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Then/Now: \'The Love Boat\' Cast

You eat an apple a day to keep the doctor away. But you might want to eat a serving of blueberries after that Granny Smith, too. Consuming flavonoid-rich foods and beverages like berries, nuts, herbs, and red wine may significantly cut your risk of Parkinson's disease, according to a recent study in Neurology.

Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health and Norwich Medical School followed 130,000 people participating in a long-running study analyzing lifestyle behaviors. More than 800 participants developed Parkinson's disease over the study's 20-year follow-up. Men who ate the most flavonoids during that time were 40 percent less likely to develop the disease than men who ate the least. In fact, men who ate one or more servings of berry fruits a week were 24 percent less likely to develop Parkinson's than those who didn't eat any.

Tips for Better Eating Habits

Previous studies have found that foods rich in these compounds can protect against cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and some cancers, says study author Xiang Gao, M.D., a research scientist at the Harvard School of Public Health.  Now, researchers think flavonoids' anti-inflammatory powers are to thank for reducing your risk of Parkinson's, a progressive neurological condition that affects at least 500,000 people in the United States. (Flavonoids have also been shown to improve your eyesight and decrease your risk of heart disease.)

Your move: Getting a daily fix of flavonoids. Step one is to pick bright-colored produce since flavonoids give plants their colors, says Alexandra Caspero, RD, owner of weight-management and sports-nutrition service Delicious-Knowledge.com. More color generally means more flavonoids, she says. Think: Spinach over iceberg lettuce and sweet potatoes over russet potatoes. Check out some other easy ways to incorporate flavonoids into your next meal.

- Toss frozen berries in your morning yogurt, cereal, or oatmeal

- Add spinach to your scrambled eggs

- Mix 1 to 2 teaspoons of dried cinnamon into your coffee grounds before brewing

- Add chopped peppers to taco meat

- Add vegetables to spaghetti sauce

- Add dried basil, oregano, or thyme to meat marinades

- Drink two cups of  green tea a day

- Add turmeric to rice

Learn 27 More Ways to Power Up Your Brain!
 



Article from FOXNEWS


Facebook, Microsoft forge $550M patent deal

Microsoft (MSFT) on Monday revealed plans to sell Facebook 650 of the patents and patent applications it is purchasing from AOL (AOL) for $550 million. 

In addition to the patents Facebook will own outright, the social-media giant will also get a license to utilize ones that that Microsoft will purchase and own, the two companies said in a statement. Microsoft  said the deal will help it regain more than half of the costs associated with the deal with AOL, while still helping it achieve the goal of the purchase. 

Facebook General Counsel Ted Ullyot said in a statement that the move represents a "significant step in our ongoing process of building an intellectual property portfolio to protect Facebook's interests over the long term."



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama\'s Hits on Romney Mirror GOP\'s 1992 Strategy

"The one issue people are concerned about is the economy, we're not stupid. It is the economy and we're going to do what's necessary to replace this president and to get somebody in the White House who understands the economy and get it working again for the American people."

-- Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney campaigning in Greencastle, Pa.

"... they're in the thralls of this reign of terror from the far right that has dragged the party to the right."

-- David Axelrod, senior political adviser to President Obama, on "State of the Union" discussing House Republicans

In 1992, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton unseated an incumbent president who had successfully prosecuted the first major American military action since Vietnam and who was widely respected as a thoughtful, qualified leader.

Clinton did it with two things.

First was the indispensable Ross Perot, the Texas billionaire whose independent candidacy -- a crusade against deficit spending and in favor of more government transparency and accountability -- tipped the race to Clinton. Consider Ohio, where Bush lost to Clinton by less than 2 points. Perot took more than 20 percent of the vote in Ohio, surely harming Republican incumbent George H. W. Bush more than Democrat challenger Clinton.

Second was Clinton's relentless focus on the puny condition of the economy in 1992.

It sounds funny to say now, but with a first quarter gross domestic product growth rate of about 4.5 percent and an unemployment rate over 7 percent, Americans had grown frustrated with the pace of recovery from the 1990-1991 recession. Those numbers sound great now, but had left voters, accustomed to the boom years before, feeling crabby. 

Clinton, who had essentially clinched the Democratic nomination on April 7 with wins over former (and future) California Gov. Jerry Brown in Wisconsin and New York, saw an opportunity and honed in on the incumbent's weak spot.

Democrats who had been skeptical of Clinton's "third-way" centrist politics during the fractious primary process of that year were so eager to see an end to nearly 12-years of Republican control of the White House that they quickly fell in line behind Clinton.

Clinton had tremendous personal liabilities. His primary campaign was almost upended by the revelations from an Arkansas mistress and revelations about collegiate drug use and avoidance of service in Vietnam added to a Republican line of attack on the Democratic nominee as too radical and too lacking in character to be the commander in chief, especially when contrasted with the dutiful Bush.

But voters were not much interested in what Clinton had smoked or whether he had helped arrange anti-war protests in London instead of serving in Vietnam. Instead they were eager to hear Clinton's pitch for economic reforms that he said could kick-start the economy and rein in deficit spending.

The implicit message from Team Clinton was that while George H. W. Bush had been presiding over the fall of the Soviet Union and the Gulf War, he had neglected domestic concerns and the economy. The guy didn't even know how grocery-store scanners worked, for goodness sake!

This year, Mitt Romney doesn't have the help of a Ross Perot-style spoiler (though the group Americans Elect may yet produce a left-of-center nominee who can play part of that role). But he does have an economy in much worse shape than it was in 1992 and a widespread belief that President Obama doesn't understand the economy.

So far, we're seeing the Obama campaign run very much like the Bush campaign in 1992. The focus is on painting Romney as a secret radical whose personal background should be disqualifying to hold the highest office in the land.

The Obama character attack on Romney has mostly to do with the way the quarter-billionaire made his money and how he has shielded it from taxes. When the Obama campaign asks, "what is Romney hiding?" it means to suggest nefarious doings. The campaign has even invoked the 1983 treatment of the Romney family's Irish setter on a car trip to Canada as evidence of Romney's poor character.

Democrats have added other lines of attack, wondering aloud if Romney's Mormon faith should be cause for concern.

In an interview with liberal Web site the Daily Beast last week, Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer allowed that Romney could make the case to Hispanic voters that his father was an immigrant from Mexico, "but then he'd have to talk about his family coming from a polygamy commune in Mexico," which Schweitzer, the former head of the Democratic Governors Association, said would hurt Romney with female voters.

Democrats tie together the arguments about the secretive and cruel Romney in the president's pitch on the stump that Romney and his fellow rich folks are working to make, to borrow Vice President Joe Biden's term, "suckers" of middle class Americans.

Just like the campaign of George H.W. Bush, the Obama Democrats want persuadable voters to be convinced that Romney is hiding secret, radical tendencies dangerous to the country. Sure, he sounds like a moderate...

Romney has nowhere near the political gifts of Clinton and Obama is a more skillful politician than the 41st president. But the same dynamics seem to be very much at work and given the droopy economy and Obama's poor marks on the subject with voters, may be moving with even greater power.

The challenge for Romney is the same as it was for Bubba in 1992: Every day not discussing the economy or Obama's economic approach is a bad day. The Obama team will be doing everything it can to make sure that Romney spends plenty of time talking about Irish setter transportation and tax shelters.

The Day in Quotes

"53.6 percent"

-- The portion of Americans under age 25 with college degrees who were unemployed or underemployed according an Associated Press study of unemployment data.

"...perfect for a bicycle or hybrid."

-- Description of the bumper sticker offered by the new "Environmentalists for Obama" program being offered by president's re-election campaign.

"Leon is doing an important job for the country, really a service to the country at the age of 73 after a long career.  He followed Bob Gates at the request of the president.  I don't think people are going to begrudge him going home and seeing his family."

-- David Axelrod, senior political adviser to President Obama, on "State of the Union" discussing the approximately $860,000 spent on weekend trips home to California by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta since taking the post in July.

"I can't think of anyone so reflective of the thinking, principles and ideals of our state."

-- Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels in a new ad for embattled Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., who gave Daniels his first job in politics in 1969 as a mayoral aide in Indianapolis. Lugar, 80, faces a tough test in his re-election bid from state Treasurer Richard Mourdock in the state's May 8 primary.

"Insiders have already seen the hand of Mr. Bernard in the presence at the dinner for [British Prime Minister David Cameron] of nearly four dozen 'bundlers,' or people who solicit campaign checks for Mr. Obama from their friends and associates."

-- Sunday New York Times article on White House Social Secretary Jeremy Bernard.

"The design of the demonstration precludes a credible evaluation of its effectiveness in achieving (the administration's) stated research goal."

-- A report from the Government Accountability Office blasting a provision in President Obama's health law that provides an $8.3 billion "pilot program" for Medicare, which Republicans say is actually just a way to soften the political blow from the first rounds of scheduled cuts to the program.

"65 percent"

-- Portion of registered voters in the latest FOX News poll who support Arizona's immigration law. The Obama administration's effort to block the measure, which allows police to determine the immigration status of those whom they detain on suspicion of other offenses, will be argued before the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News, and his POWER PLAY column appears Monday-Friday on FoxNews.com.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Very nervous\': Laid-off dad\'s big chance

RemakeAfter an agonizing job search, John overhauls his image and resumé - and lands a crucial interview.




Article from YAHOO NEWS


Etan Patz case: Search ending with no major evidence

The latest chapter in the 33-year search for Etan Patz -- the digging up of a basement in NYC's SoHo District -- has ended with no human remains found, no "aha" moment, and only a few reeds of possible evidence collected from the hundreds of pounds of debris now packed into dumpsters.

The bits of material -- some human hair, but not blonde hair like that of the young boy who vanished on his way to school, and a possible blood stained bit of cinder block -- are being sent to the FBI forensic lab in Quantico, Va..

And today, according to authorities, will be a day for winding down the operation on Prince Street.

After the day's digging at around 3 p.m. Sunday, authorities met with the Patz family to inform them of the outcome of the search. They were told what had been found, and what, significantly, had not been found: human remains or other clear evidence that their son had been inside that basement prior to his disappearance.

Patz was 6 at the time he disappeared on the morning of May 25, 1979, soon after leaving his parents' apartment at 113 Prince St., the first time he was to walk to the school bus stop by himself. The boy's 1979 disappearance sparked a citywide search that decades later led authorities back to handyman Othneil Miler's small basement workshop, this time to excavate it after cadaver dogs detected the smell of human remains.

The possible evidence was discovered in the basement that was once used as a kids' play area, which doubled as the workspace of retired handyman Othniel Miller, now 75. Miller, according to authorities, was seen with Patz the night before he disappeared.

"The FBI has been here to investigate the case," Stephaine Miller, Othniel Miller's daughter, said. "He cooperated with them and went to the site and he doesn't have anything to do with it."

Miller has not been named a suspect in the Patz disappearance, but he has been questioned.

"Mr. Miller denies involvement with what has happened to this beautiful young boy," his attorney, Michael Farkas, said. "Mr. Miller has been cooperating with this investigation for over 30 years."

Since the boy's 1979 disappearance, a man named Jose Ramos, who is a convicted child molester, has been considered the prime suspect, although he has denied any connection.

Etan Patz disappearance without a trace and was one of the first major missing child cases to receive national attention. Although he was never found, the images of the boy were never forgotten. The boy's parents never changed their phone number, and told ABC News two years ago that they never moved, in the hopes that one day their boy would come home.

Former ABC News Producer Lisa Cohen wrote a book on the case entitled "After Etan: The Missing Child Case That Held America Captive," which made national headlines. Cohen recently spoke with Etan's father again.

"He is just so grateful that they're actually moving forward with the case," Cohen said. "And if anything happens, it can bring some kind of peace to that family."

Authorities investigating the case are using technological advances that can even detect whether a body was moved to reinvestigate the cold case. Vast improvements in technology since Patz disappeared, including agents that detect traces of blood and ground penetrating radar, are allowing investigators to crack "relatively old" cold cases by looking beyond what the eye can see.

Still, in a statement to ABC News, the FBI said that there is still not a significant amount of solid new evidence to report on at this time.

"It's important not to read too much into anything at this time," the statement said. "The process of removing material, sorting it and analyzing it proceeds at a deliberate pace."

Also Read

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Concerns mount over captured US drone\'s value

  • Dec. 8, 2011: This image provided by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards claims to show the chief of the aerospace division of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, left, listening to an unidentified colonel as he points to a US RQ-170 Sentinel drone.AP

U.S. officials are challenging Iran's claims that it has reverse-engineered the American drone that went down last year inside its borders -- though one source raised concern that Tehran could try to break down the drone's components and offer access to China and Russia. 

The drone's coating, which resists detection by radar, is a high priority to the Chinese, who also sought access to a stealth U.S. helicopter tail from Pakistan after the Usama bin Laden raid. 

A former intelligence official told Fox News it's unlikely the Iranians could figure out how to recreate the drone, and that the pressing concern would be to try to use the technology to bargain with the Chinese or the Russians. 

While China does not necessarily have the technology to help significantly advance Iran's nuclear program in exchange for access to drone parts, China could offer Iran an IOU of sorts -- for a favor like a veto at the U.N. Security Council, the former official said. 

The Russians would also be interested in any U.S. intelligence collection capability, and could offer Iran ballistics technology useful for a nuclear delivery system. 

Still, the former official described any information the Iranians have been able to glean about the drone's reconnaissance history as "low-hanging fruit," since it would be contained in the drone's equivalent of a black box. 

Speaking on "Fox News Sunday," Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., also said he takes the Iranian pronouncements with "skepticism." 

"I think there is a history here of Iranian bluster, particularly now when they are on the defensive because of our economic sanctions against them," Lieberman said. "I don't have confidence at this point that they are really able to make a copy of it. It's a very sophisticated piece of machinery." 

As for Iranian claims they have broken the codes or encryption, the claims were described to Fox News as a stretch because the encryption "keys" are changed on a monthly basis, and sometimes even more frequently than that. 

"The Iranians are pulling data down, intercepting data all the time, but they can't decode it," the former intelligence official said. 

A 10-week investigation into the downing of the CIA drone in Iran, completed in February, raised  questions as to whether the malfunctions inadvertently may have handed the Iranians not only the aircraft but its data. 

Based on the review, Fox News was told that investigators think one of the drone's three major "data streams" began sending back bad information to its U.S.-based operator. A leading question is whether the bad data caused the drone's operator to inadvertently land the aircraft. But it also raises the possibility that the faulty data stream could have prevented the drone from dumping the intelligence it had collected. When a drone malfunctions, it is programmed to dump data so it does not fall into the wrong hands. 

Fox News was told in February that the CIA's comprehensive review has been unable to replicate the specific malfunction that brought down the drone in Iran. Contact was lost with the drone and its operators on Nov. 29. 

A congressional official, also familiar with the CIA review, said: "We have looked at this eight ways to Sunday. I can tell you it was a U.S. technical problem. The (data) was not lining up and it was not the result of Iranian interference or jamming." 

While efforts to reproduce or replicate the malfunction have failed, investigators are now focusing on how to prevent a repeat in the future -- but without the hardware or the drone itself, those efforts have been challenging. 

A CIA spokesman declined to comment.



Article from FOXNEWS


State Troopers, NFL Star Accused of NJ \'Death Race\'

  • New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin, lower right, applauds as running back Brandon Jacobs reacts on stage during a ceremony for the NFL football Super Bowl XLVI champions at City Hall in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

It is being called “Death Race 2012,” and it could kill the careers of at least two New Jersey law enforcement officers and tarnish the image of San Francisco 49ers running back, Brandon Jacobs.

The Star-Ledger of Newark is reporting that New Jersey authorities are investigating reports that two state police troopers led a group of dozens of exotic sports cars on a trip to Atlantic City down the Garden State Parkway at speeds exceeding 100 mph.

Citing complaints filed with the state, the newspaper says that the high-speed convoy was spotted tearing down the southbound lanes of the toll road on March 30.

Witnesses told the newspaper that the police cars were driving at the front and rear of the 25-to-30-car caravan with their emergency lights flashing. The collection of Porsches, Lamborghinis, Ferraris and other sports cars all reportedly had their license plates covered with black tape, a $100 fine in New Jersey.

According to the Star-Ledger, many drivers struggled to get out of the way of the oncoming cars, with one elderly driver nearly ending up in a ditch.

A spokesman for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie told the newspaper that authorities will take swift action once the investigation is complete, adding that "this is a very serious and disturbing matter for a couple of reasons, but particularly in terms of the disregard for public safety by all those allegedly involved."

According to the Star-Ledger, a source with knowledge of the trip said that Jacobs was among those in the caravan. The agent to the former New York Giant told the newspaper, "Brandon was part of a group that went down to Atlantic City on March 30," but declined to comment further.

Last October, when talking to Yahoo Sports on his dissatisfaction with the Giants organization, Jacobs told the news outlet: "I've got nothing positive to say. The most positive thing: I got family at home and I got a fast a-- car being delivered on Tuesday. That's it."

A well-known car enthusiast, Jacobs owns several exotic machines, including a Nissan GT-R, which has a top speed of 193 mph, but that Jacobs had modified to go even faster.

In a profile in Rides Magazine, also published in October, Jacobs said, “I like the GT-R for during the day, but most of the time you want to have some highway in front of you to get some a'ight speeds -- nothing crazy, but some a'ight speeds.”

The two-time Super Bowl Champ is a member of the Driving Force Club, a group of exotic car owners that organizes high-speed driving events at private venues and, according to the group's website, created the “club for all car fanatics with a spice of racing and adrenalin rush in their hearts. To make this place more enjoyable, we decided to restrict access for anonymous guests -- if you want to become a member and actively participate in our events, we need to get to know you better -- think of it as an introduction to a big but close-knit family."

It is not yet known if other members of the club were involved in the March 30 incident.



Article from FOXNEWS


John Edwards arrives at court for trial on affair money

  • April 23, 2012: John Edwards arrives at federal court in Greensboro, N.C.AP

John Edwards arrived at a federal courthouse in North Carolina Monday morning with his freedom on the line, as attorneys prepared to argue whether the cover-up of his affair with Rielle Hunter violated campaign finance law. 

The day of opening arguments comes more than four years after the former U.S. senator ended his Democratic presidential campaign. While the lurid details of his affair dominated the headlines going into the summer of 2008, the focus of the trial is strictly the money trail. 

At issue is whether nearly $1 million from two wealthy contributors used to hide Edwards' pregnant mistress was intended to preserve his "family man" image during the 2008 presidential campaign -- or whether it was merely intended to prevent his wife and children from finding out about the affair. That could make the difference in whether the jury determines the money was an illegal campaign contribution, as prosecutors argue, or whether the money simply represented some very generous personal gifts. 

The case will also examine whether Edwards even knew about the payments, which were made on his behalf by his national campaign finance chairman, the late Texas lawyer Fred Baron, and campaign donor Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, a now-101-year-old heiress and socialite. Each had already given Edwards' campaign the maximum $2,300 individual contribution allowed by federal law. 

"The prosecution is arguing for a broader view of what counts as a campaign contribution," said Ron Wright, a criminal law professor at Wake Forest University. "The defense would like a stricter, more traditional definition of campaign contribution." 

Edwards is accused of conspiring to solicit the funds and faces six felony counts -- each carrying a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. He has pleaded not guilty. 

U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Eagles, who was appointed in 2010 by President Obama, will preside. She said she expects the proceedings to last about six weeks. 

Edwards denies having known about the money, which paid for private jets, luxury hotels and Hunter's medical care. Abbe Lowell, the well-known Washington lawyer who is representing Edwards, has said that even had Edwards known about the secret payments, his actions wouldn't amount to a crime under federal law. Lowell has said in court that the government's case relies on flawed legal reasoning, that the grand jury process was tainted and that the Republican federal prosecutor who led the investigation was motivated by partisanship. 

But prosecutors will seek to prove he sought and directed the payments to cover up his affair, protect his public image as a "family man" and keep his presidential hopes viable. 

Much of the money at issue was funneled to Andrew Young, a former campaign aide once so close to Edwards that Andrews initially claimed paternity of his boss's illegitimate child. Young and his wife invited the pregnant Hunter to live in their home near Chapel Hill and later embarked with her on a cross-country odyssey as they sought to elude tabloid reporters trying to expose the candidate's extramarital affair. 

Young later fell out with Edwards and wrote an unflattering tell-all book, "The Politician." Young and Hunter recently ended a two-year legal battle over ownership of a sex tape the mistress recorded with Edwards during the campaign, agreeing to a settlement that dictates that copies of the video will be destroyed. 

Young is expected to be a witness for the prosecution, while the defense is likely to call Hunter to testify. After years of adamant public denials, Edwards acknowledged paternity of Hunter's daughter, Frances Quinn Hunter, in 2010. The girl, now 4, lives with her mother in Charlotte. 

It has not yet been decided whether Edwards, a former trial lawyer once renowned for his ability to charm jurors, will testify in his own defense. 

Fox News' Jonathan Serrie and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


John Edwards trial begins in North Carolina

"He'll find a horse's head in his bed. Romney's not going to take no for an answer. We have ways, we Republicans." http://t.co/tcFuAmXL

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Posh Spice Designs a Car

When Land Rover began showing off the new Range Rover Evoque back in 2010, it used celebrities like Victoria Beckham and Juliette Lewis to pitch the uber-chic crossover. Land Rover even announced that Victoria Beckham, Posh Spice herself, would consult on Evoque design.

No one knew how to take that news, since Beckham was better known for her role in the Spice Girls than for her skills as an automotive designer. Two years later, we have the result of Beckham's collaboration with Gerry McGovern and the rest of the Land Rover design team, and we'd be the first to admit it's surprisingly tasteful.

Officially called the Range Rover Evoque Special Edition with Victoria Beckham, the limited-run crossover gets hand finished matte paint; offsetting Santorini gloss black detailing; unique 20-inch gloss black wheels and a rose-gold plated grille surround and badging.

Inside, there's “vintage inspired” semi-aniline leather seats in tan with a hand-stitched accent; leather door inserts; leather armrests; mohair floor mats; a microsuede headliner; Grand black lacquer trim; textured aluminum accents and rose-gold plated interior badging.

Buyers also get a bespoke four-piece luggage set in black leather, along with a hand-sewn leather owner's manual pouch, signed by Victoria Beckham.What they don't get is more power, as the Special Edition comes packing the same 2.0-liter, 240-horsepower engine as the standard Evoque.

Land Rover is unveiling the Special Edition at this week's Beijing Auto Show, and will release it to Chinese customers first. Ensuring that values remain high, only 200 will be built to satisfy worldwide demand.

If you want one in your own garage, expect to pay handsomely for it: while full worldwide pricing hasn't been released, in the U.K. the Special Edition will be priced from £79,995 ($128,648).

More auto news from MotorAuthority



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Meteor Shower Wows World

  • Skywatcher and photographer Brian Emfinger captured this magnificent Lyrid fireball with the Milky Way in the background from Ozark, Ark., during the April 21-22 peak of the 2012 Lyrid meteor shower.Brian Emfinger

  • Photographer Bill Allen of Ralph, Saskatchewan in Canada captured this amazing view of a Lyrid meteor and the northern lights during the Lyrid meteor shower peak overnight on April 21-22, 2012.Bill Allen

  • Skywatcher and photographer Marian Murdoch snapped this photo of a Lyrid meteor from Ridgecrest, Calif., during the 2012 Lyrid meteor shower peak on April 22, 2012.Marian Murdoch (www.wildmaven.org)

The Lyrid meteor shower amazed some skywatchers around the world with bright celestial fireworks this weekend, thanks in part to the lack of a bright moon.

The annual April "shooting star" display hit its peak in the wee hours of Sunday (April 22) while the moon was in its dark, new phase, offering observers with clear weather a better chance to spot the Lyrid meteor shower without the interference of bright moonlight.

"Clear skies, no moon, a bit chilly, but otherwise perfect. I saw two meteors shortly after sunset," photographer Bill Allen of Ralph, Saskatchewan in Canada told SPACE.com in an email.

Allen snapped a striking snapshot that captured a Lyrid with green northern lights in the background.  "The aurora added to what was already a great night," Allen said. [Spectacular 2012 Lyrid Meteor Shower Photos]

Allen wasn't the only lucky observer to witness the Lyrids this weekend. Photos sent in to SPACE.com from skywatchers in California, Malaysia and other spots around the world reveal striking views of bright Lyrid meteors.

Skywatcher Brian Emfinger of Ozark, Ark., captured a magnificent fireball that created a spectacular sight through his fish-eye lens-equipped camera. The bright stars of our Milky Way galaxy serve as a backdrop in Emfinger's view.

Photographer Marian Murdoch in Ridgecrest, Calif., also reported several bright Lyrids during this year's display, but sadly the best show of the night escaped her lens.

'I saw two meteors shortly after sunset.'

- Canadian photographer Bill Allen

"There was a HUGE fireball that we observed, low on the horizon, but (of course) it was out of my field of view with the camera, Murdoch told SPACE.com via email. "Some of the meteors were very dim, and were not even seen with the human eye. Only after I brought them up on the computer was I able to see them."

The Lyrid meteor shower has been observed by humans for more than 2,600 years and occurs each year in mid-April when the Earth passes through a stream of dust left behind by the comet Thatcher (C/1861 G1). The comet dust can reach speeds of up to 110,000 mph (177,027 kph) as it slams into Earth's atmosphere, causing it to ignite as dazzling meteors.

NASA scientists predicted an impressive Lyrid meteor display this year because of the shower's timing coincided with the new moon. A confluence of two other events also enhanced the meteor shower for NASA.

First, scientists developed a special meteor camera designed to photograph fireballs while dangling from a weather balloon flying in the stratosphere. A team of students from Union High School and Home Street Middle School in Bishop, Calif., launched the camera-equipped balloon late Saturday night (April 21). The second event occurred in space; the Lyrids were expected to be visible to astronauts on the International Space Station.

NASA meteor expert Bill Cooke at the agency's Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama coordinated efforts to track meteors on the ground, by the student balloon and by station astronauts to create an unprecedented look at the Lyrid meteor shower. The Marshall center posted video and images of the student balloon launch online, along with camera views of Earth from the station, but whether Lyrid meteors were actually seen by astronauts remains to be seen.

In Kulim, Kedah, Malaysia, skywatcher Veerayen Mohanadas also snapped amazing views of the Lyrid meteor shower.

"It seems very special to me when seeing the 'shooting star' coming from star Vega," Mohanadas said.

Cooke also led an NASA webchat and video stream on the agency's website that provided live views from meteor cameras for observers plagued by bad weather.

Cooke said the Lyrid meteor shower is the second notable meteor display of the year, but the pace is about to pickup.

In May, the Eta Aquarids - one of two annual meteor showers created by remnants of the famed Halley's comet - will peak between May 5 and 6, according to a NASA guide.



Article from FOXNEWS


Dutch PM, cabinet resign over budget failure

  • March 22: Netherlands' Prime Minister Mark Rutte arrives at a ceremony for the victims of a bus crash in Switzerland.AP

The Dutch government, one of the most vocal critics of European countries failing to rein in their budgets, quit Monday after failing to agree on a plan to bring its own deficit in line with EU rules.

The government information service announced Queen Beatrix had accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Mark Rutte and his Cabinet after a meeting in which Rutte told her talks on a new austerity package had failed over the weekend.

Rutte is to address parliament Tuesday to discuss interim measures to keep public finances in order and schedule new elections. No date for elections was immediately announced, but opposition lawmakers called for a vote as soon as possible.

The Dutch government collapse came a day after the first round election victory of France's soft-on-austerity socialist candidate Francois Hollande. It calls into question whether austerity policies that are causing trauma in countries such as Greece, Spain and Portugal can be enforced even in "core" European countries such as France -- or the Netherlands, one of the few along with Germany to maintain an AAA credit rating.

Rutte's hopes to clinch a deal to cut the target below the EU's 3 percent target evaporated on Saturday, when his most important political ally, populist euroskeptic Geert Wilders walked out of the talks, saying a slavish adherence to European rules was foolish and would harm the Dutch economy.

That view is shared by some, such as the government's own Central Plan Bureau, and opposed by others, such as Dutch Central Bank President Klaas Knot.

"We don't want our pensioners to suffer for the sake of the dictators in Brussels," Wilders said.

European Commissioner Neelie Kroes called Wilders a hypocrite, since the Netherlands itself, along with Germany, had been one of the loudest in demanding Brussels adopt 3 percent deficit limit in the first place.

"Pointing to Brussels now is dumb, it's untrue, it's distracting, and it doesn't solve anything," said Kroes, who is a member of Rutte's free-market VVD party.

A spokesman for the German finance ministry said that despite developments over the weekend, approval for Europe's plan to tackle government debt by cutting spending is actually "increasing." He didn't give evidence backing that assertion.

"We should not now simply let ourselves be thrown off track by daily developments," Martin Kotthaus told reporters in Berlin.

He said Europe's recent reforms had been well-received at a weekend meeting of the International Monetary Fund. "The road is right; Europe has done its homework," he said.

Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager insisted he still plans to submit an outline budget to Brussels by April 30, as mandated by European rules.

He said he was optimistic about prospects for agreeing some cuts with opposition parties in Parliament.

"We'll show the financial markets, in consultation with Parliament, that the Netherlands' decades-long budgetary discipline will remain," he told reporters after a brief Cabinet meeting ahead of the resignation.

Opposition lawmakers say they are prepared to work with Rutte to draw up a 2013 budget.

However, Diederik Samsom, leader of the opposition Labor Party, signaled he would not insist on bringing the Dutch deficit back in line with EU norms next year.

"As far as we are concerned, you don't have to reach 3 percent by 2013," he said.

Although the Netherlands has relatively low levels of national debt, its economy is in recession and it is expected to post a deficit of 4.6 percent in 2012.

The package Rutte had been negotiating with Wilders would have slashed foreign aid and hastened a planned increase in the retirement age to 66 from 65.

Wilders, who is publishing a book in the U.S. next week about his struggle against Islam, said abruptly Saturday he could not support the package because it was unfriendly to the elderly.

Yields on Dutch bonds were up 0.11 of a percent higher than they were before the weekend. Netherlands government bonds are trading around 2.35 percent for 10-year debt, about 0.6 percentage points more than Germany.

Ratings agency Fitch last week warned the Netherlands stands to lose its AAA credit rating depending on the outcome of the budget talks that failed Saturday.

Central Bank President Knot has predicted Dutch interest rates will increase by around 1 percent if the country's rating is cut, making budget reform vital.



Article from FOXNEWS


Brazilian actor playing Judas accidentally hangs self in \'Passion of the Christ\' play

A Brazilian actor playing Judas who accidentally hanged himself during a scene in "The Passion of Christ" has died.

A hospital in Brazil's Sao Paulo state confirms on its website the death of 27-year-old Tiago Klimeck. An autopsy is being performed Monday following his death the previous day.

The actor had been in a coma since the accident on Good Friday earlier this month in the city of Itarare.

Investigator Jose Victor Bacetti told the G1 news website Klimeck accidentally hanged himself during a scene in which his character Judas commits suicide. About four minutes passed before anyone noticed, believing he was playing his role.

Police are examining the security apparatus that was meant to support Klimeck during the scene.

It's unclear if any charges will be filed.



Article from FOXNEWS


Clemens trial resumes with seating of jury

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- For the past 45 years, Herb Turetzky has had the best seat in the house to watch the Nets play basketball.

It was front row, center court. between the benches, every night.

Turetzky, the team's official scorer, has seen the Nets' glory days of Julius Erving and the ABA in the opening decade mostly on Long Island to the team's sometimes laughable struggles in NBA over the last 35 years in New Jersey, whether it be Piscataway, East Rutherford or the team's current home at the Prudential Center in Newark.

The New Jersey chapter will end for all practical purposes Monday night against the Philadelphia 76ers. It will be the Nets' final home game before a move next season to Brooklyn and the new Barclays Center.

The official close to the season will be on Thursday night in Toronto, and of course it will cap a fifth straight non-playoff season.

"If there is one word that describes this team's time in New Jersey, it's misfortune," said Turetzky, who will work his 1,177 consecutive home game on Monday. "Every time we seemed to be building something to get up to respectability some crisis came up."

The problems ranged from money, to drugs, an automobile-related death and injuries that would knock the Nets off track for extended periods that sometimes lasted close to decade.

"It's hard to believe that basketball won't be in New Jersey anymore," said former Nets and current Pistons coach Lawrence Frank, who grew up in Teaneck, where the franchise played its first season in 1967-68 as the Americans of the ABA before a move to Long Island the following season. "Having grown up there and coached there, obviously there's a lot of deep-seated feelings. To me, there was a little bit of separation when the team went to Newark, but the fact they'll no longer be playing in New Jersey - it's going to be sad."

If there was a glory time for the Nets in New Jersey, it was 10 years ago when Jason Kidd jumped on board and turned a team accustomed to failure into one which made the NBA Finals in 2002 and 2003. The second team, which won 10 straight postseason games, also featured Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson and Kerry Kittles, had a legitimate shot at a title, losing the finals to the Spurs in six games. The final loss came in a game in San Antonio where it blew a nine-point, fourth-quarter lead with the series on the verge of returning to the Meadowlands for a deciding game.

"I remember before the start of the '01-02 season, Jason got up and told us at a dinner before training camp that 'the losing was over,'" said Mitch Kaufman, the long-time Nets' director of video operations said. "It was a speech that I have never seen a player made at a dinner. We took off out of the gate that year and we were the shocking story of the year."

After the second loss in the Finals, Kidd got fed up with Byron Scott and the coach was fired halfway through the following season. The Nets made a couple of playoffs runs but Kidd's knee problems never allowed the Nets to get back to championship round. The point guard was eventually traded to Dallas in 2008, and won a title last season.

The Nets have gone downhill since, but that's the story of this franchise.

It has been close to putting things together, but something always happened.

It started the first year in the NBA. Facing a fee to join the league after the NBA-ABA merger and an unexpected $4.8 million indemnity due to the Knicks, then cash-strapped owner Roy Boe was forced to sell Erving's contract to the 76ers. Without Dr. J, the Nets first eight or so years in the league were embarrassing.

The first four years were played at Rutgers, a roughly 9,000 seat arena on a college campus. There were no seat backs on the bench and the locker rooms were very small. It was mostly a college crowd sprinkled with season ticket holders hoping to get the good seats when the team moved to the Meadowlands in 1981.

"I remember Red Auerbach one night had a big problem with the building," Kaufman said. "It was Larry Bird's rookie year. He needed a space to smoke his cigar and there wasn't big enough in the locker room."

The Nets didn't start to turn around things until around 1984 with a team that included Micheal Ray Richardson, Buck Williams, Darryl Dawkins and Mike Gminski. They stunned the defending champion 76ers in the opening round of the playoffs and seemed on the way up.

Two years later, the team collapsed after Richardson, who was as good anyone in the league when in the right frame of mind, was banned for drug use.

The Nets rebuilt in the early 1990, drafting Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson in the first round and getting Drazen Petrovic in a trade with Portland in 1991. They made the playoffs in '92 and 93, with the second one with Chuck Daly as coach. However, tragedy struck after the '93 season when Petrovic, one of the NBA's best pure shooters, was killed in a car accident in Germany.

"He was as hard a worker as I have ever seen," Turetzky said. "He took two extremely talented players (Coleman and Anderson) who weren't reaching their potential and turned those guys into All Stars. They were embarrassed to not work hard when he was there. They were both All Stars (in 1993) and when he was killed their careers floundered. They never retained that drive."

"That was the tragedy of all tragedies," Kaufman added.

The Nets fortunes did not turn until the team hired Rod Thorn as general manager in 2000. He engineered the post draft trade with Phoenix in 2001 that brought Kidd to New Jersey and almost earned the Nets a title.

That doesn't explain why the team is moving. After Boe, the franchise was owned for a group known as the Secaucus Seven. It sold the team to a group of Newark real estate developers led by Raymond Chambers and Lewis Katz in 1999. It was their intention to move the team from the Continental Airlines Arena at the Meadowlands to Newark, and they signed a deal with Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to form a company that would own both teams and their broadcast rights.

The only problem was Chambers and Katz could not get the state to pay for a new arena in Newark. They eventually sold the franchise in 2004 to real estate developer Bruce Ratner, whose plan all along was to move the team to Brooklyn. The planned move went into high gear late in 2009 when Ratner worked out a deal with Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov to become the majority owner and to provide most of the money to build the arena in Brooklyn.

"It's going to be the best thing that happened to me," said Bruce Hershfield of New York, who has had season tickets for roughly 20 years. "New Jersey people will have a problem and I don't think there will be many going. There are seven or nine trains that go to the new arena so it will be a 20-minute train ride."

Hershfield hopes the move to Brooklyn will finally give the team a fan base that will root for the team all the time, Too many times, there seemed to be as many people rooting for the opposing team.

"When they go to Brooklyn, it's going to be a whole different fan base," Frank said. "You feel bad for those fans who stuck with it both good and bad; you had to suck it up until we had our glory years, which was a short window."

___

AP freelancer Scott Held in Detroit contributed to this report.

Go inside Republicans' anti-Obama war room as the RNC preps for the general election battle. VIDEO: http://t.co/7BC4R0yw
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Secret Service sex scandal: Congressional members call for wider probe and more female agents. http://t.co/1dHQADSw


Article from YAHOO NEWS


Then/Now: \'Ally McBeal\' Stars

  • 'It's Not About the Pom-Poms'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    Laura Vikmanis has got spirit . . . and pom-poms, too! But before she stepped onto the field as the oldest cheerleader in the National Football League, she was sidelined by a bad marriage and the many responsibilities of stay-at-home motherhood.Click here to learn more

  • 'Extreme Weather'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    A terrorist hit is coming. The CIA, FBI, and Department of Defense systems have spiked, but traditional intel is going nowhere. It falls to the Taskforce-a top secret team that exists outside the bounds of U.S. law and is charged with finding and destroying asymmetric threats-to stop the unknown conspirators. Click here to learn more

  • 'All Necessary Force'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    A terrorist hit is coming. The CIA, FBI, and Department of Defense systems have spiked, but traditional intel is going nowhere. It falls to the Taskforce-a top secret team that exists outside the bounds of U.S. law and is charged with finding and destroying asymmetric threats-to stop the unknown conspirators. Click here to learn more

  • 'The People's Money'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    In The People's Money, Rasmussen explores clear-headed, responsible, and reasonable ways to eliminate a deficit that is much larger than politicians would have us believe -- $123 trillion and counting-all with the vast support of the American people. Click here to learn more

  • 'Left Turn'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsDr. Tim Groseclose, a professor of political science and economics at UCLA, has spent years constructing precise, quantitative measures of the slant of media outlets. He does this by measuring the political content of news, as a way to measure the PQ, or "political quotient" of voters and politicians. Click here to learn more

  • 'As Good As She Imagined'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    Christina-Taylor Green was beautiful, precocious, smart and popular, a member of her elementary school's student council and the only girl on her Little League team. Born on 9/11/2001, it was perhaps no surprise that she harbored aspirations of becoming a politician-thus her presence at the political rally that fateful day in Tucson last January. Click here to learn more

  • 'Choose to Lose: The 7-Day Carb Cycle Solution'

    Then/Now: Ally McBeal StarsFrom the publisher
    From celebrated fitness trainer Chris Powell, star of ABC's "Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition", comes this inspirational weight loss book to help anyone conquer their weight. Click here to learn more



  • Article from FOXNEWS


    Obama creates sanctions for tech that helps regimes

    President Obama on Monday announced a plan to impose sanctions against foreign entities and individuals who help authoritarian regimes use technology to crackdown on dissidents. 

    Obama signed an executive order authorizing the new category of sanctions on Sunday. The tougher penalties are aimed in particular at those who facilitate human-rights abuses in Syria and Iran. 

    Obama announced the new sanctions during a speech at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. 

    While rebellions in countries like Libya and Egypt have been fueled by cellphones and social media, other regimes have used technology to track dissidents or block Internet access. 

    For example, Iran has provided the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad with technology to jam cellphones and block or monitor the social networking sites rebels would use to organize demonstrations. 

    Obama has also asked the U.S. intelligence community to include assessments of the likelihood of mass killings in its National Intelligence Estimates. 

    The White House also announced a set of "challenge" grants for companies that help create new technologies to help warn citizens in countries where mass killings may occur. 

    Before delivering remarks, Obama spent about 30 minutes touring the museum with writer and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel. The president and Wiesel quietly entered the museum's Hall of Remembrance, where they lit candles and paused, heads bowed, for a moment of silence. 

    Obama placed his candle in the hall's Buchenwald section in memory of the concentration camp his great-uncle helped liberate at the end of World War II. 

    While Obama has visited the museum before, Monday's visit was his first as president. 

    The new White House policy was first reported by The Washington Post.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Nets\' 35-year run in New Jersey ends tonight

    NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities are set to resume digging up the basement of a Manhattan building in connection with the disappearance 33 years ago of a 6-year-old boy.

    The work, which began last Thursday, was to start up again at 8 a.m. Monday.

    Investigators are looking for any traces of Etan Patz (AY'-tahn payts). He would have passed the stairwell leading to the basement during his walk to the bus stop from his SoHo apartment.

    Authorities say they began the search after an FBI dog indicated the scent of human remains in the room.

    The basement now being searched was used at the time of the boy's disappearance as a workspace for a handyman named Othniel Miller. He was interviewed after Etan went missing in 1979. He has not been named a suspect.

    Go inside Republicans' anti-Obama war room as the RNC preps for the general election battle. VIDEO: http://t.co/7BC4R0yw
    George Zimmerman freed from Fla. jail on bail as he awaits trial in Trayvon Martin case. http://t.co/BDpndaZD
    Secret Service sex scandal: Congressional members call for wider probe and more female agents. http://t.co/1dHQADSw


    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    Aging workforce strains Social Security, Medicare

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Investigators early Monday sent FBI dogs trained for urban searches into the Tucson home where a 6-year-old girl disappeared as teams of law officers worked to determine if she was abducted.

    Two days of searching by scores of police and officers from several agencies failed to locate first-grader Isabel Mercedes Celis, who police said was last seen by her family in her bedroom at 11 p.m. Friday. When she was discovered missing at 8 a.m. Saturday, they called police.

    The dogs arrived from the FBI's Virginia headquarters late Sunday and began searching at the home around midnight, said police Sgt. Marco Borboa.

    "We have deployed the dogs and they're working at the residence," he said Monday.

    Officers kept the whole neighborhood block where Isabel lives cordoned off for a second day Sunday.

    More than 150 law enforcement officers were involved in the effort, which included a fourth search of a three-mile radius around the home in temperatures that reached the high-90s, police Lt. Fabian Pacheco said at a Sunday evening news conference.

    He said the search was being scaled back during the overnight hours, but did not provide any numbers.

    Investigators found "suspicious circumstances around a possible entry point" at the home police, Sgt. Maria Hawke said. But she wouldn't comment on whether the entry point was a bedroom window or a door.

    Family friend Mary Littlehorn said she heard from others close to the family that a window screen in the girl's bedroom had been knocked down.

    Earlier Sunday, Tucson police chief Roberto Villasenor said officers had served at least two search warrants. The girl's parents, identified by friends as Becky and Sergio Celis, were helpful as police worked to find their youngest child, he said. He said police were still classifying the case as a "suspicious disappearance/possible abduction."

    "We're not ruling anything out of the investigation at this point because we really need to keep our mind open about all the information that's been brought to us," Villasenor said. "The family has been cooperating with us."

    Littlehorn, who joined other family friends at a police command post, said authorities separated the two parents for hours Saturday as they questioned them. She said it was difficult for them knowing their little girl was out there somewhere.

    "She hasn't been allowed to help look for her daughter," Littlehorn said of Becky Celis.

    Littlehorn has worked with Becky Celis as a registered nurse at Tucson Medical Center for five years. She said Isabel, whose nickname is Isa, loved to play baseball and dance; the girl was supposed to play in a baseball game Saturday.

    "She's just the sweetest, she is feisty, she's full of life and spirit," Littlehorn said.

    She said Becky Celis is a registered nurse in the pediatrics unit and Sergio Celis is a dental hygienist. There's no way anyone in the family is involved in the disappearance, she said.

    "We all feel this is somebody who's been watching 'Isa' for some amount of time to know where her bedroom is," Littlehorn said.

    Investigators were looking into various scenarios, including the possibility that Isabel wandered out of the home she shares with her parents and two brothers. Hawke said Sunday the wandering off theory was becoming less likely as time passed.

    In addition to the highly trained dogs, authorities said they have also started the process of checking on the whereabouts of sex offenders in the area. They said talking with them was standard procedure.

    Volunteers have been posting fliers of the girl - who is described as about 4-feet-tall with brown hair and hazel eyes - in gas stations, malls and fast food restaurants that included a photo of Isabel holding up a school achievement award.

    More than 200 people attended a Sunday evening vigil in an empty parking lot near the family home.

    Ron Redondo, whose 14-year-old daughter goes to school with Isabel's older brother, said he wants his kids to not take safety for granted.

    "We don't know who's out there right now. We don't know if this was a random act or somebody's out there looking for kids."

    Erin Cowan, who has worked with Isabel's mom at Tucson Medical Center, brought her 7-year-old daughter. She said it has definitely been on her mind that her daughter is close in age to Isabel.

    "I put two by fours in their windows this morning," said Cowan, who also has a 12-year-old son. "I guess you can't be too careful, sadly."

    At St. Joseph Parish on Sunday morning, the parents and their two sons attended an early Mass, and deacon Leon Mazza described the parents as "very upset."

    "We didn't ask for any information. We just let them know if they need help, come see us," Mazza said.

    Parish priest Miguel Mariano said the family regularly attends Mass and said he asked the parents if they needed any help from the congregation. "And then they said, 'No, Father, just prayers,'" Mariano said.

    The couple hurried off, saying they were going to meet with police.

    The Catholic church and its school are just down the street from the family's home, and Mariano said in his sermon that he hoped whoever has Isabel has a change of heart.

    "I feel, in the name of the community, we feel we are violated," he said later.

    Go inside Republicans' anti-Obama war room as the RNC preps for the general election battle. VIDEO: http://t.co/7BC4R0yw
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    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    Obama says \'seeds of hate\' must not take root

    GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Prosecutors and defense lawyers in the John Edwards trial were poised to begin making their case to jurors on whether the former presidential candidate violated federal campaign finance laws.

    Opening statements were to begin Monday in Greensboro, N.C.

    Edwards, 58, pleaded not guilty to six criminal counts related to nearly $1 million in secret payments from two wealthy supporters. Much of the money was used to hide the then-married politician's pregnant mistress during his 2008 White House campaign.

    Prosecutors are expected to argue that Edwards masterminded a conspiracy to conceal his affair. Edwards' lawyers contend the payments were gifts from friends intent on keeping the candidate's wife from finding out about the mistress, Rielle Hunter, and her baby. Elizabeth Edwards died in December 2010 after battling cancer.

    U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Eagles, who was appointed in 2010 by President Barack Obama, will preside. She said she expects the proceedings to last about six weeks.

    A key issue will be whether Edwards knew about the payments made on his behalf by his national campaign finance chairman, the late Texas lawyer Fred Baron, and campaign donor Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, a now-101-year-old heiress and socialite. Each had already given Edwards' campaign the maximum $2,300 individual contribution allowed by federal law.

    Edwards denies having known about the money, which paid for private jets, luxury hotels and Hunter's medical care. Prosecutors will seek to prove he sought and directed the payments to cover up his affair, protect his public image as a "family man" and keep his presidential hopes viable.

    Abbe Lowell, the well-known Washington lawyer who is representing Edwards, has said that even had Edwards known about the secret payments, his actions wouldn't amount to a crime under federal law. Lowell has said in court that the government's case relies on flawed legal reasoning, that the grand jury process was tainted and that the Republican federal prosecutor who led the investigation was motivated by partisanship.

    Lowell has derided what he calls the government's "crazy" interpretation of federal law whereby money that was never handled by the candidate nor deposited in a campaign account is being defined as campaign contributions.

    Much of the money at issue was funneled to Andrew Young, a former campaign aide once so close to Edwards that Andrews initially claimed paternity of his boss's illegitimate child. Young and his wife invited the pregnant Hunter to live in their home near Chapel Hill and later embarked with her on a cross-country odyssey as they sought to elude tabloid reporters trying to expose the candidate's extramarital affair.

    Young later fell out with Edwards and wrote an unflattering tell-all book, "The Politician." Young and Hunter recently ended a two-year legal battle over ownership of a sex tape the mistress recorded with Edwards during the campaign, agreeing to a settlement that dictates that copies of the video will be destroyed.

    Young is expected to be a witness for the prosecution, while the defense is likely to call Hunter to testify. Two of the lawyers who represented Hunter in her civil suit against the former aide joined Edwards' legal team last month. After years of adamant public denials, Edwards acknowledged paternity of Hunter's daughter, Frances Quinn Hunter, in 2010. The girl, now 4, lives with her mother in Charlotte.

    It has not yet been decided whether Edwards, a former trial lawyer once renowned for his ability to charm jurors, will testify in his own defense.

    ___

    Follow AP writer Michael Biesecker at: www.twitter.com/mbieseck



    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    Lamborghini\'s600 hp SUV

    On the heels of FOX's 25th anniversary star-studded TV special that reunited cast members from some of the network's favorite and ground-breaking shows (dancing animated babies and prime time cartoons, anyone?), our friends at Snakkle.com help us catch up with the stars of “Ally McBeal” 15 years after the legal dramedy series' debut.

    Ally McBeal and her colleagues from the law offices of Cage and Fish sang first danced their ways into America's hearts in 1997. (We're not sure what that dancing baby did.) Let's see what happened to some of the show's biggest stars.

    Kevin Winter/Getty Images

    THEN: Calista Flockhart as Ally McBeal

    “Ally McBeal” became a pop culture sensation as soon as the first episode aired and we saw that dancing baby. Was Ally too thin? (Maybe). Was she anti-feminist? (Probably not). Were we hooked? (Yes).

    NOW: Flockhart and Ford

    After the show wrapped, Flockhart took a break from acting to raise her adopted son Liam, and in between started dating iconic actor Harrison Ford, who she married in 2010. She turned down the role of Susan on “Desperate Housewives,” but decided to instead return to TV for five seasons of “Brothers & Sisters.”

    See where all the stars of “Alley McBeal” are today, including Portia de Rossi and who joined “Gray's Anatomy”, at Snakkle.com.

    Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

    THEN: Jane Krakowski as Elaine Vassal

    Jane Krakowski played Ally's busybody Elaine, and sort of slutty assistant. She was also a talented inventor. Who could forget Elaine's infamous face bra?

    NOW: Krakowski at The Rock

    After Ally wrapped, Jane Krakowski returned to Broadway and won a Tony for her role in “Nine.” She now stars as everyone's favorite star of TGS, Jenna Maroney on “30 Rock.”

    See where all the stars of “Alley McBeal” are today, including Portia de Rossi and who joined “Gray's Anatomy”, at Snakkle.com.

    Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

    THEN: Robert Downey Jr. as Larry Paul

    Everyone knows the Robert Downey, Jr. story. His drug habit in the 1990s and early 2000s prevented his film career from taking off, and “Ally McBeal” was supposed to be his big comeback, clean and sober. He joined the cast as Larry Paul, Ally's boyfriend in the fourth season, but was fired from the show after two drug arrests off set.

    NOW: Downey Jr. All Cleaned Up

    If“Ally McBeal” wasn't the comeback he had hoped for, the good new for Robert Downey Jr. was that his big breakthrough (and sober life) was just around the corner. He is Hollywood's golden boy once again after success in multiple blockbuster films like “Iron Man” and “Sherlock Holmes.”

    See where all the stars of “Alley McBeal” are today, including Portia de Rossi and who joined “Gray's Anatomy”, at Snakkle.com.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    US: Imminent terror attack in Kenya possible

    The US Embassy in Nairobi warned Monday it received "credible information" regarding an attack on hotels and government buildings in the Kenyan capital.

    "The US Embassy informs US citizens residing in or visiting Kenya that the US Embassy in Nairobi has received credible information regarding a possible attack on Nairobi hotels and prominent Kenyan government buildings," it said in a message posted on its website.

    "Timing of the attack is not known, however, the Embassy has reason to believe that the potential attack is in the last stages of planning. The US Embassy urges Americans to remain aware of their surroundings and vigilant of their personal security," the message added.

    The message provided no further details of the nature of the threat.

    In an updated travel warning for Kenya issued earlier this month, the State Department warned of "continuing and recently heightened threats from terrorism and the high rate of violent crime in some areas."

    The US government "continues to receive information about potential terrorist threats aimed at US, Western, and Kenyan interests in Kenya, particularly after the death of Usama Bin Laden," the warning stated.

    It said terrorist acts could include "suicide operations, bombings, kidnappings, attacks on civil aviation, and attacks on maritime vessels in or near Kenyan ports."

    Last week, the US Embassy in Nigeria's capital Abuja warned that the radical Islamic group Boko Haram may be plotting attacks on hotels used by foreigners in the city.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Brain Freeze: We\'ve All Had It, Now Find Out Why

    Most people have likely experienced brain freeze - the debilitating, instantaneous pain in the temples after eating something frozen - but researchers didn't really understand what causes it, until now.

    Previous studies have found that migraine sufferers are actually more likely to get brain freeze than people who don't get migraines. Because of this, the researchers thought the two might share some kind of common mechanism or cause, so they decided to use brain freeze to study migraines.

    Headaches like migraines are difficult to study, because they are unpredictable. Researchers aren't able to monitor a whole one from start to finish in the lab. They can give drugs to induce migraines, but those can also have side effects that interfere with the results. Brain freeze can quickly and easily be used to start a headache in the lab, and it also ends quickly, which makes monitoring the entire event easy.

    The researchers brought on brain freeze in the lab by having 13 healthy volunteers sip ice water through a straw right up against the roof of their mouth. The volunteers raised their hands when they felt the familiar brain freeze come on, and raised them again once it disappeared.

    The researchers monitored the blood flow through their brains using an ultrasoundlike process on the skull. They saw that increased blood flow to the brain through a blood vessel called the anterior cerebral artery, which is located in the middle of the brain behind the eyes. This increase in flow and resulting increase in size in this artery brought on the pain associated with brain freeze. [Top 10 Mysteries of the Mind]

    When the artery constricts, reining in the response to this increased flow, the pain disappears. The dilation, then quick constriction, of this blood vessel may be a type of self-defense for the brain, the researchers suggested.

    "The brain is one of the relatively important organs in the body, and it needs to be working all the time," study researcher Jorge Serrador, of Harvard Medical School, said in a statement. "It's fairly sensitive to temperature, so vasodilation [the widening of the blood vessels] might be moving warm blood inside tissue to make sure the brain stays warm."

    This influx of blood can't be cleared as quickly as it is coming in during the brain freeze, so it could raise the pressure inside the skull and induce pain that way. As the pressure and temperature in the brain rise, the blood vessel constricts, reducing pressure in the brain before it reaches dangerous levels.

    If other headaches work in the same way, drugs that stop these blood vessels from opening up, or that could make this blood vessel constrict could help treat them, the researchers say. [Big Headaches: Facts on Migraines]

    The work was presented during a poster session Sunday (April 22) afternoon at the Experimental Biology 2012 meeting in San Diego.

    Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    North Korean military warns of \'special actions\'

    NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities are set to resume digging up the basement of a Manhattan building in connection with the disappearance 33 years ago of a 6-year-old boy.

    The work, which began last Thursday, was to start up again at 8 a.m. Monday.

    Investigators are looking for any traces of Etan Patz (AY'-tahn payts). He would have passed the stairwell leading to the basement during his walk to the bus stop from his SoHo apartment.

    Authorities say they began the search after an FBI dog indicated the scent of human remains in the room.

    The basement now being searched was used at the time of the boy's disappearance as a workspace for a handyman named Othniel Miller. He was interviewed after Etan went missing in 1979. He has not been named a suspect.

    Go inside Republicans' anti-Obama war room as the RNC preps for the general election battle. VIDEO: http://t.co/7BC4R0yw
    George Zimmerman freed from Fla. jail on bail as he awaits trial in Trayvon Martin case. http://t.co/BDpndaZD
    Secret Service sex scandal: Congressional members call for wider probe and more female agents. http://t.co/1dHQADSw


    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    Romney gains Rudy Giuliani\'s endorsement in GOP primary

    GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Prosecutors and defense lawyers in the John Edwards trial were poised to begin making their case to jurors on whether the former presidential candidate violated federal campaign finance laws.

    Opening statements were to begin Monday in Greensboro, N.C.

    Edwards, 58, pleaded not guilty to six criminal counts related to nearly $1 million in secret payments from two wealthy supporters. Much of the money was used to hide the then-married politician's pregnant mistress during his 2008 White House campaign.

    Prosecutors are expected to argue that Edwards masterminded a conspiracy to conceal his affair. Edwards' lawyers contend the payments were gifts from friends intent on keeping the candidate's wife from finding out about the mistress, Rielle Hunter, and her baby. Elizabeth Edwards died in December 2010 after battling cancer.

    U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Eagles, who was appointed in 2010 by President Barack Obama, will preside. She said she expects the proceedings to last about six weeks.

    A key issue will be whether Edwards knew about the payments made on his behalf by his national campaign finance chairman, the late Texas lawyer Fred Baron, and campaign donor Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, a now-101-year-old heiress and socialite. Each had already given Edwards' campaign the maximum $2,300 individual contribution allowed by federal law.

    Edwards denies having known about the money, which paid for private jets, luxury hotels and Hunter's medical care. Prosecutors will seek to prove he sought and directed the payments to cover up his affair, protect his public image as a "family man" and keep his presidential hopes viable.

    Abbe Lowell, the well-known Washington lawyer who is representing Edwards, has said that even had Edwards known about the secret payments, his actions wouldn't amount to a crime under federal law. Lowell has said in court that the government's case relies on flawed legal reasoning, that the grand jury process was tainted and that the Republican federal prosecutor who led the investigation was motivated by partisanship.

    Lowell has derided what he calls the government's "crazy" interpretation of federal law whereby money that was never handled by the candidate nor deposited in a campaign account is being defined as campaign contributions.

    Much of the money at issue was funneled to Andrew Young, a former campaign aide once so close to Edwards that Andrews initially claimed paternity of his boss's illegitimate child. Young and his wife invited the pregnant Hunter to live in their home near Chapel Hill and later embarked with her on a cross-country odyssey as they sought to elude tabloid reporters trying to expose the candidate's extramarital affair.

    Young later fell out with Edwards and wrote an unflattering tell-all book, "The Politician." Young and Hunter recently ended a two-year legal battle over ownership of a sex tape the mistress recorded with Edwards during the campaign, agreeing to a settlement that dictates that copies of the video will be destroyed.

    Young is expected to be a witness for the prosecution, while the defense is likely to call Hunter to testify. Two of the lawyers who represented Hunter in her civil suit against the former aide joined Edwards' legal team last month. After years of adamant public denials, Edwards acknowledged paternity of Hunter's daughter, Frances Quinn Hunter, in 2010. The girl, now 4, lives with her mother in Charlotte.

    It has not yet been decided whether Edwards, a former trial lawyer once renowned for his ability to charm jurors, will testify in his own defense.

    ___

    Follow AP writer Michael Biesecker at: www.twitter.com/mbieseck



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    2 arrested for allegedly planting booby traps in Utah

    The U.S. Army has nixed Ted Nugent from the lineup at a Fort Knox concert scheduled for late June, after the outspoken rocker made controversial remarks about President Obama. 

    The decision comes after Nugent met with Secret Service officials Thursday -- the Service said at the time the issue had been "resolved." 

    But the Army went on to cancel Nugent's performance set for June 23 at the Fort Knox annual summer concert. 

    "Co-headliners REO Speedwagon and Styx remain scheduled to perform," a statement on the Fort Knox Facebook page said. "However, after learning of opening act Ted Nugent's recent public comments about the president of the United States, Fort Knox leadership decided to cancel his performance on the installation." 

    Organizers are offering refunds, though the statement said they may find a replacement for Nugent's act. 

    Nugent, who recently endorsed GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, said during a recent National Rifle Association convention that the Obama administration was "vile," "evil" and "America-hating." 

    He also said that if the president is re-elected, "I will either be dead or in jail by this time next year." 

    Nugent later said his remarks were not a call to violence.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Arizona immigration case arrives at Supreme Court

    • Rich and Renee Wyatt.DISCOVERY

    From creating a zombie gun to repairing the design flaws in a Civil War-era cannon, the Wyatt family and their now famed Denver-based business Gunsmoke are back for another season of “American Guns” on Discovery â€" and they say they're busier than ever.

    “Sales of firearms have exponentially increased, and the political attitude has a lot to do with that," Rich Wyatt, the gun master and former police officer, told FOX411's Pop Tarts column. "I personally wasn't in favor of Barack Obama for President, but he has been a great salesman and his anti-gun stance has really helped us.”

    “If you want to sell something in America, tell people they can't have it, Wyatt explained. "People fear he'll ban guns so they go out and buy a dozen of them… President Clinton sold a lot for us, but President Obama has sold more.”

    Discovery will pull the trigger on season two this Wednesday, and viewers can expect reality television to hit reality television. Jesse and Ann Csincsak of “The Bachelor” fame paid a visit to Gunsmoke â€" but while Jesse wanted a firearm for the home, Ann was initially against the idea.

    “If you want to sell something in America, tell people they can't have it"

    - Rich Wyatt

    “We had her take a three-day class, a kind of shooting boot camp, and now she totally gets it,” Wyatt, who has been instructing for over 28 years, explained. “In fact, about 50 percent of people in the class are women. Now we have children, mothers, wives, sisters coming in, that's something that has really changed in recent years.”

    “American Guns” also features a thirteen-year-old Texan boy who dresses up in 1800s cowboy regalia. Wyatt is convinced he has what it takes to take Bob Munden's record for being the ‘World's Fastest Gun.'

    And if you're someone who is resistant to the liberties of gun ownership, Wyatt urges you to take a closer look.

    “Try it before you make a decision, get educated on the issue. A gun is a tool, and when used inappropriately it is a terrible thing,” he added. “But guns don't cause crime, guns stop crime. It's our classic American heritage.”

    “American Guns” Season 2 premieres Wednesday, April 25 at 9PM ET/PT.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Soccer ball lost in Japan tsunami found in Alaska

    • FILE - In this Saturday, Oct. 31, 2009 file photo, a member of U.S. special operations forces and an Afghan National Army soldier search for roadside bombs during a joint patrol in Shewan, a former Taliban stronghold in Afghanistan's Farah province.AP

    The U.S. and Afghanistan reached a deal Sunday on a long-delayed strategic partnership agreement that assures the Afghan people their key American ally will not abandon the country military or financially for years after 2014, the deadline for most foreign forces to withdraw.

    The agreement is key to the U.S. exit strategy in Afghanistan because it provides guidelines for any American forces who remain after the withdrawal deadline and for financial help to the impoverished country and its security forces. For the Afghan government, it is a way to show its citizens that its key allies are not just walking away.

    "Our goal is an enduring partnership with Afghanistan that strengthens Afghan sovereignty, stability and prosperity and that contributes to our shared goal of defeating Al Qaeda and its extremist affiliates," said U.S. Embassy spokesman Gavin Sundwall. "We believe this agreement supports that goal."

    After 10 years of U.S.-led war, Taliban and Al Qaeda linked insurgents remain a threat and as recently as a week ago, they launched a large-scale attack on the capital Kabul and three other cities.

    The draft agreement was worked out and initialed by Afghan National Security Adviser Rangin Dadfar Spanta and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and must still be reviewed in both countries and signed afterward by the Afghan and American presidents.

    U.S. forces have already started pulling out of Afghanistan and the majority of combat troops are scheduled to depart by the end of 2014. But the U.S. is expected to maintain a large presence in the country for years after, including special forces, military trainers and government assistance programs.

    The agreement is both an achievement and a relief for both sides, coming after months of turmoil that seemed to put the entire alliance in peril. It shows that the two governments are still committed to working together and capable of coming to some sort of understanding.

    "The document finalized today provides a strong foundation for the security of Afghanistan, the region and the world and is a document for the development of the region," Spanta said in a statement issued by President Hamid Karzai's office.

    Neither Afghan nor U.S. officials would comment on the details of the agreement. But it is believed to pledge a partnership for 10 years beyond the 2014 withdrawal deadline.

    Reaching any agreement is likely to be seen as a success given more than a year and a half of negotiations during which the entire effort appeared in danger of falling apart multiple times.

    Since the beginning of the year, U.S.-Afghan relations have been strained by an Internet video of U.S. Marines urinating on the corpses of presumed Taliban fighters, by Koran burnings at a U.S. base that sparked days of deadly protests and by the alleged killing spree by a U.S. soldier in a southern Afghan village. Tensions were further heightened by a spate of turncoat attacks by Afghan security forces on their international counterparts.

    White House National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said President Obama expects to sign the document before a NATO summit in Chicago next month, meeting the deadline set by the two sides. Many had started to worry in recent weeks that Karzai and Obama would miss that goal as talked dragged on and Karzai continued to announce new demands for the document.

    Much of the disagreement was about how to handle activities that the Afghan government saw as threatening its sovereignty, in particular, night raids and the detention of Afghan citizens by international forces. Those two major issues were resolved earlier this year in separate memorandums of understanding.

    But closed-door talks continued for weeks after those side-deals were signed. And then as recently as last week, Karzai said that he wanted the agreement to include a dollar figure for funding for the Afghan security forces -- a demand that would be hard for the Americans to sign off on given the need for Congressional approval for funding. U.S. officials have said previously that they expected the document to address economic and development support for Afghanistan more generally.

    The final document is likely to be short on specifics. U.S. officials involved in the negotiations have said previously that the strategic partnership will provide a framework for future relations, but that details of how U.S. forces operate in the country will come in a later agreement.

    The initialing ceremony means that the text of the document is now locked in. But the countries will have to go through their own internal review processes, Sundwall said.

    "For the United States, that will mean interagency review, consultation with Congress as appropriate and final review by the president," Sundwall said.

    In Afghanistan, the agreement will have to be approved by parliament. The Afghan foreign minister will brief Afghan lawmakers about the document Monday, the Afghan president's statement said.



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