America and 6.3% for JPMorgan Chase (JPM).

Shares of Citi promptly fell 5% after hours on the news it failed the test, wiping out the 5% runup in the final minutes of yesterday's trade.

Citi blasted an email to the media yesterday, and put up this statement on its bank blog:

“Simply put, the Federal Reserve's objection to our capital plan does not equate with 'failing' the stress test. As of the end of 2011, Citi had a Tier One Common ratio of 11.8% and remains one of the best capitalized banks in the world.”

But again, what's missing here is how Citigroup has deployed accounting moves to help paper over its losses from its equity trading desks and investment banking division, as well as its sour assets housed at its bad bank, Citi Holdings.

Specifically, Citi drew down a total of $13.9 billion out of its cookie jar loan-loss reserves over the past two years, letting them flow into its bottom line. It reported $21.9 billion in total net income for 2011 and 2010.

Its $1.2 billion reported net profit for the fourth quarter 2011 would have been a deeper loss without this move. Also, Citigroup says its fourth quarter total provisions for credit losses and other claims dropped 41% from the fourth quarter of 2010, to $2.9 billion. That figure includes a $1.5 billion drawdown from its loan loss reserves.

Citigroup's 2011 results also benefited from a paper gain of $1.8 billion, reflecting a sharp increase in the perceived riskiness of its debt -- a move that JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America have also used.

And Citi has benefited mightily from its losses, which it has built into an asset to reduce its tax bills to the U.S. government. In turn, that makes its profits look better.

Companies including Citi get to book these losses as assets, called “deferred tax assets,” on their balance sheet. They then can use these losses to lower their taxes in the future, meaning, when they start making taxable profits again. But normally, companies that go bankrupt can't use those assets to reduce their tax bills. However Citi, as did Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, got a pass here when Congress rescued these companies and essentially kept them bankruptcy, allowing the use of these DTAs for insolvent companies.

But what's funky here too is that Citi and other companies get to include these DTAs in their tier one regulatory capital, a highly questionable practice.

Capital should be solid capital, not paper gains.  

Moreover, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods notes there's another game here for banks on the brink with their DTAs.   Banks often book reserves against their DTAs, in case they can't use them. When they can't use them, then they get to sluice right back into earnings those reserves, too. Again, not solid, organic earnings growth.

Separate from the moves, banks have been struggling to make money ever since the Federal Reserve has had a virtually zero interest rate policy, which means the central bank has effectively nationalized the yield curve to save the U.S. economy from the plunging housing market.

The Federal Reserve noted that the 19 banks would generate a paltry 2.5% of their assets in net revenue in its bombed out stress scenario, or $294 billion in pre-provision net revenue, largely because of the “low interest rate, flat yield curve environment.”

Low rates have wrecked the banking system's incentive to create credit by reducing the opportunity for banks to leverage a positively sloped yield.

And banks still face all sorts of write downs from real estate. Whalen estimates the Fed's projection of $56 billion in total losses for all the banks it stress tested “is way, way too small” if housing is going to fall another 20%. He says: “Try more like $200 billion.”

In fact, “you could haircut Wells Fargo and Citigroup's second lien portfolios by $50 billion each today,” given where the housing stands, he says.

And, he questions the “mere $62 billion loss on first lien mortgages in the supervisory stress scenario,” since “real estate is half the total $13 trillion balance sheet of the US banking system and more like three-quarters of total exposure if you include RMBS (residential mortgage-backed securities), how does the Fed manage to keep total real estate losses below $150 billion in the stressed scenario?”

Of course, there's more coming from exposure to Europe. And it's not just because US banks face tremendous pressure because a number of European Union countries have banned short selling against their banks, while at the same time they've effectively nationalized their big banks. 
That's sent the short sellers running to U.S. banks, putting pressure on stocks.

But more so, U.S. banks have an estimated loan exposure to German and French banks in excess of $1.2 trillion and direct exposure to the PIIGS valued at $641 billion, according to the Bank for International Settlements, so a collapse of a major European bank would be a significant hit to the U.S. banking system.

Which was a scenario under the Fed's stringent stress tests.

What comes next for banks after stress tests?



Article from FOXNEWS


Could Apple reach $1G? Shares soar on bullish call

Shares of Apple (AAPL) soared another 4% and neared $600 on Wednesday in the wake of an exceptionally bullish research note that raised the prospect of the tech giant reaching quadruple-digits soon.

The latest leap leaves the iPad and iPhone maker up more than 40% so far this year alone and further cements its title as the world's most valuable company at north of $550 billion.

Wall Street cheered as Morgan Stanley added Apple to its best ideas list and placed a lofty 12-month price target of $720 on the stock, up 40% from its earlier target of just $515. The new price target implies a further gain of nearly 27% from the stock's closing price of $568.02 on Tuesday.

However, traders appeared to be really focused by a bold prediction that Apple's stock could near $1,000 by the end of next year.

Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty placed an end-2013 target of $960 on Apple, which would leave the stock up a whopping 69% since   Tuesday's close and more than triple its 52-week low of $310.50 set last June.

"We believe Apple's earnings power is potentially far greater than investors believe and our prior bull case model suggested," Huberty wrote. 

New earnings growth at Apple could stem from enterprise tablet adoption, margin upside thanks in part to a mix of mobile device and emerging market growth for the blockbuster iPhone further into places like China, Huberty predicted. 

Huberty defends the $960 call as "reasonable" due to capital expenditure forecasts from Apple that predict a similar revenue trajectory and the fact that this prediction doesn't include potentially bullish categories like Apple TV and low-priced iPhone.

After rallying through much of the day, Apple shares took off in early afternoon action, leaping as high as $594.72. In recent action, they were up 3.74% to $589.26.

"Even here it is 'inexpensive' on traditional valuation metrics, and with a ton of cash. Tough to find anyone who isn't in love with Apple, and with good reason," Michael James, director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities, wrote in an e-mail. 

With that in mind, Morgan notes that Apple trades at less than 10 times the brokerage's base case scenario and just 7.1 times its bull case.

Apple has been on a tear since revealing first-quarter results in late January that absolutely blew away Wall Street's expectations. Powered by record shipments of iPads, iPhones and Macs, Apple more than doubled its quarterly profits and generated sales of $46.33 billion.

Since then, Apple has unveiled a third generation of the tablet iPad and hasn't ruled out the possibility of eventually returning some of its huge stockpile of cash to shareholders via a dividend.

The ensuing rally allowed Apple to recapture the title of most valuable company in the world from energy giant ExxonMobil (XOM), which at $407 billion is now worth about $143 billion less than Apple.

"It's hard to find fault with optimistic views on Apple given the product momentum," said James. "The continued strength in the stock is forcing people who may not want to buy it to almost have to buy it due to its weighting in various indexes, particularly the NASDAQ." 

Apple accounts for an incredible 16.48% of the closely-watched, weighted Nasdaq 100, which includes 100 of the world's largest tech stocks. 



Article from FOXNEWS


Could Apple reach $1G? Shares soar on bullish call

Shares of Apple (AAPL) soared another 4% and neared $600 on Wednesday in the wake of an exceptionally bullish research note that raised the prospect of the tech giant reaching quadruple-digits soon.

The latest leap leaves the iPad and iPhone maker up more than 40% so far this year alone and further cements its title as the world's most valuable company at north of $550 billion.

Wall Street cheered as Morgan Stanley added Apple to its best ideas list and placed a lofty 12-month price target of $720 on the stock, up 40% from its earlier target of just $515. The new price target implies a further gain of nearly 27% from the stock's closing price of $568.02 on Tuesday.

However, traders appeared to be really focused by a bold prediction that Apple's stock could near $1,000 by the end of next year.

Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty placed an end-2013 target of $960 on Apple, which would leave the stock up a whopping 69% since   Tuesday's close and more than triple its 52-week low of $310.50 set last June.

"We believe Apple's earnings power is potentially far greater than investors believe and our prior bull case model suggested," Huberty wrote. 

New earnings growth at Apple could stem from enterprise tablet adoption, margin upside thanks in part to a mix of mobile device and emerging market growth for the blockbuster iPhone further into places like China, Huberty predicted. 

Huberty defends the $960 call as "reasonable" due to capital expenditure forecasts from Apple that predict a similar revenue trajectory and the fact that this prediction doesn't include potentially bullish categories like Apple TV and low-priced iPhone.

After rallying through much of the day, Apple shares took off in early afternoon action, leaping as high as $594.72. In recent action, they were up 3.74% to $589.26.

"Even here it is 'inexpensive' on traditional valuation metrics, and with a ton of cash. Tough to find anyone who isn't in love with Apple, and with good reason," Michael James, director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities, wrote in an e-mail. 

With that in mind, Morgan notes that Apple trades at less than 10 times the brokerage's base case scenario and just 7.1 times its bull case.

Apple has been on a tear since revealing first-quarter results in late January that absolutely blew away Wall Street's expectations. Powered by record shipments of iPads, iPhones and Macs, Apple more than doubled its quarterly profits and generated sales of $46.33 billion.

Since then, Apple has unveiled a third generation of the tablet iPad and hasn't ruled out the possibility of eventually returning some of its huge stockpile of cash to shareholders via a dividend.

The ensuing rally allowed Apple to recapture the title of most valuable company in the world from energy giant ExxonMobil (XOM), which at $407 billion is now worth about $143 billion less than Apple.

"It's hard to find fault with optimistic views on Apple given the product momentum," said James. "The continued strength in the stock is forcing people who may not want to buy it to almost have to buy it due to its weighting in various indexes, particularly the NASDAQ." 

Apple accounts for an incredible 16.48% of the closely-watched, weighted Nasdaq 100, which includes 100 of the world's largest tech stocks. 



Article from FOXNEWS


Congo warlord conviced of using child soldiers

The International Criminal Court convicted a Congolese warlord on Wednesday of using child soldiers, a verdict hailed as a legal landmark in the fight against impunity for the world's most serious crimes.

Human rights advocates said the guilty verdicts against Thomas Lubanga -- the first judgment in the court's 10-year history -- should stand as a clear deterrent to armies around the world not to conscript children.

"In this age of global media, today's verdict will reach warlords and commanders across the world and serve as a strong deterrent," the U.N.'s special representative for children and armed conflict, Radhika Coomaraswamy, said in a statement.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the verdict as "an important step forward" in moves to prosecute crimes against children in armed conflict, U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said.

Lubanga will be sentenced following a hearing that will be scheduled later this year. He faces a maximum of life imprisonment.

The judgment came at a time when the court is under scrutiny for its inability to arrest key war crimes suspects and its impotence in not being able to intervene in the bloody conflict raging in Syria.

The court was catapulted into the limelight last week by the viral video Kony 2012, which highlighted how it still has not had Ugandan rebel Joseph Kony arrested nearly seven years after indicting him for crimes including using child soldiers, murder and torture.

The court has no police force of its own and has to rely on states to enforce its arrest warrants.

It also can only open investigations in the 120 countries that have recognized its jurisdiction or at the request of the U.N. Security Council. Nations including the United States, China, Russia and Syria are not members.

That means it can't launch a probe into widespread allegations that forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad are systematically committing atrocities to put down an anti-government revolt.

So far, all seven of the investigations launched by the court are in Africa.

The highest profile suspects among five in custody are former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo and ex-Congo Vice President Jean-Pierre Bemba. Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has been indicted for genocide in Darfur but refuses to surrender to the court.

It took six years from the time Congo handed over Lubanga to his convictions, but ultimately the three-judge panel was unanimous in finding him guilty.

"The prosecution has proved beyond reasonable doubt that Mr. Thomas Lubanga is guilty of the crimes of conscripting and enlisting children under the age of 15 years and using them to participate actively in hostilities," said Presiding Judge Adrian Fulford.

Lubanga, wearing an ivory-colored robe and skull cap, sat with his hands clasped in front of him listening to the verdict and showed no emotion as Fulford declared him guilty.

As he left court flanked by guards, Lubanga nodded and smiled to supporters in the public gallery.

Actress and activist Angelina Jolie watched the verdicts from the court's public gallery and called them a victory for former child soldiers. "This is their day -- where these children will feel there is no impunity for what happened to them, for what they suffered," Jolie said.

Congo's Justice Minister Luzolo Bambi congratulated the court and said, "The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo takes note of this verdict which marks an advance in international penal justice."

The victory for prosecutors came after the case twice nearly collapsed because of their failure to disclose evidence to defense lawyers and despite harsh criticism from judges in their written judgment.

Fulford said three intermediaries used by prosecutors to approach witnesses in Congo "persuaded, encouraged or assisted witnesses to give false evidence" and scrapped the evidence of three witnesses.

Rights activists also criticized prosecutors for not charging Lubanga with sexual violence crimes, despite allegations that women and girls were raped and abused by his forces.

"The Prosecutor's office must review its limited investigation strategy adopted in the Lubanga case," said Michael Bochenek of Amnesty International. "Lessons need to be learned for future cases."

Lubanga led the Union of Congolese Patriots political group and commanded its armed wing, the Patriotic Forces for the Liberation of Congo, which recruited children -- sometimes by force, other times voluntarily -- into its ranks to fight in a brutal ethnic conflict in the Ituri region of eastern Congo.

The trial, which began in January 2009, was the first at an international court to focus exclusively on the use of child soldiers. It also was the first trial at an international tribunal to allow victims to participate in the courtroom and demand compensation.

The United Nations estimates tens of thousands of child soldiers are still fighting in conflicts from Africa to Asia and Latin America. Activists hope Wednesday's judgment will reduce the number.

"The guilty verdict against Lubanga is a strong warning to military commanders in Congo and elsewhere: using children as a weapon of war is a serious crime that can lead them to the dock," said Geraldine Mattioli-Zeltner of Human Rights Watch.



Article from FOXNEWS


Who\'s \'Fixing\' Windows 8?

Microsoft is “building” Windows 8 -- and an ex-employee is “fixing” it.

Most reviewers who evaluated the Windows 8 Consumer Preview -- which the company has been describing in excruciating detail in the blog Building Windows 8 -- gave it a cautious thumbs up. Windows 8 introduces a completely new way to interact with your computer and a new vision for the desktop: a touch-sensitive tile interface called Metro.

But what if you don't have a touch-screen monitor?

That's the problem underscored by Fixing Windows 8 -- a new site run by user interface designer and former Microsoft employee Michael Bibik Jr.

“Windows 8 is a radical leap forward and may be a phenomenal tablet OS. Unfortunately, 99 percent of Windows users don't have a touchscreen. I'm a UX designer and want to help Microsoft improve Windows 8,” Bibik writes on his blog.

Reached by email, the author of the blog told FoxNews.com he could not confirm his name.

“While I am not trying to keep the site anonymous, I'd rather not give any interviews at this time,” he wrote. But the website is registered to Michael Bibik Jr. of Seattle using a University of Michigan email address.

Bibik is currently a senior user interface designer at Amazon.com in Seattle, according to his LinkedIn profile, and attended the University of Michigan. From 2003 to 2007, he was a program manager at Microsoft who worked on a number of projects.

The blog was launched March 3 with a rant highlighting some user interface issues Bibik identified within the first hour of using the operating system:

  • “Windows 8 just dumps you into the Start screen. No tutorial, no help icon on the main screen, nothing. This will be fixed by launch or Windows 8 will fail.”
  • “The new Windows Start button is invisible. Actually, they removed the Start button and left some dead space where it used to be.”
  • Metro apps do not have window controls. How does a user know how to exit a Metro app? They can't minimize, they can't maximize, they can't exit. I'm pretty sure this is where 75% of first-time users will simply give up. This will be so frustrating, people won't even try to fix it

He plans to use the blog to identify potential solutions to some of the issues he uncovers.

Microsoft did not immediately respond to FoxNews.com requests.



Article from FOXNEWS


Kidney to #SaveRichard

  • Richard Bland speaks up about his kidney problems at an event held in his honorMyFoxAtlanta

College students in Georgia are turning to social media to help a classmate in need, MyFoxAtlanta reported.

Richard Bland, who attends Kennesaw State University, suffers from a serious kidney ailment and is in need of a transplant.

His classmates began a social media campaign to help Bland-which involved getting the hashtag #SaveRichard to trend on Twitter and starting Facebook groups about him to spread the word.

In addition, a couple hundred students showed up to a rally to support Bland on Tuesday, including the cast of the MTV show, “The Buried Life.”

"It's insane. I did not know this many people out there cared about me this much,” Bland told MyFoxAtlanta.

According to the local news station, Bland told attendees at the rally that his kidney is essentially “dying” and only 20 percent functional at this time.  Bland has to undergo dialysis until a donor is found.  

Because he has a particularly rare blood type, it could be some time before a kidney is found off the UNOS transplant list, so KSU students are encouraging people to get tested to see if they are a match for a live transplant.

"The best way we thought about it was to keep Tweeting. And we kept Tweeting and Tweeting-and it just blew up,” KSU student Cody Dewrell told MyFoxAtlanta.

The students are working with the American Red Cross to help find a donor for Bland.

Click here to read more from MyFoxAtlanta.



Article from FOXNEWS


Jen Spends $400 Daily on Bod?

Jennifer Aniston was recently dubbed the "Hottest Woman of All Time" by Men's Health magazine but, according to a new report, the "Wanderlust" spends $141, 037 a year maintaining her appearance.

That breaks down to almost $400 each and every day.

The website Shine has broken down what Aniston spends to retain her youthful glow, her golden locks and her taut body, based on the products and services that the star has sung the praises of.

Aniston recently revealed to Conan O'Brien that she is a fan of expensive laser peels, which cost $295 a pop, even if they leave her looking like a "battered burn victim for a week."

In addition, Aniston reportedly uses a $450 neck ointment by Euoko, and Mila Moursi Rejuvenating Serum which costs $350. She also regularly splurges on Tracie Martyn Red Carpet Facials that costs a reported $450. The star also uses a slew of other products, in addition to cosmetics.

As for Aniston's hair, her cuts with Chris McMillan, the creator of "The Rachel," cost a reported $600. The star also gets highlights from colorist Michael Canale, whose rate is reportedly $320.

But it's Aniston's famous body which costs the most to maintain.

Aniston frequents trainer and pal Mandy Ingber for private yoga sessions, which the site estimates cost $900 a week. Aniston has said that it is worth every penny of Ingber's steep fee. "I feel like I am getting a meditation, a workout and time with my friend, all rolled into one hour," Aniston has said in the past.

Aniston is also reported to bankroll nutritionist Carrie Wiatt, whose consultation fee is $300 and whose home delivery service reportedly costs $385 a week.



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama, Cameron: No plan for \'perfect\' Afghan exit, but no sudden departure either

The coalition forces in Afghanistan are going to wrap up their mission responsibly and leave Afghanistan in better, albeit not perfect, condition, President Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron said Wednesday during remarks to reporters at the White House.

The president, who was hosting the British prime minister for an official visit focused heavily on joint foreign policy, said recent events in Afghanistan have marred efforts to put the war-worn country on an even keel but will not deter the objective of giving security responsibility to the Afghans and getting out by the end of 2014. 

"That transition is already under way and about half of all Afghans currently live in areas where Afghan security forces are taking responsibility," Obama said, adding that the forces have already made "very real progress dismantling Al Qaeda and breaking the Taliban's momentum." 

Obama said he anticipates no "sudden, immediate changes to the plan we already have," for bringing forces home.

Cameron said Britain, which has 9,500 soldiers stationed there and has lost more than 400 so far, will not give up on the mission "because Afghanistan must never again be a safe haven for Al Qaeda."

"We won't build a perfect Afghanistan," Cameron said, noting that progress has been made to open markets, increase health care access, send children to school and improve the basic standard of living and security. "But we can help ensure that Afghanistan is capable of delivering its own security without the need for large numbers of foreign troops."

Obama said he will go into details of the transition during a May NATO conference in Chicago, but the objective is to move toward a support role for Afghan National Security Forces next year, before a complete pullout. NATO, however, will maintain an enduring commitment so that Afghanistan never again becomes a haven for Al Qaeda to attack our countries.

On Iran, Obama insisted there is still "time and space" for a diplomatic solution, in lieu of a military strike to set back Iran's progress toward a possible bomb, but said "the window for diplomacy is shrinking."

"We are determined to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon," Obama said, adding that he had sent a message "personally" to the Iranian leadership that it should re-enter international arms talks in good faith.

As for Syria, the president said international military intervention in Syria would be premature and could lead to a civil war, adding to the death toll, which the U.N. estimates is already at more than 7,500. On Wednesday, reports said Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad had placed mines along the borders leading out of Syria to prevent anyone from seeking refuge in Turkey or Iraq.

"Assad will leave power, it's not a question of if, but when," Obama said.

Obama was hosting Cameron on Wednesday in a full day of official meetings followed by an official dinner. The two got the day started with an elaborate welcome ceremony at the White House and jokes about the nations' shared history.

Cameron and his wife arrived at the executive mansion on a mild, sunny, spring-like morning in the U.S. capital. The prime minister was greeted with a 19-gun salute.

Several hundred people, including schoolchildren waving U.S. and British flags, gathered for the arrival ceremony on the South Lawn.

Obama welcomed the prime minister in a ceremony, joking that it's been 200 years since the British first visited the White House -- when they attacked during the war of 1812.

"They made quite an impression," he said to laughter. "Really lit up the place."

After the president's remarks, Cameron followed up by noting the military presence. 

"I am a little embarrassed to think that 200 years ago, my ancestors tried to burn this place," he said. "I see you've got this place a little better defended today."

The two also joked about British and American idioms, with Cameron referencing "alley-oops" and "brackets" after a jaunt the night before to Dayton, Ohio, where they attended a first round game in the NCAA March Madness basketball tournament -- Mississippi Valley State vs. Western Kentucky. Western Kentucky won in a late turnaround.

The arrival ceremony has all the trappings of a state visit, although it is not being called one, since the British monarch -- not the prime minister -- is considered the head of state.

Afterward, the two exchanged gifts. The Obamas gave the Camerons a wood and charcoal burning Braten 1000 Series Grill to commemorate a May 2011 visit to England in which they grilled and served food to American and British Armed Service members. The Camerons also received two White House chef jackets with their names and American and British flags embroidered on them. 

In return, the Camerons gave the Obamas a ping-pong table. 

"We should practice this afternoon," Obama joked.

During the dinner, the Camerons will hear Grammy-winner John Legend sing as well as Mumford & Sons, a British folk rock band. At the dinner will be "Homeland" actor Damian Lewis and his wife as well as golfer Rory McIlroy.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Jury finds Virginia Tech negligent in 2007 shooting

A jury found Virginia Tech negligent on Wednesday for delaying a campus warning of the first shootings in a 2007 campus massacre that left 33 dead.

Jurors returned the verdict in a wrongful death civil suit brought by the parents of two students who were killed on April 16, 2007, in the most deadly mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

Jurors deliberated for 3 1/2 hours before awarding $4 million to each family, and the state immediately filed a motion to reduce the award. State law requires the award to be capped at $100,000, but jurors weren't told of the cap.

The families of Erin Peterson and Julia Pryde said the two might be alive today if Virginia Tech police and administrators warned the campus of two shootings in a dorm 2 1/2 hours before Seung-Hui Cho ended his killing spree, then killed himself.

Virginia Tech officials said they believed the first shootings were isolated.

The verdict was met immediately by sobs from Peterson's mother, Celeste, while the Prydes didn't show much emotion.

Circuit Judge William Alexander said it was the hardest case he had been a part of.

"My heart goes out to all of you," he said to the Prydes and Petersons.



Article from FOXNEWS


New York Knicks coach Mike D\'Antoni resigns

  • New York Knicks' head coach Mike D'Antoni walks onto the court during a time out during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Philadelphia 76ers in New York, Sunday, March 11, 2012. The 76ers defeated the Knicks 106-94. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

New York Knicks basketball coach Mike D'Antoni, whose run and gun style never seemed to click with the talent pool he oversaw at Madison Square Garden, has resigned.

A source close to the team told Yahoo! Sports the move was the result of a mutual decision between D'Antoni and the team.

D'Antoni had reportedly clashed with superstar Carmelo Anthony, the offensive-minded forward the team brought in last season. Anthony missed several games earlier in the year, and the team had seemed to gel in his absence. But when the Syracuse product returned, the team went into a tailspin. Heading into tonight's game home game against Portland, they had lost six in a row.

Assistant coach Mike Woodson will take over as interim coach, according to reports.

In parts of four seasons at the helm of one of the NBA's most storied franchises, D'Antoni compiled a 121- 167 record. He previously coached at Phoenix and Denver.



Article from FOXNEWS


Sex offender arrested in alleged rape at occupy camp

A registered sex offender was arrested for allegedly raping a woman in the embattled Occupy New Haven camp, hours before protesters won a reprieve from a city order to vacate by today.

England Gamble, 53, of New Haven, was arrested and charged with first-degree sexual assault and unlawful restraint, according to police, who said the victim was raped either late Monday or early Tuesday. She was later treated at Yale-New Haven Hospital. "Occupy" organizers claimed that neither the victim nor the alleged attacker were members of the group.

The "Occupy" group, one of the last remaining camps from last year's national movement, had been under fire from city officials who say they have commandeered a public space at the expense of citizens who should be able to enjoy it. The city had ordered them out by noon Wednesday, but the protesters won a reprieve from a federal judge who gave them until at least March 28 to stay put.

Police were called to the scene on Tuesday by witnesses who found the victim in distress in a tent. They quickly zeroed in on Gamble, who is listed on the state's sex offender registry for a first-degree sexual assault conviction in 1991. Gamble was scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday. It was unclear whether he had an attorney.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Police: 4 stabbed at Ohio downtown office building

KABUL (Reuters) - In Afghanistan, if NATO forces kill a member of your family, it is better in terms of money if they come from Germany or Italy than the United States or Britain.

In the cold calculation of how much to pay for victims of the decade-old war, British forces have doled out as little as $210, while German forces have paid as much as $25,000, according to a study by the human rights NGO CIVIC.

Civilian casualties caused by NATO forces hunting insurgents are a major source of friction between the Afghan government and its Western backers - all the more so after a lone U.S. soldier gunned down 16 Afghan villagers at the weekend.

"They have to ask themselves the question how much is one's life worth? You can't put a price on it," Rafi Nabi, 33 and unemployed, said in a market in the Afghan capital.

"If one were to kill an American and offer to compensate their death with money, they wouldn't accept it."

It was unclear if the United States intends to pay reparations to the families of 16 people suspected to have been killed by the U.S. staff sergeant in a remote area of the southern province of Kandahar, the traditional Taliban stronghold. Eleven victims were said to come from one family.

The United States usually pays up to $2,500 for civilians killed in lawful operations such as air strikes, according to an investigation by CIVIC, a rights advocacy group. The study, compiled two years ago, has been regularly updated.

"The shooter clearly violated the laws of war, human rights law and the U.S. military code of justice. In these type of situations, we call for accountability and justice as well as compensation for harm done," Trevor Keck, an investigator with CIVIC, told Reuters in an email.

British forces have paid out between $210 and $7,000 while German troops provided $20,000 in cash and a car worth $5,000 after shooting three people at a checkpoint in 2008, the report said. In 2009, Italy disbursed $13,500 to the family of a 14-year-old girl who was shot dead, it said.

A series of incidents over the past month, including the burning of Korans at a NATO base and the massacre in southern Afghanistan, have stirred debate about the withdrawal timetable for foreign troops, with some asking for a faster pullout.

HEIGHTENED TENSIONS

The blunders have also heightened tensions between Kabul and Washington at a time when the United States is in delicate talks with Afghanistan over its future presence after most combat troops pull out at the end of 2014.

Based on interviews with NATO and Afghan civilians, CIVIC found that compensation payments plus an apology were key to lowering hostility toward foreign troops in Afghanistan, now at a peak again over the Koran burnings and the shootings.

There is no standard mechanism for Afghans to report civilian casualties, much less seek compensation, reducing both the hope of redress and any sense that justice is being done.

Rules often require even illiterate villagers to decipher which unit came to their home and then go to its main base - sometimes hundreds of km away down unsafe roads. And to complicate matters, most villagers do not readily distinguish between foreign troops from different countries.

As the war drags on into its 11th year, security forces battling the militants killed 410 civilians in 2011, a drop of 4 percent from 2010, the United Nations said, with the total number of civilians killed last year exceeding 3,000.

"The Americans have seen that the Afghan people are poor and desperate. If a woman loses her husband, she needs money to sustain her living. What else can they do? They have no power," said film maker Maroof Nazir, 27.

"Will the government hear their voices or help them? No. When you have no power, you're forced to take the money and say thank you to the same people who killed your families, what else can you do?"

(The story alters the first paragraph to make it clear that Italy and Germany refers to NATO forces)

(Additional reporting by Miriam Arghandiwal; Editing by Rob Taylor and Ron Popeski)



Article from YAHOO NEWS


3 wounded, 1 reported dead in Texas shooting

Clooney testifies on before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Sudan, March 14, 2012. (AP/Manuel …

Actor and activist George Clooney testified in front of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday about the government's bombing and violence against civilians in both Sudan and South Sudan.

"I want to separate what is fact and what is fiction," Clooney, who just returned from an eight-day trip to Sudan with human-rights activist John Prendergast, told the committee. "The government of Sudan, led by Omar al-Bashir, Ahmed Haroun and defense minister Hussein, the same three men who orchestrated the atrocities in Darfur, have turned their bombs on the Nuban people. Now, these are not military targets. These are innocent men, women and children. That is a fact."

Three days ago, shortly before Clooney and Prendergast crossed the border in the Nuba Mountains, 15 bombs were dropped on a village, the actor said: "When we got there, we found children filled with shrapnel, including a nine-year-old boy who had both of his hands blown off."

Clooney continued: "As we met with their leaders, we were also met with three, 300-millimeter rockets fired overhead. We witnessed hundreds of people running to the hills to hide in caves for their safety. That happens every day."

Clooney and Prendergast co-founded the Satellite Sentinel Project, an organization that uses satellite imagery to monitor the human rights situation in the region. South Sudan won formal independence from Sudan in 2011, following a two-decade civil war.

The Sudanese government in Khartoum, Clooney said, is leading "a campaign of murder, and fear, and displacement, and starvation--and that is also a fact."

"These are war crimes," Clooney added. "When you are indiscriminately bombing innocent civilians, you are committing war crimes. It's a cowardly act."

He said that the American people should care about Sudan because it has an effect on oil prices here.

"What happens in Sudan matters very much to the U.S. economy," Clooney said. "That is a fact ... We need to do what we're best at: real diplomacy."

He suggested lawmakers use the situation in Sudan to pressure China, which gets six percent of its oil from Sudan, to understand the gravity of the situation on the ground.

Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), the committee's chairman, opened the hearing by offering "cautious optimism" on the region.

The New York Times, Kerry noted, recently published a story with the headline, "A Taste of Hope Sends Refugees Back to Darfur."

"When was the last time you saw 'hope' and 'Darfur' in the same sentence?" he said.

But for every step forward, Kerry said, the region seems to relapse into violence. "Bashir has waged war on his own people," Kerry said, referring to Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who has been indicted for war crimes. "The past has become prologue."

Kerry visited Sudan with Clooney and Prendergast last year. Clooney is set to meet with President Obama and Hillary Clinton on Thursday to discuss the Sudan crisis.

The UN refugee agency, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said it has registered more than 80,000 refugees fleeing violence in Sudan into South Sudan and neighboring Ethiopia, including over 2,000 new arrivals just last week.

"A huge part of the border area [between Sudan and South Sudan] is insecure," UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told Yahoo News Friday. Indiscriminate, aerial bombing "is driving lots of people across the border. Civilians are not being fed, they have no real safe place."

Another looming concern, Fleming said, is that on top of the violence, there's been a drought and people haven't been able to plant crops. "They are very close to what people predict could be a famine," she said.

Another aid group working in South Sudan, the International Medical Corps, reported seeing some 300 internally displaced people fleeing fighting arrive at Akobo Hospital in Akobo, South Sudan on Tuesday alone, IMC's Margaret Aguirre told Yahoo News by email Tuesday.

"This is a fundamental foreign relations problem," Sen. Richard Lugar, ranking Republican on the panel, told the hearing. "We're being rebuffed" by Sudan's leaders, "people who use starvation as a form of warfare."

Other popular Yahoo! News stories:

- Obama hosts UK's Cameron at 'March Madness,' but Afghanistan casts pall on upbeat visit

- Will Afghanistan massacre accelerate U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan?

- Kony 2012 filmmaker speaks out: 'We can all agree to stop him this year'



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Jess: Pregnant Sex Awesome

Jessica Simpson has an insatiable appetite for sex during pregnancy.

The singer admits she can't get enough lovemaking with fiancé Eric Johnson as the countdown to delivery begins.

The heavily-pregnant star, who was once called "sexual napalm" by ex-boyfriend John Mayer, says: "I'm kinda unstoppable at the moment."

And Jess admits sex has never been better.

She told Los Angeles DJ Ryan Seacrest: "The big O (orgasm) is, like, the biggest O ever."

But Jessica, who is due to give birth next month, reveals she "freaked out" after suffering a false labor recently.

She said: "I had contractions last night and I freaked out a little bit. You know those Braxton Hicks things.

"It's like these contractions that pregnant woman have towards the end. It prepares your body for delivery. I'm prepared. It's scary. It's like: 'Oh God, this can happen right now.'"

Go to The Sun for more.



Article from FOXNEWS


URGENT: Suspect captured in courthouse shooting

URGENT: At least one person is dead and three others wounded after a gunman opened fire Wednesday at a Texas courthouse. 

The shooting happened at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Beaumont, Texas, about 80 miles east of Houston. A Beaumont police spokeswoman told Fox News that the alleged gunman was taken into custody after being shot by police.

Officer Doug Kibodeaux declined to identify the suspect. Kibodeaux said the suspect was going to court with his family Wednesday morning when he opened fire and shot several rounds. Kibodeaux did not immediately say whether any of the victims were related to the suspect.

KFDM-TV reported that the deceased victim is an elderly woman. The condition of the three other victims is unknown.

The victims were all shot in the parking lot of the courthouse, police told Fox News. 

The courthouse, located near the Port of Beaumont, was placed on lockdown.

An employee with the Jefferson County Court Bakery and Café, located in the building's basement, told Fox News that she did not hear any gunshots. She said employees at the courthouse were asked to evacuate the building at around 1:15 p.m. local time.  

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



Article from FOXNEWS


New frog species found in New York City

  • Mar. 14, 2012: Scientists have found a new type of leopard frog in the New York City area.Rutgers University

Scientists have identified a new species of leopard frog in and around New York City. The frog was found hiding in plain sight on Staten Island.

The New York Times reports the find is surprising because the frog was discovered in one of the world's most populated urban areas.

Researchers say the new frog species was confused for a long time with a frog it closely resembles, the southern leopard frog.

So far, the new species has been positively identified on Staten Island. A Rutgers University doctoral candidate in ecology and evolution says it probably inhabited the city's other boroughs at one time.

Jeremy Feinberg also found specimens in parts of New Jersey and to counties north of New York City, all within commuting distance of Manhattan.



Article from FOXNEWS


Key swing states see jobless rates fall faster than nation\'s

AMMAN (Reuters) - Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad launched an assault on the southern city of Deraa on Wednesday, intensifying efforts to crush a year-long uprising with no negotiated settlement in sight.

The U.N.-Arab League envoy, Kofi Annan, said he had received a reply from Damascus to peace proposals that he had laid out at the weekend, and wanted further clarifications.

"But given the grave and tragic situation on the ground, everyone must realize that time is of the essence," his spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said in a statement from Geneva. Annan will brief the U.N. Security Council on Friday.

With the anniversary of the revolt falling on March 15, the Syrian army appears to have multiplied its attacks on opposition strongholds this week, sweeping rebels from the northwestern city of Idlib and sending up to 130 tanks and armored vehicles to the southern city of Deraa.

The city lies adjacent to Jordan and was the site of some of the first protests against Assad a year ago. The United Nations estimates some 8,000 people, many of them civilians, have died in the increasingly violent months that followed.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who led efforts five years ago to bring Syria into the Western fold, denounced Assad as a "murderer" on Wednesday, but ruled out any prospect of France intervening militarily as it did in Libya last year.

Diplomats have warned that Syria, riven by sectarian divides, will descend into a Balkans-style civil war unless a political solution can be found. Its economy is already in tatters and its ties with old Arab allies are in shreds.

Official Syrian media accused "armed terrorists" on Wednesday of massacring 15 civilians, including young children, in a pro-government district of the central city of Homs, which has been the focal point of much fighting in recent weeks.

In the south, opposition activists said government troops had raked buildings in Deraa with anti-aircraft fire to subdue the opposition.

"They are hitting the birthplace of our revolution," said a resident from the city, who only identified himself as Mohammed for fear of reprisals, speaking over the Internet.

"Houses are being hit with random bombardment from gunfire, RPGs and anti-aircraft missiles," he added.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put Wednesday's death toll in Deraa at 13 civilians and seven rebels.

There were also reports of a tank bombardment on the village of al-Janoudieh in the northern Idlib region and army fire against the city of al-Haffa and surrounding areas near Syria's Mediterranean coastline.

Reports from Syria cannot be independently verified as the authorities deny access to rights groups and journalists.

CONFUSION

Annan presented Assad with a five-point plan to end the fighting at talks at the weekend. Syria said on Wednesday it had given a "positive" response to the approach.

A Middle Eastern diplomat characterized the reply from Damascus as "not a 'No'". However, adding to the uncertainty, a senior Western diplomat in the region told Reuters that Damascus had rejected Annan's suggestions.

As the army crackdown progresses, a growing number of Syrians are seeking to escape the violence.

The U.N. refugee agency said on Tuesday that some 230,000 Syrians had fled their homes during the past 12 months, of whom around 30,000 have sought safety abroad.

A stream of refugees crossed into Turkey early on Wednesday, saying they had been warned that their villages in the neighboring Idlib province would soon be targeted by the army.

"They are bombing Idlib. They are bombing the city. They have tanks and they have rockets," said Abdul Samad, one of the refugees waiting for help at a fog-bound border post.

A Western diplomatic source told Reuters that, while Assad could snuff out pockets of resistance, the rebels were simply pulling back and blending into the background.

"I feel the conflict will last a long time and fear that it will get a lot bloodier than it is now. That's why we have to keep pushing the diplomacy and the sanctions," he said.

Syria comprises a mix of faiths, sects and ethnic groups. Assad's minority Alawite sect dominates the levers of power and holds sway over the Sunni Muslim majority.

Wednesday's reported massacre in Homs took place in an Alawite district. On Monday, rebels and government traded blame for the murder of up to 50 people in a mixed area of the city.

The turmoil, coupled with Western sanctions, has cost Damascus billions of dollars in lost revenue from crude oil sales and tourism receipts. The Syrian pound has halved in value, foreign investment has dried up and trade has collapsed.

Yet there is no sign of the Assad family and their allies losing control, or of significant defections from the army.

While Western powers and much of the Arab world have slammed the bloody crackdown, Syria has been able to count on the support of both Russia and China, which have vetoed two U.N. resolutions that were critical of Damascus.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Wednesday that Beijing was taking no sides in the crisis, and that he was "deeply pained" by the suffering of the Syrian people, though his remarks did not suggest China's diplomatic position will change.

Amnesty International issued a report on Wednesday saying Syria should be referred to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. However, only the U.N. Security Council can do that, and it remains divided.

"The testimony presented in this report ... is yet further evidence that torture and other ill-treatment in Syria form part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population," Amnesty said.

(Writing by Crispian Balmer; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Oliver Holmes and Erika Solomon in Beirut; John Irish in Paris; Editing by Kevin Liffey)



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George Clooney tells Senate about violence in Sudan visit

KABUL (Reuters) - In Afghanistan, if NATO forces kill a member of your family, it is better in terms of money if they come from Germany or Italy than the United States or Britain.

In the cold calculation of how much to pay for victims of the decade-old war, British forces have doled out as little as $210, while German forces have paid as much as $25,000, according to a study by the human rights NGO CIVIC.

Civilian casualties caused by NATO forces hunting insurgents are a major source of friction between the Afghan government and its Western backers - all the more so after a lone U.S. soldier gunned down 16 Afghan villagers at the weekend.

"They have to ask themselves the question how much is one's life worth? You can't put a price on it," Rafi Nabi, 33 and unemployed, said in a market in the Afghan capital.

"If one were to kill an American and offer to compensate their death with money, they wouldn't accept it."

It was unclear if the United States intends to pay reparations to the families of 16 people suspected to have been killed by the U.S. staff sergeant in a remote area of the southern province of Kandahar, the traditional Taliban stronghold. Eleven victims were said to come from one family.

The United States usually pays up to $2,500 for civilians killed in lawful operations such as air strikes, according to an investigation by CIVIC, a rights advocacy group. The study, compiled two years ago, has been regularly updated.

"The shooter clearly violated the laws of war, human rights law and the U.S. military code of justice. In these type of situations, we call for accountability and justice as well as compensation for harm done," Trevor Keck, an investigator with CIVIC, told Reuters in an email.

British forces have paid out between $210 and $7,000 while German troops provided $20,000 in cash and a car worth $5,000 after shooting three people at a checkpoint in 2008, the report said. In 2009, Italy disbursed $13,500 to the family of a 14-year-old girl who was shot dead, it said.

A series of incidents over the past month, including the burning of Korans at a NATO base and the massacre in southern Afghanistan, have stirred debate about the withdrawal timetable for foreign troops, with some asking for a faster pullout.

HEIGHTENED TENSIONS

The blunders have also heightened tensions between Kabul and Washington at a time when the United States is in delicate talks with Afghanistan over its future presence after most combat troops pull out at the end of 2014.

Based on interviews with NATO and Afghan civilians, CIVIC found that compensation payments plus an apology were key to lowering hostility toward foreign troops in Afghanistan, now at a peak again over the Koran burnings and the shootings.

There is no standard mechanism for Afghans to report civilian casualties, much less seek compensation, reducing both the hope of redress and any sense that justice is being done.

Rules often require even illiterate villagers to decipher which unit came to their home and then go to its main base - sometimes hundreds of km away down unsafe roads. And to complicate matters, most villagers do not readily distinguish between foreign troops from different countries.

As the war drags on into its 11th year, security forces battling the militants killed 410 civilians in 2011, a drop of 4 percent from 2010, the United Nations said, with the total number of civilians killed last year exceeding 3,000.

"The Americans have seen that the Afghan people are poor and desperate. If a woman loses her husband, she needs money to sustain her living. What else can they do? They have no power," said film maker Maroof Nazir, 27.

"Will the government hear their voices or help them? No. When you have no power, you're forced to take the money and say thank you to the same people who killed your families, what else can you do?"

(The story alters the first paragraph to make it clear that Italy and Germany refers to NATO forces)

(Additional reporting by Miriam Arghandiwal; Editing by Rob Taylor and Ron Popeski)



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Security scare during Defense Secretary\'s Afghan visit

BEAUMONT, Texas (AP) - A man on his way to court with family members opened fire outside a Southeast Texas courthouse Wednesday, killing one person and wounding at least three others, police said.

The gunman was injured in the incident outside the Jefferson County Courthouse in Beaumont, about 80 miles east of Houston, and has been hospitalized, Beaumont Police Officer Doug Kibodeaux said.

Kibodeaux would not say why the suspect came to the courthouse with his family Wednesday morning, but said the man opened fire and shot several rounds in front of the building. It was not immediately clear what kind of weapon was used.

Three people were injured, Kibodeaux said. One of the victims was further injured when the suspect hit her with his truck while trying to escape, he said.

KFDM-TV (http://bit.ly/Aw4LGg ) reported that emergency personnel Wednesday afternoon surrounded the downtown courthouse, located near the Port of Beaumont. Officers in the courthouse were locked down.

1 dead, 3 wounded in gunfire near Texas courthouse http://t.co/nCXzmECC
Vehicle crashes on Afghan runway during Panetta visit; Secretary of defense safe http://t.co/iHzVS2vC
Poll shows Obama thumping GOP candidates nationally, 12 points on Romney, 28 on Santorum http://t.co/7LrxjOmR


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