Monday, October 31, 2011

[Getting To Know Android 4.0, Part 3] YouTube Grows Up

YouTube is the ugly duckling of the Gapps family. That's right, I said it. The 100% black design and horrible gradients make it look like a 13 year old boy's geocities page. It certainly doesn't look like it's from a professional company. It's only saving grace it that, since it's a video app, you aren't subjected to the UI that often when you are using at it. Thankfully, with the arrival of Ice Cream Sandwich, amateur hour is over. You should know the drill by now. We're picking apart Ice Cream Sandwich and comparing it to the previous phone? Official Android Police t-shirts are now on sale, with over 25 designs to call yours. Done With ?

?

??Related Posts

From the beginning, Android users have been trying to guess what's in store for the OS, even down to what the next version will be called. While many have speculated on what Ice Cream Sandwich's successor will be named, This is my Next reported today that a ?trusted source? revealed that the next version of Android will in...? After Google's Ice Cream Sandwich announcement, the obvious question on everyone's mind was will my device get it? Motorola has started to address that issue, albeit very slowly. A note about Ice Cream Sandwich: We are planning to upgrade DROID RAZR, Motorola RAZR, Motorola XOOM and DROID BIONIC by Motorola to Ice Cream Sandwich. We will...? There is so much speculation on when the Nexus Prime (GT-I9250) and/or Ice Cream Sandwich will be available. The most recent reports have Verizon Wireless getting the first Ice Cream Sandwich phone in October dubbed the DROID Prime (SCH-I515). Will it really have the DROID name or will it even be a true Nexus device? Could it really happen in October?...? Soon Google will be launching the first ever? Ice Cream Sandwich powered device with Samsung and we can?t wait! But if you want to check out the first ever announced Ice Cream Sandwich device, then behold ? the?Sharp Aquos Phone 104SH. Obviously this one wouldn?t be the first ICS device to hit the market, but we can say that...? Google just announced earnings, and they destroyed expectations as earnings came in a $2.73 billion while revenue was $7.51 billion. During the conference call, Google CEO Larry Page had some interesting things to say regarding Ice Cream Sandwich, which will be unveiled next Wednesday October 19 in Hong Kong . ?I?m super excited about the...? Those of you eagerly waiting for a bite of Ice Cream Sandwich will be pleased to know that XDA member charlieb620 ?posted a leak of the music player in the forums. It?s running at version 4.0 and still in beta, so any of you who want to try it out be warned that you?re installing this at your own risk. However, charlieb620 states that he?s running...? Android OS is no doubt the leader of all mobile operating systems and currently Google is working on Android 4.0 a.k.a Ice Cream Sandwich, which was announced back at Google I/O. It?s actually going to be a one-size-fits-all OS for both mobile phones and tablets. We heard rumors that it will be out somewhere around October or November but...? Ice Cream Sandwich may not yet be available on any device other than the not yet released Galaxy Nexus, but the oldest of the Nexus family has already received an taste of Google?s new dessert thanks to an SDK port. It doesn?t run perfect, but it boots and shows that this quite outdated device isn?t out of business. In fact, with...? Moments ago, we showed you a video of what could be the Samsung Galaxy Nexus along with Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0. We included some screenshots as well, but we have a few more for you. Seriously folks, I am not sure I can make it to next Tuesday, can you? Full gallery after the break Visit TalkAndroid for android news , android guides , and much more!...? Are you a ROM developer? Tinkerer? Just a solid geek with a passion for Android? After tonight?s awesome Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and Samsung Galaxy Nexus announcements, the SDK is now available for download, and users can start developing not only their apps in an emulator, but can start developing alpha-stage ROMs for their devices....?

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Chavez rejects British firm's compensation demands (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela ? President Hugo Chavez says Venezuela refuses to pay compensation in foreign currency to a British-owned company after his government expropriated tens of thousands of acres of its ranchlands.

Chavez says the government has received a demand for payment in dollars from the owners of Agropecuaria Flora, a local subsidiary of the British company Vestey Group.

But Venezuela insists in paying for private land it has taken over in bolivars, Venezuela's currency.

It's difficult for foreign companies operating in Venezuela to repatriate profits and other income due to foreign currency controls in the South American country.

Representatives of Agropecuaria Flora did not answer telephone calls seeking comment Sunday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111030/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_expropriation

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Suicide attacker kills 2 policemen in Pakistan (AP)

PESHAWAR, Pakistan ? Pakistani police say a suicide attacker has killed a police officer and his guard in the country's northwestern.

Police officer Shah Nawaz says the attack took place on Friday as the officers drove through the northwestern town of Risalpur. He says a third policeman was also wounded in the attack.

Nawaz says the slain officer, Akhtar Shah, had played a key role in arresting several militants from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where Risalpur is the provincial capital.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Pelosi cautious on Medicare, Social Security cuts as Republicans, Democrats swap deficit plans (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/154318101?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Kirsten Dunst stars in R.E.M.'s new video

Kirsten Dunst has certainly perfected the pixie-like, ethereal actress thing ?"The Virgin Suicides" or "Melancholia," anyone?

Now, she's using her charming superpowers in a mesmerizing new R.E.M. video, shot in black and white with a stationary camera capturing close-up footage of Dunst.

So what's she doing?

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Dunst isn't really doing much of anything during the song, "We All Go Back to Where We Belong," but the video is still entirely watchable.

The actress, wearing a black dress with white flowers, just stands against a white wall and appears to be listening to the song, absorbing the lyrics.

Story: Rolling Stone exclusive: Why R.E.M. broke up

Yet you can't wait for her next expression, as she looks like she's thinking, then swaying, then dissolving into giggles. She looks so sweet and pretty throughout the video, and says nothing until the final frame, where she appears to mouth "it's amazing" about the tune.

MORE: Kirsten Dunst: German citizen

Two versions of the video were made, with poet-activist John Giorno starring in the second version, which has a style similar to Dunst's and was also shot with a stationary camera. In a band statement, R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe described the videos as having "gravity and beauty."

PICS: The rocker chic look

The song is part of the band's new album, titled "Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage, 1982-2011," which is a 40-song retrospective on the group's long career.

The album will be available Nov. 15.

? 2011 E! Entertainment Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45063662/ns/today-entertainment/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

11 charged in possible $1 billion rail pension probe

Eleven people, including two orthopedists and a former union official, face federal corruption charges in a long-running probe into an alleged fraud of the Long Island Rail Road's pension system that may have cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, authorities said Thursday.

Federal and state investigators made the sweeping arrests across Long Island Thursday morning.

The 11 defendants include orthopedists, consultants, pension administrators and LIRR retirees.

Investigators said the scandal could soon top a billion-dollar rip-off if reforms are not made.

Studies show that for years, more than 90 percent of LIRR employees seeking disability pensions were awarded them.

Read the original story on NBC New York

In a system that some LIRR employees jokingly dubbed "disability by appointment," employees were allowed to choose their own doctor when seeking a disability pension and it appears many workers sought out a specific few doctors for medical exams.

Three-year investigation
For nearly three years, the FBI, the New York Attorney General?s office and the MTA's Inspector General have been looking into how and why a disability pension was awarded to nearly every LIRR employee who requested one.

Federal search warrants had been executed beginning in 2008 at the Westbury offices of the Railroad Retirement Board.

Among those charged Thursday is Peter Ajemian, an orthopedist from Rockville Centre. He is accused of helping more than 700 LIRR retirees get disability benefits from 1998 to 2008. His office manager, Maria Rusin, is also charged in connection with the investigation.

Peter Lesniewski, another orthopedist, is accused of helping more than 200 LIRR employees obtain benefits.

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Messages left with the offices of Ajemian and Lesniewski were not immediately returned.

Also charged were former Union President Joseph Rutigliano and Marie Baran, who worked as consultants to help LIRR workers "game" the system, officials said. They were paid by LIRR workers for the service, prosecutors said.

LIRR workers Gregory Noone, Regina Walsh, Sharon Falloon, Gary Satin, Steven Gagliano and Richard Ehrlinger are accused of lying to get disability benefits.

A study by the General Accounting Office last year showed that LIRR workers received disability pensions at a rate 12 times higher than workers at any other railroad.

Officials said 86 percent of all LIRR disability cases went through doctors Ajemian, Lesniewski and a third doctor, who has since passed away. The doctors are accused of conducting unnecessary tests and grossly exaggerating conditions.

Disability status adds about $36,000 on average to retirees' pensions each year, according to the LIRR, which amounts to millions of additional costs to taxpayers annually.

Doctor made $2 million?
Many of the workers were still doing their jobs when doctors determined they were too sick or disabled to work. The doctors were often paid $1,200 in addition to thousands billed to insurance companies for the diagnosis.

Prosecutors said Ajemian made more than $2 million. His patients have already collected $90 million in disability benefits and expect to get $210 million more.

Lesniewski made more than $750,000. Disability payments to his patients have already totaled more than $31 million and the patients stand to receive $64 million more.

Noone, one of the accused LIRR workers, collects an annual combined retirement and disability pension of $105,000 every year. In 2008, investigators said the disabled Noone signed in to play golf at an area club on 140 different days despite his disability claim.

The federal Railroad Retirement Board (RRB) administers the disability program in addition to a regular pension program that has an age-65 retirement.

The LIRR offers yet a third pension for workers who can start collecting benefits at age 50.

Some workers charged Thursday claimed disability so they could collect both the LIRR and a RRB disability pension starting at age 50, prosecutors said.

In October 2008, the New York Times first reported hundreds of millions of tax dollars could have been misappropriated.

LIRR President Helena Williams has said a federal agency acted as a rubber stamp without consulting the railroad.

To curb abuse, the LIRR has said it would establish a disability watchdog, mandate worker ethics training and set up a fraud hotline.

The railroad also has said it wants federal legislation to mandate independent medical reviews of all disability applications.

Early morning arrests
The Times reported Thursday that the defendants faced a prison sentence of up to 20 years if they are found guilty.

It added that the charges were expected to be announced at a news conference Thursday by Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, and Janice K. Fedarcyk, head of the New York FBI office.

The paper said that its previous articles reported that "virtually every career employee of the railroad was applying for and receiving disability payments, giving the Long Island Rail Road a disability rate of three to four times that of the average railroad."

The Times investigation also found that retired railroad workers played golf regularly at a state-owned course for free, another benefit of claiming disability.

NBC New York and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45061924/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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Con artist who helped Google probe to be sentenced (AP)

PROVIDENCE, R.I. ? A massive federal investigation that resulted in Google Inc. forfeiting $500 million this year to settle criminal claims over its advertising began with the 2008 arrest of a jet-setting career con artist, who took federal agents in Rhode Island into the underground world of peddling pills online.

David Whitaker, 36, finalized the decision to help federal agents investigate Google within six weeks of being arrested in California after being expelled from Mexico, where he told authorities he spent his time selling drugs online, according to his plea agreement. He had already served three prison sentences and was staring down a maximum sentence of 65 years in Rhode Island for bilking $8.7 to $22.6 million from small businesses and a credit card company during the mid-2000s, court records show.

The plea deal he signed with federal prosecutors offered some salvation. If he agreed to help the government with an investigation, prosecutors would recommend a punishment "at the lowest point of sentences" when Whitaker learns his fate in the fraud case on Dec. 2 in U.S. District Court in Providence.

That was the start of his two-year stint using his experience to help federal agents expose how operators exploited Google's automated ad system known as AdWords to promote illegal Canadian pharmacies to American consumers.

But Whitaker's role in the Google case is cold comfort to those who say they were ripped off by his Rhode Island electronics equipment provider, Mixitforme Inc. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to wire fraud, conspiracy and other charges.

"It's wrong for the feds to use him," said Matthew Grosso, 47, who says he lost his Stony Brook, N.Y., business and $1.3 million after his dealings with Whitaker went sour in 2005.

"You're just perpetuating this guy's god mentality."

Whitaker's victims paint a picture of a high-flying executive who cheated them out of their small businesses.

Mixitforme began selling discount electronics in 2005 with Whitaker and a partner at the helm. The company claimed it had strong ties to overseas suppliers that made its prices about 30 percent lower than its competitors, officials said. The firm also claimed to be an authorized distributor for Apple and Motorola and said it had a special arrangement with Sony to sell its products. Federal prosecutors say those were all lies.

But Whitaker still found a way to lure clients. Grosso recalled visiting warehouses in New York and New England to look at Whitaker's stockpiles of consumer electronics, including iPods and gaming systems.

Trevor Sears, 36, of Salt Lake City, said he would only place orders with Whitaker after seeing photographs of the inventory he wanted to purchase.

Both Grosso and Sears said they placed small orders at first without problems.

But as customers poured more money into Mixitforme, Whitaker blew through Mixitforme's earnings by buying four luxury automobiles, renting a Miami mansion for $200,000 monthly, flying in a private airplane, staying in luxury hotels, renting a yacht and using a limousine driver and security team regularly, according to an affidavit signed by U.S. Secret Service Special Agent Craig Marech.

Grosso recalled Whitaker suggesting they meet at The Ritz-Carlton on Central Park in New York City, where Whitaker had a room. He said other people who did business with Whitaker described going to meet him on airport tarmacs where he'd fly in to on a private jet.

"He was living high on the hog," Grosso said.

At the same time, prosecutors say, deliveries slowed and excuses and cover-ups started piling up, such as faked tracking numbers for shipments or claims the goods were being held by customs agents. From July 2005 to March 2006, Mixitforme failed to deliver about $13 million worth of electronic equipment, Marech wrote.

Finally, Sears said, he flew to Rhode Island to confront Whitaker in his downtown Providence office about a $319,600 order that wasn't delivered.

"He wouldn't see me. He was locked in his office," said Sears, who is launching his first new business, 10bucksupplements.com, after spending years trying to get back on his feet.

"He literally ruined my life," said Sears. "For a few years, it was brutal."

Mixitforme was the latest scheme in a string of criminal accusations against Whitaker that date back more than a decade.

He was arrested in Hawaii in 1997 on charges of bank fraud and e-racketeering and he was sentenced to a year in prison, according to court papers. The next year, he was arrested in New Orleans on a bank fraud charge and sentenced to a year and a day in prison. U.S. marshals also picked him up in 2000 for making forged securities and he was sentenced to 10 months in prison, the affidavit said.

Finally, after federal agents executed a search warrant at the Providence headquarters of Mixitforme, Marech says Whitaker took off for Albuquerque, N.M., where he went by the name Slade Austin and set up a company called Coyotego.com that also sold consumer electronics at below-market prices. That business, too, was shut down after a search in July 2007, but by that time Whitaker had already fled to Mexico, Marech wrote.

But what may save him from a long sentence is one last strategy: his work for the government.

Whitaker helped investigators construct phony websites that purported to sell the drugs, officials said. Then, an undercover investigator would tell Google employees who were creating the advertising for the products that they were manufactured overseas and did not require customers to have a valid prescription, officials said.

Federal officials said Google knew as early as 2003 that its ad system was allowing Canadian pharmacies to make illegal sales. Shipping prescription drugs into the U.S. from abroad violates drug and other laws, investigators said. If the case had gone to trial, federal prosecutors would have to prove an Internet search engine helped pharmacies violate federal law.

Google is no longer letting Canadian online pharmacies advertise to U.S. consumers. It also agreed in August to forfeit $500 million to avoid criminal prosecution for accusations that it improperly profited from ads promoting Canadian pharmacies that illegally imported drugs into the United States.

A Google spokeswoman declined to comment, as did spokesmen for Rhode Island U.S. Attorney Peter F. Neronha and federal Food and Drug Administration investigators, who led the probe. Whitaker's attorney, George J. West, also declined to comment.

Grosso and Sears said they had no idea Whitaker helped federal investigators on the Google case. They say they hope his help doesn't overshadow their suffering.

"He sure lived off the money he stole from people while they went down in flames," Sears said. "I certainly hope he doesn't get leniency."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/search/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_hi_te/us_google_investigation_convict

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

'Rogue' man-eating sharks actually want whales

After the attack on an American diver by a great white shark off the coast of Australia, the rumor mill is swilling with talk of a "rogue man-eating shark" that developed a taste for humans, killing three men over the last two months.

The most recent attack happened on Saturday when a great white shark attacked and killed American diver George Thomas Wainwright. Two previous attacks on humans by great whites have occurred in the last two months, one killing an Australian swimmer on Oct. 10 and the other a body boarder who was lethally attacked on Sept. 4.?

Australian waters usually see about one fatal shark attack per year; but these waters are the primary home of the great white shark, a large species that can grow up to 20 feet long. Last year, 14 unprovoked shark attacks on humans were reported in Australia, only one of which was fatal.

Scientists say the recent attacks probably came from three separate sharks."There's whales moving by that coastline at this time of the year, and the white sharks follow," George Burgess, a researcher at the University of Florida and curator of the International Shark Attack File, which catalogs shark attacks around the world. "The chance of an individual shark being involved in all three of these incidences is astronomically low. They travel 40 to 50 miles a day." [ Image Gallery: Great White Sharks ]

Sharks gone rogue
Rogue sharks, typified by the shark in "Jaws," are thought to repeatedly attack humans, though such behavior is abnormal for sharks.

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"The theory of a 'rogue' shark is unlikely, sometimes a single shark may be responsible for subsequent attacks done in the same area, in a clustered pattern," Fabio Hazin, a researcher at the Federal Rural University of Pernambuco in Brazil, told LiveScience in an email.

"This, however, tends to be more a consequence of the shark and human beings being close together than to a vicious nature of some shark specimens."

One example of such a rogue, the only that Burgess has seen in his 40 years of cataloging shark attacks, happened in Egypt last year. A ship of imported sheep from New Zealand headed to Egypt had been dropping their dead along the way. This lured a shark to the shore, where it attacked five people, killing one.

"That was a very different species and different ecological situation," Burgess told LiveScience. "It was a once in a lifetime experience for myself, after 40 years as a keeper of shark attacks."

A rogue white? Not so fast.
Australia's great whites are currently in the midst of their annual migration (they follow the whale migration paths up the western Australia coast), which would bring them into contact with humans. Three different sharks, following the same path up the coast and passing the same human-infested bathing and boating areas, are likely responsible for the recent attacks Burgess said.

"This is a very unlikely candidate for one to have stayed around and gotten the taste for humans, particularly in the case of the white shark, which is so highly migratory," Burgess said.

There were several possible reasons why shark attacks in the area might be higher than normal, Burgess said. It's possible that changes in climate may be shifting migration patterns, bringing sharks and humans closer together. Warmer temperatures would also bring more humans into the water. [ 10 Incredible Animal Migrations ]

I'd rather win the lottery
Internationally, the number of shark fatalities is down, though the actual number of attacks is rising; shark attacks hit a global 10-year high in 2010 with 115 human-shark incidents that year. That increase is probably due to increased human presence in shark territory. Only six of these incidents ended in a dead human, though.

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"We should always be cautious when entering into the sea, since it is an environment different from the one we live in," Hazin said. "We should not forget that drowning kills thousands and thousands more people every year than shark attacks."

The shark attacks in Australia have prompted calls to kill off any sharks in the area, which Premier Colin Barnett is said to be considering. Researchers are against such a shark hunt, since there is no way to know which shark or sharks are responsible for the human deaths without killing them and cutting open their stomachs.

"The region will be better off if the resources being given to hunt the killer shark would be used to study the situation ? and reduce the chances of it happening again," Burgess said. "The only answer we are going to find is if we scientifically study the situation carefully and understand better the movement patterns of the sharks."

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitte r@livescienceand on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45024823/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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YouTube Link Title Tells You Where YouTube Links Lead, Lets You Watch Them Without Leaving the Current Page [User Scripts]

YouTube Link Title Tells You Where YouTube Links Lead, Lets You Watch Them Without Leaving the Current PageChrome/Firefox/Safari (User Script): If you're like me, you probably avoid most YouTube links because you don't know what's on the other end, and you don't want to waste time finding out. User script YouTube Link Title saves you from NSFW videos, rickrolls, and things that just aren't worth your time by warning you what's on the other side.

YouTube Link Title does a few things. First and foremost, it replaces every YouTube link you see (such as www.youtube.com/watch?v=KT--CsBh5TM with the actual title of the video (such as Know Your Meme: The Rickroll). If the link text isn't the YouTube URL, you can see the video title and a thumbnail by mousing over the link. It'll even cross out links for videos that are blocked in your country, so you don't have to waste time clicking on them. And, lastly, clicking on that link will open it up on the same page, embedding it instead of making you load YouTube in a new tab. Of course, if you prefer to load YouTube in a new tab, you can always Ctrl+click or Middle click to do so.

YouTube Link Title is a user script that works in Firefox with Greasemonkey, Chrome, and Safari with NinjaKit.

YouTube Link Title | Userscripts.org via GHacks


You can contact Whitson Gordon, the author of this post, at whitson@lifehacker.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Longtime CBS correspondent Robert Pierpoint dies

CBS News correspondent Robert C. Pierpoint shown in this 2007 family photo taken in West Yellowstone Montana _ who covered six presidents, the Korean War, the Kennedy assassination and the Iranian hostage crisis in a career that spanned more than four decades _ died Saturday Oct. 22, 2011 in California, his daughter said. He was 86. (AP Photo/Pierpoint Family)

CBS News correspondent Robert C. Pierpoint shown in this 2007 family photo taken in West Yellowstone Montana _ who covered six presidents, the Korean War, the Kennedy assassination and the Iranian hostage crisis in a career that spanned more than four decades _ died Saturday Oct. 22, 2011 in California, his daughter said. He was 86. (AP Photo/Pierpoint Family)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? CBS News correspondent Robert C. Pierpoint ? who covered six presidents, the Korean War, the Kennedy assassination and the Iranian hostage crisis in a career that spanned more than four decades ? died Saturday in California, his daughter said. He was 86.

Pierpoint, who retired in 1990, died of complications from surgery at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, Marta Pierpoint told The Associated Press. He had broken his hip Oct. 12 at the Santa Barbara Retirement Community where he lived with his wife Patricia.

After making his name covering the Korean War ? a role he reprised when he provided his radio voice for the widely watched final episode of "MASH" in 1983 ? Pierpoint became a White House correspondent during the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration, a position he would hold through the Jimmy Carter administration.

"He lived quite an amazing life," said Marta Pierpoint. She said her father was most proud of his coverage of the Korean War, Watergate and most of all the Kennedy assassination, an event that would still bring him to tears in an interview with his hometown paper three weeks before his death.

"I didn't like what the priest said about a time to live and a time to die," Robert Pierpoint told the Santa Barbara News-Press in an Oct. 2 story. "It was not Kennedy's time to die."

Pierpoint said his "one bad mistake" the day of the assassination was not revealing that Jacqueline Kennedy had blood on her pink suit when she walked out of her husband's hospital room.

"I didn't describe the blood, and I should have," he said. "I was in shock."

Pierpoint said of the six administrations he covered, Kennedy's was the most fun.

"He was not afraid of the press," Pierpoint told the News-Press. "He had been a reporter. He knew everyone in the White House press corps by name and reputation and joked with us. He was comfortable in his own skin."

Pierpoint said his first White House assignment, the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration starting in 1957, was not as easy. He said Eisenhower was "a relatively good president, but he wasn't a good communicator. I didn't feel that I did a good job, but they kept me on."

CBS certainly did keep Pierpoint on at the White House, for 23 years, a period he chronicled in his 1981 memoir, "At the White House."

He moved to covering the State Department in 1980, and ended his career on the show "Sunday Morning" with Charles Kuralt.

Born May 16, 1925, in Redondo Beach, Calif., Pierpoint joined the Navy in 1943 but didn't see action. He graduated from the University of Redlands, where his papers and archives are now kept, in 1948.

While a graduate student at the University of Stockholm he began work as a stringer for CBS, and found his calling. His coverage of an attempted Communist coup in Finland won him attention, and he was sent to Tokyo as a full-time correspondent, which led to his coverage of the entire Korean War.

Pierpoint shifted as the news business did from radio to television, and appeared on the first episode of Edward R. Murrow's "See It Now" in 1951, eventually becoming one of the close Murrow associates known as "Murrow's Boys."

Before his career was over he had won two Emmys with other reporters, including one for his work on a 1989 banking scandal just before his retirement.

During retirement he was a frequent speaker and frequently went fishing in Montana.

He also didn't hesitate to give his opinion on the directions the White House went after he left, saying recently that he was not impressed with President Obama.

"He's not a fighter. He surrenders to Congress before it's necessary," Pierpoint told the News-Press. "Lyndon Johnson was a fighter. He fought for what he believed in. He was wrong on Vietnam, but right on civil rights."

In addition to Patricia, he is survived by four children, including actor Eric Pierpoint, who has appeared in "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen," and "Liar, Liar" with Jim Carrey.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-23-Obit-Robert%20Pierpoint/id-5fcdf32c0b404b66a09ff0395490051f

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PFT: Caldwell almost certainly gone, paper thinks

Pittsburgh Steelers v Arizona CardinalsGetty Images

Before the season started, we noted that the teams in the AFC North appeared to have an easy schedule.

They face the NFC West and AFC South out of division, which looked soft on paper. ?Usually ?on paper? doesn?t translate to reality, but it did this time around.

The NFC West and AFC South are the two worst divisions in football, despite the presence of the 49ers and Texans. ?ESPN?s John Clayton notes that?if the Jaguars lose tonight, the AFC South will have the worst out of division record in football at 5-16. ?The NFC West is next worse at 6-15.

It shouldn?t be a surprise, then, that every team in the AFC North is .500 or better. The division is home to one of the league?s biggest surprises (Cincy) and the worst 3-3 team we can remember. (Cleveland)

On top of that, the AFC North has the top four defenses in the league according to yards allowed. This is what happens when every team in the division gets to play the Seahawks, Jaguars, Colts, Cardinals, and Rams.

What does it all mean?

The AFC North division champion is almost a lock to get a playoff bye and could get the No. 1 seed. ?Second place in the division is very likely to go to the playoffs, and perhaps the Bengals could hang around the wild card race longer than expected.

So much of the NFL comes down to schedule, but it?s rarely talked about. We?ve heard a number of times this year how the Patriots won 11 games with Matt Cassel, but no one mentions how they faced one of the softest schedules in football that year.

It?s not like it?s the fault of the Ravens, Steelers, Browns, and Bengals. These things even out. It?s up to them to take advantage while they can.

Which reminds me: Are you ready for some football tonight? A Monday night blowout!

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/24/indianapolis-star-thinks-caldwell-is-a-goner/related/

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Libya leader orders investigation of Gadhafi death (AP)

TRIPOLI, Libya ? Libya's interim leader said Monday he has ordered an investigation into Moammar Gadhafi's death in response to strong international pressure to determine how the ousted leader was killed by a bullet to the head shortly after he was captured alive.

Mustafa Abdul-Jalil told a news conference in the eastern city of Benghazi that the National Transitional Council has formed a committee to investigate Thursday's killing amid conflicting reports of how the dictator who ruled Libya for 42 years died. Government officials have said initial findings suggest Gadhafi was killed in the crossfire as his supporters clashed with revolutionary forces seizing control of his hometown of Sirte.

But Abdul-Jalil raised a new possibility on Monday, suggesting that Gadhafi could have been killed by his own supporters to prevent him from implicating them in past misdeeds under his regime.

"Let us question who has the interest in the fact that Gadhafi will not be tried. Libyans want to try him for what he did to them, with executions, imprisonment and corruption," he said. "Free Libyans wanted to keep Gadhafi in prison and humiliate him as long as possible. Those who wanted him killed were those who were loyal to him or had played a role under him, his death was in their benefit."

The U.S., Britain and international rights groups have called for an investigation into whether Libya's former rebels killed a wounded Gadhafi after pulling him out of a drainage pipe in his hometown of Sirte, the last city to fall to revolutionary forces after an 8-month civil war.

Critics also have said the gruesome spectacle of his blood-streaked body laid out as a trophy for a fourth day of public viewing in a commercial freezer raises questions about the new leadership's commitment to the rule of law.

Abdul-Jalil said the transitional government has established a committee to determine what ultimately to do with Gadhafi's body and the decisions will be governed by a fatwa, or religious edict, by the head of the Islamic Fatwa society.

Libya's revolt erupted in February as part of anti-government protests spreading across the Middle East. But Libya's struggle has been the bloodiest so far in the region. Mass protests turned into a civil war that killed thousands and paralyzed the country. Gadhafi loyalists held out for two more months after the fall of the capital of Tripoli in late August.

Abdul-Jalil declared the country liberated on Sunday, launching the oil-rich nation on what is meant to be a two-year transition to democracy. But he also laid out plans with an Islamist tone that could rattle their Western backers. He said Islamic Sharia law would be the "basic source" of legislation, and that existing laws that contradict the teachings of Islam would be nullified.

Using Sharia as the main source of legislation is stipulated in the constitution of neighboring Egypt. Still, Egyptian laws remain largely secular as Egypt's interpretation of Sharia does not cover all aspects of modern life, while Saudi Arabia and Iran apply much more strict interpretations.

Abdul-Jalil also outlined several changes to align with Islamic law such as banning banks from paying interest and lifting restrictions on the number of wives Libyan men can take. The Muslim holy book, the Quran, allows men up to four wives.

Mindful of the concern, Abdul-Jalil said Monday he was referring to a temporary constitution and said he wanted to "assure the international community that we as Libyans are moderate Muslims."

He also said there will be a referendum on a new constitution after it is drawn up.

Islamist groups stand to gain ground in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt as well, after they shook off longtime dictators.

Libyan leaders have said they will form a new interim government within a month of liberation and hold elections for a constitutional assembly within eight months after that.

Concern about human rights violations clouded the declaration of liberation by Libya's new leaders on Sunday.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch warned Monday of a "trend of killings, looting and other abuses" by those who fought Gadhafi after finding 53 decomposing bodies, apparently of Gadhafi loyalists, some of whom it said may have been executed by revolutionary forces.

The bodies were found on the lawn of the abandoned Mahari hotel in Sirte, and some had their hands bound. HRW researcher Peter Bouckaert said the hotel had come under the control of fighters from Misrata before the killings took place.

The condition of the bodies suggested the men were killed between Oct. 15-19, the group said. Bloodstains on the grass and spent cartridges indicated some were shot and killed at the spot they were discovered.

"This latest massacre seems part of a trend of killings, looting, and other abuses committed by armed anti-Gadhafi fighters who consider themselves above the law," Bouckaert said in a statement. "It is imperative that the transitional authorities take action to rein in these groups."

The group called on Libyan authorities to conduct an immediate investigation.

Rebel fighters in Misrata ? a city which had been besieged by Gadhafi loyalists for weeks in the spring, coming under heavy shelling at the time ? had no immediate comment.

Gadhafi's death paved the way for the liberation declaration, but it remains unclear what happened in his final moments.

Jibril Othman, a Libyan fighter involved in the capture, said late Sunday that when he and others placed Gadhafi in an ambulance, the former dictator had not yet suffered what Libya's chief pathologist said was a fatal gunshot to the head.

Omar al-Shibani, a commander at the scene, told a news conference that Gadhafi had been bleeding from the head and the abdomen when he was pulled out of the pipe, but that it was unclear whether the head wound was from a gunshot.

One Gadhafi son, Muatassim, also was killed, but the former leader's one-time heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, apparently escaped with some of his supporters.

___

Associated Press writer Karin Laub in Tripoli and Rami al-Shaheibi in Misrata contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_libya

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Like a Bolt from Above

SOCORRO, N.M. ? Ten thousand feet high in the New Mexico mountains, Jake Trueblood is getting ready to fire rockets into a thunderstorm.

He lines up eight rockets, straight as soldiers, then connects each to a wire bobbin once used to guide missiles for the French military. Trueblood arms the rockets and heads underground, then waits for hours in a windowless chamber on whose metal roof the rockets sit.

Trueblood, a graduate student at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro, is waiting for a good strong electric field in the atmosphere. Then he?ll push a button that will send a whoosh of compressed air to a single rocket, sending it careening more than a thousand feet high. The goal is for the rapidly moving wire to trick the air into discharging its electricity in a lightning flash that will slam to the ground just above Trueblood?s head.

He and other lightning hunters aren?t out on the mountaintop this August day for the thrill. They?re here, at New Mexico Tech?s Langmuir Laboratory for Atmospheric Research, in search of knowledge. ?We?re here because we?re trying to understand the simplest storms we know of ? and we can?t,? says Graydon Aulich, a lightning researcher at the lab.

Golfers and picnickers are acutely aware of lightning and its dangers, but scientists still don?t understand it. ?It?s really amazing when you think this is something that everyone knows about,? says Joseph Dwyer, a physicist at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne. ?But try to draw the basic picture, where the electric charges are in the cloud and where are the currents, and you realize you don?t even know how to draw the picture to start with.?

Now, however, studies like Trueblood?s are helping to flesh out that picture. Shooting rockets into thunderstorms has allowed researchers to better understand how lightning follows an electrified channel through the air, hits the ground and then returns along the same path whence it came. Balloonborne and other experiments have revealed that X-rays and gamma rays often accompany lightning, a discovery that hints at high-speed electrons kicking the whole process off. And ways of mapping lightning in three dimensions have uncovered secrets of how lightning travels within a cloud, as well as how it can send a dangerous ?bolt from the blue? to hit the ground kilo?meters away ? or even zoom upward to the edge of space.

Such discoveries not only fill out the picture of lightning physics, but also are helping engineers design better systems to divert deadly bolts away from buildings and the people within.

Charging up

In 1752, Benjamin Franklin famously attached a metal key to a kite and flew it in a thunderstorm, observing a spark and deducing that electric charge existed in the atmosphere. Two and a half centuries later, scientists have a slightly better idea of how lightning forms: Hail and small ice particles rubbing against one another within clouds transfer electric charge, with positive charges generally gathering on small ice crystals that are carried higher by updrafts and negative charges gathering on heavier hail particles that drift lower in the cloud. This charge separation builds up an electric field, which at some point must be reconciled by discharging electricity between opposite charges, like a static spark on clothing on a dry winter day.

Electrons begin by carving a series of ionized channels, known as stepped leaders, through the air; for a typical cloud-to-ground flash this means negative charge starts propagating downward from the negatively charged region in the lower part of the cloud. Once the stepped leader reaches the ground, or another region of opposite charge, electric current zaps between the two points, creating the visible lightning flash with temperatures over 25,000? Celsius.

Worldwide, some 100 flashes occur every second. Not all of these reach the ground ? in fact, the most common type of lightning discharges within a single cloud ? but those that do can be deadly. Roughly 55 people are killed by lightning each year in the United States alone.

Yet studying lightning is like, well, trying to capture lightning in a bottle. The flash may happen often, but not often enough over the places where scientists sit and wait to study it. Kenneth Eack, a physicist at New Mexico Tech, says researching lightning is like trying to conduct an experiment knowing that the electricity you need will be turned on in your building for 20 minutes at some point during the summer ? but you don?t know which 20 minutes on which day, so all you can do is wait.

To better track lightning?s unpredictable appearances, in the mid-1990s researchers at New Mexico Tech began developing a three-dimensional lightning mapping system. Global Positioning System satellites had just started to come into common use, and on a flight back from a geophysics conference Paul Krehbiel and William Rison realized that they could use GPS receivers to precisely time and locate lightning flashes.

Today the researchers? mapping array consists of a collection of plastic tubs and other containers, each holding a solar-powered detector to measure radio-frequency radiation arriving from sparks within a lightning discharge. With multiple stations, the scientists can build a three-dimensional picture of how lightning appears and branches across the sky. Between 16 and 18 stations typically dot the mountaintop at Langmuir Lab. Many other research groups have set up similar arrays using the New Mexico Tech technology, including a new facility in Catalonia, Spain.

Because the system typically picks up 60-megahertz signals in very high frequency, or VHF, bands, it became a lot easier to detect lightning signals when overlapping television broadcasts in the United States moved to digital, Krehbiel says. Other tweaks have also improved the array?s sensitivity over time, allowing the scientists to see lightning in better detail than ever before. Already, the researchers have spotted many more ?precursors,? or attempts to get intracloud lightning discharges started. Many flashes try multiple times to discharge before they make it, Rison says.

Data from the array have also helped explain why negatively charged cloud-to-ground flashes often have multiple strokes, whereas positively charged ones (which are less common) usually don?t. Positive leaders are observed to branch out a lot and move forward only tenuously, whereas negative ones branch less and move forward more robustly, Krehbiel reported in Rio de Janeiro in August at a conference on atmospheric electricity. ?Every time we look at the data we see something new,? he says.

Next spring, the group plans to set up a new array in north-central Colorado as part of a larger study on how electrified storms affect atmospheric chemistry. As one side result, the team will see how often wind turbines along the Colorado-Wyoming border get hit by lightning. Turbine blades can spark electrical discharges, a major hazard, while spinning through the air at up to 100 miles per hour. ?There?s no data on what the mechanism is, and if we knew maybe we could design a wind turbine to be less susceptible to lightning,? says Rison.

X-ray vision

Fifteen hundred miles east of Langmuir, other scientists use the lightning mapping array ? and a lot more ? at the country?s other premier research facility, the International Center for Lightning Research and Testing at Camp Blanding, Fla.

Scientists at Camp Blanding, a military base where neighbors don?t tend to complain about rockets bringing lightning down on them, are in the middle of an intensive four-year research project funded mainly by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Among other things, radar scans the area for storms; high-speed cameras, including a video camera that can shoot 4 million frames per second, record any lightning flashes; sensitive instruments capture information on electric and magnetic fields; the mapping array locates each bolt in three dimensions; and X-ray equipment detects high-energy radiation accompanying a flash. All this equipment gathers 100 measurements on each flash, 24/7, over an area of about a square kilometer. ?It?s the most [lightning] instrumentation anyone has ever had in one place in the history of man,? says the facility?s codirector, Martin Uman.

The work paid off on July 7 of this year, when the instruments captured a natural lightning flash with four strokes. ?Everything lit up like gangbusters,? says Uman, of the University of Florida in Gainesville. Although they haven?t gone through the data yet, the researchers expect to learn much from this scientific gift from above.

Along with studying natural lightning, the Florida team also triggers lightning the way Trueblood does in New Mexico. Triggered lightning is in some sense artificial; electricity coursing down the rocket wire does not behave the same way as ionized channels forming naturally. But the return stroke of triggered lightning, when the current connects and creates a visible flash, is pretty much the same as nature provides, Uman says. So shooting rockets into thunderstorms, as cowboy as it might sound, provides an easier way to get lightning where you want it.

Camp Blanding scientists are tackling three seemingly simple yet devilishly complex questions about lightning: how it originates in the cloud, how it travels through the air and how it connects to the ground (a key question in protecting people and buildings from strikes). Of these, lightning?s birth is the least understood, Uman says. ?People always thought it was an electrical breakdown like happens in the laboratory: Put in a big enough electric field and the air starts to become conductive,? he says. But in clouds, lightning seems to occur where electric fields are much lower than those needed for a lab discharge. And for a long time no one could figure out how lightning got started in these smaller electric fields.

In the last few decades, however, researchers have begun to explore versions of a theory known as ?runaway breakdown.? According to this theory, cosmic rays hitting the atmosphere deliver a steady supply of high-energy electrons. The cosmic rays also knock into other electrons, which speed up in the thundercloud?s electric field. Soon the electrons are avalanching out of control. ?Suddenly your electric field is big enough to accelerate electrons up to the speed of light,? Dwyer says. Crucially, this means that electrons can spark a discharge when the electric field is an order of magnitude less than theorists had thought necessary.

Still, scientists don?t understand all the steps in the runaway breakdown idea. And it?s not clear whether the fast electrons initiate the lightning discharge or simply accompany it, Eack says.

X-rays in lightning could help solve the dilemma. If Superman watched lightning strike, his X-ray vision would see high-energy radiation accompanying the bolt all the way down, Dwyer says. The Langmuir team reported the first surprising hints of these X-rays back in 2001, and Dwyer later confirmed them by setting up sensitive detectors at the Florida lightning facility. At times, the X-rays were so intense that they blinded his equipment.

Last year, Dwyer took the first pictures of these X-rays during a triggered lightning flash at Camp Blanding. Made with a pinhole camera that measures voltage, the images show bright honeycomb-shaped pixels descending with the bolt from above.

Different strokes

Superman would have another advantage over today?s top lightning researchers: He could fly into, above and below a thunderstorm, watching lightning move in all directions. And he?d see phenomena that earthbound scientists have just begun to discover in recent years: lightning flashes that travel not just within a cloud or directly from the cloud to the ground, but that break out to the side or even zoom straight up to space.

The most spectacularly named of these are the ?gigantic jets,? which are essentially ordinary lightning flashes that manage to punch straight up from a thundercloud and travel some 80 kilometers upward. Videos from two amateur scientists show how the jets manage this feat.

Normally, in-cloud lightning flashes develop in the lower, negatively charged part of the cloud; if they happen to reach higher within the cloud, the positive charges higher up cancel out the negative charge, stopping the flash. But in two cases videotaped recently in Florida and Oklahoma, the negatively charged leader zoomed upward and then went sideways, trying to exit the side of the cloud. Had it succeeded, it would have become a ?bolt from the blue,? where a flash zaps the ground many kilometers away from the cloud where it originated. Bolts from the blue are some of the most dangerous types of lightning, as no one is expecting a strike from clouds far away.

But in these two cases the leaders didn?t break out of the clouds, says Steven Cummer, an electrical engineer at Duke University. They fizzled instead. In the process, though, they shorted out much of the positive charge that usually sits near the top of the cloud acting like a lid on a pot to keep negatively charged leaders from breaking through. So when a second leader was born within the same cloud and zoomed upward, it had very little positive charge above to trap it in. That leader broke through the top of the cloud and kept zipping up as a gigantic jet, Cummer and his colleagues, including Duke postdoctoral researcher Gaopeng Lu, reported online in June in Geophysical Research Letters.

Gigantic jets aren?t the only things that fly upward from storm clouds; so too do mysterious flashes of high-energy gamma rays. ?Both of these events are produced by the most ordinary of all lightning,? Cummer says.

The only way to see the rays, known as terrestrial gamma-ray flashes or TGFs, is from the viewpoint of a gamma-ray satellite looking down on Earth. The first such TGFs were reported in 1994, and as yet no one is entirely sure how they form. But recent work by Cummer and other researchers suggests that TGFs are born in the first milliseconds of a lightning flash, when there is but a single lightning channel moving almost directly upward. ?The high electric field that?s driving the TGF is definitely connected in some way to that upward leader,? Cummer says.

Even more surprising, TGFs contain antimatter, the doppelg?nger of normal matter. Earlier this year, scientists from the University of Alabama in Huntsville reported that positrons, the antimatter counterpart of electrons, are common in thunderstorms (SN Online: 1/10/11).

Dwyer thinks these positrons may be the key to understanding TGFs. In a new theory he has presented at several scientific conferences, he argues that the runaway electrons thought to trigger lightning also produce gamma rays, which in turn collide with ordinary air particles to produce electrons and positrons. ?The whole discharge becomes self-sustaining, where you get huge bursts of gamma rays because of all the positrons you?re making,? Dwyer says. ?If this is correct, then one of the keys to understanding thunderstorm physics is positrons. Who would have thought that a few years ago??

Few lightning researchers would have foreseen most of these discoveries a few years ago. But back at Langmuir, Trueblood and Aulich know they aren?t going to be contributing to new breakthroughs on this particular August day. Having watched thunderstorms come and go all around the Magdalena Mountains, too distant to try triggering a lightning flash in, the scientists are packing it in. They call the local Federal Aviation Administration office and say it?s OK to start routing airplanes over the lab again. ?We?ve gone cold,? Aulich says as he hangs up the phone.


Volcanic lightning

David Jon/NordicPhotos/Getty Images

Lightning researchers chase thunderstorms, and volcanologists lie in wait for eruptions ? and it took a seismologist in Alaska to bring the two worlds together.

In 1992, Steve McNutt of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks picked up some funny signals on the seismometers he was using to study the erupting Mount Spurr, near Anchorage. The signals turned out to be static from lightning generated by the eruption, possibly the first time volcanic lightning was recognized as such. Since then McNutt has been tracking lightning discharges in the huge billowy plumes from erupting volcanoes.

Electrical charges separate into positive and negative regions inside a volcanic plume much as they do within a thundercloud, thanks to ice particles forming and rubbing against one another, among other factors. Electricity then discharges between the charge separation, creating dramatic lightning bolts within the eruption plume.

So far McNutt has gathered data on lightning from 394 eruptions at 154 volcanoes. Volcanic lightning turns out to be ?a hell of a lot more common than people had thought,? he says. ?With modern tools in place, we can start to exploit it for what it tells us about the eruption process.?

For example, McNutt and his colleagues have found that when an eruption involves a lot of water coursing up from inside the Earth along with magma, more lightning occurs. ?The combination of ash particles, like seeds, and a lot of water sets up a very efficient mechanism to produce a lot of electricity and lighting,? he says. In essence, the water turns an eruption cloud into a sort of dirty thunderstorm.

McNutt has also teamed up with Ronald Thomas and other scientists from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro, who developed a system for mapping lightning in 3-D. To catch lightning in the act, the scientists set up several mapping stations at a safe distance from an erupting volcano. So far, they?ve caught flashes at four: Mount Augustine in Alaska in 2006, Chait?n in Chile in 2008, Mount Redoubt in Alaska in 2009 and Eyjafjallaj?kull in Iceland in 2010 (lightning at Eyjafjallaj?kull shown). Among other things, the scientists have found that electric charge persists in the plume as the eruption continues, suggesting that interactions among ash and other particles continue to build up electric fields so that lightning can keep occurring.

One day, lightning might even be used to detect eruptions at remote volcanoes. Last December, the U.S. Geological Survey and the University of Washington in Seattle unveiled an alert system that ties into the World Wide Lightning Location Network, a global array of laboratories that monitor lightning activity. By searching for lightning activity near known volcanoes, the system can e-mail notices of eruptions to scientists even before the ash cloud becomes visible to satellites.


Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/335364/title/Like_a_Bolt_from_Above

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APNewsBreak: Convicted killer gets new trial (AP)

BOSTON ? A federal judge on Thursday threw out the death penalty against a man convicted of killing three people in Massachusetts and New Hampshire during a weeklong crime spree in 2001 and ordered a new trial.

Chief U.S. Disrict Judge Mark Wolf ruled that Gary Sampson was denied his constitutional right to have his sentence decided by an impartial jury and that he is "entitled to a new trial to determine whether the death penalty is justified in his case."

Sampson, a drifter who was raised in Abington, pleaded guilty to carjacking two Massachusetts men after each picked him up hitchhiking. He said he forced both men to drive to secluded spots, assured them he only wanted to steal their cars, then stabbed them repeatedly and slit their throats.

He then fled to New Hampshire, broke into a house in Meredith and strangled a third man.

In a motion for a new trial, Sampson's lawyers argued that three jurors had given inaccurate answers to questions they were asked during the jury selection process.

Wolf found that one of the jurors had intentionally and repeatedly answered questions dishonestly in an attempt to avoid talking about subjects that were painful to her. She never disclosed, for example, that her husband had a rifle and had threatened to shoot her, that she had ended her marriage because of her husband's substance abuse and that her daughter had served time in prison because of a drug problem.

Wolf said in his ruling that if the woman had disclosed those things during the jury selection process, the court would have found that there was a "high risk" that after listening to the evidence at Sampson's trial, her decision on whether to sentence Sampson to death could have been influenced by her life experiences. Wolf said the woman likely would have been excused from serving on the jury.

"In essence, despite dedicated efforts by the parties and the court to assure that the trial would be fair and the verdict final, it has now been proven that perjury by a juror resulted in a violation of Sampson's constitutional right to have the issue of whether he should live or die decided by twelve women and men who were each capable of deciding that most consequential question impartially," Wolf wrote.

Prosecutors had no immediate comment on the ruling.

"We just received notification and we're reviewing the order," said Christina DiIorio-Sterling, a spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111020/ap_on_re_us/us_murder_spree

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Richard (RJ) Eskow: One More SEC/Citigroup Sweetheart Deal: 5 Reasons to Be Outraged

The President says he understands the frustration behind the Occupy Wall Street movement. That's nice. But the anger will keep growing as long as the government keeps handing out free passes instead of perp walks to bankers inside serial corporate criminals like Citigroup.

The Administration is finally talking the talk, which is good. But without criminal investigations it's not walking the walk. Iit's still not too late. While the SEC's latest deal should outrage you, the Administration can makes things right with two decisive actions.

Get-Out-of-Jail Free Card

The SEC announced yesterday that Citigroup agreed to pay $285 million to settle charges that it misled (synonyms for that word include deceived; lied to; tricke and defrauded) investors in a mortgage securities deal, telling them it was a good investment when it knew otherwise and was secretly betting it would fail.

That's not just slimy. As the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission found in other instances, that kind of behavior is also illegal.

Here are five reasons you should be outraged. Warning: If you have high blood pressure, you should probably stop reading right now:

1. Once again, nobody had to confess.

Forgiveness is noble, but it only if the offender asks for it. The Truth and Reconciliation Commissions in South Africa granted amnesty for many terrible crimes, for example - but only after the wrongdoers acknowledged their misdeeds and promised not to repeat them.

Yet once again bank criminals were allowed to walk without admitting anything! Common sense tells us nobody would agree to pay more than a quarter of a billion dollars unless did they'd done something very, very wrong. Yet once again the SEC has negotiated a settlement in which the perpetrator "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

"Neither admitted nor denied"? Citigroup has danced this dance before:

When it was forced to buy back $7.3 billion in bonds in 2008 after deceiving investors into thinking these high-risk investments were low-risk, Citigroup "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

When it was forced to pay $1.66 billion in 2008 over its Enron misdeeds Citigroup "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

When Citigroup agreed to pay $2.6 billion over its "improper relationship" with the CEO of WorldCom during the scandals there, it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

When it was fined $275,000 in 2004 for recommending high-risk securities without fully disclosing that risk, it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

That's nearly $12 billion that Citi's agreed to fork over without ever admitting wrongdoing! If this bank's not doing very bad things its executives should be fired, because that means they're the worst negotiators in human history.

And Citi's not the only one. Take JPMorgan Chase, which just took its crown as "biggest bank in America":

When JPMorgan Chase paid $153 million in 2011 for deceiving investors it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

When Chase paid $25 million in 2010 over the sale of illegal unregistered securities in Florida, it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

When Chase agreed to pay $55 million in 2009 after banks "allegedly" misled investors into pouring money into a venture that had already failed, it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

Even when JPMorgan Chase agreed to a settlement worth nearly three quarters of a billion (that's "billion," with a "b") over some good old-fashioned, down-and-dirty bribery and corruption charges in Alabama - real Tammany Hall stuff - it "neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing."

All the big boys have been allowed to walk away without apologizing or confessing: Wells Fargo. Morgan Stanley. Credit Suisse. UBS. Goldman Sachs ... and many, many more. A rogue's gallery of bank crooks paid billions in settlements - "without admitting or denying wrongdoing."

Why else should you be outraged?

2. Once again the criminals won't pay for their crimes - you will.

Crimes don't commit themselves.The perpetrators didn't just escape jail time for these crimes. In most cases they got other people to pay for their sins.

It always happens: Bankers commit their misdeeds and are rewarded with fat salaries and even fatter bonuses. If their crimes come to light the settlements are usually paid by the bank itself. In the very rare cases when bank execs are fined for their misdeeds, they only pay a tiny fraction of what they've made from them. In all the other cases - the ones where millions or billions are paid out - the bill goes to everybody who owns shares in the bank.

Who are those shareholders? Some are high-net-worth investors - including many members of Congress, which helps explain a lot of recent history - but others are so-called "institutional investors" that include pension funds for ordinary working people. You may be one of them.

You're not just paying for their misdeeds because you live in the economy they ruined, or because you bailed them out when they screw up. You may also be paying their fines while they skate.

3. Criminals who aren't punished commit more crimes.

No wonder the recidivism rate is so high among corporate offenders! Economists call it "moral hazard." The rest of us call it "injustice," "a raw deal," "a broken system of government," and "a sure-fire way to guarantee that the crimes keep happening." The modern history of our country's too-big-to-fail banks -- and the people who run them -- is a history of moral hazard. Time and time again they've admitted to criminal misdeeds, only to commit even more of them.

Now, I don't know about you, but all this "neither admit nor deny" business leaves me with the distinct impression that they're guilty as hell. If they're really innocent they should have their day in court - criminal court. A walk in an orange jumpsuit would be a small price to pay for vindication, don't you think?

That is, if they cared about vindication. Apparently they don't - and if there's one thing we should have learned from this long string of deals, it's that bankers who aren't punished keep breaking the law. We need to hear a whole lot less "Let's reassure the financial sector" and a whole lot more "If you can't do the time don't do the crime."

4. Bank CEOs keep getting rich while misdeeds happen on their watch - and are still treated like respectable people.

The CEOs and other senior managers at these banks are either immoral or incompetent. Dear CEOs: If you colluded with the wrongdoers or looked the other way at their actions, you're immoral. If your employees keep committing crimes and you can't stop it, you're incompetent.

It's astonishing when you think about it: CEOs like Jamie Dimon and GE's Jeffrey Immelt run organizations that have broken the law over and over, yet they're still welcome in polite company and treated like wise elders by reporters and politicians. Our society seems to have forgotten one emotion that serves a vital social function: Shame. Shame inhibits destructive behavior. It's time for shame to make a comeback.

It's time for criminal law to make a comeback, too. In the meantime, don't whine to me about being criticized, Jamie Dimon! That goes for the rest of you, too. Just tell us which it is, boys: Immoral or incompetent?

5. Citigroup was "conceived in sin" through by government officials - some of whom got very rich there afterwards.

Citigroup should never have existed. Regulators and government officials smoothed the way for Citibank's merger with an insurance company, Traveler's, by assuring them that what remained of the Glass-Steagall Act would disappear long before they were required to spin off some assets as that law required. Leading the charge was Robert Rubin, who was Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary at the time.

Rubin aggressively fought bank regulations of all kinds as Treasury Secretary, even as he was smoothing the way for the formation of Citigroup. Then he joined its Board of Directors as soon as he left office, also serving as "Senior Advisor." He eventually earned at least $50 million in cash and stock grants there. Rubin said nobody could've known things were going wrong. A Citigroup employee stated under oath that he "sent an email to Mr. Robert Rubin and three other members of Corporate Management ... (and) specifically warned about the extreme risks that existed within the Consumer Lending Group."

Rubin kept his money. (See "shame," above.)

In addition to its immoral behavior, Citigroup was incompetently managed. Its failure played a central part in the financial meltdown. Recently Peter Orszag, President Obama's Director of the Office of Management and Budget, joined Citigroup. Like Rubin, he made the move immediately upon leaving public service. Orszag's title is Vice Chairman of Global Banking, although he has no previous banking experience.

And people wonder why the 99% feel "frustrated."
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That's not to say that Republicans are better, of course. They're much worse. They're even determined to undermine even the relatively mild reforms the Democrats passed last year. They keep making the insane argument that regulation is the cause of our problems, after a financial meltdown caused by de-regulation.

Not coincidentally, 24% of Mitt Romney's campaign funding has come from the banking sector.

But neither the President nor his party will be able to tap the public's outrage with words alone, especially after the events of recent history. Fortunately, they can take two steps - steps that should've been taken a long time ago - to earn the respect and loyalty of the frustrated 99-percenters.

Criminal investigation: The SEC deal settled civil charges over these securities. That presumably allows the Administration to open a criminal investigation. It should do so promptly. Justice demands it. And when it comes to "moral hazard," nothing sharpens a person's moral instinct like seeing a peer marched off in handcuffs. Start with Citigroup, then move on down the Street until you've bagged all of the wrongdoers.

Break it up: It's not too late to protect the nation from a bank that is much too big, much too poorly managed, and much too predisposed to criminality to survive. Even a well-run Citigroup would pose a danger to the world's economy, and this one's a catastrophe that could explode at any moment. It's time to break it up. No ifs, no ands, no buts. Do it now.

Mr. President, Mr. Attorney General: The ball is in your court. The good news is there's a lot you can do - for your country, and for your own prospects in 2012. The 99% eagerly await your next move.

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Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/one-more-seccitigroup-swe_b_1023292.html

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