Thursday 26 April 2012

Cancer-stricken Chopper 'has weeks to live'

Cancer-stricken Chopper 'has weeks to live'

Melbourne criminal Mark ''Chopper'' Read has been given just weeks to live after being diagnosed with liver cancer, according to reports.
The crook-turned-author and artist used Twitter yesterday to break the news about his failing health, telling his 3428 followers: ''Looks like the big C has finally bitten. Let's see how we go …''
He later said he had four tumours on his liver and had been given just six weeks to live but was not afraid of dying.
"I've got liver cancer. They say there's no way out of it," the Herald Sun quoted him as saying.
"It depends on who you talk to. Some reckon you've got six weeks, some reckon you've got six months, some reckon if you're looked after you could have as long as six years.
"As long as the bleeding stops, I don't give a bugger."
Earlier, he apologised for not ''tweeting of late - have been spending a bit of time in hospital for my liver''.
Read, whose life was immortalised by Eric Bana in the 2000 film Chopper, later tweeted that he feels ''OK''. ''Some more surgery in a couple of weeks and hopefully I'll be ready to rock n roll after that,'' he wrote.
In 2009, Read told ABC Radio that he was refusing a liver transplant after contracting liver cirrhosis.
''I'm not going to ask for a liver transplant, it's not fair,'' he said. ''I'm 55 years old; I'm not going to put my name down against some 10-year-old kid.'' A year earlier, he said he contracted hepatitis C by using shared razor blades in prison.
''I do what I'm told and try to live a clean life. But this is killing my liver and killing me. I will die,'' he said.

Aust must do more to attract Hollywood

Aust must do more to attract Hollywood


One of Hollywood's top producers says Australia must offer better subsidies if it hopes to attract major film projects.
Lorenzo di Bonaventura, whose movies include the $US2.6 billion Transformers franchise and Angelina Jolie's action film Salt, is a big fan of Australian film crews, facilities and locations after shooting The Matrix and its two sequels in Sydney.
Di Bonaventura was a high-ranking executive at Warner Bros and a key player in choosing Australia as the shoot location for 1999's The Matrix, but the financial landscape has changed with the Aussie dollar today almost doubling in value against the greenback, making it less profitable for Hollywood to film Down Under.
More than 40 US states, including Louisiana, New Mexico, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, and European nations aggressively compete with Australia for Hollywood projects by offering juicy subsidies and incentives.
'Yes, they do,' Di Bonaventura told AAP when asked if the Australian government needed to increase its subsidies.
The federal government offers a 16.5 per cent location offset, 30 per cent post-production and visual effects offset and a 40 per cent producer offset and Australian states also offer incentives.
The federal government dug deep into its pockets to attract Hugh Jackman's X-Men sequel, The Wolverine, with a 'one-off' $A12.8 million subsidy, something the Australian film industry, desperate to attract big productions, hopes becomes a regular incentive.
Di Bonaventura said beefed-up incentives would help overcome the tyranny of distance between the US and Australia.
'It is very hard,' di Bonaventura said of the time difference and distance between Australia and Los Angeles.
'You are 17 hours away time-wise so it gets complicated.
'You are a long way away from your family.'
Di Bonaventura's next major film release is G.I. Joe: Retaliation, an action sequel starring Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Bruce Willis.
The producer selected New Orleans as the shoot location, with Louisiana boasting a 30 per cent tax credit for production costs within the state.

Wills and Kate celebrate 1 year, fans await baby news

Wills and Kate celebrate 1 year, fans await baby news
LONDON — Prince William and his wife Catherine will this weekend mark a triumphant first year of marriage as a hopeful nation waits for news they are expecting a royal heir.
The couple have lost none of their popularity in Britain and abroad 12 months after their fairytale wedding drew cheering crowds and two billion TV viewers, with one royal expert crediting them with "saving the monarchy".
But fans are still awaiting word that they are expecting a baby, and the former Kate Middleton appears to have bucked a royal trend.
Royal biographer Andrew Morton told AFP a year ago: "If Kate is not pregnant in the next nine months, she'll be defying 200 years of royal tradition."
Press speculation has been feverish and bookies are offering narrow odds on a new arrival in 2013, while succession rules were changed last year so that any daughter of the couple would be equal with boys in the queue for the throne.
But the second in line to the throne and his wife -- who took eight years to marry and have also flouted royal convention by opting against household servants -- have made it clear they will not be bound by any timetable.
"William has said he'll take things one step at a time," royal writer Robert Jobson told AFP.
"But Kate, at 30, I'm sure she wants to start a family as soon as she can. She's been with this man for eight years of her life, she's clearly in love with him."
Since their wedding the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, as they are now known, have triumphantly toured Canada and California, met the Obamas, made polished public appearances, and won fans from Nicole Kidman to Snoop Dogg.
Catherine, the middle-class girl made good, has become a fashion trendsetter and appeared with her socialite sister Pippa on Time magazine's list of the world's 100 most influential people.
She has also won the endorsement of Queen Elizabeth, who has twice appeared with Catherine -- still known to many as Kate -- in public and has reportedly written to the pair to thank them for their work.
William took part in a daring rescue of two sailors in his job as a search-and-rescue pilot, and won hearts by giving Kate a cocker spaniel, Lupo, to keep her company when he was deployed for six weeks to the Falkland Islands.
Like William's mother Diana, the pair are seen as willing to get their hands dirty for good causes. But they are also credited with helping the family move on from Diana's 1997 death in a car crash and her earlier very public divorce.
"Their story has put the monarchy back on the map in terms of what they represent. They have saved the monarchy in the public imagination," Jobson said.
The pair will celebrate their anniversary on Sunday "privately", a spokeswoman said, ahead of public appearances for the queen's diamond jubilee in June and a joint trip to Singapore, Malaysia, Tuvalu and the Solomon Islands.
In 2013 they are due to move from their home on the island of Anglesey near William's Royal Air Force base to grander accommodation -- Princess Margaret's old apartments in London's Kensington Palace.
This is widely expected to accompany them starting a family, Jobson said, and will inevitably herald even closer public attention.
Their few critics have accused the pair of being "bland" and showing little personality in public, in contrast with the fizz of William's younger brother Prince Harry, who won over hosts in the Caribbean in March with practical jokes and a comical 'race' against Usain Bolt.
But Jobson noted that there is more to Catherine "than meets the eye", recalling that she originally attracted her prince's attention by "sashaying down a catwalk at university in a see-through dress".
"William and Kate understand the seriousness of the role that lies ahead of them. They don't want to put a foot wrong and they're very cautious, perhaps too cautious.
"They're aware that the future of the monarchy is on their shoulders," he said.

‘Leap of Faith’

‘Leap of Faith’

Jeez, even the climactic thunderstorm is a letdown in “Leap of Faith.” You can see the water jets — where’s the fun in that?
Sorry if that’s a spoiler, but nothing happens in this frustrating and manipulative new Broadway musical based on a 1992 Steve Martin movie you don’t see coming a mile away.
What is surprising is how infrequently songs by Alan Menken (music) and Glenn Slater (lyrics) make you sit up and take notice.
Is this the same duo that packed “Sister Act” with tasty disco-pop tunes The composer who wrote the memorable melodies for “Newsies”? It is.
There are some rousing, albeit repetitive, gospel numbers, each accompanied by Sergio Trujillo’s gyrating dancing. And the sweet country-and-Western-flavored “Long Past Dreamin’” is a real keeper. Otherwise, the score is as striking as dust in a drought-ravaged Kansas town.
That’s where phony faith healer Jonas Nightingale (Raul Esparza, of “Company” and “Arcadia”) and his band of “angels” pitch their tent after a bus breakdown. They’re soon fleecing poor local yokels in their revival meetings.
Enter sheriff Marla McGowan (a likable low-key Jessica Phillips). She’s got Nightingale’s number, but she’s also a lonely widow with a disabled son, Jake (Talon Ackerman), turned on by Jonas and his many sleeveless T-shirts. “Smart Women, Foolish Choices” was a non-issue when Liam Neeson wore the badge on the big screen in 1992.
The sex change is one of several tweaks by Janus Cercone, who wrote the original screenplay, and Warren Leight. Now, Jonas has a sister, Sam (Kendra Kassebaum), and a boo-hoo childhood to lend a shred of psychological background. Unfortunately, there are also too many secondary characters and gaps in logic, such as Jonas’ gang not knowing he’s a con man. Huh?
Director Christopher Ashley has previously done fine work guiding “Memphis” and “All Shook Up.” But he doesn’t get a handle on this production, which he inherited after a 2010 Los Angeles tryout. It feels out of sync.
Ragtag “angels” look so slick that they could’ve come from blowouts and seaweed wraps at a spa. Even the always reliable William Ivey Long has fashioned costumes that are head-scratchers. Kassebaum’s Stevie Nicks-style frock cries out for an exorcism.

Rosie Odonnell - Rosie O'donnell: Lindsay Lohan Is Quite Talented

Rosie Odonnell - Rosie O'donnell: Lindsay Lohan Is Quite Talented


Rosie O'Donnell insists her reasons for believing Lindsay Lohan ''is not capable'' of playing the late Dame Elizabeth Taylor have nothing to do with her talent.

Rosie O'Donnell insists her reasons for believing Lindsay Lohan ''is not capable'' of playing the late Dame Elizabeth Taylor have nothing to do with the actress' talent.
Earlier this week the chat show host took aim at the troubled star - who is set to portray Elizabeth in TV movie 'Liz and Dick' - when she said: ''The last thing she did good she was 16. I don't think she's right for the role and I don't think she's capable at this point of doing what's needed.''
But after Lindsay - who has been in-and-out of rehab and jail since 2007- hit back with: ''It's funny that someone you don't know at all can say something so intrusive and so knowing,'' Rosie explains her comments were borne of concern, not criticism.
Appearing on the 'Today' show, she said: ''I [was] watching Whitney Houston's funeral, and I remember thinking, 'Why didn't more people say what they knew?'
''We all knew, when she would not show up to do this show, not show up to do my show, we watched 'Being Bobby Brown' and it was like watching Sid and Nancy, they were people who were in the throes of addiction.
''But all that anyone cared about was that the show was getting ratings, not that this woman, this talented individual, this human being, this mother, this daughter, was worth saving.
''To look at Lindsay Lohan, you can't help but feel for her. I don't think she's untalented, I think she's quite talented.''

American Idol’ viewers dump Elise Testone

American Idol’ viewers dump Elise Testone

Elise Testone won’t be winning it all on “American Idol.”
The rockin’ 28-year-old teacher from Charleston, S.C., was revealed to have received the fewest viewer votes Thursday on the Fox singing competition.
Testone delivered energetic renditions Wednesday of Queen’s “I Want It All” and Jimi Hendrix’s “Bold as Love”.
Testone was joined in the bottom three by 18-year-old singer Hollie Cavanagh from McKinney, Texas. Eighteen-year-old rocker Skylar Laine from Brandon, Miss., was the other contestant on the edge.

Romney Uses ‘Cold War Prism,’ Biden Says in Foreign Policy Attack

Romney Uses ‘Cold War Prism,’ Biden Says in Foreign Policy Attack


Shifting the battle with Mitt Romney from jobs and taxes to the safer realm of foreign policy, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. traveled to New York City on Thursday to praise President Obama as the man who got Osama bin Laden and to paint Mr. Romney as a cold war relic who would leave American troops stranded in Afghanistan.

The president, Mr. Biden said in a speech at New York University, ended the war in Iraq, devised an exit strategy in Afghanistan and restored America’s moral stature. Mr. Romney, he asserted, has distorted that record and would drag the United States back to the go-it-alone policies of the Bush administration that culminated in the Iraq war.
“Governor Romney, I think, is counting on collective amnesia,” Mr. Biden said to a gathering of 500 that included law students and Democratic foreign-policy elders like Gen. Wesley Clark, the former NATO commander, who plans to campaign for Mr. Obama. But, he added, “Americans know we can’t go back to the future.”
In assailing Mr. Romney on Iran, Afghanistan and other issues, Mr. Biden was pressing what the campaign believes is an advantage in national security — unusual for a Democratic incumbent — over a Republican who has struggled to find an easy opening against Mr. Obama on foreign policy.
The Romney campaign fired back even before Mr. Biden spoke, fielding its own team of foreign-policy advisers who accused Mr. Obama of abdicating American leadership on Iran and Syria, downgrading the alliance with Israel, buckling to Russia on missile defense and hollowing out the military with cuts in the Pentagon budget.
Mr. Biden was offering a “fantasy narrative,” said Dan Senor, a Romney adviser who was a spokesman in Iraq during the Bush administration, in a conference call with reporters. The president, he said, had left allies and dissidents “exposed and isolated in a way I have not seen in American foreign-policy history for years.”
Still, it was the Romney team that seemed dated. Pierre Prosper, who was an ambassador handling war-crimes issues for President George W. Bush, accused Mr. Obama of appeasing Russia by abandoning plans to put a missile defense site in “Czechoslovakia” — a nation that has not existed since the early 1990s. John F. Lehman, a secretary of the Navy in the Reagan administration, said the “Soviets” were capitalizing on Mr. Obama’s weakening of the American military.
Mr. Biden described Mr. Romney as someone who viewed the world “through a cold war prism,” borrowing the thought from Russia’s president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, who said Mr. Romney’s description of Russia as the nation’s “No. 1 geopolitical foe” was 1970s thinking.
It was a rare day of geopolitical combat in a campaign that has been fixated on kitchen-table concerns. But the back-and-forth had a familiar feel, as the Romney camp matched Mr. Biden’s assertions that their candidate wanted to recycle discredited and outdated policies with claims that the president was presiding over an America in decline.
Mr. Biden, the former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has given five speeches in recent weeks designed to highlight the differences between the candidates, and Thursday’s event was a chance for him to return to his foreign-policy wheelhouse.
The vice president walked through the major national-security challenges of the Obama presidency, contending that where Mr. Romney disagreed with the president, his positions were prone to reversals, and where his views did not differ from the president’s — as on Iran, Mr. Biden argued — Mr. Romney distorted the facts.
Saying that the president and Mr. Romney have both called for crippling sanctions on Iran, backed up by a threat to use military force, to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, Mr. Biden said, “It’s hard for me to understand what the governor means by a very different policy” — unless, he added, it means going to war.
“If that’s what Governor Romney means by a very different policy,” Mr. Biden said, “he should tell the American people.”
Mr. Obama, by contrast, followed Theodore Roosevelt’s dictum to “speak softly and carry a big stick,” Mr. Biden said. “I promise you, the president has a big stick,” he added, “I promise you.”
The vice president pressed his point further, recounting the story of Mr. Obama’s decision to order a raid on Bin Laden’s hide-out in Pakistan and speculating about whether Mr. Romney would have done the same. He quoted Mr. Romney as saying on the campaign trail in 2008, “It’s not worth moving heaven and earth, spending billions of dollars, just to catch one person.”
“If you’re looking for a bumper sticker to sum up how President Obama has handled what we inherited, it’s pretty simple, ‘Osama bin Laden is dead, and General Motors is alive,’ ” Mr. Biden said. Had Mr. Romney been in office, he mused, that slogan could be reversed.
The Romney campaign did outline some clear differences with the Obama administration. Mr. Senor said Mr. Romney would provide arms to opposition groups in Syria, something the president has resisted.
Mr. Romney’s advisers also said the governor would never have announced a deadline for withdrawing troops from Afghanistan. Mr. Romney has previously said he wants to withdraw troops as soon as “our generals” agree, but he has also publicly endorsed the NATO timetable for turning security over to the Afghans by 2014.

Annan Plan ‘Failing’ in Syria as Violence Trumps Monitors

Annan Plan ‘Failing’ in Syria as Violence Trumps Monitors


The United Nations effort to halt the bloodshed in Syria is “failing,” two U.S. officials said while adding that the Obama administration is sticking with diplomacy to end the conflict.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon yesterday reiterated his call for an immediate halt to the violence, focusing on Syrian government violations of the cease-fire terms, and for more UN observers to join the advance contingent of 15 monitors now in Syria. Finding and deploying unarmed monitors is going slowly, and it may take three to four weeks more to deploy 100 of the anticipated 300, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in Washington.
At least 28 people were killed in Syria yesterday, bringing to 259 the number who have died in the violence since the UN Security Council agreed April 21 to deploy as many as 300 unarmed cease-fire observers, according to the website of the opposition Local Coordination Committees. The group counts 530 people killed since the April 12 announcement of the cease-fire brokered by Kofi Annan, the special envoy for the UN and the Arab League.
“I would say it’s failing,” Derek Chollet, the president’s nominee to be assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, said of the Annan plan.
The administration will continue to use economic sanctions and diplomacy to pressure the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Chollet said at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee.
“What is obvious and indisputable is that the Kofi Annan plan has failed,” Senator John McCain said at the hearing. The Arizona Republican, who recently visited refugee camps on Turkey’s border with Syria, said it is a “shameful situation” that civilians “are being slaughtered” by the Syrian regime.

Arming the Opposition

“We are talking about economic sanctions and diplomatic sanctions when we should be helping these people as we helped the people of Bosnia, as we helped in Libya, and we’ve helped in other times in our history,” said McCain, who advocates arming the opposition.
Pentagon officials are drawing up plans should President Barack Obama decide to pursue military options in Syria, a second administration nominee, Kathleen Hicks, told the committee. She also testified that the Annan plan is failing.
“We are doing a significant amount of planning for a wide range of scenarios, including our ability to assist allies and partners along the borders,” said Hicks, the nominee to be principal deputy defense undersecretary for policy.
The U.S., Turkey and other allies have discussed creating a civilian aid corridor along the Syrian border as one possible action if the fighting continues.

Pressing for Monitors

The Security Council is pressing for monitors to be deployed as quickly as possible with a goal of deterring the violence to enable talks on Syria’s future, said two UN diplomats who spoke anonymously because the council discussions are private.
Council members are aware that without observers the Annan mission will collapse, one of the diplomats said. The observers are Plan A, and if that doesn’t work, because the monitors don’t arrive in time, or Annan’s mediation fails, the council will have to move to Plan B, he said.
Both U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe have raised the possibility of asking the UN to impose demands and further sanctions on Syria that could be enforced militarily under Chapter 7 of the UN charter, which was invoked in the case of Libya.
In Paris, Juppe said on April 25 that Annan’s next scheduled report to the council, planned for May 5, will show whether his plan is working. If not, he said, France may seek action under Chapter 7 even if Russia and China would veto the measure.

Security Council Credibility

In the meantime, the continued violence reflects the UN’s ineffectiveness in this situation and the limited will to act by the U.S. and other “Friends of Syria,” said Aram Nerguizian at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington policy group.
There is little international will for greater involvement, particularly during an election year in both the U.S. and France, and especially because neither the regime nor the opposition seem interested in putting down their arms, Nerguizian said in a telephone interview.
“None of the players are really committed in ways that are long-lasting to a path away from violence, and the Syrians are paying the price for that now,” he said.
UN special envoy Annan called April 25 for the accelerated deployment of monitors, part of his six-point cease-fire plan.

Samsung turns in record quarterly profit

Samsung turns in record quarterly profit.


Samsung Electronics, the world's largest consumer electronics maker, reported a record quarterly profit Friday on the strength of its smartphones.
The South Korea-based company said net profits rose 82 percent to a record 5.05 trillion won, or about $4.45 billion, for the fiscal first quarter ending March 31, compared with 2.78 trillion won a year earlier. Samsung also recorded record quarterly operating profits of $5.85 trillion won, in line with earlier guidance provided by the company.
"We cautiously expect our earnings momentum to continue going forward, as competitiveness in our major businesses is enhanced," Robert Yi, head of investor relations at Samsung, said in a statement.
Samsung's handset division accounted for 73 percent of the company's total profit, bringing in 4.27 trillion won, triple over the year-ago period. The division's operating profit margin jumped to 18.4 percent from 11 percent a year ago on the back of strong sales of the Galaxy S and Note smartphones. Analysts estimate Samsung sold 90 million handsets, including 44 million smartphones.
Profits from the company's TV and home appliances business skyrocketed to 530 billion won from 80 billion a year ago. However, semiconductor profits plummeted 54 percent to 760 billion won compared to last year.

RPT-UPDATE 2-Interest costs take toll on India's Idea

RPT-UPDATE 2-Interest costs take toll on India's Idea

Repeats story issued late on Thursday)* Q4 net 2.39 bln rupees vs 2.41 bln estimate
* Growth in customer base lifts revenue 27 pct
* Has to rebid for seven licences in new auction
* Sees 35 bln rupees capex this year, excluding licence auction
By Aradhana Aravindan and Devidutta Tripathy
MUMBAI/NEW DELHI, April 26 (Reuters) - India's Idea Cellular reported a fourth straight quarter of declining profit as interest costs jumped, and warned of an uncertain regulatory environment in the world's second-biggest mobile phone market.
India's third-largest mobile phone carrier by revenue said consolidated net profit fell 13 percent in its fiscal fourth quarter ended March, in line with estimates, due to a one-off provision and a near-trebling in interest costs on loans.
Mobile phone carriers in India have been hit by fresh uncertainty in recent months after a court order to revoke all cellular permits granted in a scandal-tainted 2008 sale.
Part of the Aditya Birla conglomerate, Idea is set to lose seven of its 22 zonal operative licences.
It must win those back in an auction to retain its all-India presence and compete with bigger rivals Bharti Airtel and Vodafone's local unit.
But with the sector regulator proposing the auction has a starting level of nearly 10 times the 2008 sale price, Idea may have to spend at least 25.35 billion rupees ($482 million) to regain the permits.
"There is no doubt our investors are nervous," Idea Chief Executive Himanshu Kapania told reporters at a news conference.
The regulator's proposals must be approved by the government before they become law.
Idea plans 35 billion rupees in capital expenditure in the year to next March, excluding any auction payments, f inance chief Akshaya Moondra said.
Shares in Idea, valued at $5.2 billion, closed 4.1 percent higher at 83.35 rupees in a Mumbai market that fell 0.3 percent before the earnings announcement.
Idea shares are down more than 15 percent this month and fell sharply this week after the regulator's proposals were announced. The shares had gained 20 percent over the three months to March, outperforming Bharti and the broader market.
Net profit fell to 2.39 billion rupees for the three months to March from 2.75 billion a year earlier. Revenue rose some 27 percent to 53.7 billion rupees, as the number of customers grew by more than a quarter.
Analysts in a Reuters poll of 19 brokerages had on average expected a net profit of 2.41 billion rupees on revenue of 53.04 billion for the company, of which Malaysia's Axiata owns about one-fifth.

Interest costs jumped to 2.28 billion rupees from 854 million in the year-ago quarter mainly because of loans for building a third-generation network.
Idea spent 57.69 billion rupees in a 2010 state auction to buy 3G spectrum and has invested in building the network.
The company also made a provision of 1.5 billion rupees in the quarterly result due to an "uncertain regulatory environment", Moondra said, without elaborating.
($1 = 52.6 rupees) (Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan and Devidutta Tripathy; editing by Malini Menon and David Hulmes)

U.N. chief demands Syria withdraw weapons, troops

U.N. chief demands Syria withdraw weapons, troops


UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has demanded that the Syrian government immediately comply with its commitment to withdraw troops and heavy weapons from cities and towns.
U.N. deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey said on Thursday Mr. Ban is “deeply troubled” about reports from U.N. military observers that military equipment and army personnel remain in populated areas in violation of Syria’s pledge to pull them out.
The secretary-general is also “gravely alarmed” at reports of continued violence and killing, including shelling, explosions, and armed clashes in residential areas, Mr. Del Buey said in a statement.
He said the UN chief strongly condemns the continuing repression against Syria’s civilian population which he says is “unacceptable and must stop immediately.”
Earlier on Thursday, U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice condemned the Syrian government’s continuing intense use of heavy weapons in the central city of Hama and elsewhere, which has resulted in a large number of civilian deaths every day.
She also condemned President Bashar Assad’s government for refusing to implement international envoy Kofi Annan’s six-point peace plan.
Ms. Rice told reporters that a deadly explosion that flattened houses in Hama on Wednesday appears to be “the result of intense shelling” though she couldn’t say this with certainty.
She reiterated that if the Assad regime continues to violate its commitments and the UN observer mission isn’t leading to a sustained ceasefire, the U.S. will again ask the Security Council to consider sanctions against Syria.
 

Judge denies request to release Bin Laden photos

Judge denies request to release Bin Laden photos.

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge Thursday denied a request to release photos and video taken of Osama bin Laden during and after a raid in which the terrorist leader was killed by U.S. commandos last year.
"The court declines plaintiff's invitation to substitute its own judgment about the national-security risks inherent in releasing these records for that of the executive-branch officials who determined that they should be classified," wrote U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg in rejecting a lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog group.
The group, which had sought the records under the Freedom of Information Act, filed an appeal on Thursday.
Boasberg said that the Defense Department didn't turn up anything responsive to the FOIA, while the CIA found 52 responsive records. The agency withheld all of them, citing exemptions for classified materials and information specifically exempted by other laws.
Judicial Watch had sued both agencies after they said they would be unable to process the FOIA requests within the time permitted by law. The agencies finished processing the requests after the lawsuit was filed.
"A picture may be worth a thousand words. And perhaps moving pictures bear an even higher value," wrote Boasberg, an appointee of President Barack Obama. "Yet, in this case, verbal descriptions of the death and burial of Osama Bin Laden will have to suffice, for this court will not order the release of anything more."
In court papers, the Justice Department had said that the images of the deceased bin Laden are classified and are being withheld from the public to avoid inciting violence against Americans overseas and compromising secret systems and techniques used by the CIA and the military.
John Bennett, director of the CIA's National Clandestine Service, said in a declaration included in the court papers that many of the photos and video recordings are "quite graphic, as they depict the fatal bullet wound to (bin Laden) and other similarly gruesome images of his corpse." Images were taken of bin Laden's body at the Abbottabad compound, where he was killed by a Navy SEAL team, and during his burial at sea from the USS Carl Vinson, Bennett said.
Boasberg said he was "mindful that many members of the public would likely desire to see" the images.
"In the end, while this may not be the result plaintiff or certain members of the public would prefer, the CIA's explanation of the threat to our national security that the release of these records could cause passes muster," he wrote.

Deccan Chargers beat Pune Warriors for first IPL win


Deccan Chargers beat Pune Warriors for first IPL win

Pune: Deccan Chargers tasted their first win of the fifth season of the Indian Premier League (IPL) as they beat Pune Warriors by 19 runs at the Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium here Thursday.
It took an all-round effort by Deccan Chargers for their first win, having suffered five consecutive losses.

Deccan Chargers, however, are still languishing at the bottom of the league with six points from three matches.
Pune Warriors, who were cheered by former skipper Yuvraj Singh from the dug out, suffered their second consecutive loss in the IPL and are now sixth with eight points from nine matches.
Opting to bat first, Deccan Chargers first put a challenging total of 177 for four in 20 overs after Cameron White top scored with 78 off 46 balls. White smashed five sixes and six fours and added impressive 75 runs for the fourth wicket with Jean Paul Duminy (26 not out) to take Chargers to lead the Deccan’s innings.
Deccan Chargers bowlers then churned out their most disciplined performance restricting Pune Warriors to 159 for seven in 20 overs.
Debutant pacer Ashish Reddy was the pick of the bowlers bagging two for 32 while South Africa Juan Theron also bagged two for 37.
Pune Warriors never got their chase on track as they lost wickets at regular intervals. Robin Uthappa was the top scorer with 29 while Australian all-rounder Steven Smith made 26.
Pune Warriors batsmen had to blame themselves for the loss as their batsmen got starts but could not convert them into big scores.
Skipper Sourav Ganguly (23) failed to make the most of the life he got on 22 when Jean Paul Duminy dropped a sitter at the point. Ganguly survived three more balls before falling to pacer Manpreet Gony.

Wednesday 25 April 2012

Dengue Fever Asian Mosquito Could Invade UK


Dengue Fever Asian Mosquito Could Invade UK



A mosquito that spreads tropical diseases including dengue fever may be poised to invade the UK because of climate change.

The Asian tiger mosquito has already been reported in France and Belgium and could be migrating north as winters become warmer and wetter.
Scientists have urged "wide surveillance" for the biting insect across countries of central and northern Europe, including the UK.
The mosquito can carry dengue and chikungunya viruses, both of which cause high fevers. The infections usually occur in tropical regions of Africa, Asia and South America.
Scientists led by Dr Samantha Martin, from the University of Liverpool, used climate models to predict how changing conditions might affect Asian tiger mosquito distribution.
They wrote in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface: "Mosquito climate suitability has significantly increased over the southern UK, northern France, the Benelux, parts of Germany, Italy, Sicily and the Balkan countries."
The research shows that parts of the UK could become hot-spots of Asian tiger mosquito activity between 2030 and 2050.
The mosquito has been introduced into Europe from Asia via goods shipments, mainly used tyres and bamboo.
Climate change is now shifting conditions suitable for the insect from southern Europe to central north-western areas.
The mosquito could survive in water butts and vases, and may find winter protection in greenhouses, said the researchers.

Waterworld in real life? Scientists warn sea level is rising due to melting Antarctic ice

Waterworld in real life? Scientists warn sea level is rising due to melting Antarctic ice

Antarctica's massive ice shelves are shrinking because they are being eaten away from below by warm water, a new study finds. 
That suggests that future sea levels could rise faster than many scientists have been predicting.
The western chunk of Antarctica is losing 23 feet of its floating ice sheet each year. 
Until now, scientists weren't exactly sure how it was happening and whether or how man-made global warming might be a factor. 
The answer, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature, is that climate change plays an indirect role - but one that has larger repercussions than if Antarctic ice were merely melting from warmer air.
Hamish Pritchard, a glaciologist at the British Antarctic Survey, said research using an ice-gazing NASA satellite showed that warmer air alone couldn't explain what was happening to Antarctica. 
A more detailed examination found a chain of events that explained the shrinking ice shelves.
Twenty ice shelves showed signs that they were melting from warm water below. 
Changes in wind currents pushed that relatively warmer water closer to and beneath the floating ice shelves.

 

Simon Cowell: I'm sorry for revelations

Simon Cowell: I'm sorry for revelations

Simon Cowell says he wants to "publicly apologise" to people left red-faced following the sordid revelations in his unauthorised biography.
The X Factor mogul attended the launch of the book, Sweet Revenge: The Intimate Life of Simon Cowell, at London's Serpentine Gallery and admitted that he hid under his "pillow" during the serialisation in Britain's The Sun newspaper.
The tome reveals details of his alleged fling with Dannii Minogue and his desire to sleep with Cheryl Cole among other kiss-and-tell tales.
"I wish to publicly apologise to anyone I embarrassed," he said contritely. "I have tried to keep my private life quiet a bit and I do have to apologise to certain people and certain members of my family. That's the score.
"Ten years ago if I had read someone would be writing a book about me saying I made loads of money and shagged loads of girls I would have said, 'Great!'

Part 'egghead,' part jock: Meet Andrew Luck

Part 'egghead,' part jock: Meet Andrew Luck


STANFORD, Calif. – Andrew Luck, appearing like any other slightly disheveled, scruffy college kid in army-green shorts, blue T-shirt and brown leather loafers, scrounges in his pocket and produces a prized possession
The soon-to-graduate architectural design major and sooner-to-be-a-multimillionaire pulls out … a retro flip phone.
Stanford's scholarly All-America quarterback, whom theIndianapolis Colts confirmed will be the No. 1 selection in the first round of today's NFL draft, is not embarrassed. Of course, as the fresh face of the franchise in the post-Peyton Manning era, Luck might want to consider an upgrade.

Former Google Developer Says He Took Some Java Code Out of Android

Former Google Developer Says He Took Some Java Code Out of Android


Google staff architect testifies that he removed part of the Java code from Android shortly after Oracle filed its lawsuit in 2010. The reason: Software projects are always being updated.

The Oracle v. Google lawsuit in federal court over Google's alleged illegal use of parts of the Java code base in the Android mobile device operating system has taken a couple of curious turns.

Turn No. 1: Former Google software architect Dan Bornstein, who helped create Android, testified April 25 that he took some components of the Sun-developed Java code out of the configuration shortly after Oracle filed its lawsuit in 2010 -- only months after acquiring Sun in January of that year.

Turn No. 2: The presiding judge, William Alsup, will need to decide whether or not it is proper that his court reinstitute a now-invalid Java patent. This one could play a key role in whether Java application programming interfaces (APIs) are declared part of the open source Java package or separate and sacrosanct from free use.

Iphone competitor buoys AT&T verizon

IPhone competitor buoys AT&T, Verizon


T&T and Verizon Wireless, facing concerns that Apple and Google have too tight a grip on the market for smart-phone software, are cozying up to Microsoft and Nokia.
When they reported quarterly results this month, both carriers praised Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system, which runs the new Nokia Lumia phone. AT&T began offering the Lumia 900 for $99.99 on April 8, and Verizon is preparing to add a new Nokia model to its lineup soon. AT&T declined to give sales figures for its device.
The companies are counting on the Lumia and forthcoming Windows models to provide an alternative to Apple's iPhone and Google Android handsets. While AT&T and Verizon sell millions of those devices, the products can be more costly to subsidize, especially the iPhone. The companies also face the risk that an Apple-Google duopoly will erode carriers' ability to distinguish themselves and will further squeeze their profit margins.
"We want the Lumia to succeed - we love to have competition in the handset market," said AT&T Chief Financial Officer John Stephens. "It's always better to have more choices for your customers."
For now, most of AT&T's smart-phone customers are opting for the iPhone. The Apple device made up 78 percent of the carrier's smart-phone sales in the first quarter. At Verizon, which added the iPhone to its network more recently, the product accounted for 51 percent. The company relies more on models running Android.
Apple's profit almost doubled to $11.6 billion last quarter, lifted by the surging popularity of the iPhone, while revenue jumped 59 percent to $39.2 billion. The company sold 35.1 million iPhones in the period.
Apple requires carriers to subsidize the phones at a higher level, leaving less room for profit, said John Hodulik, an analyst at UBS AG.
"They hope Lumia can take some market share to help lower their subsidy costs, now that so much of the spending is in Apple's favor," he said.
Verizon Communications Chief Financial Officer Fran Shammo also said there was a need for another player in the smart-phone software arena. Research In Motion, which has served that role, has seen its market share slide.
"It is important that there is a third ecosystem that's brought into the mix here, and we are fully supportive of that with Microsoft," Shammo said on Verizon's earnings call last week. Android "is an incredible platform today that we helped create. And we're looking to do the same thing with a third ecosystem."

Two Parties Find a Way to Agree, and Disagree, on Student Loan Rates

Two Parties Find a Way to Agree, and Disagree, on Student Loan Rates

 

IOWA CITY — As President Obama wrapped up a barnstorming tour of college campuses in swing states on Wednesday, Democrats and Republicans agreed that they wanted to avoid a steep increase in the student loan interest rate this summer. But the chief issue remained unsettled: how to pay the cost of doing so.

In a second day of campaign-style rallies, Mr. Obama pressed his attack on Republicans, depicting them as unsympathetic to college students in need. Republicans countered by accusing the president and his Democratic allies of playing politics with the issue and trying to raise taxes on small businesses to pay for the subsidized rate.
Caught in the middle were seven million college students who will see the interest rate on their federally subsidized loans double to 6.8 percent on July 1 unless Congress and the White House come together on a plan to prevent that, at a cost of $6 billion. For a typical student, the White House said the higher rate could mean as much as $1,000 in additional debt per year at a time of high unemployment among recent graduates.
Mr. Obama has made the issue his top talking point in recent days as part of an effort to put Republicans on the defensive and duplicate the political success of the payroll tax cut extension last winter. Speaking at the University of Iowa here, he seized on a comment by an aide to SpeakerJohn A. Boehner that the president should focus on fixing the economy.
“This is the economy,” Mr. Obama said with indignation in his voice. “What economy are they talking about? You are the economy.”
Republicans were equally indignant at what they saw as game-playing, saying that they, too, want to forestall the rate increase. They quickly tried to outmaneuver the president.
Late Wednesday afternoon, Mr. Boehner hastily called a news conference to announce that the House would vote Friday on a student loan bill that seemed to take shape just as suddenly. The proposal would extend the current interest rate for federal student loans for one year. The $6 billion cost would be offset by eliminating the remainder of the money from the Prevention and Public Health Fund, a portion of the health care law.
“You know, this week the president’s traveling the country on the taxpayers’ dime,” Mr. Boehner said, “campaigning and trying to invent a fight where there isn’t one and never has been one on this issue of student loans. We can and will fix the problem without a bunch of campaign-style theatrics. “
House Democrats quickly countered that they would offer a bill to maintain the rate by ending tax subsidies for oil and gas companies.
Congress first cut the interest rate on federally subsidized loans in 2007 when Democrats controlled both houses but allowed the cuts to expire after five years because of the cost. The rate moved down gradually each year to 3.4 percent last summer from a high of 6.8 percent. If no action is taken, the rate will jump back up to 6.8 percent this summer.
Mr. Obama included money in his budget to extend the cut, but just for one year. Republicans, in the budget advanced by Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, did not finance an extension. But following the lead of Mitt Romney, the party’s presumptive presidential nominee, Republican leaders say they, too, favor extending the lower rate at least temporarily.
“It took me seven years to work my way through college, working every job I could get my hands on,” Mr. Boehner said. “And what Washington shouldn’t be doing is exploiting the challenges that young Americans face for political gain.”