Friday, January 31, 2014

IOC to review Sochi’s final preparations, security

By STEPHEN WILSON

AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin

SOCHI, Russia (AP) â€" Five days before the opening ceremony, new IOC President Thomas Bach will convene his inner cabinet to review final preparations and security plans for the Sochi Games and push his agenda for future policy changes in the Olympic movement.

Bach will chair a scheduled two-day meeting of his 14-member executive board in Sochi starting Sunday, the first stage of a weeklong gathering of the International Olympic Committee on the eve of Russia’s first Winter Games.

Bach, a 60-year-old German, will be overseeing his first Olympics as IOC president. The former Olympic fencer was elected in September to succeed Belgium’s Jacques Rogge, who served for 12 years.

The buildup to Sochi has been overshadowed by Western criticism of Russia’s law banning gay “propaganda” and the threat of terrorist attacks by Islamic insurgents from the North Caucasus region. The pair of suicide bombings in late December that killed 34 people in Volgograd, 400 miles (600 kilometers) from Sochi, has ramped up the security worries ahead of the Olympics.

The Sochi organizing committee will be reporting to the IOC board on Sunday, and Russia’s security operation will be high on the agenda. Russia is deploying more than 50,000 police and soldiers to protect the games, the biggest security apparatus in Olympic history.

IOC leaders, who have repeatedly expressed confidence in Russia’s ability to secure the games, will be looking for last-minute reassurances.

“I understand the sports facilities are ready and magnificent and I hope that that the necessary security operation can be managed in such a way that safe games are delivered with a happy Olympic ambience,” IOC vice president Craig Reedie of Britain told The Associated Press.

Sochi organizing committee leader Dmitry Chernyshenko said this week that the host city was the “most secure venue at the moment on the planet.” He said security measures would not be obtrusive or detract from the Olympic atmosphere for athletes and spectators.

“You can be sure the Russians will be doing everything to welcome everybody and make everybody feel comfortable,” Bach told reporters this week.

President Barack Obama, meanwhile, said he believes the Olympics will be safe. He told CNN that the U.S. is coordinating with Russia and officials have looked at the Russian security plans.

Bach is expected to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin next week before the opening of the games on Friday. The two men met last year in Sochi when Bach visited the host city.

Organizers say the venues â€" the indoor arenas in the Olympic Park on the Black Sea coast and the snow facilities in the nearby mountains â€" are all ready to go. They were built from scratch in a massive building project whose cost has soared to an Olympic record $51 billion, a figure that includes long-term investments in road, railways, hotels and other infrastructure.

“There are last touches to be made in the last couple of days, but this is not new,” Bach said. “I think overall we can say Sochi is ready to welcome the best winter athletes of the world.”

The impact of Russia’s anti-gay law is also likely to be discussed in the meeting between the IOC and Sochi organizers. Russia has repeatedly said the law will not discriminate against gay athletes or spectators at the games.

The IOC has reminded athletes to comply with Rule 50 in the Olympic Charter, which states: “No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.”

Bach said, while athletes cannot demonstrate on the podium, they are free to express their opinions at news conferences. Chernyshenko initially took issue with Bach, saying athletes could not speak out at press conferences, but later backed off.

Also reporting to the IOC executive board will be Brazilian organizers of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. IOC leaders are concerned about the construction delays and other organizational issues dogging Rio’s preparations, underlined by Bach’s visit to Brazil last week to remind organizers they have “no day to lose.”

Sochi and Rio organizers will also deliver updates to the full IOC general assembly when it holds its three-day session in Sochi starting Wednesday.

Most of the session, however, will be set aside for debate on Bach’s vision for the future of the IOC and the Olympics. Bach has launched his “Olympic Agenda 2020″ to push through possible changes in the bidding process, the sports program, the 70-year age limit for IOC members and other areas. The IOC is also considering creating an Olympic TV channel.

The board members held a four-day “brainstorming session” convened by Bach in Montreux, Switzerland, in December. They will now put the issues up for wider discussion by the 100-plus IOC members, with recommendations to be submitted for approval at an extraordinary session on Dec. 6-7 in Monaco.

â€"

Follow Stephen Wilson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stevewilsonap

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10 Can’t Miss Super Bowl Ads To Watch on Sunday

NEW YORK (AP) â€" Actress Scarlett Johansson gives SodaStream some sex appeal in a controversial spot, Kia revives actor Laurence Fishburne’s “Matrix” character Morpheus in its commercial. And cute puppies and kids abound in ads for Cheerios to Anheuser-Busch.

Advertisers are planning to pull out the tools in their arsenal during Super Bowl time this Sunday, including celebrities, A-list rock bands and cinematic story lines.

Of course, there will still be ad surprises on Sunday with major brands like Chrysler and Coca-Cola staying mum on at least one of their ads. But the ones that are already out use a variety of tactics to draw viewers’ attention.

Overall, marketers are doing a better job getting their branding message across â€" while still entertaining â€" than previous years when a cheap joke or gag ruled supreme, says Kelly O’Keefe, professor of brand strategy at the Virginia Commonwealth University Brand Center.

“This year there’s much more focus on brand personality: the spot has to be both interesting and funny and link back to the core assets of the brand,” he said. “I’m predicting a stronger Super Bowl than last year.”

Advertisers are in the game to win. The Super Bowl is advertising’s biggest showcase, with more than 108 million people expected to tune into the game. And companies are paying an estimated $4 million to have their ads be a part of the action.

Here are 10 ads to watch for on Super Bowl Sunday.

Super Bowl Ad Anheuser-Busch

Super Bowl Ad Anheuser-Busch Image Courtesy: Associated Press

Super Bowl Ad General Mill?s

1. Anheuser-Busch: The biggest Super Bowl advertiser’s ad in the fourth quarter shows an adorable Golden Labrador becoming enamored with one of the beermaker’s iconic Clydesdales to the tune of “Let Her Go” by Passenger.

Online: http://youtu.be/uQB7QRyF4p4

Super Bowl Ad General Mill’s

Super Bowl Ad General Mill’s Image Courtesy: Associated Press

2. General Mill’s Cheerios: The cereal maker brings back an interracial family that starred in a prior spot. This one shows a father telling his daughter that they’re going to have an addition to the family, a baby boy. Then, the little girl strongly suggests they also get a puppy. The ad airs during the first unscheduled time-out of the game.

Online: http://youtu.be/LKuQrKeGe6g

3. Bank of America: The bank will promote its partnership with AIDS nonprofit (RED) by having music group U2 sing their new single “Invisible.” between the first and second quarter. The song will be a free download on iTunes during the game and for the following 24 hours. Bank of America will donate $1 each time it is downloaded to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS.

4. SodaStream: The Israeli at-home soda maker company has stirred up controversy on two fronts. Their ad features “Her” actress Scarlett Johansson touting the health and environmental benefits of the soda maker and will run in the fourth quarter. The ad first made waves when the company said it would delete its last line, “Sorry, Coke and Pepsi,” at a request by Fox. Then on Thursday, Johansson resigned her Oxfam ambassadorship. The nonprofit was unhappy she was linked with SodaStream, which operates in Israeli settlements in the West Bank of Palestine. Oxfam is opposed to that.

Online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxq4ziu-wrI

5. H&M: The clothing maker’s ad in the second quarter features nifty technology that will allow people with some Samsung Smart TVs to order soccer star David Beckham’s Bodywear products with their remote control in real time.

Online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHxCELegDz4

Super Bowl Ad Butterfinger's

Super Bowl Ad Butterfinger’s Image Courtesy: Associated Press

6. Nestle’s Butterfinger: A suggestive teaser ad showed a couple, “Chocolate” and “Peanut Butter,” in ’70s-style couple’s therapy talking about the need for “change” and “excitement.” The actual ad in the third quarter will have a related theme and Butterfinger is expected to introduce its Peanut Butter Cups with some tongue-in-cheek double entendres.

Online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1ZCl-NkQuU

7. Beats Music: Ellen DeGeneres reimagines the Goldilocks and The Three Bears fairytale in this ad running in the third quarter that introduces Beats Music, a streaming music service.

Online: http://youtu.be/jJR6YV4WAnM

Super Bowl Ad Wonderful Pistachios

Super Bowl Ad Wonderful Pistachios Image Courtesy: Associated Press

8. Wonderful Pistachios: The snack producer showcases comedian Stephen Colbert running amok in two 15-second ads in the second quarter.

Online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKAG7UJ-NWk

Super Bowl Ad Kia

Super Bowl Ad Kia Image Courtesy: Associated Press

9. Kia: In the carmaker’s third-quarter ad to introduce its K900 luxury sedan, Laurence Fishburne reprises his “Matrix” role as Morpheus and displays some surprising operatic skills.

Online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ob-wn52Dkmk

10. Chrysler: The automaker is bound to surprise. Always mum ahead of the game, Chrysler has produced some of the best loved and most remembered spots during the big game, from Eminem’s “Imported from Detroit” ad in 2011 to last year’s “Farmer” ad featuring scenes of American farmland and a voiceover by conservative radio broadcaster Paul Harvey. Look for another surprising spot or two this year.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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The Poets Café with Myrenna Ogbu

Poets Café on 90.7FM KPFK

Poets Café on 90.7FM KPFK

I had personally never heard of the Poets Café before having met Myrenna Ogbu, a poet and the host for the Poets Café on KPFK (90.7 FM) . The Poets Café was started by Marlena Bond, the producer of the show because of her love for poetry. Marlena, a wonderful woman, fell in love with the studio early on in her career and says she loves spending a whole day concocting shows for people to hear. Her love for her work and poetry, made it possible for her to start a show solely dedicated for Poets and Poetry. The Poets Café permitted many Poets such as Michael C.Ford to give avid listeners a gift of words. The Poets Café leaves you feeling that the conversations could be held in your local café among friends that happen to be Poets not by Profession but Passion. The exchanges of words that sometimes rhyme, that sometimes have a rhythm and a hidden sense at other times, take the listener and everyone present at the Poet’s Café on a poetic ride.

Myrenna Ogbu has been a poet, actress and in short an artist since she could last remember. She has been published in the anthology of Two Idiots Peddling Poetry and has made CD’s of her poems as well. I was introduced to Myrenna Ogbu by Yerusalem Ashenafi who happened to meet her professionally, and even before having met her it felt as though I knew her. I saw her twice yet it was as though we had known each other for a long time.  The second encounter with Myrenna Ogbu was because she had invited me on a “ride along” to the Poets Café. A poet herself, she was laying the grounds for aspiring poets as myself by introducing poets to each other and most of all to the world. Myrenna hosts the Poets Café with her suave and musical voice giving the show the spices it needs. Myrenna has a sense of humor, a refined taste in music, strong vocals and a great spirit. SImply put, an easy person to talk with Myrenna made the Saturday 25th of January recording a blast only those present and the listeners of the show can relate to. Myrenna Ogbu is an artistic soul!

A poetic ride at the Poets Café!

top left to right: Michael M, Adrian T, Chris W, Alan Lightner and David R bottom left to right: Myrenna O, Christine Y.

top left to right: Michael M, Adrian T, Chris W, Alan Lightner and David R
bottom left to right: Myrenna O, Christine Y.

My privileged “ride-along” to the Poets Café was really more than I had bargained for. Recording along side Poets like Chris Wesley and Michael Miller, was like a gift from the Universe I had never imagined. With the presence of three wonderful musicians, Alan Lightner, Adrian Tapia and David Riviera , the poetry readings of each of us went as smooth as silk as though it had been choreographed and rehearsed. The ambiance orchestrated by Myrenna herself really made music to listening ears, and as if by magic the poems were in sync with one another making it a joy to work together. Three  poets with different styles of writing and reading, along side three musicians with different instruments was more than an explosion of cultures, rhythm and lives.

After having searched far and wide in Orange County California for open mic poetry nights and poet gatherings, that are difficult to find as a needle in a haystack, I was more than pleased to have discovered the Poets Café. The Poets Café on KPFK (90.7 FM) is definitely a go to radio show for fans, writers and poetry amateurs. I hope you’ll enjoy the ride at the Poets Café as much as I did.

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Thursday, January 30, 2014

Google poised to execute long-delayed stock split

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) â€" Google is finally ready to split its stock for the first time, more than three years after co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin began discussing a move engineered to ensure they remain in control of the Internet’s most powerful company.

The split is scheduled to occur April 2. It had been delayed because of staunch resistance from other Google Inc. shareholders, who feared the maneuver would unfairly benefit Page and Brin at the expense of just about everyone else.

Google proposed the unorthodox split so that Page and Brin could preserve power in the company they started in a rented garage more than 15 years ago. It addresses concerns that the founders would lose control of Google as the company creates more shares to compensate its employees and buy startups.

To gain clearance for the split, Google settled a shareholders lawsuit and agreed to pay up to $7.5 billion if the split doesn’t pan out the way the Mountain View, Calif., company envisions.

Google’s split will create a new class of “C” stock that carries no voting power. One share of C stock will be distributed for each share of voting Class A stock owned as of March 27. Initially, the value of the current stock will be divided equally between the two types of shares. But they will then trade separately with different ticker symbols. Class C shares will get the company’s existing “GOOG” ticker symbol, while Class A will change to “GOOGL.”

If the split hadn’t been delayed by a legal skirmish, Google’s stock probably wouldn’t have exceeded $1,000 for the first time last fall.

Page and Brin primarily own Google’s Class B stock, which already gives them 10 times the voting power of each Class A share. Combined, the Google founders control 56 percent of the shareholder votes, even though they own less than 15 percent of the stock issued.

Nonetheless, the voting clout of Page and Brin has been gradually shrinking, as Google has used Class A stock to reward employees and finance some of its acquisitions during the past decade.

Distributing a new class of non-voting stock will enable Google to continue doling out shares to its nearly 44,000 workers without further undermining the co-founders’ power.

As with any stock split, the division will lower Google’s trading price on the Nasdaq Stock Market as investors account for a big increase in shares. The company will be distributing about 277 million shares of Class C stock, based on how many Class A shares had been issued as of late last year.

If Google’s shares behave similarly to other 2-for-1 splits, the stock’s price would be cut roughly in half from its current level of more than $1,100. Google’s market value would remain roughly the same at about $380 billion because it will have nearly double the number of shares issued.

But some shareholders suspect the non-voting status of the Class C stock will cause those shares to trade at a significant discount to the Class A stock once the new stock is issued. The concerns led to a class-action lawsuit in Delaware chancery court filed shortly after Google announced its plans for the split in April 2012.

Google delayed the stock split until the lawsuit was resolved. A trial was averted after Google hammered out a settlement. Court approval came three months ago.

Google will have to pay the Class C shareholders if the average price of their stock is at least 1 percent below the Class A shares during the first year after the split. The size of the payments will escalate as the gap widens, with the maximum payout required if the gap between the average prices of the Class C and Class A shares is 5 percent or more.

In the most expensive scenario for Google, Class C stockholders will get 5 percent of the average trading price of the Class A shares. So if the Class A stock has an average trading price of $600 during the first year after the split while the Class C stock averages $565, Google would have to pay $30 per share in cash or additional stock.

In court documents, Google argued that it’s unlikely there will be a big difference between the prices of the Class A and Class C shares, despite their contrasting voting powers.

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Source: Google poised to execute long-delayed stock split

    

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Man’s murder, decapitation stymies Wyoming police

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) â€" The discovery of an unidentified murder victim’s headless body nearly three weeks ago on a remote, dead-end dirt road in Wyoming has stymied investigators and led some residents to speculate that big-league drug violence has reached a rural county just east of Yellowstone National Park.

However, authorities insist they’re still looking for a motive for the grisly crime, along with the victim’s identity. Duck hunters found the man’s body Jan. 9 near the town of Powell.

A pathologist determined the man â€" no more than 35 years old, about 5-foot-8, and 180 to 200 pounds â€" was killed by multiple gunshot wounds before he was decapitated. One of his arms also was cut off.

It’s believed the man was killed about two days before he was found.

“You’ve got a body missing an arm and a head, no missing persons reports,” Lance Mathess, a spokesman for the Park County Sheriff’s Office, said Wednesday. “Nobody’s come forward with any solid identification leads at this point, so it really makes it a difficult investigation.”

The victim â€" stocky, physically fit and white or light-skinned Hispanic â€" was wearing an elaborate, embroidered belt buckle featuring a horsehead. Authorities say that buckle style is similar to craftsmanship from some villages in Mexico and Guatemala.

For that reason, Mathess said his agency believes the man might have been from Mexico or elsewhere south of the border and might have been a farm or ranch worker. Park County has reached out to the FBI, the U.S. Border Patrol and even Interpol, the international police agency, for assistance.

“We’re well aware of the pattern of killings, if you will, of drug cartels” in Mexico, Mathess said, citing decapitations of victims of drug cartel violence there. “But again we don’t really have anything to go on right now.”

Pat Childers, a former Wyoming legislator, lives in Cody, a little more than 20 miles from Powell.

“My personal opinion is that probably it’s involved in some drug trafficking. But I don’t know that,” Childers said.

“It doesn’t shock me,” said John Linebaugh, a gunsmith whose son lives a few miles from the crime scene. “I’ve been involved in law enforcement. A lot of my customers are law enforcement people from the FBI on down.”

It’s unclear whether the man was killed where his body was found. Investigators also say there’s no evidence wildlife might have removed the head.

“I think there’s concern among the community, but I wouldn’t classify it as an overblown concern or a panic,” Mathess said.

He added authorities have no reason to believe residents are in any imminent danger.

“We definitely encourage them to be vigilant,” Mathess said. “We definitely encourage them to continue to look out for their neighbors, to report strange activity.”

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Thunder erase early 18-point hole, top Heat 112-95

By TIM REYNOLDS

AP Photo/Alan Diaz

MIAMI (AP) â€" Down by 18 points midway through the opening quarter, Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder looked well on their way to witnessing a rout.

That’s exactly what happened.

And they enjoyed every moment.

Durant remained sizzling with 33 points, Serge Ibaka added 22 and the Thunder roared back from an abysmal start to embarrass the Miami Heat 112-95 on Wednesday night, erasing an 18-point deficit by outscoring the two-time defending champions by 43 points over a 33-minute span.

The Thunder led by as many as 25, and shot 16 for 27 from 3-point range. Miami was 3 for 19 from beyond the arc.

Durant has now scored at least 30 points in 12 straight games, matching the league’s longest such streak since Tracy McGrady did it in 14 consecutive outings in the 2002-03 season. The Thunder extended their winning streak to nine, inching them closer to Indiana in the race for the league’s best record. And the Oklahoma City bench outscored Miami’s reserves 39-21, with Jeremy Lamb scoring 18 and Derek Fisher going 5 for 5 from 3-point range for his 15 points.

LeBron James scored 34 points for Miami, his 1-on-1 duel with Durant not really amounting to much on a night where the Heat allowed 25 points off turnovers and blew an 18-point lead for just the fourth time since he, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh became teammates nearly four years ago.

Bosh scored 18 points and Dwyane Wade added 15 for Miami.

Much of the buzz going into the night was about the MVP race, and how this might be the season that Durant finally catches James for the league’s top individual award.

And head-to-head, they weren’t separated by much, which isn’t uncommon.

But for just the fourth time in 17 meetings between their teams, Durant came out on top.

Ibaka opened the scoring with a jumper, and the Heat answered with an immediate 18-0 run, not even needing 5 minutes to get what appeared to be complete control. With 6:20 left in the opening quarter, Bosh made a pair of free throws to make it 22-4.

That pretty much ended the Heat highlights for the evening.

By the end of the first, the Thunder were within nine. Lamb scored 13 in the second quarter alone, helping Oklahoma City take a 55-50 lead into the break, with the Thunder already having scored 19 points off turnovers.

The third quarter, Durant and the Thunder put it away.

Durant and James went man-to-man at times in that period, both finishing with 12 points in the 12 minutes. The difference was, Durant was getting plenty of help, and James wasn’t getting much.

Fisher connected on a 3-pointer to end the quarter, pushing Oklahoma City’s margin to 16, and the Heat had no answers in the fourth.

NOTES: Fisher made five 3-pointers, total, when the Heat faced the Thunder in the 2012 NBA Finals. … Shug McGaughey, who trained last year’s Kentucky Derby winner Orb, was part of the sellout crowd, along with Detroit Tigers slugger Miguel Cabrera. … Oklahoma City shot 14 free throws in the third quarter, the most by any Heat opponent in that period all season. … The Heat fell to 7-12 this season when allowing more than 100 points. They’re 25-1 when holding teams under 100. … The Thunder are 8-0 on the road against Eastern Conference opponents.

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Source: Thunder erase early 18-point hole, top Heat 112-95

    

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Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Terror suspect challenges NSA surveillance program

DENVER (AP) â€" Using evidence obtained under the National Security Agency’s warrantless surveillance program would violate a terror suspect’s constitutional protection against unreasonable search and seizure, the suspect argued Wednesday in a court document filed with help from the American Civil Liberties Union.

In the motion filed in federal court in Denver, Jamshid Muhtorov also requested that prosecutors disclose more about how the surveillance law was used in his case. Muhtorov denies the terror charges he faces.

“We’ve learned over the last few months that the NSA has implemented the law in the broadest possible way, and that the rules that supposedly protect the privacy of innocent people are weak and riddled with exceptions,” Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU’s deputy legal director, said in a statement Wednesday. The ACLU called the filing the first of its kind.

Justice Department spokesman Brian Fallon declined to comment.

The challenge had been expected after the Justice Department in October said it intended to use information gleaned from one of the NSA’s warrantless surveillance programs against Muhtorov. It was the first time the department had made such a disclosure.

The Supreme Court has so far turned aside challenges to the law on the grounds that people who bring such lawsuits have no evidence they are being targeted.

In another case involving the government’s surveillance methods, a federal judge in a Chicago terrorism case ruled Wednesday that a defendant’s lawyers will be given access to an application prosecutors submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, established to monitor spying within in the United States. The Chicago judge called her pretrial ruling in the case of Adel Daoud a first. Daoud has denied seeking to detonate a bomb in Chicago in 2012.

In the Denver case, Muhtorov was accused in 2012 of providing material support to an Uzbek terrorist organization active in Afghanistan.

According to Wednesday’s motion, Muhtorov was targeted by the Uzbek government because of his work with human rights groups in his homeland. He fled and resettled in Aurora, Colo., in 2007, as a political refugee with the help of the United Nations and the U.S. government. He became a legal permanent U.S. resident.

Muhtorov was arrested Jan. 21, 2012, in Chicago with about $2,800 in cash, two shrink-wrapped iPhones and an iPad as well as a GPS device. In March 2012, his attorney, federal public defender Brian Leedy, said at a court hearing that Muhtorov denied the allegations and had been headed to the Uzbekistan region to visit family, including a sister who remains imprisoned in that country.

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Q&A about Obama’s push to raise minimum wage

By CONNIE CASS

AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

WASHINGTON (AP) â€" Relatively few Americans â€" less than 5 percent of hourly workers â€" toil for the minimum wage today.

Yet President Barack Obama’s push to offset decades of inflation by raising the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour would ripple through the economy and touch the lives of millions more workers and their families. Republicans say some of those in need would be harmed, not helped.

Here are some questions and answers about Obama’s proposal:

â€"

Q: How much is the U.S. minimum wage now?

A: It’s $7.25 an hour, or about $15,000 per year for full-time work. For a worker supporting a family of two, that falls just below the federal poverty line.

A minimum wage of $10.10 would mean earning about $21,000 per year.

â€"

Q: How many Americans work for minimum wage?

A: About 1.6 million, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. They are a smaller share of the workforce than in previous decades.

Another 2 million people are paid even less, because of various exceptions in the law. Many are waiters, bellhops and others whose wages are augmented by tips from customers. Their minimum is lower â€" $2.13 an hour â€" and hasn’t gone up for more than two decades. Obama supports boosting the minimum for tipped workers to $7.07.

Together, both groups make up 4.7 percent of workers paid by the hour, and even less of the workforce when salaried workers are included.

â€"

Q: Are these the only workers who would get a boost from Obama’s plan?

A: No. Millions more people who earn less than $10.10 an hour would get an automatic raise. Many of them work in states that have imposed a minimum wage that’s higher than the current federal one.

And some people who already make more than $10.10 would get raises, too, as businesses adjusted their pay scales upward.

Democratic lawmakers pushing for the increase predict it would lead to raises for some 30 million people. Republican opponents counter that it could force companies to reduce hiring or even lay off some workers.

â€"

Q: How many states have a minimum wage higher than the federal one?

A: Twenty-one states, plus the District of Columbia, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

None is as high as the wage Obama seeks. Washington state’s is highest at $9.32 an hour, adjusted annually for inflation. California’s minimum wage is set to climb to $10 in 2016.

State lawmakers aren’t waiting for a divided Congress to act. Democratic legislators are pushing minimum-wage increases in more than half of the states this year, although several are political longshots.

â€"

Q: Who makes minimum wage?

A: Most are workers in part-time jobs. They tend to be in the service industry, especially in restaurant and sales jobs.

Most are adults. But teens and young people make up a disproportionately large share: half of minimum-wage workers are under age 25.

Nearly three-quarters have a high school degree or more education. More than three-quarters are white.

Nearly 2 out of 3 are female.

â€"

Q: Where did the minimum wage come from?

A: It started at 25 cents per hour in the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act. Since then, Congress has raised it 22 times. Its value peaked in the 1960s, but the wage hasn’t kept up with inflation since then.

The last increase was in 2007, during the presidency of George W. Bush. It was phased in to reach $7.25 in 2009.

Obama wants the wage to be indexed to inflation, so it would rise automatically in the future.

â€"

Q: Why not raise the minimum wage?

Q: Many congressional Republicans and other opponents say that would dampen hiring or even spark layoffs at a time when the nation is struggling with high unemployment. They argue that much of the cost would be passed along to consumers as higher prices. And they say it isn’t an efficient way to help the poor, because many people earning the minimum wage are part of a middle-class or higher-earning households.

House Speaker John Boehner said Obama’s proposal could lead to job-cutting and discourage companies from adding entry-level positions that he said were needed especially by minorities trying to start up the economic ladder.

“It’s bad policy, and it will hurt the very people the president purports to want to help,” he said Tuesday.

â€"

Q: So what do Obama and Democratic supporters say?

A: They say that raising the minimum wage would boost the economy and create jobs, because cash-strapped workers tend to spend any extra money that comes in. Supporters argue that boosting low wages would help narrow the gap between the nation’s poorest and richest families. And they say full-time workers with families shouldn’t have to live in poverty.

“Today, the federal minimum wage is worth about 20 percent less than it was when Ronald Reagan first stood here,” Obama said in his State of the Union speech. He urged Congress to “give America a raise.”

â€"

Follow Connie Cass on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ConnieCass

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Source: Q&A about Obama’s push to raise minimum wage

    

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Coaches concerned about snow on practice fields. Super Bowl Weather.

AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) â€" Super Bowl coaches John Fox and Pete Carroll have expressed concern that snow on the practice fields could hinder their preparation this week.

The New York metropolitan area has been hit with snow and icy temperatures for several weeks. Fox’s Denver Broncos will train at the Jets’ facility in Florham Park. Carroll’s Seattle Seahawks will work at the Giants’ complex at the Meadowlands.

Fox says Sunday he prefers the natural grass field outdoors because it “saves players’ legs,” and the Broncos have brought along their field experts, adding “We’ll see if we have to go inside or on their artificial turf.”

Carroll says he “understands there’s snow on the field and it’s frozen and we likely could be inside most of the week.”

He adds he would like to get the Seahawks outside as much as possible so they can adjust to weather far different from Seattle’s climate.

â€"

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

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Source: Coaches concerned about snow on practice fields

    

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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Sherman on best behavior as Seahawks arrive in NJ

By TOM CANAVAN

AP Photo/Julio Cortez

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) â€" If people were looking for Richard Sherman to get the week-long hype for the Super Bowl started with another rant, the Seattle Seahawks cornerback disappointed them.

With about a dozen camera crews and 50 reporters surrounding him at a table, Sherman smiled broadly, winked when a reporter asked him about his rant at Michael Crabtree after last week’s conference game, and simply played it close to the vest in discussing next Sunday’s Super Bowl against the Denver Broncos.

There were no harsh words Sunday night. He talked about his respect for the Broncos’ offense, his friendship with Denver receiver Demaryius Thomas, and the fact that the blowup with Crabtree led to a good discussion about race relations.

There were neither guarantees nor boasts. Just honest talk.

â€"

AP NFL website: http://www.pro32.ap.org

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Source: Sherman on best behavior as Seahawks arrive in NJ

    

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Baucus switches roles for hearing on China post

By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

WASHINGTON (AP) â€" Sen. Max Baucus told his Senate colleagues Tuesday that he would work to build a more equitable economic relationship with China if he is confirmed to become U.S. ambassador.

Calling the U.S. relationship with China “one of the most important bilateral relationships in the world,” Baucus said he would also encourage China to act responsibly as it emerges as a global power.

“I have become a firm believer that a strong geopolitical relationship can be born out of a strong economic relationship, which often begins with trade,” Baucus said.

The U.S. trade deficit with China is the largest with any country. Figures through November show the trade deficit was on track to set a new record in 2013, exceeding $300 billion for the second straight year.

Tuesday’s hearing by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was a switch for the six-term Montana Democrat. As chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Baucus is used to vetting nominees. On Tuesday he answered questions.

Baucus is expected to sail toward full Senate confirmation. “I am sure you will be confirmed,” Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, told Baucus.

Baucus would replace Gary Locke.

The 72-year-old Baucus said last year he would not seek re-election to another Senate term.

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Source: Baucus switches roles for hearing on China post

    

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Driver Blows Off His Hand With Firecracker

Man blows off his hand while driving.

Photo Courtesy: Associated Press

A man driving a Jeep blows off his hand with a firecracker, in Spokane, WA, early Saturday morning. The loud blast from the firecracker woke the neighbors who rushed outside to find the driver had blown his hand off. Police responding to loud explosion found a large stash of firecrackers in the mans Jeep.

Donald Wilkes said, the blast from the powerful firecracker shook his house and woke everyone inside up.“I looked around for something that got hit, but there was nothing,” Wilkes said. “My son reached in to pull the keys out of the ignition and make sure he didn’t go anywhere, and that’s when we saw his hand was missing. It blew it right off at his wrist â€" they found part of it half a block away.” Wilkes his son Nicholas and a neighbor applied tourniquet to the mans hand to help stop the bleeding.

All he did was look at my son and say, ‘Oh God, oh God.’ He looked like he was going to pass out,” Wilkes said.

The man was driving a red Jeep with a gray top and he appeared to between 28 to 30 years old with large stocky build. The blast from the firecracker blew out several of the Jeep’s window and blood was scattered on the driver side door. He was still awake while Wilkes and his son helped stop the bleeding, but he was clearly in shock. When the ambulance arrived on the scene they applied fresh tourniquets and took the man to the hospital. Hospital officials said, if the man lost anymore blood he probably would’ve died.

Spokane police and a bomb squad unit defused the rest of the explosives found in the Jeep. A decision has not yet been made if the man will face criminal charges, police are calling it an “isolated incident.” The bomb squad determined that explosion came from an M-1000 firecracker.

“Driver Blows Off His Hand With Firecracker”

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Monday, January 27, 2014

A tired tradition? Defining the union in a word

By NANCY BENAC

AP Photo

WASHINGTON (AP) â€" Is “strong” losing its strength?

Presidents of both parties have long felt compelled to sum up the state of the union with a descriptive word or two in their State of the Union addresses. Mostly the same word.

For many years now, “strong” has been the go-to adjective.

Here’s President Barack Obama last year: “Together, we have cleared away the rubble of crisis, and we can say with renewed confidence that the State of the Union is stronger.”

In the earlier years, he went with “getting stronger” or just plain “strong.”

George W. Bush liked the one-two punch of “confident and strong.”

His president-dad, George H.W. Bush, paired up “sound and strong” in 1990.

Bill Clinton in 2000 promoted the union to “the strongest it has ever been.”

It wasn’t always this way.

Dwight Eisenhower skipped the quick sum-up. With the nation in recession and millions out of work in 1975, Gerald Ford dared suggest all was not well.

A look at how some presidents past have defined the state of the union:

â€"

CALVIN COOLIDGE, 1925: “In meeting the constitutional requirement of informing the Congress upon the state of the Union, it is exceedingly gratifying to report that the general condition is one of progress and prosperity.”

FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, 1943: “The state of this nation is good; the heart of this nation is sound; the spirit of this nation is strong; the faith of this nation is eternal.”

HARRY TRUMAN, 1949: “I am happy to report to this 81st Congress that the state of the union is good.”

JOHN F. KENNEDY, 1963: “Today, having witnessed in recent months a heightened respect for our national purpose and power â€" having seen the courageous calm of a united people in a perilous hour â€" and having observed a steady improvement in the opportunities and well-being of our citizens â€" I can report to you that the state of this old but youthful union, in the 175th year of its life, is good.”

LYNDON JOHNSON, 1965: “This, then, is the state of the union: Free and restless, growing and full of hope.”

RICHARD NIXON, 1973: “The basic state of our union today is sound, and full of promise.”

GERALD FORD, 1975 “I must say to you that the state of the union is not good.”

JIMMY CARTER, 1978: “Militarily, politically, economically, and in spirit, the state of our union is sound.”

RONALD REAGAN, 1982: “In the near future the state of the union and the economy will be better â€" much better â€" if we summon the strength to continue on the course that we’ve charted.”

â€"

Online:

http://www.c-span.org/SOTU/

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Source: A tired tradition? Defining the union in a word

    

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US sales of new homes drop 7 percent in December

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

WASHINGTON (AP) â€" U.S. sales of new homes fell in December for a second consecutive month but even with the pause at the end of the year, sales for all of 2013 climbed to the highest level in five years.

Sales of new homes dropped 7 percent in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 414,000, the Commerce Department reported Monday. In November, sales had fallen 3.9 percent.

For the whole year, sales were up 16.4 percent to 428,000, the highest level since 2008.

It marked the second year that sales have risen after six consecutive annual declines as the housing industry was rocked by the collapse of a housing bubble. Sales of new homes peaked at 1.28 million in 2005. Analysts expect further sales gains in 2014.

The median price of a new home was $270,200 in December, up 4.6 percent from a year ago and up 0.6 percent from November. The median is the point where half the homes sell for more and half for less.

There were 171,000 new homes on the market at the end of December, a drop of 2.8 percent from November. At the December sales pace, that would represent a 5 month supply. That is lower than the six-month supply that economists view as healthy.

Housing was one of the strongest sectors of the recovery in the first half of 2013, but then it hit a lull during the summer when mortgage rates jumped on indications the Federal Reserve might soon start reducing the bond purchases it was making to keep long-term interest rates low.

But analysts are looking for housing to regain some of its lost momentum as the industry enters the all-important spring buying season. Analysts expect that continued improvements in the labor market will boost incomes and that will lead to stronger demand for homes.

Sales of previously occupied homes rebounded 1 percent in December helping that market to sales for all of 2013 of 5.09 million. That was the best performance since 2006 when sales totaled 6.48 million. However, the sales gains in both 2005 and 2006 represented an unsustainable housing boom which collapsed, helping drag the economy into a deep recession which triggered a painful retrenchment in housing.

Analysts expect housing will keep recovering in 2014 but they don’t look for the sales gains to be as large as they were in 2013.

Economists at Global Insight predict that growth of existing home sales will slow a bit from the 8.8 percent gain in 2013 but still show a respectable increase of 5.1 percent in 2014.

Mortgage rates rose in the summer to nearly a full percentage point higher than they were in the spring, when they were at record lows. And a limited supply of homes on the market helped drive up prices. The combination of rising mortgage rates and rising prices made home buying less affordable, particularly for first-time buyers.

Builders started work on 923,000 new homes and apartments in 2013, up 18.3 percent from 2012. It was the fourth straight annual gain and the strongest construction pace since 2007 when 1.36 million homes were started.

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Source: US sales of new homes drop 7 percent in December

    

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Asian stocks sink over global economy fears

By KELVIN CHAN

HONG KONG (AP) â€" Asian stock markets tumbled Monday as investors factored in the possibility of slowing growth in China and a further reduction in U.S. central bank stimulus.

The global sell-off that is roiling world markets was triggered by preliminary results Thursday of a survey showing that China’s manufacturing would contract in January.

Investors are also awaiting a two-day meeting by the U.S. Federal Reserve starting Tuesday, where officials are widely expected to reduce their monthly bond buying by another $10 billion to $65 billion. Turmoil in individual emerging markets such as Argentina, where the peso dropped 16 percent over two days last week, is also spooking investors.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 sank 2.6 percent to 14,993.89 as investors sought out havens such as the Japanese yen, causing it to rise against the dollar which is negative for export stocks.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 2.3 percent to 21,937.46 and Seoul’s Kospi dropped 1.7 percent to 1,907.90.

In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1.1 percent to 2,031.24. Benchmarks in Taiwan, Singapore and New Zealand also slipped.

In the U.S. on Friday, the Dow finished down 2 percent at 15,879 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 fell 2.1 percent to 1,790. The Nasdaq composite fell 2.2 percent to 4,128.

In currencies, the dollar slipped to 102.36 Japanese yen from 102.38 late Friday. The euro strengthened to $1.3688 from $1.3676.

In energy markets, benchmark crude for March delivery rose 20 cents in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 68 cents to close at $96.64 on Friday.

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Source: Asian stocks sink over global economy fears

    

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Sunday, January 26, 2014

Tunisia finally passes progressive constitution

By PAUL SCHEMM and BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA

AP Photo/Hassene Dridi

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) â€" After decades of dictatorship and two years of arguments and compromises, Tunisians on Sunday finally have a new constitution laying the foundations for a new democracy.

The document is groundbreaking as one of the most progressive constitutions in the Arab world â€" and for the fact that it got written at all. It passed late Sunday by 200 votes out of 216 in the Muslim Mediterranean country that inspired uprisings across the region after overthrowing a dictator in 2011.

“This constitution, without being perfect, is one of consensus,” assembly speaker Mustapha Ben Jaafar said after the vote. “We had today a new rendezvous with history to build a democracy founded on rights and equality.”

The constitution enshrining freedom of religion and women’s rights took two years to finish. During that period, the country was battered by high unemployment, protests, terrorist attacks, political assassinations and politicians who seemed more interested in posturing than finishing the charter.

At the same time, Egypt wrote two constitutions â€" and went through a military coup against an elected government. Egypt’s charters were quickly drafted by appointed committees and involved little public debate or input. In Tunisia, an elected assembly of Tunisian Islamists, leftists and liberals worked on a detailed roadmap for their political future.

Tunisians hope its care in drafting the constitution makes a difference in returning stability to the country and reassuring investors and allies such as the U.S.

“We needed time to get this constitution as it is today,” said Amira Yahyaoui, who has closely followed the assembly’s activities with her monitoring group Bawsala. “Clearly, writing this constitution to do a real transformation of the minds of people needed time and I absolutely don’t regret these two years and I am happy we had time to discuss and think about all the arguments.”

The new constitution sets out to make the North African country of 11 million people a democracy, with a civil state whose laws are not based on Islamic law, unlike many other Arab constitutions. An entire chapter of the document, some 28 articles, is dedicated to protecting citizens’ rights, including protection from torture, the right to due process, and freedom of worship. It guarantees equality between men and women before the law and the state commits itself to protecting women’s rights.

“This is the real revolution, many democratic constitution don’t even have that,” said Yahyaoui. “It will have a real impact on the rest of the Arab region, because finally we can say that women’s rights are not a Western concept only, but also exist in Tunisia.”

Tunisia has always had the most progressive legislation on women’s rights in the Arab world and Yahyaoui believes the long period of writing has made people comfortable with its contents.

One of the most hotly debated articles guarantees “freedom of belief and conscience,” which would permit atheism and the practice of non-Abrahamic religions frowned upon in other Islamic countries. It also bans incitement to violence and declaring a Muslim an apostate â€" a fallen Muslim â€" which leaves them open to death threats. In response, conservative law makers insisted that “attacks on the sacred” be forbidden, which many see as a threat to freedom of expression.

“This formulation is vague and gives too much leeway to the legislators to trample other rights such as the right to free expression, artistic creation and academic freedoms,” warned Amna Guelleli, the Human Rights Watch representative in Tunisia. “However, the risk is reduced given the strong safeguards (in other articles) against overly broad interpretations.”

Since the revolution, there has been a rise in convictions for so-called attacks on religion, especially by artists. A Tunisian cartoonist is in the second year of a seven-year sentence for posting cartoons insulting to the Prophet Muhammad on Facebook.

Constitutional scholar Slim Loghmani said despite some drawbacks, the constitution is an “historic compromise between identity and modernity” that can serve as a model for other countries in the region seeking a balance between an Arab-Islamic heritage and contemporary ideas of human rights and good governance.

“It’s a step forward in the nagging question of cultural identity in Arab countries,” he said, lauding in particular not just freedom of religion but what he calls the freedom “not to have a religion.”

While the constitution itself will not solve the country’s persistent unemployment, rising prices, crushing debt and constant demonstrations, Loghmani said it will move politics forward and reassure foreign investors that the country is back on track after a rocky transition.

“It will be a relief for the average Tunisian who is impatient to see the end of the transition period,” he said. “It will reassure Tunisia’s international partners that country is headed in the right direction.”

The completion of the constitution is also a tribute to the assembly’s disparate parties to come to compromise and negotiate to reach a consensus.

The moderate Islamist party Ennahda, which holds more than 40 percent of the seats in the assembly, backed down on putting a number of religious-inspired measures into the constitution in the face of wide opposition.

At times the constitution looked like it would never get written, with numerous walkouts by different parties and at one point a complete suspension of its activities in the wake of the assassination of a left-wing deputy in July.

In the end, Ennahda made concessions to the opposition and stepped down in favor of caretaker government to manage the rest of the transition, allowing the constitution to be completed.

The willingness of Ennahda to negotiate stood in sharp contrast to the more overbearing approach of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which had a more dominant position in the elected parliament and held the presidency. It ran roughshod over the demands of the opposition, citing its electoral successes.

“Egyptian constitutional politics has been a winner-take-all game; Tunisian politics has been more consensual-though consensus has been difficult to achieve,” said Nathan Brown, an expert on Egyptian law at George Washington University. “The Tunisian experience is one that is more likely to give birth to a functioning democracy.”

The overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood government in Egypt by the military in July and subsequent violent repression was a stern warning to Tunisia, said Yahyaoui of Bawsala, and it helped the various parties find a compromise.

“The only people who won something out of what happened in Egypt was Tunisia,” she said. “Ennahda saw what happened to Brotherhood and they didn’t want to see the same scenario in Tunisia.”

â€"

Paul Schemm reported from Rabat, Morocco.

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Source: Tunisia finally passes progressive constitution

    

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Suspect charged with murder in SC campus shooting

AP Photo

ORANGEBURG, S.C. (AP) â€" A 20-year-old South Carolina State University student shot to death outside a dormitory was an engineering technology student who also played on the school’s football team, the school said Saturday.

Brandon Robinson was a junior who played football as an outside linebacker and defensive end, the university said in a statement. He attended high school in Orangeburg and appeared in four games last season for SC State, according to the team’s online roster.

“Brandon was a fine young man who was paying his way through college. All he wanted to do was play football for the university,” Bulldog football Coach Buddy Pough said. “We are at (a) loss for words right now.”

Robinson was shot to death Friday afternoon outside Hugine Suites after arguing with Justin Bernard Singleton, 19, of Charleston, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division said. Singleton was charged with murder and arrested early Saturday at an Orangeburg apartment complex.

Singleton “pulled out a gun and fired at Robinson, hitting him in the neck area,” according to an arrest warrant filed by a SLED investigator.

Singleton is a full-time, sophomore student at S.C. State majoring in business, university spokeswoman Sonja Bennett-Bellamy said Saturday. He does not participate in any of the school’s athletics programs, but his mother manages a university-owned, off-campus student apartment complex, Bennett-Bellamy said.

Authorities initially said they were looking for four men who had left campus. The school decided to lock down the campus Friday so that whoever was responsible for the shooting could not return, university Police Chief Mernard Clarkson said Friday. The lockdown was lifted Friday evening.

SLED spokesman Thom Berry declined to say Saturday whether investigators were continuing to hunt for three other suspects. Detectives were confident Singleton pulled the trigger, he said.

“Our Investigation is still underway and is ongoing,” Berry said.

South Carolina State also was the site of a fatal shooting in 2011, when police said three men met on campus for a drug deal. A student, 22-year-old Jonathan Bailey, was killed.

Friday’s fatal shooting happened three days after authorities said a Purdue University student shot and stabbed a fellow student to death in a classroom.

South Carolina State University is a historically black university with about 3,200 students in Orangeburg, about 40 miles south of Columbia.

“Our hearts are heavy with grief and sorrow by the senseless act of violence,” university president Thomas Elzey said.

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Source: AP US NEWS

    

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The key findings on nuclear force troubles

AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

The Associated Press has uncovered a series of security lapses and other troubles in the nation’s nuclear forces. The issue came to a head this week when Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel summoned top military leaders and ordered a review of the problems. Here are the key missteps suffered by the personnel who handle the world’s most deadly weapons:

-Seventeen missile crew members in the 91st Missile Wing at Minot, N.D., are deemed temporarily unfit for duty and given weeks of remedial training. The wing’s deputy commander of operations complains of “rot” in the force and relieves of duty the officer in charge of crew training and proficiency.

-The 341st Missile Wing at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., fails a safety and security inspection. Nine days later the officer in charge of security forces there was relieved of duty. The unit passes a do-over.

-Twice the Air Force punished officers involved in separate incidents of opening the blast door of their launch control center while one of the two launch officers was asleep, in violation of Air Force rules.

-Key members of the Air Force’s nuclear missile force are feeling “burnout” from what they see as exhausting, unrewarding and stressful work. The finding, in an unpublished draft of a RAND Corp. study provided to The Associated Press, also cited heightened levels of misconduct such as spousal abuse and said court-martial rates in the nuclear missile force in 2011 and 2012 were more than twice as high as in the overall Air Force. The courts martial rate in 2013 declined but was still higher than the overall Air Force.

-The Air Force fires Maj. Gen. Michael Carey, commander of the 20th Air Force, which is responsible for the entire Minuteman 3 missile force, for embarrassing, drunken behavior at meetings in Russia and spending time with “suspect” women. This happened two days after a Navy admiral, who was second-in-command at the military’s main nuclear war-fighting command, was relieved of duty amid a gambling-related investigation.

-At least 34 nuclear missile launch officers are implicated in a cheating scandal and are stripped of their certification in what the Air Force believes is the largest such breach of integrity in the nuclear force. The cheating involves the monthly test on their knowledge of how to operate the missiles. That scandal was revealed as part of a drug-use investigation that involved three ICBM launch officers.

-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel orders an independent review of the nuclear force and summoned the most senior Pentagon leaders to discuss its serious missteps, leadership lapses and personnel problems.

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Source: AP Politics

    

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Saturday, January 25, 2014

What did The Beatles do?

The Beatles: On this day in music history

January 25

Most music fans know that The Beatles were an English rock group founded in 1960. They were one of (if not the) most critically and commercially successful bands in history. The line-up from 1962 on included: John Lennon (guitar, keys, and vocals), Paul McCartney (bass, keys, guitar and vocals), George Harrison (guitar, keys and vocals) and Ringo Starr (drums, percussion, piano and vocals).

On this day in music history, there were several noteworthy, memorable Beatles-related moments.  The events date back as far as 1963 and are as recent as 1991.

the beatles

The Beatles 1963

On this day in 1963 EMI gave United States record label Vee Jay the distribution rights to Beatles records in North America.  Also on this day in 1963, Beatles buddy, singer Cilla Black made her stage debut at Liverpool’s now legendary Cavern Club.

On this day in 1964 The Beatles’ “I Want To Hold Your Hand” became the group’s first number 1 single on the US charts.  This was also the day their song “She Loves You” made its debut.

On this day in 1967 The Beatles, became dissatisfied with the previous mix of “Penny Lane” and returned to the studio to record three more mixes.

On this day in 1969 The Beatles recorded an untitled jam session titled “Untitled Jamming” and a cover of The Everly Brothers’ “Bye Bye Love” in between working on “Two Of Us”, “For You Blue” and “Let It Be”.  Alan Parsons (Alan Parsons Project) was second engineer.

the beatles

The Beatles 1969

On this day in 1980 former Beatle Paul McCartney is released and deported after serving nine days of jail time in Tokyo, Japan.  He had been taken into custody at the airport when customs officials found approximately 219 grams of marijuana in his personal luggage.

On this day in 1984 Yoko Ono, widow of former ex-Beatle John Lennon, made a charitable donation of $375,000 to Liverpool’s Strawberry Field, an orphanage which inspired The Beatles‘ classic “Strawberry Fields Forever.”

On this day in 1990 The CBS show “48 Hours” broadcast a profile on Paul McCartney.

On this day in 1991 Paul McCartney performed live on MTV’s “Unplugged” program.

(Images courtesy of FanPop and BeatlePhotoBlog)

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