Total Pageviews

New York Knicks\' player arrested in Miami

  • Clippers Knicks Baske_Pata.jpg

    April 25, 2012: New York Knicks' J.R. Smith (8) reacts to teammates after scoring during the second half of an NBA basketball game.

Miami Beach police say a New York Knicks player has been arrested on a bench warrant for not having a valid driver's license.

Sgt. Bobby Hernandez says 26-year-old J.R. Smith was stopped Thursday night on Washington Avenue in South Beach. A routine search revealed the bench warrant and he was arrested.

Details were not immediately available on what led police to stop Smith around 8:30 p.m.

Hernandez says Smith was taken to the Miami-Dade County jail, where officials say he bonded out early Friday.

No attorney was listed on jail records for Smith, whose legal name is Earl Joseph Smith.

Smith was drafted by the New Orleans Hornets in 2004. He played in China during the NBA lockout last fall and played for the New York Knicks in 2012.



Article from FOXNEWS


Google warns hundreds of thousands may lose Internet in July

  • DNSChanger warning.JPG

    May 22, 2012: Google plans to aid an FBI awareness campaign with these warnings, which should crop up on the search results pages of more than half a million infected web browsers.Google

Google plans to warn more than half a million users of a computer infection that may knock their computers off the Internet this summer.

Unknown to most of them, their problem began when international hackers ran an online advertising scam to take control of infected computers around the world. In a highly unusual response, the FBI set up a safety net months ago using government computers to prevent Internet disruptions for those infected users. But that system will be shut down July 9 -- killing connections for those people.

The FBI has run an impressive campaign for months, encouraging people to visit a website that will inform them whether they're infected and explain how to fix the problem. After July 9, infected users won't be able to connect to the Internet.

Long Arm of Scofflaw

An online ad scam is having some unintended ramifications: The fix may prevent as many as 360,000 from getting online. Several sites will show if you're infected:

DNS Changer Working Group: can discern whether you're infected and explain how to fix the problem.

DNSChanger Eye Chart: if the site goes red, you're in harm's way. Green means clean.

The FBI website: type in the IP address of your DNS server to find out if it is infected.

Read more on how to stay safe

On Tuesday, May 22, Google announced it would throw its weight into the awareness campaign, rolling out alerts to users via a special message that will appear at the top of the Google search results page for users with affected computers, CNET reported. 

“We believe directly messaging affected users on a trusted site and in their preferred language will produce the best possible results,” wrote Google security engineer Damian Menscher in a post on the company's security blog.

“If more devices are cleaned and steps are taken to better secure the machines against further abuse, the notification effort will be well worth it,” he wrote.

The challenge, and the reason for the awareness campaigns: Most victims don't even know their computers have been infected, although the malicious software probably has slowed their web surfing and disabled their antivirus software, making their machines more vulnerable to other problems.

Last November, when the FBI and other authorities were preparing to take down a hacker ring that had been running an Internet ad scam on a massive network of infected computers, the agency realized this may become an issue.

"We started to realize that we might have a little bit of a problem on our hands because ... if we just pulled the plug on their criminal infrastructure and threw everybody in jail, the victims of this were going to be without Internet service," said Tom Grasso, an FBI supervisory special agent. "The average user would open up Internet Explorer and get `page not found' and think the Internet is broken."

On the night of the arrests, the agency brought in Paul Vixie, chairman and founder of Internet Systems Consortium, to install two Internet servers to take the place of the truckload of impounded rogue servers that infected computers were using. Federal officials planned to keep their servers online until March, giving everyone opportunity to clean their computers.

But it wasn't enough time.

A federal judge in New York extended the deadline until July.

Now, said Grasso, "the full court press is on to get people to address this problem." And it's up to computer users to check their PCs.

'We started to realize that we might have a little bit of a problem on our hands...'

- Tom Grasso, an FBI supervisory special agent

This is what happened:

Hackers infected a network of probably more than 570,000 computers worldwide. They took advantage of vulnerabilities in the Microsoft Windows operating system to install malicious software on the victim computers. This turned off antivirus updates and changed the way the computers reconcile website addresses behind the scenes on the Internet's domain name system.

The DNS system is a network of servers that translates a web address -- such as http://www.foxnews.com -- into the numerical addresses that computers use. Victim computers were reprogrammed to use rogue DNS servers owned by the attackers. This allowed the attackers to redirect computers to fraudulent versions of any website.

The hackers earned profits from advertisements that appeared on websites that victims were tricked into visiting. The scam netted the hackers at least $14 million, according to the FBI. It also made thousands of computers reliant on the rogue servers for their Internet browsing.

When the FBI and others arrested six Estonians last November, the agency replaced the rogue servers with Vixie's clean ones. Installing and running the two substitute servers for eight months is costing the federal government about $87,000.

The number of victims is hard to pinpoint, but the FBI believes that on the day of the arrests, at least 568,000 unique Internet addresses were using the rogue servers. Five months later, FBI estimates that the number is down to at least 360,000. The U.S. has the most, about 85,000, federal authorities said. Other countries with more than 20,000 each include Italy, India, England and Germany. Smaller numbers are online in Spain, France, Canada, China and Mexico.

Vixie said most of the victims are probably individual home users, rather than corporations that have technology staffs who routinely check the computers.

FBI officials said they organized an unusual system to avoid any appearance of government intrusion into the Internet or private computers. And while this is the first time the FBI used it, it won't be the last.

"This is the future of what we will be doing," said Eric Strom, a unit chief in the FBI's Cyber Division. "Until there is a change in legal system, both inside and outside the United States, to get up to speed with the cyber problem, we will have to go down these paths, trail-blazing if you will, on these types of investigations."

Now, he said, every time the agency gets near the end of a cyber case, "we get to the point where we say, how are we going to do this, how are we going to clean the system" without creating a bigger mess than before.  

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama Shifts Focus to Winning Blue Collar Voters

“There may be value for that type of experience, but it's not in the White House.”

-- President Obama campaigning in Des Moines, Iowa attacking Republican Mitt Romney's time as the CEO of Bain Capital. Obama also called Romney's speech in the city a week before a “cow pie of distortion.”

President Obama is working hard to try to repair relations with white, middle-class voters. After months of shoring up the liberal base and fundraising for a very expensive campaign, Obama is now looking for votes in the middle.

The hard pivot came immediately after Obama's last big gesture to the Democratic base two weeks ago: an expression of personal, but not official, support for same-sex marriage.

Since then, Obama has been working to recast himself as a more centrist figure, touting his plans for future deficit reduction and wooing working-class white voters on the trail.

The president's supporters looking to explain Obama's crisis among these voters have wasted no time in asserting that racism is at work. But if that is so, why was the president doing so much better in 2008 with these same voters?

-

Most of all, though, has been his campaign's attacks on Republican Mitt Romney's record as a CEO before becoming an Olympic organizer and governor of Massachusetts. Obama bashes Bain Capital on the stump, suggesting that such aggressive profit seeking is disqualifying for a presidential candidate.

The argument, offered more frequently and less artfully by Vice President Joe Biden, is that Romney would use the power of the presidency to take advantage of poor and middle-class people to help himself and other rich dudes.

These attacks are pretty clearly hurting Obama with his ultimate prize in the election cycle: moderate, swing-state suburbanites. Note well that many of the Democrats who have expressed the strongest misgivings about these attacks are from that very tribe. Biden has seen his approval ratings continue to sink as he throws haymakers like Primo Carnera.

To have an incumbent launching character attacks on his opponent so early and so often is unusual. To have Obama delivering such attacks in person and by name across the country in the last week of May is something we've not seen in modern American politics.

So what's the point of all that ugliness for an incumbent president? Why take the chance?

Part of it is Obama's belief that he must cripple Romney now. If the president can succeed in rendering Romney a toxic asset in the spring, Obama can spend the summer and fall trying to restore some luster to his halo. Also, Democrats believe that they would win a base-versus-base election and wouldn't mind if independent voters just got so grossed out that they stayed home on Nov. 6.

But it's also because of the uproar among working-class white voters. We've seen the president struggle against marginal candidates and “undeclared” in Democratic primaries in states with high-concentrations of these voters: North Carolina, West Virginia, Kentucky, Arkansas and Oklahoma.

The latest Washington Post/ABC News poll sums it up quite nicely. Among middle-class, white voters who said they were struggling financially, Obama trailed Romney 58 percent to 32 percent.

That's a pretty narrow slice of the demographic pie, to be sure, and it's not as if Obama is going to win any of those states in the fall. But the president cannot afford to be in such bad shape with voters who will likely make up more than a quarter of the electorate this fall, more in some swing states.

In 2008, Obama scored pretty well with white voters with household incomes less than $50,000. He nabbed 47 percent, according to exit polls. That was more than enough to deliver the win given Obama's massive margins among minority voters.

In Ohio, where white voters under the $50,000 mark were almost 40 percent of the electorate, Obama did even better, grabbing 51 percent of their votes. If Obama were to card a 32 percent in November with that same group, he would lose Ohio by hundreds of thousands of votes.

The president's supporters looking to explain Obama's crisis among these voters have wasted no time in asserting that racism is at work. But if that is so, why was the president doing so much better in 2008 with these same voters?

West Virginia's leading political analyst, Hoppy Kercheval, points out that Boone County was one of only seven of the state's 55 counties to go for Obama in 2008 but in the state's Democratic primary this month went to a New Mexican felon serving a sentence in a Texas federal prison.

Voters in Boone County (98.5 percent white) knew that Obama was black in 2008 when they gave him an 11-point win, so where's the racism? The more obvious answer is that West Virginians are furious at the president over his crackdown on the state's coal industry. It's not racist or weird to vote against someone you think is trying to put you out of a job.

But some of the president's supporters like to flatter themselves by overemphasizing the role of race in the opposition to Obama. They feel wiser and more progressive by assuming that bigotry is at the heart of the opposition to Obama. They also like the idea of racist opposition because it can be used against metropolitan opponents of Obama.

The logic is as follows: If Arkansans voted against Obama because they are racists, all of the president's opponents must bear the stain. Liberals love to talk about these protest votes because of the chance to mock the president's opponents as racist hayseeds, which may scare away moderate suburban voters, the folks most sensitive to accusations of racism.

It not only reveals their own bigotry, but also blinds them to the real dangers facing their party in the fall.

The president and his campaign aren't making the same mistake. Obama and Biden have both made clear that they expect a rougher run than last time because of economic anxiety. This is only half blind.

These voters aren't just economically insecure. Most of them seem to be convinced that Obama made the situation worse. Obama and Democrats had the same view of the 2010 wipeout for their party: that free-floating economic anxiety alit on them because they happened to be the party in power â€" a kind of cruel injustice. In truth, voters concluded that the Blue Team had made a hash of things and, just as voters had done with the Red Team four years earlier, tossed them out on their ears.

But Obama sees well enough to know what the problem is, even if he struggles to identify its cause. Hence the risky strategy of opening the general election on back-to-back negative ads and tag-team character attacks on Romney from the president and Biden.

Romney is a ripe target: A quarter-billionaire who is painfully awkward when trying to warm up downscale voters. The Bain attacks may be backfiring, but they may help reverse Romney's dominance with these voters.

The Supreme Court is set to scramble the election any day now by rendering a decision on Obama's greatest achievement and worst liability, his 2010 health law. The president very much needs to stop the hemorrhaging with this key demographic before the race gets reset again.

And Now, A Word From Charles

“I love the way the Democrats are now trying to discount the importance of [the Wisconsin recall] election. This is like saying Waterloo was a skirmish in the Belgian wilderness.”

-- Charles Krauthammer on “Special Report with Bret Baier.”

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



Article from FOXNEWS


Hottest New Gadgets

FoxNews.com


Article from FOXNEWS


Jameson: Late Night DUI

Porn actress Jenna Jameson was arrested on suspicion of DUI early Friday after her car hit a pole.

The 38-year-old "Zombie Strippers!" star was pulled over by officers at around 1:30am local time after the accident and given a field sobriety test, law enforcement sources told TMZ.

She was subsequently held for misdemeanor suspicion of DUI. She was expected to be cited and released from custody later Friday.



Article from FOXNEWS


President says French troops to leave Afghanistan

  • Afghanistan France Ho_Pata.jpg

    May 25, 2012: French President Francois Hollande review troops at Forward Operating Base (FOB) in Nijrab, Kapisa region, Afghanistan, where most of French troops are stationed in Afghanistan.AP

All French combat troops will pull out of Afghanistan by the end of the year, France's new president said in Kabul Friday, but some trainers will remain to help Afghanistan's nascent security forces.

Francois Hollande said that France's troops have carried out their mission in Afghanistan and it is time for them to leave, an early pullout that will be coordinated with the United States and other allies.

"There will be no combat troops" after the end of the year, Hollande said during a joint news conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

Hollande flew to Afghanistan to meet with troops and to discuss plans with Karzai to withdraw French combat troops more than a year earlier than scheduled. His visit was not announced ahead of time for security reasons, and he was expected to depart shortly after the news conference.

Hollande said that France will withdraw its 2,000 combat troops, out of a total of 3,400 troops and 150 gendarmes, by the end of the year. Some would stay behind to help send military equipment back to France, and others would help train the Afghan army and police. He did not provide a breakdown for the roles of the 1,400 soldiers who will remain past 2012 or how long they would stay.

Hollande said that continued cooperation was discussed over lunch with Karzai "because there will continue to be trainers who will work with (Afghan) soldiers and police."

"We won't have any more combat forces in Afghanistan after Dec. 31, 2012. I say specifically combat forces. We will still have a military force that will be dedicated to the training of Afghan army officers, that will also be present at the hospital, the airport and also will allow the Afghans to have a police force that is the most effective possible," he explained during a function at the French Embassy.

Hollande insisted France is not abandoning Afghanistan. "No. This is a continuation, and there will be further engagement, but in a different form."

He warned of possible problems in the pullout. "We will have to take every precaution. We must limit as much as possible our losses, make sure that there is no risk for our soldiers," he said.

French military spokesman Col. Thierry Burkhard said the number of trainers who stay will be "in the hundreds" and that those conducting the logistics for the pullout will leave bit by bit along with the withdrawing troops.

There are French troops in Kabul, eastern Kapisa province, the Surobi district of and at the Kandahar air base in the south -- where France has three fighter jets. Burkhard said most of the 2,000 who leave will be those in Kapisa and Surobi.

Hollande said French equipment would be taken out by ground routes, but did not say which ones.

Pakistan closed overland supply routes to Afghanistan for NATO after a U.S. attack on the Pakistani side of the border killed 24 Pakistani soldiers last November. The decision has forced NATO to use a more costly route running through the north.

France has signed an agreement with Afghanistan that calls for cooperation after 2014. Other countries, including the United States, have signed similar accords.

"We want France to have a presence in Afghanistan differently from how it did in the past," Hollande said. France wants to be "useful in a different way," in economic and cultural matters, he said.

During an earlier meeting with French troops at a base in Kapisa's Nijrab district, Hollande said "several reasons justify this decision to withdraw our combat troops from Afghanistan."

"The time for Afghan sovereignty has come," he said. "The terrorist threat that targeted our territory, while it hasn't totally disappeared, is in part lessened."

Another reason "is that, simply, you have carried out your mission."

Hollande announced plans at a NATO summit this week to pull out French troops by the end of the year, well ahead of the alliance's 2014 withdrawal date.

Reflecting increasing French disillusionment with the war, Hollande's conservative predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy, had pledged to withdraw all troops by the end of 2013. Hollande, elected president this month, made a more immediate pullout a pillar of his campaign.

Tension over Hollande's pledge to end his country's combat mission two years early dominated the NATO summit in Chicago, unleashing fears of a domino effect of other allies withdrawing early. France is the fourth largest troops contributor after the United States, Britain and Germany.

President Barack Obama last year decided to pull out 33,000 U.S. combat troops by September.

Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, said this week that on Sept. 30 there will be 68,000 U.S. and about 40,000 other coalition forces in Afghanistan -- compared to more than 130,000 last year.

The coalition has started handing over security control to Afghan army and police in areas home to 75 percent of the population, with a goal of putting them in the lead for all the country by mid-2013. NATO and other foreign forces would then be in a support role for the 352,000-strong Afghan National Security Forces.

Most foreign combat troops will have left Afghanistan by the end of 2014, when Afghanistan will take complete control for security around the country.

Kapisa, where French forces are based, is one of the areas now being transferred to Afghan control. Ashraf Ghani, head of a commission overseeing the transition, said earlier this month that "the risks in Kapisa are containable and within our capability."

"Between now and the end of the year, the Afghan army will take control of the zones protected by our forces," Hollande said. The transition will be carried out "intelligently and with complete and friendly cooperation with the Afghan authorities"



Article from FOXNEWS


Discovery May Lead to Birth Control Pills for Men

  • Sperm and BPA

    iStock

When it comes to birth control, numerous options are available to women to help them regulate their menstrual cycle and prevent ovulation.  But what if a birth control pill for men were available?

That prospect may soon become a reality now that researchers at the University of Edinburgh have recently discovered a gene that is essential for the development of sperm.  Their study, published in the journal PLos Genetics, highlights the gene Katnal1, which causes temporary infertility in male mice when blocked.

In order to identify Katnal1 as a key element in sperm production, the researchers treated a group of mice with a chemical called ENU, which triggers mutations in the DNA.  Afterward, they bred the mice to see if any of them became infertile.  After establishing a group of impotent mice, they backtracked through genetic mapping to identify which gene had been disrupted by the ENU â€" leading them to Katnal1.

“Importantly the random nature of ENU, which causes changes in DNA at random, means we can identify important genes that otherwise we would have had no reason to suspect play a role in male fertility,” said Dr. Lee Smith, a reader in the department of genetic endocrinology at the University of Edinburgh as well as the study's lead author. “For example, before this study, no one had any idea Katnal1 was even active in the testis, and as such, Katnal1 would probably not have been identified in any other way.”

Lee and his team further identified that Katnal1 was used to regulate a structure known as microtubules â€" parts of sperms that needed for support and the acquisition of nutrients.  Breaking down these microtubules inhibits sperms' ability to move throughout the testes during their maturation.

The gene's discovery not only paves the way for a male contraceptive pill, but could also aid in better understanding cases of male infertility.

“As we move towards personalized medicine, comparing DNA sequences of infertile men against gene data provided from studies such as this will help clinicians identify the causes underlying unexplained male infertility,” Smith said.  “If a genetic fault can be traced to a problem within the supporting cells of the testes rather than the sperm cells then it could be possible to use a gene-therapy approach to replace the faulty copy of the gene and restore fertility.”

However, a potential male contraceptive pill would not utilize gene-therapy, but instead would involve identifying a protein that is used to regulate Katnal1.  According to Lee, if they are able to come up with a way to specifically target the gene's function in the testes, then they could potentially create a non-hormonal contraceptive.

Also, a male pill would not only need to be effective in stopping sperm production but also be just as effective in having it start back up again.  According to Smith, blocking Katnal1 would render a man sterile for the rest of his life.

“The important thing is that the effects of such a drug would be reversible,” Smith said in a press release,” because Katnal1 only affects sperm cells in the later stages of development, so it would not hinder the early stages of sperm production and the overall ability to produce sperm.”

Currently, there are not many options in the way of male pharmaceutical contraception.  Recent options have included testosterone injections or testosterone plus progestin injections, which are used to trick the brain into thinking the testes have produced enough testosterone, so sperm production shuts down.  

However, these options rely on hormones, while the potential drug to come from Lee and his team's research would be hormone-free and could bypass the side-effects that come with increased testosterone levels â€" such as mood swings and acne.

Lee said that his team has much more research to do before this drug becomes available, but he said we could see its development within the next decade.

“We are at the beginning, but have taken a great step forward in identifying a new pathway that controls male fertility.”



Article from FOXNEWS


SpaceX Dragon capsule set for space station arrival

  • Dragon at station.JPG

    May 25, 2012: A robotic arm on the International Space Station prepares to reel in the Dragon capusle, the first commercial cargo ship to ferry supplies to the orbiting station.SpaceX

  • spacex docking 3.jpg

    May 24, 2012: The SpaceX Dragon commercial cargo spacecraft approaches the International Space Station prior to docking, scheduled for Friday, May 25, 2012.AP Photo/NASA

  • spacex docking 2.jpg

    May 24, 2012: The International Space Station, seen by the thermal imaging camera aboard the SpaceX Dragon commercial cargo craft as it approaches.AP Photo/NASA

  • spacex docking.jpg

    May 24, 2012: The SpaceX Dragon commercial cargo craft approaches the International Space Station for a series of tests prior to its final rendezvous and grapple on May 25.AP Photo/NASA

  • SpaceX historic launch 1.jpg

    May 22, 2012: The Falcon 9 SpaceX rocket lifts off from space launch complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Fla. This launch marks the first time, a private company sends its own rocket to deliver supplies to the International Space Station.AP Photo/John Raoux

Space station astronauts have captured the Dragon.

The privately bankrolled Dragon capsule arrived at the International Space Station on Friday, making history as the first commercial delivery truck in orbit. Astronauts Donald Pettit and Andre Kuipers used the space station's robot arm to snare the Dragon after a few hours of extra maneuvering.

'It's a great view ... the solar panels are nicely lit.'

- Dutch astronaut Andre Kuipers, as the Dragon pulled within 900 feet

On Thursday, the capsule came within 1 1/2 miles of the space station in a practice fly-by. It returned to the neighborhood early Friday so Kuipers and U.S. astronaut Donald Pettit could capture it with a robot arm. First, the capsule went through a series of stop-and-go demonstrations to prove it was under good operating control.

NASA ordered extra checks of the Dragon's imagers as the capsule drew ever closer to the space station, putting the entire operation slightly behind schedule. Given that the Dragon is a brand new type of vehicle and this is a test flight, the space agency said it wanted to proceed cautiously.

A collision at orbital speed -- 17,500 mph -- would have been disastrous for the space station.

This is the first time a private company has launched a vessel to the space station, an achievement previously reserved for a small, elite group of government agencies.

President Barack Obama is pushing commercial ventures in orbit so NASA can concentrate on grander destinations like asteroids and Mars. Once companies master supply runs, they hope to tackle astronaut ferry runs.

The California-based SpaceX -- officially known as Space Exploration Technologies Corp. -- is one of several companies vying for the chance to launch Americans from their homeland. That ability ended with NASA's final shuttle flight last summer. To get to the space station, NASA astronauts must go through Russia, an expensive and embarrassing situation for the U.S. after a half-century of orbital self-sufficiency.

SpaceX's billionaire maestro, Elon Musk, who helped create PayPal, said he can have astronauts riding his Dragon capsules to orbit in three or four years. His Falcon 9 rockets lift off from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Musk monitored Friday's operation from the company's Mission Control in Hawthorne, Calif.

The space station has been relying on Russian, Japanese and European cargo ships ever since the shuttles retired. None of those, however, can bring anything of value back; they're simply loaded with trash and burn up in the atmosphere.

By contrast, the Dragon is designed to safely re-enter the atmosphere, parachuting into the ocean like the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo capsules did back in the 1960s. Assuming all goes well Friday, the space station's six-man crew will release the Dragon next Thursday after filling it with science experiments and equipment.



Article from FOXNEWS


Lawmakers block Ukraine Parliament day after brawl

  • APTOPIX Ukraine Palia_Pata.jpg

    May 24, 2012: Lawmakers from pro-presidential and oppositional factions fight in the parliament session hall in Kiev, Ukraine.AP

Opposition lawmakers on Friday blocked the Ukrainian Parliament a day after a brawl in the chamber sent one legislator to the hospital.

The melee was sparked by a proposed bill to make Russian an official language in eastern regions of the country with large native Russian-speaking populations. Lawmakers grappled and threw punches. One was hospitalized with a head injury.

On Friday, deputies opposed to the bill blocked the Parliament speaker's podium, preventing the session from starting, while some 200 demonstrators held a noisy protest against the bill outside the building.

Parliament speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn on Friday said the brawl had "completely destroyed" the legislative process and called for new elections. But most parties do not support an emergency poll, because regular elections are set for October.

The bill would allow the use of the Russian language in courts, hospitals and other official institutions in the regions where Russian-speakers make up more than 10 percent of the population. Pro-government lawmakers, who draw their support from the Russian-speaking south and east of Ukraine, say it will allow people living there to use the language of their preferences.

Opponents of the bill say it will stem the development of the Ukrainian language, by creating no incentive for millions of Ukrainians to learn and use it.



Article from FOXNEWS


Suspect in Etan Patz Murder Case Due in Court

A New Jersey man arrested for the murder of 6-year-old Etan Patz will appear in court Friday -- 33 years to the day after the New York City boy disappeared while walking to a school bus stop.

New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly announced Thursday that Pedro Hernandez, 51, of New Jersey, confessed to luring the child into a store with the promise of a soda before strangling him and disposing his body. 

Kelly said Hernandez, who was then 18, was working as a stock clerk at a bodega in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood when he spotted Patz walking alone in the early morning of May 25, 1979. Hernandez then allegedly led Patz down into the basement of the bodega, where he choked him and disposed of him by putting Patz's body into a trash bag outside. Kelly said the motive of the murder is still under investigation.

Before coming to the police to confess his role in Patz's death, Hernandez expressed remorse to a family member, saying sometime in the past few decades that he had "done a bad thing and killed a child in New York," police said.

Hernandez, who moved to New Jersey shortly after the boy disappeared, was picked up there late Wednesday in Maple Shade and was questioned Thursday at the Manhattan district attorney's office.

On Wednesday evening, Hernandez brought investigators to the scene of the murder and told them what happened. Police recorded three and a half hours of videotaped statements made by Hernandez.

"He was remorseful, and I think the detectives thought that it was a feeling of relief on his part," Kelly said Thursday. "We believe that this is the individual responsible for the crime."

Police notified the Patz family that Hernandez had come forward and implicated himself in the crime. When the NYPD determined that an arrest was appropriate, they called the family back this afternoon. Stan, the boy's father, was described as surprised and taken aback by the news, the NYPD said.

"He had a few specific questions. He was a little surprised, but I think after everything Mr. Patz has gone through, he handled it very well," said Lt. Christopher Zimmerman of the Missing Persons Squad.

"We believe that this is the individual responsible for the crime."

- -- New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly

Neighbors in Maple Shade said Hernandez lived with his wife and a daughter who attends college. They expressed surprise Thursday night at the arrest.

"I knew the guy. He was not a problem. His family was great people," said Dan Wollick, 71, who rents an apartment in Hernandez' home ."He didn't bother anybody."

After Patz's disappearance in 1979, he was the first missing child to appear on a milk carton. President Ronald Reagan declared May 25 -- the day the boy disappeared -- National Missing Children's Day. The boy was officially declared dead in 2001.  

Last month, the FBI ripped up a Manhattan basement for any forensic evidence that would help solve the mystery of what happened to Patz. The search turned up nothing.

The basement is the former workspace of retired handyman Othniel Miller, 75, of Brooklyn, N.Y., who was seen with Patz the night before he disappeared. Miller, whose workshop was on the route the boy would have taken to his bus stop, has denied any wrongdoing.

Although Kelly said the dig provided no link to Hernandez, the search hurtled the case back into the news, and a tipster then pointed police to Hernandez. Kelly said the person wasn't a relative, but knew that Hernandez had said he had done a bad thing, he said.

Investigators had long focused their attention on Jose Ramos, a drifter and onetime boyfriend of Etan's baby sitter. In the early 1980s, he was arrested on theft charges, and had photos of other young, blond boys in his backpack. But there was no hard evidence linking Ramos to the crime.

Ramos, now 68, reportedly admitted trying to molest Etan on the day of his disappearance, but denied abducting him or killing him. Ramos has never been charged criminally in the Patz case and is currently serving a 20-year prison term in Pennsylvania for abusing an 8-year-old boy there. Ramos is scheduled to be released from prison in November.

Fox News' Cristina Corbin, Rick Leventhal, David Lee Miller and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Were Cavemen Flutists?

  • bird-bone-flute

    40,000 year old flute from the site of Geißenklösterle made from bird bones.The University of Tübingen

  • Mammoth-bone-flute

    Mammoth ivory flute.The University of Tübingen

Early modern humans could have spent their evenings sitting around the fire, playing bone flutes and singing songs 40,000 years ago, newly discovered ancient musical instruments indicate. The bone flutes push back the date researchers think human creativity evolved.

Researchers were studying a modern human settlement called Geißenklösterle, a part of the Swabian caves system in southern Germany, when they came across the bone flutes. One is made of mammoth ivory, while the other seems to be made of bones from a bird. They also found a collection of perforated teeth, ornaments and stone tools at the site.

"These results are consistent with a hypothesis we made several years ago that the Danube River was a key corridor for the movement of humans and technological innovations into central Europe between 40,000 and 45,000 years ago," study researcher Nick Conard, of Tübingen University, said in a statement.

"Geißenklösterle is one of several caves in the region that has produced important examples of personal ornaments, figurative art, mythical imagery and musical instruments. The new dates prove the great antiquity of the Aurignacian in Swabia." The Aurignacian refers to an ancient culture and the associated tools. [Gallery: Europe's Oldest Rock Art]

Old bones

The flutes are the earliest record of technological and artistic innovations that are characteristic of the Aurignacian period. This culture also

created the oldest known example of art meant to represent a person, found in the same cave system in 2008 (that statue seems to be about 35,000 years old). The musical instruments indicate that these early humans were sharing songs and showing artistic creativity even earlier than previously thought.

The researchers radiocarbon-dated bones found in the same layer of the archaeological dig as the flutes. This carbon dating uses the level of radioactive carbon, which is naturally occurring in the world and decays predictably into nonradioactive carbon, to estimate the age of organic materials.

They found the objects were between 42,000 and 43,000 years old, belonging to the Aurignacian culture dating from the upper Paleolithic period. So far, these dates are the earliest for the Aurignacian and predate equivalent sites from Italy, France, England and other regions.

The results indicate that modern humans entered the Upper Danube region before an extremely cold climatic phase around 39,000 to 40,000 years ago, the researchers said.

"Modern humans during the Aurignacian period were in central Europe at least 2,000 to 3,000 years before this climatic deterioration, when huge icebergs calved from ice sheets in the northern Atlantic and temperatures plummeted," study researcher Tom Higham, of Oxford University, said in a statement. "The question is what effect this downturn might have had on the people in Europe at the time."

This site was inhabited by modern humans, the researchers said, but it's possible that Neanderthals were also in the area at the same time, though they haven't been able find evidence of any cultural contact or interbreeding between the two groups in this part of Europe.

The study was published May 8 in the Journal of Human Evolution.

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



Article from FOXNEWS


Rodriquez Beach Body Then/Now

Michelle Rodriguez in 2007 (l) and today (r).

“Fast and Furious” star Michelle Rodriguez has never been what anyone would call out of shape. But in these before and after pictures, you see the action star's body has gone from plain nice to superhuman in the last five years.

How? Being in bad-ass movies, that's how.

Rodriguez loves outdoor adventures and high intensity workouts, especially when they are linked to her movie roles. Rodriguez, 33, fell in love with boxing while preparing for her role in “Girlfight,” and hit the surfboard daily while shooting the movie “Blue Crush.”

HOT SHOTS: Michelle Rodriguez hits he beach.

When she trained for “Battle: Los Angeles” last year, she told On The Red Carpet: “[Training] was pretty gnarly … I was there from 5 o'clock in the morning to 5 o'clock in the afternoon training hard-core.”

Even with all that training, you can't get this kind of sculpted bikini body without having a restricted diet. Michelle says she's not a vegetarian, but she's “disgusted every time I do have a piece of meat,” she told Eco Vegan Gal.

So if you want to look like Rodriguez, all you have to do be in action movies, and feel self-loathing when you eat a hamburger.

Easy right?



Article from FOXNEWS


Everest climber skips summit to rescue friend

An Israeli who rescued a distressed climber on Mount Everest instead of pushing onward to the summit said Friday that the man he helped, an American of Turkish origin, is like a brother to him.

Nadav Ben-Yehuda, who was climbing with a Sherpa guide, came across Aydin Irmak near the summit last weekend. In that chaotic period, four climbers died on their way down from the summit amid a traffic jam of more than 200 people who were rushing to reach the world's highest peak as the weather deteriorated.

In a telephone interview with The Associated Press, Ben-Yehuda, 24, appeared proud that Irmak, 46, had made it to the summit, noting that he is one of a small number of "Turkish" climbers to reach the top. Irmak left Turkey for New York more than two decades ago, but remains proud of his Turkish heritage. The friendship stands in contrast to the political tension between Turkey and Israel, which were once firm allies.

"Aydin, wake up! Wake up!" Ben-Yehuda recalled saying when he found his friend in the darkness. The American, he said, had been returning from the summit but collapsed in the extreme conditions, without an oxygen supply, a flashlight and a rucksack. Ben-Yehuda, who developed a friendship with Irmak before the climb, had delayed his own ascent by a day in hopes of avoiding the bottleneck of climbers heading for the top.

There have been periodic tales of people bypassing stricken climbers as they seek to fulfill a lifelong dream and reach the summit of Everest, but Ben-Yehuda said his decision to abandon his goal of reaching the top and help Irmak was "automatic," even though it took him several minutes to recognize his pale, gaunt friend.

"I just told myself, `This is crazy.' It just blew my mind," Ben-Yehuda said. "I didn't realize he was up there the whole time. Everybody thought he had already descended."

The Israeli carried Irmak for hours to a camp at lower elevation. Both suffered frostbite and some of their fingers were at risk of amputation. Ben-Yehuda lost 20 kilograms (44 pounds) in his time on the mountain, and Irmak lost 12 kilograms (26 pounds), said Hanan Goder, Israel's ambassador in Nepal. Goder had dinner with the pair after their ordeal.

"They really have to recover mentally and physically," Goder said. "They call each other, `my brother.' After the event that they had together, their souls are really linked together now."

The ambassador said the rescue was a "humanitarian" tale that highlighted the friendship between Israelis and Turks at a personal level, despite the deteriorating relationship between their governments. One of the key events in that downward, diplomatic spiral was an Israeli raid in 2010 on a Turkish aid ship that was trying to break the Israeli blockade on Gaza, which resulted in the deaths of eight Turkish activists and a Turkish-American.

The Jerusalem Post, which reported that Ben-Yehuda would have been the youngest Israeli to reach Everest's summit, spoke to Irmak by telephone during the dinner that Goder hosted.

"I don't know what the hell is going on between the two countries," the newspaper quoted Irmak as saying. "I don't care about that. I talked to his (Ben-Yehuda's) family today and I told them you have another family in Turkey and America."

Ben-Yehuda, who spoke to the AP just before leaving Nepal for urgent medical treatment in Israel, said he could not say with certainty how he would have reacted if he had come across a stricken climber he did not know. Oxygen is in such short supply and the conditions are so harsh, he said, that people on the mountain develop a kind of tunnel vision.

"You just think about breathing, about walking, about climbing," he said. According to Ben-Yehuda, the fundamental questions going through the mind of a climber heading for the peak are: "Are you going to make it?" and "When is the right time to turn back?"

And once a climber begins the descent, the all-embracing question becomes: "How fast can I go down?"

Ben-Yehuda said his military training in Israel helped shape his reflexive decision to rescue Irmak. "You never leave a friend in the field," he said.



Article from FOXNEWS


Celebs From Rags to Riches

Shatner and his wife Elizabeth pose with a member of the RCMP during the 41st Juno Awards in Ottawa in 2012.

With so many feeling the sting of the economic downturn of the past years, it's sometimes hard to see Hollywood's elite living the high life, decade in and decade out.

But not everyone in Tinseltown has lived the luxurious life since birth.

In fact, some of our favorite tabloid stars and residents of Malibu and Bel Air came from the most humble beginnings, calling shelters, trailer parks, and even the back of their car home before breaking into the big time.

Our friends at Snakkle.com tracked down several of the stars who went from rags and wretched to rich and famous.

(Seth Poppel/Yearbook Library, Taylor Hill/Getty Image)

William Shatner in High School, 1948, Would Live In His Truck

The Canadian actor and producer is perhaps best known as Captain Kirk of the wildly successful “Star Trek” franchise, which began first as a TV series in 1966. But before “Star Trek” became the phenomenon it is today, the original Captain Kirk boldly went where many impoverished actors had gone before. After his divorce and the cancellation of “Star Trek” in 1969, Shatner even lived in his truck for a while.

William Shatner is Worth $300 Million Today
After the “Star Trek” series ended, Shatner went on to star in “T.J. Hooker” from 1982 to 1986 and in the six successful film follow-ups to the “Star Trek” TV show. Today, he is worth a whopping $300 million.

The former Priceline Negotiator was said to have made a $600 million deal to be the company's spokesperson, but Shatner denied it on Twitter, tweeting “Someone stupid said a stupid thing about me making $600M. It ain't so. Relatives are coming out of the woodwork. Too bad it never happened.”

See all 12 stars who went from rags to riches at Snakkle.com

(Seth Poppel/Yearbook Library, Jason Merritt/Getty Image)

Tom Cruise in High School, 1980, Was Going To Be A Priest

Tom Cruise experienced a difficult childhood, with parents who were constantly on the move in search of employment. He attended 15 different schools in both the United States and Canada. By the time he settled in New Jersey with his mother and stepfather, Cruise had dreams of becoming a Catholic priest and taking a vow of poverty, until he decided to go to New York City at age 18 to pursue acting.

Tom Cruise is Worth $250 Million Today
It didn't take long for the actor with the million-dollar grin to make his mark on Hollywood. Cruise debuted in the film “Endless Love” in 1981. Leads in highly successful films followed, such as “Top Gun” (1986), “Rain Man” (1988), and “Born on the Fourth of July” (1989).

He also appeared in hits such as the “Mission Impossible” franchises, “Minority Report” (2002), “War of the Worlds” (2005), and “Jerry Maguire” (1996), for which he received an Oscar nomination. He'll next be seen in 2012's “Rock of Ages.” Today, Cruise is thought to be worth $250 million.

See all 12 stars who went from rags to riches at Snakkle.com

(Seth Poppel/Yearbook Library, Simon Russell/Getty Image)

Sarah Jessica Parker in 7th Grade, 1978, Was Raised In Poverty

Before Sarah Jessica Parker was the epitome of New York style as “Sex and the City's” Carrie Bradshaw, she was one of eight siblings growing up in relative poverty in Nelsonville, Ohio. Her mother was a teacher and her stepfather, who raised her, was often out of work. She began singing and dancing at a young age to help support the family.

In 1976, she won her first role on Broadway in “The Innocents.” Because of her humble beginning, Parker is pragmatic about wealth. “I don't want my children to feel they have a sense of entitlement. I want them to work hard and be challenged,” the actress has said. “That's hard to do when you have everything you need and want, so I am working on those values all the time.”

Sarah Jessica Parker is Worth $90 Million Today
After her 1982 breakout role as the lead in TV's “Square Pegs”, Parker worked steadily in both TV and film. She appeared in hits such as “L.A. Story” (1991) and “Honeymoon in Vegas” (1992). In 1998, she landed her seminal role as Carrie Bradshaw in “Sex and the City” TV series and even produced the successful movies of the same name. Today, the actress is said to be worth $90 million.

Click here to see entire gallery of stars who went from rags to riches



Article from FOXNEWS


Fail-Safe Road Trip Tips

  • iStock_000012677471Medium.jpg

    iStock

It's that time of year when the car windows go down and speaker volume goes up. Anyone with a sense of adventure and a love for a good summer drive is probably thinking: road trip. While a spur of the moment cross country trip may sound like a good idea at the time, after eight hours of grid-locked traffic on Interstate 95, you'll be wishing you had done a little planning. That's where we come in. Here are 10 easy tricks to make the most out of road trip and help you keep your sanity and your savings.

1. Choose your friends wisely

Nothing teaches you more about a person than hours and hours of car-sized confinement. As a rule of thumb, choose your road trip companion using the "friendship over distance" constant. Take the amount of time you've known a person and how well the two of you get along and divide that by the distance you have to drive. The longer the distance, the better quality of companion you are going to want with you and the better the whole equation will work out. While a short trip is a great chance to get to know someone, if the distance is too long than you may wind up wishing for an ejection seat.

2. Don't eat at the drive-thru

Food is not only one of life's greatest joys, it's also one of the best ways to experience a new region and culture. Ordering food through a window for days on end doesn't just pack on the pounds, it also becomes expensive. Instead, take a few extra minutes to explore a back road and see what you find. Odds are the eats will be cheaper, more authentic and taste way better than anything you will pick up at a rest station fast food joint.

3.  Take turns driving

This seems like a no brainer, but remember to switch up who's at the wheel. It's always nice to get a break from driving, but it's also nice to get a break from pensively staring out the window or trying to keep yourself from being a back seat driver. Don't be shy about letting your road trip buddy know when you are ready to take over driving.

4. Don't break the law, or at least don't get caught

One hefty moving violation can bankrupt a whole road trip budget. So while the open roads of the midwest may seem ripe for speeding, go easy on the gas pedal and drive the speed limit. Nobody wants to cough up money for your ticket, or even worse, your bail. 

5. Change your fluids and keep an eye under the hood

First, you sure make sure your car is road trip ready before you even set out. Take the car in for an oil change and make sure all of its fluids are full. Even while you are on the road, make sure to keep an eye on what is going on under the hood. If you don't know how to change a tire, rig up a jump start or add coolant and other fluids to your car, learn before you begin your trip. A car can be your worst enemy or your best friend on a road trip, depending on how much you know about its mechanics. 

6. Use the restroom whenever you can

All to often road trippers realize they need to use the bathroom after they've just left the rest stop. As a rule, use the bathroom every time you stop. If you are free from the car, think of it as an opportunity to visit the restroom. Even if you don't have to go, go anyway. Everyone will be grateful when they no longer have to stop by the side of the highway to watch you run into the woods.

7. Find where the gas is cheap

Luckily, in the age of the smart phone, it is easier than ever to find where gas is the cheapest. Apps like GasBuddy will help you locate the best deals for gas on the go. If you don't have a smart phone, you can figure out your gas budget ahead of time using an online fuel cost calculator, which will map out the cheapest stations to purchase gas during your trip.

8. Bring plenty of music, but don't forget the radio

Remember the good old days of the mixtape? In preparation for your road trip, relive those memories and fully stock your car with modern day mixtapes, a.k.a. playlists. Make sure to bring songs you can roll down the windows and sing to when the night and road feel eternally long. 

Another tried and true tip, don't forget about the radio. While it's nice to know that you have a treasure trove of jams waiting on your ipod, there is something timeless about American radio. Radio is a great window into the region you are driving through. Stations like WROX in Mississippi or KWEM in Memphis offer as much history as any roadside museum and they won't cost you a dime.

9. Expect the unexpected 

Let's face it, you don't take a road trip to get somewhere quickly and you're never going to look back and say, "Man, I just wish I had seen the Pacific Coast Highway faster." Plan time to be surprised by what you find along the way. Road trips are about the journey, so enjoy it. What is that John Lennon said? "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." So use your road trip as a chance to slow down and enjoy life and all the strange unexpected detours along the way.

10. Bring a paper map

Sure, it's nice to have a digital copilot suction-cupped onto your dashboard, but what happens when there's a Garmin malfunction in the middle of nowhere? Don't put all your faith in technology, because the moment you do it's bound to fail. An added bonus of keeping a paper map on hand is that it can function like a travel log. Make the map personal. Write in notes about memories you made in certain cities, get a little BBQ sauce on the folds between Houston and Austin, and keep it somewhere special so you can take it out years later and experience your road trip all over again.

Related Stories 5 Best Family Road Trip Cars Under $35,000


Article from FOXNEWS