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Sleeping bag hammock will keep you warm in the wild

Katniss would have loved one of these

Katniss may have slept a bit better in the Hunger Games arena if she had one of these hammock-sleeping bag hybrids. It's a two-piece outdoor gear composed of a hammock you can hang between trees and a unique sleeping bag that you can wrap around your body and the hammock, making you look like an enormous cocoon.

The bag has zippers on both sides so you can easily get out, and is stuffed with insulating material to keep you warm on cold nights during hiking trips. Interested? No need to fight to the death for the hammock-compatible sleeping bag - you can get one from Amazon or directly from its manufacturer, Grand Trunk, for $179.99.

[via The Gear Caster]

This article was written by Mariella Moon and originally appeared on Tecca

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Passport Lost for 60 Years Found and Returned to Owner

Last summer, while shopping for souvenirs in a flea market in Paris, medical student Nuno Fonseca found a passport that had been missing for 60 years.

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Watch 20 years of newspaper evolution in under 2 minutes

A lot of things can change in 20 years, and in the world of print, two decades can be a lifetime. From 1893 to 1912, the Hawaiian Star newspaper printed 5,930 front pages, and the video above gives us a look at every single one of them. The brief clip shows each of the thousands of front page layouts for just a fraction of a second, bringing the pages to life like an evolving creature.

As the years pass, columns change width, ads appear more frequently, and headlines begin to grow big and bold, hoping to grab the attention of would-be customers. Pictures become more abundant and text is more condensed, packing more and more information into the same size of paper. Around 1907 the paper's logo becomes larger and more dominating, and the headlines continue to grow in size and number.

While two decades worth of front pages is still very cool, we can only imagine how amazing a century's worth of print would look when sped up to the same degree. Regardless, the video is a very interesting glimpse into the history of newspaper printing and the practices in place a century ago that are still prevalent today.

(Source)

This article originally appeared on Tecca

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The new iPad proving to be the hottest ever… literally

Thermal imaging proves the new 4G iPad runs hotter than its predecessors

If you're one of the millions who picked up a new third-generation iPad this past weekend, you're no doubt aware that the new tablet is one of the hottest gadgets out there. And we mean that quite literally - the new iPad runs several degrees hotter than the iPad 2.

In an experiment, Tweakers.net ran benchmarking software to stress the processors on both an iPad 2 and a new 4G iPad while both were under a thermal imaging camera. Results were pretty clear: The old iPad 2 ran at an average temperature of 28.3°C (82.9°F), while the new iPad ran at a significantly hotter 33.6°C (92.5°F).

The higher operating temperature is likely due to the supercharged new graphics processor present in the new iPad: More power means more heat. That heat is unlikely to negatively impact your device's performance, though if your new iPad does become too hot to safely operate, it does contain an internal safety switch that will power the unit down.

(Source)

This article was written by Fox Van Allen and originally appeared on Tecca

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Do Republicans exist in Obamaland?

Glad to know there are baseball players worried about baseball tradition. http://t.co/oHnvSD6U

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Mayor-elect blamed in lap dance video arrested again

 

Daniel Salinas was arrested late Monday or early Tuesday on charges related to accusations he gave acting Police Chief Luis Monarez his job in exchange for persuading his sister not to run against a Salinas ally for City Council, according to Dona Ana County Assistant District Attorney Scot Key.

Monarez was arrested on bribery and conspiracy charges in the alleged plot earlier Monday.

Both remained jailed Tuesday in lieu of $50,000 cash bail.

Salinas had already posted $50,000 cash following his arrest in late February on extortion and other charges related to accusations he and the city manager tried to force an opponent out of the mayor's race with a secretly recorded video of him getting a lap dance.

That set off a widespread probe that has resulted in eight arrests of current and former city officials on bribery, extortion, voter fraud and other charges.
More arrests are expected, Key said.

"This has become a full-time job for our office and for the task force," the prosecutor said, noting that state police, officials with the secretary of state and the state auditor are all investigating the town's recent elections and the city's finances.



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Chevy Volt Goes Racing?

As the old saw goes: if you win on Sunday, you sell on Monday.

But does it apply to the Chevy Volt?

General Motors is about to find out as it sends its plug-in hybrid to the races.

Not the Volt, per se, but its mechanically identical European cousin with an equally cute electric-inspired name, the Opel Ampera. The car will be taking part in the prestigious Monte Carlo Rally, which kicks off on Thursday, March 22.

But don't expect to see it tearing up the twisty mountain roads above Monaco on full opposite lock. Instead, the Ampera will be competing in a support race featuring alternative energy vehicles that covers several hundred miles at a slightly more sedate pace. The idea isn't to be the fastest, but to use the least amount of energy while traveling at a target speed closer to what a real world driver would experience.

Deliveries of the the U.S.-built Ampera only began in Feburary, but appears to be off to a better start than the Volt had in the United States. It was named European Car of the Year for 2012 and Opel reports that it already has 7,000 orders for it on the books, exceeding company projections. GM also sells the Chevrolet Volt in Europe for customers looking for an exotic American car experience, the first of which was delivered last week.

Opel is entering six Amperas in the rally against a field of over 140 that includes a variety of vehicles from the conventional Fiat 500 to the Fisker Karma and even a Dodge Ram 1500. All-electric Tesla Roadsters have won the last two events, and a contingent of the two-seat sports cars will have their sights set on the Ampera over the course of the four day race that ends on Sunday.

Perhaps we'll have to wait until Monday to see who the real winners are.



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University to schedule classes on religious holidays

By Todd Starnes

New York's Stony Brook University has decided to no longer cancel classes for major Christian and Jewish holidays in an effort to ensure that some religions aren't given special treatment and to “afford equal support and equal respect to students and faculty from all faiths.”

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Jewish students would be impacted on Rosh HaShanah, Yom Kippur, Passover and Holy Week. Christian students would be impacted on Good Friday. The Christmas holiday is protected under a union contract and occurs when classes are traditionally not in session.

The university had considered allowing faculty to schedule exams on Saturday and Sunday â€" a time when many students attend worship services. However, that decision was tabled after reaching a compromise with students.

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“As a secular university, as a state-funded university our priority must be to maximize instructional opportunities for our students,” said Charles Robbins, vice provost for undergraduate education. “First and foremost, it's important to note that while I respect everyone's concerns, the reality is it's a relatively small number of people who are upset.”

Robbins told Fox News the university's decision to stop cancelling classes for Christian and Jewish holidays offers “equal protection under the regulations to everybody and no one is getting quote, unquote, special treatment.”

Robbins, who has a background in social justice, said many religions, including the Muslims and Buddhists have never had their holidays officially recognized by the university.

“Now all segments of our population will be equally recognized,” he said. “It really is the American fair thing to do.”

However, Stonybrook University's 24,100 undergraduate and graduate students are not as religiously diverse as the vice provost said. According to a report in The Jewish Week, 26 percent consider themselves Roman Catholic, 24 percent consider themselves other Christian, eight percent are Muslim, five percent are Jewish, and five percent are Hindu.

Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League, told Fox News that the university's board of trustees should conduct an investigation into the matter.

“The goal here is radical secularism being shoved down the throats of the people at Stony Brook,” he said.

The university's decision led the school's Jewish, Muslim, Protestant, Catholic and Asian Christian chaplains to write a letter encouraging them to reconsider.

“We're not taking an adversarial position against the university administration,” Rabbi Joseph Topek told Fox News. He heads the university's Interfaith Center and wrote the letter with “a heavy heart.”

Topek said the new policy “becomes less respectful of religious diversity instead of more respectful.”

“Rather than ‘respecting all religions equally,' as we were told the new calendar would do, it will surely be perceived as an attack on student and faculty religious identity and observance,” the letter read. “We fear that this will be seen as making Stony Brook a less tolerant community that seeks conformity over diversity.”

But Robbins disagreed and said the new policy is anything but disrespectful. He said students may still attend and participate in their religious activities. They will also have the ability to make up any class work should they be absent. Faculty members will also be instructed not to assign exams on religious holidays.

“We're giving more students the ability to practice their faith in any way that they see fit,” Robbins told Fox News.

Donohue also took issue with the university's contention of religious fairness.

“There are thousands of religions but this country was founded on the Judeo-Christian ethos,” he said. “No one should be apologetic about it. It's just a matter of giving due tribute to the heritage and the legacy of western civilization. So that argument doesn't work either.”

A number of faculty and students are outraged over the decision.

“You really have to choose between my faith and my school work and I don't want to be put in that position,” Aaron Gershoff told CBS News.

Norman Goodman, a professor of sociology, told The Jewish News the policy “stinks.”

“It was done without any input except from the administration â€" and it was done in secret. It does not take into account the variety of needs of faculty and students and it shows no respect for religion.”

Robbins said the university is undeterred.

“It's not that we don't recognize holidays,” he said. It's that we don't feel that as a secular and a state institution that we are in a position to decide which holidays to cancel classes for.”



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Physics Professor Jailed in Argentina on Drug Charges

An esteemed physics professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is sitting in a jail in Argentina as he fights charges he tried to smuggle drugs out of the country, relatives and U.S. State Department officials said.

Paul Frampton, 68, of Chapel Hill, N.C., was arrested in Buenos Aires on Jan. 23. He is currently being held at Devoto Prison and U.S. consular officers have visited the British-born particle phenomenologist twice since his arrest and have provided appropriate assistance, a U.S. State Department spokesperson told FoxNews.com on Tuesday.

Frampton -- who "absolutely did not" try to smuggle drugs out of the South American county, according to his ex-wife -- told The News & Observer that 2 kilograms of cocaine were cleverly built into a piece of his luggage without his knowledge. The drugs were discovered in his checked bag en route to Raleigh-Durham International Airport.

"I am innocent," Frampton, the school's Louis D. Rubin Jr. Distinguished Professor of Physics and Astronomy, told the newspaper. "I will not be convicted. It is just that the Argentinean justice system is very slow. There is easily enough evidence that I didn't know there were drugs in the bag, and that will come out, I hope sooner rather than later."

Anne-Marie Frampton, who divorced Frampton in 2008 after 15 years of marriage, told FoxNews.com she has spoken to her former husband recently by phone. She said he declined to discuss details of his arrest, but repeatedly professed his innocence.

"His spirits are quite high, he's hopeful to get out," she said. "Knowing him, he's not guilty. He's no absent-minded professor."

John Bird, a neighbor of Frampton's for two years and a retired attorney, was dumbfounded when he learned of the professor's arrest when informed by FoxNews.com.

"There's nobody in the world more improbable who would smuggle cocaine," Bird told FoxNews.com. "He got setup, I would bet my life on it. It would be contrary to everything in his background."

Frampton, who has authored more than 400 academic papers on topics such as string theory and theoretical cosmology, told The News & Observer the school cut off his pay after he was arrested, leaving him struggling to fund his defense.

"The university has done nothing, absolutely nothing, to help me," Frampton said. "You would expect a university of that caliber would do everything possible to get me out of prison."

Karen Moon, the university's interim news director, confirmed to FoxNews.com that Frampton's $106,835-per-year pay was cut off on March 1. Frampton joined the university in January 1981 as an assistant professor, she said.

Moon also confirmed that the university's senior associate dean for Social Sciences and Global Programs, Jonathan Hartlyn, had been in Buenos Aires recently on a scheduled business trip and later met with a member of the Argentine judiciary. She did not elaborate.

David Eby, a doctoral candidate at the school who has been in contact with Frampton, told The News & Observer that Frampton had been helping him with several peer-reviewed research papers while incarcerated.

"We've been in continuous contact by phone, particularly over the last month, and he has been doing all these things that I'd be depending on him for if he were actually here," Eby told the newspaper. "I find that admirable."

Frampton, for his part, is confident he'll be back stateside come this fall, ready for classes at Chapel Hill.

"I told my chairman that the chances I will be back by August 15 are 99.995 percent, so I told him to put me on the teaching schedule for fall," he told the newspaper.



Article from FOXNEWS


US Lets Allies Off Hook for Iran Trade

The United States is offering some breathing room in its seemingly ironclad set of sanctions against Iran, underscoring the difficulty the U.S. and other countries may have in truly freezing out the Iranian regime. 

The State Department on Tuesday announced exemptions for 11 countries from the newly passed economic sanctions expected to hit Iran's financial and energy sectors. 

By summer, the U.S. is expected to penalize nations that make oil purchases through Iran's central bank unless they can show they've made a significant reduction in their Iranian oil supply. 

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced Tuesday that the 11 countries -- 10 European Union nations, as well as Japan -- had met that test. 

"The actions taken by these countries were not easy," Clinton said. "They had to rethink their energy needs at a critical time for the world economy and quickly begin to find alternatives to Iranian oil, which many had been reliant on for their energy needs." 

While the announcement demonstrates that these countries have started to cut back on their Iranian oil purchases, it also ensures that for now those countries will not have to pull out of the Iranian market entirely. 

At the same time, the United States is allowing for the export of food, medicine and related products to Iran, under a long-established exemption for humanitarian items. 

And that trade has spiked in recent weeks, with Iran buying wheat from the United States for the first time in three years. 

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. companies have sold 180,000 tons of the staple crop to Iran in the past month. 

Jerry Norton, a grains analyst with the USDA's World Agricultural Outlook Board, said it appears Iran is conducting the rare trade with the U.S. after running into problems purchasing grains from its usual suppliers due to weather issues. 

The United States, he said, is a "last resort in many instances" for Iran. 

Norton said Iran may have blown through some of its own grain supplies by feeding it to livestock. Asked whether the regime is stockpiling food to prepare for the impact of sanctions, Norton said: "It's hard to know what the Iranians are truly doing." 

The transactions, though, raise questions about how effective selective sanctions can truly be. 

"If the U.S. isn't prepared to be really tough, how can we expect anyone else to be?" John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told FoxNews.com in an email. "This is one reason among many why obsessing about sanctions as a remedy is ultimately illusory, misguided and self-defeating." 

Bolton said the U.S. should cut off food sales to Iran, but he questioned what other transactions are still allowed despite sanctions -- and whether new restrictions would ultimately deter Iran's nuclear ambitions. 

A Treasury Department official said the wheat exports are allowed under a longstanding provision "that lowers the barriers for exporters to ship food to Iran." 

"The recent sanctions imposed on Iran have not changed our approach to the export of food, medicine and medical devices to Iran," the official said. 

The U.S. also exported corn to Iran in 2011, and soybeans in 2010. 

The Treasury Department on Tuesday also announced revised rules allowing the export of certain software to Iran. 

The announcement stressed that the goal is to support the "free flow of information" to Iranians, at a time when the regime uses "an electronic curtain that prevents the Iranian people from communicating with the outside world." The clarified rules authorized basic applications like Skype, Google Talk and Acrobat. 

President Obama stressed the importance of online communication services during a videotaped message to the Iranian people marking the Iranian holiday of Nowruz. 

The administration has tried to distinguish between the Iranian regime and the Iranian people governed by the regime. 

The announcement Tuesday by the State Department reflected the latest phase of a careful diplomatic effort to implement the new round of unilateral sanctions while giving leeway to countries that weren't necessarily prepared for them. 

Some of the United States' closest allies -- including Japan, South Korea and India -- import a considerable amount of their oil supply from Iran. 

India and South Korea were not on the latest list of exempted countries.



Article from FOXNEWS


Sleeping bag hammock will keep you warm in the wild

Katniss may have slept a bit better in the Hunger Games arena if she had one of these hammock-sleeping bag hybrids. It's a two-piece outdoor gear composed of a hammock you can hang between trees and a unique sleeping bag that … Continue reading â†'

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Passport Lost for 60 Years Found and Returned to Owner

Last summer, while shopping for souvenirs in a flea market in Paris, medical student Nuno Fonseca found a passport that had been missing for 60 years.

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Watch 20 years of newspaper evolution in under 2 minutes

A lot of things can change in 20 years, and in the world of print, two decades can be a lifetime. From 1893 to 1912, the Hawaiian Star newspaper printed 5,930 front pages, and the video above gives us a look at … Continue reading â†'

Article from YAHOO NEWS


The new iPad proving to be the hottest ever… literally

If you're one of the millions who picked up a new third-generation iPad this past weekend, you're no doubt aware that the new tablet is one of the hottest gadgets out there. And we mean that quite literally - the new iPad … Continue reading â†'

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Malia Obama safe in Mexico, White House says

White House: Malia Obama Safe From Earthquake in MexicoMalia Obama, President Barack Obama's 13-year-old daughter, is safe following the 7.6-magnitude earthquake in Mexico, the White House said Tuesday.




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Federal probe into Martin death could hang on race question

FILE - This undated family photo shows Trayvon Martin. College students around Florida rallied Monday, March 19, 2012, to demand the arrest of a white neighborhood watch captain who shot the unarmed teen in February, though authorities may be hamstrung by a state law that allows people to defend themselves with deadly force. (AP Photo/Martin Family, File)After a nationwide outcry, the U.S. Justice Department said late Monday it would investigate the fatal shooting last month of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed African-American teenager, in Florida.




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Obama to make first-ever visit to Korean Demilitarized Zone

As North Korea Mourns Focus Remains On Stability Of Korean PeninsulaPresident Obama will make his first-ever visit to the most guarded border in the world - the Demilitarized Zone that separates North and South Korea - as he kicks off a brief trip to Seoul for a nuclear security summit.




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Malia Obama safe in Mexico, White House says

Bales in August of 2011 ( AP Photo/Spc. Ryan Hallock)The staff sergeant suspected of shooting 16 Afghan civilians, many of them children, had a trail of legal troubles behind him, and his defense team may use those to argue the Army didn't properly screen him before deployment, experts say.

Yesterday, Gary Liebschner from Carroll, Ohio, told ABC News that Robert Bales was ordered to pay him more than $1 million after an arbitrator ruled that Bales defrauded him the year before he joined the Army. Liebschner says he never received the sum. Bales was Liebschner's stockbroker, and wasn't charged criminally in the case.

During recruiting, the Army screens applicants' criminal history, and occasionally hands out "moral waivers" to applicants who have two or more misdemeanor convictions or one serious conviction so they can still join the force. (Murder and some other crimes cannot be waived.) In 2007, the Boston Globe reported that 12 percent of the Army's entire recruiting class had criminal records, a reflection of how badly the Army was struggling to meet its recruiting quotas then.

The Army won't release details of Bales' 11-year military record, so it's unclear if his fraud charges showed up in the background search the military did, or whether Bales needed a moral waiver to join the military. The AP reported that he also had a 1998 citation for possessing alcohol on Daytona Beach, and never paid the $65 ticket. That would most likely count as a minor nontraffic violation, which wouldn't require a waiver.

Once Bales joined up, he ran afoul of the law again, in incidents that suggested he may have had alcohol problems. He was arrested in an assault investigation involving a former girlfriend in 2002, but charges were dropped after he agreed to take anger management classes. According to the Seattle Times, the State Patrol arrested Bales in 2005 after finding that he had a blood alcohol level of .14 while driving. The legal limit in Washington is .08, but Bales was not charged. According to CBS, a 2008 police report said Bales drove into a signpost and then ran into the woods, "bloody and smelling of alcohol," according to witnesses. Bales paid a fine and the hit-and-run charges were dismissed.

Generally, the Army will formally reprimand a soldier if he or she is found to have broken the law, as in a drunken driving arrest, even when the arrest doesn't result in a conviction. A reprimand could slow a soldier's future promotions, and a more serious arrest could result in a discharge. But there's no automatic process for the Army to find out about civilian arrests, and it's possible for a soldier to take care of a lower-level offense on his own and not have his commander find out, says Eugene Fidell, an attorney and a lecturer at Yale Law School. In Bales' case, Fidell thinks the glowing reports from Bales' own comrades and commanders about his conduct would outweigh any concerns about his minor civilian offenses, assuming the Army did know about them.

But John Henry Browne, Bales' celebrity Seattle-area lawyer, may use Bales' run-ins with the law as part of a larger argument that the Army shouldn't have deployed him in the first place, and it may have improperly vetted his mental state. Browne has said his client may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and told the AP after meeting with him in his cell in Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Monday that he has "very little" memory of the shooting incident. Bales suffered a traumatic head injury-which is correlated with higher rates of PTSD and violence-on one of his earlier deployments, but was cleared for a fourth tour of duty by the Army's screening process. (Browne didn't respond to requests for comment.)

Daniel Conway, a defense lawyer who represented a member of the "Kill Team," a group that was accused of killing Afghan civilians for sport, said that warning signs are often present in bad-apple soldiers. Jeremy Morlock, the convicted ringleader of the group, had several traumatic head injuries, substance abuse issues and domestic abuse charges, Conway says.

"You're starting to see in these cases over time some real common denominators, and at some point the Army's got to do a better job at vetting these individuals," he said.

Fidell said the defense may argue that the Army should have seen "indicators well in advance of this recent deployment that he was having problems in his life ... that maybe he wasn't the most suited to deploy." But Fidell isn't sure that will work so well, especially since Bales, if charged, will be tried in front of his military peers.

"It's going to be a tough row to hoe for them because he's not the only guy to have four deployments" he says. "To really push hard on the argument that the Army is responsible for this and make that pitch to a bunch of combat veterans who are hearing the case? That's not going to fly. One of the core ethics of military service is personal responsibility," he said.

Conway agrees. "It's going to be hard to get a military jury, many of whom have done multiple deployments themselves, to be that sympathetic of an individual who allegedly commits these types of acts, because they've been there and done that."

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Article from YAHOO NEWS


Federal probe into Martin death could hang on race question

A rally for Trayvon Martin, in Titusville, Fla. (AP Photo/Florida Today, Craig Rubadoux)

After a nationwide outcry, the U.S. Justice Department said late Monday it would investigate the fatal shooting last month of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed African-American teenager, in Florida.

"The department will conduct a thorough and independent review of all of the evidence and take appropriate action at the conclusion of the investigation," it said in a statement. "The department also is providing assistance to and cooperating with the state officials in their investigation into the incident."

On Tuesday afternoon, the state attorney for Brevard and Seminole counties, Norman Wolfinger, said his office would conduct its own investigation, beginning April 1o.

The federal probe, to be conducted by the FBI and the Justice Department's civil rights division, looks set to focus on whether the shooter, George Zimmerman, violated 17-year-old Martin's civil rights by targeting him because of his race.

Zimmerman, a white Hispanic, was patrolling the streets of a gated community in Sanford, Fla., on Feb. 26 when he spotted Martin and told a police dispatcher that a "black male" was acting "suspicious." Zimmerman, 28, ignored a warning from the dispatcher not to pursue Martin, and a violent confrontation ensued, leaving Martin dead. Zimmerman told local police he acted in self-defense, and he has not been detained or charged, though questions have been raised about the thoroughness of the police investigation.

A classic civil-rights violation occurs when a person is targeted because of his or her race while trying to engage in a federally protected activity, such as voting or riding on public transportation. Martin was merely walking back to the house where he was staying after buying Skittles and iced tea at a nearby store.

But Bradley Schlozman, a former acting head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, told Yahoo News that in the past, courts have found that using a public sidewalk can qualify as a protected activity.

"Under 'streets theory,' individuals have been prosecuted for targeting a minority on the basis of his or her race because they didn't appreciate that they were being on the streets," Schlozman said. "One of the recognized civil rights is being able to walk the streets."

But an FBI policy guide examined by Yahoo News points to a potential hurdle to using streets theory: "Difficulties arise from the necessary step of proving the subject's actions were ... motivated by the subject's intent to prevent the victim  from using the streets." In other words, prosecutors would need to show that Zimmerman targeted Martin because of his race, and that his goal was to stop him from walking down the street.

In the two months before the shooting, Zimmerman had called the police 46 times to report what he saw as suspicious activity. On Monday, the Sanford Police Department released tapes of six of those calls. In four of them, Zimmerman reported "suspicious" persons, all of whom were black.

The National Neighborhood Watch organization has said Zimmerman was not a registered member of any of their local groups.

The state of Florida also can bring charges after conducting its own investigation, but it may be handcuffed by a state law, passed in 2005, that allows Floridians to shoot to kill in response to a perceived threat, rather than first having to retreat before using deadly force. There's evidence the law has made it harder for prosecutors to bring cases in shooting incidents.

The Sanford Police Department has been criticized for failing to conduct a drug or alcohol test on Zimmerman, as is standard practice in homicide cases. And a witness has said a cop "corrected" her account that she heard Martin calling for help in the moments before he died.

"The Justice Department's intervention is critical, because you have a police department that is conflicted in some regards," Barbara Arnwine, the executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights told Yahoo News. "They may in fact have some liability for having such a loose gun out there. So it's the perfect circumstance when the Department of Justice would intervene."

African-American leaders, Martin's parents and hundreds of thousands of ordinary people across the country had urged state and federal authorities to get involved. On Monday, a White House spokesman called the case a "local law enforcement matter," hours before the Justice Department announced its probe.

More popular Yahoo! News stories:

- Amelia Earhart mystery: Hillary Clinton announces U.S. support of new search

- To derail Romney at Tampa convention, change the rules

- Eminem parody video takes on 'The Real Mitt Romney'

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Article from YAHOO NEWS


Obama to make first-ever visit to Korean Demilitarized Zone

@Brand_Allen see my last Tweet - reading wrong column, oops

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Spring Online Travel Dreams

Now that the Winter That Wasn't is over, your thoughts may turn to flying the coop. Everyone knows that flying isn't fun any more, but there are a flock of online travel sites trying to make it at least a little less painful.

In spite of the sputtering economy, more people may be hoping to get away this summer. According to a Travelocity survey, more Americans, about 53 percent, plan to travel this year compared to last year. That's up about 18 percent. 

And the trend continues to be to go online to make travel arrangements. Online travel bookings in the U.S. will experience double digit growth this year, according to a report from market research firm yStats.com. The trend is reflected in the shrinking state of travel agencies. Just 10 years ago there were over 29,500 agencies certified by the Airlines Reporting Corp. Today there are just over 14,000.

Replacing all those missing agents is a raft of destination recommendation sites. Unfortunately, many are loaded with questionable "user" reviews. Some businesses have been caught paying (small) fees for positive reviews, for example. Other pages seem loaded with spiteful criticisms (posted by competitors, perhaps). As with everything else these days, the social network promises a solution.

There are plenty of new, visually oriented sites to incite your wanderlust, from the popular digital scrapbook Pinterest (one of Mitt Romney's wife's favorite sites) to smaller, travel specific destinations like Gtrot, Wanderfly, and Gogobot. Even jet-setting celebrities are getting the travel bug. Gwyneth Paltrow, for example, has her own personal app newsletter extolling the virtues of honey and serving up travel tips.

Rather than simply plugging in a desired destination, Trippy also lets you browse where others have been and fill your own bucket list. It's also got a bevy of rich and not-so-famous backers who post some of their favorite spots. Many of these places mere mortals can't afford, but there's an interesting element of serendipity. 

Singer-songwriter Jason Mraz, for example, has some recommendations for vegan grocery shopping in Bali (just in case you were wondering) and former Punky Brewster Soleil Moon Frye has some favorite family spots, such as Serendipity 3 for dessert in New York City and Cafe Du Monde in New Orleans. However, Trippy only lets you book hotels (which is how the site makes money). For airfares, you have to go elsewhere.

All four of the most popular sites -- Expedia, Orbitz, Travelocity, and Kayak -- do a reasonable job. The listings at Travelocity can be confusing when they fail to, for example, flag flights with connections that require overnight stays or multiple connections that turn a 14 hour trip into a 30 hour sojourn. Kayak and Orbitz do a better job putting that information up front. 

Most of the sites cull their travel information from the same sources. However, by filtering out insane itineraries -- such as staying 11 hours in an airport or making three connections in different countries -- the cheapest practical flights I found were from Kayak and Expedia.

Then I tapped my own social network and asked a Facebook friend (a.k.a., the Travel God) what to use online. This guy gets out of town nearly every weekend -- at least that's what his digital persona would have me believe. He recommended Farecast.com. Bingo. I shaved more than $100 off the cheapest fares I found elsewhere.

So the social network can work -- when you tap trusted friends. Many travel experts also recommend buying tickets on certain days. One recent survey found that getting your tickets six weeks in advance will consistently give you the best deal. 

Farecompare.com recommends checking ticket prices on Tuesdays after 3:00 p.m. ET. It sounds like fare folklore, but airlines often offer special price reductions then and competitors scramble to match the new lower rates. Just be aware that by late Thursday, many of those deals dry up as demand picks up. In other words, if you are thinking about getting away, book your flights now.

One final bit of cyber travel advice: Sharing travel tips -- even venting about a certain airline on Twitter -- can definitely be helpful. Just remember that posting pics on Facebook of your hike to Machu Picchu may not necessarily be appreciated when the rest of us are stuck in dingy cubicles back at the office.

Follow John R. Quain on Twitter @jqontech or find more tech coverage at J-Q.com.



Article from FOXNEWS


Pay To Sit in Emergency Row?

Ryanair, the controversial Irish budget airline, is in hot water again. 

The Irish Aviation Authority is investigating the airline after passengers complained they were being forced to pay an extra £10 (or about $16) to sit in seats by emergency exits.  

Passengers like these seats because they offer more leg room.  While the airline isn't the first to charge for the extra space, they're refusing to let passengers who haven't paid sit there, yet nearby passengers are still expected to man the exit door in case of emergency.  

"I wasn't allowed to sit in the emergency exit row so I sat in the window seat in the row in front. Before take-off, one of the cabin crew spoke to me, and another passenger who was in the aisle seat," a Ryanair passenger told the Daily Mail. "Basically, she was saying that, since we were the closest to the emergency exit, we'd have to make sure we'd read and understood the instructions for opening the doors in the middle of the plane in an emergency."

Ryanair head of communications Stephen McNamara told TNT magazine that this is a non-issue, since all Ryanair passengers are given the same safety information.

The Irish Aviation Authority has launched an investigation. The U.K. regulator, the Civil Aviation Authority, has described the issue as a ‘grey area', advising Ryanair to look at its policy.

The no-frills airline has, over the years, imposed surcharges on just about everything.  All passengers must now check-in online and print their own boarding pass, costing £6 per flight (about $10). Those passengers who don't have to pay a surcharge of £60 (or about $95 per passenger).  It also raised eyebrows for a plan to install coin-operated toilets on the planes, and for giving a passenger suffering a cardiac arrest a sandwich, and then charging him for it.



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Quarterback Peyton Manning joins Denver Broncos

  • March 20: Peyton Manning showing off his new No. 18 jersey for the Denver Broncos at a packed news conference hours after signing a five-year, $96 million contract.

Peyton Manning said Tuesday he is "very excited to begin the next chapter of my playing career" after agreeing to a five-year, $96 million contract with the Denver Broncos.

"I can tell this organization is committed to winning. In the end I felt the Broncos were just a good fit," Manning said at a news conference where he announced his signing.

"This is truly a special football environment, and I'm glad to be a part of it."

Manning, who will turn 36 on Saturday, held up an orange No. 18 jersey, thanking former Broncos quarterback Frank Tripucka for allowing the franchise to unretire the number for him.

"It's truly an honor for me," Manning said, adding that he believes retired numbers should stay retired but that 84-year-old Tripucka convinced him he should wear it.

The four-time MVP's new contract will reportedly make him the highest paid NFL player, with an average annual salary of about $19 million. The deal comes less than two weeks after Manning was released by the Indianapolis Colts.

Manning, who missed all of the 2011 season following a fourth neck surgery, admits he still has work to do to return to the form he showed before the operations.

"I'm not where I want to be. I want to be where I was before I was injured," he said, adding he is encouraged by what doctors have told him about his progress to this point.

Manning said he could play this Sunday if there was a game, but acknowledged he probably could not perform up to his usual standards.

"I don't consider it much of a risk," said Broncos executive vice president of football operations and former star quarterback John Elway, who said team doctors "felt great" after examining Manning.

With the future Hall of Famer as the new starter, the Broncos are reportedly looking to trade last year's starter, Tim Tebow.

Manning praised the wildly popular 24-year-old, but said he has not spoken to him yet.

"If Tim Tebow is here next year, I'm gonna be the best teammate I can to him," said Manning, calling Tebow a "great player and a great guy."

Tebow, a fan favorite even before he became the starter, led the Broncos on an improbable run to the AFC West title and a playoff victory over the Steelers last season.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Don\'t Re-Nig\' purveyor says bumper sticker isn\'t racist

While people were questioning the authenticity of the photograph showing the bumper sticker on someone's car, we were able to track down a website selling the sticker along with several other controversial items.

Article from YAHOO NEWS


U.S. commander says Afghanistan transition plan is ‘on track\'

Marine Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 20, 2012, before the House Armed Services Committee hearing on Afghanistan. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)Marine Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, told sometimes skeptical lawmakers Tuesday that the United States is "on track" to achieve its goals for stabilizing Afghanistan and preventing it from becoming a haven for terrorism. International forces are still planning to withdraw over the next two years, despite numerous high profile setbacks [...]




Article from YAHOO NEWS


Faulty math? Santorum camp says he\'s not losing that badly

Republican presidential candidate Santorum addresses supporters at Greenwell Springs Baptist Church in Greenwell SpringsRick Santorum's campaign insists it's not focused on delegate math. But that didn't stop his top political advisers from holding a nearly hour-long conference call on the very subject Tuesday, in which they insisted that Santorum isn't losing as badly to Mitt Romney in the delegate count as some project.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


Paul Ryan: GOP candidates will fully back proposed budget

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., center, holds up a copy of his budget plan, entitled Republican House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan on Tuesday said he expects his party's presidential candidates to "absolutely" back his 2013 budget plan-which Democrats are already contesting over its proposed changes to Medicare.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


Bales\' wife: ‘I too want to know what happened\'

Karilyn Bales, the wife of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the American soldier suspected of carrying out the March 11 shooting rampage that killed 16 Afghan civilians, issued a statement Monday night expressing profound sadness over the tragedy, but said she still doesn't know what happened that night.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


\'Don\'t Re-Nig\' purveyor says bumper sticker isn\'t racist

ISLAMABAD (AP) - A Pakistani parliamentary commission demanded Tuesday an end to American drone attacks inside the country and an apology for deadly U.S. airstrikes in November as part of a review of its near-severed relations with the United States.

The commission was tasked with reviewing ties with Washington after errant airstrikes four months ago killed 24 Pakistani soldiers and prompted Islamabad to close its borders to U.S. and NATO supply lines to neighboring Afghanistan.

The incident presented an opportunity for the army - furious at the Americans and under public pressure following the U.S. raid on Osama bin Laden last year that was seen in Pakistan as a violation of the country's sovereignty - to gain a negotiating advantage in its turbulent relationship with Washington.

American officials hope the oft-delayed review will lead to the reopening of the supply lines.

"The U.S. must review its footprints in Pakistan," commission head Raza Rabbani said, reading the recommendations. "This means the cessation of drone strikes inside Pakistan."

This demand could complicate efforts to rebuild the relationship. However, the commission didn't say the supply lines should be permanently closed, as many Pakistanis would like, but rather that the government should charge the U.S. and NATO more money for the privilege.

Washington wants to rebuild its relationship with Pakistan, whose cooperation is seen as key to the success of striking a deal with insurgents in neighboring Afghanistan. Also, the supply lines are important for transporting fuel and other non-lethal goods to troops, and will be crucial to trucking out equipment as the U.S. draws down its forces.

The joint session of parliament was expected to immediately debate the recommendations, but that was shelved after opposition leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said his party needed time to study them. He hinted the party could reject them, possibly causing more delays to U.S. hopes of a speedy resumption of ties. The issue is to be debated again on Monday.

The army, and to a lesser extent the civilian government, will ultimately decide whether to restore ties with the United States, but parliament could influence the decision. Analysts say placing the issue before lawmakers was to give the government and the army some political cover, so they could claim the support of the country before quietly reopening the supply routes.

"If drone attacks really are stopped and the national sovereignty is really ensured we can approve the recommendations," said opposition leader Khan. "Otherwise we are not ready to give any authority to this government to take decisions under the garb of parliament."

The recommendations said any new agreement on the supply lines should have a clause stipulating their closure in the event that Pakistan's sovereignty is violated by the U.S. or NATO, but didn't explicitly mention drone strikes in this regard.

The demand for an "unconditional apology" for the November attacks could also complicate the rebuilding of ties.

Washington has expressed regret for the border incident, but avoided formally saying sorry. U.S. officials were reportedly preparing to apologize last month, but had to postpone the plan after U.S. soldiers burnt copies of the Quran in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama apologized for that, earning him criticism from political opponents. He also apologized after an American soldier last week allegedly killed 16 Afghan villagers in a shooting spree.

The drone strikes are unpopular among Pakistanis and have long been publicly opposed by the Pakistani army and government, which maintain they fan support for militancy even as they kill insurgents also targeting Islamabad. But their frequency has dropped significantly in recent months, which makes them less politically charged.

The issue is muddied, however, by the fact that in private the army has approved at least some of the strikes, and provided intelligence on them, raising questions over whether they technically violate the sovereignty of the country. American officials rarely talk about the program in public.

"This is neither the first time, not will it be last, that the parliament has demanded an end to drone strikes," said Samina Ahmed, who heads the International Crisis Group in Pakistan. "This is more performance than substance. The military is still the key actor as far as security policy is concerned."

She said the security establishment had "no expectation" that the drone strikes would end.

Privately U.S. officials have said the drone strikes are key to the war against al-Qaida and the Taliban, and Washington is unlikely to permanently stop them.

Pakistan, which had supported the Afghan Taliban, sided with the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, earning it billions of dollars and ending its international isolation. It needs American assistance to keep its economy afloat, while the U.S. needs its help in reaching a deal with the Afghan Taliban, whose leaders are believed to be on its soil and subject to the influence of its security forces.

Gen. James Mattis, commander of U.S. Central Command, said earlier this month he expected to visit Pakistan in mid-to-late March to talk with leaders about reopening the supply routes. His would be the first trip by a U.S. military official since the airstrikes, and will be taken as a high-level sign that Pakistan's army leadership wants to re-engage.

___

Associated Press writer Chris Brummitt contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Faulty math? Santorum camp says he\'s not losing that badly

Gingrich: "My plan. . .differs in details but shares the same core principles as Ryan's impressive effort" - what a diff a year makes

Article from YAHOO NEWS


U.S. commander says Afghanistan transition plan is ‘on track\'

New York Times reported Tuesday.

The war games' results have "raised fears among top American planners that it may be impossible to preclude American involvement in any escalating confrontation with Iran," the Times Mark Mazzetti and Thom Shanker wrote.

Defense experts said the reported war games results are another attempted warning signal to Israel not to go it alone or risk harming relations with the United States.

"The apparent results of the war game reported by the Times suggest that it will be much more difficult than Israeli leaders assume to keep the United States out of the conflict," former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East Colin Kahl told Yahoo News by email. "In the retaliatory spasm following an Israeli strike, the odds that Iranian actions and miscalculations could drag the United States military are substantial."

The two-week war simulation exercise-dubbed "Internal Look"-took place from Feb. 26 -March 3 at U.S. Central Command's headquarters at MacDill Air Force base, near Tampa, Florida, and at some overseas locations, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command said Tuesday. It was designed to "refine the command's battle rhythm and assess the staff's ability to coordinate and communicate on a modern battlefield," U.S. Central Command spokesman Col. John Robinson told Yahoo News in an email Tuesday.

The war game posited a scenario in which an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities led to Iran retaliating by striking a U.S. "Navy warship in the Persian Gulf, killing about 200 Americans," thus drawing the United States into the war, the Times' report said.

But some former officials urged caution when interpreting the war games' reported results. "It's clear the administration believes an Israeli strike on Iran would be extremely problematic," Ken Pollack, a national security expert at the Brookings Institution Saban Center for Middle East studies and a former director for Persian Gulf affairs at the National Security Council, told Yahoo News in a telephone interview Tuesday. "But it is not at all clear that the game demonstrates that an Israeli strike could produce American casualties." Pollack, who has designed and directed many such war games, explained that the designers of the game could simply have created an Iranian attack on the U.S. Navy ship as a method for testing America's control system to see if it could handle it.

The report on the war games comes as Israeli Defense Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Benny Gantz is in Washington for consultations. Meantime, the State Department's lead international Iran nuclear negotiator, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman, is in Brussels Tuesday for meetings with her international counterparts to prepare for upcoming high-stakes talks with Iran over its nuclear program, a State Department official told Yahoo News Tuesday.

More popular Yahoo! News stories:

- Treasury subpoenas former officials in finance probe over terror group PR campaign

- P5+1 political directors meet in Europe to plan for high-stakes Iran talks

- 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.

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.

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Article from YAHOO NEWS


Paul Ryan: GOP candidates will fully back proposed budget

Hmmm ... #thingsIgetinthemail http://t.co/K7AtORpA

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Does Florida gun law protect shooters?

No immediate reports of major damage or injuries after strong 7.6 quake shakes Mexico City: http://t.co/Y9vk4xLn

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Bales\' wife: ‘I too want to know what happened\'

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Article from YAHOO NEWS


White House backs Biden on audacity of Osama bin Laden raid

ISLAMABAD (AP) - A Pakistani parliamentary commission demanded Tuesday an end to American drone attacks inside the country and an apology for deadly U.S. airstrikes in November as part of a review of its near-severed relations with the United States.

The commission was tasked with reviewing ties with Washington after errant airstrikes four months ago killed 24 Pakistani soldiers and prompted Islamabad to close its borders to U.S. and NATO supply lines to neighboring Afghanistan.

The incident presented an opportunity for the army - furious at the Americans and under public pressure following the U.S. raid on Osama bin Laden last year that was seen in Pakistan as a violation of the country's sovereignty - to gain a negotiating advantage in its turbulent relationship with Washington.

American officials hope the oft-delayed review will lead to the reopening of the supply lines.

"The U.S. must review its footprints in Pakistan," commission head Raza Rabbani said, reading the recommendations. "This means the cessation of drone strikes inside Pakistan."

This demand could complicate efforts to rebuild the relationship. However, the commission didn't say the supply lines should be permanently closed, as many Pakistanis would like, but rather that the government should charge the U.S. and NATO more money for the privilege.

Washington wants to rebuild its relationship with Pakistan, whose cooperation is seen as key to the success of striking a deal with insurgents in neighboring Afghanistan. Also, the supply lines are important for transporting fuel and other non-lethal goods to troops, and will be crucial to trucking out equipment as the U.S. draws down its forces.

The joint session of parliament was expected to immediately debate the recommendations, but that was shelved after opposition leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said his party needed time to study them. He hinted the party could reject them, possibly causing more delays to U.S. hopes of a speedy resumption of ties. The issue is to be debated again on Monday.

The army, and to a lesser extent the civilian government, will ultimately decide whether to restore ties with the United States, but parliament could influence the decision. Analysts say placing the issue before lawmakers was to give the government and the army some political cover, so they could claim the support of the country before quietly reopening the supply routes.

"If drone attacks really are stopped and the national sovereignty is really ensured we can approve the recommendations," said opposition leader Khan. "Otherwise we are not ready to give any authority to this government to take decisions under the garb of parliament."

The recommendations said any new agreement on the supply lines should have a clause stipulating their closure in the event that Pakistan's sovereignty is violated by the U.S. or NATO, but didn't explicitly mention drone strikes in this regard.

The demand for an "unconditional apology" for the November attacks could also complicate the rebuilding of ties.

Washington has expressed regret for the border incident, but avoided formally saying sorry. U.S. officials were reportedly preparing to apologize last month, but had to postpone the plan after U.S. soldiers burnt copies of the Quran in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama apologized for that, earning him criticism from political opponents. He also apologized after an American soldier last week allegedly killed 16 Afghan villagers in a shooting spree.

The drone strikes are unpopular among Pakistanis and have long been publicly opposed by the Pakistani army and government, which maintain they fan support for militancy even as they kill insurgents also targeting Islamabad. But their frequency has dropped significantly in recent months, which makes them less politically charged.

The issue is muddied, however, by the fact that in private the army has approved at least some of the strikes, and provided intelligence on them, raising questions over whether they technically violate the sovereignty of the country. American officials rarely talk about the program in public.

"This is neither the first time, not will it be last, that the parliament has demanded an end to drone strikes," said Samina Ahmed, who heads the International Crisis Group in Pakistan. "This is more performance than substance. The military is still the key actor as far as security policy is concerned."

She said the security establishment had "no expectation" that the drone strikes would end.

Privately U.S. officials have said the drone strikes are key to the war against al-Qaida and the Taliban, and Washington is unlikely to permanently stop them.

Pakistan, which had supported the Afghan Taliban, sided with the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, earning it billions of dollars and ending its international isolation. It needs American assistance to keep its economy afloat, while the U.S. needs its help in reaching a deal with the Afghan Taliban, whose leaders are believed to be on its soil and subject to the influence of its security forces.

Gen. James Mattis, commander of U.S. Central Command, said earlier this month he expected to visit Pakistan in mid-to-late March to talk with leaders about reopening the supply routes. His would be the first trip by a U.S. military official since the airstrikes, and will be taken as a high-level sign that Pakistan's army leadership wants to re-engage.

___

Associated Press writer Chris Brummitt contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Major temblor shakes Mexico, no early damage reports

MEXICO CITY (AP) - A strong 7.6-magnitude earthquake hit Mexico on Tuesday, shaking central and southern parts of the country and swaying buildings in Mexico City. Plaster fell from ceilings and windows broke in the center of the capital, but the president said there were no immediate reports of major damage.

The initial quake in Guerrero state was followed by a less powerful, magnitude-5.1 aftershock that also was felt in the capital.

Frightened workers and residents poured into the streets of the capital just minutes after noon local time (18:02 GMT). Telephone service was down in the city and throughout the area where the quake was felt.

"I have problems with pressure, I felt I was going to faint," said Rosa Maria Lopez Velazquez, 62, outside a mall in Mexico City.

The quake was felt strongly in southern Guerrero state, where the epicenter was located about 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the city of Ometepec. Neighboring Oaxaca state also shook heavily, including two aftershocks.

"It was very strong, but we didn't see anything fall," said Irma Ortiz, who runs a guesthouse in Oaxaca. She said their telephones are down, and that the quake shook them side-to-side.

The U.S. Geological Survey set the intensity of the first quake at 7.6 and said the epicenter was 11 miles underground. The survey set the aftershock at 5.1.

Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard's Twitter account said the water system and other "strategic services" were not experiencing problems.

Groups of women hugged and cried at Mexico City's Angel of Independence monument, where hundreds of people evacuated from office buildings said they never had felt such a strong earthquake. Others typed ferociously on their Blackberries.

Samantha Rodriguez, a 37-year old environmental consultant, was evacuated from the 11th floor on the Angel Tower office building.

"I thought it was going to pass rapidly but the walls began to thunder and we decided to get out," she said.

Mexico City's airport was closed for a short time but there was no damage to runways and operations were returning to normal.

In Oaxaca, Sylvia Valencia was teaching Spanish to five adult students at the Vinigulaza language school when the earthquake hit.

"Some of us sat down, others ran out," she said. "It was hard, it was strong and it was long."

After the shaking stopped, however, she said they found no damage, not in their own classrooms, nor outside in the historical center of the city, so they went back to class.

Celia Galicia, who works at the U.S. consular office in Oaxaca, had just flown in from Mexico City when it hit.

 

She said there was panic in the airport, and a dash for the doors. But she said that she saw no damage at the airport and no one was hurt. She says one building in downtown Oaxaca appears to be damaged and has been evacuated.

She added that they've had two strong aftershocks, and that in downtown Oaxaca most people are out on the street at this point.

"It started shaking badly," she said.



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