সোমবার, ৫ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

12 hurt when vehicle crashes into pedestrians at California beach

Snapchat / AP

In this image take from a security camera, pedestrians scatter as a car drives along the Venice Beach boardwalk in Los Angeles on Saturday.

By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

A hit-and-run driver plowed into pedestrians walking along the Venice Beach boardwalk in Los Angeles on Saturday, killing one person and injuring 11 others, fire officials and police said.

A possible suspect was detained and a vehicle of interest seized, Lt. Andrew Neiman of the Los Angeles Police Department told NBCLosAngeles.com.

The driver had fled the scene in a dark-colored sedan, police said.?Security camera video captured a dark-colored car speeding off the boardwalk as people scrambled out of the way.?


The incident happened around 6 p.m. PT at the end of Dudley Avenue, where it intersects Ocean Front Walk just before the beach.

Twelve people were injured, and one of them later died. Nine others?were hospitalized and two received minor injuries, Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey told NBCLosAngeles.com.

The injured were "all believed to have been pedestrians on the boardwalk," according to a?tweet from the LAFD.

"The vehicle appeared to be moving purposefully down the boardwalk, according to witnesses," Humphrey?told the Los Angeles Times.?

The Venice Beach boardwalk is one of Southern California?s main visitor attractions, featuring hundreds of street vendors, performers, beachgoers and tourists on the crowded stretch of galleries, restaurants and tattoo shops.?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2f86d063/sc/8/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A80C0A30C198551190E120Ehurt0Ewhen0Evehicle0Ecrashes0Einto0Epedestrians0Eat0Ecalifornia0Ebeach0Dlite/story01.htm

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রবিবার, ৪ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

Miley Cyrus, Liam Hemsworth not planning wedding, says Noah Cyrus

miley-cyrus-liam-hemsworth-wedding-plans-noah-cyrus.jpgThat may be because there simply aren't any wedding plans to speak of. The couple is seemingly?still together, after a rough beginning of the year, but are no closer to walking down the aisle. That was confirmed by Miley's little sister, Noah Cyrus.While speaking to reporters at the 2013 Do Something Awards, Noah says, "They're not planning yet." That doesn't mean she's doesn't have ideas for her big sister, though. According to Us Weekly, Noah hopes to be Miley's maid of honor when the wedding finally happens. "It better be a very, very cool dress that I have," she says, "because I want to rock a dress."

The couple first got engaged in May 2012. They have been dating since 2009.

Photo/Video credit: Getty Images

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Source: http://blog.zap2it.com/pop2it/2013/08/miley-cyrus-liam-hemsworth-not-planning-wedding-says-noah-cyrus.html

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শনিবার, ৩ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

SIC hopes its three-way proposal will settle ?40m housing debt for good

The SIC is hoping for feedback from Scottish housing minister Margaret Burgess next week on a proposed three-way solution to eliminate its ?40 million housing debt ?once and for all?.

During last week?s cabinet visit, the council?s political leader Gary Robinson presented the new pro?posal to local government minister Derek Mackay.

It would see the local authority receive ?10 million from West?minster, which has benefited from over ?300 billion in revenues from North Sea oil since the 1970s. The SIC would match that sum to halve the debt and, critically, allow coun?cil house rents ?to be kept at an affordable level?.

Subsequently, the mooted deal would see the Scottish government hand over ?10 million in housing grants between 2016 and 2018. The SIC would provide a ?similar sum? in the form of ?land value and fund?ing for housing development?, Mr Robinson said, ?which would pave the way for new affordable homes to be built in Shetland.?

A petition by this newspaper calling on the two governments to resolve the debt, built up during the first oil boom in the 1970s, has been signed by 2,288 people.

Presented with that evidence last week, Mr Mackay said it was plain to see the strength of community feeling about what many islanders view as an historic injustice. He said the SNP government remained ?open-minded? about finding a solution, and vowed to do what he could to get the Tory-Lib Dem coalition back around the table.

Mr Robinson said this week: ?We have taken the initiative to try to break the deadlock on Shetland?s historic housing debt problem and secure a better future for our tenants in terms of affordable and available housing.

?We are pleased that the Scottish government has taken our proposal away to consider in more detail and we hope that they can encourage the UK Government to sit down and discuss the matter.?

He hopes Ms Burgess will be in a position to give initial feedback when she visits the isles on Wednesday (7th August).

?The position we have put for?ward is, in our minds, one that could settle the housing debt debate once and for all.?

SIC housing chief Anita Jamie?son said a solution to the debt is ?long overdue and is crucial to protecting our tenants, by ensuring that we can provide a quality service that meets their needs and expect?ations at an affordable rent?.

Members and officials have warned rents could rise by 10 per cent or more in April 2014 if nothing is done to address the debt.

Ms Jamieson said: ?The views of our tenants were well captured by the Shetland Tenants Forum?s recent survey. We also need to find ways of investing in new housing supply to meet the growing needs of those on the waiting list. The proposal put forward is designed to find a sustainable way forward.?

www.dropshetlandsdebt.org

Source: http://www.shetlandtimes.co.uk/2013/08/03/sic-hopes-its-three-way-proposal-will-settle-40m-housing-debt-for-good

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GOP in key states tries to slow anti-abortion push

MILWAUKEE?Abortion is still legal but getting one in many states will be difficult if laws passed this year are upheld by the courts. In a march through conservative legislatures, anti-abortion Republicans passed a wave of new restrictions that would sharply limit when a woman could terminate a pregnancy and where she could go to do so.

The push brought the anti-abortion movement closer to a key milestone, in which the procedure would become largely inaccessible in the three-fifths of the country controlled by Republicans even if still technically legal under Roe vs. Wade.

But rather than continuing to roll across the GOP heartland in synch with the pro-life movement's plan, the effort may now be hitting a wall. The obstacle comes not from opposing Democrats but from GOP leaders who believe pressing further is a mistake for a party trying to soften its harder edges after election losses last year.

The resisting Republicans include governors and top legislators in more than a half-dozen states, including some of the largest and most politically competitive in the party's 30-state coalition. They are digging in to stop the barrage of abortion proposals, hoping to better cultivate voters not enamored with the GOP's social agenda.

"It's a huge mistake if your ear is not in tune where people are," said Republican state Sen. Dale Schultz in Wisconsin, who is trying to fend off more abortion legislation in the state's GOP-controlled legislature, even though he says he personally supports it. "And we were pushing people too fast. All we're going to do is panic people and this is going to blow up if we don't begin to moderate on some of this stuff."

The Ohio Senate president, Republican Tom Neihaus, blocked a bill in November that would have banned abortions as early as six weeks into pregnancy.

"I just didn't think it was appropriate," said Niehaus, a supporter of earlier anti-abortion measures. "It's a distraction from our primary focus of getting the economy back on track."

But anti-abortion leaders say they are determined to push on into more Republican strongholds, taking advantage of the party's majority status.

"It is definitely the case that the future for us lies beyond what is considered your traditional pro-life states," said Dan McConchie, vice president of Americans United for Life, which circulates model legislation to state lawmakers.

The dissension, strongest in the Midwest and southern border states, is flaring as the GOP prepares for competitive races in the contested regions next year. The anti-abortion movement is poised to press for constitutional amendments giving legal rights to fetuses, bans on abortions based on gender, and an end to abortion exceptions for victims of rape and incest.

Anti-abortion Republicans have gotten more than 170 new abortion laws passed in 30 states since the party won control of a majority of statehouses in 2010. This year's push was highlighted by some of the strongest restrictions yet passed in North Dakota, Arkansas and Texas.

The key measures banned abortions after approximately six weeks, 12 weeks or 20 weeks, depending on the state; required women to see the fetus on an ultrasound; required doctors to have hospital admitting privileges; and required clinics to have full hospital-type facilities. More than a dozen GOP states in the South and West adopted all or most of the package.

If the new laws are upheld by the courts, many providers would close. Only six of the 42 abortion clinics in Texas are expected for remain open, serving the nation's second largest population. Already, only one clinic remains open in Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming.

In the midst of the push, Republican legislatures in Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and several other swing states enacted restrictions, but not the tougher ones. Republican majorities in Florida did not add new restrictions and leaders don't expect to. In Virginia, a key anti-abortion measure didn't pass. Republican Gov. Pat McCrory in North Carolina is balking at more action.

GOP officials there object to the idea of legislating abortion repeatedly and to proposals they consider extreme.

"We just passed the biggest abortion bill in Wisconsin in 15 years," said Wisconsin state Sen. Glenn Grothman, among the chamber's leading anti-abortion crusaders. "But to ask our members to do that again, they might not have the stomach for that."

In these states, GOP leaders say they are worried about alienating women and young people, who disproportionately favor abortion rights. These groups voted in lesser numbers than usual for GOP candidates last year. Democratic President Barack Obama won the women's vote by 11 percentage points.

Nationally, most voters approve of restrictions on abortion but 54 percent think it should be legal in most or all cases, according to a poll conducted in July by the Pew Center for People and the Press. The support for abortion rights was 10 percentage points higher in the Great Lakes and South Atlantic regions than in the South.

In Michigan, "There's just not a whole lot of legislative things left do" on abortion, said GOP Senate President Randy Richardville. "We lean conservative, but we're not crazies."

Michigan's Republican House Speaker Jase Bolger blocked one tough abortion bill this year and Republican Gov. Rick Snyder vetoed another last year, which opponents are now trying to circumvent with a ballot initiative.

But abortion rights supporters say that even if the GOP's anti-abortion push loses momentum, the measures already passed in Republican states will have a major impact on women seeking abortions.

"Even if this wave of restrictions stops, it's not like access will be restored," said Elizabeth Nash, the state policy analyst for the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

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Emery Dalesio in Raleigh, N.C.; David Eggert in Lansing, Mich.; and Gary Fineout in Tallahassee, Fla., contributed.

Follow Beaumont on Twitter at: https://twitter.com

Follow Beaumont on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/TomBeaumont

Source: http://www.twincities.com/national/ci_23783313/gop-key-states-tries-slow-anti-abortion-push?source=rss

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'Abenomics' Serving Up The Same Old Medicine In Japan?

In Japan, stocks are up as a result of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic stimulus policies, known as "Abenomics" ? but not much else has changed.

Shuji Kajiyama/AP

In Japan, stocks are up as a result of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic stimulus policies, known as "Abenomics" ? but not much else has changed.

Shuji Kajiyama/AP

Ever since Japan's stock market bubble burst in the early 1990s, the country's economy has been stuck in a deflationary spiral. Wages and prices kept going down ? and so did consumer spending.

After all, would you buy something today if you knew it was going to be cheaper tomorrow?

But when he came to power last December, Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he could fix the problem, after two "lost decades."

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's plans for reviving Japan's ailing economy are yielding mixed results so far.

Koji Sasahara/AP

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's plans for reviving Japan's ailing economy are yielding mixed results so far.

Koji Sasahara/AP

His mix of economic policies was soon dubbed "Abenomics." The government says they have begun to revive the country, while economists say the results have been mixed.

Kozo Yamamoto, a lawmaker with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, organized a series of study sessions where "reflationists," including himself, persuaded Abe to use monetary policy aggressively.

"The most important thing is to change the people's expectation on the inflation rate," Yamamoto says. "Many Japanese had deflationary expectations. Then nobody consumes and nobody invests, because in the future, prices will go down."

Japan has pumped nearly $1.5 trillion into the economy by printing more money and buying back government bonds ? an attempt to create inflation, which is what Abe officials say the country needs. And it has increased public spending by $100 billion, which will be used to improve Japan's infrastructure and for public works projects.

The policy has driven up the stock market, and thanks to a weaker Japanese currency, exports are up as well.

? I would rename it 'absolutely bad economics'. I think it is just a ploy to create a bubble economy, in the hope ... that people will forget the deflationary reality that is pressuring them.

The government says inflation is now at its highest level in nearly five years, and the economy grew at an annual rate of about 3 percent between April and June.

But many Tokyoites say Abe's policies have not yet affected them, and they're still waiting to see which way the economy goes before they make any big purchases or investments.

"I don't feel that the economy is really picking up, at least not for me, personally," says Daisuke Okada, a canned coffee salesman, as he takes his lunch break in Tokyo's Shinbashi district.

"But I do get the sense that some companies and consumers now have a more positive outlook on the economy, and they're acting on it more than before," he adds.

What would affect him, Daisuke says, is if the government raises taxes to offset its massive debt.

Up in Tokyo's working-class Kameido neighborhood, Abenomics seem to be having even less impact. "We sell daily necessities here. I think probably we'd be the last people to ever benefit from Abenomics," says local supermarket owner Tatsuhiro Mizuno.

Tatsuhiro Mizuno runs a supermarket in the working-class neighborhood of Kameido. He says he hasn't seen much change in sales recently, although he notes that imported foods are now more expensive.

Anthony Kuhn/NPR

Tatsuhiro Mizuno runs a supermarket in the working-class neighborhood of Kameido. He says he hasn't seen much change in sales recently, although he notes that imported foods are now more expensive.

Anthony Kuhn/NPR

Mizuno takes great pride in offering his customers the lowest prices he can, considerably lower than in central Tokyo. A hand-lettered sign in his office sums up his philosophy: "Conserve everything."

Mizuno says he hasn't seen any rise in people's wages or any change in their spending habits. Some imported foods are now more expensive. But he refuses to pass the extra cost on to his customers.

"Our customers are very price conscious," he says. "Even a few yen's difference matters to them. I'm sure they'd be uncomfortable paying more. So actually, we cover the price rise for them."

Some economists note that fuel and food prices are the only ones going up. All other prices are still declining, suggesting that domestic demand is still weak.

Noriko Hama, an economist at Doshisha University in Kyoto, argues that much of Japan's stimulus money has gone into creating a stock market bubble, much like that of the late 1980s, while ordinary consumer prices continue to fall.

"I would rename it 'absolutely bad economics,' " she says dryly. "I think it is just a ploy to create a bubble economy, in the hope, I suppose, that people will forget the deflationary reality that is pressuring them."

Hama says Abe's policies ? which she characterizes as supply-side neoconservatism ? are designed to preserve the collusion between government and "Japan Inc." that has been a hallmark of the Liberal Democratic Party's rule for decades.

Customers browse at a clothing shop in Tokyo. Prices for most consumer goods haven't risen in recent years ? but neither has spending.

Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images

Customers browse at a clothing shop in Tokyo. Prices for most consumer goods haven't risen in recent years ? but neither has spending.

Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images

"It's very much Rip van Winkle economics," Hama says, "dreaming about the days of strong exports, supported by a cheap yen; economic growth being sustained by public works spending, government picking winners and losers among industries."

She also notes that Abe has promised deregulation that will make it easier for companies to fire workers, or turn them into temporary workers, who now account for 38 percent of the labor force. They often do the same work as full-time workers, but without equal pay and benefits.

Some prominent foreign economists have hailed Abenomics as a model for developed economies to follow.

But Hama says that Abenomics threaten to make a very few people wealthy, while leaving most ordinary Japanese behind, and she says that's not something worth emulating.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/08/01/207861379/abenomics-serving-up-the-same-old-medicine-in-japan?ft=1&f=1017

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NASA turns 55. What's next for the space agency?

Fifty-five years ago Monday, President Eisenhower signed the Space Act, authorizing the creation of NASA. Since then, the space agency has grown from its Sputnik-shaded beginnings to studying the full scope of the heavens. What will the next 55 years bring?

By Liz Fuller-Wright,?Correspondent / July 31, 2013

Information from three telescopes was combined to create this image of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a small satellite galaxy of the Milky Way located about 160,000 light years from Earth. X-rays from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory (blue) show hot regions created by these winds and shocks, while infrared data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (red) outline where the dust and cooler gas are found. The optical light from the 2.2-m Max-Planck-ESO telescope (yellow) in Chile shows where ultraviolet radiation from hot, young stars is causing gas in the nebula to glow.

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics/Reuters

Enlarge

Fifty-six years ago, civilian pilots and military rocket scientists had little in common. And then, on October 7, 1957,?came Sputnik.

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Within a year, the?National Aeronautics and Space Administration?(NASA) began operations as a hastily cobbled-together mix of civilian aeronautics and military intercontinental ballistic missile research. Now, it's a federal agency examining the entire sweep of the sky.

From its hasty beginnings, NASA has flown 157 missions???86 still ongoing ??visiting almost every large heavenly body between the Sun and Pluto, monitoring Earth from space, peering into the heart of our galaxy's central black hole, and looking out to distant stars and galaxies. NASA has sent 301 astronauts into space, and is currently training another nine?who will soon fly.

We have a permanent human presence in orbit and 12 men have left footprints on the Moon. NASA's satellites have orbited Mercury, Venus, Earth, the Moon, Mars, the asteroid Vesta, Jupiter, and Saturn; flown by Uranus and Neptune; and another is en route to Pluto. NASA's telescopes are listening to every corner of the universe and looking at billions of stars; they have found hundreds of planets orbiting other stars, plus countless pulsars, black holes, supernovae, and more. NASA and its sister organizations around the world are examining the secrets of the universe, from tiny grains of space dust to dark matter to unthinkably enormous galaxies.

"The 20th?century was quite an amazing time for advances in science and technology, particularly in spaceflight," says Bill Barry, NASA's chief historian. Just 55 years before NASA's creation, in 1903, the Wright brothers flew the first airplane in Kitty Hawk, N.C. And now, 55 years later, we've visited the moon, "reconnoitered the solar system ? and revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos and our place in it," he says.

"Apollo, getting to the moon, developing industries and building infrastructure, exploring our solar system, the Earth, and the larger universe ? that's a pretty good list of accomplishments for 55 years," says Dr. Barry. "It's a pretty good investment for the chunk of money we spent in the '60s plus the maintenance-level investment we've made since then."

The price of exploration

Space spending in 1957 had amounted to around $35 million ($282 million in 2013 dollars), but Sputnik fears loosened federal purse strings. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration officially began its mission October 1, 1958, after President Dwight Eisenhower signed it into law on July 29. In its first year, NASA's budget was about 10 times the 1957 space budget, and it grew rapidly.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/T24XvrD_ox0/NASA-turns-55.-What-s-next-for-the-space-agency

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

News bites: Facebook shares briefly trade above IPO price

National Security Agency Director Gen. Keith Alexander defended the spy agency's surveillance programs and deflected hecklers during a speech at the Black Hat hacker conference, The Associated Press reports. Facebook's shares briefly traded above its IPO price on Wednesday, according to The New York Times.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Thursday that makes it harder for websites to illegally host copies of movies or TV shows on them, Bloomberg writes.

Apple's next iPad Mini will likely have a retina display provided by its rival Samsung, The Wall Street Journal reports.

The U.K. is engaged in a debate about whether Twitter should do more to clamp down on trolls that send abusive tweets to women, according to the AP.


Source: http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/314945-news-bites-nsa-director-defends-surveillance-programs-at-hacker-conference

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Beset San Diego Mayor Says He Didn't Get Harassment Training

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner announced at a news conference last week that he intended to seek professional help for sexual harassment issues.

Bill Wechter/Getty Images

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner, accused by at least eight women of sexually harassing them, never received a mandated training course on sexual harassment from the city, according to his attorney.

Filner's lawyer, Harvey Berger, says the city failed to meet its legal requirement and therefore should foot the mayor's legal bills. Filner and the city of San Diego are being sued by the mayor's former communications director, Irene McCormack Jackson.

The Associated Press reports that "Berger said the training was scheduled but the city trainer canceled and did not reschedule." Berger laid out his arguments in a letter to City Attorney Jan Goldsmith, parts of which were made public Wednesday.

City council members have unanimously refused to fund Filner's defense and are suing the mayor for any damages the city may incur dealing with McCormack's lawsuit, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.

"If Bob Filner is engaged in unlawful conduct and the city is held liable, he will have to reimburse us every penny the city pays and its attorney fees," Goldsmith told the U-T.

Member station KPBS reports that when McCormack went public with her allegations earlier this month:

"She described Filner's penchant for putting her into a headlock and pulling her about, while whispering sexually explicit comments in her ear. She said the mayor often told her he loved her, wanted to kiss her, told her he wanted to see her naked and that she should work without panties at City Hall; and that he wanted to 'consummate their relationship.' "

McCormack, whose suit seeks unspecified damages, alleges the city's Democratic mayor also acted inappropriately with other women. She and her attorney, Gloria Allred, are among many who have demanded the mayor resign.

Filner, 70, has refused to step down. As KPBS reports, he has acknowledged that he's made terrible mistakes and engaged in "intimidating conduct." The mayor says he's apologized to his staff and plans to address his behavior by entering an inpatient rehab clinic for two weeks, starting Aug. 5.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/08/01/207828925/beset-san-diego-mayor-says-he-didnt-get-harassment-training?ft=1&f=103943429

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Chemical weapons investigators head to Syria within days: U.N.

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. inspectors will travel to Syria within days to investigate claims of chemical weapons use in the country's civil war after the Syrian government granted access to three sites, the United Nations said on Thursday.

"The team will depart for Syria as soon as practical and is preparing to depart within days," U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters. "The team is now assembling ... in The Hague."

The head of a U.N. chemical weapons investigation team, Ake Sellstrom, and about 10 experts from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the World Health Organization will travel to Syria, Nesirky said.

They will visit Khan al-Assal in Aleppo province - where the Syrian government, backed by its ally Russia, says rebels used chemical weapons in March - and two unidentified locations, the United Nations said.

The U.N. inquiry will only try to establish whether chemical weapons were used, not who used them.

The Syrian government and the opposition have accused each other of using chemical weapons and both have denied it. The United Nations said it has received 13 reports of possible chemical weapons attacks.

Sellstrom and the head of the U.N. Office of Disarmament Affairs, Angela Kane, visited Damascus last week at the invitation of the Syrian government to discuss access and obtained an understanding that it would be granted.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chemical-weapons-investigators-head-syria-within-days-u-162723581.html

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