Sunday, 31 March 2013

Apple updates Final Cut Pro, begins new campaign to bring editors back

Apple updates Final Cut Pro, begins new campaign to bring editors back

Apple has updated its Final Cut Pro X, Motion, and Compressor applications, coinciding with the launch of a new campaign to bring former Final Cut Pro users back to the software. Final Cut Pro X now supports Sony?s XAVC codec up to 4K resolution, along with ProRes Logic C from ARRI ALEXA cameras. There have been a number of other tweaks and fixes. Motion and Compressor have also had numerous bugs fixed.

This update comes as Apple launches a campaign aimed at wooing back professional video editors that may have turned to other software solutions after the initial launch of Final Cut Pro X. The changes made between Final Cut Pro 7 and Final Cut Pro X angered a great number of users, who were unable to do things like edit footage from multiple cameras or import their projects from Final Cut Pro 7. Apple?s competitors in the space, Avid and Adobe, successfully convinced many video editors to switch to their software.

Adobe and Avid reps say they've made big gains in the last two years, while Townhill of Apple says Pro X has become the most downloaded version of the software ever. All three competitors agree that it's hard to find independent, third-party market research to verify any claims

Over the past couple of years, Apple has steadily adding features back into Final Cut Pro X, including the aforementioned multi-camera editing, and they have been able to get some users back. Their new campaign to bring editors back to Final Cut Pro features stories from profession video editors that are well-known within their industry talking about how they benefit from Final Cut Pro X?s features, including its speed.

Source: The LA Times



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Saturday, 30 March 2013

US Cellular to begin Samsung Galaxy S 4 pre-sales April 16th

US Cellular to begin Samsung Galaxy S 4 presales April 16th

AT&T's not the only operator to grant early adopters the opportunity to pre-order the Samsung Galaxy S 4 on April 16th -- US Cellular will be following suit as well. While the regional carrier hasn't announced pricing or any other details on availability yet, interested customers will be able to at least start the purchase process before it hits retail shelves. Head to the source to sign up for email alerts on pricing and availability, and we'll keep you posted as soon as we hear updates.

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Source: US Cellular

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Friday, 29 March 2013

Rodio Optimistic About Summer in Atlantic City | Arts & Entertainment

Tropicana CEO Tony Rodio is the eternal optimist when it comes to Atlantic City.

Atlantic City casino revenue dropped more than 12 percent in February compared to the same month last year. Revel, the $2.4 billion lifestyle and gaming resort that was supposed to kick-start Atlantic City?s road to financial recovery, filed for bankruptcy less than one year after it opened. And, due in large part to inaccurate reporting by television networks and news channels, there?s still a lingering perception throughout the country that Atlantic City?s Boardwalk was destroyed by Hurricane Sandy.?

But Tony Rodio is the eternal optimist, a glass-half-full-kind of guy. Despite the ominous signs, Rodio actually sees a glimmer of hope in February?s casino gaming numbers.?

Rodio, president of the Casino Association of New Jersey and chief executive officer of the Tropicana Casino and Resort and its parent company, Tropicana Entertainment, said he sees signs that Atlantic City?s casinos are rebounding from the effects of the October storm. Even with three fewer days and weather that negatively impacted feeder markets in Philadelphia and New York, gaming revenue from the city?s 12 gaming halls in February was collectively up $7 million over January.?

?The signs that I?m seeing ... indicated that I think the momentum is moving in the right direction,? Rodio said during an interview from his Tropicana office.?

But as he travels around the country between the eight casinos owned or operated by Tropicana Entertainment, Rodio said he?s amazed to find people who still believe that Atlantic City was devastated by the storm. However, the numbers of those people are beginning to dwindle, he added.?

?I do think we are getting that perception behind us and beginning to see some positive improvement,? he said. ?

A 30-year veteran of the casino industry, Rodio feels business will only increase now that federal disaster assistance funds are beginning to flow and construction to repair or rebuild infrastructures in areas severely impacted by the storm shift into high gear. He said a similar trend was observed in Louisiana and Mississippi in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.?

?There was actually a positive lift as the workers got back to work, and hopefully that?s what we?ll see [in Atlantic City] as we get into spring and summer,? he said.?

The key to Atlantic City?s economic recovery from the storm and the effects of regional competition isn?t to add more casinos or gaming floor space but to increase the number of diverse non-gaming attractions. That will continue to set the city apart from casinos and slot parlors in neighboring states that rely primarily on customers who live close by, the so-called ?convenience? gamblers who once had to travel to Atlantic City to feed the slots or sit down at a table game.?

Tropicana is doing its part by adding several new restaurants, including a branch of Chickie?s & Pete?s, the sports bar chain that?s expected to debut around Memorial Day. ?

COMMENTS

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  • TheDude said...
    Mandy Moore is pretty smokin. I wish I was cool enough to date her. Does anybody know how I can get her number?

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    ' + comment }); numDiv.inject( commentLi ); commentPar.inject( commentLi ); commentLi.inject( commentUl ); } else { msgPar.set( 'html', 'Comment has been sent for approval' ); } } } function displayNewComment() { var msgP = document.getElementById("msg"); msgP.innerHTML = "Thank you for your submission. Your comment has been added below."; if(comment != "") { if(!flagged) { var commentSection = document.getElementById("ajaxSection"); var commentDiv = document.createElement("div"); var timeStamp = 'Mar 29, 2013 at 03:35AM'; commentDiv.innerHTML = ''; commentSection.appendChild(commentDiv); } } } function validateCommentForm(form){ var fieldEmail = document.getElementById("field.email"); var fieldName = document.getElementById("field.name"); var nameValue = fieldName.value; var emailValue = fieldEmail.value; var filter = /^([a-zA-Z0-9_\.\-])+\@(([a-zA-Z0-9\-])+\.)+([a-zA-Z0-9]{2,4})+$/; if (filter.test(emailValue)) { var fieldBody = document.getElementById("field.body") var bodyValue = fieldBody.value; bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/&/g,"&"); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/,"/g,">"); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\r\n/g,"
    "); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\n/g,"
    "); bodyValue = bodyValue.replace(/\r/g,"
    "); fieldBody.value = bodyValue; if(navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer') { if(document.getElementById('submit').disabled) { document.getElementById('submit').disabled=false; } else { document.getElementById('submit').disabled=true; } } return insertComment(form,true,function(){return showEditorialComment(nameValue, bodyValue)}); } else { alert('Please enter a valid Email below.'); form.elements[field.email].focus(); return false; } }

    Source: http://www.atlanticcityweekly.com/arts-and-entertainment/Rodio-Optimistic-About-13-200285021.html

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    Adults text more than teens while driving

    A new survey claims adults text more while driving than teens. (Yahoo!)As adults continue to mirror the social media habits of the nation?s youth, it appears some of the bad behaviors are being adopted as well. In fact, the grown-ups have apparently become the greater offenders when it comes to one particularly dangerous behavior: Texting while driving.

    That's according to a new study conducted by AT&T, reported in USA Today, that shows adults text more while driving than their teenage counterparts.

    The study finds that nearly half of all adults admit to texting while driving, with 98 percent of them saying they know the practice is dangerous. Conversely, 43 percent of teenagers admit to texting while behind the wheel.

    "I was a little bit surprised," Charlene Lake, AT&T's senior vice president of public affairs, told USA Today.

    But why do adults text while driving if they know it's unwise? The answers are complicated, but according to some adults who told Yahoo News about their own distracted driving, they feel shame, guilt and stubbornness when texting.

    AT&T surveyed 1,011 adult drivers for its It Can Wait campaign, which seeks to educate drivers about the risks of distracted driving. The company has launched a free app that sends an automated and customizable reply text message to incoming texts when the vehicle is moving at 25 mph or more.

    A similar study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 31 percent of all drivers in the U.S. text while driving, despite the practice being illegal in 39 states and the District of Columbia. In that same CDC study, 69 percent of all drivers admitted to using their cellphone while driving.

    So, how bad is texting compared with other driving distractions? Virginia Tech Transportation Institute researchers say that sending or receiving a text breaks a driver?s concentration for an average of 4.6 seconds. And as USA Today notes, at 55 mph that?s enough distance to cover the length of a football field.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/adults-text-more-while-driving-teens-205717149.html

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    Wednesday, 27 March 2013

    A look at different versions of Kercher's death

    FILE - This Friday Nov. 2, 2007 file photo shows Amanda Knox, left, and Raffaele Sollecito, looking on outside the rented house where 21-year-old British student Meredith Kercher was found dead Friday, in Perugia, Italy. Italy's highest criminal court has overturned the acquittal of Amanda Knox and of her former Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, in the slaying of her British roommate and ordered a new trial. The Court of Cassation ruled Tuesday, March 26, 2013 that an appeals court in Florence must re-hear the case against the American and her Italian-ex-boyfriend for the murder of 21-year-old Meredith Kercher (AP Photo/Stefano Medici, file)

    FILE - This Friday Nov. 2, 2007 file photo shows Amanda Knox, left, and Raffaele Sollecito, looking on outside the rented house where 21-year-old British student Meredith Kercher was found dead Friday, in Perugia, Italy. Italy's highest criminal court has overturned the acquittal of Amanda Knox and of her former Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, in the slaying of her British roommate and ordered a new trial. The Court of Cassation ruled Tuesday, March 26, 2013 that an appeals court in Florence must re-hear the case against the American and her Italian-ex-boyfriend for the murder of 21-year-old Meredith Kercher (AP Photo/Stefano Medici, file)

    (AP) ? British exchange student Meredith Kercher, 21, was found dead, half-naked and in a pool of blood in the apartment she shared with Amanda Knox and two Italian roommates in the Italian university town of Perugia on Nov. 2, 2007. She died of a stab wound to the neck.

    A Perugia court convicted Knox and her ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito of Kercher's murder on Dec. 4, 2009, and sentenced Knox to 26 years and Sollecito to 25 years. An appellate court overturned their convictions on Oct. 3, 2011, and Knox returned to Seattle a free woman.

    On Tuesday, Italy's high court ordered a new trial for Knox and Sollecito, overturning their acquittals.

    Here's a look at the various versions of events the night of Nov. 1, 2007 in Perugia.

    PROSECUTORS:

    Italian prosecutors allege that Knox and Sollecito, then 20 and 23, killed Kercher in a drug-fueled sex assault involving a third man, Rudy Guede of the Ivory Coast. They maintained the murder weapon was a large knife taken from Sollecito's house and found there by investigators. Prosecutors said the knife matched the wounds on Kercher's body and had traces of Kercher's DNA on the blade and Knox's DNA on the handle. The prosecutors depicted Knox as a sex-obsessed, manipulative "she-devil."

    DEFENSE LAWYERS:

    Her defenders portrayed Knox as an innocent girl caught up in an Italian judicial nightmare, brow-beaten into saying things she didn't mean during a 14-hour interrogation by dozens of police. They claimed inept Italian police contaminated the Kercher crime scene and produced DNA evidence that was not scientifically sound.

    APPELLATE COURT RULING:

    The appeals court that acquitted Knox and Sollecito in 2011 said there was no murder weapon and determined that the DNA evidence used to convict them was faulty. It also poked holes in the motive described by prosecutors. The court said the lower trial court failed to prove the two were in the house when Kercher was killed and that the guilty verdict wasn't corroborated by any evidence, but rather based on an improbable scenario: "The sudden choice of two young people, good and open to other people, to do evil for evil's sake, just like that, without another reason."

    The three-judge panel stopped short of saying what actually might have happened the night of Nov. 1, 2007 ? or if the one man whose conviction has stood ? Guede ? acted alone.

    KNOX:

    Knox said she spent the night of the murder at Sollecito's house. She maintained they smoked a joint, watched the French film "Amelie" and made love. Knox at one point told investigators she was home the night of the murder and had to cover her ears against Kercher's screams while she was attacked by a Congolese man who owned a bar where Knox worked. That accusation formed the basis of the slander verdict against Knox, which was upheld Tuesday. Knox said she was manipulated into the statement during a lengthy police interrogation and later said she hadn't been back in her apartment that night.

    SOLLECITO:

    Sollecito told the appeals court that he was completely smitten with Knox, a new love he had known for less than a week. The night of Kercher's death, Sollecito said the two were together at his apartment. At one point he told investigators that he couldn't recall if they spent the whole night together, but in his memoir published last year he said he was "exhausted and scared" when he signed a statement saying Knox had been out working until 1 a.m. and that he hadn't realized he was "depriving Amanda of the only alibi she had."

    GUEDE:

    The Ivorian was convicted in a separate trial of sexually assaulting and stabbing Kercher. His 16-year sentence, reduced on appeal from 30 years, was upheld by Italy's Supreme Court. Guede claimed during his appeals trial that he heard Kercher and Knox argue over money minutes before the Briton was slain. Guede claimed he had fallen ill and had gone into the bathroom with his iPod when he heard "a very loud scream" coming from Kercher's bedroom. He rushed to the bedroom, he said, where he saw an unidentified man who tried to attack him. Backing into the hall, Guede said he heard the man say, "Let's go. There's a black man in the house." Guede, a small-time drug dealer, fled Italy after the killing and was extradited from Germany to face trial.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-26-Italy-Knox-Different%20Versions/id-5cf80fdbdc5e4ab784498368ebc04471

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    More fat, less protein improves canine olfactory abilities

    Mar. 27, 2013 ? From sniffing out bombs and weapons to uncovering criminal evidence, dogs can help save lives and keep the peace. Now, researchers have uncovered how to improve dogs' smelling skills through diet, by cutting protein and adding fats.

    Such a diet, say the researchers, appears to help dogs return to lower body temperatures after exercise, which reduces panting and, thereby, improves sniffing.

    The findings could change how detection dogs are fed and boost their detection abilities, says Joseph Wakshlag, associate professor of clinical studies and chief of nutrition at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine. Wakshlag, who collaborated with researchers at Auburn University, is presenting the findings at the Companion Animal Nutrition Summit in Atlanta, held March 22-24.

    The study, funded with a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, also found that detection dogs are more reliable detectors than previously thought. The study is the first to be conducted in the world's only detection dog research facility designed in conjunction with a military dog trainer. The Alabama facility, which provides expert detection dogs to police and military forces, flushes out fumes between tests, ensuring a fresh field each time.

    "Previous studies from other facilities, which lack this feature, had suggested detection dogs signaling for suspect substances are about 70 percent accurate," said Wakshlag. "The lower numbers may have been due to study design flaws which our new study overcame. Dogs tested in the new facility signaled with 90 percent and above accuracy. We also found we can push detection performance even further with the right kind of food."

    Bucking conventional thinking, the group found that less protein and more fat in the dogs' diet helped trained dogs perform better in exercise and detection tests. During an 18-month period, they rotated 17 trained dogs through three diets Wakshlag selected: a high-end performance diet, regular adult dog food, and regular adult dog food diluted with corn oil. Measuring how different diets affected each dog, they found that dogs eating the normal diet enhanced with corn oil returned to normal body temperatures most quickly after exercise and were better able to detect smokeless powder, ammonia nitrate and TNT.

    "Corn oil has lots of polyunsaturated fats, similar to what you'd find in a lot of nuts and common grocery store seed oils," said Wakshlag. "Past data from elsewhere suggest that these polyunsaturated fats might enhance the sense of smell, and it looks like that may be true for detection dogs. It could be that fat somehow improves nose-signaling structures or reduces body temperature or both. But lowering protein also played a part in improving olfaction."

    Wakshlag designed the high-performance and corn-oil diets to have the same amount of energy from fat (57 percent). But the corn oil diet had less protein: 18 percent compared with 27 percent in the regular and high-performance diets.

    "If you're a dog, digesting protein raises body temperature, so the longer your body temperature is up, the longer you keep panting, and the harder it is to smell well," said Wakshlag. "Our study shifts the paradigm of what 'high-performance' diet can mean for dogs. It depends on what you want your dog to do. A sled dog or greyhound may need more protein to keep going. But detection dogs tend to exercise in shorter bursts and need to recover quickly and smell well. For that, less protein and more fat could help."

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    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cornell University, via Newswise.

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    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/UxahAFKiSzU/130327102652.htm

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    Massive Extinction Fueled Rise of Crocodiles

    A massive extinction between the Triassic and Jurassic eras paved the way for the rise of the crocodiles, new research suggests.

    The researchers, who detail their work today (March 26) in the journal Biology Letters, found that although nearly all the crocodilelike archosaurs, known as pseudosuchia, died off about 201 million years ago, the one lineage that survived soon diversified to occupy land and sea. The lineage included the ancestors of all modern crocodiles and alligators.

    "Even though almost all the lineages except for one was extinct, the remaining survivors still did well in terms of morphology and body plans and the whole morphological diversity," said study co-author Olja Toljagi?, an evolutionary biology researcher who was at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich at the time of the study.

    Understanding the traits that allowed certain lineages to thrive could one day help paleontologists untangle one of the greatest mysteries: how dinosaurs survived the extinction unscathed and took over Earth. [Mysterious Earth: 50 Amazing Facts]

    Dinosaur counterparts

    During the Triassic period, two lines of archosaurs lived in the same environment, which included dinosaurs, and the pseudosuchians, a large group of crocodilelike creatures that had short necks, long snouts and massive skulls.

    But around 201 million years ago, volcanic activity or a meteor killed off half the known species on Earth. Just one lineage of pseudosuchians, called the crocodylomorphs, survived. That branch would ultimately give rise to modern-day crocodiles and alligators.

    Crocodile line

    In order to find out what happened to the pseudosuchians during the mass extinction, Toljagi? and her colleague Richard Butler analyzed previous research data on pseudosuchians' skull characteristics, which could provide details about species diversity.

    After doing a systematic analysis, the team found that the single surviving branch not only survived the extinction, but showed great diversity within a few million years after the extinction. These diversified crocodilelike creatures fanned out into different environments ? such as swamps, rivers and oceans ? during the Triassic period.

    Ecological opportunity

    The findings suggest that the extinction allowed crocodiles to flourish, said Stephen Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh, who was not involved in the study.

    "That extinction seems to have had a major effect by knocking off many species and then giving new species a chance," Brusatte told LiveScience.

    The next step is to try to piece together a similarly detailed picture for dinosaurs around the same time in order to understand how dinosaurs survived the extinction, he said.

    Follow Tia Ghose on Twitter @tiaghose.?Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/massive-extinction-fueled-rise-crocodiles-001311363.html

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    Baby, mom hurt in crash that killed grandparents

    Seattle Police investigate a dented pickup at the scene of a two dead traffic accident in northern Seattle neighborhood Monday March 25, 2013, in Seattle. A pickup truck driver crashed into four pedestrians crossing a Seattle street on Monday, killing two and critically injuring two others _ a woman and the infant she was carrying, police said. (AP Photo/Seattle Times, Ken Lambert)

    Seattle Police investigate a dented pickup at the scene of a two dead traffic accident in northern Seattle neighborhood Monday March 25, 2013, in Seattle. A pickup truck driver crashed into four pedestrians crossing a Seattle street on Monday, killing two and critically injuring two others _ a woman and the infant she was carrying, police said. (AP Photo/Seattle Times, Ken Lambert)

    A pickup struck four pedestrians crossing a Seattle street Monday, March 25, 2013, killing two and critically injuring two others _ a woman and the infant she was carrying, police said. The driver, sitting, Mark W. Mullan, 50, of Seattle, was booked into the King County Jail for investigation of vehicular homicide, jail records showed. (AP Photo/The Seattle Times, Ken Lambert)

    SEATTLE (AP) ? A suspected drunken driver slammed into a family at a crosswalk in a crash that critically injured a newborn child and his mother and killed his grandparents, who had recently moved to Seattle from the Midwest to be near their grandson.

    Karina Schulte, 33, and her 10-day-old son were in critical condition Tuesday afternoon, said Liz Hunter, a spokeswoman for Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. Grandparents Dennis Schulte, 66, and Judith Schulte, 68, died at the scene Monday.

    Judith Schulte's sister, Susan Morton, said the retired Indiana couple was walking Monday afternoon with their daughter-in-law and the baby when they were stuck.

    Karina Schulte "had the baby in a sling on the front. He just hit all four of them," said Morton, of Cottonwood, Minn., in a telephone interview.

    Mark Mullan, 50, was ordered held on $2.5 million bail during a court hearing Tuesday. He is being held on investigation of vehicular homicide and vehicular assault. Prosecutors have until Thursday to formally charge him.

    In court documents, a Seattle police officer investigating the crash said he smelled alcohol on Mullan's breath and that Mullan showed impairment on sobriety tests. A preliminary test showed a breath alcohol level of 0.22, nearly three times the legal limit of 0.08, the officer said in court documents. His license was suspended at the time of the crash at an intersection in a residential neighborhood, according to the documents.

    Mullan told police he was unable to see the pedestrians because the sun was in his eyes, according to court documents.

    "He does not have a valid license," said Brad Benfield, a spokesman with the Department of Licensing.

    It was unclear Tuesday whether Mullan had legal representation. A message left with an attorney who represented him in a drunken driving case in December was not immediately returned Tuesday.

    Mullan didn't answer reporters' questions as police led him away from the scene of the crash in handcuffs Monday. Police said he stopped after the crash and was cooperative. A phone number listed for Mullan was disconnected.

    Morton said Karina Schulte, who is from Chile, works as a pediatric nurse specialist and is dedicated to her work.

    Dennis and Judith Schulte were both longtime high school teachers; she taught English and was a head guidance counselor for years, while he taught math. They had moved to Seattle from Kokomo, Ind., in February to witness the birth of their first grandson. They had planned to spend six months in Seattle to be near their son and his family. They were renting an apartment near the intersection where they were killed.

    "They were so elated. This is their only grandchild," Morton said. "They wanted to be there when he was born. They got to hold him and be there with him for 10 days."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-26-Seattle%20Accident/id-d4165adee9234f8da208a86151636158

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    Tuesday, 26 March 2013

    Provide a Concrete Deadline to Get Loaned Money Back from a Friend

    Provide a Concrete Deadline to Get Loaned Money Back from a FriendIt's common wisdom that it's usually not a good idea to loan a friend money, but sometimes it's just something you have to do. When that's the case, CNN recommends you provide a concrete deadline so you actually get that money back.

    While the general rule is that you shouldn't loan out money that you expect to get back, sometimes it just has to happen, and trying to get that loan back is a seriously awkward conversation. In order to avoid potential awkwardness down the road, CNN recommends simply setting up a deadline at the outset:

    Specifying a schedule for payback is crucial. Otherwise, the loan may hang out there indefinitely, even if the borrower has given lip service to paying you back?and you'll just have to revisit the conversation at a later date.

    Obviously, the best course of action changes a bit depending on the circumstance, and you can do a few things to make that transaction easier. Head over to CNN for a few more tips on making that awkward conversation a little smoother.

    How to ask a pal or relative to pay you back | CNN via The Consumerist

    Photo by Martin Cathrae.

    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/eJ9EVTVTlAc/provide-a-concrete-deadline-to-get-loaned-money-back-from-a-friend

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    Search Foreclosures for sale in Bellingham & Whatcom County | The ...

    March 25th, 2013 by Fawn | Posted in Random No Comments ?

    ForeclosureAre you looking for a list of local foreclosure properties that are for sale in Bellingham and Whatcom County?? The Johnson Team Real Estate can help. We have an extensive list of all foreclosure and real estate owned properties listed on the Northwest Multiple Listing Service.

    Before you you search for properties it?s important to understand the terms foreclosure and ?REO.?? A Foreclosure is a property which has been acquired by a lender when the borrower no longer makes the payments on a loan. Banks refer to these properties as ?REO?, an acronym for ?Real Estate Owned?.

    Bellingham & Whatcom County real estate markets have been changing and more properties for sale are now owned by a lender who has acquired title by foreclosing on a loan. Lenders typically list these properties with agents in the local multiple listing service. In some cases, the pricing is very aggressive and offers an opportunity for a below market purchase to a buyer. In other cases, the lender is striving to get as much return on their investment as possible and is very firm on their price.

    The process in purchasing a REO is much more straightforward than trying to purchase a short sale, because the lender has established the price. While the response time may be longer than with an individual seller, it is usually within a week or two.

    You can search for Foreclosure/REO properties on our website by selecting the city name beSearch Foreclosureslow:

    Bellingham Foreclosures

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    East Whatcom County Foreclosures

    If you have specific question about real estate in Bellingham or foreclosures feel free to contact The Johnson Team Real Estate at 1-888-713-3056 or by email at Info@JohnsonTeamRealEstate.com

    ?

    Source: http://www.johnsonteamrealestate.com/blog/index.php/2013/03/25/bellingham-whatcom-county-foreclosure-property-search/

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    LAUSD teachers set to vote on confidence in district, union policies

    ONLINE

    To view the UTLA's "Initiative for the Schools L.A. Students Deserve" plan, visit utla.net/initiative

    Los Angeles Unified's 40,000 teachers will be polled next month on their confidence in Superintendent John Deasy and whether they want their union to ratchet up demands for higher pay, smaller classes and an end to many of the district's reforms.

    Teachers will be asked to vote yes or no on two questions: Do they have confidence in Deasy's leadership of LAUSD? And should UTLA adopt the "Initiative for the Schools LA Students Deserve?" a plan submitted by a breakaway faction of about 1,100 union members demanding more aggressive negotiations on disputed issues.

    Ballots were distributed last week to United Teachers Los Angeles representatives. Voting will take place on local campuses from April 2-10, with the results announced on April 11.

    Backed by the signatures of some 1,130 members, the initiative demands that union leaders negotiate with the district on a slate of issues, rather than tackling the topics one at a time. It also calls for mobilizing members to "a series of escalating actions, including preparing to strike if necessary, to fight for the demands of the campaign."

    In addition, the plan says UTLA should collaborate with parents, students and education advocates as a "force for positive school change."

    While some view the initiative as being critical of UTLA President Warren Fletcher, the head of the 40,000-member union has endorsed the plan. Fletcher did not respond to repeated

    requests for comment, but posted a statement on the UTLA website recommending a "yes" vote.

    "We must now mobilize together to force the district to restore class sizes, to restore our RIF'd colleagues to their jobs, and (of course) to increases certificated salaries," Fletcher wrote.

    Tim Delia, who sits on UTLA's the board of directors, posted an argument saying the plan should be defeated because some portions are too vague, while others simply underscore existing policy.

    UTLA will also vote on their opinion of Deasy, whose aggressive efforts to reform the district have divided union membership.

    The confidence vote on Deasy was originally scheduled for January, when it was billed as an opportunity to rate the superintendent's performance. The vote was cancellened shortly before March 8 school board election, which became a referendum on Deasy and his agenda.

    Now, results of the balloting will be released about five weeks before a May 21 runoff between two candidates to represent the East San Fernando Valley.

    While the union hasn't said publicly what it intends to do with the results, it's very clear how leaders want their members to vote.

    "Who has Deasy's ear?" the union asks on its website. "Is it the parents, teachers and health and human services professionals who are in schools every day ... or is it his billionaire businessmen mentors?"

    UTLA also asks members to send in examples of "how Deasy's decisions have hurt our schools."

    Deasy said he had no comment on the confidence poll.

    School board member Steve Zimmer - the UTLA-backed incumbent who held off a challenge by a reform candidate whose campaign spent $2 million to defeat him - questioned whether years-long financial crisis may skew the election results.

    "Certainly, the prerogative of any labor organization is to poll its members on the most important and salient issues facing the membership," said Zimmer, a former high school teacher and counselor.

    "My concern is that the poll is too close to the crisis and the layoffs that resulted for there to be any substantive analysis."

    Still, Zimmer said, it's important for the school board to understand teachers' concerns and their lack of confidence in the administration.

    "While I am supportive of the superindency and the superintendent, I absolutely reserve the right to dissent, disagree or even organize against certain policies," Zimmer said. "Having information about the overall confidence of the teaching corps is important for any board."

    The two candidates for the District 6 runoff, who each have a UTLA endorsement, said they'll be keeping a close eye on the union vote.

    "I hope the message gets through that as many teachers as possible should vote," said candidate Monica Ratliff, who teaches at San Pedro Elementary and sits on UTLA's House of Representatives.

    "The board should have a sense of teacher morale and what's important to teachers. But In order for the poll to have validity, a large number of teachers need to vote."

    Ratliff said she supports the initiative's goal of collaboration, and hopes UTLA and the district can find common ground.

    "As a (school) board member, I'm never going to say that a strike would be beneficial to students," she said. "My hope would be that UTLA would attempt to negotiate in a manner that would not require a strike."

    District 6 opponent Antonio Sanchez said he hopes results of the UTLA poll will pave the way for constructive conversations.

    "I'm obviously interested in what the teachers have to say," said Sanchez, who also has the support of the well-funded Coalition for School Reform. "The superintendent's actions should be evaluated as to his effectiveness in helping children get a good education.

    "I hope this results in positive dialogue and takes out the political back and forth. The infighting just gets in the way of our progress."

    Deasy took the helm of Los Angeles Unified nearly two years ago, at the height of the budget crisis. In November 2011, he and Fletcher announced an "unprecedented" initiative that empowered teachers to help turn around struggling schools.

    At the time, Deasy and Fletcher each said they hoped to build a collaborative working relationship.

    Since then, however, the two have been at odds over Deasy's efforts to link student test scores and teacher performance, and to take over struggling campuses.

    barbara.jones@dailynews.com

    twitter.com/LADNschools

    Source: http://www.dailynews.com/ci_22856659/lausd-teachers-set-vote-confidence-district-union-policies?source=rss_emailed

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    Phiaton Moderna MS 200 Earphones review

    Over time, I’ve reviewed earphones made from plastic, aluminum, silicone, and even wood covering every price range. Earphone makers claim that their chosen material has some advantage over the other. Well, there may be some truth to those claims. Each material does, in fact, have inherent advantages, but they also each have disadvantages. There is [...]

    Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/26/phiaton-moderna-ms-200-earphones-review/

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    Sunday, 24 March 2013

    From CFS to life of crime: Gerrard probes prison link | Manitoba ...

    Phoenix Sinclair was abused and murdered at age five by her mother, Samantha Kematch and Kematch's boyfriend, Karl McKay, at their Fisher River First Nation home in June 2005, a few months after she was returned to Kematch's care and her CFS file closed.
    Phoenix Sinclair was abused and murdered at age five by her mother, Samantha Kematch and Kematch's boyfriend, Karl McKay, at their Fisher River First Nation home in June 2005, a few months after she was returned to Kematch's care and her CFS file closed. Her death went undiscovered for nine months. (HANDOUT)

    Report an error

    A report out of Manitoba?s prisons showing that many violent offenders were raised in Child and Family Services care could be yet another sign of mismanagement at the agency, says Manitoba Liberal leader Jon Gerrard.

    ?I?ve been concerned for some time about the management of Child and Family Services,? Gerrard says.

    Then a report out of the Child Advocate?s office revealed that 88% of aboriginal inmates, and 63% of non-aboriginal inmates, at one Manitoba correctional facility surveyed in 2001 had not lived at home during adolescence, mainly because they were in foster care.

    A forum on the issue last week only raised more questions.

    ?From that forum, and from other input that I?ve had, there really is a significant concern that the mismanagement of CFS is leading to a situation where we?ve got more kids ? who are ending up in criminal activity. And it?s very disturbing.?

    So on Sunday, Gerrard is holding another discussion, with Amanda Sansregret, chair of the St. Norbert Behavioural Health Foundation, Glenn Cochrane, president of the Indian and Metis Friendship Centre, Tracy Booth from the Elizabeth Fry Society and Meredith Mitchell, a child protection lawyer for Legal Aid Manitoba.

    ?We?re asking the question: Is there a link between the poor management of CFS and the high crime rate in Manitoba??

    The Phoenix Sinclair inquiry has brought problems with CFS to the forefront, he said. Even for those with no connection to the 10,000 kids in CFS care, Gerrard says this should be a concern.

    ?It may be very important to all of us if this mismanagement is a factor in increased violent crime in Winnipeg and in Manitoba,? Gerrard said. ?If this in fact is a major problem ? then that can be important in helping us with a look at the direction we have to go, to CFS, so we eliminate this connection, or decrease this problem.?

    The public meeting goes from 2-4 p.m. Sunday at the Central Corydon Community Centre, 1370 Grosvenor Avenue.

    Gerrard said recommendations from the discussion could go to the Legislature or to another public meeting in the spring.

    ?

    Source: http://www.winnipegsun.com/2013/03/23/from-cfs-to-life-of-crime-gerrard-probes-prison-link

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    Girl to Christie: Will you run for prez? (CNN)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/293908796?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Saturday, 23 March 2013

    Cyprus poses no systemic threat to Russian banks: central bank

    By Simon Evans DENVER, Colorado, March 21 (Reuters) - A leadership role rarely falls to a 24-year-old playing in just his second World Cup qualifier but U.S. defender Omar Gonzalez will have little choice but to be an organiser on Friday against Costa Rica. Gonzalez, who plays Major League Soccer with L.A. Galaxy, lacks an experienced partner to guide him after former captain Carlos Bocanegra was left out. Injuries have robbed Klinsmann of his main options at full-back - Steve Cherundolo, Timmy Chandler and Fabian Johnson. ...

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyprus-poses-no-systemic-threat-russian-banks-central-090927217.html

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    Pa. caretaker charged with drinking old whiskey

    (AP) ? Fifty-two bottles of well-aged whiskey disappeared between his lips, police said, and now it's time for a western Pennsylvania man to settle up.

    John Saunders, the former live-in caretaker of a Pittsburgh-area mansion, faces criminal charges for allegedly drinking more than $100,000 worth of the owner's whiskey.

    Owner Patricia Hill found nine cases of whiskey hidden in the walls and stairwell of the century-old Georgian mansion built by coal and coke industrialist J.P. Brennan after she bought it in 2012. The Old Farm Pure Rye Whiskey was produced in the early 1900s by the nearby West Overton Distilling Co.

    "My guess is that Mr. Brennan ordered 10 cases . pre-Prohibition," said Hill, a New Yorker who bought the house to convert it into a bed-and-breakfast. "I was told by his family that family members used to greet him at the door each day with a shot of whiskey."

    Scottdale police told The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (http://bit.ly/Yu1faw ) that Saunders drank dozens of bottles whiskey valued at $102,400 by a New York auction house.

    Saunders, 62, of Irwin, was charged with receiving stolen property and theft. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.

    Hill told police Chief Barry Pritts she stored the whiskey in the original cases, which contained 12 bottles each. After Saunders moved out, Hill said she discovered last March that the bottles in four cases were empty.

    Saunders initially denied drinking the whiskey when questioned by police, but Pritts said a DNA linked him to three of the empty bottles.

    A phone listing for Saunders could not immediately be located Friday.

    ___

    Information from: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, http://pghtrib.com

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-03-22-Old%20Whiskey/id-74a4c7cc9f904aeaaeaeb4b6b58494dc

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    Thursday, 21 March 2013

    Bruno Mars Looks Back On 2010 Arrest: 'I Was Young'

    Singer opens up to GQ about the night he was found in possession of narcotics in Las Vegas.
    By Jocelyn Vena


    Bruno Mars on the cover of GQ
    Photo: GQ

    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1704015/bruno-mars-2010-arrest-gq.jhtml

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    Anxiety, depression identify heart disease patients at increased risk of dying

    Mar. 19, 2013 ? Heart disease patients who have anxiety have twice the risk of dying from any cause compared to those without anxiety, according to new research in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

    Patients with both anxiety and depression have triple the risk of dying, researchers said.

    "Many studies have linked depression to an increased risk of death in heart disease patients," said Lana Watkins, Ph.D., lead author of the study and an associate professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. "However, anxiety hasn't received as much attention."

    Studies show that depression is about three times more common in heart attack patients. The American Heart Association recommends that heart patients be screened for depression and treated if necessary.

    Depressed heart disease patients often also have anxiety, suggesting it may underlie the risk previously attributed solely to depression, Watkins said. "It's now time for anxiety to be considered as important as depression, and for it to be examined carefully."

    In the study, 934 heart disease patients, average age 62, completed a questionnaire measuring their level of anxiety and depression immediately before or after a cardiac catheterization procedure at Duke University Medical Center. Patients had anxiety if they scored 8 or higher on a scale composed of seven common characteristics of anxiety, with each item rated from 0 to 3 (range of possible scores: 0-21). Depression was measured using a similar scale composed of seven symptoms of depression.

    Researchers, after accounting for age, congestive heart failure, kidney disease and other factors that affect death risk, found:

    • 90 of the 934 patients experienced anxiety only, 65 experienced depression only and 99 suffered anxiety and depression.
    • Among 133 patients who died during three years of follow-up, 55 had anxiety, depression or both. The majority of deaths (93 of 133) were heart-related.

    Researchers measured anxiety and depression during cardiac catheterization because levels better reflected how patients normally handle stressful situations.

    Anxiety and depression each influence risk of death in unique ways. Anxiety, for example, increases activity of the sympathetic (adrenaline-producing) nervous system that controls blood pressure.

    "People who worry a lot are more likely to have difficulty sleeping and to develop high blood pressure," Watkins said.

    The link between depression and mortality is more related to behavioral risk factors, she said. "Depression results in lack of adherence to medical advice and treatments, along with behaviors like smoking and being sedentary."

    Future studies should test strategies to manage anxiety alone and with depression in heart disease patients, Watkins said.

    "Anxiety reducing medications combined with stress management could improve outcome for patients with just anxiety, whereas patients with anxiety and depression may need a stronger intervention involving more frequent outpatient monitoring and incentives to improve adherence," she said.

    Co-authors are: Gary G. Koch, Ph.D.; Andrew Sherwood, Ph.D.; James A. Blumenthal, Ph.D.; Jonathan R.T. Davidson, M.D.; Christopher O'Connor, M.D.; and Michael H. Sketch Jr., M.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

    The National Institutes of Health funded the study.

    Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Heart Association.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/eCRhId69LJk/130319202148.htm

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    Insight Meditation Society constructs new dormitory - Buddhist News

    Insight Meditation Society?in Barre, Massachusetts broke ground for a new dormitory at its Retreat Center facility last September. The highly energy-efficient new building is part of a larger construction project that includes renovation of the current ?Catskills? dormitory, a covered walkway connecting all accommodations buildings, and extensive work on the Retreat Center entrance to make it fully accessible for those with mobility issues. When the work is completed in late summer, all retreatants at both IMS?s centers will be housed in single rooms. In the meantime, retreats?are continuing to run without interruption throughout the year.

    Posted on: March 20, 2013 ? 2:40 pm

    Source: http://shambhalasun.com/news/?p=44697

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    Tuesday, 19 March 2013

    Pentax 645D


    Depending on the type of photographer you are, the Pentax 645D ($8,799.95 direct, body only) could be a dream camera or it could be one that completely befuddles you. Event photographers can stop reading here, as the 40-megapixel camera isn't a high ISO monster, can't record video, and doesn't fire off shots in rapid succession. But if you're more of a slow shooter?whether it be studio portraits or landscapes?the weather-sealed 645D ?may be right up your alley. It represents a relatively inexpensive path into medium-format digital photography, as the similar Hasselblad H4D-40 will set you back $16,995, and the Leica S2 is priced even higher at $22,995. Sports and event shooters should turn their attention to our a fast-shooting camera like the Nikon D4, which can fire off rapid shots and capture images in even the most challenging light.

    Design and Features
    The 645D is big, and it's styled unlike a typical D-SLR. It has a very deep handgrip, but it's body seems squat thanks to a mirror box that extends out much further than a camera with a 35mm lens mount. The body measures 4.6 by 6.1 by 4.7 inches (HWD) and weighs in at a hefty 3 pounds, 4.2 ounces. Compare this with the Nikon D800, a 35mm full-frame D-SLR that measures 4.8 by 5.7 by 3.2 inches and weighs only 2 pounds. Because of its weight, Pentax opted to put two tripod mounts on the body?one for portrait and one for landscape orientation?as some tripod heads won't be able to handle the camera's mass when used in a sideways position.

    If you aren't familiar with what differentiates medium-format, full-frame, and APS-C, it's all about sensor size. The Pentax 645D's CCD sensor is 33 by 44mm in size, which is quite a bit larger than the 24 by 36mm sensor found on a full-frame camera like the Canon EOS 5D Mark III, or the 18 by 24mm sensor found in a mainstream APS-C D-SLR like the Sony Alpha 77. Because you need to cover a large physical area with light, lenses have to be bigger, as does the mirror box.?

    The 645D is actually based on a lens system that captured images on 60-by-45mm frames of film, and can accept older lenses that were used with Pentax 645 film bodies. If you have the appropriate adapter, you can also mount lenses designed for the Pentax 6x7 system, capturing huge 60 by 70mm negatives on 120 or 220 format film. Aside from pure resolution, which is now available in smaller format cameras like the Nikon D800 , there are plenty of reasons to choose medium format for your work. The larger sensor creates a different relationship between focal length and field of view. The 55mm lens that is often paired with this camera is a true normal?its focal length matches the diagonal measurement of the sensor. The equivalent focal length on a 35mm sensor camera is 43mm. This changes the distance between you and your subject, assuming that you want to maintain the same field of view, altering perspective. The larger sensor also creates a shallower depth of field than the equivalent lens on a smaller format camera, which is desirable for portraits.

    If your biceps are up to it, the 645D actually handles quite well as a handheld camera, although I'd recommend using a tripod when you can. Its control layout is excellent, and there are physical control buttons, dials, and switches for almost every common function. The mode dial lets you choose standard shooting modes, there's a dedicated switch to toggle between Spot, Center Weighted, and Matrix metering, and another switch to set the focus point selection to either the center point, manual selection, or automatic operation. Because the camera's mirror is quite large, the vibration it causes when it raises to take a shot can actually cause some vibration that can hurt image quality. If your shutter speed for a shot is low and you're working on a tripod, you can utilize the Mirror Lockup feature?a toggle switch on the right side of the mirror box that causes the mirror to raise and stay raised when you first trip the shutter button. Hitting the shutter again takes the photo. If you really need to minimize vibrations, you can use this in conjunction with the Self Timer to get a rock solid shot.

    Control buttons let you adjust the ISO, Exposure Compensation, Color Space, White Balance, Exposure Bracketing, and Drive Mode. There are also buttons to toggle between Raw and JPG shooting, and to select which of the two SD card slots is in use. Current shooting settings are displayed in the eye-level viewfinder, as well as on the large monochrome LCD that adorns the top of the camera?if you're shooting in a dim environment, there's a button you can press to illuminate that display as well.

    There's no Live View mode on the 645D?the camera's CCD sensor technology prevents that functionality?but it didn't stop Pentax from putting an excellent 3-inch 921k-dot display on the rear of the camera, directly below the viewfinder eyecup. You can use this to configure the camera via its text-based menu system, or to review photos. The excellent resolution makes it possible to confirm focus, which is important when working with such a large image sensor, as it is less forgiving of slight focus errors.

    Landscape photographers should take special note of the camera's weather sealing. Pentax designed the camera so that it could be used in inclement weather, as every port, button, and opening is sealed against the elements. When you couple this with a weather-sealed lens?there are two available at the moment?you have a camera that can shoot in a downpour, windstorm, or worse. With a little trepidation due to the replacement cost, I simulated a downpour in my kitchen sink and placed the 645D under the running water?it performed like a champ, as I was able to pick up and shoot the dripping wet camera immediately. Pentax has also released a trio of weather-sealed lenses to go along with the camera. These include the wide-angle SMC DA 645 25mm F4 AL (IF) SDM AW and the close-focusing HD D FA 645 Macro 90mm F2.8 ED AW SR. There is also a full frange of legacy lenses available in both manual focus and autofocus versions, but none of these are sealed against the elements.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/Lz9VH3GQbAI/0,2817,2406809,00.asp

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    Google Maps brings you to Everest, Kilimanjaro with all your toes intact

    Google Maps brings you to Everest, Kilimanjaro with all your toes intact

    Living vicariously just got a bit more exciting. Google Maps had added some of the most famous (and highest) mountains in the world to Street View. The list includes Aconcagua, Kilimanjaro, Mount Elbrus and Everest Base Camp -- four members of the Seven Summits, letting you explore some of the of the highest points on Earth without the aide of a breathing apparatus. According to Google, the shots were captured with the help of a tripod and a fish-eye-sporting digital camera. All of the aforementioned mountains can be reached in the source link below -- or with the assistance of a good support team.

    Filed under: ,

    Comments

    Source: Google

    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/oYoihRwy23Y/

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    2 inmates escape from Quebec prison in helicopter

    Police vehicles block a road just outside the town of Chertsey, Quebec, Sunday, March 17, 2013, during a search for escaped prisoners. A dramatic daylight jailbreak involving two Quebec inmates climbing a rope into a hovering helicopter swiftly escalated into a large police operation Sunday night in which at least one escapee was tracked down hours after he fled. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Graham Hughes)

    Police vehicles block a road just outside the town of Chertsey, Quebec, Sunday, March 17, 2013, during a search for escaped prisoners. A dramatic daylight jailbreak involving two Quebec inmates climbing a rope into a hovering helicopter swiftly escalated into a large police operation Sunday night in which at least one escapee was tracked down hours after he fled. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Graham Hughes)

    Police vehicles block a road just outside the town of Chertsey, Quebec, Sunday, March 17, 2013, during a search for escaped prisoners. A dramatic daylight jailbreak involving two Quebec inmates climbing a rope into a hovering helicopter swiftly escalated into a large police operation Sunday night in which at least one escapee was tracked down hours after he fled. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Graham Hughes)

    MONTREAL (AP) ? Two Quebec inmates grabbed a rope attached to a hijacked helicopter to make a daring daylight escape from a prison outside Montreal, then led police in a car chase and exchanged gunfire at a rural cabin before they were finally recaptured, authorities said Monday.

    Police said the helicopter pilot was held hostage in the Sunday jail-break and was not a suspect. He was treated for shock in hospital.

    Yves Le Roux, president of the helicopter rental company, Passport-H?lico, said Monday two men posed as tourists who wanted to take a flight over Mount-Tremblant before they pulled a gun on the pilot and told him to fly to the prison and land on one of the buildings.

    "They had some rope and the two prisoners climbed onto the rope," Le Roux said. "Then they ordered him to take off to a field nearby and they landed into a field and while they were there the two guys hopped into the helicopter."

    Le Roux said the pilot switched on an emergency signal during the flight. He said when they eventually landed near a hotel the suspects pulled a T-shirt over the pilot's head and told him not to look where they were running.

    Quebec provincial police spokesman Benoit Richard said Monday that they had arrested four people about 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of the Saint-Jerome prison from which the inmates escaped. Police said they followed the helicopter until it landed, and then chased a car until it reached a rural cabin.

    "When they got out of their vehicle they started shooting at police officers," Richard said.

    Two of the suspects then broke into the cabin and the residents fled unharmed.

    Two of those arrested Sunday were inmates Benjamin Hudon-Barbeau, 36, and Danny Provencal, 33. Hudon-Barbeau was arrested first and police cornered Provencal later in the evening, after establishing a security perimeter around a building where he had barricaded himself. Richard said Provencal had surrendered peacefully after negotiations continued through the night. Police found one of the other suspects on a highway.

    Richard said the charges could include attempted murder, hijacking an aircraft, evasion, possession of restricted weapons and breaking and entering. The suspects are due in court on Monday afternoon. Richard said the accomplices are known to police.

    On Sunday afternoon police received a call from the staff at the Saint-Jerome jail, reporting the escape at about 2:20 p.m. local time, Richard said.

    The prison's warden told police that Hudon-Barbeau and Provencal had grabbed a rope dropped from the helicopter to make their getaway, Richard said.

    Quebec provincial police tracked down the helicopter used in the escape to Mont-Tremblant, about 53 miles (85 kilometers) away from the jail but only the chopper's pilot was still at the scene. Police called the pilot "an important witness."

    "It's spectacular. It's out of the ordinary," Quebec police spokesman Gregory Gomez Del Prado said. "Three were in custody within five hours. The fourth was in custody around midnight."

    Police said Hudon-Barbeau had suffered an injury during the incident, unrelated to the shooting, and was under guard in a hospital.

    Hudon-Barbeau was arrested in November on two firearm related charges and associating with people with criminal histories, according to a provincial police report. The arrest came as part of an investigation of a double murder in Quebec. Police said one of the men charged with murder is identified as having ties to the Hells Angels biker gang.

    A Montreal radio station, 98.5 FM, said it received a call Sunday from a man claiming to be Hudon-Barbeau, who said he was "ready to die" as he tried to evade police.

    "The way they're treating me in there, it's unreal," the man told the radio station. "They won't let me be. They put me back in prison for nothing."

    Authorities did not immediately respond to the claims made in the radio station interview.

    Yves Galarneau, the correctional services manager who oversees the Saint-Jerome jail, said he'd never seen anything like the dramatic escape in more than three decades on the job.

    Galarneau said there are no security measures in place at the prison to prevent a helicopter from swooping down from above.

    "This is the first time this has occurred in a Quebec facility," Garlarneau said. "An assessment will be carried out. We will be looking at what further steps can be taken."

    Although the tactic is a first for Quebec, using a chopper to break out of jail has a long and colorful history, and not just in the movies.

    A helicopter swooped down on a prison courtyard in Greece last month as armed men on board fired on guards and lowered a rope to help a convicted killer make his fourth attempt to escape from the prison. But the plot was foiled after the prisoner was shot and the chopper was forced to land in the prison's parking lot.

    In 2009, one of Greece's most wanted men, bank robber Vassilis Paleokostas, escaped from from a prison with another inmate by helicopter ? staging their second chopper getaway in three years. Paleokostas remains at large while an accomplice was arrested several months after the breakout.

    A convicted murderer escaped from a Russian penal colony aboard a hijacked helicopter last year, but he was captured a few hours later.

    Three inmates escaped from a Belgium prison by helicopter in 2009, but were later arrested. An inmate also escaped by helicopter from another Belgian prison in 2007. He was arrested two days later.

    A New York businessman, Joel David Kaplan, used a chopper to escape from a Mexican jail in 1971, and went on to write a book about it. Pascal Payet, a French prisoner, used a helicopter to escape on three occasions, only to be caught by authorities every time.

    The prison at the center of Sunday's escapade in Quebec is a provincial detention center with a maximum-security wing.

    Saint-Jerome jail, located about 37 miles (60 kilometers) northwest of Montreal, experienced a mini-riot by about a dozen prisoners a little over a month ago. In that incident, police were called in to secure the outside of the jail, which holds about 480 inmates, and jail staff used pepper spray to disperse the mob.

    _________

    Associated Press Writer Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-18-Canada-Prison%20Escape/id-1ea3ed645a8f4ede9d9bd0ccbc68b9fb

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