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New Lux Hotel Underground

  • Surrounding cliffs will be given over to bungee jumping and rockclimbing.Shanghai Shimao Property Group/ Atkins

  • The InterContinental Shimao Wonderland is expected to open in late 2014 or early 2015.Shanghai Shimao Property Group/ Atkins

  • A large-scale theme park is planned as part of the wonderland complex.Shanghai Shimao Property Group/ Atkins

  • The Intercontinental Shimao Shanghai WonderlandShanghai Shimao Property Group/ Atkins

Would you spend upwards of $300 to stay in a hotel resort more than 300 feet below the Earth's surface?

Construction began last month on Shanghai's first “groundscraper”, soon to be the InterContinental Shimao Shanghai Wonderland, a 19-story, 380-room luxury hotel and theme park, reports Smart Planet.

The building, being built in an abandoned quarry at an expected cost of some $555 million, is an engineering feat designed by U.K.-based engineering firm Atkins, the company behind the Burj Al Arab hotel in Dubai.  According to the developers, the hotel will be grafted onto the side of the quarry, where three floors will be resting above ground on the crater, and another 16 floors will be underground. A massive 190-feet tall glass curtain wall that is designed to mimic a waterfall will cascade down the rockface, reports CNN. 

Below the surface the resort will have restaurants, luxury hotel rooms, spa services, an underwater restaurant, an athletic complex for water sports and a 32-feet deep aquarium.

Above ground, guests will be able to use the quarry's cliffs for extreme sports like bungee jumping and rock climbing.

The hotel is due to open in late 2014 or early 2015, and rooms is expected to run at a rate of $320 per night.



Article from FOXNEWS


Tyler: \'You Made Love Singing\'

With just six weeks left until the “American Idol” finale, the seven remaining contestants battled each other Wednesday night singing songs from the very recent past.

Anything after 2010 was fair game. 

Louisiana native Joshua Ledet earned the night's only standing ovation from the judges when he belted out an energetic version of Bruno Mars' "Runaway Baby.”

“You can sell a song like a work of art,” raved judge Steven Tyler. “Every time you sing, you sell itâ€"that's ‘cause your voice is so good.”

Ledet, who turned 20 on April 9, also received a very special greeting from his favorite “Idol,” season three winner Fantasia Barrino.

“From Fantasia to Mantasia, happy birthday,” cooed Barrino via satellite.

Elise Testone got some words of encouragement from movie star Jason Segel who confessed, “I'm a giant fan of yoursâ€"I watch the show every week, and I'm sitting at home rooting for you. I think you're amazing.”

“The Five Year Engagement” star even suggested that he hoped to meet Testone in person one day, adding, “I'll talk to you soon, Elise!”

Segel's flirty pep talk must have helped, because Testone, who landed in the bottom three last week, delivered a rousing rendition of Lady Gaga's “You and I.”

“America, Elise is back,” praised judge Randy Jackson. “You needed a moment, I think you got one tonight.” 

Sharp-shootin' Mississippian Skylar Laine opened the show with Kellie Pickler's “Didn't You Know How Much I Loved You,” displaying her talent for playing guitar, along with her strong vocals.

“You could have a hit with a song like that,” said Jackson. “That was crazy hot and crazy good.”

Laine's maybe-paramour Colton Dixon also impressed the judges with a haunting version of Skylar Grey's “Love the Way You Lie,” made popular by Eminem and Rihanna.

“You sang so many different types of artists, but it's always very Colton when you do it,” said judge Jennifer Lopez. “It's the mark of a real artist.”

“You just made love singing to each other”

- Steven Tyler

Dixon and Laine (who, it should be noted, both vehemently deny any romantic involvement) also paired up for a duet, singing “Don't You Want to Stay,” by Kelly Clarkson and Jason Aldean.

“You just made love singing to each other,” Tyler told a mortified Dixon and Laine. “So it don't much matter now anymore anyway.”

Jessica Sanchez, who can count this week's mentor, R&B star Akon, as a fan, sang a passionate version of Jazmine Sullivan's “Stuttering.”

“You slay it every time,” said Tyler. “Not only do you have the nerve to sing that song with such a beautiful melody, you have the nerve to wear Jennifer's shoes.”

Looking down at her $1,595 Christian Louboutin asteroid spike-toe pumps, Lopez laughed and said, “She's got good taste, what do you want.”

Once again, Hollie Cavanaugh didn't quite hit the right notes with the judges, failing to impress with Pink's “Perfect.”

“It wasn't perfect, but it's a lot better than where you were last week,” Jackson damned with faint praise.

Phillip Phillips, whose “Idol” fame has driven up the prices at his family's pawn shop in Georgia (a stuffed turkey is now reportedly fetching $2500), underwhelmed with his rendition of Maroon 5's “Give a Little More.”

“I've seen this performance now a couple of times,” lamented Lopez. “It wasn't everything that I know you can give us.”

Up next: James Durbin and Jennifer Hudson “come home to ‘Idol'” and one of the contestants faces elimination.



Article from FOXNEWS


Did Spark Cause GM Lab Fire?

General Motors Co. said Wednesday that a lithium-ion battery undergoing tests at a Warren, Mich., research center exploded, sending an employee to the hospital.

The battery exploded at about 9:00am local time Wednesday at GM's Warren Technical Center, where the auto maker designs and develops new vehicles, a company spokesman said. Emergency personnel examined five employees on the scene and transported one to a local hospital, he said.

The explosion is the latest glitch in the auto industry's efforts to bring electric vehicles to market. GM's battery-powered Volt and Nissan Motor's Leaf had disappointing sales in their first year and several start-up companies producing batteries for electric cars have struggled.

Warren Mayor Jim Fouts said in an interview the explosion inside the lab blew out three of the building's exterior windows and an eight-inch-thick (20cm) door. The building will likely need extensive renovations, he said. "They had extreme testing going on," Fouts said.

GM spokesman Greg Martin said the damage was confined to the lab, which has windows and doors designed to give way in a blast. GM and the city's fire department are investigating.

The GM employee taken to the hospital was listed in stable condition with a suspected concussion and chemical burns, according to another city official.

The battery involved in Wednesday's incident was being developed for all-electric cars, including a coming line of Spark subcompacts, and is made by A123 Systems Inc., people familiar with the matter said. An official from A123 wasn't available for comment.

Read: Chevy Spark mini car priced at $12,995

A123 last month said it would recall defective battery packs developed for auto makers that were made at its Livonia, Mich., plant. A flaw in the manufacturing process led to defective packs that could cause them to fail, the company then said.

A123, which is owned in part by General Electric Co., is one of several battery companies that built production facilities with aid from the US government. A123 received $249 million in federal grants to build battery facilities.



Article from FOXNEWS


Worst Stage Parents Wanted

Hollywood casting firm Doron Ofir Casting is looking for the next Kris Jenner or Tina Knowles to star in the forthcoming reality series “Momagers,” Fox411.com's Pop Tarts column has exclusively learned. 

The show is centered on mothers who think they have “been blessed with the most talented kid in the world. Music, sports, dancing or acting.”

“From your child's first steps and first words, you recognized their star potential. You know them better than anyone and no one will ever be more committed to their success than you,” reads the casting notice. “Are you putting your life on hold to get theirs on track? Are you juggling other clients while trying to keep your kid a priority? This brand new documentary series will get to know the true stories behind the future faces of entertainment, and the moms who will do whatever it takes to earn Top Billing for their kids.”

The new show follows reality series like “Dance Moms” and “Toddlers & Tiaras,” whose popularity is due in large part to pushy Hollywood stage parents whose sole goal in life is getting their kids into show business. 

“There are no less than four reality shows in development about stage moms. Two of them are being produced by stage moms themselves,” Anne Henry, co-founder of BizParentz, a non-profit corporation providing education and support to parents and children engaged in the entertainment industry. “We're very disappointed in this trend as we believe that reality TV and professional acting are two separate industries and of course, we are offended by the behavior of extreme stage moms.”

"Maybe the end point would be ‘American Fetus'"

- Casting pro Alan Shankman

And while shocking episodes have already aired featuring a toddler dressed as a hooker on “Toddlers & Tiaras” and girls giving the illusion of toplessness on “Dance Moms,” the horrors of real-life Hollywood stage parents can be “less scripted” and more subtle, industry vets say.

“Parents pay pseudo ‘publicists' to get their kids on red carpets just to have a picture taken. Parents come to L.A. and live off their kids' income. Parents create ‘fan pages' and other online identities for their child and are ‘okay' with pedophiles who virtually follow them because they are ‘just fans',” Henry continued. “Evil stage moms and dads tend to do most of their damage online these days.”

Henry said it has become commonplace for parents to create online profiles, social media accounts, YouTube channels and fan pages on their child's behalf, and that can lead into a disturbing, unrelenting obsession with fame and fortune.

“People believe that it is actually possible to ‘build a fan base' and ‘get discovered,'” she said. “This mentality breeds ugly stage mom behavior; because the parents believe they can control their child's success if they are aggressive enough.”

Paul Petersen, a former actor who founded the non-profit organization A Minor Consideration to support child stars through legislation, family education, and personal intervention, said the reality television explosion has given parents a license to exploit their children.

“[That] stage parents are suddenly being promoted and are the recipients of some notoriety is bad enough. They are using tactics that are inexcusable,” he said, adding that he is deeply dismayed when parents dress their children and allow them to go for sexualized roles in the quest for success. “Parents who bend the rules make their children available for emotionally charged and sexually charged projects need to be held to account.”

Theatrical agent and co-founder of the online casting service GotCast.com, Alec Shankman, said he is frequently approached by parents seeking representation for a child that is only a few weeks old -- or not even born yet! Other industry insiders said parents change kids' names before they can even walk to be more “showbiz appropriate,” and while lining up for an audition, mothers are often painting their toddlers' faces with makeup and curling their hair so they can look “the prettiest.” 

Some casting agents are also unnerved by the idea that many parents home-school their young ones not for religious reasons, but to give them more time to audition and seek stardom.

Former casting director and acting coach Mirren Lee was appalled to learn that entire temporary accommodation apartment buildings in Burbank -- home to several studios including ABC, Disney and Warner Bros. -- are booked solid by parents during pilot season, with the pressure of kids to “make it” due to the financial investment being made “for them.” 

This kind of excessive pressure can have devastating consequence for both the children and parents involved.

“I've seen parents put so much pressure on their children that the kids develop major anxiety disorders and the parents are riddled with depression when the kids don't succeed to the level they desire. It can have severe implications on that child's mental health in both their childhood years and their adult life,” explained Dr. Reef Karim, a leading Los Angeles-based psychiatrist.

Heather Broeker, Director of Marketing for ChildrenInFilm.com, a casting and information resource for young actors, said the organization has had to speak to parents crossing the line.

“It becomes shocking when they seem to put the desire for fame and fortune above that of the needs of their child," she said. "Parents who spent their life savings to give this industry a try, without first having done their homework, simply because a stranger told them ‘their kid should be on TV,' often get wrapped in to the drama that causes them to act in a shocking manner."

So how low can shows about stage parents go?

“So long as they attract an audience, there is no end in sight," Shankman said. "Perhaps we'll see MTV ‘Real Cribs' or “American Infant.' Maybe the end point would be ‘American Fetus.'”



Article from FOXNEWS


Kids Watched by Clever Cams

Gun-toting students, bullies, drug dealers and even tornados are just a few of the threats children may face these days at school -- leading some districts to turn to a new breed of ultrasmart surveillance cameras that run iPhone-style apps, can read license plates, and even talk back to misbehaving students.

During the tornadoes that touched down in Southern Indiana on March 2, video cameras installed at the West Clark Community schools were so resilient that they remained installed and operating in the gym and parking lot while the tornado passed through -- providing the unique documentation of the incident seen above.

It's not their strength but their smarts that really impress, however.

“We're moving closer to the CSI side and running far away from your father's old tube TV set-quality from the 70s and 80s,” Fredrik Nilsson general manager of video camera maker AXIS, told FoxNews.com.

AXIS invented networked cameras 15 years ago and is known for top-of-the-line surveillance cameras for defense and security purposes, with modern devices far removed from the black and white footage of the analog Stone Age.

Schools have been keen to leverage the latest in surveillance technology, arguing the benefits of these clever cameras outweigh any privacy concerns.

In fact, schools are far ahead of the rest of the country: Approximately 75 percent of new video cameras installed last year in the U.S. were analog; about 50 percent of those added to schools are digital models with built in Internet connections, pixel-perfect pictures, the ability to record heat signatures and more.

Oh, and there's an app for that, as well.

The AXIS ARTPEC chip embedded in some of the company's cameras lets software developers create applications and analytics to run inside the camera itself -- making the company's cameras the iPhones of the surveillance world.

High-quality IP video footage, whether of a natural threat like a tornado or a student shooter, can be a critical tool after threat incidents to review how the school responded.

And in the event of a Columbine-type incident, schools can enable remote access to live video for faculty and law enforcement, allowing them to know the location and movement of a shooter as well as the location and status of victims.

The recent release of the film Bully has focused attention on intimidation of students. In such cases, analog cameras can capture only blocky images that make it difficult to identify culprits. School staff can now view digital camera footage on an HDTV to not only identify faces, but clothing and license plates as well.

A camera can then identify students who ought to be in class and alert an authority, who can use the built in speaker to talk to that student -- and order him back to class.

The Connetquot Central School District of Islip, N.Y., deployed a district-wide surveillance system in 2010 to centrally monitor all 11 schools, offering Suffolk County Police Department the ability to temporarily access the cameras. Connetquot reported a 60 percent reduction in vandalism after installing its system.

Utica Community Schools, the second largest district in Michigan, are putting footage in real time on screens in the hallway so that students can see they are being filmed -- a deterrent to nefarious behavior.

The University of Texas at San Antonio uses cameras that capture license plates; the school reports greatly reduced incidence of theft on campus, as well as improved safety.

The Chippewa Valley Schools in Detroit leverage modern video system so teachers can focus on teaching rather than incident investigation. Principals and assistant principals can watch multiple cameras simultaneously from their desktop computers -- and do more with their limited resources than patrolling hallways.

To tackle theft in school, some districts are even utilizing technology similar to that used for terrorist threats, which can pinpoint a suspicious package representing a potential bomb threat.

Using Smart Search Video Management System software, schools like Wyoming's Cody High School solve theft in minutes by drawing a virtual box on the screen around say, a laptop that was stolen. The system will detect when it disappeared by recognizing when the pixels change in the scene.

Good coverage for an average school could involve 100 to 250 cameras with typical fixed IP cameras used by schools can range from $400 to $1000 and for movable PTZs from $1000-$2500. HDTV PTZs with digital zoom can run about $600.

In all, a surveillance video system for a school can range from $100,000 to $500,000, but often school systems can be the result of government grants.

The initial investment for higher resolution, feature-rich IP-based surveillance system may be higher, but the results can provide a net savings â€" and either way, can a dollar amount be put on keeping children safe?

Ballet dancer turned defense specialist Allison Barrie has travelled around the world covering the military, terrorism, weapons advancements and life on the front line. You can reach her at wargames@foxnews.com or follow her on Twitter @Allison_Barrie



Article from FOXNEWS


Axl\'s Rambling Rock Hall Snub

Axl Rose declined induction into the Hall of Fame with a rambling letter addressed to the Hall, his former band members, his current band members, his fans, enemies, and seemingly anyone else who might be passing by.

Welcome to his jungle ... of words.

----

The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, Guns N' Roses Fans and Whom It May Concern,

When the nominations for the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame were first announced I had mixed emotions but, in an effort to be positive, wanting to make the most of things for the fans and with their enthusiasm, I was honored, excited and hoped that somehow this would be a good thing. Of course I realized as things stood, if Guns N' Roses were to be inducted it'd be somewhat of a complicated or awkward situation.

Since then we've listened to fans, talked with members of the board of the Hall Of Fame, communicated with and read various public comments and jabs from former members of Guns N' Roses, had discussions with the president of the Hall Of Fame, read various press (some legit, some contrived) and read other artists' comments weighing in publicly on Guns and the Hall with their thoughts.

Under the circumstances I feel we've been polite, courteous, and open to an amicable solution in our efforts to work something out. Taking into consideration the history of Guns N' Roses, those who plan to attend along with those the Hall for reasons of their own, have chosen to include in “our” induction (that for the record are decisions I don't agree with, support or feel the Hall has any right to make), and how (albeit no easy task) those involved with the Hall have handled things… no offense meant to anyone but the Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony doesn't appear to be somewhere I'm actually wanted or respected.

For the record, I would not begrudge anyone from Guns their accomplishments or recognition for such. Neither I or anyone in my camp has made any requests or demands of the Hall Of Fame. It's their show not mine.

I respectfully decline my induction as a member of Guns N' Roses to the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame

- Axl Rose

That said, I won't be attending The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Induction 2012 Ceremony and I respectfully decline my induction as a member of Guns N' Roses to the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.

I strongly request that I not be inducted in absentia and please know that no one is authorized nor may anyone be permitted to accept any induction for me or speak on my behalf. Neither former members, label representatives nor the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame should imply whether directly, indirectly or by omission that I am included in any purported induction of “Guns N' Roses”.

This decision is personal. This letter is to help clarify things from my and my camp's perspective. Neither is meant to offend, attack or condemn. Though unfortunately I'm sure there will be those who take offense (God knows how long I'll have to contend with the fallout), I certainly don't intend to disappoint anyone, especially the fans, with this decision. Since the announcement of the nomination we've actively sought out a solution to what, with all things considered, appears to be a no win, at least for me, “damned if I do, damned if I don't” scenario all the way around.

In regard to a reunion of any kind of either the Appetite or Illusion lineups, I've publicly made myself more than clear. Nothing's changed.

The only reason, at this point, under the circumstances, in my opinion whether under the guise of "for the fans" or whatever justification of the moment, for anyone to continue to ask, suggest or demand a reunion are misguided attempts to distract from our efforts with our current lineup of myself, Dizzy Reed, Tommy Stinson, Frank Ferrer, Richard Fortus, Chris Pitman, Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal and DJ Ashba.

Izzy came out with us a few times back in '06 and I invited him to join us at our LA Forum show last year. Steven was at our show at the Hard Rock, later in '06 in Las Vegas, where I invited him to our after-party and was rewarded with his subsequent interviews filled with reunion lies. Lesson learned. Duff joined us in 2010 and again in '11 along with his band, Loaded, opening in Seattle and Vancouver. For me, with the exception of Izzy or Duff joining us on stage if they were so inclined somewhere in the future for a song or two, that's enough.

There's a seemingly endless amount of revisionism and fantasies out there for the sake of self-promotion and business opportunities masking the actual realities. Until every single one of those generating from or originating with the earlier lineups has been brought out in the light, there isn't room to consider a conversation let alone a reunion.

Maybe if it were you it'd be different. Maybe you'd do it for this reason or that. Peace, whatever. I love our band now. We're there for each other when the going get's rough. We love our fans and work to give them every ounce of energy and heart we can.

So let sleeping dogs lie or lying dogs sleep or whatever. Time to move on. People get divorced. Life doesn't owe you your own personal happy ending especially at another's, or in this case several others', expense.

But hey if ya gotta then maybe we can get the "no show, grandstanding, publicity stunt, disrespectful, he doesn't care about the fans" crap out of the way as quickly as we can and let's move on. No one's taking the ball and going home. Don't get it twisted. For more than a decade and a half we've endured the double standards, the greed of this industry and the ever present seemingly limitless supply of wannabes and unscrupulous, irresponsible media types. Not to imply anything in this particular circumstance, but from my perspective in regard to both the Hall and a reunion, the ball's never been in our court.

In closing, regardless of this decision and as hard to believe or as ironic as it may seem, I'd like to sincerely thank the board for their nomination and their votes for Guns' induction. More importantly I'd like to thank the fans for being there over the years, making any success we've had possible and for enjoying and supporting Guns N' Roses music.

I wish the Hall a great show, congratulations to all the other artists being inducted and to our fans we look forward to seeing you on tour!!

Sincerely,

Axl Rose

P.S. RIP Armand, Long Live ABC III



Article from FOXNEWS


Iranian split ahead of nuke negotiations with West

  • Feb. 1, 2012: In this photo released by the official website of the Iranian President's office, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, center, arrives at the parliament to deliver the new year's budget, as he is surrounded by lawmakers, in Tehran, Iran.AP

Internal divisions in Iran's government are hampering its effort to form a united front in the coming negotiations with the West over the Islamic Republic's nuclear program.

Analysts say that could make it harder for Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to strike a compromise to avoid the appearance of weakness, as the West demands concessions to the program.

The talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany are scheduled to take place in Istanbul on Saturday. The Western nations are expected to demand that Iran suspend or significantly reduce its uranium enrichment activities and give UN inspectors unlimited access to its nuclear sites.

"The international community is united, Iran is isolated, the way to change that dynamic is for Iran to live up to its international obligations and to forsake its nuclear weapons ambitions," White House press secretary Jay Carney said Wednesday.

In its negotiations with the West, Iran has long followed a strategy that its officials call the "grand policy" bargaining, meaning the country puts up a united front against the West and decisions on its nuclear program rise above petty domestic rivalries.

To read more on this story, see The Wall Street Journal article here.



Article from FOXNEWS


Army opens lab to research hybrid technology

  • Captain Robert Shaw plugs a cord into this Fuel Efficient Demonstrator vehicle (FED) named, "BRAVO" to power electronics in the grand-opening tent, Wednesday, April 11, 2012 in Warren, Mich. The U.S. Army unveiled a new laboratory Wednesday that can simulate Afghanistan's desert heat and Antarctica's extreme cold in an effort to discover how to save energy and make combat vehicles fuel-efficient.AP

A new Ground Systems Power and Energy Lab opening in Warren will help the U.S Army of tomorrow become a more fuel efficient fighting machine.

A ribbon cutting ceremony was held Wednesday at the new Army laboratory at TARDEC where technology such as fuel cells and hybrid systems for combat vehicles will be developed.

Federal officials say the facility at the Detroit Arsenal is unique in that it brings together a number of high-technology testing capabilities in a single facility that can test vehicle components, systems and full vehicles, which will enable TARDEC to increase its collaboration with the Department of Energy, industry and academia.

Among it's features, the lab can simulate the desert heat of Afghanistan and a bone-chilling day in Antarctica and can transition between the extremes in temperatures in a matter of minutes.

According to a release, Senator Carl Levin, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, secured $18.5 million in the fiscal year 2008 Military Construction Appropriations bill for the construction of the GSPEL and an additional $6 million in the defense appropriations bill to help outfit GSPEL with the latest laboratory equipment.

The new lab also received $15 million in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

Read more from MyFoxDetroit



Article from FOXNEWS


12-year-old student struck, killed by school bus

The Tennessee Highway Patrol says an East Tennessee child was killed when he was struck and killed by a school bus.

The Greeneville Sun reported the incident occurred Thursday morning on Holder Road and said emergency personnel confirmed one child had been killed.

Lt. Jarrett Ramsey of the Fall Branch district of the THP said the 12-year-old boy was struck as the bus was making its first pickup of the day at around 6:40 a.m. Ramsey said the boy's sibling had already boarded the bus.

Ramsey said boy, whose name was not immediately released, was a student at Chuckey-Doak Middle School in Greene County. Ramsey said he did not know whether any charges would be filed, but the THP's Criminal Investigation Division was assisting with the investigation.



Article from FOXNEWS


Weekly jobless claims rise 13,000, to 380,000

More people sought unemployment benefits last week, pushing the number of applicants to the highest level in two months.

The Labor Department said Thursday that weekly unemployment benefit applications jumped 13,000 to a seasonally adjusted 380,000. The previous week's figures were also revised higher. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, rose to 368,500.

After steadily declining since last fall, applications have leveled off in recent weeks. The four-week average is essentially unchanged over the past two months.

When applications fall below 375,000, it generally suggests that hiring will be strong enough to lower the unemployment rate.

The figures come after a disappointing employment report last week that showed that employers added only 120,000 jobs in March, half the average pace in the preceding three months. But many economists downplayed the weak March figures, noting that a warmer winter may have led to some earlier hiring in January and February.

The economy has added an average of 212,000 jobs per month in the January-March quarter, well ahead of last year's pace. And the unemployment rate has fallen from 9.1 percent in August to 8.2 percent in March. One factor is that some people have given up looking for work. People who are out of work but not looking for jobs aren't counted as unemployed.

Economists note that applications for unemployment aid are at a much lower level than they were last year, suggesting that March's weak numbers might have been a temporary lull.

A similar message resonated from a Federal Reserve survey released Wednesday. All of the Fed's 12 bank districts reported that the economy grew steadily from mid-February through April 2. And hiring was stable or increased in most of the country during that time.

Additional hiring has boosted consumer confidence and spurred more spending. Consumer spending jumped in February by the most in seven months, the government said last month. And many large retail chains have reported healthy sales for March.

Higher auto sales and solid business demand for machinery and other equipment is boosting factory output. The manufacturing sector expanded in March at a faster pace than the previous month, according to a private survey.

The economy grew at an annual rate of just 3 percent in the October-December quarter. Most economists are predicting that growth slowed in the January-March quarter to an annual rate of under 2.5 percent.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has cautioned that the economy is growing too slowly to maintain recent declines in the unemployment rate.

Bernanke has said growth normally needs to be closer to 4 percent for a full year to lower the unemployment rate by a full percentage point. He has warned that hiring is likely to slow until consumers and businesses spend more, fueling faster growth.

Greater hiring hasn't led to larger paychecks. Wages aren't rising fast enough to keep up with inflation. Rising gas prices are also weighing on consumers' ability to spend money on other goods and services. Europe's debt crisis has flared up again, as Spain and Italy have been forced in recent days to pay higher interest rates on their debts.



Article from FOXNEWS


Mexico rattled by another strong earthquake- Indonesian quakes blamed for 5 fatal heart attacks

A strong earthquake struck off the coast of Mexico on Thursday, waking up residents living near the Gulf of California, only hours after a separate temblor swayed tall buildings in Mexico City, causing evacuations.

Authorities said neither quake left major damage nor victims.

The U.S. Geological Survey reported a 6.9 magnitude quake hit the waters between the Baja peninsula and the northern state of Sonora at 12:15 a.m. local time.

Residents in the city of Hermosillo woke up as their beds swayed and their ceiling fans shook. Luis Enrique Cordova, director of emergency services in Sonora, said confused residents clogged the phone lines of the civil protection office in Hermosillo, the largest city and capital of the state, where some 700,000 people live. But Cordova said no major damages have been detected in the region.

"I was on my bed, leaning against the wall, and the fans kept moving non-stop, side to side," said Carlos Morales, a teacher in Hermosillo.

The temblor was centered 82 miles northeast of Guerrero Negro, and 133 miles west of Hermosillo, and it hit some 6.4 miles below the surface.

It follows a 6.4 magnitude quake which struck a sparsely populated area in the mountains of western Mexico on Wednesday, and caused multi-story buildings to sway more than 200 miles  away in Mexico City.

Wednesday's temblor was the latest in a series of strong shakes to hit Mexico City since a powerful 7.4-magnitude quake hit southern Mexico three weeks ago. But this was not an aftershock of that one, USGS geophysicist Dale Grant said.

Last month's big earthquake was felt strongly in the nation's capital, and it damaged hundreds of homes and killed at least two people near the border between Guerrero and Oaxaca states. Mexico's seismological service said that quake has been followed by close to 400 aftershocks, including one of magnitude 6.0.



Article from FOXNEWS


Florida rapist, murderer set to die by lethal injection

  • FILE: David Alan GoreAP Photo/Florida Department of Corrections

David Alan Gore was set to be executed Thursday nearly 29 years after murdering 17-year-old Lynn Elliott, whose attempted escape ended a string of rapes and murders that shook the quiet coastal town of Vero Beach.

In all, Gore killed four teenage girls and two women. Elliott's murder is the only one for which he's condemned. He was scheduled to die by lethal injection at 6 p.m. Thursday at Florida State Prison. It's a day her parents have been waiting for - they say living for - and one they many think should have come years ago considering there is no doubt he committed the crimes and he has shown no remorse for the killings.

"For us it's been a nightmare, because I just turned 81. I was beginning to think that I might die before he went," Carl Elliott, the girl's father said.

Jeanne Elliott almost did die. About two years ago she was in a coma and doctors told her son to begin making funeral arrangements. She suddenly began recovering and she said she believes it was because of her wish to see Gore die first.

On July 26, 1983, Gore and his cousin, Fred Waterfield picked up Lynn Elliott and her 14-year-old friend hitchhiking to Wabasso Beach north of Vero Beach. They took them at gunpoint to Gore's parents' house. Waterfield left and Gore raped the girls, who were bound in separate rooms. Elliott freed her legs and ran naked from the house, hands still tied behind her back. Gore, also naked, chased her, drug her back toward the house as she kicked and screamed and then shot her twice in the head. Police were called after a boy witnessed the murder. Gore was caught and the other girl rescued.

After his arrest, Gore admitted to killing three other girls and two women and led authorities to the bodies of four of the victims. He was sentenced to life in prison for the other murders. Even though there's no doubt he committed the crimes and even though he showed no remorse for the killings, Gore managed to stretch out his appeals and remain on death row 28 years after he was condemned. Gov. Rick Scott signed his death warrant after the Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers asked him about the case.

"I've been waiting for this day for years. I would've saved the state a lot of money if they let me. I'd do it myself and have no qualms about it," said Mike Daley, whose wife, Judy Kay Daley was killed by Gore in July 1981.

Daley was Gore's third victim. He disabled her car while she was alone on a secluded beach, then waited for her to try to start it. When she couldn't, he offered her a ride, raped her, killed her, then chopped up her body. More than two years later, he led authorities to where he buried her skull, hands and feet. He said he threw the rest of her body in a canal.

Five months earlier, Gore kidnapped, raped and murdered Ying Hua Ling, 17, and her mother, Hsiang Huang Ling, 48. Their bodies were stuffed in steel drums and buried in the orange grove where he worked.

Gore was arrested in July 1981 after being found in the back seat of a woman's car. He was shirtless and had a cocktail in one hand and a gun in the other. He also had handcuffs, rope and a police scanner. Gore was sentenced to five years in prison, though he was paroled and served only about a year-and-a-half. He soon began killing again.

In May 1983, Gore and Waterfield picked up two 14-year-old hitchhikers, Barbara Ann Byer and Angelica LaVallee. The girls were raped, killed and dismembered. While Gore says Waterfield was his partner throughout the killing spree, this was the only case that earned Waterfield a murder conviction. He is serving back-to-back life sentences.

Like Daley and the Elliotts, Nancy Byer also expressed frustration that it's taken this much time to execute the man that killed her daughter.

"It's gone on so long that it's just exhausting. I'm just so ready for it to be done. I'm ready for him to be gone. He has harmed so many people," said Byer, who will travel with her husband from their home in Ashville, N.C., to witness the execution. "You have to wonder why. Why drag it out like this?"

The Elliotts will also watch on the other side of a glass partition after Gore is strapped into a gurney and has IV needles stuck in his arm. They look forward to the moment.

"He looked over at us a couple of times in the trials," Carl Elliott said. "And if we can make eye contact with him in there, it would be great. I'd like to."



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Alleged car thief pocket-dials 911, discusses crimes

A Seattle-area man was busted for car theft after he mistakenly dialed 911 multiple times from inside vehicles he had stolen and discussed his plans for more thefts, Q13 Fox reports.

Police say 40-year-old Wesley Strom called 911 on accident and discussed his car thefts at least four times before they were finally able to track him down. 

In the initial call on March 14, Strom could be heard discussing with his passenger how he planned to steal more cars, indicating he had already stolen at least one. Police were able to track the location of the call but not the stolen vehicle.

When a gray Toyota 4-Runner was later reported stolen, police connected that car to the call.

On March 18, police say Strom accidentally called 911 again, twice. Lo and behold Strom discussed a 4-Runner he had allegedly stolen, now being used as means to steal other cars. 

Strom argued with his accomplice over their plans to steal rims, and suggested they steal rims, put them in the 4-Runner and drive off.

When police tracked the call, they found an abandoned Honda with missing custom rims, which had been reported stolen. Still, they were unable to find Strom.

Officers were finally able to track Strom down after his fourth call on April 1st. They say he admitted to stealing the 4-Runner, Honda and other cars, and remains in custody.

Officers say Strom admitted to them his phone was prone to mistakenly calling 911.

Click here for more on this story from Q13Fox.com.



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Syria\'s uprising hotspots quiet after truce deadline- EXCLUSIVE: Opposition offers alternate peace plan

  • April 6, 2012: In this citizen journalism image provided by the Local Coordination Committees in Syria, Syrians chant slogans during a demonstration in Idlib, north Syria.AP

A fragile cease-fire brokered by the U.N. took hold in Syria on Thursday with regime forces apparently halting widespread attacks on the opposition but still defying demands by international envoy Kofi Annan to pull troops back to barracks.

If the truce holds, it would be the first time the regime has observed an internationally brokered cease-fire since Bashar Assad's regime launched a brutal crackdown 13 months ago on mass protests calling for his ouster. The opposition called for peaceful protests on Friday to test the government's commitment to the accord.

There was deep skepticism that the regime would halt its fire for long, given that Assad has broken promises in the past. Also, the regime said Wednesday, on the eve of the truce deadline, that it reserves the right to respond to any aggression, potentially a pretext for breaking the truce.

Annan's plan calls for the deployment of international observers and talks on a political transition once a truce is in place. The initiative has broad international support, including from Assad allies Russia, China and Iran, and is widely seen as the last chance for diplomacy to end the violence. The increasingly militarized uprising has been veering toward an armed insurgency.

The West and its allies doubt the sincerity of the regime's pledges to comply with the truce plan, which calls on the Syrian government to allow peaceful protests. A prolonged cease-fire could threaten the regime by encouraging large numbers of protesters to flood the streets, as they did at the start of the revolt against the four-decade rule of the Assad clan. The government met those demonstrations with a harsh crackdown, and more than 9,000 people have died since, according to the U.N.

Burhan Ghalioun, head of the opposition Syrian National Council, urged Syrians to demonstrate peacefully on Friday. Protests are common on Fridays after Muslims crowd mosques for noon prayers.

"Tomorrow, like every Friday, the Syrian people are called to demonstrate even more and put the regime in front of its responsibilities -- put the international community in front of its responsibilities," he said.

Analyst Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha Center, said while the cease-fire is fragile, the apparent halt in government attacks suggests Assad's allies are pressuring him for the first time, after shielding him from international condemnation in the past. Annan has visited Russia, Iran and China in his attempt to get the broadest possible backing for the plan.

Annan is to brief the U.N. Security Council by video conference from Geneva on Thursday afternoon.

Both the government and the opposition have said they will abide by the truce, which began at 6 a.m. Thursday.

All the flashpoints of the uprising were reported quiet in the hours after the truce took hold. The central provinces of Hama and Homs, the northern regions of Idlib and Aleppo, the capital Damascus and its suburbs, as well as Daraa to the south and Deir el-Zour to the east were all calm, said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

However, troops, tanks and armored personnel carriers continued to patrol several opposition strongholds, including Damascus and the city of Homs, activists said.

"There have been no withdrawals from checkpoints but calm is prevailing in all areas in Syria," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Observatory.

Another activist group, the grassroots Local Coordination Committees, said regime forces carried out arrests in the Damascus suburb of Maadamiyah shortly after reinforcements entered the area. It also reported anti-regime protests at universities in the southern city of Daraa and the eastern city of Deir el-Zour, and a protest march in the northern village of Tamanaa.

The regime ignored a Tuesday deadline for withdrawing troops from population centers, prompting renewed demands by Annan that forces return to their barracks.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu demanded that the Syrian troops withdraw, saying that "keeping the cities under pressure is not meaningful."

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey could seek NATO's help in case the Syrian troops violate its borders again. Syrian forces opened fire across the Turkish border on Monday, killing two people in a Turkish refugee camp.

Assad apparently is unwilling to ease control over opposition areas for fear of widespread anti-government protests.

A major test could come on Friday. Since the outbreak of the protests in March 2011, thousands have taken to the streets every week after Friday noon prayers in the mosques.

The military crackdown over the past year succeeded in preventing protesters from recreating the fervor of Egypt's Tahrir Square, where hundreds of thousands of people camped out in a powerful show of dissent that drove longtime leader Hosni Mubarak from power.

The government denies that it is facing a popular uprising, claiming instead that terrorists are carrying out a foreign conspiracy to destroy Syria. In pledging Wednesday to observe the cease-fire, the government set a major condition, saying troops reserve the right to defend themselves if attacked.

Syrian troops have been on a major offensive since late January when they attacked rebel-held areas around the capital Damascus. During the first week of February, Assad's forces began a major campaign to retake the Baba Amr neighborhood in the city of Homs that fell in the hands of the regime in early March.

Since then, Assad's forces have been retaking major rebel-held areas including the city of Idlib as well as many towns around the country. Troops also now control much of the areas that border Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq making it more difficult for refugees to leave the country. Despite the regime gains, rebels still held some areas, including spots in the province of Homs, Hama, Daraa.

The White House cautioned Wednesday that the Assad regime has reneged on promises to stop the violence in the past.

"What is important to remember is that we judge the Assad's regime by its actions and not by their promises, because their promises have proven so frequently in the past to be empty," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters in Washington.

Western powers have pinned their hopes on Annan's plan, in part because they are running out of options. The U.N. has ruled out any military intervention of the type that helped bring down Libya's Muammar Qaddafi, and several rounds of sanctions and other attempts to isolate Assad have done little to stop the bloodshed.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar have called for arming the rebels, but even if they follow through there is no guarantee that such efforts could cripple Assad's well-armed regime.



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Motorcyclists face terrorism charges in Mexico over noisy exhausts

Being linked to a loud noise in Mexico could lead to terrorism charges.

This is a country, after all, traumatized by drug violence.

That is why a crowd in northern Mexico was sent into panicked stampede when the exhaust pipes of two motorcycles backfired, sounding a lot like gunshots. Now the two motorcyclists are facing terrorism charges.

It was the second time in less than a year that people have been charged in Mexico under terrorism statutes for spooking the populace in areas of the country hit by drug violence. Officials say state criminal codes often lack lesser but more appropriate charges to handle situations involving acts that may be irresponsible but are hardly criminal.

The two motorcyclists, Juan Ramon Munguia and Enrique Trevino Rívera, were leaving their workplace Saturday evening at a store near the main square of the northern city of San Luis Potosi, where an Easter week festival was being held.

The two got on their bikes and fired them up, and that is when the confusion began.

"There are two versions: They (the motorcyclists) say that is just where they usually warm up their engines," said San Luis Potosi state spokesman Juan Antonio Hernández. "But there are witnesses who say they purposely continued to rev their engines , even after people had started to panic."

Because the backfiring of the engines sounded like the popping of gunshots, hundreds of people in the main square who were celebrating a Holy Week event that involves the burning of paper-mache figures representing villains started to stampede out of the square, seeking cover.

But the streets were nearly blocked by vendor stalls selling traditional Mexican food, causing the crowd to pile up and resulting in some people getting trampled.

That, not the motorcycle engines, was the real problem, according to the state Human Rights Commission, which said it had launched an investigation into the arrests.

Celebrating the Cinco de Mayo That Made History

"There is possible blame that can be attributed to city authorities who allowed vendors to set up stands in the square without the appropriate controls, which prevented a rapid evacuation," the commission said in a statement Wednesday.

"The arrests and charges of terrorism lack any legal basis," according to the statement. "This commission has evidence that the two workers were leaving work and doing what they do every day, starting up a motorcycle they use as transport."

The agency also noted the two suspects said they had been beaten by police after their arrest.

It would all seem like a tempest in a teapot, if the two men weren't facing possible sentences of five to 20 years in prison if convicted. While that seems like harsh punishment for a noisy exhaust, Hernández said such irresponsible behavior is a real problem for states like San Luis Potosi, where drug-gang gunbattles have terrorized residents in recent years.

While the most serious injuries appear to have been bruises or blows from people falling or being stepped on in the crowd, Hernández said that "we were on the threshold of having a tragedy."

Crowds have been sent scrambling for cover at concerts, baseball and soccer games in Mexico when gunfire has broken out nearby in recent years. A grenade attack on an independence day celebration in 2008 killed eight people and wounded dozens in the main square of the Michoacan state capital, Morelia.

160 Thousand Businesses Flee Mexico

In San Luis Potosi, Hernández said, there have been tens of thousands of fake calls to emergency numbers and bomb threats to a local hospital over the last year.

State law defines terrorism as acts that "produce alarm, terror or fear in the population ... to disturb the public peace or try to undermine government authority."

It is not the first time such charges have been brought in Mexico. In September, two people in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz were charged with terrorism for posting on social networking sites unverified rumors of mass attacks by criminals on the local population.

Following a public outcry, those charges were dropped.

It was unclear whether the two suspects in San Luis Potosi had lawyers, but Claribel Guevara, who served as a defense attorney for the suspects in Veracruz, called the charges unwarranted and disappointing.

"This is even more sad and terrible, that instead of learning (from the Veracruz case), they are committing the same errors and the same violations of human rights," Guevara said, noting that one of her clients suffered health problems and been out of work for about six months following his arrest.

She believes that authorities, who have had limited success in battling drug gangs, instead focus on easier targets - common citizens whose acts sometimes cause panic.

"I think that what is really behind this is that they want to tell the public, 'Here, we are really investigating ... here is the proof that the police are doing their jobs."

After the Veracruz case became a freedom-of-speech issue, that state proposed changing its laws to create something closer to a charge of "disturbing the peace," so as to avoid having to use terrorism charges again.

Hernández said San Luis Potosi is hoping to do the same, but notes authorities are between a rock and a hard place.

"That's the problem, they ask you to apply the law, and when you apply the law, then all sorts of justifications and criticisms come up," he said.

Based on reporting by The Associated Press.

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North Korea shows no signs of delaying launch

North Korea's first chance at a rocket launch came and went Thursday with no word of a liftoff, but also with no sign that Pyongyang intends to call off what the U.S. and its allies consider an attempt to test long-range missile technology.

The launch window for what North Korea says is a observation satellite opened during a week aimed at celebrating Sunday's centennial of the birth of Kim Il Sung, the country's late founder.

Events also include high-level meetings where new leader Kim Jong Un has received at least three new titles to further cement his rule.

North Korea had told international organizations that its rocket launch would come between Thursday and Monday, between 7 a.m. and noon local time. That timeframe passed Thursday without liftoff.

North Korean space officials, who had taken foreign journalists to the launch control center Wednesday and said fueling was under way, did not comment on the timing of the launch beyond saying it would occur in the five-day window.

Poor weather made a Thursday launch unlikely, Philippine disaster managemment agency chief Benito Ramos said, citing an assessment passed on to him by the Philippine military, which is being briefed by U.S. and Japan counterparts. Wind in particular can scuttle rocket launches.

The United States, Japan, Britain and others say the launch would constitute a provocation and would violate U.N. Security Council resolutions banning North Korea from developing its nuclear and missile programs. Experts say the Unha-3 carrier is similar to the type of rocket that could be used to fire a missile mounted with a nuclear warhead to strike the U.S. or other targets.

North Korea denies that the launch is anything but a peaceful civilian bid to send a satellite into space. The Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite is designed to send back images and data that will be used for weather forecasts and agricultural surveys.

Pyongyang made two previous attempts to launch a satellite, in 1998 and 2009, but the U.S. and other outside observers say there is no evidence that either reached orbit. This week's planned launch came with more fanfare, with Pyongyang inviting a possibly unprecedented crowd of foreign journalists and other guests.

North Korea also is elevating Kim Jong Un, who has been firmly in power since his father, Kim Jong Il, died in Decemeber.

He was named first secretary of the ruling Workers' Party at a conference Wednesday, a new top title that allowed the party to grant Kim Jong Il the posthumous title of "eternal general secretary."

Though he already is considered supreme commander of the armed forces, Kim is expected to gain other new titles formalizing his position as "supreme leader," possibly including his father's title of chairman of the National Defense Commission.

Revised party rules now refer to Kim Jong Il as "suryong" -- a title meaning "leader" previously reserved for Kim Il Sung. During his rule, Kim Jong Il was referred to as "ryongdoja," another title meaning "leader."

The elevation of Kim Jong Il to his father's status provides a glimpse into how North Korea will handle the nation's second hereditary succession and indicates he will be honored much in the same way father Kim Il Sung was made "eternal president" following his 1994 death.

Footage aired on state TV on Thursday showed Kim Jong Un seated at the front of the conference with white statues of his grandfather and a new statue of his father in his trademark khaki work ensemble, one arm on his hip. On Mansu Hill, once the domain of a huge bronze statue of Kim Il Sung, a second covered statue awaits its unveiling.

Another key meeting, the Supreme People's Assembly session, opens Friday.

Workers' Party delegates also elected a new generation of younger officials to key posts, including Choe Ryong Hae, a new vice marshal who will join Kim on the powerful Presidium of the Central Committee's Political Bureau.

Ken Gause, a North Korea specialist at CNA, a U.S.-based research organization, said younger members also were promoted at the last party conference in September 2010, when Kim Jong Un was made vice chairman of the Central Military Commission.

"I expect in the near future, as Kim Jong Un begins to consolidate his power, we will see more," he said in an email interview.

Six other people were named to the Political Bureau of the Central Committee, including Jang Song Thaek, who is married to Kim Jong Il's sister, Kim Kyong Hui.



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Homeowner reportedly killed after failed burglary

  • A burglar stabbed a homeowner to death after being surprised during a break-in, the Douglas County Sheriff's Office said.MyFoxAtlanta.com

A burglar stabbed a homeowner to death after being surprised during a Wednesday break-in, Georgia authorities said, according to MyFoxAtlanta.com

The alleged burglar lived across the street from the victim and may be linked to other recent burglaries in the area, Lt. Bruce Ferguson of the Douglas County Sheriff's Office said.

Events of the killing are unclear, but police identify the suspect as David Baltodano, 27, who lived in the area for seven months after moving to the state from Miami, the report said. He is married with three children.

The victim, Don Peden, 62, has two sons who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and recently welcomed a grandchild, the report said.

Barry McGee, a neighbor, remembered Peden as a good man.

"He would've given anything to you if you just ask him. And to find out that the suspect lives right here; it's quite a shock," McGee said.

Please click here for more from MyFoxAtlanta.com



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Josh Powell\'s Washington home demolished

  • April 11: Demolition workers remove what is left of the fire-damaged home where Josh Powell killed himself and his two sons on Feb. 5, 2012. in Graham, Wash.AP

A demolition crew has removed the debris at the home in Washington state where Josh Powell killed himself and his two young sons in a fiery explosion in February.

A contractor, Greg Pelland of Pelland Enterprises, says he was told to remove every trace of the home in Graham on Wednesday, including the driveway.

Powell was married to Susan Cox Powell, who went missing from their home in December 2009 in West Valley, Utah. He returned to Puyallup with his sons but lost custody after his father, Steven Powell, was arrested for investigation of voyeurism and child pornography.

A social worker brought 5-year-old Braden and 7-year-old Charlie to Josh Powell's home for a visit when he slammed the door in her face and set the fire.



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Man abandons suitcase full of puppies in alley

  • April 11, 2012: Puppies play after being rescued from a suitcase.FOXToledo

An Ohio man was charged after he allegedly dumped a suitcase full of puppies and their mother in an alley, but forgot to take the luggage tags with his contact information off the suitcase, FOX Toledo reports.

Toledo police say a passer-by found the canvas suitcase with six 4-week-old puppies and their mother inside. The suitcase still had a luggage tag on it with the contact information for 53-year-old Howard Davis. The mother dog was also found to be registered to Davis.

"He gave us a story about the dog," said John Dinon of the Toledo Area Humane Society. "He had given the dog away to some friends in Michigan, and that the suitcase had been stolen."

Police didn't believe Davis' story, and charged him with two counts of animal abandonment.

The mother dog and her puppies, which are mixed-breed English Bulldogs, are now in the care of the Humane Society. 

"It was really a lucky break because they were sealed up pretty tight in that suitcase," Dinon said. "Imagine if it would have gone on for any length of time, they might have suffocated."

Click here for more on this story from FOXToledo.com. 



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Potential Afghan war plan would replace thousands of US troops with special ops teams

Adm. Bill McRaven, the head of U.S. special operations, is mapping out a potential Afghanistan war plan that would replace thousands of U.S. troops with small special operations teams paired with Afghans to help an inexperienced Afghan force withstand a Taliban onslaught as U.S. troops withdraw.

While the overall campaign would still be led by conventional military, the handfuls of special operators would become the leading force to help Afghans secure the large tracts of territory won in more than a decade of U.S. combat. They would give the Afghans practical advice on how to repel attacks, intelligence to help spot the enemy and communications to help call for U.S. air support if overwhelmed by a superior force.

If approved by the administration, the pared-down structure could become the enduring force that Afghan Defense Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak indicated Tuesday at the Pentagon that his country needs, possibly long after the U.S. drawdown date of 2014.

McRaven's proposal amounts to a slimmed-down counterinsurgency strategy aimed at protecting the Afghan population as well as hunting the Taliban and al-Qaida. It's not the counterterrorist plan advanced by Vice President Joe Biden, which would leave Afghan forces to fend for themselves while keeping U.S. special operators in protected bases from which they could hunt terrorists with minimum risk, according to a senior special operations official reached this week.

Thousands of U.S. troops could remain in harm's way well after the end of combat operations in 2014, tasked with helping Afghans protect territory won by U.S. forces.

The special operations proposal was sketched out at special operations headquarters in Tampa, Florida, in mid-February, with Central Command's Gen. James Mattis and overall Afghanistan war commander Gen. John Allen taking part, according to several high-level special operations officials and other U.S. officials involved in the war planning. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the proposal has not yet been presented to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta or the White House.

The Pentagon asked the top officials to draft proposals to present to the White House after NATO allies decide how large a force to keep in Afghanistan, according to a U.S. official familiar with the administration's deliberations.

Leaders of NATO nations are to meet May 20-21 in Chicago to discuss the war, among other issues.

The Pentagon by September will draw down the 23,000 troops that remain from the surge of 33,000 troops sent to Afghanistan in 2010 to buy time for the Afghan military and government to build both the numbers and expertise necessary to defend and govern themselves. Plans for the remaining 68,000 troops in Afghanistan are not yet complete, but most U.S. troops are scheduled to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014. Allen, the commander of forces in Afghanistan, has indicated he would like to keep as many troops on the ground for as long as possible. But with a solid majority of Americans now against the continued U.S. presence in Afghanistan and the sped-up departure of some of America's NATO allies from the war zone, the Obama administration is feeling some pressure toward a faster drawdown.

The McRaven plan could provide a way to shrink troop numbers quickly without leaving a security vacuum as U.S. troops depart, as has happened in Afghanistan before when NATO forces left an area.

"This is the least bad option," said retired Marine Col. T.X. Hammes, senior fellow at the National Defense University and longtime critic of the U.S. counterinsurgency strategy in Afghanistan. "It's probably the smartest thing we could do to keep the Afghan government functioning long enough to safely withdraw."

In the back-of-the-envelope version of the strategy, a couple thousand special operators, like Navy SEALs and the Army's Delta Force, would keep working with Afghan special forces to raid terrorist targets, the senior special operations official explained.

U.S. commanders would seek to keep the same number of defense intelligence troops in country to feed data to the smaller force and would also rely heavily on the CIA for intelligence, while an as-yet-undetermined number of conventional forces would provide everything from air to logistical support to keep all the special operations teams running, officials said. Some two-thirds of the roughly 6,000-strong special operations force would head to Afghanistan's rural towns and villages to advise inexperienced Afghan forces. This would include expanding the Village Stability Operations program in Afghan villages, in which special operators help what is essentially an Afghan government-backed armed neighborhood watch to keep the peace.

Reliance on the program already had forced it to grow so quickly, however, that U.S. commanders had put regular military forces into some of the sites. That is how Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, a regular soldier with no prior Afghanistan experience, ended up at one of the sites. He stands accused of killing 17 Afghan villagers in a shooting spree last month. U.S. officials say they will take more care with selecting who gets deployed into such sensitive and remote posts in the future.

The commanders building the new team also would draw heavily from the group known as "Afghan Pakistan hands," the 700-plus force of troops and civilians given months of extra language training in Pashtu, Dari or Urdu, the three main languages of Afghanistan and Pakistan, officials say. Around 50 of the "hands" are deployed to the Village Stability Operations to serve as translators, both of language and culture, between special operations troops, Afghan government officials and local villagers.

The insider knowledge of both the "hands" group and the special operators with multiple Afghan tours is intended to minimize the chance of further antagonizing Afghans and driving them to support the Taliban.

U.S.-Afghan relations have been strained in the past year, exacerbated by the killings of at least 16 U.S. and NATO troops by their Afghan allies in recent months, the inadvertent burnings of Qurans by U.S. troops in January and the shootings of the 17 Afghan villagers. Afghan President Hamid Karzai initially asked that the U.S. retreat from rural areas.



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\'Miracle\' baby found alive in morgue improving

  • Analia Bouter and her husband Fabian Veron pose for a photo outside the hospital in Resistencia, Argentina, Wednesday April 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Juan Pablo Faccioli)

A baby found alive in a coffin in an Argentine morgue nearly 12 hours after the girl had been declared dead is improving, but questions remain for the hospital responsible for the near-fatal mistake.

The mother, Analia Bouter, says she fell to her knees in shock after finding her baby alive in a coffin.

Bouter named her newborn Luz Milagros, or "Miracle Light." The tiny girl, born three months premature, was in critical but improving condition Wednesday in the same hospital where the staff pronounced her stillborn on April 3.

The case became public Tuesday when Rafael Sabatinelli, the deputy health minister in the northern province of Chaco, announced in a news conference that five medical professionals involved have been suspended pending an official investigation.

Bouter told the TeleNoticias TV channel in an interview Tuesday night that doctors gave her the death certificate just 20 minutes after the baby was born, and that she still hasn't received a birth certificate for her tiny girl.

'Stillborn' Baby Found Alive in Morgue

Bouter said the baby was quickly put in a coffin and taken to the morgue's refrigeration room. Twelve hours passed before she and her husband were able to open the coffin to say their last goodbyes.

She said that's when the baby trembled. She thought it was her imagination - then she realized the little girl was alive and dropped to her knees on the morgue floor in shock.

A morgue worker quickly picked up the girl and confirmed she was alive. Then, Bouter's brother grabbed the baby and ran to the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit, shouting for the doctors. The baby was so cold, Bouter said, that "it was like carrying a bottle of ice."

Bouter said she still has many unanswered questions about what happened. She said she had given birth normally to four other children and doesn't understand why doctors gave her general anesthesia this time. She said she also doesn't know why she wasn't allowed to see her baby before it was put into a coffin.

Palm-sized Baby Among the World's Smallest

She said she had to insist on going to the morgue's refrigeration room, where she brought her sister's cellphone to take a picture of the newborn for the funeral. Her husband struggled to open the lid, and then stepped aside to let her see inside.

"I moved the coverings aside and saw the tiny hand, with all five fingers, and I touched her hand and then uncovered her face," she said in the TeleNoticias interview. "That's where I heard a tiny little cry. I told myself I was imagining it - it was my imagination. And then I stepped back and saw her waking up. It was as if she was saying 'Mama, you came for me!'

"That was when I fell to my knees. My husband didn't know what to do. We were just crying and I laughed and cried, cries and laughter. We must have seemed crazy."

She says the family plans to sue the staff at Hospital Perrando in the city of Resistencia for malpractice, and still wants answers. But they've been focused for now on their little girl, whom she described as amazingly healthy despite being born after just 26 weeks of gestation. So far, she hasn't needed oxygen or other support commonly provided to preemies, she said.

"I'm a believer. All of this was a miracle from God," she told Telam, Argentina's state news agency.

Based on reporting by the Associated Press.

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Trip for GSA Employees or Taxpayer-Funded Vacay?

  • Federal officials gather in Honolulu in July 2011 for groundbreaking on a new FBI building.KHOU

The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee said Wednesday that five employees associated with the recently scandal-plagued Government Services Administration went to Hawaii for up to a week in 2011 to attend an hour-long groundbreaking on space leased by the federal government for the FBI.

Details of the incident surfaced in a transcript of an interview between the GSA Inspector General's Office and a GSA employee.

The employee indicated to the IG investigator that trip was not isolated and that there was another, longer junket scheduled for Hawaii this fall.

That one would be in Hilo, Hawaii for 10 days and would include groundbreakings for a federal building, a post office and perhaps a courthouse.

The transcript indicates that some of the GSA employees went snorkeling during their free time in the mornings.

Fox Business Exclusive: Taxpayers Paid for GSA Intern Conference

"And they were, I'm sure, working hard the whole time," the IG's office is quoted as saying.

"I doubt it," a GSA employee responded.

The House panel is one of two in the chamber that will hold hearings about the GSA scandal next week.

In October 2010, a GSA division spent more than $823,000 at an employee-training conference in Las Vegas. During the investigation and the release of the Inspector General's report this month, videos surfaced of employees do skits about the lavish spending.

Several top agency officials have resigned, including the agency chief, Martha Johnson.



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Zimmerman Eyes Bail inFirst Court Appearance

Neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who is set to face second-degree murder charges in the death of an unarmed black teen, will plead not guilty at his first court appearance scheduled for Thursday at 1:30 p.m., his lawyer said.

Speaking on NBC's "Today" show, Mark O'Mara, Zimmerman's new lawyer, said his client is stressed and very tired and hoping to get bail.

"He wants to be out (of jail) to be able to help with his defense, but overall he is doing ok," O'Mara said.

Florida special prosecutor announced Wednesday that she concluded that claims of self defense were not supported in the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Special prosecutor Angela Corey's announcement marked a turning point in the high-profile case, as weeks of outrage and speculation about Zimmerman's motives culminated in his arrest -- something that Martin's family and their supporters have argued for since the Feb. 26 shooting in a gated community in Sanford, Fla.

O'Mara said he is "hoping that the community will calm down" after the intense scrutiny of the case in the community and the media drove Zimmerman into hiding.

Zimmerman, 28, was booked Wednesday evening into the Seminole County Jail, and he could face a minimum of 25 years in prison or a maximum of life if convicted.

In announcing the arrest, Corey would not discuss how she reconciled the conflicting accounts of what happened or explain how she arrived at the charges, saying too much information had been made public already. But she made it clear she was not influenced by the uproar over the past six weeks.

"We do not prosecute by public pressure or by petition. We prosecute based on the facts on any given case as well as the laws of the state of Florida," Corey said.

A second-degree murder charge in Florida is typically charged when there is a fight or other confrontation that results in death and where there is no premeditated plan to kill someone.

Meanwhile, Martin's parents said charges against Zimmerman in the killing of their son would start the healing process, but they won't stop fighting until the shooter is convicted.

"We just wanted an arrest and we got it," Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, said.

"The question I would really like to ask him is, if he could look into Trayvon's eyes and see how innocent he was, would he have then pulled the trigger? Or would he have just let him go on home?" father, Tracy Martin, said.

The shooting brought outspoken demands from black leaders for Zimmerman arrest and set off a furious nationwide debate over race and self-defense that reached all the way to the White House. Martin was black. Zimmerman's father is white and his mother is Hispanic.

One of the biggest hurdles to Zimmerman's arrest over the past month was Florida's "stand your ground" law, which gives people wide leeway to use deadly force without having to retreat in the face of danger. The lack of an arrest had sparked outrage and rallies for justice in the Orlando suburb and across the country.

Many legal experts had expected the prosecutor to opt for the lesser charge of manslaughter, which usually carries 15 years behind bars and covers reckless or negligent killings, rather than second-degree murder, which involves a killing that results from a "depraved" disregard for human life.

The most severe homicide charge, first-degree murder, is subject to the death penalty in Florida and requires premeditation -- something that all sides agreed was not present in this case.

The confrontation took place in a gated community where Martin was staying with his father and his father's fiancee. In phone calls, Zimmerman told an emergency dispatcher that Martin looked suspicious, and he followed the teen despite the dispatcher's advice.

Zimmerman's father said that Martin threatened to kill his son and that Zimmerman suffered a broken nose. A video taken about 40 minutes after the shooting as Zimmerman arrived at the Sanford police station showed him walking unassisted without difficulty. There were no plainly visible bandages or blood on his clothing, but Zimmerman may have had a small wound on the back of his head.

On Tuesday, Zimmerman's lawyers announced they were withdrawing from the case because they hadn't heard from him since Sunday and didn't know where he was. They portrayed his mental state as fragile.

Zimmerman had been in hiding for weeks, his former lawyers, Craig Sonner and Hal Uhrig, said.

"He is largely alone. You might even say he is emotionally crippled by virtue of the pressure of this case," Uhrig said.

The U.S. Justice Department's civil rights division is conducting its own investigation. But federal authorities typically wait until a state prosecution is complete before deciding how to proceed.

The Associated Press and NewsCore contributed to this report.



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Body of Missing College Student Found in Reservoir

  • FILE: This photo shows Franco Garcia.myFOXboston

Seven weeks of searching and hoping for their son's safe return dissolved into grief Wednesday for the parents of a Boston College student who said police pulled his remains from the water of a reservoir near the campus.

Priests prayed over 21-year-old chemistry major Franco Garcia before authorities placed his body inside a van at the edge of Chestnut Hill Reservoir.

Garcia's father, Jose Garcia, weeping at his Newton home later Wednesday, said, "I found him. But not the way I want."

Garcia was last seen drinking with friends at a bar near campus early on Feb. 22. He had planned to stay the night at a friend's dorm but never showed. His car was parked where he left it, there was no new activity on his credit card and no one had used his cellphone since it pinged off a tower near the reservoir that night.

Divers had repeatedly scoured the depths of the reservoir, in between campus and the bar, since he disappeared. Authorities also used sonar to search the reservoir, but found no sign of Garcia there until a man walking his dog reported seeing a body in the water Wednesday.

Authorities said the body was found in an area of heavy weeds, which had limited visibility during their searches.

The family said police reported that the clothes on the body matched the description of what Garcia was wearing when he was last seen. Police also found the student's wallet in his pocket and recovered his eyeglasses, according to his family, though the district attorney said he couldn't confirm for certain that the body was Garcia's until authorities performed an autopsy.

Garcia's parents said police told them they will investigate whether their son died in an accident or if foul play was a factor. They said they hope authorities find that Garcia's death was an accident so they can have some closure as they grieve.

"This is not going to be over until we find the truth of what happened with him," Luzmila Garcia told The Associated Press. "The only thing I ask is to find the truth -- what happened with Franco?"

The night he disappeared, her son had gone to a popular hangout with fellow members of Boston College's Symphonic Band after a practice on campus. Inside the bar, he also met up with friends from high school. At closing time, his college friends couldn't find him. A close friend of Garcia's previously told the AP that Garcia was drunk "but not smashed" that night.

There is no fence around the reservoir where authorities found the body.

Police got involved a day later, when his parents returned in a panic from a vacation to New York City after not being able to reach him.

Garcia lived at home with his parents, who emigrated more than two decades ago from Lima, Peru. Worried relatives there also have been following the case, and one of Luzmila Garcia's sisters flew to Boston from Lima to help search for her nephew.

The case drew the attention of singer Bruce Springsteen, whose son is a senior at Boston College. The musician posted the student's missing person poster on both Twitter and Facebook.

A priest joined Garcia's parents at their home later in the day, when they said they would begin planning for their son's funeral now that their search for him had ended. Family planned to attend a church service in Garcia's memory at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Catholic parish Saint Mary in Waltham.

Luzmila Garcia said that while she knew her son was gone, she still felt his spirit.

"I can see him telling me, `Calm down, Mama. That's OK,"' she said. "He's telling me that."

Click here to read more on this story from MyFoxBoston.



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Cutting-Edge DestroyerWill Be Navy\'s Biggest

  • This file image released by Bath Iron Works shows a rendering of the DDG-1000 Zumwalt, the U.S. Navy's next-generation destroyer, which has been funded to be built at Bath Iron Works in Maine and at Northrop Grumman's shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss.AP/Bath Iron Works

  • Apr. 4, 2012: A plasma burning machine makes the first cut into a piece of steel at a ceremony marking the start of construction for DDG 1002, the third Zumwalt Class guided missile destroyer at Bath Iron Works, in Brunswick, Maine.AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach

  • Apr. 4, 2012: Jim Favreau, director of fabrication at Bath Iron works, leading Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Jonathan Greenert during a tour of the shipbuilding facility as Greenert makes his way to the start of fabrication opening ceremony for the Zumwalt-class destroyer.AP Photo/US Navy, Peter D. Lawlor

  • Apr. 4, 2012: U. S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, smiles as she places a cap on her head while Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jonathan Greenert, laughs during a news conference at Bath Iron Works.AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach

An enormous, expensive and technology-laden warship that some Navy leaders once tried to kill because of its cost is now viewed as an important part of the Obama administration's Asia-Pacific strategy, with advanced capabilities that the Navy's top officer says represent the Navy's future.

The stealthy, guided-missile Zumwalt that's taking shape at Bath Iron Works is the biggest destroyer ever built for the U.S. Navy.

The low-to-the-water warship will feature a wave-piercing hull, composite deckhouse, electric drive propulsion, advanced sonar, missiles, and powerful guns that fire rocket-propelled warheads as far as 100 miles. It's also longer and heavier than existing destroyers -- but will have half the crew because of automated systems.

'With its stealth, incredibly capable sonar system, strike capability and lower manning requirements -- this is our future.'

- Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations

"With its stealth, incredibly capable sonar system, strike capability and lower manning requirements -- this is our future," concluded Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations, who gave the warship his endorsement on a visit last week to Bath Iron Works, where the ships are being built.

It wasn't always this way.

The General Accounting Office expressed concerns that the Navy was trying to incorporate too much new technology. Some Navy officials pointed out that it's less capable than existing destroyers when it comes to missile defense, and a defense analyst warned that it would be vulnerable while operating close to shore for fire support.

Even its "tumblehome" hull was criticized as potentially unstable in certain situations.

The 600-foot-long ships are so big that the General Dynamics-owned shipyard spent $40 million to construct a 106-foot-tall building to assemble the giant hull segments.

And then there's the cost, roughly $3.8 billion apiece, according to the Navy's latest proposed budget.

Including research and development, the cost grows to $7 billion apiece, said Winslow Wheeler, director of the Straus Military Reform Project at the Center for Defense Information in Washington.

Because of cost, the originally envisioned 32 ships dipped to 24 and then seven. Eventually, program was truncated to just three. The first, the Zumwalt, will be christened next year and delivered to the Navy in 2014.

But Greenert told reporters that the ship fits perfectly into the new emphasis on bolstering the U.S. military presence in the Pacific in response to Asia's growing economic importance and China's rise as a military power.

Greenert didn't go into detail on how the new ship could be used. But the Defense Department has expressed concerns that China is modernizing its Navy with a near-term goal of stopping or delaying U.S. intervention in a conflict involving Taiwan. China considers the self-governing island a renegade province.

Defense officials also see a potential flashpoint in the South China Sea, where China's territorial claims overlap with those of other countries including Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia.

The Zumwalt's new technology will allow the warship to deter and defeat aggression and to maintain operations in areas where an enemy seeks to deny access, both on the open ocean and in operations closer to shore, the Navy says.

Jay Korman, industry analyst with The Avascent Group, said the warship uses so much new technology that it's viewed by the Navy as a "silver bullet" answer to threats. The only problem is the cost.

"They were looking to introduce so many new technologies at once, and the cost ballooned," he said. "I don't think people have changed their minds that it's a capable ship. It's just too expensive."

Unlike another new ship entering the Navy's arsenal -- the small and speedy "littoral combat ship" -- the Zumwalt will be heavily armored and armed.

The Zumwalt's 155 mm deck guns were built to pound the shore with guided projectiles to pave the way for the Marines to arrive in landing craft, and they're far more cost-effective in certain situations than cruise missiles, said Eric Wertheim, author of the "Naval Institute's Guide to Combat Fleets of the World."

The smaller crew also represents a substantial cost savings, he added.

Down the road, the ship could one day be equipped with an electromagnetic railgun, a powerful weapon that uses a magnetic field and electric current to fire a projectile at several times the speed of sound.

Production will stop after three ships, and the Navy will go back to building tried-and-true Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, 510-foot-long ships featuring a versatile Aegis radar system that's being modified for ballistic missile defense. Even with modifications, the ships will cost far less than the Zumwalt-class ships.

For Bath's 5,400 workers, the Zumwalt has been both exciting and challenging, with a new design and new construction techniques. In the coming months, workers will take delivery of the composite deck house and helicopter hangar, which are being built at the Huntington Ingalls shipyard in Mississippi. Those will be placed on the Bath-built hull.
"If anybody can do it and do it successfully, then I'm confident that's us," said Jay Wadleigh, vice president of Local S6 of the Machinists Union in Bath.



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