Total Pageviews

Union Funding New Home For Occupy DC in Office

  • Occupy_DC.jpg

    File: 2012: The now-shuttered Occupy DC encampment at McPherson Square, just blocks from the White House in Washington.AP

Occupy DC has gotten an upgrade from the run-down tent village where they once lived, now that one of the country's most powerful labor unions is paying for office digs in downtown Washington.

The Service Employees International Union, one of President Obama's biggest supporters, is paying the protest group's $4,000-a-month rent at the Institute for Policy Studies, institute spokeswoman Lacy MacAuley told Fox News on Wednesday.

She said SEIU recently extended the offer, so Occupy organizers went shopping for office space and decided on a “separate, side suite” at the institute's headquarters.

An Occupy spokeswoman confirmed the group is working from the space. The group settled in Monday, as first reported by The Washington Examiner.

At least one union member is not pleased with the arrangement. 

SEIU member Kandy Gonzalez said Wednesday that she and other members were upset with the union spending dues on non-union concerns.

"We're not happy," she said on Fox News. "When you pay dues, you think you're paying for a better work environment."

SEUI's political action committee reported $70.4 billion in expenditures for the 2008 Obama campaign, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.  

And the union, which has 2.1 million members and is the fastest-growing union in North America, endorsed Obama's re-election campaign back in November 2011.

SEIU will reportedly pay the rent for six months so Occupy protesters can plan demonstrations, workshops and continue to advocate for “the 99 percent (of Americans)  to have a say in returning the country to a just political and economic system.”

 The union did not return a call to verify it is paying the rent.

Occupy DC was essentially evicted in February from McPherson Square, just blocks from the White House, for continuing to camp overnight on federal land. District officials had tried for months to evict the protestors, who closed their kitchen after officials found an “explosion” of rats inside their camp.

Occupy has had a enduring but uneven relationship with SEIU, accepting financial support shortly after the so-called Occupy Wall Street movement started last fall but occasionally complaining that the union was too pro-Obama and was attempting to hijack some events for its own cause.

The setup at the Institute for Policy Studies “looks nothing like an SEIU office,” MacAuley said.

Occupy protestor John Zangas told the Examiner: "We've got full control of how we allocate space, time, resources, access. Nobody's telling us what to do. We still have our own brand name. We continue with unbridled decision making."



Article from FOXNEWS


Murder, Kidnap Suspect Added to Most Wanted List

There's a new name on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.

Authorities have added the man suspected of killing a Tennessee woman and her teenage daughter and fleeing with the woman's two other young girls, as police hope more public attention to the case will help them nab the suspect, Adam Mayes.

Earlier Wednesday, two first-degree murder charges were filed against Mayes, 35, who has been sought by authorities for more than a week. His wife, Teresa Mayes, was also charged.

His inclusion on the Most Wanted list comes with a $100,000 reward for anyone providing information leading to his arrest. Local authorities have also pitched in an additional $75,000.

An affidavit says Teresa Mayes of Guntown, Miss., told authorities she was with Adam Mayes on April 27 when he allegedly killed Jo Ann Bain, 31 and her 14-year-old daughter, Adrienne, in a garage at the Bains' Whiteville, Tenn., home.

Teresa Mayes told officials the motive was to kidnap Bain's two younger daughters, 12-year-old Alexandria and 8-year-old Kyliyah.

A call seeking comment from Teresa Mayes' attorney wasn't immediately returned.

Meanwhile, authorities released new surveillance video Tuesday they say shows Adam Mayes in a convenient store three days after the women disappeared, MyFoxMemphis.com reported.

The store clerk described Mayes as “calm” and “normal,” the station reported. He even purchased a Coke.

"I remember he had a haircut because he had a  pony(tail) and now he had a haircut," Nick Barghoutti, the clerk, said.

The FBI said Tuesday that authorities were hopeful the two young girls were still alive, but it declined to say why. Mayes may be anywhere in the U.S, the agency said, and FBI spokesman Joel Siskovic said investigators think the two girls are still with him.

Authorities have described Mayes as a family friend of the Bains', who was staying with them at the time of the family's disappearance. Before he fled, he admitted to authorities that he was the last person to see Jo Ann Bain and her daughters, according to an affidavit filed with the court.

The bodies of Jo Ann Bain and Adrienne Bain were found last week behind the mobile home in northern Mississippi where Mayes lived. The affidavit provides the first clue that the victims may have been killed soon after they were abducted. It said his wife and mother saw him digging a hole in the yard on April 27 or soon after.

Click here for more from MyFoxMemphis.com

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Religious Groups Protest Sebelius\' Georgetown Talk

Two religious groups are calling on Georgetown University to rescind an invitation for Heath and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to speak at upcoming graduation ceremonies -- calling her the “architect” of the Obama administration's effort to force religious-affiliated employers to offer insurance-covered contraception.

The Cardinal Newman Society and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty are asking school President John J. DeGioia to withdraw an invitation for Sebelius to speak May 18 on the Washington campus and are attempting to garner support with online petitions.

“Catholics are fed up with this,” group President Patrick Reilly said Wednesday morning of Fox News. “There's absolutely no reason that a Catholic institution should have the architect of this policy that would violate this church's religious freedom.”

In a separate petition, the conservative Becket Fund said Georgetown should not associate itself with "this attack on religious liberty." 

The administration announced early this year that religious-affiliated employers including schools and hospitals would have to offer contraceptive coverage -- Obama later backed off the plan amid public outcry, allowing those employers to refuse to provide that coverage directly while putting the responsibility on insurers to make it available. 

Georgetown has issued a statement in response to the group's criticism, saying Sebelius is among a wide-variety of “high-profile” speakers and that she was chosen by students in the school's Public Policy Institute to talk at their diploma ceremony.

Sebelius will deliver “a message of congratulations as (students) begins their careers in public policy,” according to the statement.

Reilly also took issue with Georgetown -- the country's oldest Catholic and Jesuit university -- for not speaking out when law student Sandra Fluke testified on Capitol Hill in February in support of contraceptive coverage mandates in Obama's health care policy.

“The university … has done nothing to criticize her position,” Reilly said. “We're very disappointed with Georgetown over the past two decades. It has not been very strong in its Catholic identity.”

The group was created 19 years ago to help renew and strengthen Catholic identity in Catholic higher education, according to its web site.

The Department of Health and Human Services has not yet responded to a request for comment. 

Religious Groups Protest Sebelius Georgetown Talk



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama: Gay couples should be able to marry

President Obama today announced that he now supports same-sex marriage, reversing his longstanding opposition amid growing pressure from the Democratic base and even his own vice president.

In an interview with ABC News' Robin Roberts, the president described his thought process as an "evolution" that led him to this decision, based on conversations with his staff members, openly gay and lesbian service members, and his wife and daughters.

"I have to tell you that over the course of several years as I have talked to friends and family and neighbors, when I think about members of my own staff who are in incredibly committed monogamous relationships, same-sex relationships, who are raising kids together; when I think about those soldiers or airmen or marines or sailors who are out there fighting on my behalf and yet feel constrained, even now that 'don't ask, don't tell' is gone, because they are not able to commit themselves in a marriage, at a certain point I've just concluded that for me personally it is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same sex couples should be able to get married," Obama told Roberts in an interview to appear on ABC's "Good Morning America" Thursday.

Excerpts of the interview will air tonight on ABC's "World News With Diane Sawyer" and “Nightline.”

The president stressed that this is a personal position, and that he still supports the concept of states' deciding the issue on their own. But he said he's confident that more Americans will grow comfortable with gays and lesbians getting married, citing his own daughters' comfort with the concept.

"It's interesting, some of this is also generational," the president continued. "You know when I go to college campuses, sometimes I talk to college Republicans who think that I have terrible policies on the economy, on foreign policy, but are very clear that when it comes to same-sex equality or, you know, sexual orientation, that they believe in equality. They are much more comfortable with it. You know, Malia and Sasha, they have friends whose parents are same-sex couples. There have been times where Michelle and I have been sitting around the dinner table and we're talking about their friends and their parents and Malia and Sasha, it wouldn't dawn on them that somehow their friends' parents would be treated differently. It doesn't make sense to them and, frankly, that's the kind of thing that prompts a change in perspective."

Timeline: President Obama's Evolution on Same-Sex Marriage

Roberts asked the president whether first lady Michelle Obama was involved in his decision. Obama said she was, and he talked specifically about his own faith.

"This is something that, you know, we've talked about over the years and she, you know, she feels the same way, she feels the same way that I do. And that is that, in the end the values that I care most deeply about and she cares most deeply about is how we treat other people and, you know, I, you know, we are both practicing Christians and obviously this position may be considered to put us at odds with the views of others but, you know, when we think about our faith, the thing at root that we think about is, not only Christ sacrificing himself on our behalf, but it's also the Golden Rule, you know, treat others the way you would want to be treated. And I think that's what we try to impart to our kids and that's what motivates me as president and I figure the most consistent I can be in being true to those precepts, the better I'll be as a as a dad and a husband and, hopefully, the better I'll be as president."

Previously, Obama has moved in the direction of supporting same-sex marriage but has consistently stopped short of outright backing it.

Instead, he has voiced support for civil unions for gay and lesbian couples that provide the rights and benefits enjoyed by married couples, although not defined as "marriage." At the same time, the president has opposed efforts to ban gay marriage at the state level, saying that he did not favor attempts to strip rights away from gay and lesbian couples.

The president's position became a flashpoint this week, when Vice President Joe Biden pronounced himself "absolutely comfortable" with allowing same-sex couples to wed.

Obama aides insisted there was no daylight between the positions held by the president and his vice president when it comes to legal rights, but as other prominent Democrats also weighed in favor of gay marriage, the disconnect became difficult for the White House to explain away.

The announcement completes a turnabout for the president, who has opposed gay marriage throughout his career in national politics. In 1996, as a state Senate candidate, he indicated support for gay marriage in a questionnaire, but Obama aides later disavowed it and said it did not reflect the candidate's position.

In 2004, as a candidate for the U.S. Senate, he cited his own religion in framing his views: "I'm a Christian. I do believe that tradition and my religious beliefs say that marriage is something sanctified between a man and a woman."

[Related: Join the debate about gay marriage]

He maintained that position through his 2008 presidential campaign, and through his term as president, until today.

As president in 2010, Obama told ABC News' Jake Tapper that his feelings about gay marriage were "constantly evolving. I struggle with this." A year later, the president told ABC's George Stephanopoulos, "I'm still working on it."

"I probably won't make news right now, George," Obama said in October 2011. "But I think that there's no doubt that as I see friends, families, children of gay couples who are thriving, you know, that has an impact on how I think about these issues."

Obama's decision has political connotations for the fall. The issue divides elements of the Democratic base, with liberals and gay-rights groups eager to see the president go further, but with gay marriage far less popular among African-American voters.

Just yesterday, in North Carolina, voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on gay marriage. Obama carried North Carolina in 2008, and its status as a 2012 battleground state was guaranteed by Democrats' decision to hold their convention in Charlotte this summer.

Obama's likely Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, opposes gay marriage, and fought his state's highest court, as governor, when Massachusetts became the first state to legalize gay marriage in 2004. Romney said on the campaign trail Monday that he continues to oppose gay marriage.

"My view is that marriage is a relationship between a man and a woman," Romney said. "That's the position I've had for some time, and I don't intend to make any adjustments at this point. ... Or ever, by the way."



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Romney doubles down on same-sex marriage

By Holly Bailey | The Ticket â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


How will Obama\'s change of heart affect his re-election campaign?

By Olivier Knox | The Ticket â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Soldier Dad Surprises Kids

Soldier Dad Surprises Kids
Soldier Dad Surprises Kids



Article from FOXNEWS


Lift Lighter to Be Lighter

  • Women lifting weights.jpg

    istock

With Memorial Day approximately one month away, many are looking for some quick bathing suit fixes. The official start of summertime has some seeking the best exercises to work those problem areas and get beach body- and poolside-ready.

The good news is that there is no need to lift heavy weights. A new study out of Canada's McMaster University found that lifting lighter weights can get you similar results as lifting heavier weights.

"Rather than grunting and straining to lift heavy weights, you can grab something much lighter but you have to lift it until you can't lift it anymore," Stuart Phillips, who is an associate professor of kinesiology at McMaster University said.

The study was featured on ScienceDaily.com and was published in the Journal of Applied Physiology. The report “challenges the widely accepted dogma that training with heavy weights -- which can be lifted only six to 12 times before fatigue -- is the best avenue to muscle growth.”

Below is a workout targeting different body parts to get you beach-ready for which the above mentioned study can be applied.

You should do two sets of at least 24 reps of each exercise using light weights, such as 3-5 pounds.

Lower body workout

Lunges
Place one foot in front of the other in a split stance, with back heel lifted. Hold weights in your hands by your sides. Bend front knee, lunging forward and keeping upper body upright.

Keep front knee and toe at a 90 degree angle as you lower down. Push up through front heel, coming back up without locking out the knee.

Repeat on the other side.
___________________________________________________
More From EmpowHER:
Eat Your Flavonoids For Better Health 

Why That Muffin Top Puts You At Risk for Cancer

Cellulite: What Is It and Can You Do Something About It?
___________________________________________________

Weighted Ball Squats
Place the ball on a wall directly behind your mid-lower back. Hold weights for added resistance in either hand at sides.

Lean against the ball (slightly) and bend knees, lowering your body until your knees are at a 90-degree angle. Push back to starting position

Upper body workout

Isolated Bicep Curls
Sit on a resistance ball or chair with legs wide and feet turned out. Hold a weight in one hand and lean in, resting elbow against inner thigh, without rounding shoulders.

Slowly lower the weight down, bringing your arm almost straight to prepare for repetition. Curl weight up toward shoulder and slowly lower back down.

Repeat on the other side.

Overhead Tricep Extension
Hold a weight overhead, arm straight up. While keeping your bicep close to your ear, drop your forearm behind your head. Contract the triceps to straighten the arm.

Return to start and repeat on the other side.

Shoulder workout

Dumbbell Lateral Raise
Sit on the ball with dumbbells at sides. Raise your arms out to the sides to shoulder level, elbows slightly bent and wrists straight. Lower your arms and repeat.

Dumbbell Overhead Press
Sit on the ball with arms bent at a 90-degree angle holding dumbbells. Hands should be in an overhand grip, with palms forward. Slowly raise arms up and in, using a pressing motion. Lower back down to 90 degrees.



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama aide: Edwards mistress considered to be a \'loose cannon\'

  • palmieri_jennifer_050912.JPG

    May 9, 2012: Jennifer Palmieri, a former campaign spokeswoman for John Edwards, arrives at a federal courthouse in Greensboro, N.C.AP

An aide to President Obama testified Wednesday that John Edwards' mistress was considered by his inner circle to be a "loose cannon," as she explained a confrontation between the former presidential candidate's wife and donors who financially supported his lover. 

Jennifer Palmieri, a former Edwards spokeswoman who now serves as deputy communications director for President Obama, said that in October 2007, Edwards called her to his Iowa hotel room. There, his wife Elizabeth was questioning billionaire Fred Baron and his wife Lisa Blue Baron about why they had taken Rielle Hunter on a shopping trip and flown her on private jets. 

"Lisa was saying that you've got to hold your friends close and your enemies closer," Palmieri recalled. "Rielle was a loose cannon and we just didn't know what she would say to the press." 

Palmieri's testimony proved to be a mixed blessing for prosecutors when they asked her about their key witness, former campaign aide Andrew Young. 

"He seemed insincere to me, might sort of exaggerate his experiences," she said. 

Another witness, former speechwriter Wendy Button, testified that Edwards was aware of Mr. Baron's financial and logistical support for his pregnant mistress while she was in hiding. 

"He said that he had known all along that Baron was taking care of things," Button said. 

However, she said Edwards did not acknowledge assistance from another donor, Rachel "Bunny" Mellon until long after his 2008 presidential campaign. 

"He only used the phrase he had 'just learned' about Bunny Mellon," Button said. 

During cross-examination, Edwards' lawyers asked Button whether she had ever participated in any of the discussions concerning logistics of hiding her former boss's affair. 

"I didn't have any role in any of these events that took place that led to this moment," she said.
Prosecutors plan to wrap up their witness testimony by Thursday. It remains unclear whether they plan to call Hunter to the stand. 

"If the prosecution feels its case is made, she is a question mark for them and they probably would not want to call her," said Steven Friedland, a law professor at Elon University. "On the other hand, they know that she'll be called by the defense. And if (prosecutors) do not call her, the jury may think they're covering something up."



Article from FOXNEWS


Daniels three-peats as Romney tepid-endorsement champion

By Chris Wilson | The Ticket â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Duchess of Cambridge dons daring dress for date night

By Ron Recinto | The Sideshow â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Fox News host warns GOP not to be ‘on the wrong side of history\'

By Dylan Stableford | The Cutline â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Family pleads for U.S. soldier held in by Taliban since 2009

By Missy Ryan | Reuters â€" 

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Dee Snider\'s Twisted Memoir

  • 'Service: A Navy SEAL at War'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom the publisher

    AreNavy SEAL Marcus Luttrell returned from his star-crossed mission in Afghanistan with his bones shattered and his heart broken. So many had given their lives to save him-and he would have readily done the same for them. As he recuperated, he wondered why he and others, from America's founding to today, had been willing to sacrifice everything-including themselves-for the sake of family, nation, and freedom.| Click here to learn more

  • 'Bombshell: Explosive Medical Secrets That Will Redefine Aging'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom the publisher

    Are you ready to rethink and redefine your approach to aging? This powerhouse book tells you how to go from dreading it to making it the greatest passage of your life! | Click here to learn more

  • 'To Heaven and Back'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom the publisher

    Is there life after death? Is God real? Is there sufficient reason to live by faith? Dr. Mary Neal's walk with God has been both ordinary and extraordinary, brimming with the gift and privilege of being touched by God in visible and very tangible ways | Click here to learn more

  • 'Sweet Revenge: The Intimate Life of Simon Cowell'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom the publisher

    For this definitive biography, acclaimed journalist and best-selling author Tom Bower was granted unprecedented access to Simon Cowell and those around him-and the result is a fascinating multilayered portrait of one of the world's most intriguing television personalities ever to dominate the music industry Click here to learn more

  • 'It's Not About the Pom-Poms'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom 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'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom 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'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom 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'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom 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'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirDr. 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'

    Dee Sniders Twisted MemoirFrom 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



  • Article from FOXNEWS


    Funky Futuristic Hotels

    • hotel2.jpg

      Sweet Chill at the Aria Resort & Casino Las Vegas.Oyster

    • hotel5.jpg

      A room at the Dream Downtown -- New York CityOyster

    • hotel1.jpg

      Lobby at the nhow BerlinOyster.com

    • hotel4.jpg

      Seating at Hotel Silken Puerta America -- MadridOyster

    • hotel3.jpg

      Hallways at the UNA Hotel Vittoria -- FlorenceOyster

    Staying at a hotel is all about getting away. While some hotels make you feel like you're in a different location, others go a step beyond and transport you to another era.  Oyster.com has put together images of some of the the coolest futuristic hotels. With everything from funky lighting, to pod-like bedrooms, these hotels are ready for the 22nd Century.

    The Hotel: nhow Berlin
    Why We Love It: The nhow Berlin is an offbeat, creative hotel overlooking the River Spree. This futuristic property has a music theme and offers rare amenities like Gibson guitar room service and two recording studios on-site. Bright colors, psychedelic patterns, and funky-shaped furniture have high visual impact in the lobby, bar, and restaurant. The wild decor is somewhat muted in the rooms, though there's still plenty of pink, and quirky furniture, as well as amenities such as iPod docks and TVs embedded in mirrors.
    Fave Futuristic feature:
    What's not to love about the pink UFO-like sculpture in the lobby?

    The Hotel: Aria Resort & Casino Las Vegas
    Why We Love It: A 4,004-room mega-resort, Aria stands as the shiny centerpiece of the $11 billion City Center, opened in December 2009. Everything at Aria is done on a grand scale, from the soaring ceilings to the 16 restaurants, and not at the expense of good service, either. And the design - while whimsical with a new-age tilt - aims for refinement and class rather than Vegas kitsch, creating a lovely luxury hotel; and one that's still affordable.
    Fave Futuristic Feature: We love the pink glow and candy-colored chairs at Sweet Chill - it's the perfect look for a gelato shop.
    See more photos of Aria Resort & Casino and read our full review now
    .

    The Hotel: UNA Hotel Vittoria - Florence
    Why We Love It: The understated exterior of the UNA Hotel Vittoria belies the funky, ultra-modern decor found inside this 84-room property. The hotel's eclectic style is hard to peg: Plastic furniture can be found in common areas, while Renaissance-style paintings adorn dark, atmospheric hallways - but the design has an overarching space-age vibe, with funky lighting and elements of surprise.
    Fave Futuristic Feature: The mix-match of old and new makes the futuristic decor here seem even funkier; but best of all we love the modern sculptures, such as the one topped with a funky glowstick chandelier.

    The Hotel: Hotel Silken Puerta America - Madrid
    Why We Love It: Hotel Silken Puerta America is known for its over-the-top design, from the colorful facade of the hotel to the rooms. Each of the 12 floors was executed by a different designer, and range from futuristic, space-like decor to sexy style with “levitating beds” and bold colors. Hotel features include a hip on-site restaurant and a top floor bar with expansive views.
    Fave Futuristic Feature: A levitating bed? Yes, please!
    See more photos of Hotel Silken Puerta America and read our full review now.

    The Hotel: Dream Downtown - New York City
    Why We Love It: The Dream Downtown is an aggressively modern hotel in Chelsea. The hotel blends public spaces together in a unique way (for example, the fitness center has portholes overlooking the pool), and the hotel's scene is decidedly hip, especially at PH-D lounge (a popular celeb haunt). With stunning, sweeping views of Manhattan, PH-D is easily one of the best parts of the hotel. Gold King rooms have portholes surrounding the bed with killer views.
    Fave Futuristic Feature: The pool's glass bottom means that swimmers can get a peek at guests in the lobby, and vice versa.
     See more photos of the Dream Downtown and read our full review now.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Flier caught at German airport with lizard \'food supply\'

    A German man who was caught with 49 live lizards in his luggage at Munich airport claimed the creatures were for his dinner and even offered to bite the head off one to prove it.

    The man was traveling back from Oman in the Middle East when customs officials discovered 31 spiny-tailed lizards and 18 other assorted breeds of lizard in his suitcase, Germany's DPA news agency reported.

    The 28-year-old man claimed the reptiles were for his "personal food supply" and offered to eat one of the creatures in front of officials as proof.

    "The traveler was even going to bite the head off of one of the spiny-tailed lizards under the eyes of customs officials," a spokesman said.

    The lizards are now being cared for by veterinarians in Munich and are said to be doing fine.

    The traveler may face a fine of several thousand euros for transporting protected animals.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    Log Cabin Republicans underwhelmed by Obama support

    By Chris Moody | The Ticket â€" 

    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    Former Edwards aide discusses wife\'s outrage

    By MICHAEL BIESECKER | Associated Press â€" 

    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    USPS to Cut Hours, Not Close Post Offices

    By Amy Bingham | ABC OTUS News â€" 

    Article from YAHOO NEWS


    ENERGY IN AMERICA: Diesel-fueled cars making a comeback in the US

    Diesel-fueled cars are making a comeback, but they are not for everyone. 

    Three months ago New Jersey motorist Guy Anello bought a new car. Along with a small but growing number of Americans, he bought a diesel. He says the gas mileage on his diesel Volkswagen Passat is “phenomenal.” He cites an average of 32 miles per gallon for city driving and expects about 46 mpg on the highway.

    According to recent sales figures, about 2 percent of all new car sales in the U.S. are diesel. Although diesel fuel costs an average of $4.07 per gallon, about 7 percent  more per gallon than gasoline, diesel vehicles are about 30 percent more efficient. 

    Diesel fuel, which was once cheaper than gasoline, is more costly due to federal requirements to produce a cleaner low sulfur fuel, higher taxes, but mainly increased demand. According to oil analyst Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service, “Diesel is more expensive because global demand is a little bit closer to global supply.”  

    Nearly half of all cars driven in Europe are powered by diesel. While heavy trucks run almost exclusively on the fuel, most U.S. motorists are not interested in diesel cars. After a brief spike in sales in the 1970s, most Americans rejected diesels as too loud and emitting a bad smell. 

    Diesel fans say the current generation of vehicles, although a few thousand dollars more expensive than their gasoline-fueled counterparts, are much more quiet and don't produce foul odors. Foreign car companies importing diesel cars to the United Sates report a dramatic increase in demand. Volkswagen cites a 35 percent sales increase in the last year.

    American automakers don't sell diesel cars in the United States, but that will change in 2013 when General Motors plans to offer a diesel version of the Chevy Cruze. Auto analyst Joe Philippi says if the trend continues, diesel sales could have “an impact on, say, hybrid cars to some extent."

    Analysts say it's highly unlikely American diesel car sales will ever catch up to Europe. But even if sales triple, diesel fuel prices probably won't be significantly affected. The U.S. currently produces more diesel than it uses, exporting more than a million gallons a day. Is diesel economical right for you? Auto analyst Philippi said potential purchasers should do the math, “Sit down with a calculator and a pad of paper and a pencil.”

    Read: Couple squeezes 84 mpg out of diesel Volkswagen Passat



    Article from FOXNEWS


    URGENT: Famed hairstylist Vidal Sassoon dies at 84

    • VidalSassoon.jpg

      Vidal SassoonAP

    Hairstylist Vidal Sassoon, who undid the beehive with his wash-and-wear cuts and went on to become an international name in hair care, died Wednesday. He was 84.

    Sassoon died at his home on Mulholland Drive in Los Angeles, police spokesman Kevin Maiberger said. Officers were summoned to the home at about 10:30 a.m., where they found Sassoon dead with his family. They determined that he died of natural causes, and there will be no further police investigation, Maiberger said.

    When Sassoon picked up his shears in the 1950s, styled hair was typically curled, teased, piled high and shellacked into place. Then came the 1960s, and Sassoon's creative cuts, which required little styling and fell into place perfectly every time, fit right in with the fledgling women's liberation movement.

    "My idea was to cut shape into the hair, to use it like fabric and take away everything that was superfluous," Sassoon said in 1993 in the Los Angeles Times, which first reported his death Wednesday. "Women were going back to work, they were assuming their own power. They didn't have time to sit under the dryer anymore."

    His wash-and-wear styles included the bob, the Five-Point cut and the "Greek Goddess," a short, tousled perm -- inspired by the "Afro-marvelous-looking women" he said he saw in New York's Harlem.

    Sassoon opened his first salon in his native London in 1954 but said he didn't perfect his cut-is-everything approach until the mid-'60s. Once the wash-and-wear concept hit, though, it hit big and many women retired their curlers for good.

    His shaped cuts were an integral part of the "look" of Mary Quant, the superstar British fashion designer who popularized the miniskirt.

    He also often worked in the 1960s with American designer Rudi Gernreich, who became a household name in 1964 with his much-publicized (but seldom-worn) topless bathing suit.

    "While Mr. Gernreich has dressed his mannequins to look like little girls," The New York Times wrote after viewing Gernreich's collection for fall 1965, "Vidal Sassoon has cut their hair to look like little boys with eye-level bangs in front, short crop in back. For really big evenings, a pin-on curl is added at the cheek."

    In 1966, he did a curly look inspired by 1920s film star Clara Bow for the designer Ungaro. He got more headlines when he was flown to Hollywood from London, at a reputed cost of $5,000, to create Mia Farrow's pixie cut for the 1968 film "Rosemary's Baby."

    Sassoon opened more salons in England and expanded to the United States before also developing a line of shampoos and styling products bearing his name. His advertising slogan was "If you don't look good, we don't look good."

    The hairdresser also established Vidal Sassoon Academies to teach aspiring stylists how to envision haircuts based on a client's bone structure. In 2006 there were academies in England, the United States and Canada, with additional locations planned in Germany and China.

    "Whether long or short, hair should be carved to a woman's bone structure," he told the Los Angeles Times in 1967. "Actually short hair is a state of mind ... not a state of age."

    Sassoon's hair-care mantra: "To sculpt a head of hair with scissors is an art form. It's in pursuit of art."

    He wrote three books. The first was an autobiography, "Sorry I Kept You Waiting, Madam," published in 1968. "A Year of Beauty and Health," which he wrote with his second wife, Beverly, was published in 1979. In 1984 he released "Cutting Hair the Vidal Sassoon Way."

    He sold his business interests in the early 1980s to devote himself to philanthropy. The Boys Clubs of America and the Performing Arts Council of the Music Center of Los Angeles were among the causes he supported through his Vidal Sassoon Foundation. He later became active in post-Hurricane Katrina charities in New Orleans.

    He had moved to Los Angeles in the early 1970s in search of a chemist to formulate his hair-care products and had decided to make the city his home.

    A veteran of Israel's 1948 War of Independence, Sassoon also had a lifelong commitment to eradicating anti-Semitism. In 1982, he established the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

    Growing up very poor in London, Sassoon said that when he was 14, his mother declared he was to become a hairdresser. After traveling to Palestine and serving in the Israeli war, he returned home to fulfill her dream.

    "I thought I'd be a soccer player but my mother said I should be a hairdresser, and, as often happens, the mother got her way," he told the AP in 2007.

    He told the Chicago Tribune in 2004 that he was proud to have entered the field.

    "Hairdressers are a wonderful breed," he said. "You work one-on-one with another human being and the object is to make them feel so much better and to look at themselves with a twinkle in their eye. Work on their bone structure, the color, the cut, whatever, but when you've finished, you have an enormous sense of satisfaction."

    Married four times, Sassoon had four children with his second wife, Beverly, a sometime film and television actress, usually billed as Beverly Adams.

    None of the children went into the family business. The eldest, Catya, an actress and model, died in her sleep on New Year's Day 2002 of an accidental overdose.



    Article from FOXNEWS


    FBI Pressured to Reveal How It Sets No-Fly List

    With terrorism fears heightened following the discovery of another plot to blow up a plane using an underwear bomb, the American Civil Liberties Union is trying to have one of the government's tools against terrorism ruled unconstitutional.

    The no-fly list has been around since 2003 and has grown to roughly 20,000 names, including about 500 U.S. citizens. It's maintained by the FBI's Terrorist Screening Center, which also keeps a terrorist watch list with more than 500,000 names.

    The ACLU filed suit in 2010 and will argue this week the case should be heard in U.S. District Court in Portland. “In the modern day, air travel is absolutely fundamentally important to how we travel on a daily basis,” says ACLU attorney Nusrat Choudhury, “and that right to travel is protected by the Constitution's promise of due process.”

    The case involves 16 plaintiffs who are all U.S. citizens and Muslims. They argue the government refuses to explain why they were put on the list. It's a point the TSC does not dispute. An official told Fox News that telling people they're on the list would “compromise security.” 

    “If terrorists knew they were on the list, they would change their identity or turn to an operative who may not be on the list to conduct an attack,” the TSC official said.

    Jamal Tarhuni is one of the Americans on the no-fly list, and he says the feds got it wrong. The Oregon businessman only learned he was on the list when he tried to fly home to Portland from Tunisia. He had just completed a humanitarian visit to his native Libya with the Christian group Medical Teams International. They delivered water and medical supplies to victims of the country's civil war.

    Tarhuni says he was eventually interviewed for several hours by FBI agents and kept in Tunis for a month before being allowed to fly home. He remains on the no-fly list and still doesn't know why. He was recently forced to take a 36-hour train ride to give a speech in Minneapolis. Then he drove 17 hours to Washington, D.C., to meet with the Libyan prime minister. Altogether his travel took more than 100 hours.

    “I think it's my right, as an American citizen, that whoever placed me on the no-fly list should come out and tell me why,” says Tarhuni.

    There is a redress procedure that allows people who are mistakenly put on the list to have their name removed. Changes to the list are made daily. Jamal Tarhuni has not attempted redress, saying his lawyer believes it requires that he give up some of his constitutional rights. Tarhuni claims the FBI wanted him to take a polygraph test in Tunis, but he refused because he would have had to sign away his Miranda rights.

    “They can ask me anything they want about what I know, and I'll be more than happy to answer, because I have nothing to hide about what I've done in Libya, or how I've lived my life in the United States,” says Tarhuni.

    The FBI says to be put on the no-fly list a person must be on the larger terrorist watch list and be considered a threat to the aircraft, its passengers or to national security. Jamal Tarhuni freely admits he worships at the Islamic Center of Portland, a mosque that has been at the center of several terrorist investigations since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

    The Portland Seven, a group of jihadists who tried to enter Afghanistan to fight American soldiers, belonged to the Islamic Center of Portland. It's imam, Sheik Mohamed Kariye, was accused by one of the Portland Seven of funding the effort. Kariye was never charged with terrorism, but is also on the no-fly list and is one of the plaintiffs in the ACLU case.

    Mohamed Osman Muhamud, a Somali-born U.S. citizen who was arrested for trying to detonate a fake van bomb at a Portland Christmas tree lighting ceremony in 2010, also attended the mosque.

    A former member of the Portland Joint Terrorism Task Force says the no-fly list has saved lives. “I don't think the mosque is any threat,” says Retired Milwaukie (OR) Police Chief Larry Kanzler. “It's the activities of the people who attend that location who have drawn attention to themselves by their activities.”

    Jamal Tarhuni says he never met any of the Portland Seven or Muhamud. And as far as his trips to Libya, he says ever since he fled the country, he has protested against the Qaddafi regime.

    He hopes to be allowed to fly back in June to work with the new government in establishing a democracy that serves all the people.



    Article from FOXNEWS