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Romney sails to Puerto Rico win, Illinois up next

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mitt Romney has sailed to a win in Puerto Rico's GOP presidential primary over chief rival Rick Santorum.

That's according to Enrique Melendez, the Republican representative on the Puerto Rican State Electoral Commission.

He tells The Associated Press that Romney will top 50 percent and win all 20 of the island's delegates to the Republican presidential nominating convention in August.

Next up is Illinois on Tuesday. Polls show Romney and Santorum locked in a close race there.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Clooney Uses Star Power To Shine Light on Sudan

George Clooney may be a pretty face, but if it helps draw attention to the Sudan, he says he's more than happy to become the poster boy for humanitarian activism.

The global superstar was arrested last week with his father, retired newsman Nick Clooney, outside the Sudanese embassy in Washington. That was after testifying on Capitol Hill and meeting with President Obama to discuss the carnage being committed by Sudan's brutal leaders against their own citizens.

Clooney, who grew up watching the battle between news and entertainment, said he has learned what it takes to sell a story.

"I saw my father in the '70s doing really good stories and then getting bumped because there was a Liz Taylor story that was going to be out. And the story that he did that had real some social value was going to get bumped," Clooney said in an interview taped for "Fox News Sunday."

He said in 2006, he called his dad to join a new cause. 

"I said, 'Remember how you used to get all your stories bumped by Liz Taylor or something happened in Hollywood?' And he said, 'Yes.' I said, 'Well, let's go to Darfur. And you be the newsman and I'll be Liz Taylor and let's get it on the air.' And he said, 'OK,'" Clooney said.

Since then, Sudan has split up into two countries -- Sudan and Southern Sudan, but Sudan, including Darfur and the Nuba Mountain region, is still beset by "war crimes" committed by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and his ministers. 

According to John Prendergast, co-founder of The Enough Project, who joined the Clooneys in Sudan to record the devastation, South Sudan may have separated from the rest of the country, but the Sudanese government is still targeting border villages where rebel supporters live.

"Basically, they are fighting a civil war and they are using tactics that are designed to clear people out. It's ethnic cleansing in these areas," said Prendergast, who appeared with Clooney in a taped interview for "Fox News Sunday."

"The oldest trick in the book: drain the water to catch the fish. You drain the people out of an area, and it's harder for the rebel to stay afloat in there," he said.

Clooney said he had some pretty close calls in going in to film the atrocities. Aside from just walking through areas where dead bodies laid scattered on the ground, the film crew got a close-up look at an unexploded bomb shown to them by a local villager. 

"Well, the bomb one was funny because the guy said, you want to see," Clooney recounted. "And we're standing on top of this bush, he pulls back the bush, and there was a bomb. Oh, there's a bomb.

"And so he kept messing with the bush and I thought, maybe don't hit it with the stick too many times, you know? So, we were glad to get out of there," Clooney said.

In all seriousness, Clooney said the tragedy is not political -- at least not in U.S. terms -- but it is devastating.  

"They are killing people. But more than that, they are keeping them hiding in the rocks, in the caves so that they can't farm, and they missed their planting season this year. ... Now, they're not going to be able to feed themselves."

Clooney acknowledged that just shedding light on the problem won't solve it. He added that neither will confrontation with China, which gets 6 percent of its oil supply from the south through pipelines that pass through the north. 

Trying to "throw guilt their way" doesn't really work, he said of the Chinese. "It never really has. You can't appeal to someone's better angels in this situation."

Instead, Clooney suggested Obama hold high-level talks with the Chinese and appeal to their economic interest. 

Likewise, he said, while his "gut reaction" to seeing a kid with his hands blown off is to send in U.S. forces or NATO to take out the "jerk" indiscriminately dropping bombs from 10,000 feet in the air, "in the real world," that's not going to happen. 

Instead, he suggested, following the money that's paying for the weapons is another approach to stopping the onslaught. 

Meanwhile, said Prendergast, private organizations like Digital Globe are donating millions of dollars worth of satellite imagery to track the Sudanese military and see where they are amassing to attack next. 

"We can basically say they're going to attack this place, and shine a light, blow a whistle and say it's going to happen; we know it's going to happen. What are we going to do about it?" he said.

Clooney said his star power and the ability to help the 100,000 people forced into hiding can only go so far.

"I don't make policy. I can just make it louder," he said.

"These aren't people who are sitting there with their hands out going, 'Help us.' They've always taken care of themselves, bad weather, whatever; they farm. They take care of themselves. And right now, they are hiding for their lives and they're terrorized. And we need to do whatever we can to help them," he said. 



Article from FOXNEWS


Romney, Santorum competing for Puerto Rico\'s 20 delegates

Romney, Santorum Deficit Slayers? Team Obama Says Mitt Romney is looking to increase his lead over Rick Santorum in the delegate count as Puerto Rico Republicans are set to have their say in who should win the party's presidential nomination. Although Puerto Rico does not receive any electoral votes in the November election, 20 GOP delegates were up for grabs in the [...]




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Rookie Home Buying Mistakes

With today's unprecedented low mortgage rates and home prices, you may be thinking of making the big leap into home ownership.

If you're a mortgage newbie, don't get caught making an error that could cost you big money. Here are five home financing mistakes that rookie homebuyers make, along with tips on how to avoid them.

1. Getting one or two mortgage quotes, tops

Why it's a mistake: Mortgage rates can vary a lot between lenders. According to MIAC, a mortgage and financial services industry analytics firm based in New York, N.Y., the variance can be 0.25 to more than 0.50 percentage points, depending on the loan type.

It's definitely worth your time to do a bit of comparison shopping now. How worth it? A mortgage calculator doesn't lie: On a $300,000 home loan at 5%, you'd be paying $279,767 in interest over 30 years. But at 5.35%, you'd pay an additional $23,320 in interest over the life of the loan.

How to avoid it: Don't assume the first lender you ask is giving you the most competitive rate. Get multiple quotes from qualified mortgage lenders.

2. Just caring about your ballpark credit score

Why it's a mistake: Literally a single credit score point could save or cost you thousands. Until recently, you didn't have to worry about your credit score as long as it was decent. Not so today. Mortgage pricing is assigned by credit score in 20-point tiers.

Is a borrower with a 679 FICO really a higher risk than one with a 680 score? Probably not, but all the same, Fannie Mae's Loan-Level Pricing Adjustment matrix shows that the person with the 679 score pays 0.75 percentage points more in loan fees. That's $2,250 more on a $300,000 mortgage!

How to avoid it: As soon as possible (before applying for your mortgage), get your free credit report and pay the nominal fee for your credit scores at www.annualcreditreport.com. Concentrate on fixing inaccuracies in the reports and paying down balances. Wouldn't you rather spend that $2,250 paying off credit cards than giving it to Fannie Mae?

3. Dismissing FHA loans as just for low-income buyers

Why it's a mistake: Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans are not restricted to lower-income borrowers. In fact, they're not just for first-time homebuyers, either. FHA loans do limit the amount you can borrow, you must pay both an upfront and monthly insurance premium, and they can only be used for primary residences. However, FHA loans have several advantages:

  • Required down payments range from 3.5% to 10%
  • The loans are assumable when you sell your home. If mortgage rates increase, the ability to transfer your home loan to the new homeowner can give you a big advantage over other sellers
  • Minimum credit scores range from 500 to 580, and credit scores don't influence pricing
  • Underwriting is flexible

How to avoid it: Get in touch with a few FHA-approved lenders and ask them what they have available for you. Compare the numbers on FHA loans with conventional financing. You may be surprised.

4. Going after the lowest monthly mortgage payment

Why it's a mistake: A lower mortgage payment doesn't always represent savings. If a 15-year loan and a 30-year loan had the same mortgage rate, the 15-year loan would require a higher monthly payment than the 30-year loan. Yet you'd pay less in total interest on the 15-year loan.

It's not necessarily a bad move to choose a loan with a lower monthly payment, particularly if a higher payment would overburden you financially, but be aware that it may be coming with greater total interest.

It works the same with your credit card. Making the small minimum monthly payment to your credit card company just ensures that repayment is prolonged, and you'll rack up loads of interest payments in the process.

When you refinance your mortgage, watch out for the same bad logic of "lower payment equals savings." Even some loan officers perpetuate the refinancing untruth that your refinance pays for itself once the difference in your old and new monthly payments adds up to the closing costs of your new mortgage. When you refinance, the new loan often stretches the remaining balance over a new repayment term, and this longer repayment period is driving at least some of the so-called monthly "savings."

How to avoid it: By all means, keep your monthly payments low, but make sure you're comfortable with the total interest you're paying over the life of the loan. HSH.com's Tri-Refi refinance calculator lets you see the cash outlays clearly.

5. Fixating on the 30-year fixed rate mortgage

Why it's a mistake: To very conservative folks, traditional 30-year fixed rate mortgages are the only home loans to consider. However, especially for younger buyers, hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs)--which give you a fixed rate for a specified number of years before becoming adjustable--may be better.

According to the National Association of Realtors' 2010 statistics, the average home seller in the U.S. owned the home for eight years. If you're younger, it's possible that you may need to be even more mobile for a job move or family change. If it's simply not very likely that you will keep your home for 30 years, why get a mortgage that assumes you will?

ARMs usually give you a 1 percentage point or greater discount from the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. You can select a fixed rate for three, five or seven years and might save enough in interest throughout those years to pay for a car. Some mortgage experts suggest taking out an ARM, and during the fixed-rate period, paying the higher monthly payment as if you took out a 30-year fixed at a higher interest rate. This way, when the loan adjusts you'll be ahead of the game in paying both principal and interest.

A closely related myth is that adjustable rates always increase. If mortgage rates fall, ARM rates can adjust downward, too. Homeowners with ARMs today are finding that their mortgage rates have dropped into the 3% range.

How to avoid it: Think realistically about how long you might own your first home. When shopping for a mortgage, ask about ARMs and hybrid ARMs with various fixed-rate terms, and compare them to fixed-rate loans of various lengths.

The original article can be found at HSH.com:
5 rookie homebuying mistakes and how to avoid them



Article from FOXNEWS


Indy police chief warns parents after shooting

Unsupervised teenagers with nothing to do and easy access to guns are a recipe for trouble, experts said Sunday after a late-night shooting that wounded five youths in downtown Indianapolis.

Indianapolis Police Chief Paul Ciesielski said he has had more officers downtown since three shootings injured 10 young people during the Indiana Black Expo in summer 2010. A community task force found that teenagers were being dropped off in the area and left unattended.

But Ciesielski said there's only so much officers can do.

"Parents just need to be more responsible and not use the downtown as a baby sitter," he said after the latest shootings, which happened as crowds reveled along a downtown canal that had been dyed green for St. Patrick's Day.

"Two of the victims were 14 years old," Ciesielski said in an email. "Why were they there at 10 p.m. without parental supervision? Who are they hanging with while downtown?"

None of the victims, ages 14 to 17, had life-threatening injuries, police said.

Police said no arrests had been made, but the shootings weren't believed to be random.

"Some of the victims were targeted by the shooter, some victims were not intended but right there and were struck," Ciesielski said.

The chief said police had extra officers downtown Saturday night both in and out of uniform, though he declined to say how many. He said the department routinely assigns plainclothes officers trained to deal with youth to the Circle Centre Mall, a popular downtown gathering place for teens.

Bill Glick, director of the Indiana Juvenile Justice Task Force, said another piece of the problem was the availability of guns. Teens can get hold of guns at home or buy them on the street, he said.

"Our kids tell us it's no problem getting a gun," he said. "I ask kids if I drop you off in downtown Indianapolis, how long would it take to find someone to help you get a gun? They say probably a couple of hours."

Glick added that many teens seem to be desensitized to violence.

"They somehow seem to be inured to the fact that if you shoot a gun it's not like a video game, someone really gets hurt," he said.

Police said three teens shot Saturday were taken to nearby Riley Hospital for Children. They were a 14-year-old boy shot in the chest, a 14-year-old boy with a gunshot wound to the face and a 16-year-old girl shot in the leg. Police said the boy shot in the chest and the girl had been critically wounded.

The two other shooting victims, both 17-year-old boys, were taken to another hospital, one with a gunshot wound to the back and the other shot in the leg, according to the police statement. They had both been released by early Sunday, police said.



Article from FOXNEWS


Lost Tale From Titanic Survivor Rediscovered

A survivor's account of the sinking of the Titanic has been rediscovered after having been lost for decades and will be published next month ahead of the 100th anniversary of the disaster.

John B. “Jack” Thayer, who boarded the ship at age 17 with his parents, printed his recollections of the catastrophe as a family record in 1940 and made just 500 copies.

The tome was recently unearthed by Lorin Stein, editor of the Paris Review, who recalled a family tie he had to the Titanic after Luke Pontifell, who runs handmade-book publisher Thornwillow Press, said he wished he could track down documents from the ship.

“Suddenly, I half-remembered that a distant cousin of mine had written an eyewitness account and had given my great-grandfather a copy,” Stein said. “My mother found the book in my grandfather's library when he died.”

Click for the complete story from the New York Post



Article from FOXNEWS


Research firm: New iPad more expensive to make

He is accused of the kind of crime that makes people shiver, the killing of families in their own homes under cover of night, the butchery of defenseless children. Under normal circumstances, Americans would dismiss such an act as worthy of only one response: swift and merciless punishment.

Not so in the case of Robert Bales - at least, not for some Americans.

So far, many seem willing to believe that a 10-year U.S. military veteran, worn down by four tours of combat and perhaps suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, simply snapped. That somehow there must be, if not an excuse, at least an explanation.

Exactly what set off the Army sergeant accused of massacring 16 civilians in Afghanistan's Kandahar Province is far from clear. But already, organizations and individuals with differing agendas have portrayed Bales as the personification of something that is profoundly broken, and have seized on his case to question the war itself or to argue that the American government is asking too much of its warriors.

On the website of Iraq Veterans Against the War, organizer Aaron Hughes declared that Afghan war veterans "believe that this incident is not a case of one 'bad apple' but the effect of a continued U.S. military policy of drone strikes, night raids, and helicopter attacks where Afghan civilians pay the price." Those veterans, he wrote, "hope that the Kandahar massacre will be a turning point" in the war.

"Send a letter to the editor of your local paper condemning the massacre and calling for an end to our occupation in Afghanistan," Hughes wrote.

On March 11, authorities say, Bales, a 38-year-old married father of two from Washington state, stalked through two villages, gunned down civilians and attempted to burn some of the bodies. The dead included nine children.

In Lake Tapps, Wash., neighbors knew Bales as a patriot, a friendly guy who loved his wife and kids, and a man who never complained about the sacrifices his country repeatedly asked of him. They find it hard to believe he could be capable of such depravity.

"I kind of sympathize for him, being gone, being sent over there four times," said Beau Britt, who lives across the street. "I can understand he's probably quite wracked mentally, so I just hope that things are justified in court. I hope it goes OK."

Paul Wohlberg, who lives next door to the Baleses, said: "I just can't believe Bob's the guy who did this. A good guy got put in the wrong place at the wrong time."

Talk like that infuriates Fred Wellman, a retired Army lieutenant colonel from Fredericksburg, Va., who did three tours in Iraq. He said comments like those of Bales' neighbors and his attorney simply feed into the notion of "the broken veteran."

Wellman does not deny that 10 years of war have severely strained the service. But while others might see Bales as a wounded soul, Wellman sees a man who sneaked off base to commit his alleged crimes, then had the presence of mind to "lawyer up" as soon as he was caught.

"That may play well with certain circles of the civilian community, which doesn't understand our lives," Wellman said. "But he's going to be tried by a military court ... and chances are three or four of those guys had things happen to them, may have had three or four tours, may have lost people, may have been blown up. And NONE of them snapped and killed 16 people." He added: "It's just too easy, and a lot of us, we're not buying it."

Benjamin Busch, a Marine veteran of two tours of Iraq, wrote last week on the website The Daily Beast that he and his comrades are afraid to admit that Bales "lost his mind in war," because that "allows for the possibility that any one of us could go insane at any time, and that every veteran poisoned by their combat experience could be on edge for life."

James Alan Fox, an expert on murder, said Americans can more easily make excuses for Bales because the shootings did not occur here at home.

"Although the victims weren't soldiers or the enemy, they were civilians, many Americans ... literally distance themselves from this case, because it's so far away in a foreign land," said Fox, a professor at Boston's Northeastern University. "It's still mass murder, yet many Americans sort of perceive it differently because it is related to a military situation, as opposed to a private citizen who's murdering other private citizens."

Even some fellow warriors who deplore Bales' alleged acts suggest he should not bear all the blame.

Reacting to a New York Daily News headline labeling the then-unidentified suspect "Sergeant Psycho," Ron Capps wrote an angry piece on Time magazine's blog site.

"To our elected officials and the people who elected them: this is what you get when you refuse to do what is necessary to create and maintain sufficient military force to fight your wars," wrote Capps, who described himself as a 25-year veteran who did a combat tour in Afghanistan.

"This means everything necessary up to and including the implementation of a draft. ... The all-volunteer Army was designed as a peacetime force. It was never supposed to carry us through 10 years of war."

The killings sent Thomas L. Amerson, a retired Navy captain from Ledyard, Conn., back to the history books to explore other stains on America's military history, including the 1968 massacre of Vietnamese civilians at the village of My Lai. Too often, he argued, Americans absolve the leaders who start the wars and "invest the full responsibility in the combatants themselves and the families that support them."

"These actions in Iraq and Afghanistan have been more than a clash of combatants; they have been a clash of cultures, ideologies, and religions that has blurred the lines of right and wrong," Amerson wrote in an email to The Associated Press.

Amerson asked that Americans "hope for the safety of Sgt. Bales' family and for the ability of his wife and small children to reconcile the person they knew with the one they now face. May they be successful in un-blurring lines that society and courts will, no doubt, fail to distinguish satisfactorily."

___

Associated Press writer Gene Johnson in Seattle contributed to this report.

Santorum wins in Alabama and Mississippi. To restore campaign, Romney must first survive March http://t.co/Q8XOs7Wz
Tough delegate math: Romney could lose Mississippi and Alabama primaries and maintain edge http://t.co/RlYNgQog
Can Mitt Romney keep fending off Santorum and Gingrich as the race moves to Mississippi and Alabama? http://t.co/a09YqnP0


Article from YAHOO NEWS


In-Ground vs. Above Ground

Don't dive right in to buying a swimming pool! You have to decide whether you want to purchase an in-ground or above ground pool before you start inflating those inner tubes. Here are some factors that will influence your decision:

Practicality
The first step is to identify why you want a pool. What function will it serve, and who will be using it? In-ground pools can be more dangerous, especially if you have pets or small children. However, do not purchase an above ground pool if you want to practice diving. Above ground pools are too shallow for diving and any kind of head-first jumping can lead to catastrophic consequences.

The size and shape of some backyards make installing an in-ground pool impossible. Above ground pools are designed in a variety of shapes and sizes, so you should be able to find one that matches your dimensional needs. Above ground pools do not have the same level of commitment as in-ground pools. If you want, you can break down an above ground pool and take it with you when you move. The new residents of your home can get rid of an above ground pool easily, while it would take more effort to fill in an in-ground pool.

Climate can also influence you decision. The Better Business Bureau suggests building your in-ground pool at the end of the summer, meaning you will be able to use it in the spring. If you live someplace where it is warm all year, you can choose to install your pool whenever you want. Above ground pools, on the other hand, only take a few days to set up, so you can take advantage of them right away rather than having to wait. Temperature regulation is also harder for above-ground pools.

Cost
Above ground pools are generally less expensive than in-ground pools. They require less installation, excavation, supply and labor costs. In-ground pools may be taxed as property improvements while above-ground pools may not, so check out the situation in your state.
All pools require a certain level of upkeep, and costs extend beyond the initial price of putting in the pool. You will need to buy a filter, steps or ladders of some kind and a surface cleaner. Then you have to decide if you will buy a heater for the pool, and what kind of cover you will use. Keep in mind that you will have to buy chemicals and treat your pool so it is safe for swimming. Look into the different degrees of dedication the pool varieties require. There are many kinds of in-ground pools, so you will have to compare the prices and benefits of aluminum, concrete, fiberglass and vinyl-lined pools.

Appearance

The potentially unsightly appearance of an above ground pool is one if its main drawbacks. It might look awkward in your yard and can impact the value of your home. In-ground pools can increase your home's value and may be a selling point. However, in-ground pools may require expensive landscaping and outside renovations. You may want to add outside lights for nighttime swims, or build a deck to complement the pool. If you weren't already planning on it, you might be required by law to enclose the pool area with a fence. This will provide privacy and act as a safety measure.

Weigh the pros and cons of in-ground and above ground pools and pick the best one for your situation. Either way, you will end up with your own backyard spot for fun in the sun.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Good Girl\' Underwood

It was a big week for Country music, with a diverse group of artists making strides in the industry. First up is former "American Idol" Carrie Underwood, who plays many parts in her new music video “Good Girl” out now. It's the lead single from her upcoming May album “Blown Away," and it's also our featured song of the week.

Country music also took center stage in Austin, Texas at the South By Southwest Music Festival as Lionel Richie performed at Billboard's annual showcase in support of his upcoming March 26th duets album “Tuskegee.”  The album features 13 of Richie's greatest hits redone as country music duets.  Folks got a look at what's in store on the road from the music icon as he was joined by Kenny Rogers for a performance of “Lady.”  Richie will perform with several of the country artists who recorded duets with him throughout the spring.

Austin, Texas is also the first stop on Shooter Jennings upcoming tour. Jennings is heading out in support of his new country album (his 5th studio album) “Family Man” which he released this week.  The collection features the single “The Deed and the Dollar” which hit iTunes back in December and is the tune behind a personal music video that already premiered featuring home footage of him, his daughter, and his fiancé Drea de Matteo.

Meanwhile, we have more news about the upcoming ACM Awards on April 1st.  The Academy of Country Music continues to expand on its list of performers this year as ACM New Artist of the Year Nominees Brantley Gilbert, Hunter Hayes, and Scotty McCreery have now been announced as part of the 2nd Annual Fan Jam. The Fan Jam will be hosted by Zac Brown Band, and takes place in Las Vegas during and after the ACM Awards.  The live concert will remote into the telecast.   Gilbert, Hayes, and McCreery will find out on the ACM Fan Jam stage if they'll go home with the New Artist of the Year title.

From stage to the small-screen we also get a look at Craig Morgan's scripted series debut on Lifetime's “Army Wives.”  The musician and TV host guest stars on March 18th and brings new music from his latest album “This Ole Boy” onto the show.  Morgan also gets a special recognition the night of his debut from his hometown of Dickson, Tenn. as he'll be introduced with the mention that he served 10 years in the US Army and is the recipient of the USO Merit Award. 

Click for the pics and much more in this week's Fox 411 Country Round-up!



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Is She the World\'s Fastest?

The North American Eagle land-speed record challenge team has been looking for the right driver of its car to take over from project manager Ed Shadle.

The converted F-104 Lockheed Star Fighter jet once flown by some of the most famous test pilots of the 1950s and 1960s has been tested for the past six years but has yet to make its attempt at the record currently held by Andy Green in the Thrust SSC at 763 mph.

Shadle has been working to bring that record back to the U.S. for the first time in 15 years.

He selected two-time motorcycle land-speed record holder Valerie Thompson, 45, originally from Tacoma, WA and living in Scottsdale, AZ to drive the 50,000-horsepower jet-powered car, designed to travel at over 800 mph.

Read: Fastest woman on two wheels has land speed record in her sights

"We're expecting Valerie to set a new record as the world's fastest female racer, when she eclipses Kitty O'Neal's 1972 record of 512 mph," Shadle boasted. Test runs with Thompson at the helm begin this summer.

The North American Eagle land-speed record challenge team has been looking for the right driver of its car to take over from project manager Ed Shadle.

The converted F-104 Lockheed Star Fighter jet once flown by some of the most famous test pilots of the 1950s and 1960s has been tested for the past six years but has yet to make its attempt at the record currently held by Andy Green in the Thrust SSC at 763 mph.

Shadle has been working to bring that record back to the U.S. for the first time in 15 years.

He selected two-time motorcycle land-speed record holder Valerie Thompson, 45, originally from Tacoma, WA and living in Scottsdale, AZ to drive the 50,000-horsepower jet-powered car, designed to travel at over 800 mph.

"We're expecting Valerie to set a new record as the world's fastest female racer, when she eclipses Kitty O'Neal's 1972 record of 512 mph," Shadle boasted. Test runs with Thompson at the helm begin this summer.

Click here for more from MotorAuthority



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Libya seeks Gaddafi spy chief handover by Mauritania

BEIJING (Reuters) - The global economy has stepped back from the brink of danger and signs of stabilization are emerging from the euro zone and the United States, but high debt levels in developed markets and rising oil prices are key risks ahead, the IMF said on Sunday.

"The global economy may be on a path to recovery, but there is not a great deal of room for maneuver and no room for policy mistakes," International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director, Christine Lagarde, said in a speech in Beijing.

In a separate talk on the same day, Lagarde said that China's yuan could become a reserve currency in the future, adding that the country needed a roadmap for a stronger, more flexible exchange rate system.

She said signs of stabilization were emerging to show that policy actions taken in the wake of the global financial crisis were paying off, that U.S. economic indicators were looking a little more upbeat and that Europe had taken an important step forward in solving its crisis with the latest efforts on Greece.

"On the back of these collective efforts, the world economy has stepped back from the brink and we have cause to be more optimistic. Still, optimism must not lull us into a false sense of security. There are still major economic and financial vulnerabilities we must confront," Lagarde said.

The IMF chief cited still fragile financial systems burdened by high public and private debt persists advanced economies as the first of three major risks and said euro zone public sector and bank rollover funding needs in 2012 were equivalent total about 23 percent of GDP.

"Second, the rising price of oil is becoming a threat to global growth. And, third, there is a growing risk that activity in emerging economies will slow over the medium term," she said.

Lagarde also said youth unemployment should be tackled and that all countries must persevere with their policy efforts if the progress made in stabilizing the global economy is to pay off with better prospects ahead.

She said advanced economies must continue with macroeconomic support and a balanced fiscal policy, together with financial sector reforms and structural and institutional reforms to repair the damage done by the crisis and to improve competitiveness.

Meanwhile emerging market economies need to calibrate macroeconomic policies both to guard against fallout from the advanced economies as well as to keep overheating pressures in check.

SEES A YUAN "ON PAR" WITH CHINA'S STATUS

Lagarde's comments on the yuan as a reserve currency were the most direct endorsement to date by an IMF official of China's ambitions for its currency.

"What is needed is a roadmap with a stronger and more flexible exchange rate, more effective liquidity and monetary management, with higher quality supervision and regulation, with a more well-developed financial market, with flexible deposit and lending rates, and finally with the opening up of the capital account," she told a gathering of leading Chinese policymakers and global business leaders.

"If all that happens, there is no reason why the renminbi will not reach the status of a reserve currency occupying a position on par with China's economic status."

Renminbi is another name for the yuan.

China operates a closed capital account system and its yuan currency is tightly controlled, although Beijing has said it wants to increase the international use of the yuan to settle cross border trade and has undertaken a series of reforms in recent years to that end.

Lagarde said China had showed leadership and adept policy skills when the global financial crisis exploded and which might have been worse but for the impetus it provided to growth and stability.

China unveiled a massive 4 trillion yuan ($635 billion) stimulus package for its economy at the end of 2008 as the financial crisis reverberated around the world and global trade -- which China's massive factory sector depends on for growth and jobs -- shuddered to a standstill.

Lagarde further praised what she said was China's leadership and influence in global institutions such as the IMF and G20 group of the world's 20 biggest economies.

"China has been instrumental in helping to make the global economic system less prone to damaging crises," she said, adding that lingering weaknesses in the global outlook reinforced the importance of China maintaining a prominent role in global policy discussions and accelerating reform in its own economy.

Lagarde said she saw three priorities for China, the first to support growth; second, to shift its drivers of economic growth away from investment and exports towards domestic consumption; and third, to spread wealth more widely.

The IMF chief said it was crucial that the world's major economies were working together with the same objective.

"We are all interconnected and we are all affected by each other's policy actions. We need to prepare for success together. If we stand together, the whole will be more than the sum of the parts," Lagarde said.

(Additional reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Don Durfee and Jonathan Thatcher)



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Libya frees two detained British journalists

NEW YORK (AP) -- Protesters marking the six-month mark since the start of the Occupy movement were taken into custody by police officers who poured into the park after warning those who had gathered there that it was closed.

Police said 73 people were detained. It was unclear how many were still in custody Sunday afternoon.

Some demonstrators had locked arms and sat down in the middle of Zuccotti Park near Wall Street after police announced on a bullhorn at around 11:30 p.m. Saturday that the park was closed. Officers then entered the park, forcing out most of the crowd and surrounding a small group that stayed behind. Police formed a human ring around the park to keep protesters out.

An unused public transit bus was brought in to cart away about a dozen demonstrators in plastic handcuffs. One female under arrest had difficulty breathing and was taken away in an ambulance to be treated.

For hours, the demonstrators had been chanting and holding impromptu meetings in the park to celebrate the anniversary of the movement that has brought attention to economic inequality, as police mainly kept their distance.

But New York Police Det. Brian Sessa said the tipping point came when the protesters started breaking the park rules.

"They set up tents. They had sleeping bags," he said. Electrical boxes also were tampered with and there was evidence of graffiti.

Sessa said Brookfield Properties, the park owner, sent in security to advise the protesters to stop pitching tents and to leave the park. The protesters, in turn, became agitated with them. The company then asked the police to help them clear out the park, the detective said.

"Most of the people, they left the park," Sessa said. "People who refused to leave and were staying were arrested."

Many protesters shouted and officers took out their batons after a demonstrator threw a glass bottle at the bus that police were using to detain protesters.

Sandra Nurse, a member of Occupy's direct action working group, said police treated demonstrators roughly and made arbitrary arrests. She disputed the police assertion that demonstrators had broken park rules by putting up tents or getting out sleeping bags.

"I didn't see any sleeping bags," she said. "There was a banner hung between two trees and a tarp thrown over it ... It wasn't a tent. It was an erect thing, if that's what you want to call it."

Earlier in the day, with the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti drew hundreds of people.

Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, who had given a speech at a nearby university, also made an appearance at the park, milling around with protesters.

With the barricades that once blocked them from Wall Street now removed, the protesters streamed down the sidewalk and covered the steps of the Federal Hall National Memorial. There, steps from the New York Stock Exchange and standing at the feet of a statue of George Washington, they danced and chanted, "We are unstoppable."

As always, the protesters focused on a variety of concerns, but for Tom Hagan, his sights were on the giants of finance.

"Wall Street did some terrible things, especially Goldman Sachs, but all of them. Everyone from the banks to the rating agencies, they all knew they were doing wrong. ... But they did it anyway. Because the money was too big," he said.

Dressed in an outfit that might have been more appropriate for the St. Patrick's Day parade, the 61-year-old salesman wore a green shamrock cap and carried a sign asking for saintly intervention: "St. Patrick: Drive the snakes out of Wall Street."

Stacy Hessler held up a cardboard sign that read, "Spring is coming," a reference, she said, both to the Arab Spring and to the warm weather that is returning to New York City. She said she believes the nicer weather will bring the crowds back to Occupy protests, where numbers have dwindled in recent months since the group's encampment was ousted from Zuccotti Park by authorities in November.

But now, "more and more people are coming out," said the 39-year-old, who left her home in Florida in October to join the Manhattan protesters and stayed through much of the winter. "The next couple of months, things are going to start to grow, like the flowers."

Some have questioned whether the group can regain its momentum. This month, the finance accounting group in New York City reported that just about $119,000 remained in Occupy's bank account - the equivalent of about two weeks' worth of expenses.

But Hessler said the group has remained strong, and she pronounced herself satisfied with what the Occupy protesters have accomplished over the last half year.

"It's changed the language," she said. "It's brought out a lot of issues that people are talking about. ... And that's the start of change."

___

Associated Press writer Samantha Gross contributed to this report.

Santorum wins in Alabama and Mississippi. To restore campaign, Romney must first survive March http://t.co/Q8XOs7Wz
Tough delegate math: Romney could lose Mississippi and Alabama primaries and maintain edge http://t.co/RlYNgQog


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Amid signs of recovery, caution is still key

BEIRUT (Reuters) - A car bomb ripped through a residential area of Syria's second city Aleppo on Sunday, as activists reported heavy clashes across the country between state forces and rebels fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.

World powers have been unable to stop more than a year of bloodshed in Syria, a country that sits on the fault lines of several regional and ethnic conflicts. Recent army gains against rebel positions have shown no sign of quelling the violence and no negotiated settlement is in sight.

In Aleppo, Syria's commercial hub, state news agency SANA said terrorists were behind the car bomb that killed two people and wounded 30 others when it exploded in a central area close to a state security office and a church.

Opposition activists accused the government of staging the explosion to back up its official line that foreign-backed extremists are behind the uprising. The government says about 2,000 members of security forces have been killed in the unrest.

The explosion came a day after twin blasts killed 27 people in the capital Damascus and wounded nearly 100 others.

Aleppo had seen less unrest than much of Syria but has recently been hit with more violence as revolt spreads and becomes increasingly bloody. The United Nations says more than 8,000 have been killed and humanitarian conditions are grim.

The semi-official news channel al-Ikhbariya said security forces had been tipped off about the bomb in Aleppo and had been moving residents out of the area when it went off. It said the car had been filled with 200 kilogrammes of explosives.

Pictures on the SANA website showed building fronts blasted open and aid workers standing near piles of shattered masonry and bomb craters, while Syria TV showed a street corner splattered in blood.

"The explosion came suddenly and the only thing I thought to do was fall to the ground," a girl told Syria TV, her hands and face covered in shards of glass. "Nothing remained. All the building fronts collapsed. God curse them."

No group claimed responsibility for the Aleppo attack, and an activist from the opposition's local Revolutionary Council said the government was behind the explosion.

"They want to make our uprising seem like a terrorist operation to the rest of the world, but it is not," said the activist called Marwan, who spoke to Reuters by telephone.

CLASHES, RAIDS ACROSS SYRIA

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 19 people, including four children, had died in rocket and gunfire during army raids and fighting with rebels across the country on Sunday.

Fighting was heaviest in the northwestern province of Deir Ezzor, where activists said rebels had taken over some of the streets in the provinces main city and had torched at least two army vehicles. At least 14 soldiers and five rebels died in the fighting, which calmed by evening, the Observatory said.

In the southern province of Deraa, a sniper shot dead two men in Dael, the British-based Observatory said, and thousands took to the street to mourn the deaths and protest four decades of Assad family rule.

In northern Idlib, gunmen shot dead a Turkish lorry driver, Turkey's state-run Anatolian news agency said, but it did not specify when the attack took place.

Reports from Syria are difficult to verify as the government has restricted access to foreign journalists.

Aid groups also have limited access but were recently allowed a joint mission between staff from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the Syrian government and the United Nations. The group is now in Damascus planning the mission.

The head of the International Committee of the Red Cross Jakob Kellenberger was on his way to Moscow on Sunday to ask Russia to help persuade Damascus to let more humanitarian aid into the country.

PROTESTS, ARRESTS IN CAPITAL

In the capital, as hundreds gathered to mourn victims of Saturday's car bombs, activists said security forces beat and arrested people at a march of more than 200 when protesters began shouting "the people want to topple the regime".

The phrase has echoed through the wave of Arab uprisings that began last year and has toppled autocratic rulers in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen.

"At first they shouted slogans against violence and the police didn't do anything, but as soon as they started to call for regime change the police rushed in and started beating people with canes," said Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Observatory.

The protest, which called for non-violent resistance to the government, had been led by moderate opposition leaders previously tolerated by the government because of their calls for dialogue and rejection of foreign intervention.

Activists said the Sunday march aimed to commemorate the peaceful roots of Syria's uprising, which has been overshadowed by a growing armed insurgency against state security forces.

Security forces beat and arrested Mohammed Sayyed Rassas, a leader of the National Coordinating Body for Democratic Change (NCB), an opposition group which had visited China and Russia in attempts to promote dialogue between Assad and the opposition.

Most opposition groups have rejected the NCB over its insistence on non-violence and its stance against foreign intervention, arguing the government's fierce crackdown has made arming the uprising inevitable.

Security forces also arrested Farzand Omar, a doctor and politician from the party "Building the Syria State," when he arrived at the Damascus airport from his hometown of Aleppo.

"His arrest confirms once again that Syrian authorities repress all their opponents and are dishonest in claiming that they respect and accept member of the Syrian opposition or accept dialogue," the party said in a statement.

Syrian government forces have crushed a rebel stronghold in the central city of Homs and have been pounding rebel strongholds in northern Idlib. Activists reported heavy clashes and extensive security force raids in the embattled province, which borders Turkey.

"It's clear that the battle is finishing in the regime's favour overall," said a Lebanese official close to Assad's government.

Rebels argue they are making tactical retreats and will continue to reappear whenever the army eases its grip, hoping to tire out Assad's forces.

"On the security level there is a long and difficult struggle for the regime and it is obvious this will take a long time to finish," the Lebanese source said. "We will see many more explosions like those we saw yesterday but in general they have finished off the military fight and they don't have much more to do."

(Additional reporting by Laila Bassam; Editing by Andrew Roche)



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Many willing to cut Afghan shooting suspect slack

Former Penn. Gov Ed Rendells speaks at a pro-MEK rally in front of the White House Oct. 22, 2011. (Jose Luis M …

The U.S. Treasury Department has issued subpoenas in an investigation into several prominent former senior American officials taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees to promote a controversial Iranian terrorist group, the Mujahedin e-Khalq (MEK).

Among the former cabinet level officials whose speaking agencies have received subpoenas in the investigation are former Pennsylvania governor and DNC chair Ed Rendell, former Pennsylvania governor and Department of Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge, former FBI director Louis Freeh, and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Hugh Shelton, NBC's Michael Isikoff reported Friday.

The Treasury Department investigation, which dates back to last summer, is seeking to understand where the money for the pro-MEK lobbying campaign is coming from, people familiar with the investigation said. At least 11 subpoenas have been issued to date in the probe, one source briefed on the probe said Friday.

The investigation "is targeted less at individuals, and more at where the money is coming from," said Reza Marashi, a former State Department official whose group, the National Iranian American Council, advocates against taking the MEK off the terrorism list, in an interview with Yahoo News Friday.

Several U.S. government agencies--including Treasury, the State Department, and the FBI--"are putting their heads together on this," he said.

The Treasury Department, contacted by Yahoo News Friday, declined to comment on the investigation. However it did note that the U.S. government considers the MEK a terrorist group, thus forbidding American citizens from taking money from it either directly or indirectly, without a license from the Treasury Department.

"The MEK is a designated terrorist group; therefore U.S. persons are generally prohibited from engaging in transactions with or providing services to this group," Treasury Department spokesman John Sullivan told Yahoo News in an emailed statement Friday. "The Treasury Department takes sanctions enforcement seriously and routinely investigates potential violations of sanctions laws."

The emergence of the investigation comes as supporters of the MEK are lobbying for it to be taken off the State Department's list of designated terror groups, an issue which is currently under review by the State Department. But few of his old colleagues at the State Department Iran desk believe the group should be taken off the list, Marashi reported Friday. A former senior US intelligence official told Yahoo News Friday the United States should have nothing to do with the group, whose leader Marjam Rajavi urged her followers as recently as 2003 to set themselves on fire after she was taken into custody by French police.

Founded as a Marxist-Islamist movement in the 1960s which advocated armed violence to topple the Shah of Iran, the MEK has continued to use terrorism to attack the regime which succeeded him. It is widely despised as a cult terrorist group among Iranians of all political persuasions, among other reasons, for having allied with Iraq's Saddam Hussein to wage war against Iran in the 1980s. The group also has reported ties to Israeli intelligence, which some reports say has used it as a proxy group to carry out attacks in Iran. Other reports have claimed the MEK has been a cut-out for Israeli intelligence claims about Iran's nuclear program since 2003.

A legacy of its twenty year alliance with Saddam, the MEK currently has some 3,000 members at Camp Ashraf in Iraq. The current Shiite-led Iraqi government, with close ties to Iran, is hostile to the group and has signaled its intent to close the camp. The United States has recently persuaded some 800 members of the camp to move to another Iraqi location, Camp Liberty, to try to defuse a potential humanitarian crisis.

Attorneys and Washington policy experts said they did not find the investigation surprising, given how conspicuous the American public relations and lobbying campaign has been on behalf of a group that is on the U.S. terror list.

"Honestly, this is not a surprise to me," Douglas Jacobson, a Washington attorney who specializes in international trade law, told Yahoo News in an interview Friday. "First of all, OFAC [the Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control] reads the newspapers to get info. This is a clear situation that merits an inquiry."

Asked if the former officials could argue they were just exercising their free speech rights to speak in favor of a group, Jacobson said they could only make that case if they did not take money from the terrorist group, either directly or indirectly. It did not appear, given the investigation, that the former officials or their speaking agencies had applied for a license or waiver from Treasury's OFAC to represent the group, he said.

"It all goes back to the funds," he said.

The former officials are reported to have received from $20,000 to $30,000 per speech for the MEK, plus travel expenses. Rendell "has received $160,000 over the past year for appearing at about seven conferences and rallies" his office told NBC.

Calls by Yahoo News Friday to the office of Tom Ridge, and Ridge's speaker's bureau the Washington Speakers bureau were not returned. A spokesman for Louis Freeh told Yahoo News Friday that he did not have immediate comment on the case.

The irony, both Jacobson and Marashi said, is that for all the hundreds of thousands of dollars that have been spent on the MEK public relations campaign, it is unlikely to affect the State Department's decision.

"This is a big waste of their money," Jacobson said. "These decisions are based upon the facts. They are based upon evidence and they are based upon foreign policy determinations."

More popular Yahoo! News stories:

- Karzai makes surprise request to pull troops back to barracks

- Panetta safe after attempted attack at Afghanistan airport

- Assad's inbox: Alleged emails give glimpse of dictator's, wife's inner world

- Iran banks booted from SWIFT global financial network

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

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Ryan budget plan aims to seize spending debate

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in the House of Representatives will try this week to seize control of the election-year spending debate by rolling out a plan to slash trillion-dollar deficits and revive controversial reforms to the Medicare healthcare program for the elderly.

The effort from influential House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan aims to portray Republicans as unafraid to face the tough decisions needed to avoid what they warn is a looming debt crisis.

He intends to contrast Republicans with what they view as a big tax-and-spend budget from President Barack Obama that would produce a fifth straight year of $1 trillion deficits and make no major changes to Medicare or the Social Security government retirement program.

Ryan will unveil the sequel to his "Path to Prosperity" budget on Tuesday, with a committee vote scheduled for Wednesday. It is expected to be considered on the House floor the following week, an aide to House Majority leader Eric Cantor said.

Although the Ryan budget resolution is expected to win approval in the Republican-controlled House, neither it nor Obama's budget plan is expected to become law. Mainly, they will be used as campaign platforms detailing policies each party wants to pursue if it wins the White House and control of Congress in November.

The main goal for Republican lawmakers is to change the subject of campaign debates from political gridlock in Congress to one where they claim an advantage - spending and deficits.

Republican aides were keeping details under tight wraps, and Ryan's appearance on CNN's "State of the Union" program on Sunday was canceled without explanation.

The committee and Republican leaders were trying last week to quell an uprising among fiscal conservatives who were demanding deeper cuts than those specified in caps agreed to with Democrats in last year' debt limit deal. House leaders were insisting on a more modest cut of $19 billion to the budget caps for fiscal 2013, which starts on October 1.

But the quick committee vote on Wednesday and swift movement to the House floor - even with a critical highway bill still pending - is an indication that conflict may have been set aside and that there are sufficient votes to pass the budget plan without any help from Democrats.

MEDICARE REFORMS REDUX

Many of the 87 first-term Republicans in Congress were elected on pledges to slash wasteful Washington spending and the plan gives them an opportunity to get back on territory where they are more comfortable. Projections of ballooning U.S. debt are still a major election-year concern among voters.

"It will be a historic budget, it will alter the debt course of America," Senator Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee told Fox News Channel. "It will take us from unsustainability to sustainability. I'd like to see them go really far with that budget."

While Republicans aim to bring the budget back into balance without raising taxes, Obama's approach calls for higher taxes on the wealthy, while boosting investments in infrastructure and education and bringing deficits down more gradually to a sustainable level.

The Ryan plan is expected to draw a significant amount of its savings from reforms to Medicare and Medicaid, the healthcare programs for older Americans and the poor. But it will contain modifications from last year's plan, which proposed replacing traditional fee-for-service Medicare with a voucher-like system to allow seniors to purchase private insurance.

That set off a firestorm of controversy among seniors, helping Democrats to win control of a traditionally Republican House district in upstate New York last year.

Instead, Republicans aim to blunt that criticism by allowing seniors a choice between traditional Medicare and competing private plans, drawing on a proposal floated by Ryan and Democratic Senator Ron Wyden in December. They argue the changes will make the programs sustainable for future generations.

But analysts say Republicans will struggle to explain the Medicare reforms to seniors. Democrats, who are positioning themselves as defenders of the popular program, are itching for a fight over the plan.

In addition, the Republican plan is expected to shield defense spending from automatic spending cuts that kick in next January. Since a special commission failed to agree on deeper spending cuts after last year's debt limit deal, the government faces an across-the-board $97 billion budget cut.

Those cuts are expected to be shifted to other parts of the budget, including entitlements, in line with a similar proposal from the Republican-led House Armed Services Committee.

"House Republicans are continuing their efforts to reprioritize the savings called for under the Budget Control Act, because our troops and military families shouldn't pay the price for Washington's failure to take action," Ryan said in a statement last week.

(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Peter Cooney)



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Romney, Santorum competing for Puerto Rico\'s 20 delegates

RT @mikememoli: Official Puerto Rico primary results site http://t.co/hCtaxvrt

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Rivals Eye Illinois as Puerto Rico Votes

The next three days are crucial for both Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney as they try to collect the delegates needed to create the mathematical inevitability of becoming the Republican presidential nominee to challenge President Obama.

With Puerto Rico offering 20 delegates on Sunday -- which could go to the winner if he scores 50 percent of the vote -- the candidates are also looking forward to Tuesday's primary in Illinois, with 69 delegates and then to Louisiana on the weekend. 

The goal is an algebraic equation that forces one of two scenarios: Romney begins to wrap up his quest for the 1,144 delegate majority needed for victory, or Santorum, with the help of Newt Gingrich's proportional take, pulls away enough delegates from the front-runner to halt him in his tracks and possibly force a brokered convention.

"I know a lot of people will talk about delegates and strategies and math and that's all very interesting to the insiders. But I think the American people want to see someone who has the leadership, skill and experience to beat the president," Romney told "Fox News Sunday."

"I can't tell you exactly how the process is going to work. But I bet I'm going to become the nominee," Romney said.

Santorum, however, rejects the notion that Romney can run away with it.

"We still believe that there are plenty of delegates out there for us to do what we have been doing, which is actually going out there and winning states and winning the tough battles, and doing so over pretty overwhelming odds," Santorum told ABC's "This Week" on Sunday. 

He added that he rejects the notion that the GOP candidate is doomed against President Obama if the nominee is not chosen until the late August convention to be held in Tampa. 

Offering a critical take of his rival, Santorum said the primary has given him a chance to bone up against the president in a general election contest.

"I feel like I'm doing a training run for the general election. The same issues I'm out there campaigning on against Governor Romney are the same issues I'm going to campaign against Barack Obama on," Santorum said. "Unfortunately, Governor Romney and Barack Obama are in the same place."

Romney, who has expressed confidence about his prospects for winning many of Puerto Rico's delegates, has support from much of the island's establishment, including its governor, Luis Fortuno, who supports making the island the 51st state. 

Santorum has tried to blunt, if not negate, a potential victory. He left last week to go to Puerto Rico, which participates in the nominating process, but as a territory rather than a state, doesn't have a vote in the general election.

Santorum has said he would support statehood if the November vote were decisive. He also has spent days explaining his comment that English would have to become the island's main language for Puerto Rico to realize statehood. Only a fraction of Puerto Rico's residents speak English fluently.

Illinois also provides an interesting test. Its largely considered a northern state, with the kind of suburban, upscale voters that Romney has done well with in earlier primaries. However, downstate, it has a significant rural population and borders Iowa and Missouri, where Santorum has done well.

Romney is maintaining his lead in most polls, but it's a lead that has been narrowed in recent days with Santorum gaining a bit of momentum. Romney curtailed his trip to the U.S. territory Saturday in favor of spending more time in Illinois, where he campaigned on Sunday.

The candidates have until the last primary in Utah on June 26 to score the 1,144 delegate majority. If not, the GOP would host their first convention floor fight since 1976. 

But most analysts discount the likelihood of a brokered convention or a floor flight at the convention despite Democrats' obvious amusement at such a possibility.

"We thought we'd have a nominee by now. But, you know, every time it looks like Mr. Romney has some momentum, he gets set back. He hasn't been able to make the sale to his own party," said Obama's chief campaign adviser David Axelrod.

"I think the Republican Party is having a hard time picking a nominee," Axelrod said, adding that "if he thinks he's an economic heavyweight, he must be looking in a funhouse mirror, because that is not the record of an economic heavyweight."

"I think David's living in a permanent funhouse mirror myself," responded Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, who followed Axelrod on CBS' "Meet the Press." 

"We're not making plans right now for a brokered convention. But the up side is that we've got rules to handle any possibility. And obviously, we're going to follow those rules. But right now what we're talking about is how who is going to be our nominee and what this president promised to the American people and what he delivered," Priebus said.

Fox News' Doug McKelway and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Room Painting Tips

If you want to add some color to your bedroom or living room walls but don't want to hire a painter, doing it yourself can save money and provide you with a true sense of accomplishment. Pick your paint, throw on an old baseball cap and get ready to work some interior decorating magic. Here are some tips for painting a room:
 

Prep and clean before you paint
Don't dip a brush until the room is ready. If there are cracks and holes in the walls, spackle and sand as necessary. Clean the walls with a damp cloth to remove dust, especially from the trim and tops of doorways. Set aside some extra time for preparation - you might not be able to get the room ready and paint it in one day.

Turn off the breaker or fuse before working with electrical outlets, lights and switches. Have a stash of plastic zip top bags to cover doorknobs and light fixtures, but remove what you can. Clear out the furniture, take everything off the walls and push what you cannot remove to the center of the room. Cover everything. Heavy canvas drop cloths are the best - just make sure you tape down the corners.

Have the right materials
Line your paint tray with an inside-out plastic grocery bag. Pour paint into a small bowl and work from that when you are using a brush. Decide if you are going to use a primer or base coat. Use brushes with natural bristles for oil-based paints. Brushes with synthetic bristles were designed for water-based or latex paints but have multiple uses. Locate the right size and variety of brushes and rollers for the job at hand. If you have a steady hand and are on a tight budget, you can save money and time by not using painting tape. However, if you can spring for it, it can make your life easier and ensure clean edges.

When the time comes, wear your painting outfit so nothing good gets ruined. Find some old, comfortable clothes to wear while painting. Take off all of your jewelry. Wear shoes you can easily slip off so you do not track paint into other rooms.

Paint and clean up smart
Attack the walls with a brush first. Painting the corners, trim and ceiling before going at it with a roller. Make sure you use long, continuous strokes rather than a short, back and forth motion.

Let your paint dry completely between coats, and make sure you do add a second coat. Cover the brush or roller tightly in plastic wrap or a plastic bag to prevent them from drying out between coats. Cleaning your brush after an hour of painting. Remove the painter's tape when the paint is dry. Have cleaning rags on hand while you paint. Use razor blades to remove excess paint from glass, windows or tile.

Store extra or leftover paint in smaller containers or jars. Make sure to label the new receptacles with the date you last used the paint, the color name and number, and where you used it in the room. If you have the paint swatch from the store, attach it to the container. You can fill and set aside baby food jars or small storage containers for paint touch-ups. Label them appropriately for easy retrieval.



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Katy Perry Ready for Battle

Introducing Private Perry!

Pop superstar Katy Perry debuted the teaser-trailer for her ‘Part of Me' music video on Friday, which shows the Grammy-nominated singer preparing for battle in full-on army gear.

The song has already been a huge success since Katy debuted it at the 2012 Grammys, shooting to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 charts in a matter of weeks. Its female-empowering lyrics have also caused some to wonder if the song is about Katy's ex-husband, Russell Brand.

Will the video reveal a similar message? We'll find out when it fully premieres Wednesday evening at 7:23 PM ET on MTV. In the meantime, check out a preview clip in the video above!



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Best Fuel Saving Car?

Gasoline prices are headed for record highs this spring. If that happens, a new, more fuel-efficient car may be worth the investment.

Gas has jumped 54 cents to an average of $3.81 per gallon this year. By next month, the price could break the all-time record of $4.11 in July 2008.

Four years ago, car companies didn't have enough fuel-sipping small cars to satisfy buyers, and that hurt sales. But they've put far more emphasis on fuel economy since then, and there's now a wide selection of efficient cars and SUVs.

Want a car that gets 50 miles per gallon? Check. Need an SUV that gets 30 mpg? Check. Want an electric car that uses no fuel at all? Check.

"The American consumer shopping for a new car is seeing the most fuel-efficient lineup of vehicles ever," says Jesse Toprak, vice president of market intelligence at the auto shopping site TrueCar.com.

Ed Tonkin, who runs 17 dealerships in the Portland, Ore., area, says he's seeing more people trading in trucks and SUVs for gas sippers. Buyers are assuming pump prices will stay high.

"We're getting a lot more interest in higher gas mileage vehicles," Tonkin says.

As always, do the math before committing to a new vehicle, even one that promises to save you money on gas. Hybrids and diesels might offer impressive fuel economy, but they cost more, so be sure you'll drive them long enough to make up that premium. At today's gas prices, for example, it would take about 7.3 years to make up the price difference between a 2012 Toyota Camry hybrid and its gasoline-powered equivalent, according to auto information site Edmunds.com. Downsizing to a smaller car can also save you money, but you may not want to sacrifice the space.

Here are some fuel-saving 2012 models. Fuel economy numbers come from the Environmental Protection Agency. Estimates are based on a typical combination of city and highway driving.

- The recent graduate. The newest Toyota hybrid, the Prius c, is a compact hatchback targeted at younger buyers. It gets an estimated 50 miles per gallon, but it starts at nearly $19,000, which is high for many buyers in this bracket. One answer: Go smaller. The Scion iQ, which is just 10 feet long, gets the government's nod as the most fuel-efficient subcompact. The four-seater gets 37 mpg and starts at $15,995. There are plenty of cheaper subcompact cars in the 33 to 34 mpg range. The Nissan Versa four-door starts at $10,990. For a more chiseled, eye-catching design, consider the Hyundai Accent, which starts at $12,545, or the Ford Fiesta, which starts at $13,200.

- The family of four. The Ford Escape hybrid is a midsize SUV that gets 32 mpg, the highest in its category. But at $30,570, it's $9,000 more than a base model Escape. There are several non-hybrid, five-seat SUVs that get 26 mpg and cost under $25,000. They include the Chevrolet Equinox, Honda CR-V and Hyundai Tucson.

You can get even better fuel economy if you can pack your family into a midsize sedan. The Kia Optima has one of the lower-priced hybrid sedans on the market. It gets 37 mpg and starts at $25,700 - or $4,700 more than the gas version. Diesel cars, which are around 30 percent more efficient, can also save you money at the pump. Volkswagen has two diesels that cost around $26,000 (or $6,000 more than the regular gas versions): the 34-mpg Jetta SportWagon and the 35-mpg Passat midsize sedan. Diesel fuel is currently around 30 cents more than regular gas, so that will cut into the amount you save.

- Going electric. Manufacturers are still working out the kinks in electric cars. Consider General Motors' recent decision to fix the Chevy Volt's battery to decrease the risk of fires after crashes. Then there's the question of refueling. On the road, recharging stations are still few and far between, and some drivers worry they'll run out of juice on longer trips. At home, electric cars can be charged from an outlet, but it's slower than a charging station. You have to pay to install a station in your garage - if you have one. But for some drivers, it's exhilarating to be among the first to own a gas-free or nearly gas-free car.

The Mitsubishi i - on sale now on the West Coast -will roll out to other states later this year. It's the most efficient car in the U.S., with a miles-per-gallon equivalent of 112 - that's a measure of how much energy it uses - and estimated annual electric costs of $550. It starts at $29,125. For buyers concerned about how far they can drive on a charge, the Volt has a backup gas engine that kicks in when its battery is drained. The Volt is $39,145. All electric cars are currently eligible for a $7,500 tax credit.

- The luxury buyer. Even if you have money to spend, you don't want to blow it at the gas pump. Buick's eAssist system, which uses battery power to boost the gas engine's fuel economy, helps both the sporty Buick Regal and the Buick LaCrosse sedan get 29 mpg. Both cars cost around $30,000. Several other luxury models are in the 28-mpg range, like the $34,900 BMW 328i. Beware: They use premium gas, which costs more. There's also luxury hybrids, such as the Lexus CT 200h, a small car that gets 42 mpg and starts at $29,120; and the larger Lincoln MKZ, which gets 39 mpg and starts at $34,755. And if money is no object? Tesla's all-electric Roadster sports car will set you back $130,450.



Article from FOXNEWS


Florida atheists ‘unbless\' highway with ‘unholy water\'

A group of atheists in Florida spent part of their weekend washing away a blessing placed upon a local highway by a religious group.

Armed with brooms, mops and "unholy water," the atheists gathered Saturday to symbolically clean up holy oil that Polk Under Prayer put down on Highway 98 near the Pasco-Polk county line last year, Bay News 9 reported.

"We come in peace," Humanists of Florida director Mark Palmer announced before he and members of other atheist organizations launched their cleanup. "Now that's normally what aliens say when they visit a new planet, but we're not aliens, we're atheists!"

According to the report, Palmer said Polk Under Prayer's blessing "sends a very bad signal to everyone in Polk County, and [anyone] who travels through Polk County who doesn't happen to be Christian."

The unblessing project, he explained, was "not about atheist rights" but about "welcoming everybody into Polk County."

Click for more on this story from Bay News 9



Article from FOXNEWS


MARCH MADNESS: Georgetown falls to NC State

  • March 18: Georgetown's Jason Clark, center, drives to the basket between North Carolina State's C.J. Leslie, left, and Richard Howell during the first half of an NCAA college basketball tournament third-round game in Columbus, Ohio.AP

Lorenzo Brown hit three free throws in the final 10.6 seconds and North Carolina State conjured up its glorious tradition with a 66-63 upset of third-seeded Georgetown in a Midwest Regional on Sunday.

The Wolfpack (24-12) advance to play the Purdue-Kansas winner on Friday in St. Louis.

A lowly 11th seed coming in, they had to survive a furious comeback by the Hoyas (24-9) and only were assured of the win when Greg Whittington's hurried 3-point attempt from the right wing was off the mark at the buzzer.

C.J. Williams, Scott Wood and C.J. Leslie each had 14 points, and Brown added 12 for the Wolfpack, who earned their first trip to the round of 16 since 2005.

Hollis Thompson led the Hoyas with 23 points.



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama should fire advisers over gas prices: Romney

NEW YORK (AP) -- Protesters marking the six-month mark since the start of the Occupy movement were taken into custody by police officers who poured into the park after warning those who had gathered there that it was closed.

Police said 73 people were detained. It was unclear how many were still in custody Sunday afternoon.

Some demonstrators had locked arms and sat down in the middle of Zuccotti Park near Wall Street after police announced on a bullhorn at around 11:30 p.m. Saturday that the park was closed. Officers then entered the park, forcing out most of the crowd and surrounding a small group that stayed behind. Police formed a human ring around the park to keep protesters out.

An unused public transit bus was brought in to cart away about a dozen demonstrators in plastic handcuffs. One female under arrest had difficulty breathing and was taken away in an ambulance to be treated.

For hours, the demonstrators had been chanting and holding impromptu meetings in the park to celebrate the anniversary of the movement that has brought attention to economic inequality, as police mainly kept their distance.

But New York Police Det. Brian Sessa said the tipping point came when the protesters started breaking the park rules.

"They set up tents. They had sleeping bags," he said. Electrical boxes also were tampered with and there was evidence of graffiti.

Sessa said Brookfield Properties, the park owner, sent in security to advise the protesters to stop pitching tents and to leave the park. The protesters, in turn, became agitated with them. The company then asked the police to help them clear out the park, the detective said.

"Most of the people, they left the park," Sessa said. "People who refused to leave and were staying were arrested."

Many protesters shouted and officers took out their batons after a demonstrator threw a glass bottle at the bus that police were using to detain protesters.

Sandra Nurse, a member of Occupy's direct action working group, said police treated demonstrators roughly and made arbitrary arrests. She disputed the police assertion that demonstrators had broken park rules by putting up tents or getting out sleeping bags.

"I didn't see any sleeping bags," she said. "There was a banner hung between two trees and a tarp thrown over it ... It wasn't a tent. It was an erect thing, if that's what you want to call it."

Earlier in the day, with the city's attention focused on the huge St. Patrick's Day parade many blocks uptown, the Occupy rally at Zuccotti drew hundreds of people.

Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, who had given a speech at a nearby university, also made an appearance at the park, milling around with protesters.

With the barricades that once blocked them from Wall Street now removed, the protesters streamed down the sidewalk and covered the steps of the Federal Hall National Memorial. There, steps from the New York Stock Exchange and standing at the feet of a statue of George Washington, they danced and chanted, "We are unstoppable."

As always, the protesters focused on a variety of concerns, but for Tom Hagan, his sights were on the giants of finance.

"Wall Street did some terrible things, especially Goldman Sachs, but all of them. Everyone from the banks to the rating agencies, they all knew they were doing wrong. ... But they did it anyway. Because the money was too big," he said.

Dressed in an outfit that might have been more appropriate for the St. Patrick's Day parade, the 61-year-old salesman wore a green shamrock cap and carried a sign asking for saintly intervention: "St. Patrick: Drive the snakes out of Wall Street."

Stacy Hessler held up a cardboard sign that read, "Spring is coming," a reference, she said, both to the Arab Spring and to the warm weather that is returning to New York City. She said she believes the nicer weather will bring the crowds back to Occupy protests, where numbers have dwindled in recent months since the group's encampment was ousted from Zuccotti Park by authorities in November.

But now, "more and more people are coming out," said the 39-year-old, who left her home in Florida in October to join the Manhattan protesters and stayed through much of the winter. "The next couple of months, things are going to start to grow, like the flowers."

Some have questioned whether the group can regain its momentum. This month, the finance accounting group in New York City reported that just about $119,000 remained in Occupy's bank account - the equivalent of about two weeks' worth of expenses.

But Hessler said the group has remained strong, and she pronounced herself satisfied with what the Occupy protesters have accomplished over the last half year.

"It's changed the language," she said. "It's brought out a lot of issues that people are talking about. ... And that's the start of change."

___

Associated Press writer Samantha Gross contributed to this report.

RT @YahooTicket: #Obama quaffs a pint of Guinness: @OKnox on the president's St. Patrick's Day outing: http://t.co/vzUsYPaD
Santorum wins in Alabama and Mississippi. To restore campaign, Romney must first survive March http://t.co/Q8XOs7Wz
Tough delegate math: Romney could lose Mississippi and Alabama primaries and maintain edge http://t.co/RlYNgQog


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