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Explosions, gunfire shake Afghan capital

CLEVELAND (AP) - On their way into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Guns N' Roses got together for one more gig.

Axl Rose missed it.

The hedonistic hard rockers, who became the world's top music act amid endless dysfunction, members of Guns N' Roses reunited for three songs on Saturday night before 6,000 fans, many of whom were thrilled to see at least most of the band's original lineup jam on classic hits like "Sweet Child O' Mine" and "Paradise City."

Rose, the band's frontman and ringmaster of the G N' R traveling sex, drugs and rock and roll circus, declined to attend the induction, saying he didn't want to be part of the ceremony because it "doesn't appear to be somewhere I'm actually wanted or respected."

He was hardly missed.

While his decision disappointed some hardcore fans and ended any possibility of a full-scale reunion of the original lineup, guitarist Slash, bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Steve Adler performed for the first time in nearly 20 years to the delight of the sell-out crowd inside historic Public Hall.

Guns N' Roses were one of the headliners of this year's eclectic group of inductees, which included the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Beastie Boys, folk icon Donovan, late singer-songwriter Laura Nyro and British bands the Small Faces and Faces.

The event lasted well into the early morning with an All-Star jam featuring some of rock's biggest names closing the 5 1-2 hour ceremony with a stirring rendition of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground."

Hours earlier, Chili Peppers lead singer Anthony Kiedis said it was strange to be enshrined while the band was touring.

"We're going somewhere," Kiedis said. "How can we stop and take an award when really we're just halfway there? But it is nice to be together with people that we spent some incredible years along the way writing songs and playing shows in little theaters and sweaty little transvestite clubs and having the time of our lives."

Cleveland rocked without Rose.

As he inducted Guns N' Roses, Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong recalled the first time he saw the band on MTV.

"I thought, one these guys could end up dead or in jail," he said.

Guns N' Roses came out both barrels blaring and their debut album "Appetite For Destruction," shook a music world that at the time was consumed with pop ballads and dance music.

"It's the best debut album in the history of rock and roll," Armstrong said. "Every song hits hard. It takes you a trip to the seedy world of Los Angeles. The thing that set them apart from everyone else was guts. They never lost their edge for one second."

Armstrong talked about each of the Guns members, talking about Slash's mastery and Adler's pulsive, pounding beats before pausing.

"Let's see, who am I missing?"

The reference to Rose drew boos and catcalls that Armstrong tried to shout down.

"He's one of the best frontmen to ever touch a microphone," Armstrong said.

McKagan and Slash did not mention Rose during their brief remarks but then took the stage with Myles Kennedy, a member of a side project with Slash, singing lead vocals.

Like Guns N' Roses, the Red Hot Chili Peppers emerged from Los Angeles during the 1980s when Sunset Strip's rock scene was dominated by "hair" bands more concerned with their tight lycra pants and eyeliner than their sound. Not the Chili Peppers, who found their unique groove by blending punk, funk, rock and rap.

While their lineup has undergone some changes - founding guitarist Hillel Slovak died of a heroin overdose in 1988 - Kiedis and bassist Flea have survived personal highs and lows and the band remains one of music's top live acts.

Kiedis said Slovak would have loved the honor.

"I think that he would have a good laugh," Kiedis said. "Yeah, it would certainly mean something to him as he cared deeply about music and the love of the brotherhood of being in a band and being a creative force in the universe, which he is and always will be a brother in everything we do."

Comedian Chris Rock, a longtime fan and friend of the band, inducted the Chili Peppers.

"If (Beach Boy) Brian Wilson (funkmaster) George Clinton had a kid he would be ugly," Rock said. "But he would sound like the Red Hot Chili Peppers."

The Chili Peppers took the stage at 1 a.m. and opened a four-song set with "By The Way" with drummer Chad Smith flanked by Jack Irons and Cliff Martinez, two former drummers with the band.

Flea gave a moving speech in which spoke of his passion to play for the musicians before him. He choked back tears as he thanked his mother.

Three white middle-class smart alecks from New York City, the Beastie Boys were initially dismissed as beer-swilling frat boys following their 1986 debut album "License To Ill," which featured songs like "(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!)" and "Girls." But their follow-up, "Paul's Boutique," was acclaimed by critics and brought the Beasties credibility in the black hip-hop community.

"It broke the mold," said Public Enemy's Chuck D, later citing one of the group's lines. "The Beastie Boys are indeed three bad brothers who made history. They brought a whole new look to rap and hip-hop. They proved that rap could come from any street - not just a few."

Only two of the three Beasties attended the ceremony. Michael "Mike D" Diamond, Adam "Ad-Rock" Horovitz read a speech by Adam "MCA" Yauch, who has been fighting cancer.

The Beasties are just the third hip-hop act to enter the hall, joining Grand Master Flash and the Furious Five and Run DMC.

Kid Rock joined the Roots in a medley of Beastie hits, including "No Sleep 'Til Brooklyn" and "Sabotage."

Stevie Van Zandt, one of Bruce Springsteen's sidemen in the E Street Band, inducted the Small Faces and Faces, bands that included Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood, two rock superstars.

Van Zandt credited the underrated bands for having a major influence on generations of rockers. He said both were blessed to have strong lead singers in the late Steve Marriott and Rod Stewart.

"Not many bands get two lives or two of the greatest white soul singers in the history of rock and roll," he said.

Stewart came down with the flu this week and couldn't attend. Simply Red's lead singer Mick Hucknall, a friend of the band, filled on three songs including the classic "Stay With Me," with Wood, previously inducted with the Rolling Stones, delivering an exquisite slide guitar.

During a speech that was at times comical but heartfelt throughout, John Mellencamp inducted Donovan, a balladeer from the flower-power 1960s once labeled "the new Dylan." Donovan Leitch had a string of hits in the '60s with "Sunshine Superman," ''Hurdy Gurdy Man" and "Mellow Yellow."

During his remarks, Mellencamp raised the copy of Donovan's "Fairy Tale" album he bought 47 years ago as a kid in Indiana.

"I wasn't just listening to Donovan, I was living Donovan," Mellencamp said. "He was my inspiration. One of the original originals."

The influential Nyro, who died in 1997, never reached commercial success but wrote hits for other artists. She was inducted by singer Bette Midler.

"I loved her the moment I dropped the needle on the vinyl," Midler said. "She was the very essence of New York City. Not in the gritty real sense, but in the passionate, romantic, ethereal, eternal sense."

Carole King inducted late rock promoter Don Kirchner, who helped launch the careers of Prince and the Eagles.

Smokey Robinson inducted long-deserving backup bands for early rock artists. The groups included Buddy Holly's The Crickets, James Brown's The Famous Flames, Bill Hailey's The Comets and Robinson's The Miracles.

___

Associated Press Writer Thomas J. Sheeran contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Syrian city shelled, UN truce observers to arrive

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - A series of explosions followed by sustained gunfire shook the Afghan capital on Sunday in what appeared to be a coordinated attack by militants on three neighborhoods frequented by Afghan government officials and their international allies.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the assault in a text message to The Associated Press. He said a group of armed suicide bombers have launched an attack on NATO forces headquarters, parliament and a number of diplomatic residences in Kabul.

There were also attacks in two other eastern cities - Jalalabad and Gardez. There were no immediate reports of casualties from those assaults, but details were sketchy and the fighting was still going on. Mujahid did not provide any information about attacks outside the capital.

The first explosions in Kabul struck the central Wazir Akbar Khan neighborhood, which is home to a number of embassies and a NATO base. Gunfire erupted soon after the blasts, forcing people out in the street to quickly take cover. Smoke could be seen rising from a few buildings in the neighborhood as sirens wailed.

More than 10 explosions in all shook the capital, and heavy gunfire continued to shake the city more than 30 minutes after the initial blast.

Militants who had staked out positions in a tall building were firing rockets in different directions, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene. It was not immediately clear what they were targeting, but shots appeared to be focusing on the nearby British Embassy.

At about the same time, residents reported a blast near the parliament building across town. A police officer in the area, Mohammad Assan, said there was an attack involving shooting near parliament.

Meanwhile, an AP reporter at the Turkish military base on the outskirts of the city said the installation was under direct attack from mortar fire. Turkish and Greek forces were responding with heavy-caliber machine gun fire.

It was the first attack in Kabul since a shooting inside the Interior Ministry in February in which a ministry employee turned a gun on NATO advisers and shot two soldiers dead.

___

Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann and Amir Shah contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Inmate at large after escaping California prison

KLAMATH, Calif. -- Authorities were searching Saturday for an inmate who escaped from a minimum security prison in northern California, the California Department of Corrections announced.

Justin William Hardin, 35, was last seen at around 11:30pm local time Friday at Alder Creek Conservation Camp near Klamath, south of the Oregon border.

He is a white man of medium build with green eyes and brown hair. He was wearing gray sweatpants, a gray shirt and a light-colored beanie when prison officials last saw him, the Department of Corrections said.

Hardin was serving a sentence for corporal injury on a spouse. He was scheduled to be paroled in November 2013.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Dangerous\' Militants FreedIn Taliban Prison Break

  • April 15, 2012: Pakistani security officials visit the central jail in Bannu, 106 miles south of Peshawar, Pakistan.AP

Taliban militants armed with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades battled their way into a prison in northwest Pakistan on Sunday, freeing close to 400 prisoners, including at least 20 described by police as "very dangerous" insurgents, authorities and the militants said.

The raid by more than 100 fighters was a dramatic display of the strength of the insurgency gripping the nuclear-armed country. The escaped prisoners may now rejoin the fight, giving momentum and a propaganda boost to a movement that has killed thousands of Pakistani officials and ordinary citizens since 2007.

The attackers stormed the prison before dawn in the city of Bannu close to the Afghan border, said police officer Shafique Khan. They used explosives and hand grenades to knock down the main gates and two walls, said Bannu prison superintendent Zahid Khan.

"They were carrying modern and heavy weapons," said Zahid Khan. "They fired rockets."

Once inside the building, the attackers headed straight to the area of the prison where death-row prisoners were being kept, he said. They fought with guards for around two hours, setting part of the prison on fire before freeing the 380 inmates, including at least 20 "very dangerous Taliban militants," said Shafique.

One escaped prisoner, Adnan Rashid, was on death row for his involvement in an assassination attempt against former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, said Zahid Khan.

The prison in Bannu housed 944 inmates.

A Taliban spokesman, Asimullah Mehsud, claimed the movement's fighters freed 1,200 of their comrades. The group is known to make exaggerated claims.

Pakistan's military has launched a series of operations against the Pakistani Taliban group in the northwest, where it is strongest and has forged alliances with al-Qaida and other transnational militant movements based there along the Afghan border.

The movement is closely linked to the Afghan Taliban, which is battling U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Soldiers and police have killed or arrested hundreds of militants, but the insurgency has proved resilient. Insurgents have carried out suicide bombings and other attacks across the country in retaliation, raising doubts in some quarters over whether the county can survive. Prison breakouts like the one Sunday have been rare.

Bannu city is the main gateway to North Waziristan, the most militant-infested region along the border.



Article from FOXNEWS


Advance UN team on way to Damascus

EDITORS, PHOTO EDITORS:

Drawing your attention to AP photos NY107-109, which feature images of the ocean floor near the Titanic's stern captured from a NOAA expedition in 2004. The photos show a coat and boots in the mud, evidence federal authorities believe of where a victim came to rest.

The AP

Five U.S. military members in Colombia face misconduct allegations along with a dozen Secret Service agents: http://t.co/EnG4NHqL
Robin Gibb, a founding member of the Bee Gees, is reportedly in a coma at a London hospital. http://t.co/V60TXgsB
U.N. Security Council agrees to send cease-fire observers to Syria. http://t.co/FHYJMavG


Article from YAHOO NEWS


Midwest tornadoes: authorities say 5 dead in Okla.

CARTAGENA, Colombia (AP) - President Barack Obama might be noticing a familiar pattern. Whether it's allegations of Secret Service personnel consorting with prostitutes, candid moments caught live on microphones or launching bombs over Libya, his foreign trips seem to get overshadowed by distractions.

That's been the case here on the coast of Colombia, where Obama will wrap up a weekend summit with a news conference that may well force him to confront the latest troubles - misconduct claims against Secret Service and military personnel assigned to make Cartagena secure for his visit.

In the past year alone - in travels to Latin America, to an economic summit in Cannes, France, to Seoul, South Korea and now in Cartagena - Obama's intended message has been sidetracked, interrupted or even buried by bad timing, miscues or, in the case of the allegations in Colombia, outright scandal.

As night fell Saturday, a story that began bubbling late Friday was drowning out Obama's participation in the sixth Summit of the Americas, a conclave of more than 30 heads of government from North, South, and Central America and the Caribbean.

In the end, 11 Secret Service employees were on administrative leave for misconduct and five service members assigned to work with the Secret Service were confined to quarters amid allegations involving prostitutes and heavy drinking. The Secret Service and the U.S. Southern Command said the misconduct occurred at their hotel in Cartagena before Obama arrived in the Caribbean city on Friday.

Waiters interviewed by The Associated Press described the agents as drinking heavily during their stay.

Rep. Peter King of New York, the Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said officials told him the incident began when a woman visiting a Secret Service member failed to leave by 7 a.m. as required by hotel rules. King said hotel staff and police investigated and found the woman with the agent in the hotel room and a dispute arose over whether the agent should have paid her. The agent ultimately paid, King said he was told.

King was briefed on the incident because his committee has jurisdiction over the Secret Service.

For Obama, this scandal is particularly piercing because it goes against type.

When his trip to Brazil and Chile in March 2011 was overwhelmed by U.S. bombing over Libya, it displayed strength even as he carried out a military act from abroad. A live microphone in Cannes captured him and French President Nicholas Sarkozy discussing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with Sarkozy confiding he couldn't stand working with the Israeli leader. But while briefly embarrassing it wasn't wholly revelatory.

In Seoul last month, another live mic caught Obama suggesting to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev that he would be able to negotiate a missile defense deal during a second term because "After my election, I have more flexibility." The incident sparked an uproar among Republicans. But at its heart it reflected a political reality: Presidents in their second terms aren't saddled with election considerations.

But the alleged misconduct in Cartagena clashes dramatically with Obama's image of personal rectitude.

Still, the White House issued no comment on the president's behalf. The issue was almost certain to come up again Sunday when Obama holds a press conference.

White House spokesman Jay Carney dismissed suggestions that the Secret Service story was distracting Obama.

"I think it's been much more of a distraction for the press," Carney said. "He's here engaging in the business that he came here to do with the assembled leaders of the Americas."

Still, Obama was already dealing with other diversions. He began the day complaining about other side issues that were competing with his optimistic message of economic growth in the Americas and the opportunity it presented to both the United States and its neighbors to the south.

U.S. insistence that Cuba not participate in the summit prompted Ecuador's president to boycott the session and other Latin American leaders complained that this would be the last Summit of the Americas unless Cuba was allowed to attend in the future. Some leaders cited old grievances against the United States to illustrate their complaints.

To that, Obama chafed.

He said he felt like he was in a "time warp" of "gun-boat diplomacy and yanquis and the Cold War and this and that" dating to a time before he was born.

"That's not the world we live in today," he said.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


New North Korean leader makes first public speech

EDITORS, PHOTO EDITORS:

Drawing your attention to AP photos NY107-109, which feature images of the ocean floor near the Titanic's stern captured from a NOAA expedition in 2004. The photos show a coat and boots in the mud, evidence federal authorities believe of where a victim came to rest.

The AP

Five U.S. military members in Colombia face misconduct allegations along with a dozen Secret Service agents: http://t.co/EnG4NHqL
Robin Gibb, a founding member of the Bee Gees, is reportedly in a coma at a London hospital. http://t.co/V60TXgsB
U.N. Security Council agrees to send cease-fire observers to Syria. http://t.co/FHYJMavG


Article from YAHOO NEWS


For Obama abroad, side issues tend to befall him

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) - North Korea's new leader gave his first public speech Sunday since taking power, portraying himself as a strong military chief unafraid of foreign powers as the army showed off what appeared to be a new long-range missile.

Kim Jong Un's lengthy speech - two days after North Korea launched a long-range rocket in defiance of international warnings - took North Koreans gathered at Kim Il Sung Square and before televisions across the country by surprise. His father, late leader Kim Jong Il, addressed the public only once in his lifetime.

Calm and measured, Kim Jong Un covered a wide range of topics, from foreign policy to the economy, as he spoke during choreographed festivities honoring the 100th birthday of his late grandfather, North Korean founder Kim Il Sung.

The rocket unveiled Sunday, which appeared to have several stages, was similar to the one that broke into pieces over the Yellow Sea shortly after liftoff Friday, but was of a more overtly military design. While it's not clear how powerful or significant this addition to the North Korean arsenal is - or whether it was a mock-up - it signaled that North Korea is continuing to build up its military despite the failed launch.

Although that launch was a huge, costly embarrassment, Kim's address Sunday was seen by analysts as an expression of confidence by the young leader and meant to show that he is firmly in control.

"Superiority in military technology is no longer monopolized by imperialists, and the era of enemies using atomic bombs to threaten and blackmail us is forever over," Kim said.

Kim's words often mirrored what North Korea regularly says in its state media, but there was symbolism in the images of the new leader, who is believed to be in his late 20s, addressing the country on state TV and then watching - and often laughing and gesturing in relaxed conversation with senior officials - as a parade of North Korean military troops and hardware marched by.

Outside analysts have raised worries about how Kim, who has been seen but not publicly heard since taking over after his father's December death, would govern a country that has a nuclear weapons program and has previously threatened Seoul and Washington with war.

The speech was a good "first impression for his people and for the world," said Hajime Izumi, a North Korea expert at Japan's Shizuoka University. "He demonstrated that he can speak in public fairly well, and at this stage that in itself - more than what he actually said - is important. I think we might be seeing him speak in public more often, and show a different style than his father."

Kim emphasized the importance of strengthening North Korea's defenses by placing the country's "first, second and third" priorities on military might. However, he also said he is open to working with foreign countries that do not have hostile policies toward his nation, and said he would strive to reunify Korea.

"It's a heartbreaking fact that our nation has been divided for more than 70 years," he said.

Kim also stressed the importance of national unity, calling his country "Kim Il Sung's Korea" rather than North Korea. In recent days, the square bearing his grandfather's name has been redecorated, with the Marx and Lenin portraits that adorned key buildings taken down and replaced with long red banners vowing to defend the new leader "to the death." At the front are portraits of the two late leaders, Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il.

"That suggests to me that they want to let the country, and the world, know that this is a 'new' country," said Han S. Park, a University of Georgia professor who works frequently with top U.S. and North Korean officials, after watching the events in Pyongyang.

The young leader also underlined his commitment to aggressively building the economy and improving people's daily lives. North Korea has suffered decades of economic hardship following a famine in the mid-1990s and the loss of aid from the Soviet Union. Kim Jong Un's formal three-year succession has coincided with a push to improve the economy by employing modern technology.

Kim's speech was "an expression of confidence," said Kim Yeon-su of Korea National Defense University in South Korea. "Kim Jong Un is trying to dispel lingering doubts about his grip on power."

North Korea is in the midst of two weeks of celebrations marking Kim Il Sung's birthday and the upcoming 80th anniversary of the Korean People's Army. But it has also become a showcase of Kim Jong Un's new era of leadership, with Kim giving the world a taste of his foreign policy by firing the rocket Friday in defiance of outside criticism.

In a surprise admission, North Korea's state media announced hours after the launch that the attempt to send a satellite into space was a failure.

Condemnation abroad was swift, and the launch - using the same type of rocket technology used for firing a long-range missile - raised concerns that a nuclear test might be next.

The finale in Sunday's military parade was the new long-range missile.

Military analysts in Japan and South Korea said further examination is needed to determine whether it's a new intercontinental ballistic missile that North Korea reportedly has been building.

The exact design could not immediately be confirmed by North Korean military officials. A number of North Koreans at the parade said it was the first time they had seen the missile.

Narushige Michishita, a North Korea military expert at Japan's National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, said the missile appeared to be new, but strongly resembled the rocket used on Friday and also the long-range Taepodong-2, which North Korea first launched, unsuccessfully, in 2006.

He said it probably has three stages but did not appear to be big enough to have the 15,000-kilometer (9,000-mile) range needed to effectively attack the United States, which would be the goal of an ICBM for the North.

"I don't think this is a serious ICBM," Michishita said. "Putting it on display has a psychological impact, and that would have been greater if Friday's launch had worked. But North Korea has a very bad record with long-range missiles. It think this is more a propaganda ploy than a military advance."

___

Associated Press writers Sam Kim, Foster Klug and Eric Talmadge in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Taliban attack Pakistan prison, free 380 prisoners

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - Greg Biffle knew his only chance to get past Jimmie Johnson for good was at the end, and he finally figured out where to do it.

Biffle drove down into Turn 3 and charged under Johnson with 30 laps remaining Saturday night, then pulled away to end his 49-race winless streak while giving owner Jack Roush another NASCAR Sprint Cup victory in Texas.

"I just dug deep. I knew I had to do it and kept trying and trying and trying," Biffle said. "I knew the team would forgive me if I wrecked it trying to beat him so I just gave it all I had."

Once Biffle got his No. 16 Ford around Johnson, he went on to a 3.2-second victory in the fastest Cup race in Texas with an average speed of 160.577 mph.

"Catching the 48 at the end, it was all I had to be able to get to him," he said. "It seemed like when we got to him, it was too easy."

Biffle's 17th career victory was his first since an October 2010 race in Kansas, where the series goes next week.

Johnson led three times for 156 of the 334 laps while going for owner Rick Hendrick's 200th victory. But he never recovered, even scraping hard into the wall trying to catch up after Biffle drove under him and completed the pass before the start-finish line.

It was Roush's ninth win in 23 Cup races at Texas, and completed a Lone Star State weekend sweep. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won the Nationwide race on Friday night for Roush's fourth Texas victory in a row and ninth overall in the second-tier series.

"I don't know if this is my last sweep," Roush said. "But I'm going to remember this one for a long time."

After starting third, season points leader Biffle was among the lead pack the entire race, leading 90 laps on a fast-paced and windy night.

There were only two cautions for 10 slowed-down laps, both for debris, and the race finished with a record 234 consecutive laps of green-flag racing.

Biffle said his hands were hurting from fighting the wheel through the wind. But he thought there were no major incidents because every driver was dealing with the same conditions and maybe more cautious because of them.

Mark Martin finished third in a Michael Waltrip-owned Toyota, followed by Jeff Gordon and Roush driver Matt Kenseth. Polesitter Martin Truex Jr., another Waltrip car, was sixth after leading 69 laps.

Biffle got his eighth consecutive top-10 finish at Texas, where he had a victory in 2005 even before that stretch.

He was surprised that it was so easy after the final pass gave him his seventh and last lead in the race.

"I thought he was going to be right there," Biffle said.

Said Johnson, who had led 119 laps combined his first 17 Texas races, "He got by me and I was chasing him from there. I didn't have anything left to go get him. I tried."

For Hendrick Motorsports, it was another close call for its first victory of the season and the owner's 200th in a career that began in 1984.

Johnson, Gordon and teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. were running in the top three at Martinsville two weeks ago before a late restart in the last race before the Easter weekend break. But Clint Bowyer's aggressive inside move took out Johnson and Gordon, and Earnhardt ended up third.

"It's nice to be running well. It's nice to be in this position," Johnson said. "But I want to get back to our winning ways really soon."

Kasey Kahne, the first-year Hendrick driver, finished seventh ahead of another Roush driver, Carl Edwards. Harvick and Earnhardt rounded out the top 10.

The first lead change came on the 32nd lap when Biffle went around the top through Turns 1 and 2 and got past Truex on the backstretch.

Five laps later, Kenseth went around the outside of Truex through Turns 3 and 4 to take over second place.

The first caution flag came out on lap 67, when a cap was tumbling around near Turn 2 on a night when the wind was gusting more than 30 mph.

Gordon, who started 34th, was in the top 10 before the second caution after Trevor Bayne scraped the wall.

The race restarted on lap 100, with Truex in front of Biffle for only one lap. There were no more yellow flags after that.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


MTV\'s \'True Life\': Orthorexia

  • Spring Jackson, 26, suffered from orthorexia nervosa for nearly three yearsMTV

In the return of its long-running series “True Life,” MTV explores the daily lives of three young adults who suffer from orthorexia nervosa, an increasingly common â€" though medically unrecognized â€" eating disorder.

“Viewers [will] meet three young people who are so obsessed with righteous eating that it's damaging their mental and physical wellbeing,” MTV said in a statement.  “…Eating healthy is actually making them sick.”

Orthorexia is defined by the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA) as a “fixation on righteous eating.”  The disorder can stem from various causes: One woman featured in the episode, Spring Jackson, wanted to start eating healthier when she began breastfeeding her daughter; Andrew, developed a crippling fear that packaged goods would give him cancer.

For all three young adults â€" Jackson, 26; Andrew, 20, and Lauren, 20 â€" their attempts to eat healthier began innocuously enough.  However, over time, their eating habits spiraled out of control and led them to cut entire food groups from their diets.

Jackson, once a self-professed junk food lover, only ate raw fruits and vegetables.  She would force herself to purge if she ate anything cooked.  Lauren, meanwhile, had a list of only 15 “safe” foods â€" examples include oatmeal, almonds and vegetables â€" she could eat out of fear of gaining weight.  Her cheat food?  Adding cheese to a meal of egg whites.  And finally, Andrew was convinced that even a small morsel of unhealthy food would put him at risk of cancer or diabetes.

“My fixation to eat healthy and desire to be healthy slowly became more fixated on certain foods I felt were pure and correct for my body to eat,” Jackson told FoxNews.com.  “I still don't know for certain if I got sick after eating unhealthy foods was because my body had become adjusted to a raw diet or because mentally I got so distressed over it, knowing my body wasn't going to process it.  I thought it was poison essentially, because it wasn't organic or it wasn't  raw.”

Jackson said she essentially thought she might as well have cancer “because I'm just putting poison in my body.  It's in there, and it's bad.”

Though orthorexia seems as if it should improve a person's health by leading them to eat fruits and vegetables while avoiding packaged foods, the disorder can actually lead to various health problems such as malnutrition, early-onset osteoporosis, and if severe enough, can even cause fertility problems.  

In addition, the intense obsession with food “can crowd out other activities and interests, impair relationships, and become physically dangerous,” according to NEDA.  Jackson, for example, described her fixation with food as “OCD-like” and would avoid friends' parties, or even eating with her parents, due to her restricted diet.

“Changing my diet is not an option,” Jackson says in the upcoming episode, adding that she felt like she had to keep her habits a secret from her family and friends.

Part of the problem, according to NEDA, is that orthorexics lose the ability to eat intuitively â€" in other words, to recognize when they are hungry, when they are full and when they have eaten enough.

“The orthorexic never learns how to eat naturally and is destined to keep ‘falling off the wagon' and thus feeling shameful, similar to any other diet mentality,” NEDA says on its website.  However, for most othorexics, the disorder is not fueled by the desire to diet or lose weight, according to Jackson.

“It has nothing to do with weight whatsoever,” Jackson said.  “I got thin before I started purging because I was so strict with the foods I ate. I was about 98 pounds at 5'5”, which is really small for my frame. I was actually trying to gain weight because I stopped having my period.  Purging was a last resort [when I ate unhealthily] to fix and undo what I did, which I felt was wrong, or poison or not healthy.”

How orthorexia is different from anorexia

Jackson said it can be difficult for people to understand orthorexia because "as soon they hear ‘rexia' they think you're just anorexic, or you're just binge eating and throwing it up."

She said her reasons for being orthorexic are a completely different mental process.

"I don't feel I identify with people who are afraid of getting fat.  I feel like I'm in a separate class," she said.

Not all extremely healthy eaters are orthorexic, but some problem signs to look out for are: when healthy eating takes up an inordinate amount of time and attention, when eating less healthy leads to guilt or shame, or when healthy eating is used to avoid other life issues.  

To treat orthorexia, sufferers must first admit there is a problem and identify its root cause.  Then, they can begin to address their emotional issues and be less rigid in their eating habits.  In some cases, professional help is recommended or required â€" though because the disorder isn't officially recognized, not all doctors or therapists are aware of it.

Jackson said she had to explain to her therapist what orthorexia was, and even now after treatment, her relationship with food is “better but not where it needs to be.”  

“I'm looking forward to the show coming out because I want to reach out to [other people with orthorexia] and hear their experiences,” Jackson said.  “I'm hoping a lot of people will connect with me. I think it could be instrumental to my healing.”

MTV's “True Life” airs at 1 pm ET on Sunday.



Article from FOXNEWS


Best American Steakhouses

We wouldn't steer you wrong - these top 10 steakhouses remind us that one of the great American culinary genres is getting better with age, just like their steaks. In addition, some of these are now well known for signature dishes that go beyond destination beef - from Emeril's crab croquettes in Louisiana to Wolfgang Puck's bone marrow dumplings in L.A. The iPad wine list at Chicago Cut Steakhouse tells us that these are not your father's steakhouses anymore as they defy stereotype and go beyond expectation. Click here to read complete reviews for each top steakhouse.

Bern's Steak House
1208 S. Howard Ave.
Tampa, FL 33606
813-251-2421

One of Tampa's most opulent restaurants augments its more than 50 variations of stellar dry-aged steaks with 20 choices of caviar and 35-plus desserts - and claims its wine list is the biggest in the world.

Bob's Steak & Chop House
4300 Lemmon Ave.
Dallas, TX 75219
214-528-9446

Don't mess with Texas at this top-notch Dallas steakhouse, where big spenders graze on generous entrées including Prime beef, chops, roast duck and Maryland crab cakes.

Bobo's
1450 Lombard St.
San Francisco, CA 94123
415-441-8880

This sultry San Francisco steakhouse emporium is famous for its butter-tender Prime beef - dry-aged up to six weeks - and a rarely seen bone-in filet mignon.

Carnevino
The Palazzo Resort Hotel Casino
3325 Las Vegas Blvd. S.
Las Vegas, NV 89109
702-789-4141

Mario Batali's deluxe Italian steakhouse at The Palazzo draws on the Tuscan Chianina tradition with its dry-aged beef, but other specialties include house-made salumi, lobster two ways and the star chef's signature pasta dishes.

Chicago Cut Steakhouse
300 N. LaSalle St.
Chicago, IL 60654
312-329-1800

This Chicago mainstay dry-ages its own N.Y. Prime steaks in house and offers an opulent wine list to a posh River North following.

CUT
Beverly Wilshire, a Four Seasons Hotel
9500 Wilshire Blvd.
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
310-276-8500

Wolfgang Puck's star-studded steakhouse in Beverly Hills is a showcase for A-level celebs, financiers and Hollywood elite who flock here for an innovative meat menu and more. Click here for a complete restaurant review of CUT.

Elway's Cherry Creek
2500 E. First Ave.
Denver, CO 80206
303-399-5353

Former Broncos quarterback John Elway's rustic sports-themed steakhouse offers Denver denizens big screens to catch the game, as well as live music, as they tackle massive steaks.

Emeril's Delmonico
1300 St. Charles Ave.
New Orleans, LA 70130
504-525-4937

Emeril's Creole steakhouse is housed in an historic century-old building where locals and tourists mingle amidst an atmosphere of Big Easy glamour and hospitality.

Peter Luger
178 Broadway
Brooklyn, NY 11211
718-387-7400

Since 1887, this Brooklyn institution has been one of the top steakhouse destinations in America. Click here to read a complete restaurant review of Peter Luger.

The Precinct
311 Delta Ave.
Cincinnati, OH 45226
513-321-5454

This swank Cincinnati spot is set in a stylish 1901 police patrol house, where choices run beyond the prime suspects to include creative steak entrées and select wood-grilled fish.

MORE ON GAYOT.com

Find the Best Steakhouses Near You

More Top Steakhouses in the U.S.

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Tracking Down Your Refund

Well, you can stop bugging your mail carrier. There are more productive ways to track down your Internal Revenue Service cash.

Now you can go online, call a special toll-free number or even use your smart phone to check your refund status. The tracking options work regardless of whether you're awaiting a check in the mail or you've instructed the IRS to directly deposit your tax cash into one or multiple accounts.

The Waiting Game

Since 2003, taxpayers have been able to use the IRS' "Where's My Refund?" Web page to track down refunds directly from their own computers.

But exactly when you need this service depends on how you filed your return. Processing times differ for paper and electronically filed 1040s. How you ask the IRS to send you your money also makes a difference.

If you e-file and request direct deposit, the IRS says it should take no longer than three weeks for you to get your refund. If you filed a paper return and asked that your check be mailed to you, it could take up to eight weeks.

This year, there's also the issue of delayed tax return processing. Because tax law changes affecting 2010 returns weren't enacted until Dec. 17, 2010, the IRS had to update forms and its computer systems before it could process many returns. The IRS started working on those delayed filings on Feb. 14.

Once you're past the time frame for issuance of your refund, it's time to log on and locate your money.

Necessary Tracking Data

To get started, you'll need your Social Security number, the filing status entered on your return and the amount you're expecting. Joint-return filers should enter the name and tax ID number of the spouse shown first on the return.

And don't do any rounding on the refund amount entry. The tracking program wants precise dollars and cents.

If you have any questions about exactly what information the IRS wants here, the "Where's My Refund?" program has links that will open up new screens with explanations of where you can find the information on your copy of your return.

After you've entered the necessary data, click and wait for the good news that your check is in the mail.

Dialing for Tax Dollars

If you don't have access to a computer or simply prefer using a telephone, you still can call the IRS to track down your refund.

A special automated toll-free line is dedicated to refund status reports. When you call (800) 829-1954, you'll need the same information the online system requires.

In addition to having a copy of your return on hand, it's always a good idea to have paper and pen ready to jot down any information, additional instructions or follow-up phone numbers that you might receive during the call.

And, as with the online system, don't call unless it's been the requisite number of weeks for your filing method.

The IRS has gone mobile with IRS2Go, the agency's first smart phone application. It allows taxpayers to check on the status of their tax refund.

Once again, you'll need your Social Security number, filing status and expected refund amount to use IRS2Go.

After you find out what's up with your refund, you can use the app to sign up for IRS tax updates or follow the IRS on Twitter.

The IRS refund tracking app also has a "contacts" section, with telephone numbers and hours for the agency's various tax help lines as well as links to help you find your local taxpayer assistance center if you want some face-to-face help.

The IRS2Go app is free at the Apple App Store and the Android Market.

What's the Holdup?

Regardless of which tracking method is used, the IRS says that in most cases a taxpayer will learn that his or her return was received and is being processed.

When the tax check is indeed in the mail, the tracking systems will provide the date it was sent out or directly deposited to the filer's chosen account.

But even when the news is bad, the online program might be able to offer some immediate help. If, for example, the U.S. Postal Service bounced your refund check back to the IRS as undeliverable, the IRS online tracker now allows some taxpayers to correct or change their mailing addresses online so they can get their refunds ASAP.

If this option is available in your case, "Where's My Refund?" will prompt you to take the appropriate steps.

What if It's Lost?

Occasionally, though, a tax check actually is lost.

If your online or automated phone inquiry reveals your refund was mailed but it still hasn't shown up, you can begin an online refund trace using the "Where's My Refund?" program. This option is available for filers who are still waiting for refund money the IRS says was mailed at least 28 days earlier. If this is your situation, the online program will prompt you to take the next steps.

You also can call the IRS' main help line at (800) 829-1040. But be forewarned: During the filing season, you're probably in for a wait.

More localized assistance might be a better move. Check the IRS' "How to Contact Us" Web page for local and regional agency addresses and numbers.

Once the IRS verifies your refund check is lost or stolen, the replacement process will begin. You might be asked to complete Form 3911, Taxpayer Statement Regarding Refund, to get the ball rolling.



Article from FOXNEWS


65 MPG Engine of Future

Real revolutions in engine technology are rare.

By and large, the internal combustion engine has remained much the same for well over a century, with just general, incremental improvements in all areas separating today's engines from those in the very first automobiles.

Scuderi's patented split-cycle engine is a little different, and if not revolutionary, it's certainly a significant evolution of the engines we know and love.

Most gasoline engines today, with a few exceptions, run on the 'Otto' four-stroke cycle: induction, compression, ignition and exhaust. Fuel and air comes into the cylinder, it's compressed by the piston, the spark ignites the mixture, pushing the piston down in the power stroke, and as the piston makes its way back up again, the exhaust valve opens and the gases are pushed out.

It's simple to understand and the process has become quite refined these days, but it's still relatively inefficient.

The split-cycle engine

The split-cycle engine cuts this four-stroke cycle into two parts. It uses 'paired' cylinders, with each cylinder in the pair doing half the work. We first covered the concept a few years back, after Scuderi completed a prototype.

In the first cylinder, air is drawn through an intake valve, where it mixes with fuel injected into the cylinder. As the piston returns, a different valve opens into a special port. The mixture is pushed through, where it's drawn into the second cylinder through another intake valve.

The valve then closes, the mixture is compressed by the second piston, and ignited in the power stroke. As the piston returns again, the mixture exits through the exhaust valve as it would normally.

Watch: Reinventing the engine

It sounds more complicated than it is, but what it means is that for every crankshaft revolution, the engine is doing more work--while one piston is drawing in fuel and air, the other is already combusting the mixture that's just been sent through.

No more cylinders than normal would be required--so you could still have four, six, eight or more cylinders--but those cylinders are paired so only half of them would actually be combusting mixture. That also means half the spark plugs and half the injectors of a regular engine.

The engine runs on a Miller-cycle principle. This is similar to the Atkinson-cycle used in several hybrids. That normally means less power, but Miller-cycle engines use forced induction--in this case a turbocharger--to make up the power deficit.

Benefits

Scuderi says its split-cycle engine is 25 percent more efficient than a regular "high economy" engine found in efficient European cars, and 13 percent more efficient than best-in-class vehicles.

Emissions are reduced, and Scuderi predicts up to 65 mpg would be possible from a small-capacity unit.

Combine those figures with a hybrid drivetrain and the numbers would start looking very impressive indeed.

So is the Scuderi engine evolutionary, or revolutionary? Until it hits the market it's hard to say, but it could certainly breathe new life into combustion engines.

Read more at MotorAuthority



Article from FOXNEWS


Best Buy announces locations for store closings

Best Buy has announced the locations of 50 stores that it is closing this year. The list includes seven stores in California, six in Illinois and six in the company's home state of Minnesota.

The struggling electronics chain said last month that it would close the stores, cut 400 corporate jobs and trim $800 million in costs.

The company has already closed two stores this year, one in Missouri and one in Arizona. Most of the rest will close May 12, others this summer. Best Buy says it will try to find other jobs in the company for the workers.

On Tuesday, Best Buy said CEO Brian Dunn had resigned after the board of directors began investigating his "personal conduct."



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1 dead, 4 missing in California yacht race accident

The Coast Guard says one sailor is dead and four are missing after their yacht ran aground off San Francisco.

Eight people were aboard the 38-foot sailing vessel when it went aground during a race near the Farallon Islands Saturday.

Coast Guard says helicopters and boats rescued three people and recovered the body of a fourth, but four others were still missing and a search was under way late Saturday night.

The yacht was taking part in a race around the islands, located about 30 miles west of San Francisco.



Article from FOXNEWS


FOX NEWS POLL: Tax $$ spent less carefully today- Secretary\'s tax rate tops Obamas\'

Adding to the pain of tax day, a majority of American voters think the government spends their money less carefully these days.  

That's according to a Fox News poll released Friday.  

While 15 percent of voters believe their tax dollars are spent more carefully today than five years ago, three and a half times as many -- 53 percent -- say the money is spent less carefully.

Click here for full poll results.

Twenty-nine percent think taxpayer dollars are spent just as carefully today as five years ago.  

The poll was conducted about one week after a report found the General Services Administration inappropriately and excessively spent taxpayer dollars on a Las Vegas conference.  Yet current views are almost identical to one year ago.  At that time, 14 percent said more carefully, 49 percent less carefully (April 2011).

Most Republicans (80 percent) and over half of independents (56 percent) think the government spends their tax dollars less carefully than before.  Some 26 percent of Democrats believe so.  

Meanwhile, 54 percent of voters think their taxes are too high, while 43 percent say their tax bill is “about right.”  Only 3 percent says their taxes are too low.   

The new poll finds high-end earners and those living in lower-income households alike feel the taxes they pay are too high.  Fifty-four percent of those living in households earning less than $50,000 annually think their taxes are too high, as do 54 percent of those in households earning $50,000 and over.

Republicans (62 percent) are much more likely than independents (57 percent) or Democrats (42 percent) to think the amount they pay Uncle Sam too much.  

Voters who are part of the Tea Party movement are the most likely to feel their taxes are too high.  Fully 75 percent say so.   

A slim 51-percent majority of Democrats think the taxes they pay are about right, while 38 percent of independents and 37 percent of Republicans feel that way.

Six percent of Democrats say their tax bill is too low.  That's three times the number of independents (2 percent) and six times the number of Republicans (1 percent).

On this point, opinions are similar to previous years.  For example, in 2004 some 51 percent said their taxes were too high, 44 percent said about right and 1 percent said too low.  

Finally, despite displeasure with tax rates and how the money is spent, nearly four voters in 10 say they would pay higher taxes if all the money went toward paying down the national debt.  
Democrats (43 percent) are more likely than independents (34 percent) and Republicans (33 percent) to say they would pay higher taxes to pay down the debt.

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with 910 randomly-chosen registered voters nationwide and is conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from April 9 to April 11.  For the total sample, it has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.  



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Vatican mystery deepens after Good Friday homily

  • An undated photo showing Italian teenager Emanuela Orlandi, the daughter of a Vatican employee, believed to have been kidnapped after a music lesson in Rome on June 22, 1983 when she was 15-years-old.AP

The Vatican insisted Saturday it has done everything possible to try to resolve the 1983 disappearance of an employee's teenage daughter and has no objections to allowing inspection of the basilica tomb of a reputed mobster from a gang purportedly linked to her presumed kidnapping.

Its chief spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, made the assertion following media speculation that the Vatican knows something it has not revealed about the disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi in Rome. Sparking the speculation was a Good Friday homily on April 6 in St. Peter's Basilica by the papal preacher, who decried that many "atrocious" crimes go unsolved.

With Pope Benedict XVI among those listening, the preacher, the Rev. Raniero Cantalamessa, included this ringing appeal in his homily: "Don't carry your secret to the grave with you!"

The priest didn't name any names or specify any crimes, but his unusual choice for Good Friday reflection immediately sparked speculation that the appeal must have been meant for some Vatican official with knowledge about the Orlandi case, which the Vatican has viewed as a kidnapping.

Emanuela Orlandi was 15 when she disappeared after leaving her family's Vatican City apartment to go to a music lesson in Rome. Her father was a lay employee of the Holy See.

Because she vanished two years after the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square, some, Vatican officials among them, "shared the prevailing opinion that the kidnapping might have been used by some obscure criminal organization to send messages or enact pressure in the context of the jailing and interrogation of the pope's attacker," Lombardi said, referring to the Turkish gunmen, Mehmet Ali Agca.

Referring to the recent speculation, Lombardi said in a written statement that "doubt has been raised as to whether Vatican institutions or personalities truly did everything possible to contribute to the search for the truth about what happened."

Lombardi gave details of what he said were Vatican efforts to help during the early days of the case.

"Just to give one example, the investigators, and above all, SISDE (intelligence) agents had access to the Vatican switchboard to hear possible calls from the kidnappers," he said. He added that the Vatican authorized Italian investigators to tap the Orlandi family's phone and to come and go to speak with the family without having to first ask Vatican permission.

"All the Vatican authorities collaborated, with commitment and transparency, with the Italian authorities to deal with the kidnapping in the first phase, and, then, later in the successive investigations," Lombardi maintained.

"As far as we know, there is nothing hidden, nor are there 'secrets' n the Vatican to reveal on the subject," Lombardi said. "To continue to assert it is completely unjustified; also, we reiterate, yet again, all the material from the Vatican was handed over, in its time, to the investigating magistrates and to police authorities."

Apparently in hopes of putting to rest speculation, the Vatican is willing to allow a reputed mobster's tomb in the Vatican Basilica dell'Apollinare, a Rome church, to be inspected, and the remains moved elsewhere, Lombardi added.

Four years ago, Italian news reports quoted the dead man's former lover as telling Rome prosecutors that mobsters from the city's crime syndicate, known as the Magliana gang, had kidnapped the girl and had her body dumped in a cement mixer near a beach outside the capital.

Italian prosecutors cannot publicly discuss a case while it is under investigation, so it is unclear if these claims have shed any light on Orlandi's disappearance.

The Vatican at the time described the woman's claims as having "extremely doubtful value." The woman's lover, Enrico De Pedis, was gunned down in 1990 as he rode his motorscooter in Rome.

The 2008 media reports also claimed the woman told prosecutors that the girl had been kidnapped on orders from Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, the late U.S. prelate who had headed the Vatican bank and was linked to a huge Italian banking scandal in the 1980s. Marcinkus had always asserted his innocence in the scandal.

Lombardi noted in his statement that the De Pedis tomb in the basilica "has continued and continues to be the motive of questions and discussions," but he offered no explanation as why a reputed mobster would be buried in a Vatican church.

He recalled John Paul's "intense personal involvement" in the suffering of the girl's family, and said "suffering unfortunately is revived with every new path of explanation, so far without result."



Article from FOXNEWS


Slacktivists: Changing the world a \'Like\' at a time

  • Content and entertainment company TakePart sponsored a study that found so-called "slacktivism" can be effective.TakePart

They fill your inbox with viral videos, re-tweet the latest cause célèbre and preach to the digital masses on their Facebook status â€" but do so-called “slacktivists” actually accomplish anything?

The newly-minted term for folks who passively support causes on the Internet and through social media has been thrust into the lexicon since a California-based content and entertainment company released the viral video phenomenon “KONY 2012.” More than 100 million people viewed the video about a murderous Ugandan warlord, but critics were skeptical of the impact. Sending the link to everyone in your address book might have made you feel good, they said, but such lazy engagement falls far short of true activism.

"A slacktivist is someone unwilling to actually leave their computer to further the cause, so while they support the idea, they'll do the lowest common denominator to support it," Jason Stern, a New York-based Internet lawyer, told FoxNews.com.

Yet other observers say "slacktivism" can yield real results. Massive online support can influence policymakers, any kind of awareness beats ignorance and slacktivism might just be a gateway into making a difference, they say.

“It's definitely another door to raise money or to raise awareness and activism,” said Sayo Martin, director of digital marketing for Take Part, a California-based content and entertainment company that works with nonprofits. “Just look at what happened with the Arab Spring. It was started through social media.”

A study from Georgetown University in November entitled “Dynamics of Cause Engagement” looked how Americans learned about and interacted with causes and other social issues, and discovered some surprising findings on Slacktivism.

"Slacktivists are not useless because by raising global awareness, they do contribute in a small way. But they are not activists."

- Jason Stern, an attorney specializing on internet and social media issues

While the traditional forms of activism like donating money or volunteering far outpaces slacktivism, those who engage in social issues online are twice as likely as their traditional counterparts to volunteer and participate in events. In other words, slacktivists often graduate to full-blown activism.

“It's the easiest way for someone to be active,” said Martin, who believes the more accurate term is "clicktivism."

Not everyone can afford to donate to a cause, much less take on Japanese whaling ships or devote their lives to feeding the hungry in a third-world nation. But Stern said there is some justification for the derision heaped upon slacktivists.

"Slacktivists are not useless because by raising global awareness, they do contribute in a small way," Stern told FoxNews.com. "But they are not activists."

There is at least one program through which slacktivists can achieve tangible results. A web-based game called FreeRice, sponsored by the United Nations World Food Program, actually turns mouse clicks into food for the needy. Users take quizzes on various subjects and, for each correct answer, they earn ten grains of rice for those in need. The site relies on ads to pay for distribution of donated food.

“It's been hugely successful for us. It accounts for about 9% of our site's traffic,” Bettina Luescher, spokeswoman for the World Food Program, told FoxNews.com. She added that nearly 100 billion grains of rice--enough to feed two meals to five million people--has been distributed through the program.

“The fact that five million people could be fed through a game is amazing,” Luescher said. “I think the younger generation is looking to be involved and are searching for ways to give back.”

Still, the best way to make the world a better place is to get out and work at it, said Stern. Clicking, preaching and caring deeply from a sedentary position can only go so far.

"If I had to pinpoint it," Stern said. "I would say that slacktivism ends and activism begins when the fingers leave the Apple keyboard and the butt leaves the Herman Miller chair."



Article from FOXNEWS


Report: Lockerbie bomber in critical condition

  • Aug. 21, 2009: Convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset al-Megrahi shakes the hand of Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi in Tripoli in this image from Libya TV. (Reuters)

TRIPOLI, Libya -- The convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdel Baset al Megrahi has been hospitalized in Tripoli, where he remained in critical condition Saturday, a source close to Megrahi's family said.

"Abdel Baset has been in the hospital since yesterday [Friday] and his condition is critical," the source told AFP, adding that Megrahi's relatives were by his bedside.

Megrahi was convicted in a Scottish court in 2001 over the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jet. Some 270 people died in the attack.

The 60-year-old was released on compassionate grounds in 2009 and allowed to return to Libya, with doctors saying at the time that he was suffering from terminal cancer and had only three months to live.

Megrahi was greeted as a hero upon his return to Libya after he served eight years of a minimum 27-year jail term for his role in the bombing.

Britain's prime minister David Cameron criticized the release at the time, calling it a "terrible mistake." The fact that he has survived so long after his release has also led to anger in the US and Britain.

In August 2011, following the revolution which toppled Moamar Ghadafi, Megrahi's brother Abdel Nasser said at the family home in Tripoli that Megrahi was "in and out of a coma."

Megrahi had appeared on TV at a rally in Tripoli in July 2011 in support of Ghadafi, leading Britain's foreign secretary William Hague to respond, "The appearance of Mr. al Megrahi on our television screens is a further reminder that a great mistake was made when he was released."

All 259 passengers, mainly Americans, and crew, died when the Pan Am flight exploded over the town of Lockerbie in southern Scotland in December 1988. A further 11 people on the ground died in the incident.

Megrahi was convicted of 270 counts of murder by a panel of Scottish judges, but he has consistently proclaimed his innocence in the bombing.

In a statement issued following his release in 2009, he said, "I say in the clearest possible terms, which I hope every person in every land will hear -- all of this I have had to endure for something that I did not do."



Article from FOXNEWS


12-year-old dies after getting hit by baseball

  • Eric Lederman died after being struck in the neck by a baseball.MyFoxChicago.com

A 12-year-old sports fanatic has died in Illinois after being hit in the neck by a baseball while warming up for a game this week.

Eric Lederman, a sixth-grader from Oswego, Ill., roughly 50 miles southwest of Chicago, was hospitalized after being hit while throwing a ball with a teammate Wednesday night before a league game in Wheaton, the Chicago Tribune reported.

He died Thursday night, leaving his local community in shock.

"He was an inspiration to his teammates, coaches and baseball family," Brian Zacker, the coach of Eric's baseball team, told the newspaper. "He played with an infectious smile and played the game with tremendous passion and heart."

Oswego Softball and Baseball Association executive director John Thorson told the Chicago Sun-Times that officials were working on plans to set up a memorial for the Lederman family.

"I've played baseball many years and in college and I've never seen anything like this," he said.

"It's a tragic freak accident. But right now we're concentrating all our efforts on the family and the team and the coaching staff. They are all literally beside themselves."

Please click here for more from MyFoxChicago.com



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Secret Service scandal deepens, agents on leave

DEVELOPING ...

Cartagena, COLOMBIA - The scandal regarding as many a 12 Sercret Service agents being sent home because one allegedly tried to bring a prostitute into his hotel room, which resulted in a confrontation, has now widened to include five U.S. service members.

Military officials said Saturday the service members violated curfew and "may have been involved in inappropriate conduct ...alleged to have occurred in the same hotel where the recalled U.S. Secret Service agents were staying."

The service members were assigned to Joint Task Force Summit of the Americas in support of the Secret Service.

General Douglas Fraser, commander of USSOUTHCOM, said he is "disappointed by the entire incident and that this behavior is not in keeping with the professional standards expected of members of the United States military."

White House spokesman said the president is aware that service members now appears to be involved.

The U.S. Secret Service said on Saturday it had put 11 agents on administrative leave to investigate their behavior, and apologized for the distraction the incident had caused.

A dispute in a hotel about paying for an extra "guest," possibly a prostitute, started the confrontation that ultimately led to sending home at least a dozen Secret Service agents covering detail of President Obama's trip in Colombia, a senior law enforcement official tells Fox News' Ed Henry.

New details are emerging about the incident at the Hotel Caribe, where the Secret Service advance team was staying ahead of Obama's three-day visit to the country.

A senior law enforcement official said the dispute started when hotel employees witnessed inappropriate behavior.

An employee approached at least one Secret Service agent and demanding that he pay extra money for having an additional overnight guest in his room.

The agent balked, which eventually resulted in a confrontation and forced diplomatic intervention.

The official said the guest involved apparently was a prostitute. It remains unclear whether more agents and more prostitutes were involved.

A hotel employee told the Associated Press the agents were drinking heavily during their stay.

The senior law enforcement official stressed the matter is under investigation and officials are still trying to corroborate initial details.

The hotel tells Fox News they will not be commenting on the matter.

A new Secret Service crew was immediately rushed to Colombia to cover the agents who had been sent home.

What makes the case unusual is the large number involved. In previous incidents involving agents on a trip, typically only one or two personnel have been involved.

As is protocol with any White House foreign trip, there's a large contingency of federal agents covering multiple aspects of presidential security. Agents often arrive several days ahead of the president.

The embarrassing incident has quickly eclipsed issues addressed at the summit such as foreign trade, the economy; drug trafficking, immigration and collaboration among the 33 Western Hemisphere countries.

The beachfront hotel where the apparent incident occurred is also the same where other White House staff and the press are staying.

A Service Service spokesman said the alleged incident occurred prior to the president's arrival. The agency would not confirm the total number of people involved or whether the incident had to do with prostitution. Officials stressed that the president's security was never in any danger.

The White House has not yet commented and is directing all inquiries to the agency.

Prostitution is legal in Colombia in certain "tolerance zones"

"The Secret Service takes all allegations of misconduct seriously," agency spokesman Edwin Donovan said Friday. "This entire matter has been turned over to our Office of Professional Responsibility, which serves as the agency's internal affairs component."

Capitol Hill lawmakers have been briefed on the situation. Sources tell Fox News Senior Producer Chad Pergram that those involved were not on the president's detail.

There are different divisions of security positions within the Secret Service, including a uniformed division and one that provides presidential protection.

Former Washington Post reporter and author on a book about the agency, Ronald Kessler, first reported the allegations.



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Washington named Britain\'s greatest ever military foe

George Washington has been named Britain's greatest ever foe, according to the UK's National Army Museum.

The American Revolutionary War hero and the country's first president was the winner of a vote held at the museum Saturday to identify the Britain's most outstanding military opponent, The (London) Daily Telegraph reported.

The museum drew up a list of 20 candidates, which was whittled down to a shortlist of five. On Saturday, five historians presented the case for each commander to an audience of 70 guests at the west London museum who then voted.

Washington was named ahead of Michael Collins, who led Ireland to independence from the UK; France's Napoleon Bonaparte; Erwin Rommel, the German World War II commander; and Turkish World War I leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

To qualify for the vote, each commander had to come from the 17th century onwards -- the period covered by the museum's collection --- and had to have led an army in the field against the British, which excluded political enemies like Adolf Hitler.



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Activists: Syrian forces resume shelling in rebel city

  • April 6, 2012: In this photo, Free Syrian Army fighters try to spot a sniper during fighting with Syrian troops in a suburb of Damascus, Syria.AP

Syrian troops resumed their shelling of residential neighborhoods dominated by rebels in the central city of Homs Sunday, activists said, after the U.N. Security Council voted to dispatch the first group of monitors to the country to shore up a shaky truce.

The reported shelling is threatening the cease-fire to which President Bashar Assad and rebels fighting to topple him had agreed. Both sides accuse each other of violating the truce at the center of international envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan.

The Local Coordination Committees activist network said shells falling at the rate of six each minute shook the neighborhood of Khaldiyeh for the second consecutive day. There was no immediate word on casualties.

Syrian troops shelled residential neighborhoods of Homs Saturday in the first use of heavy weapons since the cease-fire officially took effect Thursday. Rebels were reported by the state media to have fired rocket-propelled grenades.

In an amateur video posted on the Internet by activists Sunday, explosions and gunfire can be heard echoing as Khaldiyeh's skyline is engulfed in gray smoke. Homs-based activists said other districts including Bayada, Jouret el-Shayah, Qarabees and Qusour were also being bombarded.

The regime restricts access of foreign observers, including journalists, making it difficult to verify reports of violence independently.

Saturday's resolution gave the 15-nation Security Council its first united front since the uprising against President Bashar Assad began 13 months ago. It called for immediate deployment of up to 30 monitors, to be followed by a larger contingent of up to 250 once the situation has stabilized.

Emphasizing that both sides must halt the violence that has killed more than 9,000, the council called on Syria to pull soldiers and heavy weapons out of towns and cities -- a truce provision Assad's regime has ignored. It also demanded urgent compliance with Annan's six-point plan intended to lead to talks between the regime and the opposition on Syria's political future.

The plan is widely seen as the only remaining chance for diplomacy, mainly because it has the backing of Syria allies Russia and China which shielded Assad from Security Council condemnation in the past.

Annan said in Geneva that he was "very relieved and happy" about the council vote.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also welcomed the resolution.

"I will make sure that this advanced observer mission will be dispatched as soon as possible and try to make concrete proposals by eighteenth of April for an official observer mission," he said.

Western powers and opposition leaders remain skeptical about Assad's willingness to ease his tight grip on the country, ruled by his family for four decades. The regime appears to have complied with parts of the Annan plan, while flouting others.

With the exception of Homs, an opposition stronghold pounded by daily regime shelling in the three weeks leading up to the cease-fire, the military has halted random shelling and mortar attacks on rebel-held residential areas, which were the daily norm in recent weeks. However, it has maintained an intimidating presence of troops, tanks and plainclothes security agents in the streets and demanded that anti-government protesters seek permits, despite Annan's demand that peaceful gatherings be allowed.



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North Carolina tells drivers to hang up or pay up

If you're driving through Chapel Hill, N.C., and your cellphone rings, don't answer it. Starting June 1, you can get a $25 dollar ticket for talking on your cellphone while driving within the city limits.

In a close 5-4 vote, the town council decided to ban any phone calls made while operating a vehicle â€" that includes hands-free devices, such as Bluetooth and speakerphones.

Chapel Hill, home to the University of North Carolina, is the first municipality in the nation to enact a complete ban on all cellphone use in cars. Town council member Penny Rich says a large number of pedestrians and bicyclists navigating sidewalks and streets among drivers who tend to multitask is a dangerous mix.

“The distraction is not holding the phone. The distraction is actually the conversation,” Rich said. “So just holding the phone is not what is making you drive poorly, it's the conversation.”

The ban is a second-offense violation. So the Chapel Hill police will not pull you over if they see you talking on a phone. A ticket will only be issued if they stop you for another traffic violation, such as speeding or running a red light, and find that you were talking on your phone.

The National Transportation Safety Board supports the ban and is trying to promote statewide cellphone bans in all 50 states.

“If you need to make that call at 5 o'clock and you are on the road, just find a parking lot or somewhere to go to make that call,” Rich said. “You make that call, and you get back on the road and continue driving.”

But some businesspeople in the area are upset about the ban and say not being able to use their phones while driving in Chapel Hill can cost them customers and hurt their business.  

“Basically my car is my office,” said Dave Cotton, owner of AdvantaClean, a disaster restoration and cleaning business. “If a customer or potential customer calls me and I don't answer that phone, well, they are going to call someone else.”

Frank Coker owns Senior Helpers, a company that helps homebound senior citizens with daily tasks, such as grocery shopping, getting to doctor's appointments and household chores. Coker worries that a missed phone call might be from a client that needs immediate response.

“I need to pick those up. I am not comfortable waiting four minutes to pull off and call them,” Coker said. “That could be a very long time for someone who is in a distressing situation.”

But Rich, who runs her own business as a personal chef, argues that pulling over to pick up a phone call will not hurt business. She says her clients are very understanding about her policy to not answer phone calls while driving her company van.

“Actually, my clients applauded me for bringing this to the Chapel Hill town council for an ordinance to be put in place,” Rich said. “This is not really an ordinance to write tickets for people. It's an education campaign that we are putting forth.”

There are legal questions about the ban that could open it up to challenges from ticketed drivers. In a response to a letter from the Chapel Hill town attorney asking about the proposed ban, a North Carolina assistant attorney general explained that the ordinance was pre-empted by state laws on cellphone usage and might be deemed unenforceable.

“It's impossible to call this issue,” said Shea Denning, associate professor of public law and government at UNC-Chapel Hill. “There are really strong legal arguments pointing both ways in favor or pre-emption and in favor of the town's authority to have acted.”

Denning also says that elected officials have to also consider the delicate balance between regulatory authority and people's individual freedoms.

“The town council decided in this instance that the balance fell on the public safety side,” Denning said. “It appears that they considered a really deep record of information before acting, but it did take a long time for them to come to this point.”

Evanston, Ill., could become the second city to enact a similar ban. That city now requires cellphone calls within city limits to be hands free, but it is exploring an ordinance to ban all cellphone use as well.



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TSA baggage inspector accused of stealing iPads

A Transportation Security Administration (TSA) official has been charged after being accused of stealing eight iPads from luggage at Dallas/Fort Worth International airport, KXAS-TV reported.

Clayton Keith Dovel, a baggage inspector, has been charged with theft by a public servant and has been suspended by the TSA.

"The unacceptable behavior of this individual in no way reflects the dedication of our nearly 50,000 transportation security officers who work tirelessly to keep our skies safe," TSA said in a statement obtained by the station.

One victim of Dovel's alleged thefts is University of Texas at Arlington student Borna Maira, who told KXAS that his iPad went missing when he traveled through the airport in May 2011.

"I noticed my iPad was not in my luggage, and I thought, 'Maybe I made a mistake. Maybe I left it at my apartment,'" he said.

Police contacted him months later after finding the iPad at Dovel's home.

Dovel could face between two and 10 years in prison if convicted.



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Key figure in GSA Vegas controversy not talking- Smarts and judgment in Washington

A prayer campaign launched by a California Planned Parenthood affiliate has angered pro-life groups who claim the counter-campaign mocks their own "40 Days for Life" effort.

Officials at Six Rivers Planned Parenthood (SRPP) in Eureka, Calif., launched "40 Days of Prayer" last month and has offered up daily prayers for pregnant women and clinicians who perform abortions.

"Today we pray for women for whom pregnancy is not good news, that they know they have choices," read the prayer for Day 1.

Day 18 offers prayers for "staff at abortion clinics around the nation," while Day 38 calls for a "cloud of gentleness to surround" every abortion facility in the country.

The campaign, according to Liberty Counsel, an Orlando-based pro-life litigation group, is another "desperate attempt" to regain positive public attention and funding by mimicking a pro-life campaign.

"Planned Parenthood's prayer crusade is an attempt to mock and marginalize the highly effective '40 Days for Life,' which has unified half a million voices for the cause and saved at least 5,838 lives," the organization said in a statement. "As a direct result of this prayer event, 22 abortion clinics have closed and 69 doctors have stopped performing abortion."

SRPP officials referred inquiries to Faith Aloud, a St. Louis-based religious organization that composed the prayers. Rev. Rebecca Turner, Faith Aloud's executive director, told FoxNews.com that the prayers were written four years ago, but this is believed to be the first time they've been used by a Planned Parenthood affiliate. She denied allegations that they are meant to mock the "40 Days for Life" campaign.

"In no way is it a mockery of anything because we take prayer very seriously," Turner said Friday. "And I take women's concerns very seriously. These prayers, all of them, are very specific to women and not all of them are about abortion. In fact, very few of them are."

Turner continued: "Everyone, in any situation, can turn to God and pray. A pregnancy is not an exception to that."

Liberty Counsel founder Matthew Staver was blunt in his assessment of a campaign featuring prayers for those involved in abortions.

"Planned Parenthood's 'prayer' campaign is offensive," Staver said.



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Romney: Obama will erode gun owners\' rights

  • April 13, 2012: Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks at the National Rifle Association convention in St. Louis.AP

The presidential campaign briefly veered from the emotional Mommy Wars on Friday to the back-burner issue of gun rights, with Mitt Romney telling the National Rifle Association that President Barack Obama is not protecting gun owners -- even though the topic has rarely arisen during his time in office.

Without offering details, Romney said that Obama would like to erode gun owners' rights.

"We need a president who will enforce current laws, not create new ones that only serve to burden lawful gun owners," Romney told thousands of NRA members in St. Louis for their annual convention. "President Obama has not. I will."

Obama has said relatively little about firearms, deeply disappointing gun-control groups. Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said the president's record "makes clear the he supports and respects the Second Amendment, and we'll fight back against any attempts to mislead voters."

The gathering of gun enthusiasts comes as Romney, the presumptive GOP nominee, is trying to woo conservative groups to consolidate his base after fending off challengers on his right. His relationship with gun owner groups is uneasy.

Running for the Senate in 1994, Romney said: "I don't line up with the NRA." A decade later he became a lifetime NRA member.

The NRA convention is a must-do for any Republican candidate. But this week it interrupted a new campaign narrative that Romney would like to extend: the view that top Democrats look down on stay-at-home moms.

Romney used the NRA setting, in the domed arena where the St. Louis Rams play football, to make his first public comments on the topic. He brought a central player and key supporter: his wife, Ann, who stayed home to raise their five sons.

Democratic activist Hilary Rosen set off the tempest Wednesday by telling CNN that Ann Romney never worked a day in her life. The ensuing uproar knocked Democrats off their message that Republicans are insufficiently concerned about women's rights, including access to birth control.

In St. Louis, Mitt Romney began his 24-minute speech by calling his wife "a hero" and "my sweetheart," adding: "I happen to believe all moms are working moms."

Ann Romney praised working fathers as well as mothers, then left the stage to her husband and his appeal to the gun-rights group.

Mitt Romney told the group: "We need a president who will stand up for the rights of hunters, sportsmen, and those seeking to protect their homes and their families. President Obama has not; I will."

Asked for details to support the claims, Romney's campaign said Obama has appointed judges, including Supreme Court Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, who have supported moves such as placing temporary limits on importing semiautomatic assault weapons. The campaign said Attorney General Eric Holder has not adequately backed people's rights to own and use firearms.

But gun-control groups such as the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence have expressed dismay over the lack of attention to their concerns. In its most recent assessment, in 2010, the group flunked on Obama on all seven issues it deemed important.

Campaigning in 2008, Obama said: "I believe in people's lawful right to bear arms. ... There are some commonsense gun safety laws that I believe in. But I am not going to take your guns away."

Dan Gross, president of the Brady group, said he is happy that Obama recently spoke in support of the family of Florida shooting victim Trayvon Martin and called for more national dialogue on gun violence following last year's shooting of then-Rep. Gabriel Giffords, D-Ariz., which killed six people.

"Our disappointment is that his voice is really yet to be heard in that conversation," Gross said. He said Romney is pandering to the NRA, a group he accuses of abetting the killings of thousands of people.

Neither Romney nor other NRA speakers -- former presidential contender Rick Santorum and still-trying candidate Newt Gingrich were among them -- alluded to the high-profile Martin case. A volunteer neighborhood watchman has been charged with second-degree murder for fatally shooting the unarmed teenager, who was walking in a gated community.

The NRA strongly backed Florida's "stand your ground" law, at the heart of the unfolding case.

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul said Romney "believes that efforts to craft `stand your ground' legislation should be left up to the individual states."

When Romney ran successfully for Massachusetts governor in 2002, the NRA gave his Democratic opponent a higher rating on gun-rights issues but made no endorsement.

Massachusetts quadrupled its gun-licensing fee while Romney was governor. He signed a law that made permanent a ban on assault-type weapons, although it was coupled with some measures backed by gun-rights groups.

As he was considering his first presidential run in 2006, Romney became a lifetime NRA member.

Romney drew snickers in 2008 by claiming he sometimes hunts "small varmints." He showed more humility and humor last month in Alabama, where he said he hoped to go hunting with a friend who "can actually show me which end of the rifle to point."

Gingrich, who addressed the NRA convention after Romney, said the United Nations should adopt a treaty "to extend the right to bear arms to every person on the planet." Such "human rights," he said, would reduce rapes and child killings worldwide.



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