Thursday, April 11, 2013

Budget cuts ground Air Force, Navy aircraft

FILE - In a Tuesday, May 29, 2012 file photo, a formation of U.S. Navy Blue Angel fighter jets perform a flyover above graduating Midshipmen during the United States Naval Academy graduation and commissioning ceremonies in Annapolis, Md. The commander of Naval air forces announced on Tuesday, April 9, 2013 that the U.S. Navy has canceled the remainder of the elite Blue Angels demonstration team's 2013 season because of federal cuts. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

FILE - In a Tuesday, May 29, 2012 file photo, a formation of U.S. Navy Blue Angel fighter jets perform a flyover above graduating Midshipmen during the United States Naval Academy graduation and commissioning ceremonies in Annapolis, Md. The commander of Naval air forces announced on Tuesday, April 9, 2013 that the U.S. Navy has canceled the remainder of the elite Blue Angels demonstration team's 2013 season because of federal cuts. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

In this photo provided by the Florida Keys News Bureau, the U.S. Navy's Blue Angels perform their precision aerobatics over the Florida Keys during the Southernmost Air Spectacular at Naval Air Station Key West Saturday, March 23, 2013, in Key West, Fla. The weekend air show concludes Sunday, March 24, and may mark the the last Blue Angels performance through the end of September 2013 due to sequester budget cuts. (AP Photo/Florida Keys News Bureau, Rob O'Neal)

(AP) ? The U.S. Air Force plans to ground about a third of its active-duty force of combat planes and a top general warned Tuesday that the branch might not be able to respond immediately to every event when needed.

The Air Force didn't immediately release a list of the specific units and bases that would be affected on Tuesday, but it said it would cover some fighters, bombers and airborne warning and control aircraft in the U.S., Europe and the Pacific.

Gen. Mike Hostage, commander of Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Virginia, said the branch would focus its budget and resources on units supporting major missions, like the war in Afghanistan, while other units stand down on a rotating basis.

"The current situation means we're accepting the risk that combat airpower may not be ready to respond immediately to new contingencies as they occur," Hostage said in a statement.

The Air Force says, on average, aircrews 'lose currency' to fly combat commissions within 90 to 120 days of not flying and that it generally takes 60 to 90 days to conduct the training needed to return aircrews to mission-ready status.

Returning grounded units to mission ready status will require additional funds beyond Air Combat Command's normal budget, according to Air Force Officials.

"Even a six-month stand down of units will have significant long-term, multi-year impacts on our operational readiness," Air Combat Command spokesman Maj. Brandon Lingle wrote in an email to The Associated Press.

For affected units, the Air Force says it will shift its focus to ground training. That includes the use of flight simulators and academic training to maintain basic skills and aircraft knowledge, Lingle said. Aircraft maintainers plan to clear up as much of a backlog of scheduled inspections and maintenance that budgets allow.

On the same day, the U.S. Navy confirmed that the Blue Angels aerobatic team would be cancelling the rest of its season.

Tom Frosch, the Blue Angels lead pilot and team commander, announced the news late Tuesday at the team's Pensacola Naval Air Station headquarters standing in front of the one of the iconic blue-and-gold jets. Frosch said the news marks the first time since the Korean War that the team would not make the air show rounds.

"The Navy held off as long as possible with the hope of salvaging some of the season," Frosch said. "We hope we'll be turned back on for 2014."

As the news trickled out, business owners and residents of the coastal enclave where the team is based were disappointed.

"I just think it's sad that there are political games being played. I doubt the Blue Angels are even half of 1 percent of the entire Navy budget," said Lloyd Proctor, co-owner of Blue Angel Hot Tubs in Pensacola. Proctor and his wife named their business after the team 10 years ago.

"They have national name recognition and they are loved by people everywhere," Proctor said Tuesday.

Most held out hope that the grounding was temporary and that the season could somehow be salvaged.

Thousands of fans flocks to Pensacola Beach each July to watch the team fly over the white sand and turquoise surf. It is always the biggest tourism revenue weekend of the year, said W.A. Buck Lee, president of the Santa Rosa Island Authority. Lee said he had hoped that the six fighter jets would be allowed to continue practicing as a team and the Pensacola Beach show could be replaced by a routine practice over the beach.

Instead, the Navy announced Tuesday that the six elite pilots would maintain only minimum flight hours to remain qualified in their F/A 18 Hornets and that squadron practices would end for the remainder of the season.

"The economic impact of the show for us is more than $2 million," Lee said. "People are going to start cancelling their hotel rooms and will hurt businesses here."

A spokesman for the Navy said team members would be allowed to fly minimal hours to maintain flight proficiency in the F/A 18 fighter jets, but the six-jet squadron would discontinue group practices for the remainder of the season. The elite pilots selected to serve a two-year rotation with the team are among the top Navy's top fighter pilots. Many are graduates of the Navy's famous Top Gun fighter tactics school.

Forsch said the team will continue its focus on community outreach and on Navy and Marine recruiting.

"To be a part of this team in any way is an honor and there is an obligation to continue that legacy of the Blue Angels that inspired me and others to fly and to join the Navy and the Marines," he said.

___

Nelson reported from Pensacola, Fla.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-09-Military%20Aircraft-Budget%20Cuts/id-20b7b797fa2c48daa884200de290507f

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

What's Inside the Oculus Rift Virtual Reality Headset?

The Oculus Rift might be something out of Demolition Man. Or it might be a Virtual Boy. However it turns out, it's deeply ambitious, and iFixit has the first look at what's inside the new VR headset. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/anEQVFv8mU8/whats-inside-the-oculus-rift-virtual-reality-headset

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Mark Wahlberg: Worst Kidnapper Ever? Watch Exclusive 'Pain & Gain' Clip Now!

Wahlberg and director Michael Bay have a Sneak Peek Week chat with MTV News, leading up to Sunday's MTV Movie Awards.
By Todd Gilchrist


Anthony Mackie and Dwayne Johnson in "Pain & Gain"
Photo: Paramount Pictures

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1705299/pain-gain-exclusive-clip-sneak-peek-week.jhtml

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New Era for Energy Department Expected Under a Secretary Moniz

With stimulus funding for clean energy at an end, climate-change policy dead in Congress, and harsh budget cuts looming over all agencies thanks to the sequestration, the days of President Obama?s vision of the Energy Department as a green juggernaut have probably come to an end.

But Ernest Moniz, who faces a Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday morning as Obama?s choice to become the next Energy secretary, would be likely to steer the department into a new era, one in which climate change still plays a key role in guiding its mission but so, too, do policies connected to the nation?s recent boom in oil and natural-gas development.

The MIT professor and former Energy undersecretary in the Clinton administration is also likely to renew the agency?s traditional focus on nuclear energy, nuclear waste, and nonproliferation of nuclear weapons.

Before Obama took office, the Energy Department had been widely viewed as a backwater agency. But people close to Moniz say they expect him to revitalize the department?s original mission while also taking on new issues involving global trade and commerce.

Like the man he would succeed, Nobel laureate Steven Chu, Moniz is a renowned physicist with serious research chops: He is director of the Energy Initiative at MIT, where he has been on the faculty since 1973. Unlike Chu, however, Moniz has a long record of supporting a broad portfolio of energy sources, including natural gas. He also has a strong background in nuclear issues, making him a better fit considering the agency?s historic nuclear portfolio.

Also unlike Chu, Moniz is viewed as a pragmatic and politically savvy operator who knows his way around Washington.

?I think it will be a very different agency than it was in the first term,? said Charles Ebinger, director of the Energy Security Initiative at the Brookings Institution, who has worked with Moniz on energy policy for many years.

?Ernie knows climate change, but also unconventional oil and gas and coal and nuclear. He will push the president towards a more balanced policy. I think you?ll see a focus on unconventional oil and gas and not as much on renewables.?

Frank Verrastro, director of the energy program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said, ?He?ll be a more complete secretary of Energy. He brings different skills. He?s focused on climate and clean energy, but he?s aware of what?s going on in the oil and gas space. It?s an opportunity for the administration to gain back some energy-policy stake.?

The nation?s energy picture has changed profoundly since 2008, when Obama appointed Chu to lead the DOE. Since then, a boom in unconventional oil and gas development, thanks to breakthroughs in hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? technology has led to a dramatic increase in domestic oil and gas supply. Obama has been particularly bullish on natural gas as a one-two punch for his climate-change and economic goals: The fuel has half the carbon emissions of coal, and the new glut of it has lowered U.S. manufacturing costs.

The fossil-fuel industry, which regularly railed against Chu, has already indicated its openness to Moniz.

?Moniz seems to be a pragmatist on the important energy issues facing our nation including natural-gas development,? said John Krohn, a spokesman for Energy In Depth, which represents the gas-fracking industry in Washington. ?When he arrives at DOE, he will join many senior-level Obama officials who have publicly stated that natural gas is an important fuel for our nation?s environment and economic future.?

Among the biggest policy decisions facing the Energy Department in the coming years will be the question of whether or not to grant permits for U.S. companies to begin exporting natural gas. Manufacturers fear that exporting the fuel will increase their prices, but foreign policy thinkers believe it could help increase U.S. muscle in Asia. Moniz is expected to be a key player in these decisions.

Nuclear-energy issues are also likely to get more attention under Moniz. While some environmentalists remain wary of nuclear energy, Moniz is among a group of thinkers who see nuclear power?which produces no carbon emissions?as a key piece of a future climate policy. While nuclear-waste issues were not a forte of Chu?s, Moniz was part of the blue-ribbon commission on nuclear waste that last year recommended building medium-term nuclear-waste storage facilities that could hold waste for up to a century.

?There will be more attention paid to nuclear waste and the nuclear stockpile,? said John Deutch, a professor at MIT and former head of the CIA who held senior positions in the Energy and Defense departments during the Carter and Clinton administrations, and who has worked with Moniz on energy issues for more than 30 years.

?He will have a much broader agenda, and he will be asked to have a broader agenda by President Obama,? Deutch said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/era-energy-department-expected-under-secretary-moniz-223657993--politics.html

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Two 4-year-olds, two guns, two tragic shootings

By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

Four-year-old boys in different states were involved in two separate shooting incidents in the last four days, with tragic results.

On Saturday, a Tennessee boy discharged a pistol at a sheriff's deputy's wife, killing her instantly. On Monday, a New Jersey boy left a 6-year-old neighbor in serious condition after a rifle fired at his head.

The Tennessee incident occurred during a family cookout at the home of Josephine and Daniel Fanning. He's a sheriff's deputy in Wilson County.

Deputy Fanning, 51, was in his bedroom showing his collection of weapons to a relative around 7:00 p.m. Saturday, when Josephine, 48, and the 4-year-old came into the room. The young boy grabbed a loaded handgun sitting on the bed and fired it once, striking and killing the deputy?s wife, according to Tennessee Bureau of Investigations spokeswoman Kristin Helm. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

The incident appears to be an accident and no one has been charged, but the investigation is still open, according to Helm.

?It?s a sad, sad set of circumstances,? Sheriff Robert Bryan told NBC affiliate WSMV in Nashville.?"Nobody is immune to this. Nobody. It doesn't matter if you are a law enforcement officer. These things can happen in second."

The 4-year-old is a relative of the deputy and his late wife, WSMV reported. The weapon used by the 4-year-old boy was not Deputy Fanning?s service weapon.

Another tragic incident took place in New Jersey on Monday evening, when a 4-year-old boy accidentally shot a 6-year-old neighbor with a rifle he found in his parents? home.

Police said the two boys were playing with a .22-caliber rifle outside the 4-year-old?s home in Toms River, N.J., when around 7:00 p.m. the gun discharged and struck the 6-year-old in the head, NBCNewYork.com reported.

The 4-year-old's parents reportedly heard the shot and called 911.

According to NBCNewYork.com, the 6-year-old is in serious condition at Jersey Shore Medical Center. An investigation is ongoing.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2a846008/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C0A90C176713330Etwo0E40Eyear0Eolds0Etwo0Eguns0Etwo0Etragic0Eshootings0Dlite/story01.htm

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Atlanta food and drink events, April 8-14: Final Four specials, spring ...


Cook's Warehouse, Brookhaven Mon., April 8, 7 & 9 p.m. Simple Abundance Cooking Class: Southern Feast Celebrity Chef Art Smith's newest executive chef of Southern Art, Timothy Magee, will provide demonstrations and recipe instruction on southern staples, plus a wine tasting sponsored by Sherlock's Wine Merchant and a chance to win door prizes provided by Bella Cucina Artful Foods and Cabot Cheese. Details

Big Tex Decatur Mon., April 8, 6 p.m. March Madness Big Tex Decatur will screen the championship game, and is offering food and drink specials for fans. Details

BLT Steak Mon., April 8 Final Four Offer Guests who bring in any Final Four ticket stub will receive 10 percent off food and 20 percent off drinks. Details

Davio's Northern Italian Steakhouse Mon., April 8 Savory Spring Roll Bracket In conjunction with this year's NCAA's Final Four playoff tournament, Davio's will host its own final four showdown to decipher which of its signature spring rolls rules supreme. Details

Googie Burger Mon., April 8 Final Four Specials Googie Burger is offering special sliders to accompany a screening of the NCAA championship. Details

Nikolai's Roof Mon., April 8, 7 p.m. Final Four Specials The NCAA championship game will be playing on all four screens, and the restaurant is offering an $18 beer bucket special, as well. Details

Trader Vic's Mon., April 8 Final Four specials Trader Vic's celebrates the Final Four tournament with an $18 beer bucket special, along with other exciting events. Details

KR SteakBar Tue., April 9, 5 p.m. Food Bank Supper Club This edition of Food Bank Supper Club will be hosted by KR SteakBar, which will donate 20 percent of each diner's check to support hunger relief. Details

Miller Union Tue., April 9, 6-8:30 p.m. Miller Union Spring Harvest Dinner Miller Union chef Steven Satterfield will serve up a three-course family-style supper to celebrate the spring season. Details

Canoe Tue., April 9, 7 p.m. Wine Education Series Beverage Director Matt Bradford will host a four-course educational dinner with a guided wine tasting, focusing on 45th Parallel pinot noirs. Details

Atkins Park Wed., April 10, 9:30 p.m. Ping Pong Tournament Atkins Park and New Belgium Brewing Company will host a ping pong tournament to benefit the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition, and will offer prizes presented by New Belgium Brewing. Details

Atlanta Marriott Buckhead Thurs., April 11, 6 p.m. 9th Annual "A Taste of Buckhead Business" Expo The expo brings together premier restaurants and businesses to showcase the cultural diversity of the greater Buckhead community. Details

The Georgia Association of The American Institute of Architects Thurs., April 11, 6-9 p.m. Wine Reception and Silent Auction This is AIA|ATL's first temporary storefront gallery exhibition to showcase the talents of local and emerging designers. Details

Haven Thurs., April 11, 7 p.m. Haven Patio Party Chef Stephen Herman will be grilling and serving up seasonal bites paired with a selection of beer and wine. There will also be live music. Details

Rosebud Sat., April 13, 2-5 p.m. 2nd Annual Mother Clucker Fried Chicken Festival A gathering of Atlanta's top chefs will partake in a fried chicken cook-off in a tented lot next to Rosebud. Expect live music and other sweet treats. Details

Food 101 Sat., April 13, 2 p.m. Masters Tournament Viewing Party Join Food 101 to watch one of the final days of the Masters Tournament, with food and drink specials available all day. Details

The Terrapin Beer Company Sat., April 13, 4:30 p.m. Terrapin's Annual Anniversary Party This birthday party for Terrapin features casks, limited barrel-aged beers, the beer dunk tank, live music, and carnival games, and will benefit the Community Connection. Details

Crack in the Sidewalk Farmlet Sun., April 14, 3 p.m. Spring Tonic: A Benefit Dinner Celebrate spring while supporting local farmers at the Spring Tonic Benefit Dinner, hosted by chef Ryan Smith and mixologist Kellie Thorn of Empire State South. Details

Ponce City Market Sun., April 14, 6 p.m. New South Family Supper at Ponce City Market Celebrated chef-owners Anne Quatrano and Clifford Harrison announce the inaugural New South Family Supper, a benefit for the Southern Foodways Alliance, bringing together a cadre of the South's most innovative chefs. Details

Yeah! Burger Sun., April 14, 11 a.m. Meet the Farmer Learn where your food comes from on Yeah! Burger's greenspace. Details

Source: http://clatl.com/omnivore/archives/2013/04/08/atlanta-food-and-drink-events-april-8-14-final-four-specials-spring-harvest-dinners-and-more

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Hot Links: Investing for Status | The Reformed Broker

  • Joshua M Brown
  • April 8th, 2013

Stuff I'm Reading this Morning...

Might not be too early to begin your Sell in May tactics.? (MarketWatch)

Your market risk here could be twice the reward if historical statistics hold up.? (FatPitch)

Hussman: Zero chance of a US recession? I don't think so.? (HussmanFunds)

Cam Hui: "Defensive" stocks seem to be leading since last June in part because they're more mainly comprised of "Value" and dividend stocks.? (HumbleStudent)

Google drops down into key support levels - this is where it "should" be able to bounce.? (SeeItMarket)

Mike Harris: "arguments for passive funds that concentrate on the fee structure of actively management funds are designed to distract investors from focusing on the important issues."? (PriceActionLab)

Chess: Will the link between euro/yen strength and higher US stocks survive the spring? (iBankCoin)

American food companies working overtime to come up with new and exciting ways to make you as fucking fat as possible. Are you not entertained? (Fortune)

Can Marissa get the rank and file at Yahoo to start acting more startup-y? My suggestion: Get them pogo sticks and a case of PBR on Fridays. (NYT)

Look closely - you might be investing for social status rather than successful outcomes, the fault of your brain's primary shot caller.? (Interloping)

George Soros on China's stock market, real estate and whether or not the economic "hard landing" has already happened.? (SouthChinaMorningPost)

Maybe the best unintended consequence of European economic strife is all the topless protest going on.? (BusinessInsider)

Songs on a fat guy's iPod jogging playlist.? (Deadspin)

REMINDER: Backstage Wall Street is now on Kindle!

Full Disclosure: Nothing on this site should ever be considered to be advice, research or an invitation to buy or sell any securities, please see my Terms & Conditions page for a full disclaimer.

blog comments powered by The Reformed Broker Blog

Source: http://www.thereformedbroker.com/2013/04/08/hot-links-investing-for-status/

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Smoking may negatively impact kidney function among adolescents

Apr. 8, 2013 ? Exposure to tobacco smoke could negatively impact adolescent kidney function; this is according to a new study led by a team of researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins Children's Center. They examined the association between exposure to active smoking and kidney function among U.S. adolescents and found the effects of tobacco smoke on kidney function begin in childhood. The results are featured in the April 2013 issue of Pediatrics.

"Tobacco use and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke are major health problems for adolescents, resulting in short-term and long-term adverse health effects," said Ana Navas-Acien, MD, PhD, senior author of the study and an associate professor with the Bloomberg School's Department of Environmental Health Sciences. "In this nationally representative sample of U.S. adolescents, exposure to tobacco, including secondhand smoke and active smoking, was associated with lower estimated glomerular filtration rates -- a common measure of how well the kidneys are working. In addition, we found a modest but positive association between serum cotinine concentrations, a biomarker of tobacco exposure, among first-morning albumin to creatinine ratio. These findings further support the conclusion that tobacco smoke may damage the kidneys."

Using a cross-sectional study of 7,516 adolescents ages 12 to 17, the authors assessed participant tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke through self-reported data from a home questionnaire and serum cotinine. Participants who reported having smoked "at least one day" in the last month or "at least one cigarette" in the last month, or those who had serum cotinine concentrations over 10 ng/ml were classified as active smokers. Secondhand smoke exposure was defined as non-active smokers who reported living with at least one person who smoked, or who had cotinine levels greater than or equal to 0.05 ng/ml, but less than or equal to 10 ng/ml even if they reported not living with a smoker. Participants with serum cotinine levels below 0.05 ng/ml, not living with a smoker and not smoking in the last month, were classified as unexposed to tobacco.

Earlier studies examining U.S. adolescent tobacco exposure have indicated more than 600,000 middle school students and 3 million high school students smoke cigarettes and 15 percent of non-smoking adolescents report exposure to secondhand smoke at home. Among adolescents, active smoking has been associated with increased asthma risk, reduced lung function and growth, early atherosclerotic lesions and increased cancer risk as well as premature mortality in adulthood. According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, smoking is also a risk factor for several autoimmune diseases, including Crohn's disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

"Small changes in the distribution of estimated glomerular filtration rate levels in the population could have a substantial impact in kidney-related illness, as it is well known for changes in blood pressure levels and hypertension-related disease. Evaluating potential secondhand smoke exposure and providing recommendations to minimize exposure should continue to be incorporated as part of children's routine medical care," noted Jeffrey Fadrowski, MD, MHS, co-author of the study and an assistant professor in Pediatric Nephrology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

"Tobacco as a chronic kidney disease risk factor is of great concern given the high prevalence of use and the chronicity that most often accompanies this exposure. Protecting young people from active smoking is essential since nearly 80 percent of adults who smoke begin smoking by 18 years of age," said Navas-Acien.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Esther Garc?a-Esquinas, Lauren F. Loeffler, Virginia M. Weaver, Jeffrey J. Fadrowski, and Ana Navas-Acien. Kidney Function and Tobacco Smoke Exposure in US Adolescents. Pediatrics, 2013 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-3201d

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/most_popular/~3/nW0pbiakyh8/130408152955.htm

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China warns against "troublemaking" on Korean peninsula

By Ben Blanchard and Jane Chung

BEIJING/SEOUL (Reuters) - China warned against "troublemaking" on its doorstep, in an apparent rebuke to North Korea, and the United States said it was postponing a missile test to help calm high tension on the divided Korean peninsula.

The North, led by 30-year-old Kim Jong-un, has been issuing vitriolic threats of war against the United States and U.S.-backed South Korea since the United Nations imposed sanctions in response to its third nuclear weapon test in February.

Pyongyang's anger appears heightened by U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises. But most analysts say it has no intention of starting a conflict that would bring its own destruction and instead is out to wring concessions from a nervous international community.

The North told diplomats late last week to consider leaving Pyongyang because of the tension, but embassies appeared to view the appeal as more rhetoric and staff have stayed put.

South Korea said it was ready for any kind of action that the North's unpredictable leaders might make - including a possible missile launch - by Wednesday, after which the North said it could not guarantee diplomats' safety.

China, North Korea's sole financial and diplomatic backer, has shown growing irritation with Pyongyang's warnings of nuclear war.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, addressing a forum on the southern island of Hainan, did not name North Korea but said no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain".

Stability in Asia, he said, "faces new challenges, as hot spot issues keep emerging and both traditional and non-traditional security threats exist".

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi expressed similar frustration in a statement late on Saturday, relating a telephone conversation with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

"We oppose provocative words and actions from any party in the region and do not allow trouble making on China's doorstep," Wang said, according to a ministry statement on its website.

On Sunday, the ministry expressed "grave concern" at rising tension and said China had asked North Korea to "ensure the safety of Chinese diplomats in North Korea, in accordance with the Vienna Convention and international laws and norms".

China's embassy, it said, was "understood" to be operating normally in Pyongyang.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, addressing the Hainan forum, said avoiding conflict on the peninsula was vital. "There, any aggression is a threat to the interests of every country in the region," she said.

British Foreign Minister William Hague said North Korea's nuclear ambitions had to be taken seriously.

Interviewed by Sky News, he said the international response "should also be very clear, very united and calm at all times because it's important not to feed that frenetic rhetoric that we've seen over the last few weeks".

Switzerland's Foreign Ministry offered to mediate, saying it was "always willing to help find a solution, if this is the wish of the parties, such as hosting meetings between them".

Kim, the third member of his dynasty to rule North Korea, is thought to have spent several years in Switzerland being educated under a pseudonym. He took over in December 2011 after the death of his father Kim Jong-il, who confronted South Korea and the United States throughout his 17-year rule.

FEAR OF "MISCALCULATION"

In Washington, a defense official said a long-scheduled test of the Minuteman III intercontinental missile, due to take place at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, would be postponed.

"This test ... has been delayed to avoid any misperception or miscalculation in light of recent tensions on the Korean peninsula," the official said on Saturday. "This is the logical, prudent and responsible course of action to take."

He said the test had been unconnected to "anything related to North Korea" and added that another test launch could be expected next month. The United States remained fully prepared to respond to any North Korean threat, the official said.

The South Korean president's office said the country had a "firm military readiness" for any eventuality. It described as "planned behavior" the North's call for South Korean workers to leave the Kaesong joint industrial park, just inside North Korea, and for diplomats to evacuate Pyongyang by Wednesday.

"Ahead of that time, a situation like a North Korean missile launch could occur," Kim Haing, a spokeswoman for the presidential Blue House, quoted the chief of the National Security office as saying. "As of now, there are no signs of all-out war, but if a local conflict breaks out, North Korea should be aware that it will pay the price."

South Korean media said on Friday the North had moved two medium-range missiles to the country's east coast, but there has been no confirmation of such a move.

The North has always condemned joint exercises off the South Korean coast, but its rhetoric has been especially furious this year as the United States sent nuclear-capable stealth bombers from their home bases.

North Korean state television showed a military training session, with soldiers putting dogs through their paces, including one seen tearing to pieces an effigy of South Korean Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin. Soldiers were shown firing at pictures of the minister and a depiction of a U.S. serviceman.

"As you all know, on the Korean peninsula, it is not a matter of whether we will have a war or not, but whether it will take place today or tomorrow," an unidentified soldier said.

"This is a situation like being on the eve of a big explosion. Every minute, every second counts. We are right now set to march, once the order is given."

There was no evidence of any tension in the South Korean capital, Seoul, with residents strolling in the city center on a chilly spring day.

(Writing by Ron Popeski and Andrew Roche; Additional reporting by Koh Gui Qing in Hainan and Phil Stewart in Washington; Editing by David Stamp)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/embassies-staying-put-north-korea-despite-tension-001315898--business.html

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

HBOS bosses to blame for bank's failure - parliamentarians

By Matt Scuffham

LONDON (Reuters) - Bailed out British lender HBOS would have failed even without the 2008 financial crisis, a panel of parliamentarians said in a report which blamed three men still in positions of influence in business and politics.

The Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards, tasked with finding ways to reform UK banks, said HBOS was an "accident waiting to happen," with bad lending and losses across the business likely to have led to its insolvency even without the funding and liquidity problems of the financial crisis.

Although regulators bore some of the blame, primary responsibility lay with Dennis Stevenson, chairman from the formation of HBOS in 2001 until its collapse, and former chief executives James Crosby and Andy Hornby, it said on Friday.

There was a "colossal failure of senior management and the board", said Commission chairman Andrew Tyrie, a Conservative MP who expressed surprise that only Peter Cummings, who was head of corporate lending at HBOS, had so far been punished.

Cummings was fined 500,000 pounds by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) in September and banned for life from the industry.

HBOS, Britain's biggest mortgage lender, had to be rescued via a government-engineered takeover by rival Lloyds, which subsequently needed a 20-billion-pound bailout to survive.

The Commission said the regulator should consider if Stevenson, Crosby and Hornby should be barred from working within the financial services industry in the future.

Hornby, who since leaving HBOS has worked as chief executive of healthcare group Alliance Boots and is currently the boss of betting shop chain Coral, declined to comment on the report.

Crosby, a senior independent director at the world's biggest catering company Compass and an adviser to private equity firm Bridgepoint, as well as Stevenson, who sits in the upper chamber of parliament, could not be reached for comment.

HBOS was created in 2001 by a merger between Halifax, a former English building society, and the 300-year-old Bank of Scotland. It ramped up lending using cheap funding on the wholesale markets rather than safer customer deposits, and its high-risk strategy was exposed when that funding dried up following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

HBOS's managers blamed the financial crisis for the collapse. But the Commission said the bank's business model was inherently flawed and its board was a "model of self-delusion."

"The sums would never have added up," Tyrie said.

"The Commission has estimated that, taken together, the losses incurred by the corporate, international and treasury divisions would have led to insolvency, regardless of funding and liquidity problems, had HBOS not been bailed out by both Lloyds and the taxpayer," he said.

The Commission said 25 billion pounds was lost on bad corporate loans and there were losses of 15 billion at its international business and 7 billion at its treasury unit.

Crosby was chief executive of HBOS between 2001 and 2006 before being succeeded by Hornby.

(Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hbos-bosses-blame-banks-failure-parliamentarians-230834078--finance.html

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EU: Nuclear talks with Iran have failed

ALMATY, Kazakhstan (AP) ? Iran and six world powers failed to reach agreement Saturday on an approach to reducing fears that Tehran might use its nuclear technology to make weapons, with the EU's foreign policy chief declaring that the two sides "remain far apart on substance."

Expectations that the negotiations were making progress rose as an afternoon session was extended into the evening. But comments by the two sides made clear that they failed to make enough headway to qualify the meeting as a success.

"What matters in the end is substance, and ... we are still a considerable distance apart," Catherine Ashton, the European Union's head of foreign policy, told reporters at the end of the two-day talks.

Ashton said negotiators would now consult with their capitals. She made no mention of plans for a new meeting ? another sign that the gap dividing the two sides remains substantial.

Chief Iranian negotiator Saeed Jalili spoke of "some distance between the positions of the two sides." He suggested Iran was ready to discuss meeting a key demand of the other side ? cutting back its highest-grade uranium enrichment production and stockpile ? but only if the six reciprocated with concessions far greater than they are now willing to make.

Iran's 20 percent enriched uranium is just a step away from weapons-grade uranium. Stopping its production and shipping out most of it would keep Iran's supply below the amount needed for further processing into a weapon.

The six ? the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany ? say the Islamic Republic must meet its demand on 20 percent uranium, and make that move first, to build confidence that its nuclear program is peaceful.

But Iran wants greater rewards for any concessions that the six are ready to give. They have offered to lift sanctions on Iran's gold transactions and petrochemical trade. But Tehran wants much more substantial sanctions relief. It seeks an end to international penalties crippling its oil trade and financial transactions.

Jalili questioned that it was up to Iran to make the first step, saying it was up to the six powers to demonstrate their "willingness and sincerity." He urged them to "take appropriate confidence-building steps in the future" ? shorthand for Iran's request to lift major sanctions and offer other concessions.

The talks already seemed to run into trouble shortly after they began Friday with a Western diplomat saying Iran's response to the offer from the group fell short of what the six wanted and instead amounted to a "reworking" of proposals it made last year at negotiations that broke up in disagreement.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-nuclear-talks-iran-failed-135020075.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Opinions Differ Widely On The Effectiveness of Apple's Apology In China

People queue up to buy the new iPad during its China launch at the Apple store in ShanghaiTim Cook’s apology to Apple’s Chinese customers has divided observers, some of whom claim that the public mea culpa might undermine the Cupertino company by giving credence to government criticism. Cook’s letter was posted (link via Google Translate)?on the Chinese Apple Web site on Monday after two weeks?of heated attacks by China’s state-run media. Cook focused on Apple’s communication over its warranty and said the company would change its repair policy for iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S devices sold in China. “We realize a lack of communication in this process has led to speculation that Apple is arrogant and doesn’t care about or value consumers’ feedback,” wrote Cook. “We sincerely apologize for any concern or misunderstanding this has brought to customers. The wording of Cook’s apology made it seem like a direct response to an article published by People’s Daily, the Chinese government’s official newspaper, that called the company “arrogant,” as well as a China Central Television’s investigative program that claimed Apple’s warranty practices discriminates against Chinese iPhone owners. (Other recent attacks by state-run media agencies included a report by official government press agency Xinhua, which blamed Apple for an increase in high-interest loans taken out by students to buy ?fancy electronic products.?) At stake is Apple’s second-biggest and fastest-growing market: “Greater China” (the term used to describe the market including China, Hong Kong and Taiwan) accounted for 13 percent of Apple’s sales last year. Cook’s apology earned the Cupertino company pats on the head by the state media and government officials.?The Global Times, published by the People’s Daily, wrote, “the company’s apology letter has eased the situation, softening the tense relationship between Apple and the Chinese market.”?Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei also told the press during a daily news briefing that “we approve of what Apple said.” Despite the onslaught of highly critical articles, many Chinese netizens seemed dubious about the charges against Apple.?In fact, the company may have undermined its positive image among consumers by issuing an apology, Shaun Rein, managing director and founder of China Market Research Group, told Bloomberg. “After the criticism started taking place, my firm went out and interviewed about 30 Chinese consumers. The vast majority of them said ‘why is the media attacking Apple? Apple is known for great service,’” Rein said. “The consumers are saying the media should be attacking, say the pigs in the river, which is really disgusting.” “The problem

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/KKCcawTrw54/

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Sanford's fiancee appears (CNN)

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Our Favorite Soundbars, Streaming Boxes, Stoves, and More

Winter's slowly winding down, and no doubt, the warm weather is beginning to beckon what with the birds and the sunshine and the joyful frolicking and whatnot. And we'd be out there enjoying it, too... if this past month hadn't given us a whole slew of gadgets to stay inside drooling over. Ah well—the sun looks just as good from a window, anyway. More »


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Global warming mystery: Are North and South really polar opposites?

Two studies, one about plants covering previously frozen landscapes in the Arctic, the other about expanding winter sea ice in Antarctica, appear to say different things about global warming.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / April 1, 2013

A Greenpeace activist dressed as a polar bear floats on the Moskva River to protest oil drilling in the Arctic, in Moscow, Russia, April 1, 2013.

Mikhail Metzel / AP

Enlarge

The amount of land in the high Arctic covered by trees and upright shrubs could increase by up to 52 percent by midcentury, warming the region to levels climate scientists had previously not expected to see there until 2100.

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That's the take-home message from a new study that looks at statistical ties between climate and vegetation types to estimate how the Arctic's landscape could change with global warming. The impact of the vegetation changes on the region's climate not only would be felt at lower latitudes through changing atmospheric circulation patterns, researchers say. The changes also would affect the range and types of wildlife in the area and the livelihoods of the Inuit who rely on the wildlife for food.

The results are appearing just as a new study from the bottom of the world offers an explanation as to why warming in Antarctica might appear to some people to be on hold, given a 20-year trend of expansion in winter sea ice.

Taken together, the two studies highlight the ways in which human-triggered warming averaged over the entire planet can play out in unique ways in specific regions of the globe ? in this case, two regions that play a critical role in Earth's climate system as "sinks" for heat generated in tropics.

At the top of the world, warming at the surface has occurred at nearly twice the rate of warming as the world as a whole. Some studies indicate that the winter temperatures have been rising at least four times faster than the summer temperatures. This warming has brought trees and woody, upright shrubs to areas once dominated by tundra.

Previous studies of the impact of a greener Arctic on the region's climate indicated the trend would reinforce warming.

On the one hand, a green canopy could shade soils once the snow melts, keeping them cooler than they otherwise would be and slowing the release of CO2 from soils.?But a darker canopy also would capture and reradiate heat ? warming the air earlier in the spring and slowing the return of cold temperatures in the fall. In addition, during the growing season, trees give off water vapor, a potent greenhouse gas, through a process known as evapotranspiration. This also would tend to reinforce warming in the region.

Earlier studies had suggested that the factors that reinforce warming would win out, contributing 0.66 to 1.8 degrees Celsius (about 1.2 to 3 degrees Fahrenheit) to Arctic warming. But modelers had to make a best guess on how much additional land would be covered by trees and upright shrubs. They settled on an increase of about 20 percent by 2100.

A team led by Richard Pearson of the American Museum of Natural History in New York took a different approach. They used statistical tools to determine the climate conditions each of 10 broad vegetation types could tolerate. Then they used climate models to explore the range of conditions the models projected for the Arctic by 2050. The two sets of results allowed them to estimate the new ranges for the vegetation types. Some, such as trees and upright shrubs migrated north. Other types, in coastal regions with nowhere farther north to go, vanished.

The approach has been used for other regions, notes Scott Goetz, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Research Institute in Woods Hole, Mass., and a member of the team performing the study. But, he adds, its the first time anyone has applied the technique to the Arctic.

Overall, the team found that if climate-induced shifts in plant types were patchy, the changes would affect 48 to 69 percent of the Arctic regions they studied above 60 degrees north latitude. Those regions spanned northern Russia, northern Alaska, and northern Canada.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Glq64U46Mwk/Global-warming-mystery-Are-North-and-South-really-polar-opposites

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Slovenia backs Croatia's EU entry after bank dispute set aside

LJUBLJANA (Reuters) - Slovenia ratified Croatia's European Union accession bid on Tuesday after the two ex-Yugoslav republics agreed last month to set aside a 20-year old dispute over a shuttered bank that had blocked Zagreb's entry path.

Croatia concluded EU accession talks in 2011 but needs all 27 EU members to ratify its entry before it can join the bloc on July 1. With neighboring Slovenia's parliament voting unanimously in favor, 23 member states have done that so far.

Germany, Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands are expected to follow suit, after the European Commission said last month that Croatia had met all requirements and was ready to join.

Slovenia had until now kept Croatia on hold because of a dispute over Slovenian lender Ljubljanska Banka (LB). LB closed down without reimbursing its Croatian depositors when Slovenia and Croatia declared independence in 1991.

Croatia agreed in March to suspend a lawsuit before its courts, in which it is seeking reimbursement from Ljubljana. Further talks on LB will be held under the auspices of the Swiss-based Bank for International Settlement.

Croatia will be only the second former Yugoslav republic to join the EU. Montenegro started the accession talks last year while Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia and Kosovo have yet to do so.

(Reporting by Zoran Radosavljevic; Editing by John Stonestreet)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/slovenia-backs-croatias-eu-entry-bank-dispute-set-101302372.html

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Monday, April 1, 2013

Iranian tourists in Egypt showcase warming ties

LUXOR, Egypt (AP) ? More than 50 Iranian tourists arrived by boat to the ancient city of Luxor on Monday as part of a rare visit that showcases how much ties between the two countries have warmed since Islamist President Mohammed Morsi came to power last year.

Diplomatic relations were frozen for decades after Egypt signed the 1979 peace treaty with Israel and Iran went through the Islamic Revolution. But Morsi has been reaching out to Tehran since he came to power in June 2012.

Morsi broke barriers by visiting Tehran after his June election, marking the first visit by an Egyptian leader in more than three decades. Months later, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Cairo to attend a conference of Islamic nations.

There is a new bilateral deal to promote tourism and improve relations between the regional heavyweights. And the group of Iranian tourists arrived on some of the first commercial flights between the two countries in 30 years, according to a security official.

Their movements will be restricted, including a ban on visiting Egypt's capital, following objections from some ultraconservative Sunni Muslims to receiving visitors from Shiite Iran.

Members of the Salafi movement in Egypt, like other Sunni hardliners around the region, consider Shiites heretics, and fear Iran is trying to spread its practices among Sunnis.

A visiting Iranian official was heckled by Salafi protesters last week as he tried to make his way to a conference organized by the Sunni world's most prestigious learning institute, al-Azhar, briefly stopping the meeting.

The Iranian tourists will only be allowed to visit certain areas, such as ancient cities and Red Sea resorts like Sharm el-Sheikh. Cairo has several Shiite shrines that the tourists will not be visiting.

Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs said in a news conference in Cairo on Monday that tourists from his country don't have a religious agenda and that they are coming to Egypt to support its economy.

"Iran has no agenda to manage Egyptian mosques," he said. "Iranian and Egyptian relations are at the best."

The group reached Luxor late Monday in a tourist boat coming down the Nile from the southern city of Aswan. The docking area, opposite a major security station in the city, was heavily guarded.

They are expected to spend the night on the boat. The group is visiting ancient Egyptian sites in Luxor, including the famed open-air Karnak Temple and the Valley of the Kings where Tutankhamen's tomb lies. They will spend a night in the city after already having spent nearly two days in another ancient southern city, Aswan.

Luxor resident Wael Ibrahim said that his union of tour guides is happy to welcome the Iranians to Egypt, where tourism has been devastated following two years of turmoil and protests around the country.

Thousands of people who work in the tourism industry have lost their jobs, affecting the country's already weakened economy.

Bakri Abdul-Jalil, who owns shops in Luxor that sell trinkets and other souvenirs, said that other regional tensions have not stopped tourists from coming to Egypt.

"All are welcome to Egypt. Other tourists, like Israelis coming to the Sinai Peninsula, do not need a (prior) visa and no one is objecting to that," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iranian-tourists-egypt-showcase-warming-ties-210223546.html

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Theatre: Midnight in Moscow is Dean Parker's new... | Stuff.co.nz

Costello

Wars and peace: Doctor Zhivago is at the centre of Dean Parker?s play set in Russia at the onset of the Cold War and New Zealander Paddy Costello?s ties to communism.

In?1949 the First Secretary at the New Zealand Legation in Moscow, Paddy Costello, was visiting the Russian poet (and subsequent author of Doctor Zhivago) Boris Pasternak when Pasternak was called away to the phone.

According to James McNeish's enthralling 2007 biography of Costello, The Sixth Man, Costello related how his stunned host "returned after some minutes white-faced, in a state of shock, saying, ?That was Stalin. He says he is writing a poem. He wanted my advice'."

Costello sounds a corker bloke. Born 1912, raised in a grocery in Ponsonby not far from where I live, then on to Auckland Grammar and Auckland Uni, brilliant linguist and classicist, scholarship to Cambridge 1932, joined Communist Party 1935, met and within three weeks married fellow comrade Bella Lerner, Long Range Desert Group during the war, right-hand man to General Freyberg, renowned for pitch-perfect ballads sung at booze-ups, career diplomat until 1954, then let go after suspicion of being a Soviet agent. Died 1964 (heart attack). A quick and sensational life.

What stands out, of course, is suspicion of being a Soviet agent.

In 1954 two atom bomb spies working for the Russians arrived in Paris from the United States and were issued with New Zealand passports under the false names Peter and Helen Kroger. This enabled them to enter Britain and set up shop until arrested in 1961.

When The Mitrokhin Archive - a cache of documents smuggled out of Russia by a senior officer of the Soviet Foreign Intelligence service - was published in 1999, it revealed that a list of the Paris KGB's "particularly valuable agents" in 1953 included an agent at the New Zealand consulate code-named "LONG". This was 6ft 2in Paddy Costello whom, the Archive claimed, issued the Krogers with their kiwi passports.

McLeish's biography coolly and forensically demolishes the claim that Costello issued the Krogers' passports. The passport applications were taken by another member of the consulate, Doug Zohrab, and signed off by the Charge d'Affaires, Jean McKenzie.

Of course proving Costello had no hand in the issuing of the Krogers' passports is one thing, proving he wasn't a Soviet agent code-named LONG entirely another. The term "agent" presumably covered a multitude of dealings. Costello had an Irish background, learnt Irish, would have seen the Union Jack as a butcher's apron and the Empire a racket where Britain waived the rules, would have had no compunction in passing on to anyone anything and everything he was privy to about London's continued meddling in, say, the Middle East pre-Suez. I would have done the same.

But he loved his family, admired and was loyal (in his own way) to his wife, didn't exploit or oppress anyone, liked a drop and sang at parties. He was "unforgettably good company" according to his mate and fellow son of Irish immigrants the wonderful Southland novelist and short story writer Dan Davin, "an unscrupulous arguer, the subject of countless stories, a man who could make any occasion come alive". Who cares if he was a Russian spy? I've noticed women don't. Women have a much more honest and personal view of what constitutes treachery. It's only blokes who care about whether or not he was a spy.

When I wrote Midnight in Moscow (opening at the Maidment Theatre in Auckland in April, then in a second production at Circa in Wellington in May), I had Costello in mind as I fashioned one of the characters, Hugh Toomey.

The play takes place in the Russian capital in 1947, right at the onset of the cold war.

It's a play of four acts, standard Chekhov.

Three of the acts are set inside the New Zealand Legation where there's a line-up of entertaining and hard-drinking figures from the foreign service.

The remaining act, occurring in the first half, is set among the pine trees and cucumber patch of Boris Pasternak's dacha in Peredelkino, a leafy riverside retreat outside Moscow.

There Hugh Toomey, Second Secretary at the Legation, makes regular visits to argue politics and literature with Pasternak - just like Costello.

When he was stationed in Moscow, Costello edited a volume of 20th century Russian poetry published by the Oxford University Press. He regularly met up with Boris Pasternak.

Like Costello, Hugh has been asked by Pasternak to do the English translation of the novel he is working on, Doctor Zhivago, a novel which portrayed the devastation wrought on Russia following the 1917 revolution and which will eventually win Pasternak the Nobel prize for literature and prove a major humiliation for the Soviets.

But Hugh dislikes what he has seen of Zhivago.

So did Costello.

Costello felt the book was a failure as a novel. "The characters exist simply to talk and listen to Doctor Zhivago," he wrote later. "The narrative is as feeble as the character-drawing."

But what irked Costello more was Pasternak's (and his alter ego Zhivago's) lack of enthusiasm for Russian Communism. Responding to Zhivago's famous denunciation of building the Soviet state, that "man is born to live, not to prepare for life," Costello tartly retorts, "To ?live' in the Zhivago sense one must be fortunate enough to possess a decent unearned income," and "Zhivago's conduct is in keeping with his philosophy of life, which includes an unconditional denial of all obligations to society."

Costello saw the Soviet Union as the forward base of the march of history and the Communist Party as its line of supply. According to one report, Pasternak complained of Costello "insisting on every possible and impossible occasion that he should get closer to the Party".

And in the play these are the arguments we hear from Hugh.

And again in the play the phone rings and it's Stalin calling for Pasternak.

But this time it's not the call that Pasternak recounted to Costello, the call about poetic advice; "Stalin needs an envoi for his latest sonnet," might have got an easy laugh but I could see no real payoff in terms of where the play was taking me. So I changed it. I changed it to an earlier call that Stalin made Pasternak. A more lethal call.

In 1934 Lenin had been dead for 10 years and the Soviet Union was in the glacial grip of Stalin. The Party had replaced the people, and the General Secretary the Party. Moscow had become a place of the chill midnight tap on the door.

On an evening in June that year Stalin rang Pasternak and asked if he thought the poet Osip Mandelstam was a genius as Mandelstam had just been arrested and "the Soviet Union does not arrest geniuses". We know from various reported accounts that Pasternak rambled on about how Mandelstam was from a different school of writing to himself but then straightened up and said he needed to talk to Stalin "about love, about life, about death". Stalin went silent, then said something along the lines of, "If it was me getting arrested, I'd hope my friends would stick up for me better." And hung up. And fair enough.

This was the phone call I used in the play, because I thought it gives a better insight into Pasternak, his little vanities and delusions.

Gives an insight into pretty much all writers, really.

Costello's life was compromised by Stalinism. He failed to see Russia's revolution had changed in its class base and character, and carried on as a Stalinist cheer-leader.

But Pasternak was compromised as well. He had supported the revolution in 1917, lost his faith to a considerable degree in the 20s but seemed to believe that all that was needed in the post-revolutionary 30s was some sort of guidance in spiritual values from the top. When that proved impossible, or mistaken, he retreated into art and mystical pronouncements on life and love.

What was needed was a different debate about how we are to live.

Hence the play.

Midnight in Moscow, Maidment Theatre. April 11 to May 4, directed by Colin McColl; Circa Theatre May 11 May to June 8, directed by Susan Wilson.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

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Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/arts/8478959/The-Kiwi-and-the-Kremlin

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Texas DA slain in his home; had armed himself

KAUFMAN, Texas (AP) ? Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland took no chances after one of his assistant prosecutors was gunned down two months ago. McLelland said he carried a gun everywhere he went and was extra careful when answering the door at his home.

"I'm ahead of everybody else because, basically, I'm a soldier," the 23-year Army veteran said in an interview less than two weeks ago.

On Saturday, he and his wife were found shot to death in their rural home just outside the town of Forney, about 20 miles from Dallas.

While investigators gave no motive for the killings, Forney Mayor Darren Rozell said: "It appears this was not a random act."

"Everybody's a little on edge and a little shocked," he said.

The slayings came less than two weeks after Colorado's prison chief was shot to death at his front door, apparently by an ex-convict, and a couple of months after Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was killed in a parking lot a block from his courthouse office. No arrests have been made in Hasse's slaying Jan. 31.

McLelland, 63, is the 13th prosecutor killed in the U.S. since the National Association of District Attorneys began keeping count in the 1960s.

Sheriff David Byrnes would not give details Sunday of how the killings unfolded and said there was nothing to indicate for certain whether the DA's slaying was connected to Hasse's.

El Paso County, Colo., sheriff's spokesman Sgt. Joe Roybal said investigators had found no evidence so far connecting the Texas killings to the Colorado case, but added: "We're examining all possibilities."

Colorado's corrections director, Tom Clements, was killed March 19 when he answered the doorbell at his home outside Colorado Springs. Evan Spencer Ebel, a white supremacist and former Colorado inmate suspected of shooting Clements, died in a shootout with Texas deputies two days later about 100 miles from Kaufman.

McLelland himself, in an Associated Press interview shortly after the Colorado slaying, raised the possibility that Hasse was gunned down by a white supremacist gang.

McLelland, elected DA in 2010, said his office had prosecuted several cases against racist gangs, who have a strong presence around Kaufman County, a mostly rural area dotted with subdivisions, with a population of about 104,000.

"We put some real dents in the Aryan Brotherhood around here in the past year," he said.

In recent years, the DA's office also prosecuted a case in which a justice of the peace was found guilty of theft and burglary and another case in which a man was convicted of killing his former girlfriend and her 10-year-old daughter.

McLelland said he carried a gun everywhere he went, even to walk his dog around town, a bedroom community for the Dallas area. He figured assassins were more likely to try to attack him outside. He said he had warned all his employees to be constantly on the alert.

"The people in my line of work are going to have to get better at it," he said of dealing with the danger, "because they're going to need it more in the future."

The number of attacks on prosecutors, judges and senior law enforcement officers in the U.S. has spiked in the past three years, according to Glenn McGovern, an investigator with the Santa Clara County, Calif., district attorney's office who tracks such cases.

For about a month after Hasse's slaying, sheriff's deputies were parked in the district attorney's driveway, said Sam Rosander, a McLelland neighbor.

The FBI and the Texas Rangers joined the investigation into the McLellands' deaths.

McLelland and his wife, Cynthia, 65, were the parents of two daughters and three sons. One son is a police officer in Dallas. The couple had moved into the home a few years ago, Rozell said.

"Real friendly, became part of our community quickly," Rozell said. "They were a really pleasant, happy couple."

___

Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writers Michael Graczyk in Houston, Angela K. Brown in Fort Worth and P. Solomon Banda in Denver contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-da-slain-home-had-armed-himself-175942683.html

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