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Walker Win May Signal Bumpy Ride for Obama

“Remember me? I'm the only guy that gave you four surplus budgets out of the eight I sent.”

-- Former President Bill Clinton at a Monday fundraiser with President Obama.

WAUKESHA, Wisc. -- Tuesday's oversized victory by Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wisc., in the recall election launched by labor groups and Democrats here comes at an unhappy moment for Obama Democrats.

The election showed, most dangerously for Obama, that the same silent-majority voters who had been racking up wins for the GOP since 2009 are out in force. Why did the final result in the election â€" a 9-point trouncing â€" differ so much from what exit polls showed at the outset? Power Play suspects that the voters least likely to answer questions from inquisitive strangers with clipboards outside their precinct â€" working, white males â€"were out in force.

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We are now about a third of the way through the general election season, and if the first act was a prelude to what's to come, President Obama will be in for a very bumpy ride.

Obama said this week that his challenge in this election was “fear and frustration” among voters, but those adjectives might better suit the Democratic Party at this milestone moment in the 2012 election.

The failed recall in Wisconsin proved a microcosm of the troubles plaguing Obama and his party right now: internal divisions, an implacable base and muddled messaging.

Government worker unions, now the most important constituency of the Democratic Party, demanded the risky recall and Democrats in the state and nationally had little choice but to go along for the ride.

And while the Democratic nominee to replace Walker, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, was out trying to talk to moderate voters about jobs and the economy, the Democratic base was fixated on an intense hatred of Walker and his law curbing the power of government worker unions.

The national narrative further intruded when the ongoing fracas between the Clinton and Obama wings of the party came to town. While Obama rankled Democratic activists by not campaigning for Barrett, former President Bill Clinton, still engaged in a two-week rampage through Obama's election messaging, dropped in to campaign with their man.

Obama flew over the state as part of a six-fundraiser day and offered a Tweet of support , reinforcing his reputation as a solitary man, not a team player for his party. Clinton, meanwhile, ate it up like a fresh-grilled Sheboygan bratwurst.

The message for the small sliver of undecided voters in the state was that Democrats were a mess. The party's talking points in the election sounded like scanning through the radio too fast.

The election also showed, most dangerously for Obama, that the same silent-majority voters who had been racking up wins for the GOP since 2009 are out in force. Why did the final result in the election â€" a 9-point trouncing â€" differ so much from what exit polls showed at the outset? Power Play suspects that the voters least likely to answer questions from inquisitive strangers with clipboards outside their precinct â€" working, white males â€"were out in force.

While an SEIU member from Madison might have been eager to talk about their vote, the forklift operator from Waukesha might prefer to not tarry and talk politics with someone they don't know. We didn't hear his voice in the exit poll, but sure did when the votes were counted.

Those guys have been keeping Republicans on a winning run since the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial elections in November 2009 and the hole in Tuesday's polling data shows they are still voting, and not for Democrats.

It was 10 weeks ago that Republican Mitt Romney began to don the cloak of presumptive GOP nominee. Since then, Obama and his team have committed many unforced errors: the hot mic “flexibility” message for Russian strongman Vladimir Putin; jousting in public with the Supreme Court; the insult of Ann Romney; failing to get his party lined up behind the opening assault on Romney's reputation; etc.

The president has also had plenty beyond his control go wrong. As the recovery stalls again there is an increasing sense that the president could be running on empty.

To have this all lead up to a blowout win for Walker in this recall has got to make Team Obama feel like they've been run over by the Packers' defensive line.

There are now about 21 weeks until the election. If Obama has another 10 weeks like the ones he's just completed, no amount of money, technology or organization will be able to save this election for him.

And Now, A Word From Charles

“Loose cannon?  He is a double agent. What is the message?  Bill Clinton says elect Obama because at the end of a second term you might begin to be getting out of recession?  I wouldn't run on that.”

-- 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


\'100 Midget March\' Film Flap

Snubbed dwarfs are raging at the makers of Hollywood film "Snow White and the Huntsman" for casting average-sized people as the film's seven dwarfs.

The dwarf actors are threatening to protest against the film -- which stars Oscar-winner Charlize Theron -- with a "100-midget march," according to a report in TMZ.

Los Angeles dwarf theater group Beacher's Madhouse is fuming -- arguing that filmmakers would never use white actors and then digitally turn them black.

Matt McCarthy -- a 4ft, 1in dwarf who heads the group -- fired off a letter to Universal Chairman Adam Fogelson, saying, "In response to and in protest of this incredible injustice and prejudice, the Beacher's Madhouse midgets and I are coordinating a 100-midget march to Universal's offices."

McCarthy adds that casting average-sized actors as Snow White's dwarfs "is the equivalent of Universal casting a white actor to play a role written for an African-American person and digitally changing the color of their skin".

Another dwarf group, The Little People of America, said the entertainment industry should be actively casting little people.

A spokesman said, "This means both casting people with dwarfism as characters that were specifically written to be played by little people ... and other roles that would be open to people of short stature."

In the film, the dwarfs are played by actors Ian McShane, Bob Hoskins, Toby Jones, Eddie Marsan, Brian Gleeson, Ray Winstone, Nick Frost and Johnny Harris.

Director Rupert Sanders used camera angles and special effects to make them appear like dwarfs, including digitally inserting their faces on to the bodies of shorter people.

Go to The Sun for more.



Article from FOXNEWS


Police confirm newly-found body part is \'fake\' foot

  • magnotta_headshot.jpg

    This image provided by Interpol shows an undated photo of Luka Rocco Magnotta, 29 years-old, who is accused of videotaping a gruesome murder before posting it to the internet will be charged with threatening Canada's prime minister after mailing a severed foot to his Conservative party headquarters, police said.AP/Interpol

  • canadian_psycho_airportAP.jpg

    This surveillance image provided by Interpol shows who authorities believe is Luka Rocco Magnotta at a security checkpoint area. A state prosecutor says police are investigating two claimed French capital sightings of the Canadian porn actor wanted in connection with a gruesome murder in Montreal.AP

  • canadian_psycho_internetcafe_reuters.jpg

    June 4, 2012: People enter the internet cafe where Luka Rocco Magnottahe was recognize in the district of Neukoelln in Berlin, Germany.AP

Police who responded early Wednesday to frantic reports that a human foot had turned up in Montreal later confirmed the body part was a "fake."

Montreal police said on its Twitter account that the foot was "not a human foot," following news early Wednesday that the item had been recovered from the city's Notre-Dame-de-Grace neighborhood.

"The foot found in N-D-G is a fake. It's not a human foot," police said on Twitter.

The incident follows the now-infamous "cannibal murder" in the city and just one day after a human foot and a hand were found in the mail by two schools in Vancouver.

Staff at False Creek Elementary School received a parcel containing a hand, and St George's School received a package containing a human foot, Vancouver Police Deputy Chief Constable Warren Lemcke confirmed Tuesday.

The suspect in the killing of Jun Lin, 29-year-old Luka Rocco Magnotta, was arrested in Berlin on Monday and is expected to be extradited. If he doesn't fight extradition, it's possible he could be back in Canada by the end of the week

The case began last week when body parts were mailed to the headquarters of Canada's Liberal and Conservative parties. A torso was found in a suitcase on a garbage dump in Montreal, outside Magnotta's apartment building.

Magnotta, 29, was caught at an internet cafe in Berlin after evading police for days while he partied in Paris. He has told German authorities he would not fight extradition.

German authorities are waiting on Canada's formal extradition request, Martin Steltner, a spokesman for Berlin prosecutors, said Wednesday. The Canadian Embassy in Berlin declined to comment on when Ottawa may file the official papers seeking extradition.

After the request arrives, Magnotta will officially have to tell the court whether he objects to the request. If he does, it could drag out the process, Steltner said.

In Vancouver, Deputy Police Chief Warren Lemcke said a package containing what appeared to be a human hand was opened by staff at False Creek Elementary School on Tuesday. Another package containing what appeared to be a human foot was found by staff at St. George's private school for boys later in the day.

"There is no indication any student or staff has been targeted at any school," Lemcke said Tuesday.

Zheng Xu, a press spokesman at the Chinese consulate in Montreal, said four of Lin's family members, including his parents, arrived in Montreal on Tuesday night and will meet with Montreal police.

Video footage of what authorities believe to be the killing seems to show the suspect eating the body, police said Tuesday in Montreal, where the death occurred.

Lafreniere said that although police have not been able to conclusively confirm it, they suspect Magnotta ate parts of the victim's body.

"As gross and as graphic as it could be, yes, it was seen on the video," Lafreniere said.

Authorities allege Magnotta filmed the killing in his apartment and posted it online.

A copy of what police believe is the video of the killing, viewed online by The Associated Press, shows a man with an ice pick stabbing another naked, bound male. He also dismembers the corpse and performs sexual acts with it.

It did not show anyone eating the body but did show a man using a fork and knife on it. Police suggested Tuesday that they have access to more extensive video of the killing, possibly an unedited version.

"We're keeping some details for ourselves," Lafreniere said.

Cmdr. Denis Mainville, the head investigator of the Montreal police major crimes unit, said investigators will review hundreds of homicide cases over the last 30 years in Montreal and throughout Quebec for any possible links to Magnotta. Mainville said such a review is routine in such cases.

Montreal police on Tuesday said DNA tests have confirmed that the body parts mailed to the political parties were Lin's remains, and that they have footage of Magnotta mailing the two parcels that were sent to Ottawa.



Article from FOXNEWS


Ray Bradbury Dies, Was Icon of SciFi Literature

  • BradburyObit.jpg

    FILE - This Dec. 8, 1966 file photo shows science fiction writer Ray Bradbury looks at a picture that was part of a school project to illustrate characters in one of his dramas in Los Angeles. Bradbury, who wrote everything from science-fiction and mystery to humor, died Tuesday, June 5, 2012 in Southern California. He was 91.AP

Ray Bradbury, the science fiction-fantasy master who transformed his childhood dreams and Cold War fears into telepathic Martians, lovesick sea monsters, and, in uncanny detail, the high-tech, book-burning future of "Fahrenheit 451," has died. He was 91.

He died Tuesday night, his daughter said Wednesday. Alexandra Bradbury did not have additional details.

Although slowed in recent years by a stroke that meant he had to use a wheelchair, Bradbury remained active into his 90s, turning out new novels, plays, screenplays and a volume of poetry. He wrote every day in the basement office of his Cheviot Hills home and appeared from time to time at bookstores, public library fundraisers and other literary events around Los Angeles.

His writings ranged from horror and mystery to humor and sympathetic stories about the Irish, blacks and Mexican-Americans. Bradbury also scripted John Huston's 1956 film version of "Moby Dick" and wrote for "The Twilight Zone" and other television programs, including "The Ray Bradbury Theater," for which he adapted dozens of his works.

"What I have always been is a hybrid author," Bradbury said in 2009. "I am completely in love with movies, and I am completely in love with theater, and I am completely in love with libraries."

Bradbury broke through in 1950 with "The Martian Chronicles," a series of intertwined stories that satirized capitalism, racism and superpower tensions as it portrayed Earth colonizers destroying an idyllic Martian civilization.

Like Arthur C. Clarke's "Childhood's End" and the Robert Wise film "The Day the Earth Stood Still," Bradbury's book was a Cold War morality tale in which imagined lives on other planets serve as commentary on human behavior on Earth. "The Martian Chronicles" has been published in more than 30 languages, was made into a TV miniseries and inspired a computer game.

"The Martian Chronicles" prophesized the banning of books, especially works of fantasy, a theme Bradbury would take on fully in the 1953 release, "Fahrenheit 451." Inspired by the Cold War, the rise of television and the author's passion for libraries, it was an apocalyptic narrative of nuclear war abroad and empty pleasure at home, with firefighters assigned to burn books instead of putting blazes out (451 degrees Fahrenheit, Bradbury had been told, was the temperature at which texts went up in flames).

It was Bradbury's only true science-fiction work, according to the author, who said all his other works should have been classified as fantasy. "It was a book based on real facts and also on my hatred for people who burn books," he told The Associated Press in 2002.

A futuristic classic often taught alongside George Orwell's "1984" and Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," Bradbury's novel anticipated iPods, interactive television, electronic surveillance and live, sensational media events, including televised police pursuits. Francois Truffaut directed a 1966 movie version and the book's title was referenced -- without Bradbury's permission, the author complained -- for Michael Moore's documentary "Fahrenheit 9-11."

Although involved in many futuristic projects, including the New York World's Fair of 1964 and the Spaceship Earth display at Walt Disney World in Florida, Bradbury was deeply attached to the past. He refused to drive a car or fly, telling the AP that witnessing a fatal traffic accident as a child left behind a permanent fear of automobiles. In his younger years, he got around by bicycle or roller-skates.

"I'm not afraid of machines," he told Writer's Digest in 1976. "I don't think the robots are taking over. I think the men who play with toys have taken over. And if we don't take the toys out of their hands, we're fools."

Bradbury's literary style was honed in pulp magazines and influenced by Ernest Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe, and he became the rare science fiction writer treated seriously by the literary world. In 2007, he received a special Pulitzer Prize citation "for his distinguished, prolific and deeply influential career as an unmatched author of science fiction and fantasy." Seven years earlier, he received an honorary National Book Award medal for lifetime achievement, an honor given to Philip Roth and Arthur Miller among others.

"Everything I've done is a surprise, a wonderful surprise," Bradbury said during his acceptance speech in 2000. "I sometimes get up at night when I can't sleep and walk down into my library and open one of my books and read a paragraph and say, `My God, did I write that? Did I write that?', because it's still a surprise."

Other honors included an Academy Award nomination for an animated film, "Icarus Montgolfier Wright," and an Emmy for his teleplay of "The Halloween Tree." His fame even extended to the moon, where Apollo astronauts named a crater "Dandelion Crater," in honor of "Dandelion Wine," his beloved coming-of-age novel, and an asteroid was named 9766 Bradbury.

Born Ray Douglas Bradbury on Aug. 22, 1920, in Waukegan, Ill., the author once described himself as "that special freak, the man with the child inside who remembers all." He claimed to have total recall of his life, dating even to his final weeks in his mother's womb.

His father, Leonard, a power company lineman, was a descendant of Mary Bradbury, who was tried for witchcraft at Salem, Mass. The author's mother, Esther, read him the "Wizard of Oz." His Aunt Neva introduced him to Edgar Allan Poe and gave him a love of autumn, with its pumpkin picking and Halloween costumes.

"If I could have chosen my birthday, Halloween would be it," he said over the years.

Nightmares that plagued him as a boy also stocked his imagination, as did his youthful delight with the Buck Rogers and Tarzan comic strips, early horror films, Tom Swift adventure books and the works of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells.

"The great thing about my life is that everything I've done is a result of what I was when I was 12 or 13," he said in 1982.

Bradbury's family moved to Los Angeles in 1934. He became a movie buff and a voracious reader. "I never went to college, so I went to the library," he explained.

He tried to write at least 1,000 words a day, and sold his first story in 1941. He submitted work to pulp magazines until he was finally accepted by such upscale publications as The New Yorker. Bradbury's first book, a short story collection called "Dark Carnival," was published in 1947.

He was so poor during those years that he didn't have an office or even a telephone. "When the phone rang in the gas station right across the alley from our house, I'd run to answer it," he said.

He wrote "Fahrenheit 451" at the UCLA library, on typewriters that rented for 10 cents a half hour. He said he carried a sack full of dimes to the library and completed the book in nine days, at a cost of $9.80.

Few writers could match the inventiveness of his plots: A boy outwits a vampire by stuffing him with silver coins; a dinosaur mistakes a fog horn for a mating call (filmed as "The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms"); Ernest Hemingway is flown back to life on a time machine. In "The Illustrated Man," one of his most famous stories, a man's tattoo foretells a horrifying deed -- he will murder his wife.

A dynamic speaker with a booming, distinctive voice, he could be blunt and gruff. But Bradbury was also a gregarious and friendly man, approachable in public and often generous with his time to readers as well as fellow writers.

In 2009, at a lecture celebrating the first anniversary of a small library in Southern California's San Gabriel Valley, Bradbury exhorted his listeners to live their lives as he said he had lived his: "Do what you love and love what you do."

"If someone tells you to do something for money, tell them to go to hell," he shouted to raucous applause.

Until near the end of his life, Bradbury resisted one of the innovations he helped anticipate: electronic books, likening them to burnt metal and urging readers to stick to the old-fashioned pleasures of ink and paper. But in late 2011, as the rights to "Fahrenheit 451" were up for renewal, he gave in and allowed his most famous novel to come out in digital form. In return, he received a great deal of money and a special promise from Simon & Schuster: The publisher agreed to make the e-book available to libraries, the only Simon & Schuster e-book at the time that library patrons were allowed to download.

Bradbury is survived by his four daughters. Marguerite Bradbury, his wife of 56 years, died in 2003.



Article from FOXNEWS


Miss PA: Pageant Was Rigged!

  • Miss PA USA 2012

    May 30: Miss Pennsylvania Sheena Monnin resigned Monday after claiming the show was rigged.AP

The Miss USA pageant representative from Pennsylvania resigned her crown claiming the contest is rigged, but according to organizers the beauty queen was upset over the decision to allow transgender contestants to enter.

A posting on Miss Pennsylvania Sheena Monnin's Facebook page claims another contestant learned the names of the top 5 finishers on Sunday morning -- hours before the show was broadcast.  

Monnin claims the other contestant told her the names of the top 5 she spotted on a planning sheet for the telecast -- and she decided to step down as soon as those same contestants were named during the show.  

"In my heart I believe in honesty, fair play, a fair opportunity, and high moral integrity, none of which in my opinion are part of this pageant system any longer," Monnin wrote in one of her Facebook posts.  

Monnin, of Cranberry, Butler County, did not immediately respond to a Facebook message from The Associated Press.  

Donald Trump, who runs the Miss Universe Organization, called Monnin's claims that the pageant was fixed "totally ridiculous" in a live interview Wednesday on ABC's "Good Morning America" and said the pageant organization plans to sue Monnin for making the "false charge."  

"We're going to be suing her now. She made a very false charge and she knows it's a false charge," Trump said.  

Pageant organizers confirmed Monnin resigned, but said it wasn't for the reason she claimed.  

According to a statement from the Miss Universe Organization, the contestant who Monnin claimed saw the sheet vehemently refuted Monnin's account.  

The statement includes text from an email organizers said Monnin sent citing the decision to allow natural born males into the competition as the reason she's resigning.  

A transgender contestant was initially denied entry to the Miss Universe Canada pageant because she wasn't born female, but Trump subsequently overruled that decision.  

Trump downplayed the role transgender contestants had on that Monnin's decision, even though pageant claim that was her motivation.  

"I don't think that she had an issue with that," Trump said. "I think her primary issue is that she lost and she's angry about losing. And frankly, in my opinion, I saw her barely a second and she didn't deserve to be in the top 15."



Article from FOXNEWS


Girl stuck by syringe in Washington hotel bed

An investigation is underway at a hotel in Aberdeen, Wash., after a little girl was stuck with a syringe that had been left in her hotel bed, KOMO News reported.

According to the station, Emily Smith was crawling into her bed at Guest House Inn and Suites when the syringe pierced through the mattress and stuck her right heel.  

The needle, which was caked in dried blood, was found along with other disturbing items under the mattress, including plastic bags and bloody bandages, according to Emily's mother.  The family is demanding answers from the hotel as well as trying to understand what risks Emily now faces.

“Our main concern is HIV disease and hepatitis B or C,” Emily's mother, Angie Smith, told KOMO News.

The family, who had been in town for Emily's fast-pitch tournament, was angry to find that the hotel had still charged them for the room despite the incident. However, the hotel told KOMO News that they considered the incident a “horrible situation,” and once a police investigation is able to determine how the syringe got under the mattress, they intend to refund the Smith family.

Click for more from KOMO News.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Band of Brothers\' honored on D-Day anniversary

A statue in the likeness of a Pennsylvania native whose quiet leadership was chronicled in the World War II book and television miniseries "Band of Brothers" is being unveiled near the beaches where the D-Day invasion of France began in 1944.

The 12-foot (3.6-meter) tall bronze statue in the Normandy village of Sainte-Marie-du-Mont shows Maj. Dick Winters with his weapon at the ready, evoking the massive Allied operation that paved the way for the end of the war.

The unveiling is one of many ceremonies Wednesday commemorating the 68th anniversary of the invasion.

Winters - a native of Ephrata, Pennsylvania who died last year aged 92 - only accepted serving as the statue's likeness after monument planners agreed to dedicate it to the memory of all junior U.S. military officers who served that day.



Article from FOXNEWS


Child seen sitting in car next to gas can in car seat

A traffic officer in Colorado took a picture of a toddler in diapers sitting next to a gas can that was strapped into a car seat and posted the image on the Colorado Department of Transportation's Facebook page.

The Aurora officer was apparently conducting a Click It or Ticket search at checkpoints last week and came across the car. The boy's parent behind the wheel apparently told police that the boy managed to do it himself. The officer apparently didn't buy the story and handed the parent three citations.

The Denver Channel reports that Colorado law states that children under 8 must be in a child safety seat when inside a car. Under the law, there's a minimum $82 fine per violation.

Click for more from The Denver Channel



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\'Plastic Brits\' to learn UK anthem for Olympics

American-raised hurdler Tiffany Porter was at the center of the so-called "Plastic Brits" debate after she was named Britain's captain for the indoor world championships in March.

Porter was asked at the championships in Istanbul, Turkey, if she knew the words to Britain's national anthem and was then prodded to sing it. She refused, saying she knew the words and that reciting it was unnecessary. She went on to win a silver medal in the 60-meter hurdles.

Porter was born and raised in the United States to a British mother and a Nigerian father. She's held a British passport since she was a baby and represented the United States as a junior before opting for Britain last year.

At the London Games that begin July 27, Porter will be one of eight foreign-born track athletes on the 90-member athletics team to compete for Britain.

"They know the words, or they will," said Britain's athletics team head coach Charles van Commenee. "I'm not going to rehearse everybody because we have 90 athletes, but people that matter ... let's say the relevant ones."

Van Commenee, who is Dutch, said he only knows the first two lines of his own national anthem.

Cuban-born triple jumper Yamile Aldama is another so-called Plastic Brit, who won a gold medal for Britain at the indoor championships.

Aldama is married to a Briton but previously chose to compete for Sudan because of complications in gaining British citizenship. She finally got her British passport two years ago.



Article from FOXNEWS


\'Boy on Beach\' Haunts WWII D-Day Medic

  • friedenberg.jpg

    Seen here at a 2009 event honoring New Jersey veterans, Bernard Friedenberg, a 90-year-old World War II medic who took part in the D-Day invasion, visited a local school in Atlantic City on Tuesday to commemorate its 68th anniversary, sharing his experiences with students who hung on his every word. But he will otherwise not mark the day in which he “lost so many friends,” he said. (YouTube)

The passage of 68 years has not dimmed Army medic Bernard Friedenberg's memory of "the boy on the beach."

Friedenberg was just 22 when he took part in the storied Normandy Invasion, hitting Omaha Beach with the 16th Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division, or “The Big Red One” on June 7, 1944. Moments after reaching the heavily-fortified French coastline, and as Nazi artillery rained down from the cliffs above, Friedenberg found a young, mortally-wounded soldier gasping his last breaths.

“He was shot through the chest and as he would breathe, the air would blow out of his chest, so I had to seal off the wound,” Friedenberg told FoxNews.com. “At the same time, I was hearing ‘medic, medic,' from other soldiers. It was a massacre, an absolute massacre, and I was in the middle of it.”

Faced with the dilemma of continuing to treat the wounded soldier or turning to others, Friedenberg gave the soldier morphine and moved on. It's a decision that still haunts the 90-year-old New Jersey man long after the invasion that allowed the Allies to gain a foothold in Normandy and begin the march across Europe to defeat Adolf Hitler.

“It was really rough,” he said. “I have some terrible memories. I was patching up guys right and left, on all sides of me.”

More than 5,000 ships and 13,000 aircraft took part in the D-Day invasion, which Gen. Dwight Eisenhower called a crusade that necessitated “nothing less than full victory.” By day's end, more than 9,000 Allied soldiers were killed or wounded. But more than 100,000 soldiers survived, including Friedenberg, who would eventually trek through England, Algeria, Tunisia, Belgium, Germany and Czechoslovakia, earning two Purple Hearts, two Bronze Stars and two Silver Stars along the way.

Friedenberg, of Margate, N.J., visited a local school in Atlantic City on Tuesday to commemorate the anniversary, sharing his experiences with students who hung on his every word.

“The day is very significant to me,” he continued. “I lost so many friends on that day. God only knows how I came through without getting hit. But I did get through.”

Friedenberg, as a way of treating his post-traumatic stress disorder -- "they called it 'shellshock' in those days" -- chronicled his experiences as a near-sighted soldier who nearly wasn't accepted into the service to his return to Normandy on his 80th birthday. The book, “Of Being Numerous: World War II As I Saw It,” published by Stockon College's Holocaust Resource Center, is now mandatory reading at area college courses on the war, he said.

Despite the book's near-universal praise for its candor and humor, Friedenberg does not enjoy recounting his war stories.

“He still gets nightmares, and he think back to the men he couldn't save,” Friedenberg's wife, Phyllis, told FoxNews.com.

“I have scars on my body, and scars in my head as well,” he said. “They will never heal.”

Other soldiers interviewed by FoxNews.com who took part in the D-Day invasion, including Rufus Broadaway, a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division, recall the day in a much different light.

“I had forgotten that [today] is D-Day,” Broadaway told FoxNews.com when reached in Gainesville, Fla. “We don't have any plans but to have our flag on our lawn.”

Sixty-eight years ago today, Broadaway leaped from his "hit" plane from the lowest altitude he had ever jumped -- maybe 300 feet, he said -- and landed on an apple tree.

“The roadway was covered with debris, a lot of dead bodies, injured soldiers, and soldiers so petrified that they couldn't even move,” Broadaway said. “The air was full of shots and shells. But my captain had us going along. It was a miracle that we got across that causeway. By that time, the Germans had retreated.

“I wouldn't take anything back,” Broadaway continued. “I will forever be proud of it and hold that experience close. I'm so thankful that I was a part of it.”

FoxNews.com's Maegan Vazquez contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Bynes Asks Obama to Fire Cop

  • People Amanda Bynes_Angu.jpg

    Sept. 13, 2009: Amanda Bynes arrives at the MTV Video Music Awards in New York. Los Angeles prosecutors charged Bynes on Tuesday June 5, 2012 with driving under the influence in April, when she was arrested after grazing a sheriff's car in West Hollywood.AP

Apparently begging the president to fire the cop you allegedly hit with your car doesn't work. Even if you're kind of famous.

Los Angeles prosecutors have charged actress Amanda Bynes with driving under the influence, despite the actress' plea to President Obama to can the trooper she allegedly sideswiped.

"Hey @BarackObama... I don't drink. Please fire the cop who arrested me. I also don't hit and run. The end," Bynes tweeted Tuesday.

The 26-year-old will be arraigned Wednesday morning in Beverly Hills, but doesn't have to attend the hearing. Instead, she can have a lawyer enter a plea.

The arraignment comes roughly two months after authorities say she grazed a sheriff's patrol car in an early morning accident.

Bynes was arrested April 6 after authorities say she scraped a patrol car making a turn.

The misdemeanor complaint filed Tuesday alleges she refused to take a test at the time that could've determined whether she was drunk or under the influence of drugs. 

Because of her refusal, authorities may suspend her driver's license for a year.

Her publicist, Melissa Raubvogel, didn't immediately return an e-mail.

Bynes appeared in the Nickelodeon series "What I Like About You" and the film "Easy A."



Article from FOXNEWS


Crowe Has Brain Tumor

  • Sheryl Crow

    Reuters

Sheryl Crow revealed that she has a benign brain tumor, but her rep says it's nothing to be alarmed about.

The 50-year-old told an audience about her condition at a recent concert, but her representative, Christine Wolff, said it's very common.

The tumor is a meningioma (men-in-GEE-oh-mah), and it's typically benign and develops from the protective linings of the brain and spinal cord.

Wolff said that Crow is doing great and is healthy and happy.

Crow has a history of memory loss, with the tendency dating back to the 1990s when the singer forgot lyrics during a Las Vegas show. She was also in the news in 2006 for forgetting words to her hit, "Soak Up the Sun," Reuters reported.    

"I worried about my memory so much that I went and got an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging). And I found out I have a brain tumor," Crow told the Las Vegas Review-Journal on Tuesday. "And I was like, 'See? I knew there was something wrong."

Crow battled breast cancer in 2006 and was treated successfully the same year. She's currently on a nationwide tour.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



Article from FOXNEWS


Maryland man allegedly shoots co-worker with nailgun

Authorities say a Maryland man has been charged with assault after allegedly shooting a co-worker with a nail gun.

Police say 41-year-old Guillermo L. Lopez-Molina was charged Monday with first- and second-degree assault and reckless endangerment. Authorities say Lopez-Molina got into an argument with a 34-year-old Laurel man and shot him with the tool.

Police say they were called to a home framing site on Sweet Leaf Lane about 11:30 a.m. They say the found the victim suffering from injuries related to a nail gun, and that he was taken to a hospital with possibly life-threatening injuries.

Police say three-inch framing nails were removed from the man's chest and hand.

Lopez-Molina was being on a $250,000 bond.



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Prince Philip\'s health improves \'considerably\'

LONDON -- The Duke of Edinburgh's condition has "improved considerably" since he was hospitalized during the Diamond Jubilee celebrations for his wife, Queen Elizabeth II, a spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said Wednesday.

Prince Philip, 90, will remain in London's King Edward VII hospital for a few more days while continuing to receive antibiotics treatment for a bladder infection. But he was confirmed as in "good spirits," the spokesperson added.

The duke was hospitalized Monday as a "precautionary measure," forcing him to miss the evening Diamond Jubilee Concert, a day after he joined the queen at the front of a 1,000-vessel flotilla on the River Thames.

It came amid four days of national celebrations at the queen's 60-year reign on the British throne.

The queen made no mention of her husband's condition in a public address, but said, "Prince Philip and I want to take this opportunity to offer our special thanks and appreciation to all those who have had a hand in organizing these Jubilee celebrations."

The couple's son, Edward, who visited his father's bedside Tuesday, confirmed the duke was feeling "much better" and had been watching Jubilee festivities on TV.

Asked how the queen was doing without him, Edward said, "She's bearing up but she's missing him, obviously."

Prince Philip was last taken to the hospital in December after experiencing chest pains. He was subsequently treated for a blocked coronary artery and released a few days later.



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Space shuttle Enterprise embarks for NYC Intrepid Museum today

By Robert Z. Pearlman | SPACE.com â€" 

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\'Talent\': Fake Combat Injury?

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A singer who appeared on the NBC show "America's Got Talent" and claimed he was injured during a grenade blast in Afghanistan has no military record of his purported combat injuries, the Minnesota National Guard said Tuesday.

Timothy Michael Poe appeared on the nationally televised show Monday. He told the judges he spent 14 years in the military, and suffered a broken back and brain injury when he was hit by a grenade in Afghanistan in 2009.

"I had volunteered for a team to go out and clear buildings and help out with the wounded," Poe said during a taped interview on the show. "There was a guy who come up with a rocket-propelled grenade. I saw it coming down, and by the time I turned and went to jump on top of my guys, I yelled `grenade' and the blast had hit me."

According to military records, Poe served with the Minnesota Army National Guard from December 2002 through May 2011, working as a supply specialist. Records show he was deployed in Kosovo from Oct. 10, 2007 to July 15, 2008, and then served in Afghanistan for about a month in 2009.

"Sgt. Poe's official military records do not indicate that he was injured by a grenade in combat while serving in Afghanistan in 2009, as he reports," Lt. Col. Kevin Olson, a spokesman for the Minnesota National Guard, said in a statement.

Olson noted that Poe did not receive the Purple Heart, which is given to those who are injured in enemy combat. Poe didn't claim he had received the award.

"We looked very closely at his record," Olson said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "We did not find something to substantiate what he said."

Neither Poe nor NBC returned telephone messages from the AP on Tuesday.

Poe told the judges that he was from San Antonio, Texas. The television show listed his age as 35.

Poe had a stutter when he spoke with the judges, which he attributed to his brain injury. The stutter disappeared when he sang. He also didn't appear to stutter when he spoke with the show's host after his performance.

When he was describing his injury, Poe said during the video clip: "When I was laying there I thought I'd never see my daughter walk down the aisle or throw the baseball with my son or be able to hold them and see them. ... I didn't want my life to be over."

He said singing has helped him deal with the injury.

"I'm just happy to be here," he told the judges.



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Walters Aided Sexy Assad Aide

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Barbara Walters has expressed regret for trying to advance the media career of an adviser to Syrian President Bashar al Assad, after a British newspaper discovered emails between the pair.

Walters -- who was granted a rare and historic interview with the Syrian leader amid widespread civil unrest late last year -- sought to arrange for Sheherazad Jaafari, 22, to attend New York's Columbia School of Journalism, as well as lobbying CNN's Piers Morgan to give the girl an internship, The (London) Daily Telegraph reported, citing emails it had obtained.

Jaafari, who liaised with Walters as she sought the Assad interview, is the daughter of Syria's UN ambassador.

Walters, 82, expressed "regret" and admitted a conflict of interest when approached by the Telegraph.

She and Jaafari remained in touch after December's interview -- in which Assad denied being responsible for a bloody crackdown against regime opponents -- with Walters signing off some emails, "Hugs, Barbara" and Jaafari calling the veteran journalist her "adopted mother."

Walters reportedly scotched a request to get Jaafari a job with her at ABC, but wrote in a subsequent email, "I wrote to Piers Morgan and his producer to say how terrific you are and attached your resume."

Writing to Columbia professor Richard Wald, Walters gushed that Jaafari was "brilliant, beautiful, [and] speaks five languages," with Wald replying that he would get admissions staff to "give her special attention," the Telegraph said.

Jaafari did not end up at either Columbia or CNN.

Walters said in a statement, "In the aftermath [of the Assad interview], Ms Jaafari returned to the US and contacted me looking for a job. I told her that was a serious conflict of interest and that we would not hire her. I did offer to mention her to contacts at another media organization and in academia, though she didn't get a job or into school. In retrospect, I realize that this created a conflict and I regret that."

Jaafari did not respond to requests for comment, the Telegraph said.

SOURCE LINK: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/9312558/Barbara-Walters-apologises-over-links-to-Syrian-aide-of-Bashar-al-Assad.html



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4-year-old has gun pointed at her during Texas robbery

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    A young girl and her uncle unwittingly walked into the middle of an armed store robbery in Dallas a week ago.Dallas Police Dept./MyFoxDFW.com

An uncle and his young niece walked into the middle of an armed robbery in Dallas last week and were confronted by an armed suspect, MyFoxDFW.com reported.

Surveillance video captured the harrowing incident on May 28 at a Metro PCS store as two men, one armed with a handgun, entered the store and threatened employees.

The gunman can be seen repeatedly pointing his weapon at the employees, the man and even his 4-year-old niece.

Police said the robbers took an undetermined amount of money and property from the business, and also took money from the employees and customer.

Click for more from MyFoxDFW.com



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Breivik refuses to answer \'World of Warcraft\' questions

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    Confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik sits in the courtroom in Oslo, Norway Friday 1 June, 2012. Norwegian police said they are confident that confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik acted on his own in terror attacks last year that killed 77 people and that they found no evidence he belonged to a Europe-wide anti-Muslim network. (AP Photo/Heiko Junge,Pool)

OSLO -- The Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik became angry and refused to answer questions in an Oslo court Wednesday after a prosecutor sought to quiz him about his time spent playing the "World of Warcraft" video game.

The 33-year-old killer became visibly upset when the prosecutor expressed a wish to ask questions about Breivik's use of the game, according to the Verdens Gang newspaper.

Breivik told the court the game had nothing to do with the July 2011 attacks in Norway, and accused the court of trying to "ridicule" him.

"I do not want to answer any questions related to this," he said.

The court had previously heard about Breivik's obsession with playing computer games during his 20s.

Friends told the court that Breivik began to shut himself inside to play World of Warcraft in 2006, after moving in with his mother. At the time, he apparently had the specific intention of playing the game for a whole year.

Breivik killed 69 people at a political youth camp on Utoya island and another eight after bombing a government building in Oslo on July 22 last year.

He confessed to the killings, but refuses to plead guilty claiming the shootings were "cruel but necessary" to stop the Norwegian Labor Party's "multicultural experiment" and the "Muslim invasion" of Norway and Europe.

Breivik is currently on trial at the Oslo District Court.

Click here for more on this from Verden Gangs newspaper. 



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