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Obama to tap Charlotte mayor to run Transportation - Fox 28

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 April 2013 | 16.14

Obama to tap Charlotte mayor to run Transportation
April 29, 2013 07:30 GMT

By JULIE PACE AP White House Correspondent

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A White House official says President Barack Obama will nominate Charlotte, N.C., Mayor Anthony Foxx, a rising star in Democratic politics, to run the Transportation Department.

The official says Obama will announce the nomination from the White House Monday afternoon. The official requested anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss the nomination ahead of the president.

Foxx will be the first black nominee among Obama's picks for open spots in his second-term Cabinet. The president has faced questions, including from the Congressional Black Caucus, about a lack of diversity in his first round of nominations after winning re-election.


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From Russia with hatred - New York Post

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers yesterday demanded to know whether slain Boston Marathon terrorist Tamerlan Tsarnaev got overseas training and what role his jihad-loving mom played in developing his murderous beliefs.

Focus on Tsarnaev's mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, has intensified since Saturday, when it was revealed that Russian security forces had wiretapped recordings of her speaking to Tamerlan about jihadist activities.

Investigators want to talk to Tsarnaeva, who lives in the Republic of Dagestan, American officials said.

"I think she played a very strong role in his radicalization process," House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mike McCaul (R-Texas) told "Fox News Sunday."

"I do believe if she does come to the United States that she will be detained for questioning. So I think there is a connection."

McCaul also said he believes Tamerlan may have received terror training when he visited Russia six months ago.

"The level of sophistication of this device leads me to believe . . . that there was a trainer, and the question is: Where is that trainer or trainers?"

One suspect has recently been cleared. "Misha," who was accused of radicalizing Tamerlyn, said he has cooperated with the FBI, according to a report yesterday in The New York Review of Books.

"I gave them my computer and my phone and everything," he said. "I wanted to show I haven't done anything,"

Meanwhile, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee said yesterday that feds are still looking at others in the US who may have aided the suspects.

"There are persons of interest in the US," Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.) said on ABC's "This Week."

"The real test is in Russia. When he went over to Russia and came back, things changed."

Tamerlan's brother, Dzhokhar, 19, is facing charges of using a weapon of mass destruction.

He was recently moved from a hospital to a medical detention center in Ayer, Mass. His cell has a steel door with food slot.

Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) conceded the FBI erred by not keeping closer tabs on Tamerlan.

"I am a big defender of the FBI," he said. "But in this case, they may have messed up, because Russia did call and say they had doubts about Tsarnaev."

Additional reporting by Yasmine Phillips and David K. Li in New York


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Last pieces of One World Trade Center spire are rising - Fox News

  • One World Trade Center rises above the lower Manhattan skyline.AP

  • One World Trade Center emerges from the clouds in the night sky in a photo made from a passing airplane, Monday, March 11, 2013 in New York. Construction continues on the office complex going up on the site of the original World Trade Center, which was destroyed in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Matthew Ziegler)AP2013

  • FILE - Construction workers and equipment excavate the southeastern corner of the World Trade Center site on in this Jan. 8, 2008 file photo taken in New York.AP

One World Trade Center already is New York's tallest building.

And when the last pieces of its spire rise to the roof -- weather permitting -- the 104-floor skyscraper that replaces the fallen twin towers will be just feet from becoming the highest in the Western Hemisphere.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey says the spire pieces plus a steel beacon will then be lifted at a later date from the rooftop to cap the building at 1,776 feet.

Installation of the 800-ton, 408-foot spire began in December, after 18 pieces were shipped from Canada and New Jersey.

The spire will serve as a world-class broadcast antenna.

With the beacon at its peak to ward off aircraft, the spire will provide public transmission services for television and radio broadcast channels that were destroyed on Sept. 11, 2001, along with the trade center towers.

Overlooking the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, the high-rise is scheduled to open for business in 2014.

The tower is at the northwest corner of the site, which is well on its way to reconstruction with the 72-story 4 World Trade Center and other buildings.

Monday's celebration of the reconstructed trade center comes days after a grisly reminder of the terror attack that took nearly 3,000 lives: the discovery of a rusted piece of airplane landing gear wedged between a nearby mosque and an apartment building -- believed to be from one of the hijacked planes that ravaged lower Manhattan.

As officials prepared to erect the spire, the office of the city's chief medical examiner was working in the hidden alley where debris may still contain human remains.

The new tower's crowning spire is a joint venture between the ADF Group Inc. engineering firm in Terrebonne, Quebec, and New York-based DCM Erectors Inc., a steel contractor.

The world's tallest building, topping 2,700 feet, is in Dubai.


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Police: 4 people stabbed at Albuquerque church - Atlanta Journal Constitution

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —

A man jumped over several pews at an Albuquerque Catholic church and stabbed several members in the choir area just as Mass was ending Sunday, Albuquerque police said.

According to authorities, Lawrence Capener, 24, walked up to the choir area at St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church and stabbed church-goers just as the choir began singing its final hymn. The man continued his attack until others raced to subdue him, police said.

Four church-goers were injured in the attack but their wounds weren't life-threatening, Albuquerque police spokesman Robert Gibbs aid. Among those stabbed were the church choir director Adam Alvarez, flutist Gerald Madrid and two other parishioners before he was tackled by several other churchgoers, Gibbs said.

All four were being treated at hospitals and listed in stable condition, police said late Sunday.

Three church members also were evaluated by Albuquerque Fire Department on scene and didn't go to the hospital, investigators said.

It was not immediately known what sparked the bizarre attack at the church on the city's Westside. Investigators don't yet know whether Capener had ties to the victims or whether he regularly attended the church, Gibbs said.

Several church members, including an off-duty firefighter and others at the church, held Capener until police arrived.

Madrid told KOB-TV that he tried to stop Capener by placing him in a bear hug but was stabbed in the neck and back.

Police described the stabbing scene as chaotic as parishioners screamed as the attack unfolded.

The choir's pianist, Brenda Baca King, told KRQE-TV that the attacker was looking at the lead soloist. "I just remember seeing him hurdle over the pews, hurdle over people and run (toward) us and I thought, 'Oh my God, this is not good,'" Baca King said.

Capener was interviewed by police and was expected to face felony charges, Gibbs said.

It's not yet known whether Capener has an attorney.

Archbishop of Santa Fe Michael Sheehan released a statement Sunday afternoon saying he was saddened by the attack.

"This is the first time in my 30 years serving as archbishop in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and as Bishop of Lubbock, that anything like this has occurred," Sheehan said. "I pray for all who have been harmed, their families, the parishioners and that nothing like this will ever happen again," Sheehan said.

The church didn't immediately return calls seeking comment on Sunday afternoon.

___

Follow Russell Contreras on Twitter at http://twitter.com/russcontreras


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Another pre-election bombing in Pakistan leaves 6 dead - CNN International

From Aliza Kassim, CNN

updated 4:42 AM EDT, Mon April 29, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • No one immediately claimed responsibility for the Monday attack
  • The Pakistani Taliban took responsibility for blasts that killed 8 on Sunday
  • The group says it is targeting candidates in the upcoming democratic election
  • Pakistani Taliban: "We are not in favor of democracy. Democracy is for Jews and Christians"

(CNN) -- A man in a motorcycle detonated explosives Monday near a police van in northwest Pakistan, killing at least six people and wounding more than 30, police said.

The explosion took place on a busy road in the city of Peshawar. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

It was the latest deadly blast to rattle the country ahead of national elections next month.

On Sunday, at least eight people were killed as the Pakistani Taliban continued to attack candidates in that country's upcoming vote, police said.

In a statement to CNN, the Pakistani Taliban took responsibility for bombings at the offices of candidates in Peshawar and the Orakzai Agency.

Both attacks Sunday targeted independent candidates.

The Taliban said it targeted secular candidates, but many parties have been hit by the increasing violence.

"A man cannot be secular and Muslim at a time. These are two different doctrines in nature," the statement said.

The elections in May will mark the first time in Pakistan's history that one democratically elected government will give way to another.

The nation has experienced three military coups, been ruled by generals for half its life, and it remains mired in near-constant political turmoil.

Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud has told Pakistanis to stay away from the elections.

"We are not in favor of democracy. Democracy is for Jews and Christians," he said in recent propaganda video.

"We want the implementation of Sharia (law), and for that jihad is necessary," he added.

The Pakistani Taliban are closely linked with the group's namesake in Afghanistan as well as with al Qaeda. It shares a similar religious extremist ideology, but is a distinct group that wants to replace the Pakistani government with an Islamist one.

Ali Dayan Hasan, the Pakistan director at Human Rights Watch, called for the country's interim government to provide candidates with as much protection as possible so they can campaign freely without fear.

"Since the end of military rule in 2008, Pakistan's political parties have displayed an impressive commitment to cementing democratic and constitutional rule," Hasan said.

"It would be a tragedy if a combination of militancy and the government's failure to ensure security compromises the election and sets back Pakistan's progress towards regular, free and fair elections in which all Pakistanis can participate."

CNN's Nic Robertson contributed to this report.


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Hearing for Miss. Man in Suspicious... - ABC News

The Mississippi man charged with making and possessing ricin as part of the investigation into poison-laced letters sent to President Barack Obama and others was expected to appear in court Monday.

The arrest of 41-year-old James Everett Dutschke early Saturday capped a week in which investigators initially zeroed in on a rival of Dutschke's, then decided they had the wrong man. The hunt for a suspect revealed ties between the two men and the 80-year-old county judge who, along with Obama and U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, was among the targets of the letters.

Dutschke's house, business and vehicles in Tupelo, Miss., were searched earlier in the week often by crews in hazardous materials suits and he had been under surveillance.

Dutschke (pronounced DUHS'-kee) was charged with "knowingly developing, producing, stockpiling, transferring, acquiring, retaining and possessing a biological agent, toxin and delivery system, for use as a weapon, to wit: ricin." U.S. attorney Felicia Adams and Daniel McMullen, the FBI agent in charge in Mississippi, made the announcement in a news release.

Dutschke's attorney, Lori Nail Basham, said she had no comment on the arrest at his Tupelo home, but earlier had said Dutschke was cooperating fully with investigators and insisted he had nothing to do with the letters. He faces up to life in prison if convicted.

He already had legal problems. Earlier this month, he pleaded not guilty in state court to two child molestation charges involving three girls younger than 16. He also was appealing a conviction on a different charge of indecent exposure. He told The Associated Press last week that his lawyer told him not to comment on those cases.

The letters, which tests showed were tainted with ricin, were sent April 8 to Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Mississippi judge, Sadie Holland.

The first suspect accused by the FBI was Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, an Elvis impersonator. He was arrested on April 17 at his Corinth, Miss., home, but the charges were dropped six days later and Curtis, who says he was framed, was released from jail.

The focus then turned to Dutschke, who has ties to the former suspect, the judge and the senator. Earlier in the week, as investigators searched his primary residence in Tupelo, Dutschke told the AP, "I don't know how much more of this I can take."

"I'm a patriotic American. I don't have any grudges against anybody. ... I did not send the letters," Dutschke said.

Curtis' attorney, Christi McCoy, said Saturday: "We are relieved but also saddened. This crime is nothing short of diabolical. I have seen a lot of meanness in the past two decades, but this stops me in my tracks."

Some of the language in the letters was similar to posts on Curtis' Facebook page and they were signed, "I am KC and I approve this message." Curtis' signoff online was often similar.

And Dutschke and Curtis were acquainted. Curtis said they had talked about possibly publishing a book on a conspiracy that Curtis insists he has uncovered to sell body parts on a black market. But he said they later had a feud.

Curtis' attorneys have said they believe their client was set up. An FBI agent testified that no evidence of ricin was found in searches of Curtis' home. Curtis attorney Hal Neilson said the defense gave authorities a list of people who may have had a reason to hurt Curtis and Dutschke's came up.

Judge Holland also is a common link between the two men, and both know Wicker.

Holland was the presiding judge in a 2004 case in which Curtis was accused of assaulting a Tupelo attorney a year earlier. Holland sentenced him to six months in the county jail. He served only part of the sentence, according to his brother.

And Holland's family has had political skirmishes with Dutschke. Her son, Steve Holland, a Democratic state representative, said he thinks his mother's only other encounter with Dutschke was at a rally in the town of Verona in 2007, when Dutschke ran as a Republican against Steve Holland.

Holland said his mother confronted Dutschke after he made a derogatory speech about the Holland family. She demanded that he apologize, which Holland says he did.

———

Follow Mohr at http://twitter.com/holbrookmohr .


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Aaron Rodgers signs five-year extension worth $110M - USA Today - USA TODAY

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 27 April 2013 | 16.14

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has a reason to smile: a five-year contract extension worth $110 million.(Photo: Benny Sieu, USA TODAY Sports)

Story Highlights

  • Aaron Rodgers' contract extension is worth $22 million annually, higher than the $20.1M annually for Ravens QB Joe Flacco
  • With two years on his old deal, Rodgers' new contract runs through 2019
  • Rodgers is the second Packers player to sign an extension this month, following linebacker Clay Matthews

Now this is a draft weekend to remember for Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

Rodgers signed a five-year contract extension with the Packers on Friday that will make him the highest-paid player in the NFL. Rodgers' contract is worth a total of $110 million, with $40 million to be paid in the first year, a person with knowledge of the contract told USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because terms of the deal were not to be announced.

The $40 million in the first year of Rodgers' extension matches what New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees received last year. The total payout, and average yearly salary, eclipses the contract signed by Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco in March.

BELL: How many draftees will go broke?

"Aaron is a true professional and a special player," Packers general manager Ted Thompson said in a statement. "He works hard, is humble, and is focused on his actions, on and off the field. He is an excellent teammate and pushes himself and others to be the very best. We are happy to reach an agreement and extend his career with the Packers."

Rodgers, who had two years remaining on his previous deal, is under contract through 2019.

After the Packers announced the agreement, Rodgers tweeted: "Thanks to the Organization, coaching staff, teammates, Packer nation for last 8 years! Excited about 7 more!"

It was only eight years ago that Rodgers plummeted to the No. 24 pick in the draft after expecting to be selected early in the first round, perhaps as early as No. 1 overall to the San Francisco 49ers. On Thursday night, Rodgers tweeted a message of support to former West Virginia quarterback Geno Smith, who was not selected in the first round.

"Good things come to those who wait," Rodgers wrote to Smith.

It has worked out that way for Rodgers in Green Bay. Rodgers spent three years sitting behind Brett Favre before becoming the Packers starter in 2008. In the years since, he has led the Packers to a Super Bowl title (and was named the game's MVP) and won a league MVP award.

Rodgers is the second Packer to sign a contract extension this month, joining star linebacker Clay Matthews, who signed an extension to his rookie contract last week. Matthews' deal makes him the highest-paid linebacker and includes $31 million guaranteed.

Tight end Jermichael Finley, who has had a rocky relationship with Rodgers, tweeted: "Congratulations 2 my man ... Frankly, he deserves more, but thank you 4 saving some 4 the rest. Every dinner on u sir! Let's Go."

***

PHOTOS: All 32 first-round picks


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Sarkozy Gave The Obamas $41000 Worth Of Swag - Daily Beast

National Gift Registry: Obama/Sarkozy

AP, Getty (3)

If the U.S. Federal Registry proved one thing when releasing a list of gifts that federal employees received from foreign administrations in 2011, it's that high-ranking politicians command an impressive amount of swag—even if they don't actually get to keep it.

According to a federal registry document issued by the State Department on Friday, President Obama and his family got thousands of dollars worth of gifts from foreign dignitaries. The document, which details all gifts received by United States officials in 2011, is clear to point out that the Obamas didn't keep the swag for themselves because it "would cause embarrassment to donor and U.S. Government."

A large majority of the Obamas's gifts, unsurprisingly, came from former French president Nicolas Sarkozy. By all accounts, the notoriously 'blingy' Sarkozy was the 2011's best political gift-giver—a skill that often involved Hermès. Among the luxury leather goods that the Obamas received from the Sarkozys are a black golf accessory bag (estimated at $7,750), an orange cotton canvas travel case, a beach towel "printed with umbrellas and towels beach scene," and a black golf bag. (Philippe Augier, the mayor of French seaside town Deauville, incidentally, gifted Obama Hermès's own Deauville scarf.)

But Sarkozy's shower of presents didn't stop there. Sarko also gifted the Obamas a "Neo Igor" business bag by Louis Vuitton (estimated at $2,310), a white Lacoste polo shirt, a Christian Dior leather clutch, and -- wait for it -- "His and hers white, belted Dior bathrobes with 'Dior' embroidered on the breast pocket" for the President and the First Lady.

French designer swag aside, Sarkozy also gave Obama something to remind him of home: a plexiglas Tootsie Roll sculpture with an "American flag patterned wrapper." According to the State Department document, when added up, Sarko's gifts to the Obamas amounts to more than $41,000.

But Sarkozy wasn't the only one with a strong – if not slightly obsessive -- sense of brand loyalty. Judging from the list, it seems like German chancellor Angela Merkel is a bonafide Adidas addict. She sent Malia and Sasha a stockpile of goods from the German athletic brand including two pairs of swimming goggles, two mini soccer balls, two t-shirts, a windbreaker, two notebooks, a hooded jacket, and two gym bags -- clocking in at around $557. Sadly, all of it's been shipped straight off to the National Archives, along with the silver 'Links Sweetie Bracelets' David Cameron and wife Samantha sent over, one with an 'S' charm and the other an 'M.'

Obama's cabinet members were in on the action too. Hillary Clinton received no less than three Hermès scarves, each from French, Korean, and Lebanese officials. (The French Republic also gifted her a $2,400 Dior bag.)

But most bizarre is the list's documentation of weird perfume exchanges. Libyan ambassador Ali Aujali gave Chief of Protocol Penavic Marshall a 3.4-ounce bottle of Marc Jacobs's 'Lola' perfume — a scent that comes with rubber flower topper that reminded some of a vagina. We'll try not to look into the sub-context of Afghani government's gift to Bernard E. Mater, a vice air force commander in Afghanistan (they sent over a bottle of Calvin Klein's 'Intense Euphoria' fragrance). But best of all? The Qatari's gift to Air force lieutenant Gilmary M. Hostage. Among the $10,287.13 stockpile of gifts lay Juicy Couture's discontinued men's fragrance, Dirty English.


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For Boston bombing survivor, a life-changing decision - CBS News

(CBS News) BOSTON - As of Friday, there are 29 Boston Marathon bombing victims still being treated in the hospital and one is in critical condition. Many of the wounded have faced a terrible choice between amputation or living with a severely damaged limb. They're called gray zone patients. We met one and the doctor who helped her make a decision.

Following her injury from the Boston Marathon blast, Heather Abbott is considered a gray zone patient: facing a choice between saving a limb or amputation.

/ CBS News

The force of the second explosion blew Heather Abbott into a Boylston Street bar.

"My foot felt like it was on fire and I wouldn't look at it, though," she said, not wanting to know how badly injured she was.

But it was Dr. Eric Bluman's job to tell her. He is an orthopedic surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital.

"It was extensively damaged," Bluman said of Abbott's foot. "Bone, joint, cartilage, ligament -- there was wholesale loss in each of those."

Abbot was given a choice: live with severe pain and limited use of her foot -- or amputation.

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How difficult is it for Bluman to tell someone that they are going to lose a limb? "I think that happens fairly rarely that we tell them that there is no way we can save this limb. Much more frequently, it's a decision-making process that we go through."

Dr. Eric Bluman is an orthopedic surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital who described Heather Abbott's injured foot.

/ CBS News

While the first priority is to save the person's life, the second one may be giving him or her the best possible life. "Sometimes saving the limb is the best choice, and other times it's not," said Bluman.

According to Abbott, Bluman told her she could decide to keep the foot, but she would not be able to use it.

"I think that when he told me the reality of the damage, I certainly didn't want to," she said. "But to know that I wouldn't be able to do any of the things that I love to do for the rest of my life -- I'm 38, so I hopefully I'm going to be around for a while -- I think I would have a miserable life. I don't think I would be happy with that at all."

Abbott will be fitted with a prosthetic leg next month. She hopes to return to the aerobics and jogging she loves by the fall.


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Economy grew at 2.5 percent in 1st quarter, amping fears of a stalled recovery - Washington Post

A steep slowdown in defense spending tied to the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan is undercutting the country's economic recovery, new government data released Friday revealed.

The report showed gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of 2.5 percent during the first three months of the year — significantly slower than most economists had expected. The culprit? A surprising 11.5 percent annualized drop-off in military spending.

The decline comes on the heels of an even bigger plunge in defense spending at the end of last year that brought economic growth to a standstill. Taken together, the two quarters represent the steepest declines in military outlays since the Korean War, according to JPMorgan Chase economist Michael Feroli.

The GDP report amounts to a caution about the looming consequences of federal spending cuts known as the sequester. The cuts officially began in March but could take months — or even years — to fully digest. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the sequester will shave nearly half a percentage point from economic growth this year, delaying projections for economic liftoff to 2014.

"The longer-running story has not changed, as the economy remains mired in the pattern of slow and uneven growth seen since the end of the Great Recession," said Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Bank.

Consider just the past year of the recovery. Last spring, the economy was treading water before the pace of growth picked up to more than 3 percent at an annual rate over the summer. But hopes for a sustainable recovery dissipated by the end of the year when economic growth stalled.

The bounce-back this year has been weaker than expected by many analysts, who have already begun warning that any momentum that had built up has likely already cooled. Economists forecast that the growth rate during the second quarter will be an anemic 1 to 2 percent.

Even the good news in the GDP report came tempered with caveats: The biggest single driver of growth during the first quarter was a surge in business inventories, contributing about one percentage point of growth. But economist Ben Herzon of Macroeconomic Advisers noted that most of that stockpiling was done in January.

Consumer spending was also strong during the first quarter, rising 3.2 percent. Analysts have attributed the jump to the large number of bonuses paid late last year to avoid the bite of higher taxes this year. Consumers spent that extra money in the first quarter, but that boost will disappear over the year. In fact, some data suggest households are already beginning to draw back as higher payroll taxes squeeze paychecks.

Meanwhile, defense spending has been a drag on growth for the past two years. A decade after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2011, America officially ended the war in Iraq and killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. President Obama also announced in 2011 a timeline for withdrawing from Afghanistan.

That shift in foreign policy is still trickling through the real economy. Compensation for military and civilian employees working in defense have fallen every quarter since 2012. Major contractors such as Lockheed Martin have laid off or bought out hundreds of employees, including top executives, and consolidated facilities in recent years.

Defense procurement reached its height in 2008 at nearly $400 billion for the year, and it has fallen steadily since. Last year, contract awards dropped 15 percent below the peak, after adjusting for inflation.

But many of those contracts are for complex weapons and machinery that can take years to build. The GDP report does not count them as government purchases until they are actually delivered. In other words, much of the slowdown in contract awards is only now showing up as a decline in government spending.

That also means the Pentagon's $500 billion in budget cuts required by the sequester could hold back GDP growth for years to come.

"If you're looking at earnings of defense companies, you're not going to see a hit on that for a while as a result of sequestration," said Todd Harrison, a senior fellow in defense budget studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.

Fairfax-based ManTech International is a prime example of the effect of wartime spending reductions. The contractor depended heavily on battlefield work and has seen significant financial declines. Its 2012 profit of $95 million was down nearly 30 percent from 2011.

Now the company is also facing cuts from sequestration. In an earnings call in February, as the deadline for implementation loomed, top executives highlighted the uncertainty of its impact on their bottom line.

"Nobody has a crystal ball on what's going to happen with sequestration," Chief Financial Officer Kevin M. Phillips said. "We're taking a conservative view based on the uncertainty. . . . Does it cover the worst-case scenario? There's no ability to tell right now."

Jim Tankersley contributed to this report.


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'Part of 9/11 plane landing gear' found in New York - BBC News

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Sarabjit Singh continues to be in coma and on ventilator support - Times of India

NEW DELHI: Indian death row prisoner in Pakistan, Sarabjit Singh, who was admitted to a Lahore hospital after an attack on him at Kot Lakhpat jail, continues to be in coma and on ventilator support, officials said on Saturday.

"Doctors attending to Sarabjit Singh informed Indian officials that he is in coma, on ventilator and receiving in-vitro drip," external affairs ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said on twitter.

Singh was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of Lahore's Jinnah Hospital after the murderous attack on him by fellow prisoners on Friday afternoon. He reportedly suffered critical head injuries in the assault. He was attacked with bricks, sharp objects and plates.

According to doctors, Sarabjit Singh is responding to some stimuli at times.

"The officials of India's High Commission at Jinnah Hospital in Lahore are in regular contact with medical board attending to Sarabjit Singh," Akbaruddin said.

The medical board has been constituted at the hospital.

"X-rays, MRI, CT scans (have been) done on Sarabjit Singh. (The) doctors (are) carrying out trauma control and await stabilisation in condition before further tests," he said.

The reason behind the assault was not immediately known. Doctors are battling to save his life, said an official of India's external affairs ministry. Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad have been granted consular access.

The assault on Sarabjit Singh comes a few months after the death of Indian prisoner Chamel Singh in the same Kot Lakhpat jail after he was allegedly assaulted by the jail staffers.

Sarabjit Singh has been on death row in Pakistan since 1990 after being convicted by Pakistani courts for bomb blasts in Lahore and Multan, which left 14 people dead. Sarabjit's family claims that he had inadvertently crossed into Pakistan in August 1990 in an inebriated state and was arrested there.

But police in Pakistan claimed Sarabjit Singh was involved in acts of terrorism.


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Baghdad car bomb kills at least seven: officials - AFP

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 April 2013 | 16.14

Baghdad car bomb kills at least seven: officials

(AFP) – 16 hours ago 

BAGHDAD — A car bomb in the Iraqi capital killed at least seven people and wounded 23 on Wednesday, security and medical officials said.

The bomb exploded in a mobile phone market in Al-Husseiniyah in east Baghdad, they said, bringing the toll since Tuesday from a country-wide wave of violence to 125 dead and 268 wounded.

Violence in Iraq has fallen significantly from its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common, killing 271 people last month, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.

Copyright © 2013 AFP. All rights reserved. More »


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Obama's Brilliant Method for Stopping His Daughters From Getting Tattoos - New York Magazine

Barack Obama demonstrated the fine art of parental jujitsu today, in an interview with the Today show's Savannah Guthrie. Asked whether his daughters think he's uncool, Obama noted,

Michelle and I have used this strategy when it comes to things like tattoos. What we've said to the girls is, if you guys ever decide you're going to get a tattoo, then Mommy and me will get the exact same tattoo, in the same place, and we'll go on YouTube and show it off as a family tattoo.

The parental shame slingshot. Works every time.


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2nd Miss. man investigated in ricin case - WHLT22

OXFORD, Miss. (AP) - A second Mississippi man investigated in connection to ricin-laced letters sent to the president and a U.S. senator says that investigators ripped through his house during an hours-long search.

Authorities descended on the home of 41-year-old Everett Dutschke in Tupelo, Miss., on Tuesday. On Wednesday, they searched the site of a martial arts studio once operated by Dutschke, who hasn't been arrested or charged.

Dozens of investigators were searching at a small retail space where neighboring business owners said Dutschke used to operate a martial arts studio. Officers at the scene wouldn't comment on what they were doing.

Dutschke's attorney, Lori Nail Basham, said Dutschke is "cooperating fully" with investigators.

Dutschke said Tuesday morning that authorities had torn through his house the previous day and that they went to a friend's to rest.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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The FAA furloughed air traffic controllers this week, causing widespread delays ... - Politico

Aeroflot passengers with their baggage wait to check in for a flight at the Tom Bradley International Terminal at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), California April 24, 2013. | Reuters

The FAA furloughed air traffic controllers this week, causing widespread delays, the author writes. | Reuters

The air traffic controller furloughs are the White House tours of the sky.

From time immemorial, a government that doesn't want to tighten its fiscal belt finds high-profile ways to inconvenience the public in the hopes of turning it against spending cuts. In keeping with this tried-and-true so-called Washington Monument strategy, the White House canceled tours in the immediate aftermath of sequestration. In an escalation, the Federal Aviation Administration furloughed air traffic controllers this week, causing widespread flight delays.

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Somehow, the Obama administration managed to find the federal employees perhaps most essential to the nation's transportation and commerce, and send them home. It found one of the few categories of federal workers that operate something, and cut it. It found a way to make one of the most aggravating aspects of modern American life, air travel, even more aggravating.

On Monday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rushed to the Senate floor to say that, "In airports across the country, millions of Americans will get their first taste of the pain of sequestration." He then plugged for a budgetary gimmick to cancel most of sequestration, so spending can resume as usual. Reid knows the script of the Washington Monument strategy very well.

The head of the FAA, Michael Huerta, says he has no choice but to disrupt the nation's aviation in implementing the sequestration. He has to find $600 million in cuts in an agency with a $15 billion budget within a Transportation Department with a $70 billion budget. Only 15,000 of the FAA's 47,000 employees are air traffic controllers. Yet he is furloughing controllers such that on Monday more than 1,000 flights were delayed.

The furloughs hit all airports equally, no matter how busy they are, or how central they are to the system. As far as the FAA is concerned, the Chicago Air Route Traffic Control Center, with more than 8,000 takeoffs and landings a day, is the just the same as Waterloo Regional Airport in Iowa, with fewer than 80.

The FAA should be able to manage with a little less. Its operations budget has doubled since 1996. The agency got along just fine in 2007, even though it had fewer controllers than today and less money, while handling more air traffic. Even with sequestration, the FAA overall has slightly more funding than under President Barack Obama's 2013 budget request.

In 1986, the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings automatic deficit-reduction law, the model for today's sequestration, went into effect, mandating a cut of more than 4 percent at the FAA. Yet no controllers were furloughed. In past budget showdowns, air traffic controllers have been considered essential employees.

As Sen. Tom Coburn has pointed out in letters to Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, "The FAA employs a variety of lawyers, public affairs specialists, speechwriters, administrative staff, congressional affairs staff, community players, management and program assistants, and other employees that aren't immediately critical to FAA's mission." Why can't they disproportionately contribute to the savings of sequestration? The operations account where the sequestration cuts largely fall also has $2.7 billion in non-personnel costs.


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3 hurt as fuel barges explode, catch fire on Mobile River in Alabama - Fox News

  • April 24, 2013: Fire burns aboard two fuel barges along the Mobile River after explosions sent three workers to the hospital.AP

  • April 24, 2013: Fire burns aboard two fuel barges along Mobile River after explosions sent three workers to the hospital.AP

MOBILE, Ala. –  large fire that began with explosions aboard two fuel barges in Mobile, Ala., was rocked by a seventh explosion early Thursday and fire officials said they planned to let the fire, which has injured three, burn overnight.

Firefighters from Mobile and U.S. Coast Guard officials responded after 8:30 p.m. CDT Wednesday to a pair of explosions involving the gas barges in an area of the Mobile River east of downtown, authorities said.

As they were responding, a third explosion occurred around 9:30 p.m., Mobile Fire and Rescue spokesman Steve Huffman wrote in an email to The Associated Press. Additional explosions followed over the next few hours.

The Coast Guard said early Thursday that a one-nautical-mile safety zone had been established around one barge, which it said was "at the dock for cleaning."

Authorities said three people were transported to University of South Alabama Medical Center after suffering burn-related injuries. Huffman identified them as workers with Oil Recovery Co. The three were in critical condition early Thursday, according to hospital nursing administrator Danny Whatley.

Across the river, the Carnival Triumph, the cruise ship that became disabled in the Gulf of Mexico last February before it was towed to Mobile's port, was evacuated, said Alan Waugh, who lives at the Fort Conde Inn in downtown Mobile, across the river from the scene of the explosions. Waugh saw the blasts and said throngs of Carnival employees and others were clustered on streets leading toward the river as authorities evacuated the shipyard.

"It literally sounded like bombs going off around. The sky just lit up in orange and red," he said, "We could smell something in the air, we didn't know if it was gas or smoke." Waugh said he could feel the heat from the explosion and when he came back inside, his partner noticed he had what appeared to be black soot on his face.

U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Carlos Vega said the initial blast took place in a ship channel near the George C. Wallace Tunnel -- which carries traffic from Interstate 10 under the Mobile River. The river runs south past Mobile and into Mobile Bay, which in turn flows into the Gulf of Mexico.

Video from WALA-TV showed flames engulfing a large section of the barge, and a video that a bystander sent to AL.com showed the fiery explosions and billowing smoke over the river.

The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear, Huffman and Vega said.

"Once (the fire) is out and safe, a full investigation will take place," Huffman wrote.

Mobile Fire Chief Steve Dean told AL.com he was confident the fire wouldn't spread to nearby industrial properties, including the shipyard where the Carnival cruise ship is docked.

Huffman said the ship is directly across the river from the incident -- about two football fields in length.

The barges are owned by Houston-based Kirby Inland Marine, company spokesman Greg Beuerman said. He said the barges were empty and being cleaned at the Oil Recovery Co. facility when the incident began. He said the barges had been carrying a liquid called natural gasoline -- which he said is neither liquefied natural gas or natural gas. He said the company has dispatched a team to work with investigators to determine what caused the fire.

The explosion comes two months after the 900-foot-long Carnival Triumph was towed to Mobile after becoming disabled on the Gulf during a cruise by an engine room fire, leaving thousands of passengers to endure cold food, unsanitary conditions and power outages for several days. The ship is still undergoing repairs there, with many workers living on board.

Carnival didn't immediately respond to an emailed request for comment late Wednesday.

Earlier this month, the cruise ship was dislodged from its mooring by a windstorm that also caused, in a separate incident, two shipyard workers to fall into Mobile Bay. While one worker was rescued, the other's body was pulled from the water more than a week later.


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Frantic search for survivors after Dhaka building collapse - BBC News

25 April 2013 Last updated at 04:59 ET
Bangladeshi rescuers squeeze through a gap to help pull out survivors spotted in the debris of a building that collapsed in Savar, near Dhaka

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The BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan reports: "Just a day before this incident there were complaints about cracks on the wall and also on some of the pillars"

A frantic search for survivors is continuing at a building outside the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, which collapsed, killing at least 175 people.

Rescue workers are working with volunteers to free survivors still believed to be trapped inside.

Tens of thousands of weeping family members are gathered at the site.

Police said the factory owners had ignored warnings not to allow their workers into the building after cracks were noticed on Tuesday.

The owners are now said to have gone into hiding.

The exact number of those trapped is not clear, but accounts from survivors and eyewitnesses suggest there may be hundreds still unaccounted for.

The disaster has prompted questions over Bangladesh's chronically poor safety standards.

Bangladesh has one of the largest garment industries in the world, providing cheap clothing for major Western retailers which benefit from its widespread low-cost labour.

Continue reading the main story

At the scene

Grieving relatives have been anxiously waiting outside the collapsed building in Savar. Rescue teams have been working frantically using concrete cutters and cranes digging through the rubble to pull people out.

It is still not clear how many people are trapped inside, although local media say there are hundreds. A doctor at the local hospital told the BBC that their services had been stretched.

The reason for the collapse is not yet known. The latest incident has once again raised questions about safety standards in the country's thriving garments industry. However, factory owners say safety standards have improved significantly in recent years.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has announced a national day of mourning on Thursday in memory of the victims.

Officials said the death toll had risen to 160 by late on Thursday morning, from an overnight figure of about 100 - and they warn it may rise still further.

'Like a pancake'

Some 2,000 people were in the Rana Plaza building in Savar, some 30km (20 miles) outside Dhaka, when it collapsed suddenly on Wednesday morning.

Fire-fighters and soldiers joined volunteers in the effort to locate survivors in the mangled wreckage of concrete and steel.

On Thursday, Army Brig Gen Mohammed Siddiqul Alam Shikder said many people were still trapped in the building.

Rescue workers and volunteers have been using heavy machinery and their bare hands to free survivors.

A clearer picture of the rescue operation would be available by afternoon, he said.

Trapped workers can be heard inside the rubble, screaming for help. Food and water is being passed to survivors through gaps in the the rubble.

Lengths of textile that were earlier being cut into garments - many destined for Western consumers - were now being used as makeshift slides to evacuate survivors and corpses.

Mosammat Khursida wailed as she looked for her husband, AP reported.

Continue reading the main story

History of accidents in Bangladesh

  • Nov 2012 - More than 100 workers die in a fire at a factory in Dhaka
  • March 2012 - More than 100 people die as a ferry collides with an oil tanker and sinks
  • June 2010 - Four-storey building in Dhaka caves in, killing at least 25 people
  • April 2005 Another garment factory collapses in Savar, killing 73 people
  • May 2002 - Up to 500 people die when a river ferry sinks during a storm

"He came to work in the morning. I can't find him," she said. "I don't know where he is. He does not pick up his phone."

Lines of relatives filed by numbered bodies of victims, looking for their family members.

Local hospitals were overwhelmed with more than 1,000 people injured.

Survivors said the building had collapsed suddenly, without warning.

"It became completely dark on this side," a witness said. "There was a lot of dust from the collapsing debris, so we ran downstairs. When we came out we saw the whole building collapsed."

Only the ground floor of the building remained intact, officials said.

"The whole building collapsed like a pancake within minutes. Most workers did not have any chance to escape," national fire department chief Ahmed Ali told AFP news agency.

Factory worker

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Bangladeshi factory worker: "In one minute everything collapsed"

Speaking at the scene, Home Minister Muhiuddin Khan Alamgir said the building had violated construction codes and "the culprits would be punished".

There are reports that the building owner had illegally added three extra stories to the building.

'Catch-22'

In November, a fire at a garment factory in the Dhaka suburb of Tazreen drew international attention to working conditions in Bangladesh's textile industry.

Primark, a clothes retailer with a large presence in Britain, confirmed that one of its suppliers was on the second floor of the Rana Plaza.

It said it was "shocked and deeply saddened by the appalling incident" and that it would work with other retailers to review standards.

Discount giant Wal-Mart - which was found to be sourcing products from the Tazreen factory - said it was still trying to establish whether its goods were being produced at the Rana Plaza.

"We remain committed and are actively engaged in promoting stronger safety measures, and that work continues,'' said Wal-Mart spokesman Kevin Gardner.

A company called New Wave, with two factories in the building, supplies firms from around Europe, the US and Canada.

Meanwhile, Spanish retailer Mango said it had not been using any of the suppliers in the building but had been in talks with one of them to produce a batch of test products.

Edward Hertzman, a textiles broker based in New York, told Reuters news agency that pressure from US retailers to keep costs down was in part responsible for unsafe conditions.

"Bangladesh is the longest lead-time country and a difficult country to work in, so the only way it becomes competitive is by offering the lowest [cost]. That's the catch-22," he said.

"If the factories want to raise prices to make up for rising wages and costs, the buyers say, 'Oh why do we want to go to Bangladesh if I could go to China, Pakistan, Cambodia etc for a similar price?"

He said if Western companies really wanted safety standards to improve, they would have to accept that they need to start paying higher prices.


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Petraeus to Join CUNY as Visiting Professor - New York Times

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 April 2013 | 16.14

David H. Petraeus, who resigned as director of the Central Intelligence Agency last November after having an extramarital affair with his biographer, will serve as a visiting professor at the City University of New York next academic year, the university announced on Tuesday.

Reed Saxon/Associated Press

David H. Petraeus has accepted a one-year position.

Mr. Petraeus, who will be the next visiting professor of public policy at the university's Macaulay Honors College, had been approached by many universities, but settled on CUNY because he admires its diversity of students, locations and offerings, his lawyer, Robert Barnett, said in an interview.

In a statement, Mr. Petraeus said he looked forward to leading a seminar "that examines the developments that could position the United States — and our North American partners — to lead the world out of the current global economic slowdown."

The idea, Ann Kirschner, dean of Macaulay, said in an interview, "is an interdisciplinary seminar in keeping with his research interest in energy, advanced manufacturing, life sciences and information technology."

In addition, she said, he will give talks and meet with students about their research projects. "We're still figuring out how much time he'll be available to us and how to get him as involved as possible in the life of the college," she said. His compensation for the one-year position, which begins in August, is "still in discussion," she said.

Matthew Goldstein, chancellor of the CUNY system, said in a statement that "with his appointment, our students will have a unique opportunity to learn about public policy firsthand from a distinguished leader with extraordinary experience and expertise in international security issues, intelligence matters and nation-building."

Mr. Petraeus, a highly decorated four-star general who commanded the coalition forces in Afghanistan and Iraq, is far better known for his accomplishments on foreign battlefields than for his time in classrooms, but he graduated in the top 5 percent of his class at the United States Military Academy, then went on to be the top graduate of the United States Army Command and General Staff College.

He earned a master's degree from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, taught at the United States Military Academy and held a fellowship at Georgetown University. While he was still C.I.A. director, his supporters speculated that he might even be named the next president of Princeton.

Many of his accomplishments were detailed in "All In: The Education of General David Petraeus," the best-selling biography by Paula Broadwell. His personal relationship with her came to light last November, and he resigned shortly afterward.


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30 years later, nation remains at educational risk - WMBF

By PHILIP ELLIOTT
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. students are falling behind their international rivals. Young people aren't adept at new technology. America's economy will suffer if schools don't step up their game.

"A Nation at Risk," the report issued 30 years ago by President Ronald Reagan's Education Department, was meant as a wake-up call for the country. It spelled out where the United States was coming up short in education and what steps could be taken to avert a crisis.

But its warnings still reverberate today, with 1 in 4 Americans failing to earn a high school degree on time and the U.S. lagging other countries in the percentage of young people who complete college.

"A Nation at Risk" spooked the public, urged an overhaul of how and what children are taught and sparked the school reform movement in the country. Current reform advocates such Michelle Rhee, the former District of Columbia schools chancellor, and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush can trace their work back to the report.

"We opened the genie from the bottle and said, 'You aren't doing so well,'" said Xavier University of Louisiana President Norman C. Francis, a member of the commission that produced the dire warning. "For us, we felt good about the fact that we wrote something that needed to be said. We had the research. And we hoped we would have a greater measure of return."

At times, President Barack Obama has seemed to take his cues from the report.

"What is at stake is nothing less than the American dream," he said in 2009, calling for education overhaul to keep pace with other counties.

"Despite resources that are unmatched anywhere in the world, we have let our grades slip, our schools crumble, our teacher quality fall short and other nations outpace us," he said.

Russ Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution and a former senior Education Department official, calls the report prescient. "The themes that it stressed - the increasing role of technology, globalization - is now the everyday stuff of education. But it wasn't at the time."

"I can't think of anything that painted with quite as broad a stroke as 'A Nation at Risk,'" he added.

Its impact, however, was not as broad.

The commissioners urged extending the school year from 180 days to up to 220 days. The report also suggested an 11-month contract for teachers so they could spend their summers preparing for the next year. Neither recommendation has been put into widespread use.

The commissioners also said teacher salaries should be increased to be "professionally competitive." Again, there hasn't been near the movement commissioners sought. In today's dollars, the average teacher earned $46,700 in 1983 and $54,900 in 2010, according to the Education Department.

But some of the commission's other recommendations were put into practice, including a more rigorous curriculum. For instance, students graduating in 1982 had an average of 2.2 science credits on their transcripts. In 2009, that average number rose to 3.5 credits.

And the class of 1982 left high school with 2.6 math credits, compared with the 2009 graduates' 3.9 credits, according to Education Department data.

"The results are mixed," said William Bennett, who served as Reagan's second-term education secretary. "We have progress being paid to the right things: content, accountability. ... It was right about how we needed to beef up courses and how we needed to be stronger."

But when Bennett compares U.S. results with those of other nations, there's no reason to celebrate.

"If you look at those numbers, you get the story for 30 years," he said. "If there's a bottom line, it's that we're spending twice as much money on education as we did in '83 and the results haven't changed all that much."

American fourth-graders are 11th in the world in math in the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, the measure of nations against each other. U.S. eighth-graders ranked ninth in math, according to those 2011 results.

The Program for International Student Assessment measurement found the United States ranked 31st in math literacy among 15-year-old students and below the international average. The same 2009 tests found the United States ranked 23rd in science among the same students, but posting an average score.

It's impossible to compare the rankings before 1995, when these international math and science tests were first given. The first international math literacy and science tests were given in 2001.

Yet domestic tests show there have not been major changes in students' scores.

Between 1980 and 2008, 13-year-old students posted only a 2-point gain in reading scores and 17-year-old students saw just a 1-point gain during that time. The tests were scored on a scale of 0 to 500, meaning the change was statistically insignificant.

Similarly, 13-year-olds saw a 12-point gain in math scores between 1982 and 2008. Seventeen-year-old students saw an 8-point gain during the same time on math scores. Again, the tests followed a scale of 0 to 500.

"We haven't yet gotten near the payoff that we want and need in terms of achievement in 30 years," said Chester Finn, a former senior Education Department official who now heads the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative think tank.

"The fact that 30 years later, despite all of the reforming, the gains are so modest, they ought to serve to energize and even panic today's policymakers," he said.

Of course, stagnant scores don't automatically mean stagnant learning; higher standards could yield lower scores.

Domestic measurements comparing U.S. students to one another are relatively new and tests aren't given every year. Also, tracing changes isn't as simple as looking at the United States' standing compared with other countries today.

What is clear is that "A Nation at Risk" cast the United States as on the precipice of collapse, not unlike the warnings that followed the Soviet Union's 1957 launch of the Sputnik satellite, which caught Americans by surprise.

While other education studies urged action, none was as intentionally alarming as this one.

"If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war," the commissioners wrote. "As it stands, we have allowed this to happen to ourselves. ... We have, in effect, been committing an act of unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament."

In a brisk 36 pages, the authors warned that schools were not preparing students for their future and cautioned that the country would suffer. In some ways, the same warnings have appeared in most reports on education in the last decades.

The report continued, "The educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and a people."

Last year, another commission borrowed that indictment of mediocrity in similar language.

"The sad fact is that the rising tide of mediocrity is not something that belongs in history books," concluded a Council on Foreign Relations panel led by former New York City schools chief Joel Klein and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

When the Reagan-era commission began its work, no one expected the report to be so critical. In fact, Reagan campaigned for president on a pledge to dismantle the same Education Department that convened these leaders.

Instead, the commissioners brought together experts and original research to make the case for an expanded role for education. They wrote a document that Reagan eventually would wrap himself in, travel the country to promote and use as a rhetorical prop during the final decade of the Cold War.

"This was much more a political document. ... A lot of this was just bombastic, plug-and-play rhetoric," said Frederick Hess, director of education policy at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

Where it excelled at language, it came up short on specifics, he said.

The data the commissioners used to reach their conclusions and recommendations 30 years ago pale in comparison to what researchers today have. The report sparked volumes of tests and rankings now common to measure students.

"Gosh, I think they got the message right, but the facts weren't strong enough to back them up," said Whitehurst, the Brookings scholar who was the first chief of the Education Department's current research arm. "A report trying to draw the same conclusions today would have more research."

Even so, the report has its place in history.

"It's been the most influential report on education in my lifetime. It was so blunt," said Michael Rebell, a professor of law and education at Columbia University's Teachers College. "It gave us the whole standards movement."

Francis, a member of the original commission, said the report should have scared Americans into much more sweeping action.

"We were saying in 1983, 'This is a global society emerging and you need to worry about this now,'" he said.

Yet, despite the urgency, the report yielded no significant legislation and many of the problems it identified have not been solved.

"I still think we made a contribution," Francis said. "But maybe it could have been much more. But you never look back."

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Local government says 21 killed in clashes cited as 'terrorism' violence in ... - Washington Post

BEIJING — Local government says 21 killed in clashes cited as 'terrorism' violence in western China.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Justice Says Armstrong Was 'Unjustly Enriched' - ABC News

The federal government is going after Lance Armstrong's money. As much as it can get.

The Justice Department unveiled its formal complaint against Armstrong on Tuesday, saying the cyclist violated his contract with the U.S. Postal Service and was "unjustly enriched" while cheating to win the Tour de France.

The government had previously announced it would join a whistle-blower lawsuit brought by former Armstrong teammate Floyd Landis under the federal False Claims Act. Tuesday was the deadline to file its formal complaint.

The Postal Service paid about $40 million to be the title sponsor of Armstrong's teams for six of his seven Tour de France victories. The filing in U.S. district court in Washington, D.C., says the USPS paid Armstrong $17 million from 1998-2004.

The lawsuit also names former team Armstrong team director Johan Bruyneel and team management company Tailwind Sports as defendants.

"Defendants were unjustly enriched to the extent of the payments and other benefits they received from the USPS, either directly or indirectly," the complaint said.

The financial costs for Armstrong and Bruyneel could be high. The government said it would seek triple damages assessed by the jury. Armstrong has been dropped by his personal sponsors and left the cancer-fighting foundation he started in 1997.

Armstrong had previously tried to negotiate a settlement, but those talks fell through before the government announced it would join the Landis lawsuit. Settlement talks could resume as the case proceeds to trial.

Armstrong, who in January admitted using performance-enhancing drugs after years of denials, has argued that the Postal Service's endorsement of his team earned the government agency far more than it paid him.

Armstrong attorney Elliot Peters called the government's complaint "opportunistic" and "insincere."

"The U.S. Postal Service benefited tremendously from its sponsorship of the cycling team. Its own studies repeatedly and conclusively prove this," Peters said. "The USPS was never the victim of fraud. Lance Armstrong rode his heart out for the USPS team, and gave the brand tremendous exposure during the sponsorship years."

The government must prove not only that the Postal Service was defrauded, but that it was damaged somehow.

Previous studies done for the Postal Service concluded the agency reaped at least $139 million in worldwide brand exposure in four years — $35 million to $40 million for sponsoring the Armstrong team in 2001; $38 million to $42 million in 2002; $31 million in 2003; and $34.6 million in 2004.

Landis attorney Paul Scott dismissed the idea that money gained by the Postal Service should negate the claims of fraud. Scott the Postal Service is tainted by the drug scandal.

"Even if the USPS received some ephemeral media exposure in connection with Mr. Armstrong's false victories, any illusory benefit from those times will be swamped over time immemorial by the USPS forever being tied to the largest doping scandal in the history of sports," Scott said.

The formal complaint against Armstrong appears to rely heavily on evidence and statements supplied by Landis and gathered by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for its 2012 investigation that exposed a doping program on the USPS team. Armstrong has been banned from sports for life and stripped of his seven Tour de France victories.


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Australian LulzSec hacker arrested - Sydney Morning Herald

Matthew Flannery.

Accused: Matthew Flannery. Photo: Facebook

Australian police have arrested IT security professional and self-proclaimed leader of an international hacking ring Matthew Flannery after he allegedly infiltrated a government website this month.

The 24-year-old man, from Point Clare on the NSW central coast, claims to be a leader of the international hacking group LulzSec.

LulzSec, an abbreviation of ''lulz'' (laughs) and security, was formed in 2011. The group has claimed responsibility for multiple high-profile cyber attacks, including against Sony, Rupert Murdoch's News International, the CIA and other government organisations. They are also associated with prominent international hacking group Anonymous.

Matthew Flannery.

Matthew Flannery. Photo: Facebook

Flannery, known online as Aush0k, is a "well-informed" IT professional who worked for Sydney-based firm Content Security. The company said he was a recent hire and has been dismissed since being arrested on Tuesday evening, and no longer has access to Content Security's building or computer system.

The AFP said Flannery had access to sensitive information from clients that included government agencies.

But the company has denied this. "Flannery did not and does not have access to any customer information that was or could have been used to carry out any malicious activity or compromise systems," it said in a statement.

"LulzSec hackers are allegedly part of a loose confederation of computer saboteurs known as Anonymous".

The Lulzsec logo.

Content Security said that although Flannery had undergone thorough background checks during his employment, the company was in the process of retraining an independent company to audit their employment process.

"He is a well-respected person within the Anonymous community, within LulzSec and that side of the house, but he has also worked in the IT professional field," said Brad Marden, co-ordinator for cyber crime operations at the AFP.

Police say Flannery used information gathered from his workplace to gain access to and deface a government website from his computer, which has been seized by police. Police would not confirm details of the hack or the website, but said that it was not a federal government site.

"He took advantage of a commonly known exploit to access the [website], and then put a back door in so that he could gain further access to the website and also posted other things on that website", said Superintendent Marden.

Flannery is not thought to have accessed personal private information stored on the site.

"We are not dealing with small petty crime here," said Commander Glen McEwen, manager of cyber crime operations at the AFP. "The potential for such access has huge ramifications for society.

"The potential for damage is immeasurable. This is not harmless fun. This is serious."

Flannery appears to have been working alone, police said, but has been involved with LulzSec for some time, and his multiple claims to be a figurehead of the group did not go unchallenged by other members of the online community.

Flannery's LinkedIn profile claims that he works for security firm Tenable Network Security, but the company has denied this. "Matt Flannery is not and has never been an employee of Tenable Network Security," chief research officer Renaud Deraison told Fairfax Media.

"We're in touch with LinkedIn to have this misrepresentation of Mr Flannery's employment record corrected on his profile."

Police said his arrest at work on Tuesday evening in Sydney was the first by the AFP of a LulzSec member.

In the United States last week, LulzSec hacker Cody Kretsinger, 25, who pleaded guilty last year to a computer breach of Sony Pictures Entertainment, was sentenced to one year in prison and community service.

In April, British LulzSec hacker Ryan Ackroyd, 26, pleaded guilty to cyber attacks on Sony, Nintendo, News International and the Arizona State Police.

The AFP said they discovered the man's online activities less than two weeks ago, as part of investigations into cyber crime. He is allegedly known to international law enforcement agencies.

Flannery was released on bail on Tuesday evening. A spokesman for NSW Local Courts confirmed to IT Pro he will face court on May 15 on charges of unauthorised access and modification to restricted data.

Got a tip? Email scoop@smh.com.au

The AFP advised IT businesses to:

  • Provide employee awareness and education programs;
  • Monitor content going into and out of networks;
  • Implement acceptable use policies for wireless technology, information technology and mobile devices;
  • Complete background checks on staff;
  • Conduct mandatory reporting of misuse and abuse of computer equipment;
  • Complete a set of written standard operating procedures for technology;
  • Manage account and password policies.

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At least 70 dead in Bangladesh building collapse - USA Today - USA TODAY

Bangladeshi volunteers prepare lengths of textiles to be used as evacuation slides for the injured and dead after a building collapsed in Savar.(Photo: Munir Uz Zaman, AFP/Getty Images)

Story Highlights

  • 600 survivors were rescued
  • The incident took place at a garment factory near Bangladesh%u2019s capital
  • The factory made clothes for Wal-Mart, Disney and other brands

SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) — An eight-story building housing several garment factories collapsed near Bangladesh's capital Wednesday morning, killing at least 70 people and trapping many more in the rubble, officials said.

Tens of thousands of people gathered at the site, some of them weeping survivors, some searching for family members. The collapse stirred memories of a fatal fire at a garment factory in November that killed 112 people and raised an outcry about safety in the nation's garment industry.

Health Minister A.F.M. Ruhal Haque said that by Wednesday afternoon 70 people had been confirmed dead in Wednesday's collapse at the building in the Dhaka suburb of Savar. Brig. Gen. Mohammed Siddiqul Alam Shikder said another 600 survivors had been rescued.

Reports indicated the death toll could rise.

"We had sent two people inside the building and we could rescue at least 20 people alive. They also told us that at least 100 to 150 people are injured and about 50 dead people are still trapped inside this floor," said Mohammad Humayun, a supervisor at one of the garment factories.

The collapse happened about 8:30 a.m. and since garment factories in the area routinely work 24 hours a day, it appeared likely that the four housed in the building were staffed at the time.

Firefighters and soldiers using drilling machines and cranes worked together with local volunteers in the search for other survivors from the building, which pancaked onto itself and stood only about two stories tall.

The November fire at the Tazreen garment factory drew international attention to the conditions workers toil under in the $20 billion-a-year textile industry in Bangladesh. The country has about 4,000 garment factories and exports clothes to leading Western retailers. The industry wields vast power in the South Asian nation.

Tazreen lacked emergency exits and its owner said only three floors of the eight-story building were legally built. Surviving employees said gates had been locked and managers had told them to go back to work after the fire alarm went off.

The factory made clothes for Wal-Mart, Disney and other Western brands.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Mancos teen shakes hands with Obama - The Durango Herald

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 23 April 2013 | 16.14

President Barack Obama shakes hands with a robotic arm built by Mancos High School junior Easton LaChappelle, 17, during the White House Science Fair on Monday in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington.Enlarge photo

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press

President Barack Obama shakes hands with a robotic arm built by Mancos High School junior Easton LaChappelle, 17, during the White House Science Fair on Monday in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press

President Barack Obama shakes hands with a robotic arm built by Mancos High School junior Easton LaChappelle, 17, during the White House Science Fair on Monday in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington.

WASHINGTON – When Easton LaChappelle met President Barack Obama at the White House on Monday, the Mancos High School junior offered him two handshakes.

One with his real arm, and another with a robotic one.

Easton, 17, first came up with the idea of the brain-controlled, wireless arm – which he shows off on a tall stand – when he was 14. On Monday, he brought his invention to Washington, D.C., for the White House Science Fair.

The event showcased 100 students from across the country and their science, technology, engineering and math projects.

"Let me just start by saying, in my official capacity as president: This stuff is really cool," Obama said in his remarks in the East Room. "And I want to thank these incredible young people for explaining to me what the heck is going on."

Obama singled out several students in his speech, including Cheyenne Mountain High School senior Sara Volz, 17, of Colorado Springs.

Sara researched algae biofuels in her bedroom laboratory – she conducted her experiments under her lofted bed.

"So, Sara, you have very supportive parents. One reporter asked her, 'Exactly what is growing under your bed that's going to save the planet?'" Obama said as he asked her to rise from her seat. "And Sara's answer was algae that can produce more oil for cheaper biofuels."

"Fuel from pond scum – how is that not the most exciting thing ever?" Sara said in an interview in the Blue Room, her DNA double-helix earrings bobbing.

Easton also has a bedroom laboratory, but his prosthetic arm didn't require any algae growth. He built the arm – which can be controlled by thoughts, different facial expressions and blinking patterns from 10 feet away – using a 3-D printer.

He's already been featured on Nickelodeon and in the magazine Popular Mechanics. PBS hopes to produce a documentary about him.

Easton spent all last week at home preparing for the science fair. He toted it through airport – part of his carry-on luggage – and U.S. Secret Service security, already expecting the strange looks he got as it went through X-ray machines.

Once at the White House, Easton set up his station in the State Dining Room with the arm and a posterboard.

But the arm fell off its stand and broke at the elbow joint just before Obama walked over. The president, who had been briefed on the malfunction, asked Easton if it was working.

"Up until two minutes ago," Easton said, according to a press pool report.

But Obama still gave it a handshake, Easton said, and inquired about the future of the arm. The young scientist thinks it can be fixed with some Super Glue.

Overall, Easton said his trip was "an awesome experience."

"Even just seeing the White House, let alone being in it," he said.

Easton won't be away from the federal government for long: He's already secured an internship with NASA this summer.

Stefanie Dazio is a student at American University in Washington, D.C., and an intern for The Durango Herald. You can reach her at sdazio@durangoherald.com.


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THQ's leftovers (including Darksiders and Red Faction) raise $7 million at auction - Digital Trends

As planned, the remaining assets in THQ's stable of properties went up for auction this month, and the many leftovers sitting in the former video game publisher's archives have been scattered to the wind. Bids for five lots of different game properties were made between Apr. 1 and 15, and according to documents detailing the court proceedings, the company raised quite a bit of money. Not as much as you might expect for properties that produced more than 30 games and costs hundreds of millions in development and distribution costs over the course of nearly fifteen years, but still a healthy chunk of change nonetheless.

Seventeen bids were made for the six separate lots representing THQ's remaining holdings, raising between $6 and $7 million in the process. The offers won't be presented to the court and finalized before May, but they will put a number of notable series into new studios hands.

The lots were arranged in an unusual way, and four of them represent individual properties. One includes the Darksiders franchise, while another represents the four games from the Red Faction series. The other two were for the long dormant Homeworld series of space simulators and the long-running racing series MX vs. ATV, which THQ tried – unsuccessfully – to reimagine as a microtransaction-based budget series.

It's the remaining two lots that are the most intriguing, though. They are grab bags of different original series and licenses still held by THQ with some real gems within. Lot five, for example, includes the rights to forty individual games including bombs like uDraw that crippled THQ, but it also includes critical and commercial hits like the de Blob, Destroy All Humans!, and Full Spectrum Warrior series.

The sixth lot meanwhile is for thirty-six licenses held by THQ. That these weren't sold individually is sure to be an annoyance for a number of different developers. Tim Schafer's Double Fine, for example, was looking to gain back the console publishing rights to its games Stacking and Costume Quest, but these were lumped into the lot. The same goes for the console rights to Jellyvision's 2011 You Don't Know Jack. Hopefully those developers won't have to fight too hard to regain these publishing rights or it could make future releases less likely for players.

There has already been a great deal of interest in the various properties, but we won't know until at least May where the properties landed. 

Source: GamesIndustry International


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Suspects in thwarted terror plot to appear in court - CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • One of the suspects was a doctoral student at the University of Quebec
  • Iran denies allegations that al Qaeda is operating inside its borders
  • U.S. Rep. Peter King tells CNN the targeted train was "going from Canada to the U.S."
  • The suspects "were receiving support from al Qaeda elements in Iran," police say

(CNN) -- Two men accused of planning to carry out an al Qaeda-supported attack against a passenger train traveling between Canada and the United States will make their first court appearance on Tuesday, police said.

The hearing in Toronto's Old City Hall Court comes a day after the Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced they had arrested 30-year-old Chiheb Esseghaier of Montreal and 35-year-old Raed Jaser of Toronto.

The two men face charges of "receiving support from al Qaeda elements in Iran" to carry out an attack and conspiring to murder people on a VIA railway train in the greater Toronto area, Assistant Police Commissioner James Malizia said.

"When I speak about supported, I mean direction and guidance," he said.

Despite the allegation of links to al Qaeda in Iran, there was no evidence to suggest the planned attacks were state-sponsored, Malizia said.

Iran vehemently denied the allegations that al Qaeda was operating inside its borders.

"Iran's position against this group is very clear and well known," according to a statement released by Iran's mission to the United Nations.

"Al Qaeda has no possibility to do any activity inside Iran or conduct any operation abroad from Iran's territory, and we reject strongly and categorically any connection to this story."

U.S. Rep. Peter King, chairman of the counterterrorism and intelligence subcommittee, said, "As I understand it, it was a train going from Canada to the U.S."

But neither the Canadian authorities nor King identified the exact route of the targeted train.

Few details have been released

Authorities said the suspects were not Canadian citizens, but declined to identify their nationality or how long they had been in Canada.

Additional details may come to light during Tuesday's hearing.

Essenghaier has been a doctoral student at the National Institute of Scientific Research at the University of Quebec since 2010, Julie Martineau, the university spokeswoman, said.

He was conducting research on nanosensors, which are primarily used for medical treatments or to build other nanoproducts, such as computer chips, she said.

"I cannot comment on any behavior issues. He seemed like a normal student," Martineau said.

There was no link between the Canadian investigation and the Boston Marathon bomb attack, an official with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told CNN on condition of anonymity.

Canadian authorities were tight-lipped about the planned time frame of the alleged attack except to say it was in the planning stage and not imminent.

"We are alleging these two individuals took steps and conducted activities to conduct a terrorist attack," Jennifer Strachan of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told reporters.

"They watched trains and railways in the greater Toronto area."

The alleged attack included a plan to derail a passenger train, she said.

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation quoted "highly placed sources" as saying the suspects were under surveillance for more than a year.

The CBC reported that the investigation was "part of a cross-border operation involving Canadian law enforcement agencies, the FBI and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security."

Terror plots

Al Qaeda has long studied the possibility of attacks on railroad systems, seeing them as cheap, relatively easy to carry out and with potentially devastating results.

The organization and its sympathizers have plotted attacks on railway systems in Spain and Germany. More than 200 people were killed and 1,700 injured in an attack that targeted several commuter trains in Madrid in March 2004.

In a document seized during the raid in Pakistan that left Osama bin Laden dead was evidence of an al Qaeda discussion to target rail lines in the United States, a law enforcement official told CNN in late 2011.

According to the document, al Qaeda members discussed as early as 2010 a plan to derail trains in the United States by placing obstructions on tracks over bridges and in valleys.

The plan, according to the document, was to be executed to coincide with the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks, though no specific rail system was identified, the official said.

News of the arrests Monday came the same day Canada's parliament debated an anti-terrorism bill.

Traditionally, al Qaeda's membership is seen as Sunni-dominated and not Shiite.

As a result, al Qaeda and Iran have not been viewed as allies.

"We have very little intelligence on al Qaeda in Iran," King said.

What is known is that bin Laden's son-in-law, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, fled Afghanistan for Iran after the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

According to U.S. documents and officials, in addition to Abu Ghaith, other members of bin Laden's inner circle ended up in Iran, including the formidable military commander of al Qaeda, Saif al-Adel, and Saad bin Laden, one of the al Qaeda leader's older sons who has played some kind of leadership role in the group.

Saad bin Laden also helped one of his father's wives and several of his father's children to move from Pakistan to Iran, officials said.

CNN's Catherine Shoichet, Jack Maddox, Tim Lister, Wolf Blitzer, Steve Almasy, Paula Newton and Irving Last contributed to this report.


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French Embassy in Libya Is Attacked - New York Times

CAIRO — The French Embassy in Libya was struck by what was reported to be a car bomb on Tuesday, injuring two French guards, according Libyan media accounts and French authorities who called the attack "odious."

The assault was described as the first of its kind in the Libyan capital since the revolt beginning in 2011 that toppled Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, but it was not the first attack on a diplomatic building in Libya.

Last September in the eastern city of Benghazi, militants struck at two American facilities, killing the American ambassador, J. Christopher Stevens, and three other Americans. Last month, Libyan security officials said they had arrested two men in the kidnapping near Benghazi of five British humanitarian activists, at least two of them women who had been sexually assaulted.

On Tuesday, Reuters quoted residents living near the French diplomatic compound in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, as saying they heard two explosions in the early morning.

"We think it was a booby trapped car," a French Embassy official told Reuters. "There was a lot of damage and there are two guards wounded."

The attack raised worries among Tripoli residents that the security situation there was unraveling further.

Since the fall of Colonel Qaddafi, Tripoli had generally been seen as safer than Benghazi, which many foreigners avoid. But the country as a whole is viewed by outsiders as potentially perilous with many weapons in the hands of citizens and militias beyond government control. Many foreigners in Tripoli take elaborate security precautions.

The French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, was quick to issue a statement in Paris calling Tuesday's attack odious. Mr. Fabius said he condemned the attack with the utmost vigor and said French and Libyan authorities would make every effort to shed light on the circumstances surrounding the attack.

The assault came a day after the French Parliament voted to extend the French military deployment in Mali, but there was no indication whether the attack was linked to that development. No group immediately took responsibility for the blast.

Steven Erlanger contributed reporting from Paris.


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Feds delay policy to allow small knives on planes - MyFox Tampa Bay

WASHINGTON (AP) -

Airline passengers will have to leave their knives at home after all. And their bats and golf clubs.
 
A policy change scheduled to go into effect this week that would have allowed passengers to carry small knives, bats and other sports equipment onto airliners will be delayed, federal officials said Monday.
 
The delay is necessary to accommodate feedback from an advisory committee made up of aviation industry, consumer, and law enforcement officials, the Transportation Security Administration said in a brief statement. The statement said the delay is temporary, but gave no indication how long it might be.
 
TSA Administrator John Pistole proposed the policy change last month, saying it would free up the agency to concentrate on protecting against greater threats. TSA screeners confiscate about 2,000 small folding knives from passengers every day.
 
The proposal immediately drew fierce opposition from flight attendant unions and federal air marshals, who said the knives can be dangerous in the hands of the wrong passengers. Some airlines and members of Congress also urged TSA to reconsider its position.
 
The delay announced by TSA doesn't go far enough, a coalition of unions representing 90,000 flight attendants nationwide said Monday.
 
"All knives should be banned from planes permanently," the group said in a statement.
 
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who opposed the policy, said TSA's decision is an admission "that permitting knives on planes is a bad idea." He also called for a permanent ban.
 
Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., another opponent, said he will continue to push TSA to drop the proposal entirely.
 
"People with radical ideas can use everyday objects to cause great harm," Markey said.  "If there is an opportunity to decrease risks to Americans, we have a duty to protect our citizens and disallow knives from being taken onto planes."
 
The proposed policy would have permitted folding knives with blades that are 2.36 inches (6 centimeters) or less in length and are less than 1/2-inch (1-centimeter) wide. The policy was aimed at allowing passengers to carry pen knives, corkscrews with small blades and other small knives.
 
Passengers also would have been be allowed to bring onboard as part of their carry-on luggage novelty-sized baseball bats less than 24 inches long, toy plastic bats, billiard cues, ski poles, hockey sticks, lacrosse sticks and two golf clubs, the agency said.
 
Security standards adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organization, a U.N. agency, already call for passengers to be able to carry those items. Those standards are non-binding, but many countries follow them.
 
The proposal didn't affect box cutters, razor blades and knives that don't fold or that have molded grip handles, which are prohibited.
 
Passengers were prohibited from carrying the small knives onboard planes after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Some of the terrorists in those attacks used box cutters to intimidate passengers and airline crew members.
 
It's unlikely in these days of hardened cockpit doors and other preventative measures that the small folding knives could be used by terrorists to take over a plane, Pistole told Congress last month.
 
There has been a gradual easing of some of the security measures applied to passengers after the 9/11 attacks. In 2005, the TSA changed its policies to allow passengers to carry on airplanes small scissors, knitting needles, tweezers, nail clippers and up to four books of matches. The move came as the agency turned its focus toward keeping explosives off planes, because intelligence officials believed that was the greatest threat to commercial aviation.
 
And in September 2011, the TSA no longer required children 12 years old and under to remove their shoes at airport checkpoints. The agency recently issued new guidelines for travelers 75 and older so they can avoid removing shoes and light jackets when they go through airport security checkpoints.


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Clashes at Sunni Protest in Iraq Kill at Least 14 - ABC News

Clashes erupted early on Tuesday between Sunni demonstrators and security forces in a northern Sunni town in Iraq, killing at least 14 people and wounding dozens in an escalation likely to enrage anti-government protesters who have been rallying for months.

The fighting broke out in the town of Hawijah, about 240 kilometers (160 miles) north of Baghdad. It is one of several overwhelmingly Sunni communities across Iraq that have been the site of months of sustained anti-government protests.

The provincial health director for the area, Sidiq Omar Rasool, said 14 civilians have been killed and more than 50 are wounded. He said another six members of the Iraqi security forces were also wounded.

Two Iraqi army officials reported that as many as 20 people have been killed. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information to journalists.

Sheikh Abdullah Sami al-Asi, a Sunni provincial official from Hawija, said the fighting began early in the morning when security forces entered the protest area and tried to make arrests. He said scores of people have been wounded or killed.

The Defense Ministry issued a statement saying that Iraqi security forces were killed along with what it described as militants from al-Qaida and Saddam Hussein's outlawed Baath Party.

On Friday, a checkpoint jointly run by the police and army near the town came under attack, and militants seized a number of weapons before retreating into the crowd of protesters, according to the Defense Ministry.

That led to a standoff, with security forces at times trying to negotiate with local and tribal officials the handover of those involved in the raid.

The Defense Ministry said it warned demonstrators to leave the protest area before moving in early Tuesday, and that large numbers of protesters left the site.

As Iraqi forces tried to make arrests, they came under heavy fire from several types of weapons, and were targeted by snipers, according to the Defense Mininstry account.

A United Nations spokeswoman in Iraq, Eliana Nabaa, confirmed that there are multiple casualties. She urged both sides to immediately lay down their weapons.

Protests against the Shiite-dominated government began in western Iraq in December following the arrest of bodyguards assigned to Sunni Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi. The rallies quickly spread to other areas that are home to Iraq's minority Sunni Arabs, including Hawijah.

The Sunni demonstrators are protesting what they call unfair treatment by Shiite-led government.

After the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, the Sunni Arab-dominated town of Hawija was considered one of the dangerous areas for both American and Iraqi forces where they faced lethal attacks by different groups of Sunni militants mainly al-Qaida in Iraq.

Like in other Sunni towns, its residents accuse the Shiite-led governments in Baghdad of neglecting them and practicing sectarian agenda. They also oppose the Kurds' ambitions to annex nearby Kirkuk to their three-province autonomous region.

Also Tuesday, two bombs went off near a Sunni mosque in the southern Bagdad neighborhood of Dora, killing five worshipers and wounding 21, police and health officials said. The worshippers were leaving the mosque after morning prayers at around 5:00 a.m. when the bombs exploded simultaneously, two police officers said.

A medical official confirmed the causality figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

———

Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul-Zahra contributed reporting.

———

Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://twitter.com/adamschreck and Sinan Salaheddin at http://twitter.com/sinansm


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