Monday, April 29, 2013

Chrysler says second-quarter vehicle shipments to rise at least 13 percent

BERLIN, April 29 (Reuters) - Barcelona will try every trick in the book to overturn a 4-0 first-leg deficit against Bayern Munich in their Champions League semi-final return leg on Wednesday, honorary Bayern president Franz Beckenbauer warned on Monday. Bayern crushed the Spaniards last week in a surprisingly one-sided encounter but Beckenbauer, former player, coach and president of Germany's most successful club, warned that Barcelona were not ready to surrender. "Barca will try everything to throw Bayern off balance," he told Bild newspaper. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chrysler-says-second-quarter-vehicle-shipments-rise-least-132821547.html

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Jarvis Is A Personal Assistant That Goes Beyond Siri To Embrace The Connected Home

jarvisIf you're an Iron Man fan, you already know about Jarvis, Tony Stark's personal assistant (who's either a human or a virtual AI, depending on how long you've been following the comic). Jarvis is the glue that keeps Stark's business, personal and super hero lives running smoothly.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/1dCXu2V2-EA/

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Are private schools worth the hefty price tag?

When she was a 17-year-old high school senior applying to college, Jessica Assaf wanted more than anything to attend Brown University.

Founded in 1764, the private research university based in Providence, R.I. holds the distinction of being one of the U.S.'s oldest higher learning institutions.

Along with its Ivy League peers, it's also among the most selective colleges in the country. This year, Brown accepted just 9.2 percent of the 28,919 students that applied for the Class of 2017. When Assaf was a senior in high school back in 2007, Brown's acceptance rate stood at 13.5 percent.

Despite a strong r?sum?that included solid grades and entrance exam scores, and an enviable list of extracurricular activities, Assaf ? who attended the private, $29,800-a-year Branson School outside of San Francisco ? failed to get accepted to Brown.

At the time, she "felt like a failure," she openly admits.

Now, several years removed from that disappointment, she sees that momentary stumbling block as a precursor to everything she's been able to accomplish since.

"Not getting into Brown was the best thing that's ever happened to me," said Assaf, a vice president of sales at S.W. Basics of Brooklyn who ultimately ended up studying at NYU and has been accepted to the Harvard Business School.

The private school environment, according to Assaf, too often tended to engender in her and her classmates "an entitlement mentality."

"At NYU, in a city like New York, nothing happens for you," she said. "You have to earn every opportunity."

At Branson "you don't think you have to work hard," she added. "You think I'm here, I deserve to be here, and now everything's just going to be handed to me."

Assaf is careful to point out that she's not trying to fault her private school or in any way disparage her former classmates. Yet she also admits to being "frustrated about my high school experience, because it was so expensive and there's so much emphasis on getting into an Ivy League school."

At a time when many Americans see little choice but to tighten their belts in an economy just barely lumbering along, parents are increasingly questioning each and every purchasing decision. That includes what they're willing to pay full price for at the local supermarket, to which schools they send their children.

Read More: Jobs Picture Looks Bleak for 2013 College Grads

Some parents can afford the hefty sticker price attached to schools like Branson. However, the experience of students like Assaf, coupled with comparable data on the success rates of many gifted students who attend free public schools, has called into question the cost-benefit?or the return on investment?of a private school education overall.

Indeed, while many still believe that enrolling their child in a prestigious private school?where the cost of attendance can often exceed that seen at top colleges and universities ? is a guarantee of social status, recent evidence suggests that calculus isn't so clear cut.

Worth the Cost of Admission?
At Brooklyn's Poly Prep Country Day School, the yearly tuition is about $32,000. Students excel in the classroom, all while attempting to live up to the standard set by some of the school's notable alumni, such as Kenneth Dubertstein (class of 1961), a White House Chief of Staff to Ronald Reagan; Seth Low (1966), a former New York City Mayor; and novelist Joseph McElroy (1947).

Poly Prep's graduating seniors also routinely gain admission to some of the nation's elite colleges and universities.

"In the ever-increasing competitive world of college admissions, Poly Prep students continue to fare quite well," said Poly Prep's dean of college relations, Michael Muska, co-author of "Getting In: The Zinch Guide to College Admissions & Financial Aid in the Digital Age," on the school's site.

In an e-mail to CNBC, Muska said that "over 20 percent of last year's class attended Ivy and Little Ivy schools."

That said, Poly Prep's numbers seem to be in line with the estimated 25 percent of seniors from New York's "specialized science and math [public] high schools," like Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan ? raising the question of whether its worth it to shovel money into private schools.

According to InsideSchools.org, an independent guide to the city's public school system, the largest in the country, students that hail from New York's most rigorous and competitive schools also gain entrance to the Ivies and top private colleges at impressive rates.

Other schools, such as the Illinois Math and Science Academy in Aurora, where students are admitted in the 10th grade based on their junior high and 9th grade performance, rank among the top schools in the nation in sending students on to Ivy League schools.

Both IMSA and Stuyvesant edged out Branson in a 2007 Wall Street Journalsurvey of student admissions to a select group of elite colleges and universities. Poly Prep, however, failed to make that list. Meanwhile, the famed Dalton School in Manhattan, which cost families more than $40,000 a year, just barely made the cut.

Some experts are openly skeptical about the merits of a private school education over that of a comparably strong public school, which they argue can offer a good student the same standard of education?and chances of gaining entry to a top university ? and are free.

"I used to chuckle at parents who would send their kids off to expensive private schools rather than Oyster Bay," said Gwyeth Smith Jr, an independent college adviser and former high school counselor. "If they're bright kids, they're going to be in the same honors and AP courses that are going to be equivalent to or better than many of the private schools."

Smith said he's concerned that far too many parents and students get caught up in the "college admissions arms race."

"My last six clients have all been 9th and 10th graders," said Smith, who acknowledged that most of students he works with come from middle- to upper-income families. "That scares me."

A Competitive Advantage?

While a supporter of public schools, Smith nonetheless admits that many private schools do have some advantages, such as better student-to-counselor ratios that allow them to put a greater emphasis on the college counseling process.

Smith often advises his students to make nontraditional college choices ? such as one student he encouraged to attend USC over an Ivy League school. However, he says he's concerned with the dejection that students like Assaf experience, when the substantial investment in a high-priced secondary school education doesn't yield the return they expected.

Read More: Student Loan Borrowers Leaving Lots of Money on the Table

"Those are the kids I [worry about] more and more," he said. It's "terribly confusing" for them and their parents, "who often believe their children are the 'chosen ones.'"

David L. Marcus, who wrote a book on helping students find the "right college" couches the public-private school debate in terms of institutional shortcomings.

"Increasingly, public schools fail to prepare students for college and beyond," Marcus told CNBC in an e-mail. The 1986 Brown graduate, who has served as an admissions interviewer for the school for the past several years, added that "too many [schools] aren't emphasizing critical thinking, and they're not helping kids see the connections between science and math."

On the flip side, he says that college admissions staffs "do a fantastic job scouring public schools for poor and middle-class students who distinguish themselves," echoing Smith's sentiment that a talented student will stand out to college admissions officers more often than not.

"I look for qualities that don't show up on a high school transcript," he said. "I want someone who has an insatiable desire to learn, and who thinks critically."

So what exactly are parents getting for the hefty sums they shell out each year for a private school education?which costs a family, on average, $15,000 a year, according to the Council for American Private Education?

Part of that answer lies with the superior access and attention to detail that comes with attending private school, says Jennifer Simpson, the director of college advising at the Kent Place School, an all-girls private school in Summit, N.J.

At Kent Place, where the annual tuition is approximately $35,000?more than the cost of attending Rutgers-New Brunswick, which is about $24,000 for 2012-2013?students have access to college counselors like Simpson, who came to the school after spending several years working "on the other side of the able" in college admissions.

She admits that access is "absolutely" a key factor in many parents' decision to send their children to Kent Place. Like many private schools, Kent subsidizes the cost of attendance with generous financial aid awards.

Yet when asked about Kent Place students' admissions rates to the Ivy League and other top colleges, Simpson said she didn't feel comfortable supplying those figures. She said different people had "different interpretations" of what constitutes a top college.

Still, parents like Ginny Dameron, a school nurse in San Antonio, TX whose son attended the prestigious Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, showers praise on her son's private school experience, and the perks that came along with its price tag. Dameron's son graduated from Exeter in 2007 and from Dartmouth in 2011, and is now earning a law degree at Yale.

"I think my son went to the best school in the world," she says of Exeter, where the cost of attendance is about $45,000 a year. The school's nearly $1 billion endowment dwarfs that of many liberal arts colleges.

Read More: Why Businesses Prefer a Liberal Arts Education

Dameron says she not only received very generous financial aid from Exeter, but that the school took a genuine interest her son from the outset of the recruitment process, and continued to nurture him on through graduation.

Still, even Dameron questions whether schools like Exeter still remain the "ticket to ride" to the college or university of one's dreams they may have once been.

"I honestly don't know if that's still the case anymore," she said.

A Shifting Perspective
Admissions officers like Jarrid Whitney of the California Institute of Technology?one of the most selective universities in the country alongside peers like Stanford and MIT? downplayed any notion that students attending private schools get special consideration in the admissions process, or had any other clear advantages over their public school counterparts.

"Although private schools may, in some contexts, offer more resources in certain communities than the local public school can," Whitney, executive director of admissions and financial aid at Caltech, said in an e-mail to CNBC. "I've never felt as if attending a private school would automatically give a student any type of competitive advantage in the admissions process."

Smith, who spent close to forty years working in public schools, still believes that public schools can and should do far more to help students navigate the vexing gauntlet of college admissions. "My own children went to public schools," said Smith, whose children attended Manhasset High School on Long Island. "I believe very strongly in public education."

For her part, Assaf is enthusiastic about her current career trajectory, even if it wasn't the seamless path she anticipated as an ambitious high school senior. She doesn't mind that her life took a lengthier path to the Ivy League.

"If anything, I give all the credit to NYU," she said, noting the many interesting opportunities she's gotten due to her NYU experience.

Although Assaf said she may have had similar opportunities had she attended Brown, she wondered if she still would have believed that "everything's just going to be handed to me," as she and many of her classmates did while they attended Branson.

"I think it ultimately comes down to the individual," she said. "I think about what's gotten me to where I am now, and it has nothing to do with having gone to private school."

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2b451a2c/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Care0Eprivate0Eschools0Eworth0Ehefty0Eprice0Etag0E6C96410A91/story01.htm

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Saturday, April 27, 2013

Why Amazon Wants To Make You Pay Sales Tax

Our days of sales-taxless, free-love internet revelry may be numbered. Thursday afternoon, the Senate voted to approve a bill that could end tax-free online shopping once and for all. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/dT0GQAb-tJE/why-amazon-wants-to-make-you-pay-sales-tax

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Can I take out a bank loan on top of recieving student finance?

I have got a place on a PGCE next year which means moving away from home, so I have applied for a student loan to cover rent and living. However, the loan I am receiving only just covers rent. Is it possible to take out a bank loan, or any other kind of loan on top of my student finance? I am desperate to go and wont be able to save enough money in the time I have left before I go to support myself for a year.

Any advice is hugely appreciated

Source: http://www.wiki-qa.com/businessfinance/credit-businessfinance/can-i-take-out-a-bank-loan-on-top-of-recieving-student-finance.html

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Military grooms new officers for war in cyberspace

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, Martin Carlisle, standing, a computer science professor at the Air Force Academy and director of the school's Center for Cyberspace Research, instructs cadets in cyber warfare, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, Martin Carlisle, standing, a computer science professor at the Air Force Academy and director of the school's Center for Cyberspace Research, instructs cadets in cyber warfare, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, a cadet works at a large computer display inside a classroom at the Center for Cyberspace Research, where cyber warfare is taught, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, a cadet walks past multiple computer displays inside a classroom at the Center for Cyberspace Research, where cyber warfare is taught, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, Martin Carlisle, standing, a computer science professor at the Air Force Academy and director of the school's Center for Cyberspace Research, instructs cadets in cyber warfare, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, cadets work at computers inside a classroom at the Center for Cyberspace Research, where cyber warfare is taught, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation?s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) ? The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation's military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system.

Students at the Army, Navy and Air Force academies are taking more courses and participating in elaborate cyberwarfare exercises as the military educates a generation of future commanders in the theory and practice of computer warfare.

The academies have been training cadets in cyber for more than a decade. But the effort has taken on new urgency amid warnings that hostile nations or organizations might be capable of crippling attacks on critical networks.

James Clapper, director of national intelligence, called cyberattack the top threat to national security when he presented the annual Worldwide Threat Assessment to Congress this month. "Threats are more diverse, interconnected, and viral than at any time in history," his report stated. "Destruction can be invisible, latent, and progressive."

China-based hackers have long been accused of cyber intrusions, and earlier this year the cybersecurity firm Mandiant released a report with new details allegedly linking a secret Chinese military unit to years of cyberattacks against U.S. companies. This year, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post all reported breaches in their computer systems and said they suspected Chinese hackers. China denies carrying out cyberattacks.

On Tuesday, hackers compromised Associated Press Twitter accounts and sent out a false tweet. AP quickly put out word that the report was false and that its accounts had been hacked. AP's accounts were shut down until the problem was corrected.

Once viewed as an obscure and even nerdy pursuit, cyber is now seen as one of the hottest fields in warfare ? "a great career field in the future," said Ryan Zacher, a junior at the Air Force Academy outside Colorado Springs, Colo., who switched from aeronautical engineering to computer science.

Last year the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., began requiring freshmen to take a semester on cybersecurity, and it is adding a second required cyber course for juniors next year.

The school offered a major in cyber operations for the first time this year to the freshman class, and 33 midshipmen, or about 3 percent of the freshmen, signed up for it. Another 79 are majoring in computer engineering, information technology or computer science, bringing majors with a computer emphasis to about 10 percent of the class.

"There's a great deal of interest, much more than we could possibly, initially, entertain," said the academy's superintendent, Vice Adm. Michael Miller.

Since 2004, the Air Force Academy has offered a degree in computer science-cyberwarfare ? initially called computer science-information assurance ? that requires cadets to take courses in cryptology, information warfare and network security in addition to standard computer science. The academy is retooling a freshman computing course so that more than half its content is about cyberspace, and is looking into adding another cyber course.

"All of these cadets know that they are going to be on the front lines defending the nation in cyber," said Martin Carlisle, a computer science professor at the Air Force Academy and director of the school's Center for Cyberspace Research.

About 25 Air Force cadets will graduate this year with the computer science-cyberwarfare degree, and many will go on to advanced studies and work in their service's cyber headquarters or for U.S. Cyber Command at Fort Meade, Md., the Defense Department command responsible for defensive and offensive cyberwarfare.

Almost every Army cadet at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., takes two technology courses related to such topics as computer security and privacy. West Point also offers other cyber courses, and a computer security group meets weekly. One of the biggest cybersecurity challenges is keeping up with the head-spinning pace of change in the field.

"You know American history is pretty much the same" every year, said Lt. Col. David Raymond, who teaches a cybersecurity course. "In this domain, it's really tough to keep up with how this thing evolves."

In his congressional report, Clapper noted that the chance of a major attack by Russia, China or another nation with advanced cyber skills is remote outside a military conflict ? but that other nations or groups could launch less sophisticated cyberattacks in hopes of provoking the United States or in retaliation for U.S. actions or policies overseas. South Korea accused North Korea of mounting a cyberattack in March that shut down thousands of computers at banks and television broadcasters.

Gen. Keith Alexander, head of U.S. Cyber Command, told Congress in March the command is creating teams to carry out both offensive and defensive operations. A spokesman said the command is drawing cyber officers from the service academies, officer schools and Reserve Officer Training Corps programs.

Teams from the three academies compete in events such as last week's National Security Agency Cyber Defense Exercise, in which they try to keep simulated computer networks running as an NSA "aggressor team" attacks. Teams from the U.S. Coast Guard and Merchant Marine academies also took part, along with graduate students from the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School and Canada's Royal Military College.

Air Force won among undergraduate schools. The Royal Military College won among graduate schools.

That hands-on experience is invaluable, said 2nd Lt. Jordan Keefer, a 2012 Air Force Academy graduate now pursuing a master's degree in cyberoperations at the Air Force Institute of Technology.

"You can't just go out there and start hacking. That's against the law," he said. The competitions, he said, "gave me actual experience defending a network, attacking a network."

Counterterrorism expert Richard Clarke, noting that really high-level computer skills are rare, suggested the military might have to re-examine some of its recruiting standards to attract the most adept cyberwarriors.

"Hackers are the 1 percent, the elite and the creators," said Clarke, who served as White House cybersecurity adviser during the Clinton administration. "I wouldn't worry a whole heck of a lot (about whether they) can they run fast or lift weights."

Cyber's appeal was enough to get Keefer to put aside his dream of becoming a fighter pilot, a job with undeniable swagger. "It's a challenge, and for people who like a challenge, it's the only place to be," Keefer said.

___

Witte reported from Annapolis, Md. Associated Press Writer Michael Hill in Albany, N.Y., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Dan Elliott at http://twitter.com/DanElliottAP. Follow Brian Witte at http://twitter.com/APBrianWitte . Follow Michael Hill at http://twitter.com/MichaelTHill

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-26-Future%20Cyberwarriors/id-499ed15ce3bc42429752a4af058d87bf

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Drippler, FocusTwist, Akatu, and More

Take beautiful shots, drink responsibly, cover up bodily functions, and improve your phone. Sound like an unattainable amount of multitasking? Not really, if you have this round of the best iPhone apps of the week to assist you. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/7wyqbx3pV6A/drippler-focustwist-akatu-and-more

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Visit Kenya A Magic Land Captivated By Excellent Natural Beauty

Having worlds class tourist attraction availability in the country, for many people Kenya is the East Africa in microcosm. Despite being the source of enjoying alpine shows, forest open plains, the metropolis of Nairobi and colorful tribal cultures, freshwater of eye-catching lacks fascinates the people who come to visit this site.

Moreover, since decades ago, the wildlife of Kenya safari has been the charming tourist attractions for people. Considering other activities tourists can include in their tour are trekking Mount Kenya, ballooning over the Masai Mara and snorkeling in Malindi on the Indian Ocean coast. Lets discuss the top tourist places in the country starting from Nairobi National Park.

Nairobi National Park

The park is just a 10 minutes of drive from the center of Nairobi with only a fence separating the parks wildlife from the metropolis. One can get pleasure from national park the Nairobis skyscrapers. Despite its proximity to the city and the relative small size of the park, the park boasts a large and varied wildlife population. You can see in the park wildebeest and zebra in dry season which is one of Kenya safaris most successful rhinoceros sanctuaries.

Malindi

Malindi, with its extensive coral reefs and beautiful beaches, is center of coastal tourist attractions in Kenya. You can enthusiastically experience there surfing, snorkeling, deep-sea fishing and other water sports. The Malindi Marine National Park enjoys protestation having fine beaches clear water and very colorful fish.

Mount Kenya

Are you excited to see the highest mountain in Kenya and the second-highest in Africa? If yes, then Mount Kenya is the right choice, it is the highest mountain in the country after Kilimanjaro. You can witness a beautiful and enticing sight, as the mountain offers it with great zeal. Its series of peaks are naturally crowned with snow, and its slopes are covered with forest. Here you can perform adventurous activity, as the 5199 meter (17,057 ft) high summit is a difficult technical climb.

Samburu National Reserve

For those wishing to add a little spice, quite literally to their Kenya safari experience by being into a very peaceful region, Samburu National is a great choice to be. It seems attracting wildlife because of the Uaso Nyiro River that runs through it and mixture of forest and grass land vegetation. You would be amazed to see the three big cats; lion, cheetah and leopard, as they generally can be spotted here. Besides the three big three cats, you can also be able to see elephants, buffalo and hippos and crocodile in Uaso Nyiro River.

Despites all the above tourist destinations in Kenya, there are many other places that you can witness during your Kenya safari tour. They inspire people from all over the world to pay their visit at least once in their lives to these natural beauty-occupied lands.

About the Author:
The author of this article is describing about wonderful trip to Kenya Safari and other places to visit in that area. Here, the author also provides Budget tour packages to America, Honeymoon tour packages, Hill Station tour packages in India and customers can book air tickets online from tours and travel agents in Chennai.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Visit-Kenya-A-Magic-Land-Captivated-By-Excellent-Natural-Beauty/4569659

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Boston bombing suspects' mom in terror database

WASHINGTON (AP) ? U.S. intelligence agencies added the mother of the Boston bombing suspects to a government terrorism database 18 months before the bombings, two officials told The Associated Press. She called it "lies and hypocrisy" and said she has never been linked to crimes or terrorism.

The CIA asked for the Boston terror suspect and his mother to be added to a terrorist database in the fall of 2011, after the Russian government contacted the agency with concerns that both had become religious militants, according to officials briefed on the investigation. About six months earlier, the FBI investigated Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, also at Russia's request, one of the officials said. The FBI found no ties to terrorism.

The revelation that the FBI had also investigated Tsarnaeva and the CIA arranged for her to be added to the terrorism database deepened the mystery around the family. The Tsarnaevs are ethnic Chechens from southern Russia who immigrated to the Boston area in the past 11 years. Tsarnaeva, a naturalized U.S. citizen who has appeared on television interviews since the attacks and reversed her decision to return to the U.S. after the bombings, has said her sons could never have been behind the deadly attacks and believes they were framed.

The officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak publicly about the ongoing case.

Tsarnaev, who died in a gun battle with police last week, and his younger brother, Dzhokhar, are accused of carrying out the bombings. Officials said that before he was advised of his constitutional rights to remain silent or consult a lawyer, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev admitted to FBI interrogators that the brothers committed the bombings and that he was recruited by his brother to participate only a week or two before the attacks.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, was taken overnight from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where he was recovering from a gunshot wound to the throat and other injuries suffered during a getaway attempt, and transferred to the Federal Medical Center Devens, about 40 miles from Boston, the U.S. Marshals Service said. The facility at the former Fort Devens Army post treats federal prisoners.

Also, FBI agents Friday picked through a landfill near the campus of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, where Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was a student. FBI spokesman Jim Martin would not say what investigators were looking for.

Previously U.S. officials have said only that the FBI investigated Tamerlan. But in March 2011, the Russians asked the FBI to look into his mother as well because of concerns they were religious militants who planned to travel back to Russia, the official said.

The FBI found nothing to link either person to terrorism, and the FBI closed the investigations in June 2011. Then, the Russians in the fall sent the same warning to the CIA. The CIA asked the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center to add the mother's and son's names to its huge, classified database of people known to be terrorists and those who are suspected of having terror ties, called the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, or TIDE.

Being in that database does not mean the U.S. government has evidence that links someone to terrorism. About a year ago, there were some 745,000 names in the database. Intelligence analysts add names and partial names to TIDE when terror-related intelligence is shared with them.

Tsarnaeva said it would not surprise her if she was listed in a U.S. terror database.

"It's all lies and hypocrisy," she told the AP from Dagestan. "I'm sick and tired of all this nonsense that they make up about me and my children. People know me as a regular person, and I've never been mixed up in any criminal intentions, especially any linked to terrorism."

A search of U.S. criminal records showed only that Tsarnaeva was arrested in June 2012 in Natick, Mass., on a shoplifting charge over the alleged theft of $1,624 worth of women's clothing from a Lord & Taylor department store. She was arrested and charged with larceny over $250 and two counts of malicious or wanton property damage. Tamerlan had traveled to Russia in January 2012 and returned in July.

Tsarnaeva accused U.S. law enforcement of killing her elder son.

"They are already talking about that we are terrorists, I am terrorist, they've told that I was doing something terroristic," Tsarnaeva said.

Some lawmakers in Washington have questioned whether the FBI adequately investigated Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his mother in 2011. Over the course of that year, the FBI reached out to Russia three times for more information, U.S. officials said. The first time was in March 2011, when they received the initial tip from the Russians. The second was in June 2011 when they were preparing to close the investigation. The third time was in the fall of 2011 after the CIA received the same tip from the Russians.

One of the officials said the FBI never found the type of derogatory information on Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his mother that would have elevated their profiles among counterterrorism investigators or would have formally placed them on a terror watch list.

___

Associated Press reporters Pete Yost and Kimberly Dozier in Washington and Arsen Mollayev and Max Seddon in Dagestan contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boston-bombing-suspects-mom-terror-database-171946561.html

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Nokia Chat beta messaging app released for WP8, is exclusive to Lumias

Nokia Chat beta messaging app released for WP8, is exclusive to Lumias

One of the benefits of buying a Windows Phone 8 handset with a Nokia stamp is the exclusive apps, and today we can add another to that list with the beta release of Nokia Chat for WP8. The software started life on Symbian and Series 40 devices before falling out of favor with Nokia, but this WP8 refresh enables cross-platform chatter between those older phones, the newer Lumia range and, as Yahoo Messenger contacts are supported, anything running that IM client, too. In addition to standard messaging, you can share your location with others, and send details about a specific place -- a restaurant, for example -- that'll link with Nokia Maps on Lumias for more info. (That sounds an awful lot like Nokia's other beta messaging app Pulse, doesn't it?) Other Lumia-only features in Nokia Chat include Live Tile and lock screen push notifications, Live Tile message previews, voice commands and text-to-speech composition. Nokia Chat beta is only available in a handful of countries right now, including the US, Canada and the UK, with more being added "in the near future." Head over to the Nokia Beta Labs source link to try it out.

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Putin denies he is returning Russia to Stalinism

MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday he was not returning Russia to the era of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin and denied any political motive in the prosecution and jailing of opponents.

In response to a question from a liberal journalist at his annual phone-in, Putin said he saw "no element of Stalinism" in the country since his return to the presidency last May.

He said Russia must never return to the cult of personality, repressions and labor camps under Stalin, who controlled the Soviet Union for three decades until his death in 1953, but that this did not mean Russia should not have order and discipline.

"Nobody is putting anyone behind bars for their political views," Putin added in reply to a question about the jailing last year of two female members of the Pussy Riot protest group and the trial of protest leader Alexei Navalny on theft charges.

He said he was certain that Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner and organizer of anti-Putin protests who could face up to 10 years in prison, would have a fair trial.

(Writing by Steve Gutterman, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-denies-returning-russia-stalinism-115341314--business.html

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

A way of life - Tampa Bay Newspapers

ST. PETE BEACH ? Shane Webb has always spent a lot of time on or near the water.

Whether it was teaching himself how to surf as a kid while on family vacations in Daytona Beach, riding a wave in Hawaii or paddleboarding down the Tennessee River in his hometown of Chattanooga, the desire to be involved in some type of water sport has been a part of his life.

So when the opportunity came a few years ago to open a paddleboard rental business with a partner in Tennessee, Webb decided it was time to end a 12-year career as a police officer and take the plunge, so to speak.

?You either get on or get off,? he said.

Webb decided to get on. Since then, he has expanded his business to include a shop and rentals on the beach behind the Post Card Inn.

His shop, Saltwater Kite and Paddle, at 6340 Gulf Blvd., specializes in the sale of paddleboards and kiteboards, but the bulk of time is spent next to the surf watching over his paddleboard rentals.

Webb, 39, and his fianc?e Grace Marcel, are entrepreneurs in one of the fastest growing recreation water sports in America.

Both offer kiteboarding lessons and rentals, but prefer to steer most people toward the safer sport of paddleboarding.

?It?s way easier and a much more forgiving sport,? said Webb, whose nickname is Waterboy. ?If you have the least bit of coordination you can do it.?

He said the sport dates back to the 1920s in Hawaii when former U.S. Olympic swimmer Duke Kahanamoku taught surfing lessons. Many of Kahanamoku?s students wanted keepsake photographs and because of the distance offshore, beach photographers couldn?t get good shots. Opportunistic photographers would paddle out on surfboards and carefully shoot their subjects without losing control of their cameras.

More recently, American surfer Laird Hamilton has taken up the sport, spurring a new generation of interest in the sport.

?Not everybody can surf,? said Webb. ?This is the closest a lot of people will come to surfing.?

Because of that, he said the sport has grown ?like wildfire? the last three or four years.

?Most surf shops have gone to them (paddleboards) because they?re so easy to use,? Webb said.

On a good day, Webb said he rents boards to about 25 people. Rates are $35 for an hour, $25 for a half-hour and $55 for three hours.

?We give a short tutorial,? he said. ?We tell them do this and don?t do that to make sure everybody is on the same page as far as safety.?

This compares with three to four hours of instruction before turning someone loose with the more expensive kiteboarding equipment.

For the most part, the tranquil water of the Gulf of

Mexico is perfect for paddleboarding.

?Typically, we have flat enough days and flatter makes it easier to learn,? Webb said. ?We don?t even open if it?s too rough.?

He?s rented boards to all ages, ranging from 6 to 73.

?If you?re in shape and have the slightest amount of coordination, you can do it,? he said.

Webb rents varying sizes of paddleboards but said his ?magic number? is 10-feet, 6 inches to 11 feet in length and 30 to 32 inches wide.

Good boards range in price from $1,000 to $2,000 and good paddles run about $250.

Webb also organizes a pair of paddleboarding events each year. The Tampa Bay Winter SUP Series is held from December to February and the Pacifico Paddle Challenge races are held in early November.

This year the third edition of the Paddle Challenge will be a two-day event on Nov. 9-10. It will include zigzag races, relays, kids competition, an 8-mile distance race and a 4-mile open race.

New this year will be the addition of kayaks, outrigger canoes and prone paddleboards.

Plans also call for a luau, complete with Polynesian dancers from Walt Disney World, live music and plenty of good food. The luau will be included in the entry fee for the race competitors but the general public can also take part too. Cost will be $10 for adults, $5 for children, Webb said.

?We want to get the community involved and to come out and watch the competition,? Webb said. ?We want to push the kids participation to get the community involved more and to understand the sport.?

For more information on the Paddle Challenge or paddleboarding in general, stop by Webb?s shop or give him a call at 423-463-1847.

Source: http://www.tbnweekly.com/pubs/beach_beacon/content_articles/042413_bhb-03.txt

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OBU communications staff help host national workshop; Zimny ...

Helping shape Baptist Communicators Association?s national branding for years to come, Brooke Zimny was honored last week for designing BCA?s new logo.

IMG_20130420_100302_580Zimny, Ouachita?s assistant director of communications, has been a member of BCA since 2011. BCA is a national professional development organization for Baptist communicators serving in such areas as editorial, electronic media, graphic design, management, marketing, photography and public relations.

This year?s BCA annual workshop was held last week at the Capital Hotel in Little Rock with Arkansas BCA members hosting their colleagues from across the nation.

Trennis Henderson, vice president for communications at Ouachita, served as program committee chair for the event held April 17-20. Serving with him on the program committee were Zimny, a 2008 Ouachita graduate, and Matt Ramsey, director of information and communication for the Arkansas Baptist State Convention and a 2003 OBU grad, as well as Stella Prather, director of communications for Arkansas Baptist Children?s Homes, and Tim Yarbrough, editor of Arkansas Baptist News.

?Led by program chair Trennis Henderson and his team, those attending the 2013 BCA workshop in Little Rock experienced an outstanding mix of challenging professional development, along with time for building important relationships with colleagues,? said Jim Veneman, BCA?s newly elected president. Veneman, director of visual communication for Union University, is a 1975 Ouachita graduate.

?The theme for this year?s workshop was ?Mission: Impact.? The goal was to highlight the life-changing impact our work can have as Christian communicators as well as our professional mission,? Veneman added. ?From start to finish we were reminded of the many ways we reach a lost world. Creative breakout sessions, outstanding field trips and a powerful mission experience provided the heart of an excellent workshop.?

The four-day workshop featured professional development breakout sessions, networking and fellowship as well as field trips to Heifer International and the Clinton Presidential Library plus the annual Wilmer C. Fields Awards Banquet. Ouachita?s Office of Communications earned two BCA awards in the national competition ? one for the music video, ?OBU Lipdub: Tunes Unleashed? and one for the design of the new Dr. Jack?s Coffeehouse logo.

?Tunes Unleashed,? released in December 2012, has been viewed at www.vimeo.com/obu/lipdub more than 15,000 times in more than 80 nations. It was produced by the Office of Communications in partnership with student volunteers, the Office of Admissions Counseling and Dean Film & Video of Memphis, Tenn.

The Dr. Jack?s Coffeehouse logo was designed in honor of Ouachita?s founding president, Dr. John W. ?Jack? Conger. The Office of Communications staff worked with Ferris Williams, assistant professor of visual arts, to design the award-winning logo which is featured on coffeehouse signage, coffee mugs and T-shirts.

BCA, founded in 1953, is marking its 60th anniversary this year. Seeking to update the organization?s professional branding, BCA leaders invited members to submit designs for a new logo to be voted on by fellow members and officers.

Three of Zimny?s designs were among the top five submissions, with one of the three being adopted as BCA?s new logo. She and her husband, Ren? Zimny, OBU?s assistant director of graphic services and a 2008 Ouachita graduate, collaborated on the logo designs. The winning logo was unveiled during the final session of last week?s workshop. The presentation included a plaque presented to Zimny, the unveiling of a new BCA banner featuring the logo and a reception following the presentation that included a cake sporting the new logo design.

BCA Logo

?The annual BCA meeting is something I look forward to every year, but it was especially memorable this year serving on the program committee that planned and hosted the event,? Zimny said. ?It was fun introducing communicators from across the nation to Little Rock and many of the Ouachita alums in the area who are experts in the communications field. Being recognized for designing the new BCA logo was a huge honor and incredibly humbling ? especially after seeing so much great work from our peers throughout the workshop and awards banquet.?

Two Ouachitonians were awarded academic scholarships by BCA. Rachel Gilmer, a senior mass communications major from Princeton, Texas, received a $1,000 undergraduate scholarship and Mary Lynn Burns, a 2006 Ouachita graduate, received a $500 graduate scholarship. The scholarships are awarded ?to encourage the growth and professional development of college, university and seminary students in the field of Baptist communications.?

Other Ouachita alumni and faculty members who participated in the annual workshop include:

? Dr. Terry Carter, associate dean of Ouachita?s Pruet School of Christian Studies, and Dr. Ken Shaddox, a 1983 OBU graduate and senior pastor of Park Hill Baptist Church in North Little Rock, led morning devotionals for workshop participants.

? Andy Dean, founder and president of Dean Film & Video, is a former Ouachita student. He led breakout sessions on ?Visual Impact I: Telling Your Story while Building the Brand? and ?Visual Impact II: Creating Quality through Cinematic Motion.?

? Alyse Eady, a 2010 Ouachita graduate, Miss Arkansas 2010 and co-anchor of ?Today?s THV This Morning,? was the featured speaker and performer at BCA?s opening reception at the Old State House.

? Brent Gambill, a 2001 OBU grad, serves as vice president and director of digital media for Martin-Wilbourn Partners in Little Rock. He was the featured speaker during the conference?s keynote luncheon, addressing the issue of ?Social Media Impact: Embrace Faith.?

? Dr. Craig Hamilton, OBU?s Lena Goodwin Trimble Professor of Music and director of bands, led the OBU Jazz Combo in performing at the Wilmer C. Fields Awards Banquet. In addition to Hamilton playing trumpet, five Ouachita students performing in the jazz combo were: Michael Curtis, bass; Chris Mazen, piano; Brent Nessler, tenor saxophone; Bret Steed, trombone; and Zach Zucha, drums.

? Denver Peacock, a 1994 OBU graduate, is senior vice president and chief marketing officer for Cranford Johnson Robinson Woods in Little Rock. He led a breakout session on ?Maximizing Marketing: Moms, Bikes, Hoops & Hogs.?

? Jim Veneman, a 1975 Ouachita graduate, led a pair of breakout sessions titled ?Photography I: What You Need to Know? and ?Photography II: What?s Next??

? Dr. Randall Wight, dean of Ouachita?s Sutton School of Social Sciences, led a breakout sessions on ?Strategic Planning that Works.?

BCA members also participated in a local mission project, providing financial donations, gifts and a baby shower for the Promise House Maternity Home in Little Rock, a ministry of the Arkansas Baptist Children?s Homes and Family Ministries to unwed, pregnant teens and preteens.

?It was a special privilege to help plan, coordinate and host this year?s BCA annual meeting for our colleagues from across the nation,? said Henderson, a former BCA president and member for more than 30 years. ?With the focus on ?Mission: Impact,? we were able to highlight the significant mission and ministry of Baptist communications while also showcasing the incredible skills of several Ouachitonians and other workshop leaders.?

For more information about Baptist Communicators Association, visit www.baptistcommunicators.org.

Source: http://media.obu.edu/2013/04/obu-communications-staff-help-host-national-workshop-zimny-honored-by-peers/

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Bush library not meant to be 'a monument to himself'

A mangled beam from the World Trade Center on display at the Bush library (Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

DALLAS?Former first lady Laura Bush formally unveiled the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum to the media on Wednesday, saying she hopes the facility will help Americans ?really learn and relearn? about her husband's presidency.

Speaking on the eve of the library?s dedication ceremony, Bush emphasized that her husband?s goal was not to create a facility that would be ?a monument to himself,? but one that would shed light on the decisions he made as president and the principles that guided him in public life.

?If it?s based on one personality, it becomes less relevant over time,? Bush told reporters. ?But if it?s based on the principles that we believe are the most important for our country, it can stay relevant.?

The library, located on the grounds of Southern Methodist University near downtown Dallas, is designed to emphasize how the 9/11 attacks dramatically changed the country and the course of Bush?s presidency.

Entering the library?s main exhibit, visitors first see photos of George Bush and his family against the backdrop of large photos of his Texas ranch. It casts him as a more centrist figure driven by faith and a ?call to service,? and emphasizes his outreach to Latino voters and his pledge to be a ?compassionate conservative.?

The exhibit focuses on Bush?s proposals on education reform, including No Child Left Behind, and other key domestic issues Laura Bush said her husband thought would drive his presidency. But as visitors turn a corner, they immediately come upon a large, mangled steel beam from the World Trade Center?s south tower, which the library says was near the point of impact when a hijacked airliner crashed into the building nearly 12 years ago.

The beam, which the museum encourages visitors to touch, stands vertically in the room, with its backdrop a wall listing the names of the victims of the 9/11 attacks, as well as video monitors playing news footage from that day and excerpts of George Bush?s speech to the nation that night.

A nearby exhibit shows artifacts familiar to anyone who closely followed news coverage in the days after the attacks, including the bullhorn that Bush used to address firefighters and other rescue workers at the World Trade Center site.

Laura Bush said family members of some of the victims of the 9/11 attacks would attend Thursday?s dedication ceremony. She predicted the section of the library dealing with the attacks would be the most emotional for visitors and said the goal was to tell the story of what happened that day from Bush?s perspective for future generations.

Her husband, she said, recently gave a family with young children a tour and was surprised that the kids on the tour "weren't even alive then, so they had no direct memory of it as all of us do."

She added, ?It?s important to remind people it was a very pivotal moment and the most challenging moment in our history.?

From there, the library transitions to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq?with a case displaying artifacts, including the gun that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was carrying when he was captured during the war in 2003. It also includes a deck of playing cards handed out to troops in Iraq featuring the faces of Saddam and other Iraqi leaders wanted for arrest.

On the issue of Iraq, a large display lists a lengthy ?threat assessment? about Saddam's regime ahead of the 2003 invasion. It repeats many of the arguments the Bush administration made in justifying the war, including how Saddam had ?refused to account for his chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs.?

But it?s also here where George Bush makes something of a mea culpa. The display notes that ?no stockpiles of WMD (weapons of mass destruction) were found" although ?post-invasion inspections confirmed that Saddam Hussein had the capacity to resume production.?

Bush is equally upfront about two other subjects: his handling of Hurricane Katrina and the economic collapse in fall 2008.

All are featured issues in the ?Decision Points? theater, where visitors get the chance to choose their own path when presented with the information Bush had at the time he made his own calls in those cases.

?One of the things George really wanted was for people to know ? how many decisions come to the desk of the president of the United States,? Laura Bush said. ?He wanted to show people what it?s like to have to make decisions quickly with the press hounding you on what you?re going to decide and what you?re going to do, but also how you have to rely on the information you are given.?

What?s striking about the museum, however, is who?s not featured. Vice President Dick Cheney isn't prominently mentioned in any of the library?s exhibits?and is indeed featured less than the Bush family's two Scottish terriers, Barney and Miss Beazley, who are immortalized in a pair of bronze statues.

?There are statues of dogs but no Dick Cheney,? one reporter on the tour joked.

Karen Hughes, a longtime Bush adviser who was at the library, defended the approach, saying the library is more about ?principles? than individual people. She said Cheney had been interviewed by library archivists, but none of that footage appeared to be on display on Wednesday morning during the media tour.

The library, Hughes said, ?is about the big principles and ongoing policies that he and Mrs. Bush felt were most important to their public service.?

But Cheney?s absence was striking?particularly in the 9/11 section and the subsequent exhibit on the wars given his immense influence on George Bush at that time.

The library also has two large sections focusing on issues that, Bush and his aides believe, history will regard kindly, including his efforts to pass immigration reform and his work to stop AIDS in Africa. It also includes a scale replica of the Oval Office, where people can sit at a desk modeled after the one Bush used. That room looks out onto a replica of the White House Promenade and the Rose Garden?only this one features roses from Texas and other native plants.

?Very few people have actually ever had a chance to walk into the Oval Office,? Laura Bush said. ?And this will give everyone who comes to the museum the chance to see what it?s like.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/laura-bush-library-not-monument-her-husband-182824927--politics.html

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More antibiotics may not always be better

Finish the course of pills: that's what all doctors say when they prescribe antibiotics, and for now, you should heed them. But new research suggests that might not always work as well as they assume, and may even compound the problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Doctors consider it good practice to hit bacterial infections with high doses of antibiotics for days or longer, to make sure all the bacteria are dead. To treat tough infections such as TB, they combine two or more antibiotics in order to prevent the evolution of resistance, so if a bug starts resisting drug A, it will still be killed by drug B.

But much of this is based on assumption rather than evidence, says Robert Beardmore at the University of Exeter in the UK. He and his colleagues tested this by treating cultures of E. coli with two antibiotics considered synergistic ? they kill more bacteria together than separately. They found that bacteria did indeed die off fast on the first day.

But any bacteria that survived were those with genes for resisting both drugs, and they boomed as drug-sensitive competitors died. Bacterial loads were higher after treatment than they had been before it, and higher drug doses just quickened the growth of resistant populations.

"It's a double-edged sword," says Andrew Read of Pennsylvania State University in University Park, who was not involved in the work. "If you kill all the bacteria with your initial dose, great." But if not ? and antibiotics fall to sub-lethal levels at some time or in some part of the body during treatment ? then problems arise.

Further experiments performed by Beardmore's team suggest that not only synergistic drugs but also longer treatment might not hammer the surviving bacteria as intended. Instead such approaches might make more of the survivors antibiotic-resistant, and may even worsen the infection. "We need to base treatment on better evidence," says Read.

"I'm not advocating low dosing," says Beardmore, as this does lead to resistance. But, he says, we need a better understanding of how antibiotics work in different situations instead of going on untested assumptions.

He is now testing whether antibiotics that antagonise each other ? one may interfere with another's binding to bacteria, for instance ? might actually work better than synergistic drugs. This counter-intuitive possibility, thrown up by a mathematical model of bacterial evolution, might work in practice because antibiotics that antagonise each other do not make antibiotic resistance so advantageous.

Journal reference: PLoS Biology, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001540

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Lawmakers ask if intel blocked before Boston bombs

(AP) ? Lawmakers say U.S. law enforcement and other agencies may not have shared enough intelligence about the Boston Marathon bombing suspects in the months before the deadly bombings.

But none of the lawmakers are saying ? yet? that better sharing could have stopped the attacks, after FBI officials briefed them on the investigation Tuesday.

The chairwoman and top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee ? Dianne Feinstein and Saxby Chambliss ? say the incident showed there was a lack of sharing of some information, despite intelligence-sharing reforms implemented after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Officials say Homeland Security officials were tracking now-deceased suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev's (tsahr-NEYE'-ehv) trip to Russia last year, for instance, but were not coordinating their suspicions with the FBI.

Investigators suspect he may have become radicalized during that journey.

Associated Press

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Lauryn Hill tax evasion sentencing delayed

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) ? A federal judge postponed Lauryn Hill's tax evasion sentencing on Monday but not before scolding the eight-time Grammy-winning singer for reneging on a promise to make restitution by now.

Hill pleaded guilty last year to not paying federal taxes on $1.8 million earned from 2005 to 2007. At that time, her attorney said she would pay restitution by the time of her sentencing. It was revealed Monday in court that Hill has paid $50,000 of a total of $554,000.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Madeline Cox Arleo criticized her for relying on the promise of a recording contract to pay the tax bill.

"This is not someone who stands before the court penniless," Arleo said to Hill's attorney, Nathan Hochman. "This is a criminal matter. Actions speak louder than words, and there has been no effort here to pay these taxes."

The reclusive singer didn't speak during the proceeding and left the court without commenting. Arleo rescheduled the sentencing for May 6.

The total Hill owes is in dispute. Hochman contends it is slightly less than $1 million, counting civil penalties and interest, while the U.S. attorney's office estimates it at a little more than $1 million. Hochman accused the government of trying to pad the amount because once it surpasses $1 million, the sentencing range for Hill under federal guidelines would increase from 24 to 30 months to 30 to 36 months.

Whatever the range is, Hochman said he would seek a probationary sentence for Hill, a 37-year-old South Orange resident who has six children.

After the proceeding, Hochman said Hill was about to sign a loan against two properties that would allow her to pay the remainder of the restitution before her next court date.

"I fully expect that by May 3 Ms. Hill will be able to pay back all the restitution she has," Hochman said.

Hill has a recording contract but hasn't yet realized any revenue from it, Hochman said outside the courtroom.

Hill got her start with The Fugees and began her solo career in 1998 with the acclaimed album "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill."

At the time of her June arrest, Hill wrote in a long post on the Internet how she had rejected pop culture's "climate of hostility, false entitlement, manipulation, racial prejudice, sexism and ageism." She also wrote that she hadn't paid taxes since she withdrew from society to guarantee her family's safety but that she had always intended to rectify the situation.

"When I was working consistently without being affected by the interferences mentioned above, I filed and paid my taxes," she wrote. "This only stopped when it was necessary to withdraw from society, in order to guarantee the safety and well-being of myself and my family."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lauryn-hill-tax-evasion-sentencing-delayed-203152256.html

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