Tuesday, January 31, 2012

AP Source: Cristobal not leaving FIU for Rutgers

A person familiar with the decision says Florida International football coach Mario Cristobal won't be leaving to take over at Rutgers.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because neither the coach nor the school had made their talks public.

The New York Times first reported Cristobal's decision.

Rutgers was pursuing Cristobal to replace Greg Schiano, who left the school last week to become Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach.

The 41-year-old Cristobal, a former Rutgers assistant under Schiano, just completed his fifth season at FIU. He is 24-38 with the Panthers but has led the program to bowl games the past two seasons and a Sun Belt Conference title in 2010.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-01-30-Rutgers-Coach/id-ae2d2cd8816e435989f66ece19f850ad

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Monday, January 30, 2012

Iconic skier's death points out US health gap

Doug Pensinger / Getty Images

Skier Maddie Bowman wears a band on her arm and a purple ribbon in rememberance of Canadian skier Sarah Burke during Winter X Games 2012 at Buttermilk Mountain on Saturday. Burke died Jan 19 from injuries she sustained in a training accident.

By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

Since the death of Canadian skier Sarah Burke in January, fans and supporters from around the world have donated over $300,000 ? more than enough to cover the massive U.S. medical bill generated by efforts to save her.

The outpouring of grief for Burke and the influx of funds are a tribute to a young woman who was a pioneer and legend in her sport. The need for a fundraiser ? to help her grieving family avert bankruptcy ? was viewed by some Canadians and?U.S. observers?as a condemnation of the U.S. health care system.

"The irony is that had the accident occurred in Canada? her care would have been covered because, unlike the U.S., Canada has a system of universal coverage," wrote Wendell Potter, an insurance executive-turned-whistleblower who writes for iWatch at the Center for Public Integrity. "No one in Canada finds themselves in that predicament, nor do they face losing their homes as many Americans do when they become critically ill or suffer an injury..."


Burke, who died at 30, was on skis by age five, and pursuing a professional skiing career before she left high school. She pioneered women?s halfpipe skiing and was instrumental in getting the event included in the X-Games, according to a profile in Sportsnet magazine of Canada.

"She was to freeskiing what Wayne Gretzky was to hockey or Michael Jordan was to basketball ? the iconic face of a sport,? wrote Sportsnet reporter Dan Robson. "She built her world by conquering limits, both on the hill and off it."

After Burke?s crash while training on the Eagle Superpipe at Park City Mountain Resort in Utah on Jan 10, doctors fought to save her for nine days. She died Jan. 19, from a torn vertebral artery in her neck that caused bleeding in her brain,

Burke?s contribution to sport ? not to mention her youth, beauty, charisma and fame ? has no doubt helped the effort to generate donations?to cover an operation, countless tests, care and hospitalization. The fundraising page on GiveForward.com late Monday showed that $302,535 had been raised. Burke?s publicist said that medical costs were expected to be about $200,000.

The fundraising page said that future contributions would go to a foundation ?to honor Sarah's legacy and promote the ideals she valued and embodied."

The loss of Sarah Burke is no less painful for her loved ones, but with medical care covered through donations, the aftermath will not bring them additional hardship.

For?many Americans, the hardship persists.

On Monday, Potter pointed to the plight of a 13-year-old Caroline Richmond on life support in Alabama after collapsing from a stroke, which turned out to be caused by leukemia. Her self-employed parents do not have health coverage.

?As it turns out, Caroline is one of more than 50 million men, women and children who do not have health insurance in the United States, which is why her family is in the same predicament as Sarah Burke?s,? Potter wrote.

The community has launched a multi-pronged effort to raise money to cover mounting medical costs for Carolyn ? car washes, a bake sale, a fish fry and so on ? but like most people who have life threatening medical conditions, she is not famous.

An estimated 700,000 American families file for bankruptcy every year because of medical debt, Potter said.

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

Click here to follow Kari Huus on Facebook.

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/30/10274212-iconic-skiers-death-points-out-us-health-gap

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

HBT: Selig foresees expanded playoffs this season

We?re just a little over two months away from the start of the 2012 season, but we still have no confirmation on when the expanded playoff format will take effect. Commissioner Bud Selig aims to change that real soon.

According to Jim Owczarski of CSNChicago.com, Selig was in attendance at SoxFest on Friday night to present an award to White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf and said that he still expects?a second wild-card team to be added to each league this season.

?While I agree with Yogi Berra that it ain?t over til it?s over, I really believe we?ll have the wild card for 2012, this year,? Selig said. ?Clubs really want it. I don?t think I?ve ever seen an issue that the clubs want more than to have the extra wild card, this year.

?We?re working on dates right now. That will all take place. It looks to me like we?ll have it because I?ve told everybody that we have it. It?ll be exciting ? (a) one-game playoff and start the playoffs out on a very exciting manner.?

The new 10-team playoff format would begin with a one-game playoff between the two wild-card teams in each league.?MLB?s new?collective bargaining agreement?specifies that expanded playoffs will begin by 2013, but Selig has been vocal about his desire for the changes to begin as soon as possible.

Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports.com reports?that there are still some schedule quirks to work out, such as leaving room for potential tie-breaker scenarios, but the plan calls for union and management officials to resume discussions on the logistics early next week.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/01/28/bud-selig-expects-expanded-playoffs-to-begin-this-season/related/

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Friday, January 27, 2012

Panetta: US ground forces would be cut by 100,000 (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Pentagon leaders outlined a plan Thursday for absorbing $487 billion in defense cuts over the coming decade by shrinking U.S. ground forces, slowing the purchase of a next-generation stealth fighter and retiring older planes and ships.

In a bid to pre-empt election-year Republican criticism, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the plan shifts the Pentagon's focus from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to future challenges in Asia, the Mideast and in cyberspace. More special operations forces like the Navy SEALs who killed Osama bin Laden will be available around the world, he said.

"We believe this is a balanced and complete package," Panetta told a news conference, with Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at his side.

Some lawmakers were quick to dispute him.

"Taking us back to a pre-9/11 military force structure places our country in grave danger," said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee that will hold hearings on the Pentagon budget plan.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said the Panetta plan "ignores the lessons of history." He said it provides for a military that is "too small to respond effectively to events that may unfold over the next few years."

Dempsey, however, said the military is united in its support for the new approach.

"This budget is a first step ? it's a down payment ? as we transition from an emphasis on today's wars to preparing for future challenges," he said, adding, "This budget does not lead to a military in decline."

Panetta announced that the administration will request a 2013 budget of $525 billion, plus another $88 billion for operations in Afghanistan. Combined, those totals are about $33 billion less than the Pentagon is spending this year.

Panetta said, however, that the Pentagon's base budget will grow to $567 billion in 2017. At that point, the cumulative budgets over five years would be $259 billion less than had been planned before the administration struck a deficit-cutting deal with Congress last summer that requires projected defense spending to be reduced by $487 billion by 2022.

Among the details Panetta disclosed:

The Army would shrink by 80,000 soldiers, from 570,000 today to 490,000 by 2017. That is slightly larger than the Army on 9/11.

The Marine Corps would drop from today's 202,000 to 182,000 ? also above the level on 9/11.

The Air Force would retire some older planes including about two dozen C-5A cargo aircraft and 65 of its oldest C-130 cargo planes.

The Navy would keep a fleet of 11 aircraft carriers but retire seven cruisers earlier than planned. It also would delay purchase of some other ships, including a new Virginia-class submarine.

Purchase of F-35 stealth fighter jets, to be fielded by the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps, would be slowed.

Current plans for building a new generation of submarines that carry long-range nuclear missiles would be delayed by two years. The current fleet of nuclear-capable bombers and land-based nuclear missiles would be left unchanged.

Military pay raises will remain on track until 2015, when the pace of increase will be slowed by an undetermined amount.

President Barack Obama will ask Congress to approve a new round of domestic base closures, although the timing of this was left vague and there is little chance that lawmakers would agree to this in a presidential election year.

The defense spending plan is scheduled to be submitted to Congress as part of the administration's full 2013 budget on Feb. 13.

Prominent in the Obama plan is a renewed focus on Asia, where China's rapid military modernization has raised worry in Washington and rattled U.S. allies.

The Pentagon has embraced a proposal by special operations chief Adm. Bill McRaven to send more manpower and equipment to worldwide "Theater Special Operations Commands" to strike back wherever threats arise, according to a senior defense official who spoke to The Associated Press and to other current and former U.S. officials briefed on the program. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the details of the proposal are still being worked out, including how fast the changes could be made.

The stepped-up network would put top special operations personnel closer to the problems they face, better able to launch unilateral raids like this week's Somalia mission. McRaven also wants the newly invigorated commands to build new relationships with foreign armies to help them lead their own operations, the senior defense official said.

Panetta also has made clear the administration will resist any effort to shrink the Navy's fleet of aircraft carriers. He said last weekend while on board the fleet's oldest carrier, the USS Enterprise, that keeping 11 of the warships is a "long-term commitment" that Obama believes is important to keeping the peace.

"Our view is that the carriers, because of their presence, because of the power they represent, are a very important part of our ability to maintain power projection both in the Pacific and in the Middle East," he said.

Obama has said he hopes to further reduce the size of the U.S. nuclear arsenal, but Panetta said the basic structure ? a "triad" of land, sea and air nuclear forces ? will be maintained. The Pentagon said it will study the potential to shrink that force later.

The defense budget is being reshaped in the midst of a presidential contest in which Obama seeks to portray himself as a forward-looking commander in chief focusing on new security threats. Republicans want to cast him as weak on defense.

Obama has highlighted his national security successes ? the killing of Osama bin Laden, the death of senior al-Qaida leaders and the demise of Libya's Moammar Gadhafi ? to counter Republican criticism. He also has emphasized the completion of the U.S. troop withdrawal from Iraq and the start of a drawdown in Afghanistan as turning points that offer new opportunities to scale back defense spending.

But several congressional Republicans see a political opening in challenging the reductions in projected military spending that the GOP and Obama agreed to last summer as part of a deal to raise the nation's borrowing authority. They've echoed Obama's potential presidential rivals Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum, who plead for fiscal austerity but contend that sizable cuts would gut the military.

___

Associated Press writers Kimberly Dozier and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

___

Robert Burns can be reached on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_defense_budget

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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Sundance doc traces Simon's 'Graceland' hit album

Singer Paul Simon, left, and director Joe Berlinger, from the film "Under African Skies," pose for a portrait during the 2012 Sundance Film Festival on Monday, Jan. 23, 2012 in Park City, Utah. (AP Photo/Victoria Will)

Singer Paul Simon, left, and director Joe Berlinger, from the film "Under African Skies," pose for a portrait during the 2012 Sundance Film Festival on Monday, Jan. 23, 2012 in Park City, Utah. (AP Photo/Victoria Will)

(AP) ? Paul Simon recalls his return to South Africa like a family reunion ? musical brothers getting back together after decades apart.

The trip last summer to commemorate the 25th anniversary of his "Graceland" album was a far more joyous occasion than some of his earlier travels on behalf of the record.

The Sundance Film Festival documentary "Under African Skies" chronicles the creation of "Graceland," its overnight success and the furor it caused as critics accused Simon of impeding progress to abolish South Africa's system of racial segregation known as apartheid.

Simon said he was surprised by protests that sprang up on his "Graceland" tour in the 1980s. But looking back, he said the album and tour with South African musicians raised awareness that helped end apartheid in the 1990s.

"Once I saw it had an immediate acceptance and that people loved it and had great affection for the music, I thought that the tour and the album were going to be a very effective way of showing just how evil apartheid was," Simon said in an interview alongside "Under African Skies" director Joe Berlinger.

The film shows Simon's South African musical colleagues enjoying their first taste of success outside their oppressed nation on the "Graceland" tour. But critics charged that the tour violated a United Nations cultural ban meant to pressure South Africa's white minority into doing away with government policies of segregation against blacks.

There were protests and even bomb threats, resulting in tight security as the tour progressed around the world.

Even today, there is lingering bitterness against Simon. "Under African Skies" includes a sometimes-uneasy exchange last summer between him and Dali Tambo, the son of African National Congress leader Oliver Tambo and the founder of Artists Against Apartheid. Dali Tambo had remained a harsh critic of Simon.

The joint interview arranged by filmmaker Berlinger helped clear the air between Simon and Tambo, who ended their meeting with a warm hug on camera.

That meeting was part of Berlinger's aim to examine both the musical origins of "Graceland" but also its unpleasant political fallout.

"I made it clear I didn't want a puff piece, a Paul Simon puff piece, and he didn't want a Paul Simon puff piece," Berlinger said. "We established that we're going to do an honest exploration of these issues and also go deeply into how this music was made, which, to me, is actually the more interesting part of the film.

"The political story is relevant and has resonance in today's world as well, but how this album was made, the dissection of that music and that achievement to me was as interesting, or more so, than the political story."

The film traces the creation of the album, from early recording sessions Simon did in South Africa to capture the raw material for many of the songs, to a London studio session with vocal group Ladysmith Black Mambazo, to an early performance on "Saturday Night Live" that enchanted the audience months before "Graceland" was released.

"Under African Skies" also follows Simon on his return to South Africa last summer, when he and musicians from the album reunited for a performance.

Simon had a gracious welcome there, reminiscent of a trip back to South Africa he took a few years after the "Graceland" tour, when apartheid had ended and South Africa's new president, Nelson Mandela, invited him to come and perform.

Mandela's invitation amounted to the "official announcement that was nothing about 'Graceland' that the ANC saw as harming the cause. In fact, the opposite," Simon said. "We all felt particularly honored to even meet Nelson Mandela. I think of him as one of the great, great leaders of the 20th century. One of the great teachers. To be in his presence actually was extraordinary. We felt great about it."

___

Online:

http://www.sundance.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-25-Film-Sundance-Paul%20Simon/id-c983202736c74daf9911ea63e50d5beb

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Like it or Not, Romney Will Be GOP Nominee (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | It started out as a whole crop of candidates, but now there are only four: Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, and Rick Santorum. This primary process has held political pundits in suspense, as the leaders atop the polls have interchanged regularly. Yet, in spite of this, one name has been circulating continuously:

Mitt Romney.

The former governor of Massachusetts had tried for the presidency in '08, but lost out on the GOP nomination. Now, it seems, he is doubly determined to secure the White House.

On one hand, Romney certainly seems to always be in possession of the coveted media coverage. Even when he's behind in the polls, it seems that his screen time doesn't diminish. And, according to thestate.com, Romney has been picking up numerous endorsements.

Still, the irony is that Romney continues to be a figure of division within his own party; there's a looming sense of distrust in his values, which explains why conservative candidates like Santorum sometimes enjoy a temporary boost; also, he's been suspiciously mum with regards to his Mormon faith. Even 2008 candidate Mike Huckabee, according to huffingtonpost.com, suggested that Romney needs to address his faith. The longer he stays mum on his faith, the more people wonder what he may have to hide. And that's the worst possible impression a presidential candidate can make.

Now, after all this, you may be wondering how I can still say that Romney will win. The answer is simple: He's the only one who stands a chance at beating President Barack Obama this November. If a staunch Republican sat back and looked at the bigger picture, they would know that Romney's moderate stances on some issues could help sway key undecided voters to his side. Let's face it, many Americans are disenchanted with President Obama, as the promised change did not come overnight. According to nytimes.com, Obama is particularly vulnerable with the coveted swing voters. Yet, because of his liberal policies, many may still give him their vote if his opponent is a staunch right-wing conservative.

At some point in the very near future, the GOP will have to decide if they want to hold to their party's conservative principles and risk losing the election by choosing a traditional candidate, or if they are willing to sacrifice some of their principles in order to have a plausible chance of regaining the White House from the Democrats.

Something tells me that they will choose the latter.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120124/pl_ac/10876535_like_it_or_not_romney_will_be_gop_nominee

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Testimony to begin in trial of financier Stanford

FILE - In this Aug. 24, 2010 file photo, R. Allen Stanford arrives in custody at the federal courthouse for a hearing in Houston. On Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, after much delay, federal prosecutors in Houston are due to begin laying out their case against Stanford, telling jurors that the 61-year-old?s business empire was built on smoke and mirrors and that he bilked investors out of more than $7 billion over 20 years as part of a massive Ponzi scheme. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 24, 2010 file photo, R. Allen Stanford arrives in custody at the federal courthouse for a hearing in Houston. On Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, after much delay, federal prosecutors in Houston are due to begin laying out their case against Stanford, telling jurors that the 61-year-old?s business empire was built on smoke and mirrors and that he bilked investors out of more than $7 billion over 20 years as part of a massive Ponzi scheme. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

(AP) ? Texas financier R. Allen Stanford built a vast fortune through his network of banks and other businesses in the U.S., Latin America the Caribbean, and he led a lifestyle befitting a billionaire business magnate.

Once considered one of the U.S.'s wealthiest people, with an estimated net worth of more than $2 billion, Stanford snatched up luxury homes and cars, private jets and yachts, and became so prominent in his adopted country of Antigua, where he took on dual citizenship, that he was knighted by the Caribbean island's government and became known as "Sir Allen."

On Tuesday, after much delay, federal prosecutors in Houston were due to begin laying out their case against Stanford, telling jurors that the 61-year-old's business empire was built on smoke and mirrors and that he bilked investors out of more than $7 billion over 20 years as part of a massive Ponzi scheme. Jury selection in Stanford's trial resumed Tuesday, after starting a day earlier, and was anticipated to conclude with opening statements expected later in the day

Stanford, who denies the claims and says his businesses were legitimate, is charged with 14 counts, including wire and mail fraud, and faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. He is expected to testify during the trial, which will likely last at least six weeks.

Stanford's business empire was run through the Houston-based Stanford Financial Group, but at its heart was Antiguan-based Stanford International Bank. The bank mainly sold certificates of deposit, or CDs, that promised substantially higher rates of return than U.S. banks and promised investors their money was safe.

Prosecutors say Stanford used money from the sale of the CDs, which were sold to clients from more than 100 countries, to pay off those purchased earlier once they matured and to support his other businesses, which included other banks, a brokerage firm that sold the CDs, an airline, cricket grounds and restaurants. They say Stanford used up to $2 billion of investor funds as personal loans to support his lavish lifestyle, and that he and three former executives at his companies who also face charges covered up their misdeeds by fabricating the bank's records and bribing Antiguan regulators.

"It's a bait and switch," prosecutor William Stellmach said at a court hearing last week.

But in court documents filed earlier this month, Stanford's attorneys argued that he intended to pay CD investors through his other companies if authorities hadn't seized them and begun selling them off.

"This fraud (theory by the government) is just wrong," Ali Fazel, one of Stanford's attorneys, said at that hearing. "Our defense is we didn't do anything wrong."

A gag order bars lawyers from publicly discussing the case.

Stanford has been in jail since his arrest 2? years ago because he was deemed a flight risk. His trial was delayed after he was declared incompetent due to an addiction he developed in jail to an anti-anxiety drug and underwent treatment for eight months last year. He was also evaluated for any long-term effects from being injured in a September 2009 jail fight.

U.S. District Judge David Hittner declared Stanford fit for trial last month.

Once Antigua's richest citizen, primary banker and its largest private employer, Stanford had his assets seized and now has court appointed attorneys after an insurance policy that had been paying for his defense was revoked.

Stanford is on his fifth set of lawyers since being indicted. Previous attorneys accused him of being difficult.

The three other indicted former executives are to be tried in June. A former Antiguan financial regulator was also indicted and he awaits extradition to the U.S.

Stanford and the former executives are also fighting a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit filed in Dallas that makes similar allegations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-24-Stanford%20Trial/id-781246e463d74c0fbc27fb098e1ae363

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House Republican budget to seek Medicare reforms (Reuters)

BALTIMORE (Reuters) ? Republicans in the House of Representatives will put forward a budget plan this year that will seek substantial reforms to health benefits for the elderly and make aggressive strides toward reducing deficits, a senior lawmaker said on Friday.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan said he wanted his budget plan to offer voters an alternative vision to the "cradle-to-grave welfare state" that he says Democratic President Barack Obama is promoting.

The House Republican budget resolution will contain reforms to Medicare, the healthcare program for Americans 62 and over, such as providing subsidies to help recipients pay for private insurance, based on their wealth and medical needs.

"We haven't written it yet, but we're not backing off on the kinds of reforms we've advocated," Ryan told reporters at a retreat for House Republicans in Baltimore.

Ryan said there was emerging bipartisan support for such "premium support" plans as the best way to save Medicare, which he said was going broke.

The Wisconsin congressman caused an uproar last year by proposing a plan effectively to privatize Medicare by turning the popular $525 billion fee-for-service program into a system of vouchers to be used by recipients to buy private insurance.

The plan was enough to rattle elderly voters and was cited as a key factor in the defeat of a Republican candidate in a normally conservative New York state congressional district last year.

In December, Ryan and Democratic Senator Ron Wyden unveiled a new approach to cut Medicare costs through a "premium support" model that allowed seniors to buy insurance through a regulated exchange while retaining Medicare's traditional fee-for-service model. The plan was viewed by critics as a ploy to soften opposition to future reforms.

The Obama administration has steadfastly opposed reforms that would end Medicare for seniors or amount to what it calls "radical privatization" of the program.

Representative Tom Price, who heads the House Republican Policy Committee, said there was a lot of enthusiasm at the Baltimore retreat to tackle fundamental reform of "automatic spending programs" such as Medicare and Social Security.

BUDGET REFORM PLANS

Ryan said his budget plan would aggressively shrink deficits to put U.S. debt on a downward path, adding the United States would be in a situation similar to some debt-stricken European countries in a few years if no action was taken. He did not specify an amount for planned cuts.

"We feel we have an obligation to show the country our plan to pre-empt a debt crisis in this country. What matters most as is that we get the trajectory right," he said.

Despite the controversy raised about the House's last budget plan, Ryan insisted that Americans be offered an alternative as a vision of what the Republicans would accomplish if elected.

"People want to be bolder on the budget. People feel good about our budget experience and the budget we passed, even the Northeasterners, the people from the tough seats, they feel we did the right thing on the budget and they want to keep doing it."

Ryan also said he hoped to reform the budgetary process, which he said was outdated and broken, noting the Senate had not passed a budget resolution in nearly three years.

The House Budget Committee is working on 10 bills to reform the annual budget process, including a provision that would force the two houses of Congress, along with the White House, to work on a joint budget resolution early in the year, for votes later in the year.

In the process in place since 1974, the House and Senate work on separate budget bills and then work out the differences later.

Ryan said the panel would begin to refine some of the proposals in coming weeks, but the process would be halted for the committee's work on the fiscal 2013 budget plan, which will be unveiled in March. The reforms will resume later in the year once the budget plan is passed, he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120123/pl_nm/us_house_republican_budget

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The 'Choking Game': 1 in 7 College Kids Has Tried It (Time.com)

College students aren't necessarily renowned for their good judgment, and a new study reinforces that, finding that nearly one in seven co-eds has played the Choking Game, which is every bit as dangerous as it sounds.

Also called the Fainting Game, Pass Out, or Space Monkey, the Choking Game can be played individually or in groups. It consists of manually choking yourself or others, sticking a plastic bag over the head, tying a string around the neck or hyperventilating, all in search of a few seconds of euphoria. (See TIME's health and medicine covers.)

Researchers at The Crime Victims' Institute at Sam Houston State University surveyed 837 students at a Texas university and found that the behavior, which works by cutting off blood flow to the brain in order to induce a high, was frighteningly commonplace:

?16% of students said they'd played the game, and three-quarters more than once
?On average, students first played the game at age 14
?Males were more likely to have played than females
?90% of students who had played the game learned about it from friends, and most students said they first played in a group

Why in the world would kids engage in this potentially deadly behavior? In a word, curiosity. They may also not realize it has the potential to be just as deadly as illegal drugs. The good news is that learning that a number of teens and college students have suffocated to death from playing the Choking Game helped deter students from playing. Parents, talk to your kids. And schools can play a role too: related research found that 90% of parents think that including information about the dangers of the game in school health and drug prevention classes is a smart idea.(MORE: For Teens Who Cut, Going Online Can Sometimes Help)

As the study notes:

"This 'game,' as it is often called, does not require obtaining any drugs or alcohol, is free, and can go undetected by many parents, teachers, physicians, and other authority figures. Most importantly, many of those who engage in this activity, do not understand that the practice can be just as deadly as the illegal substances youth have been warned against."

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20120123/hl_time/httphealthlandtimecom20120120thechokinggame1in7collegestudentshastriedittexasstudyfindsixzz1k0m9efzixidrssfullhealthsciyahoo

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Video: Markets Flat on Europe Uncertainty

U.S. stocks are little changed Monday as investors weighed the developments in Europe's efforts to tame its debt crisis, Margie Patel, Wells Fargo Funds Management, and Doug Sandler, Riverfront Investment Group.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/46105958/

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Longtime Hamas leader Mashaal asks to quit (AP)

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip ? Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal has decided not to seek another term, the movement said Saturday, paving the way for a possible leadership contest at a time when the anti-Israeli Islamic group faces far-reaching decisions on whether to stay the course of militancy or moderate.

However, Hamas suggested Mashaal could be asked to stay on, in what would be a boost for his more pragmatic line.

Mashaal could not be reached for comment Saturday, but his decision not to seek another term as head of Hamas' political bureau was confirmed in a Hamas statement. Mashaal, who like other top Hamas leaders is based in Syria, has led the 15-member bureau since 1996, or nearly twice as long as permitted under Hamas rules.

Hamas said Saturday the final decision on Mashaal's future will be left to the 55-member Shura Council, which oversees the political bureau and authorizes key decisions. Mashaal was last reaffirmed in his post in April 2009, and it is not clear if and when the Shura Council would appoint a successor.

Word of Mashaal's decision comes at a time of change in Hamas' relationship with its parent movement, the pan-Arab Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood has scored election victories in Egypt and Tunisia following the pro-democracy protests of the Arab Spring over the past year, and has urged Hamas to moderate.

Brotherhood leaders have encouraged Mashaal to pursue reconciliation with Palestinian rival Fatah, led by Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, and to abandon violence, according to several Hamas figures.

In discussions within Hamas, Mashaal has praised the pragmatism of the Brotherhood and proposed that Hamas take steps toward becoming a strictly political movement, rather than also maintaining a parallel military wing. This would eventually require a decision to halt attacks on Israel, something Hamas has so far avoided.

In recent months, Mashaal has led attempts to reconcile with Fatah, although he has encountered some opposition from senior Hamas activists in the Gaza Strip, controlled by the Islamists since they seized the territory from Abbas in 2007. The Gaza branch of Hamas would likely lose jobs and influence in any reconciliation deal.

Mashaal is to meet with Abbas in Cairo early next month to try to move bumpy reconciliation efforts forward. The rivals had previously agreed to hold general elections in the Palestinian territories in late spring, but smaller gestures, such as mutual prisoner releases, have not yet been carried out, suggesting continued distrust.

Some in Fatah expressed concern Saturday that a Hamas leadership change could put reconciliation on hold.

"Mashaal had a significant role in pursuing reconciliation," said Amin Maqboul, a Fatah negotiator in the talks with Hamas. "We hope that his successor takes the same path, particularly ... since there are some forces in Hamas in Gaza who are not interested in reconciliation."

Raed Naerat, a West Bank-based Hamas expert, said he expects the movement to stay on Mashaal's current course, arguing that his policies have been endorsed by the collective leadership.

Mashaal first told the Hamas leadership at a Shura Council meeting in Sudan last month that he does not plan to seek re-election, according to Hamas insiders who spoke on anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

It is unclear whether Mashaal is serious about stepping aside, or hopes to elicit a show of support from the movement by announcing he is not seeking re-election. Under Hamas' internal rules, the head of the political bureau can only serve two terms for a total of eight years, and Mashaal faced severe criticism in the past for staying on past that.

Some said the Arab Spring may be influencing Mashaal's strategy.

"With this step, Mashaal wanted to emphasize that Hamas is a democratic movement, but the final decision will be made by the Shura Council," said Ahmed Yousef, a Hamas figure in Gaza who spoke to Mashaal earlier in the week.

It's not clear if and when Hamas elections would be held. Osama Hamdan, a senior Hamas official in Lebanon, said the date of possible internal elections would not be revealed, citing security reasons.

Possible contenders for Hamas' leadership include Mashaal's deputy, Moussa Abu Marzouk, and Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas prime minister in Gaza.

In recent months, Mashaal has increasingly adopted a pragmatic tone, though Hamas insists it will not formally renounce violence or recognize Israel ? conditions set by the international community for ending its boycott of the group. In its founding charter, the movement is committed to Israel's destruction and has killed hundreds of Israelis in militant attacks that have included shootings and suicide bombings. Since 2007, the group has ruled the Gaza Strip, a sliver of territory wedged between Egypt's Sinai desert and Israel.

In a December interview with The Associated Press, Mashaal said he wanted to focus on a strategy of holding mass protests against Israel, in the style of Egypt and Tunisia, where citizens successfully overthrew their dictatorships. However, he did not renounce violence.

Hamas leaders in Gaza tend to adopt a harder line, although they have mostly observed a truce with Israel for the past three years. Palestinian militants from other groups have fired rockets at Israel with varying intensity recently, but it has not escalated into larger violence.

Hamas considers all of Israel to be occupied Palestinian land. The Palestinian Authority, led by Abbas, seeks a state alongside Israel in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem.

Mashaal is originally from the West Bank Palestinian village of Silwad. He survived an Israeli assassination attempt in 1997 in Jordan.

___

Daraghmeh reported from Ramallah, West Bank. Associated Press writers Diaa Hadid in Jerusalem, Zeina Karam in Beirut and Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, contributed reporting.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120121/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_palestinians

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Toshiba Portege Z830-S8302


Travelers seeking an executive-class status symbol will be tempted by Toshiba's flagship ultrabook, the Portege Z830-S8302 ($1,429 list). It puts a speedy Intel Core i7 chip into a magnesium alloy chassis that out-diets Apple's MacBook Air 13-inch (Thunderbolt) ($1,299 direct, 4 stars), coming in at 2.5 pounds to the Apple Air's and most Windows ultrabooks' 2.9 pounds or so. It's packed with features ranging from a fingerprint reader to a backlit keyboard.

It's a lot more expensive than its Core i3?powered sibling, the Portege Z835-P330 ($799.99 at Best Buy, 3.5 stars). If all you need in an ultralight is Office and Outlook capability, the slower model is undeniably the, well, better buy. But if you regularly mix some photo editing or occasional video encoding with your word processing and Web surfing, or if you just want ultrabook bragging rights, you'll want to inspect Toshiba's top of the line?although you may find yourself wishing it actually weighed a few ounces more.

Design
Although the Portege's magnesium alloy frame makes its 1.6-by-12.4-by-8.9-inch (HWD) body relatively rigid?you can pick it up by a front corner with no problem?the same isn't true of its super-thin screen. Grasp the latter by the corners and it will wiggle and flex, or start typing with the Toshiba in your lap and the display will vibrate and wobble to an annoying degree. The computer doesn't really feel flimsy, but it definitely feels too flexible.

The screen looks good, though?it's a 13.3-inch, LED-backlit matte panel with the same 1,366-by-768 resolution as every other ultrabook we've tested with the exception of the 1,600-by-900 Asus Zenbook UX31-RSL8 ($1,049 list, 4 stars), with ample brightness, sharp text, and crisp colors. I also liked the Toshiba's touchpad, which works smoothly and responsively apart from two slightly stiff, fingerprint-magnet chrome buttons. The laptop's speakers produce enough volume to fill a room, albeit with sketchy and scratchy audio.

The spill-resistant keyboard is backlit for confident typing in dim rooms and on red-eye flights (the backlight by default turns off after 15 seconds without pressing a key, though you can switch it to be always on or off). It offers a first-rate layout, with Ctrl and Delete keys in their proper lower-left and top-right corners respectively, and dedicated Home, End, PgUp, and PgDn keys as well as cursor arrows. Its typing feel, alas, is less satisfactory?flat and shallow, with a few keys (notably the space bar and left shift) not always registering during the first hours of use. Slowing down and giving the space bar a sharp rap cured the typos, but I'd still rate the keyboard as inferior to that of the Lenovo IdeaPad U300s ($1,495 list, 4 stars)?or the Toshiba Z835-P330, which showed no space-bar problems in our test.

Features
The Z830-S8302 takes a backseat to no ultrabook, however, when it comes to input/output features. Sure, others may match its 802.11n Wi-Fi networking and HDMI video port, but the Portege also has good old-fashioned Ethernet and VGA ports, because connecting to wired office LANs and conference-room projectors can still be pretty darn convenient.

Microphone and headphone jacks are on the left, next to the SD card slot that the Lenovo U300s designers forgot. There's a USB 3.0 port on the right and two USB 2.0 ports, one with Toshiba's "sleep and charge" functionality for recharging phones and other devices, at the rear. Bluetooth is present, though WiMAX is not. Intel's Wireless Display (WiDi) 2.1, which streams the Portege's screen to an HDTV set equipped with a third-party (Netgear, Belkin, or D-Link) adapter, is supported, although our test unit arrived without the WiDi software. We downloaded it (135MB) from Intel's site and configured WiDi with no problems.

Like other ultrabooks, the Z830-S8302 has no optical drive for loading new software, but Toshiba makes up for that with a slew of preloaded software including links to an app store and book store; a scanty 30-day trial of Norton Internet Security; Google Chrome; a Bulletin Board app for arranging notes and other information; and a ReelTime timeline thumbnail view of recently accessed documents and files. The flagship ultrabook is backed by a three-year parts-and-labor warranty.

Considering its price premium over the Z835-P330, you might guess that the Z830-S8302 boasted more storage as well as a faster processor, but you'd be wrong?it's the same 128GB solid-state drive. That's nothing to sneeze at, though, as the SSD helped the Toshiba start up in 25 seconds and wake from sleep in just 3 seconds.

Performance
Toshiba Portege Z830-S8302 The price premium does, however, get you that Core i7 CPU?the same dual-core, four-thread, 1.8GHz Core i7-2677M found in the IdeaPad U300s?as well as 6GB of RAM instead of the usual 4GB. The difference from the Core i3 model is night and day, as the Z830 completed our Adobe Photoshop CS5 test in literally half the time (4 minutes 8 seconds versus 8:17) and pummeled its economical sibling in PCMark 7 (3,366 versus 2,496).

Toshiba Portege Z830-S8302

Actually, that PCMark 7 score was narrowly eclipsed by that of the Asus Zenbook UX31 (3,531), but in most of our other benchmarks, the Toshiba topped its rivals (including the same-CPU'd Lenovo) to become the fastest ultrabook we've yet tested. The Portege whisked through our Handbrake video encoding run in a tick under 2 minutes, roughly 10 seconds ahead of the Asus and MacBook Air. Its score of 2.32 in CineBench R11.5 was half again as much as the Lenovo's 1.55. Only its Intel integrated graphics proved predictably inadequate for serious gaming, falling just short of 20 frames per second in both Crysis and Lost Planet 2.

The only test where the high-end Toshiba lost to the value model was our MobileMark 2007 battery rundown, where the Z830-S8302's more potent components drained the sealed 47Wh battery in 6 hours 27 minutes versus 7:35 for the Z835-P330. Still, the deluxe Portege's time is a virtual tie with the Asus UX31's 6:32, and longer life than you see with either the MacBook Air or Lenovo U300s.

The ultrabook market is booming. If you're comparison shopping, $70 more will buy you the Lenovo U300s with a 256GB instead of 128GB SSD; $330 less will buy you the Asus UX31 with a perfectly capable Core i5 and a higher-resolution screen; and of course $630 less will buy you the adequate-for-most-tasks Core i3 Portege. But the Portege Z830-S8302 scores highly in performance, practicality, and sheer sex appeal, though our test unit's so-so space bar was frustrating.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the Toshiba Portege Z830-S8302 with several other laptops side by side.

More laptop reviews:
??? Toshiba Portege Z830-S8302
??? HP Pavilion dm1-3010nr (Verizon)
??? Dell Latitude E6420 XFR
??? Lenovo IdeaPad U400
??? Gateway ID47H07u
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/k83oKAFTn00/0,2817,2398989,00.asp

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Wesseling: Flacco's litmus test awaits Sunday

Ravens QB is better than people give him credit for, but he must crack a barrier Sunday

Image: Joe FlaccoAP

Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco celebrates his touchdown pass to Anquan Boldin during their victory over the Texans last Sunday.

By Chris Wesseling

NBCSports.com contributor

updated 2:04 p.m. ET Jan. 19, 2012

Entering Sunday's NFL conference championship games, no player is under more scrutiny than Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco.

For over a decade, the working narrative has been this: the Ravens? ground attack and swarming defense compensate for an anemic passing game.

"I'm sure if we win [the Super Bowl], I'll have nothing to do with why we won, according to you guys," Flacco told the media last week. Since then, the Ravens ? thanks to four turnovers ? squeaked past a Texans team that posted more first downs, total yards, and yards per pass play than Baltimore.

Former AP defensive player of the year Ed Reed, among others, fingered Flacco as the primary culprit, taking aim at his shaky pocket presence and loss of composure in managing just three points over the final 45 minutes.

But does Flacco deserve his status as the public?s playoff punching bag?

Team leader Ray Lewis, who said from "Day 1" that Flacco?s arm was special, defends his quarterback as a ?flat-out winner.? And the numbers back that up. For his career, Flacco is 5-3 in the playoffs during and 44-20 in the regular season, including a 7-0 record against playoff teams this season.

No quarterback has more regular-season victories in his first four seasons.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, Flacco has shown the ability to move the ball through the air with the best of the league?s passers. He entered the season as one of just six quarterbacks in NFL history with 10,000 yards in his first three seasons. Flacco is the only quarterback since the NFL merger in 1970 to start a playoff game in each of his first four seasons. Through nine games this season, he was on pace for the sixth most passing attempts in history.

That success, though, masks a disturbing habit of following standout performances with disappointing losses against inferior teams. Flacco?s inconsistency forced the Ravens to alter their blueprint down the stretch, winning six of seven games while leaning on Ray Rice and a typically stingy defense.

Even against a Patriots defense that surrendered the most completions of 20-plus yards and the second-most passing yards in history, Baltimore?s first priority will be to jumpstart a running game that averaged just 2.8 yards per rush last week.

?Time of possession is going to be huge? at New England, coach John Harbaugh said, essentially giving away his game plan. It?s no secret the Ravens offense is best when Rice and Ricky Williams set up Flacco?s down-field strikes to Torrey Smith and Anquan Boldin.

As great as the Reed- and Lewis-led defense has been, Tom Brady?s surgically precise offense won?t implode the closer it advances toward the red zone as overwhelmed rookie T.J. Yates did a week ago.

It?s going to take more than 20 points for Flacco to finally ascend that AFC summit of Brady-Manning-Roethlisberger and reach Super Bowl XLVI.

If the Baltimore faithful have any hope of parading in the streets of the city that welcomed the Mayflower moving vans of their beloved Colts in 1984, Flacco is going to have to go against script to outgun Brady by taking advantage of that porous Pats secondary. This is his litmus test. In fact, one national report suggests Flacco?s future in Baltimore may hinge on his ability to finally knock off one of the NFL?s elite quarterbacks in the postseason.

? 2012 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/46059088/ns/sports-nfl/

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Faint 'satellite galaxy' discovered

Thursday, January 19, 2012

A faint "satellite galaxy" 10 billion light years from Earth is the lowest-mass object ever detected at such a distance, says University of California, Davis, physics professor Chris Fassnacht, who aided in the satellite's discovery.

The find, described in a paper published online in the journal Nature, could help astronomers find similar objects and confirm or reject theories about the structure of the cosmos.

Theory predicts that galaxies should be surrounded by halos of smaller, satellite blobs of mass, according to Fassnacht. Astronomers have detected such satellites around our own galaxy, the Milky Way, and nearby.

But they had not previously detected the predicted satellites of more distant galaxies.

Because most of the mass of galaxies is made up, not of stars, but of "dark matter," which does not absorb or emit light, these distant objects may be very faint or even completely dark.

The team looked for faint or dark satellites of distant galaxies using a method called gravitational lensing. Using the Keck II telescope at the W.M. Keck Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, with "adaptive optics," they found two galaxies aligned with each other, as viewed from Earth.

The nearer object's gravitational field deflects the light from the more distant object as the light passes through or near the other object's gravitational field, creating a distorted image as if passed through a lens. By analyzing these distorted images, the researchers could determine if there were any satellite galaxies clustered around the "lens" galaxy.

Adaptive optics make constant, tiny adjustments to the telescope mirror to compensate for the effects of the Earth's atmosphere. As a result, the Keck telescopes can achieve higher resolution than the Hubble Space Telescope.

The technique can now be applied to many more galaxies, Fassnacht said. "As we collect more objects, we can do more precise tests of our simulations and make predictions about the structure of the universe," he said.

First author Simona Vegetti, a postdoctoral researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said: "Now we have one dark satellite, but suppose that we don't find enough of them ? then we will have to change the properties of dark matter.

"Or, we might find as many satellites as we see in the simulations, and that will tell us that dark matter has the properties we think it has."

Fassnacht and Vegetti worked with Leon Koopmans of the University of Groningen, Netherlands; David Lagattuta, now at the Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Matthew Auger, UC Santa Barbara; and John McKean of the Netherlands Foundation for Research in Astronomy. Lagattuta and Auger are former graduate students in Fassnacht's lab, and McKean was a postdoctoral researcher at UC Davis.

###

University of California - Davis: http://www.ucdavis.edu

Thanks to University of California - Davis for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116848/Faint__satellite_galaxy__discovered

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NFL Communications - St. Louis Rams to Host Regular-Season ...

NFL Communications - St. Louis Rams to Host Regular-Season Game in United Kingdom in Each of Next Three Years ? \ '); $('#wpl-mustlogin').hide().slideDown('fast'); } ); $('#wpl-mustlogin input.input').live( 'focus', function() { $(this).prev().hide(); }).live( 'blur', function() { if ( $(this).val() == '' ) $(this).prev().show(); }); $('#wpl-mustlogin input#wp-submit').live( 'click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); $.post( 'http://nflcommunications.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php', { 'action': 'wpl_record_stat', 'stat_name': 'loggedout_login_submit' }, function() { $('#wpl-mustlogin form').submit(); } ); }); $('#wpl-mustlogin a#wpl-signup-link').live( 'click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); var link = $(this).attr('href'); $.post( 'http://nflcommunications.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php', { 'action': 'wpl_record_stat', 'stat_name': 'loggedout_signup_click' }, function() { location.href = link; } ); }); }); /* ]]> */

Source: http://nflcommunications.com/2012/01/20/st-louis-rams-to-host-regular-season-game-in-united-kingdom-in-each-of-next-three-years/

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Republican Debate: Presidential Candidates Face Off Ahead Of South Carolina Primary

HuffPost's Michael Calderone reports:

CHARLESTON, S.C. -- Washington bureau chief Sam Feist got a call Thursday morning that would not only shake up the Republican primary but lead to some last-minute tweaks before CNN's prime-time debate.

CNN reporter Peter Hamby notified Feist that Rick Perry was dropping out of the race, a scoop that would soon make the rounds on Twitter and on air before the Texas governor's 11 a.m. press conference. "When we left here last night, we had finished what we thought were the debate questions for five candidates," said Feist, who's producing the network's 8 p.m. faceoff, co-sponsored with the Southern Republican Leadership Conference.

In addition to revising the questions -- something CNN debate staff also did on Monday after Jon Huntsman dropped out -- the production team set to work on rearranging the stage and lights for the four remaining candidates. "It has been an interesting morning," Feist noted.

Click here to read more.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/19/republican-debate-south-carolina-primary_n_1217392.html

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Texas governor Rick Perry dropping presidential run (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Texas Governor Rick Perry, just months ago a serious contender to become the 2012 Republican U.S. presidential nominee, was set to drop out of the race on Thursday after a series of gaffes and controversies undercut his campaign.

Perry is abandoning his run for his party's nomination to face Democratic President Barack Obama on November 6, campaign sources said, and will endorse Newt Gingrich, a former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Perry scheduled a news conference in North Charleston, South Carolina, for 11 a.m. EST (1400 GMT). Perry drops out just two days before Saturday's pivotal Republican presidential primary in the conservative Southern state where he had hoped to revive his campaign.

Perry entered the race in August and briefly was at the front of the pack of Republican candidates, but a series of gaffes, lackluster debate performances and controversial statements during the campaign undermined his standing in polls.

Perry's poll numbers remained low in South Carolina, with little prospect for improving before the primary or in the contests ahead.

Perry had contemplated getting out of the race after a distant fifth place showing in the January 3 Iowa caucuses - the first contest in the state-by-state battle for the Republican nomination - but quickly decided to stay in the race. His campaign, however, never got any more traction.

Perry had roared past former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and other rivals to take the lead in polls of the Republican candidates after entering the race.

POOR DEBATE PERFORMANCES

His conservative views and support from the grassroots Tea Party movement had positioned him as a top contender in the race for the Republican nomination.

But Perry foundered after several poor debate performances in which he was hammered by his rivals over his immigration policies and for ordering that young girls in Texas be vaccinated for a sexually transmitted virus.

He was ridiculed after a major debate stumble in November when he could not remember one of the three government agencies that he had repeatedly said he would eliminate if elected president. He also alienated some conservative voters with his stance on immigration.

This past Sunday Perry accused the Obama administration of over-reacting to a videotape that shows four Marines appearing to urinate on dead Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.

The latest controversy to hit Perry came this week when U.S. ally Turkey condemned as "unfounded and inappropriate" the Texas governor's comments that Turkey is ruled by Islamic terrorists and questioned whether it should remain in the NATO alliance.

Perry also said during a Republican debate in South Carolina on Monday that the United States should eliminate all aid to its long-time ally.

"Obviously when you have a country that is being ruled by what many would perceive to be Islamic terrorists, when you start seeing that sort of activity against their own citizens, then yes - not only is it time for us to have a conversation about whether or not they belong in NATO, but it's time for the United States, when we look at their foreign aid, to go to zero with it," Perry said at the debate.

Perry had been known for controversial remarks even before running for president. In 2009 Perry pondered his state's secession from the United States. At a Tea Party event in Austin, supporters shouted "secede," and Perry said Texas might want to "if Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people."

Perry becomes the latest casualty in the marathon presidential campaign. Last August, former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty withdrew after failing to make headway in the race.

Former pizza executive Herman Cain dropped out in December amid allegations of sexual harassment and infidelity. And U.S. congresswoman Michele Bachmann dropped out earlier this month after a weak showing in Iowa.

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Karen Brooks and Patricia Zengerle, Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120119/ts_nm/us_usa_campaign_perry_report

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Cruise survivors: 'There was so much chaos'





Ms. MARIA PAPA (Survived Cruise Ship Disaster): Good morning.

CURRY: So I want to get your response to the CEO of the company in his discussion in calling the -- about the cruise saying he's grateful for the skill and behavior of the crew, that the crew performed very well. What is your reaction to that?

Ms. GODUTI: My reaction is that the crew was never informed and I can't blame the crew because they were never -- they did not know anything. When we -- everything happened they just were telling us to go back to our room. I was trying to find out where are the life boats , does anyone speak English? They did not give us any information whatsoever. They just kept telling us to go back to our room. What...

CURRY: And this was particularly frightening for you, Maria , because as I understand it you don't know how to swim.

Ms. PAPA: Correct, I do not know how to swim. And there was no direction whatsoever. I think if the captain took more of a hand on it then I think that the crew would have been able to understand what was going on. But they weren't getting any announcements.

CURRY: He also said that the cruise line rigorously trains its staff for emergencies, that they hold life boat drills every other week. You saw one of these drills on Saturday before the accident. How would you describe the drill ?

Ms. GODUTI: We actually never saw a drill .

CURRY: Oh, you never saw a drill ?

Ms. PAPA: No.

Ms. GODUTI: No, we never saw a drill . Our drill was scheduled -- we walked into our stateroom and I looked at the itinerary and it says the next day 5 PM that's when our drill was. So we've never seen a drill .

CURRY: And you -- and you bring this up to some degree because you've been on cruise ships before.

Ms. GODUTI: Yes.

CURRY: And you had a very different experience on some of these other cruise ships ?

Ms. GODUTI: Yes. I mean, within one hour of getting on the boat you have to go -- it's mandatory to go to this drill . They take your sea pass, they scan it, and they make sure that every single passenger was there. And they make sure and they tell you that if anything was to happen that you are going to scan your sea pass and we're going to know who got off the ship and who's still on the ship so they know who to look for. And here they didn't know who to look for and they're sending their crew members back on to find people who they don't even -- they've never accounted for anyone.

CURRY: So you're describing chaos, essentially.

Ms. GODUTI: Yes.

Ms. PAPA: Yes.

CURRY: Give us a feeling of what it was like. How were the crew members behaving?

Ms. PAPA: The crew members were running around like the actual passengers. They had no idea what was going on, in my eyes. And they were just running around. They couldn't answer any questions to anyone. There wasn't -- there wasn't anybody speaking English. There was just -- there was so much chaos. We went to go get on one boat when they finally sound the alarm and the door would not open on that life boat . So Melissa grabbed my hand and we went to the next boat.

CURRY: So basically you took your own rescue into your own hands, it sounds like.

Ms. PAPA: Yes.

CURRY: When you hear that the captain had left the ship, that he did not know that there were fatalities, as we just heard in this report, what's your reaction?

Ms. GODUTI: Well, I didn't know that until we saw it on the news. And it's just -- I mean, it's astonishing that someone would actually do something like that. I mean, there was no one who was in charge of our life boat . We had one individual that we found that spoke English, she was from Australia , she was a dancer, and she ended up taking off and leaving because she said she needed to find her friends. So there's no one who's even from Costa Cruise Lines that said, 'OK, stay at this life boat , this is what you're doing. And you're going to get to the island.' When we get to the island wherever we are -- I mean, they told we are -- we are in Nice , France . They told us we were in Savona . The crew members didn't know. The crew...

CURRY: Where you were?

Ms. GODUTI: Where you were. They had no clue. No one informed them. They said if the captain had -- it was an emergency he would sound the alarms. It took an hour and a half for him to sound an alarm.

CURRY: Do you just blame the captain or do you blame the cruise line itself, Maria ?

Ms. PAPA: Well, the -- I believe that the cruise line should have been more prepared. They actually even had taken our passports when we got on and gave us a red little ticket with a number on it that wasn't even filled in with our name. And we asked for a copy of our passport because we didn't have this experience when we were on our cruise in the Royal Caribbean Cruise Line , and they asked us -- we said we need a copy of our passport and they said, 'We'll give it to you tomorrow morning.' And as far as the -- everything, the cruise people were in line for information. I don't think anything was organized, I really do not. And it's a very scary feeling. At one point I actually seen a bunch of crew members running past and they -- it was about 15 or 20 of them. And I said to my daughter, 'Is that the captain?' And she's like, 'Mom, I don't think so.' But...

CURRY: Well, obviously this -- there's much more to be investigated in this story. Thank you so much . We're so glad you're both safe.

Ms. GODUTI: Thanks.

CURRY: Thanks for being with us this morning.

Ms. PAPA: Thank you.

CURRY: Thank you, Melissa and Maria .

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46024452/ns/today-today_people/

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