'Bachelor Pad' 3 Cast Reveals Clues About Emily Maynard's Final Choice

The summer television schedule is usually kind of a bore, but fans of The Bachelor & The Bachelorette can rest assured that they will receive their full dose of insane reality TV drama when Bachelor Pad 3 premieres on Monday, July 23 on ABC. (Pardon me while I stand up and do a bit of a "woo-hoo!") And while I've been avoiding Reality Steve's website like the plague these days because I'm trying to enjoy Emily Maynard's season of The Bachelorette without any spoilers -- I can't help but be a little bit excited about the unofficial Bachelor Pad 3 cast list that he published. While most of the names on the list are only rumored to be joining in on the Bachelor Pad fun this summer, there are six contestants who are 99 percent confirmed to be appearing on the show. And if these names are correct, then two of them give us key clues about who will most definitely not be putting a ring on Emily Maynard's finger. And I know I'm not the only person who is ready to stand up and cheer after hearing that Ryan Bowers and Kalon McMahon are the two dudes who will be trying their luck at finding love (and money) this summer -- and thankfully not with Emily. After this past Monday's episode, I was ready to hit both of these guys over the head with a frying pan. Between Ryan telling Emily that she better not get fat if they get married and Kalon telling her he doesn't like it when she "won't let him finish" speaking -- I'm actually kind of shocked that either of them made it through the last rose ceremony. But judging from their rumored spots on Bachelor Pad 3, it sounds like Emily isn't too far away from kicking them to the curb. And I can't wait to hear the pig-headed comments that come out of both of these two after she sends them packing. Odds are good that neither one of them will have anything remotely mature or classy to say. Based on her eliminations each week so far, Emily is one smart cookie. She's on to the little act that both Ryan & Kalon have going on -- and I can't wait to see her put both of them in their place.

Pregnant Woman's Emergency C-Section Uncovers Something Even Bigger Than Her Baby

I've heard plenty of stories about pregnant women who needed to have emergency C-sections, but when I heard about Gemma Fletcher's incredible case? All I can say is wow -- just WOW. Gemma started having complications with her pregnancy at 32 weeks, and shockingly, doctors discovered a HUGE tumor on her kidney -- which actually weighed more than the baby girl she was carrying! Doctors were worried about the tumor bursting, so she underwent an emergency Cesarean when she was 8 months pregnant. Gemma's daughter, Ava, weighed in at 6.4 pounds after delivery. And the tumor, yeah, that sucker tipped the scales at 7.5 pounds. (What are the odds?!) Doctors think she had the benign tumor since birth, but her hormones during pregnancy caused it to grow. And it's a good thing that little Ava was delivered early, because it kept growing even more after she was born. OMG. Can you imagine if they'd waited any longer to deliver the baby? I mean, Gemma's delivery wasn't normal or easy, but it probably would've been much, much worse had that tumor gotten any larger. She must've felt like she was carrying twins, and I can't even imagine her relief when her little girl came into the world safe and sound. Her jaw must have dropped when she found out her tumor was an entire pound larger than her baby! (I can't seem to get over that part.) And I guess, in a way, baby Ava actually saved her mom's life, because the tumor may not have been discovered if Gemma hadn't been pregnant. Isn't it funny how things have a way of working out like that? Baby Ava is a true miracle -- in more ways than one.

Queen Latifah Came Out for Gay Pride, But She Didn't 'Come Out'

Remember when Ellen DeGeneres came out in 1997 and what a big deal it was? Today, of course, Ellen is still a lesbian, has an enormously popular talk show, and no one seems to think about her sexual orientation (except a few moms boycotting JCPenney). Such as it is when celebrities "come out" these days. Who even really cares anymore? Speculation is now rampant that Queen Latifah just "came out" since she appeared at a Gay Pride rally in Long Beach, California. She told the crowd, "Y'all my peeps. I love you!" and "Thank you to all my favorite peeps who came out to support me." Is this a coming out? Is this just support for her LGBT fans? Who knows? Who cares? Queen Latifah, unlike some other celebrities whose sexual orientation is the source of much speculation, isn't married. Nor does she make her living as a heterosexual sex symbol. Is her sexuality anyone's concern or business? More from The Stir: Gay or Not, Raven Symone Deserves to Grow Up Don't get me wrong. I do think that it's a great thing that there are celebrities like Lance Bass, Melissa Etheridge, Ricky Martin, Jillian Michaels, and Jim Parsons, who felt it was important to make more of an announcement. Maybe they did it so that young people struggling with their sexuality can feel more at ease and have someone to look up to. I think that's a great reason. But there are other celebrities, like Raven Symone or Lindsay Lohan, who just prefer to live their lives and date whom they want. And still others, like Queen Latifah, choose to show support to the LGBT community without feeling like she has to explain exactly WHY. Someday, people will no longer feel the need to "come out" at all. Come to think of it, maybe we have reached that day.

Pregnant Tori Spelling Flaunts Bump In Revealing Monokini!


Tori Spelling celebrated the holiday weekend at her Los Angeles home, pouring her pregnancy curves and burgeoning baby bump into a scandalously sexy swimsuit and hitting the pool – and RadarOnline.com has the photo.

Tori Spelling Shows Off Her Baby Bump In A Bikini The reality star, who is several months along in her pregnancy with her fourth child with husband Dean McDermott, left very little to the imagination wearing a crocheted string monokini and Sanuk Yoga Mat sandals while frolicking around the backyard at her Memorial Day barbeque. Tori and Dean recently put their Malibu beach house on the market, asking $2.675 million for the 2,400 square foot home.

The 39-year-old, who is currently pregnant with her 4th child, flaunted her body in a daring two-piece held together by mesh in the middle while at a Memorial Day BBQ yesterday in Malibu. The actress-turned-reality star posed in the risque swimsuit with 7-month-old daughter Hattie and hubby Dean McDermott ... who was wearing Affliction board shorts. Tori isn’t the only Hollywood star to show off her baby bump in a
sexy swimsuit! To see more pregnant stars stripped down, click here.

Poonam Pandey makes Shah Rukh fool?

A new controversy has emerged about Poonam Pandey having gone nude. And surprisingly, not for her stripping! It is being alleged that her supposedly 'nude' picture, which she tweeted in support of Shah Rukh Khan's cricket team Kolkata Knight Riders winning the Indian Premier League (IPL), is actually a fake. Oops! With a little research it can be found out that this photograph, done in the backdrop of an antique-looking window and house plants, was actually shot wearing a bikini with high-heeled black shoes and a blackish-brown bead-necklace and wristband. But in its new avatar, Poonam is seen in the buff, giving rise to speculations about the new picture having been 'photoshopped' to generate fake hype. "Photographs speak for themselves. The old and new pictures are definitely from the same shoot and done at the same place," analyses Bollywood PR guru Dale Bhagwagar. "But let us also give the benefit of doubt to Ms Pandey, before pouncing on her. For all you know, she might just have decided to do away with her costume for a shot after doing the bikini pictures," comments the crisis management expert. And though the publicist speaks somewhat in her favour, Poonam has already been termed a compulsive liar by many. Indeed, this Kingfisher Calendar model has made a lot of tall claims in the past. Poonam became an instant hit when she grabbed the attention of the whole country, by claiming to go nude to celebrate Team India's World Cup win. But to the dismay of her fans mainly on Twitter, she didn't! Instead, she put out a whole lot of bikini pictures, on the lines of prototype Sherlyn Chopra. Apparently, Poonam also spread news about her entering Bigg Boss 5, claiming to have been offered a staggering 2 crores for it. That too, turned out to be false. Then she claimed she had "rejected 30 film offers". Later, Poonam declared, she signed a film by Amit Saxena, who directed the Bipasha Basu-John Abraham thriller Jism. Saxena denied her claims in the media stating, "I really want her (Poonam) to stop spreading false stories about me. Nothing has been finalized yet and I hope she stops doing this.

New Apple Retail chief John Browett Receives $61m in Stock Rights

Back in January, we reported that Apple had appointed John Browett as the new Senior Vice President of Retail. Browett left his position as CEO of Dixons Retail. Today, a couple of filings filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reveal that Browett has officially started working with the company. Browett’s starting date was revealed in an SEC Form 3 filing noting that Browett owned no stock in Apple at the time he began work. The filing reveals that on April 20th he began work at Apple, which is last Friday. As of that start date, Browett also received a total of 100,000 restricted stock units (RSUs) on Friday, with staggered vesting dates. This ensures Browett is rewarded for staying on the job. At Apple’s current stock price, those RSUs are worth around $61 million. His first batch of 5,000 units will vest on October 20, and an additional 15,000 units will vest at Browett’s one-year anniversary with the company, which is April 20, 2013. The remainder of the units will vest in batches of 20,000 units on each anniversary of his start date through the fifth year.

Nokia PureView 808 Launched In India For Rs. 29,999

Nokia PureView 808, a Symbian handset with 41 Megapixel camera sensor, has finally made its way in to the Indian market. Priced at Rs. 29,999, the device is available at Nokia’s online store. However, users can only get their hands on Nokia PureView 808 in Black. Customers interested in other colors might have to wait until first week of June. Announced at the Mobile World Congress 2012, the phone can record high-quality 1080p HD resolution videos and comes with 5.1 Dolby Digital Sound technology and can also records sounds without distortion at audio levels as high as 140dB. The phone also allows up to 3x zoom without any loss in picture quality. The Pure View 808 has a 4-inch CBD display with a disappointingly low nHD (360×640) resolution. There is also a 1.3GHz single-core processor, 16GB of on-board memory, and a microSD card slot. Nokia PureView 808 might be the last Symbian handset from Nokia considering its jump to Microsoft’s Windows Phone. This might generate some enthusiasm among hard core Symbian fanatics, however, it needs to be seen whether the device could garner similar enthusiasm from the market. Nokia PureView’s technology is also expected to be heading towards future Windows Phone handsets from Nokia.

7 Deadly Sins of Retargeting

Retargeting is a powerful digital marketing technique that can improve brand recognition, recall and revenue. Though retargeting can be a wildly effective, high-ROI solution, campaigns gone awry can leave you worse off than when you started. Avoid these seven retargeting sins, and you’ll be sure to have a successful campaign. Some retailers need to think about their re-targeting strategies! Being shown a banner left right and centre – employ a new retargeter! One of the biggest concerns most brands have before starting a retargeting campaign is the fear of annoying, creeping out, or otherwise overwhelming their consumers. The concern here is certainly a valid one, as consumer annoyance due to excessive retargteing ads is well-documented. Luckily, it’s also easy to avoid. Set a frequency cap to limit the number of impression each of your users is served. While showing too many impressions can turn users against you, not showing enough can render your retargeting campaign just as ineffective. The power of retargeting lies in its ability to keep your brand top of mind among users through continuous exposure. If you only serve a few ads throughout the month, it won’t be sufficient to solidify brand awareness and cement brand recall. In our experience, the optimal number is approximately 17-20 impressions per user per month, breaking down to roughly one impression every other day. At this level, your users won’t be inundated with ads, but will see your brand with enough frequency to solidify brand recall.
1. Showing too many impressions One of the biggest concerns most brands have before starting a retargeting campaign is the fear of annoying, creeping out, or otherwise overwhelming their consumers. The concern here is certainly a valid one, as consumer annoyance due to excessive retargteing ads is well-documented. Luckily, it’s also easy to avoid. Set a frequency cap to limit the number of impression each of your users is served.  
2. Not showing enough impressions While showing too many impressions can turn users against you, not showing enough can render your retargeting campaign just as ineffective. The power of retargeting lies in its ability to keep your brand top of mind among users through continuous exposure. If you only serve a few ads throughout the month, it won’t be sufficient to solidify brand awareness and cement brand recall. In our experience, the optimal number is approximately 17-20 impressions per user per month, breaking down to roughly one impression every other day. At this level, your users won’t be inundated with ads, but will see your brand with enough frequency to solidify brand recall.
3. Neglecting your creatives The banner ads you use may do more to determine success than any other factor of your retargeting campaign, so it’s crucial to devote sufficient resources to making beautiful ads. All of your banner ads should be well-branded and recognizable. Use bold colors, concise copy, and clear calls to action with big, clickable buttons. For more suggestions, check out our section on banner ad best practices. Even if you launch your campaign with incredibly strong creatives, running with the same set of ads for months on end will result in a lower performing campaign. According to proprietary ReTargeter data, clickthrough rates decrease by almost 50% after five months of running the same set of ads. After seeing the same ads again and again, a user’s interest is no longer peaked and the ads are more likely to blend into the background. By rotating your ad creative every few months, you can easily avoid experiencing these dips in performance.
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Klout Carries Clout In The Right Circles

Justin Bieber scored a perfect 100. Lady Gaga racked up a 94, Kim Kardashian a 91. No, this was not their high school averages. These numbers are their Klout scores; the newest way to measure people and their influence online. Klout is a San Francisco based company which looks at people’s Facebook, Twitter and other social media accounts to see who is influencing whom. “Klout measures the standard of influence. What Klout does is analyze the engagement across social networks to help people understand and benefit from their influence,” said Klout’s Lyn Fox. “It’s your ranking. It’s like being the popular kid in school” said Nick D’Annunzio of Tara Ink Public Relations. “It’s amazing the way that brands are associating Klout with where you stand in society as they look at your overall Klout score to see if they are going to market you.” Which could translate into private party invites, hotel room upgrades or free bottles of the hottest brand of scotch. If you’ve got the scores, you’ve got the influence and the clout – or would that be Klout. Tara Solomon and her partner D’Annunzio run “Tara Ink,” a high profile public relations firm which represents ‘big name’ clients. On the day CBS4’s Lisa Petrillo visited, the firm was handling the opening part of the all new “Ocean House” residences – South Beach’s newest high end condo. ”Will you in the future and do you now use Klout scores for invites to these events,” asked Petrillo. “Klout scores are a great qualifier and I think the more we’re into social media we can use it as a way to discern and invite the right people,” said Solomon. The hope is that the right people will ‘engage’ which means post to Facebook or Tweet about an event or product therefore influencing others. Believe it or not, South Floridians Klout scores are higher than average. “The average Klout score is 20,” according to Fox. “The average in Miami is 36. That’s good. People in their 50s are in the 90th percentile.” As you would imagine, celebs and politicians have very high Klout scores; President Barack Obama has a 94, Mitt Romney an 84. But ordinary folks can also achieve a high scores, but they’ll have to work on it.

Teen wins right to wear 'Jesus Is Not a Homophobe' T-shirt to school

The 16-year-old junior at Waynesville High School in Ohio has won a legal fight to wear the shirt, which was a gift from a friend’s aunt, on school grounds. “I’m really blessed and happy,” he told msnbc.com on Tuesday, a week after he learned of a court action in his favor. “It’s just really amazing. I never thought it would come out like this.” In the judgment entered May 21, U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett ordered school officials to allow Maverick to wear the T-shirt to school whenever he chooses. He also ordered the school district to pay $20,000 in damages and court costs to the teen. “We’re very happy for Maverick and all LGBT students in Ohio,” Christopher Clark, senior staff attorney for Lambda Legal, which sued on Maverick’s behalf, said in a press release. “If school officials had any doubt before, it’s clear now: First Amendment rights apply to all students on every day of the year, and efforts to silence LGBT youth will not go unchallenged.” The settlement ends a legal fight that began a little more than a year ago. According to court documents, Couch wore the T-shirt with a rainbow-colored Ichthys, or “sign of the fish,” and lettering that read “Jesus Is Not a Homophobe” to school in April 2011 in observation of the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network’s “Day of Silence.” The principal, Randy Gebhardt, called Maverick into his office and instructed him to turn the shirt inside-out. Maverick complied. He wore the T-shirt to school again the next day. This time, his mother was called in and he was told to remove the T-shirt or face suspension. Maverick again complied. Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com When school resumed in the fall, Maverick asked the principal for permission to wear the T-shirt. Again, he was told he would be suspended if he did so. That’s when he and his mother turned to lawyers. In January, Lambda Legal sent the school district a letter outlining Maverick’s First Amendment rights and stating he had the right to wear the shirt. The school district responded that “the message communicated by the student’s T-shirt is sexual in nature and therefore indecent and inappropriate in a school setting.” The school district’s response continued: “Wayne Local School District Board of Education had the right to limit clothing with sexual slogans, especially in light what was then a highly charged atmosphere, in order to protect its students and enhance the educational environment. Consequently, the high school principal was well within the bounds of his authority to request that the student remove his T-shirt and refrain from wearing the T-shirt in the future.” Last month Lambda Legal sued the Wayne Local School District on Maverick’s behalf, contending the district was violating the teen’s First Amendment right to free speech.

Causeway Cannibal Identified; Fears Grow Over Drug Possibly Involved

The crime shocked South Florida and has drawn the attention of the world. A naked man is shot by Miami Police while eating another naked man’s face on the MacArthur Causeway. As the story quickly went viral across the Internet, some have likened the attack to one by a zombie. Details of the unthinkable attack included police reporting that when they ordered the cannibal to stop, he looked up with blood on his face and growled at officers. The suspected cannibal has been identified by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner’s officer as 31-year-old Rudy Eugene. Eugene may have been homeless at the time of the attack, his last known address was in North Miami. Eugene grew up in South Florida and attended North Miami Beach High in the late 90′s, where he played for the school’s football team according to CBS4 news partner The Miami Herald. He later transferred to North Miami Senior high. Court records showed he was married to Jenny Ductant in 2005 and divorced two years later. Ductant declined to talk about her ex-husband when contacted by CBS4 reporter Gio Benitez Since news of the attack first broke, the big question has been why did Eugene attack the other man, why were they naked, and why did the attacker turn into a cannibal on the causeway? The president of the Miami Fraternal Order of Police, Armando Aguilar believes the entire incident is the fault of a new drug trend that has led to similar incidents. Emergency room doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital said they too have seen a major increase in cases linked to the street drug called “bath salts” or what is sometimes referred to on the street as “the new LSD”. “We noticed an increase probably after Ultra Fest,” said emergency room Dr. Paul Adams, at Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Causeway Cannibal Identified; Fears Grow Over Drug Possibly Involved

The crime shocked South Florida and has drawn the attention of the world. A naked man is shot by Miami Police while eating another naked man’s face on the MacArthur Causeway. As the story quickly went viral across the Internet, some have likened the attack to one by a zombie. Details of the unthinkable attack included police reporting that when they ordered the cannibal to stop, he looked up with blood on his face and growled at officers. Click here for the original story about the cannibalistic attack. The suspected cannibal has been identified by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner’s officer as 31-year-old Rudy Eugene. Eugene may have been homeless at the time of the attack, his last known address was in North Miami. Eugene grew up in South Florida and attended North Miami Beach High in the late 90′s, where he played for the school’s football team according to CBS4 news partner The Miami Herald. He later transferred to North Miami Senior high. Court records showed he was married to Jenny Ductant in 2005 and divorced two years later. Ductant declined to talk about her ex-husband when contacted by CBS4 reporter Gio Benitez Since news of the attack first broke, the big question has been why did Eugene attack the other man, why were they naked, and why did the attacker turn into a cannibal on the causeway? The president of the Miami Fraternal Order of Police, Armando Aguilar believes the entire incident is the fault of a new drug trend that has led to similar incidents. Emergency room doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital said they too have seen a major increase in cases linked to the street drug called “bath salts” or what is sometimes referred to on the street as “the new LSD”. “We noticed an increase probably after Ultra Fest,” said emergency room Dr. Paul Adams, at Jackson Memorial Hospital. In many of the cases, Dr. Adams said the person’s temperature has risen to an extremely high level, they’ve become very aggressive. Some have used their jaws as a weapon during attacks. Dr. Adams said the patients were in a state of delirium. They were “Extremely strong, I took care of a 150 pound individual who you would have thought he was 250 pounds,” Dr. Adams said. “It took six security officers to restrain the individual.” Adams said the extreme strength and violence of patients on “bath salts” has become a significant threat to all those charged with the task of trying to help those high on the drug, which unlike the original LSD is a stimulant. “It’s dangerous for the police,” Adams said. “It’s dangerous for the fire fighters. It’s dangers for the hospital workers taking care of them because they come in, they have to be restrained both chemically and physically and you’re asking for someone to get hurt.” Aguilar said drug dealers aren’t aware that the liability could fall back on them.

The Enigma 1,800 Miles Below Us

As if the inside story of our planet weren’t already the ultimate potboiler, a host of new findings has just turned the heat up past Stygian. Geologists have long known that Earth’s core, some 1,800 miles beneath our feet, is a dense, chemically doped ball of iron roughly the size of Mars and every bit as alien. It’s a place where pressures bear down with the weight of 3.5 million atmospheres, like 3.5 million skies falling at once on your head, and where temperatures reach 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit — as hot as the surface of the Sun. It’s a place where the term “ironclad agreement” has no meaning, since iron can’t even agree with itself on what form to take. It’s a fluid, it’s a solid, it’s twisting and spiraling like liquid confetti. Researchers have also known that Earth’s inner Martian makes its outer portions look and feel like home. The core’s heat helps animate the giant jigsaw puzzle of tectonic plates floating far above it, to build up mountains and gouge out seabeds. At the same time, the jostling of core iron generates Earth’ magnetic field, which blocks dangerous cosmic radiation, guides terrestrial wanderers and brightens northern skies with scarves of auroral lights. Now it turns out that existing models of the core, for all their drama, may not be dramatic enough. Reporting recently in the journal Nature, Dario Alfè of University College London and his colleagues presented evidence that iron in the outer layers of the core is frittering away heat through the wasteful process called conduction at two to three times the rate of previous estimates. The theoretical consequences of this discrepancy are far-reaching. The scientists say something else must be going on in Earth’s depths to account for the missing thermal energy in their calculations. They and others offer these possibilities: “From what I can tell, people are excited” by the report, Dr. Alfè said. “They see there might be a new mechanism going on they didn’t think about before.” Researchers elsewhere have discovered a host of other anomalies and surprises. They’ve found indications that the inner core is rotating slightly faster than the rest of the planet, although geologists disagree on the size of that rotational difference and on how, exactly, the core manages to resist being gravitationally locked to the surrounding mantle. Miaki Ishii and her colleagues at Harvard have proposed that the core is more of a Matryoshka doll than standard two-part renderings would have it. Not only is there an outer core of liquid iron encircling a Moon-size inner core of solidified iron, Dr. Ishii said, but seismic data indicate that nested within the inner core is another distinct layer they call the innermost core: a structure some 375 miles in diameter that may well be almost pure iron, with other elements squeezed out. Against this giant jewel even Jules Verne’s middle-Earth mastodons and ichthyosaurs would be pretty thin gruel.

Laws of physics defied to make ... coneheads

In a mind-bending, and light-bending, discovery, scientists have produced a fun-house-like warping of light that defies existing laws of physics. For centuries, simple equations (taught every year to high school physics students) have described how light moves through different media, for example from air into glass. Now, however, researchers have found that if the boundary between media is sufficiently complex (in this case, coated with nano-sized wires), those laws no longer apply. The discovery has prompted the physicists to rewrite the traditional equations to account for the characteristics of the boundary surface. In most cases where these tweaked equations are applied, the new laws simplify back to their traditional forms, but sometimes, they show that light can behave in incredibly strange ways. "Using designer surfaces, we've created the effects of a fun-house mirror on a flat plane," researcher Federico Capasso of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences said in a statement. "Our discovery carries optics into new territory and opens the door to exciting developments in photonics technology." In addition to stirring up the laws of physics, the new finding allowed the researchers to create some wacky pictures. For instance, they simulated an image of their lab group as it would appear in a mirror coated with nano-wires. The result: a portrait of conehead-looking scientists.

Doc Rivers upset with technicals

Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers, tagged with one of five technical fouls assessed against his team in Monday's Game 1 loss to the Miami Heat, let off some steam during his postgame news conference and could be donating some money to the league for venting. Rivers earned his technical late in the second quarter for barking about a lack of a foul call after Rajon Rondo converted a driving layup in traffic. Television replays appear to show Rivers simply screaming, "C'mon, Eddie," at referee Ed Malloy as the action moves back upcourt. A moment later, Malloy stopped the action and tagged Rivers with the technical. "I know mine wasn't (deserved). I can tell you that much," said Rivers, whose team got hit with three individual technicals, a delay of game and an illegal defense call. "I don't know how long I've been in this league, but that has to rank as the worst I've ever had. I would have loved to earn it. "We should never get them anyway. I told our guys that. But everybody has to keep their composure. Not just the players and coaches." Rivers' technical was the fourth of the night for Boston. This after typically mild-mannered Ray Allen got a technical from referee Danny Crawford with 10:22 to play in the second quarter. A little more than three minutes later, Crawford assessed a technical to Boston for delay of game when Kevin Garnett batted the ball away after a make. Midway through the third quarter, Malloy gave Rondo the team's final technical for shoving Shane Battier when the two got tangled under the Boston basket with 5:06 to play in the frame. Asked whether the technical fouls worked against Boston in the first half, Rondo brushed it off. Despite the calls against them, the Celtics erupted for 35 points, their biggest offensive outburst of the postseason.

Secret ‘Kill List’ Proves a Test of Obama’s Principles and Will

This was the enemy, served up in the latest chart from the intelligence agencies: 15 Qaeda suspects in Yemen with Western ties. The mug shots and brief biographies resembled a high school yearbook layout. Several were Americans. Two were teenagers, including a girl who looked even younger than her 17 years. President Obama, overseeing the regular Tuesday counterterrorism meeting of two dozen security officials in the White House Situation Room, took a moment to study the faces. It was Jan. 19, 2010, the end of a first year in office punctuated by terrorist plots and culminating in a brush with catastrophe over Detroit on Christmas Day, a reminder that a successful attack could derail his presidency. Yet he faced adversaries without uniforms, often indistinguishable from the civilians around them. “How old are these people?” he asked, according to two officials present. “If they are starting to use children,” he said of Al Qaeda, “we are moving into a whole different phase.” It was not a theoretical question: Mr. Obama has placed himself at the helm of a top secret “nominations” process to designate terrorists for kill or capture, of which the capture part has become largely theoretical. He had vowed to align the fight against Al Qaeda with American values; the chart, introducing people whose deaths he might soon be asked to order, underscored just what a moral and legal conundrum this could be. Mr. Obama is the liberal law professor who campaigned against the Iraq war and torture, and then insisted on approving every new name on an expanding “kill list,” poring over terrorist suspects’ biographies on what one official calls the macabre “baseball cards” of an unconventional war. When a rare opportunity for a drone strike at a top terrorist arises — but his family is with him — it is the president who has reserved to himself the final moral calculation. “He is determined that he will make these decisions about how far and wide these operations will go,” said Thomas E. Donilon, his national security adviser. “His view is that he’s responsible for the position of the United States in the world.” He added, “He’s determined to keep the tether pretty short.” Nothing else in Mr. Obama’s first term has baffled liberal supporters and confounded conservative critics alike as his aggressive counterterrorism record. His actions have often remained inscrutable, obscured by awkward secrecy rules, polarized political commentary and the president’s own deep reserve. In interviews with The New York Times, three dozen of his current and former advisers described Mr. Obama’s evolution since taking on the role, without precedent in presidential history, of personally overseeing the shadow war with Al Qaeda. They describe a paradoxical leader who shunned the legislative deal-making required to close the detention facility at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, but approves lethal action without hand-wringing. While he was adamant about narrowing the fight and improving relations with the Muslim world, he has followed the metastasizing enemy into new and dangerous lands. When he applies his lawyering skills to counterterrorism, it is usually to enable, not constrain, his ferocious campaign against Al Qaeda — even when it comes to killing an American cleric in Yemen, a decision that Mr. Obama told colleagues was “an easy one.” His first term has seen private warnings from top officials about a “Whac-A-Mole” approach to counterterrorism; the invention of a new category of aerial attack following complaints of careless targeting; and presidential acquiescence in a formula for counting civilian deaths that some officials think is skewed to produce low numbers. The administration’s failure to forge a clear detention policy has created the impression among some members of Congress of a take-no-prisoners policy. And Mr. Obama’s ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron P. Munter, has complained to colleagues that the C.I.A.’s strikes drive American policy there, saying “he didn’t realize his main job was to kill people,” a colleague said.

Inside an al Qaeda stronghold in Yemen

In recent years, the most significant terrorist plots against the United States have emanated from Yemen. This little known country on the Arabian Peninsula has become the hottest front in the war against al Qaeda. Last week, a suicide bomber killed about 100 soldiers in the country's capital, Sana. Earlier this month, news broke of a foiled plot by al Qaeda in Yemen to bomb a U.S.-bound airliner. Ghaith Abdul-Ahad, reporting for FRONTLINE, recently traveled to Yemen's radical heartland to investigate this threat. A portion of his report, Al Qaeda in Yemen —which airs tonight on PBS (check local listings) and online at pbs.org/frontline—is embedded above. In dangerous areas of southern Yemen where few journalists have traveled, Ghaith found members of al Qaeda, describing themselves as the group Ansar al-Sharia, in control of cities and towns and winning both support and recruits among some in the local population by administering scarce resources. In the above video, Ghaith visits Jaar, which al Qaeda captured a year ago without resistance from the Yemeni Army—which receives arms, training and intelligence from the United States. An al Qaeda spokesman, Fouad, took Ghaith on a tour of the large town and explained the way they are implementing Sharia, Islamic law. On the desolate streets, Ghaith encountered fighters he believed to be from Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. "We are at war with America and its allies," Fouad told Ghaith. And Ansar al-Sharia has grand ambitions: the creation of its own state. "For the first time in my experience, we see al Qaeda actually trying to hold territory, and this is a departure from anything that we had seen before," U.S. ambassador Gerald M. Feierstein told FRONTLINE. "The fact of the matter is that they continue to try to find ways to attack not only here in Yemen, but in the United States, in the neighborhood against Saudi Arabia, against Western Europe and the U.K. So they have global aspirations, and we consider that they still present a very significant challenge." President Obama has said that the United States is "very concerned" about al Qaeda's operations in Yemen. American drones regularly target the group and the administration has, in President Obama's words, "established a strong counterterrorism partnership with the Yemeni government." But Osama bin Laden warned al Qaeda in Yemen that the main threat to their survival was not U.S. drone attacks, not the Yemeni army, but antagonizing Yemen's tribes.

16-year-old's equations set off buzz over 325-year-old physics puzzler

A research paper that claims to fill in a gap in Isaac Newton's formulas for the physics of falling objects has drawn worldwide attention to a 16-year-old student in Germany, but physicists are reserving judgment until they've seen the proof. The focus of the buzz is Shouryya Ray, an Indian-born student who won second prize this month in the math and informatics category for Germany's Jugend Forscht student science competition. Ray tackled a couple of longstanding puzzlers for physics students: How do you account for air resistance in calculating the trajectory of ball thrown out at an angle? And precisely how does a ball thrown against the wall rebound? The first question relates to Newton's law of universal gravitation: In his Principia Mathematica, published in 1687, Newton laid out how a gravitational field would affect a thrown object — but he didn't account for the effect of air resistance. Through the centuries, physicists have used numerical approximations to take drag into account, and when computers come into play, those approximations can be incredibly precise. But Ray said he wanted to come up with a set of formulas that could calculate the effect directly, even though his instructors said that had never been done. "I asked myself: Why can't it work?" he told the German newspaper Die Welt. That's what Ray tried to do in his prize-winning paper, titled "Analytical Solution of Two Fundamental Unsolved Problems of Particle Dynamics" ("Analytische Lösung von zwei ungelösten fundamentalen Partikeldynamikproblemen"). In addition to the falling-ball problem, Ray took on a puzzler of more recent vintage, having to do with the description of a particle's collision with a wall, as described by 19th-century theory. But it was the "kid-trumps-Newton" angle that really stirred up a buzz. Die Welt's report came early in the game: The Daily Mail and The Sunday Times of London picked up the story, adding to the sensation. The idea that a teenager could figure out something that Newton didn't is irresistible — particularly when the teen is an immigrant from Calcutta who says he's no genius. But the story just sparked more questions among inquiring minds in such online hangouts as Physics Forum, Slashdot and Reddit: What exactly did Ray do? And were these problems really such mysteries to solve? That's a challenge, because Ray's paper was a school project submitted for a contest, and thus not subject to the publication process and peer review that professional work typically goes through. For that reason, the experts are reluctant to weigh in.

Powerful "Flame" cyber weapon found in Iran

Security experts said on Monday a highly sophisticated computer virus is infecting computers in Iran and other Middle East countries and may have been deployed at least five years ago to engage in state-sponsored cyber espionage. Evidence suggest that the virus, dubbed Flame, may have been built on behalf of the same nation or nations that commissioned the Stuxnet worm that attacked Iran's nuclear program in 2010, according to Kaspersky Lab, the Russian cyber security software maker that took credit for discovering the infections. Kaspersky researchers said they have yet to determine whether Flame had a specific mission like Stuxnet, and declined to say who they think built it. Iran has accused the United States and Israel of deploying Stuxnet. Cyber security experts said the discovery publicly demonstrates what experts privy to classified information have long known: that nations have been using pieces of malicious computer code as weapons to promote their security interests for several years. "This is one of many, many campaigns that happen all the time and never make it into the public domain," said Alexander Klimburg, a cyber security expert at the Austrian Institute for International Affairs. A cyber security agency in Iran said on its English website that Flame bore a "close relation" to Stuxnet, the notorious computer worm that attacked that country's nuclear program in 2010 and is the first publicly known example of a cyber weapon. Iran's National Computer Emergency Response Team also said Flame might be linked to recent cyber attacks that officials in Tehran have said were responsible for massive data losses on some Iranian computer systems. Kaspersky Lab said it discovered Flame after a U.N. telecommunications agency asked it to analyze data on malicious software across the Middle East in search of the data-wiping virus reported by Iran. STUXNET CONNECTION Experts at Kaspersky Lab and Hungary's Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security who have spent weeks studying Flame said they have yet to find any evidence that it can attack infrastructure, delete data or inflict other physical damage. Yet they said they are in the early stages of their investigations and that they may discover other purposes beyond data theft. It took researchers months to determine the key mysteries behind Stuxnet, including the purpose of modules used to attack a uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, Iran.

Canadian kids missing nearly 4 years found in Mexico

Two children who went missing during a court-ordered visit with their father have been reunited with their mother in Winnipeg, Manitoba, after a nearly four-year manhunt across North America. Winnipeg police said the two, 11-year-old Dominic Maryk and his sister Abby Maryk, 9, were rescued from a house in Guadalajara, Mexico, on Friday. Their father and another man were both arrested. "I am the happiest mommy in the world right now," the children's mother, Emily Cablek, said in a statement read by Winnipeg police. "We have a long road ahead, and I want my children to feel completely safe through all of it." The two children went missing on Aug. 30, 2008, while on a two-week visit with their father. Over the years, police tracked the group to at least five different locations, and recently focused their efforts on two areas of Mexico, Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta. The breakthrough came after Winnipeg police sent photos and a video of the children to Mexican media, resulting in someone recognizing them and tipping off Mexican police. "This is an evil individual who did not want to be found," said Detective Sgt. Shaunna Neufeld of Winnipeg Police Service. Kevin Douglas Maryk, and Robert Neil Groen now face extradition to Canada on charges of child abduction, while police are still looking for a third man. Christy Dzikowicz, a director at the Canadian Centre for Child Protection said the children were "confined" to a house in Mexico, with no playmates, no schooling and no connection to the outside world. Local media said the house was protected by security cameras, guard dogs and a wall topped with barbed wire, and police found drugs, weapons and child pornography inside. Police declined to comment on those details.

College transcripts replace birth certificate for Obama detractors

Now that the issue of the president’s birth certificate has been laid to rest (mostly), some conservatives are turning their attention to a new obsession: Barack Obama's college transcripts. Last week, a website that already had offered a $10,000 reward for Obama's transcripts from Occidental College, Columbia University and Harvard Law School, increased the bounty to $20,000. About a year ago, Donald Trump, among the highest-profile "birthers," helped get the mini-movement started. After the president released his long-form birth certificate, Trump abruptly changed subjects: "The word is, according to what I’ve read," said Trump, "that he was a terrible student when he went to Occidental. He then gets into Columbia; he then gets to Harvard. ... How do you get into Harvard if you’re not a good student? Now maybe that's right or maybe it’s wrong, but I don't know why he doesn’t release his records." What do these "transcripters" (if we may coin a phrase) hope to prove? "We’re not convinced that Barack is as smart as you media elitists keep insisting he is," says The Trenches, the website that posted the reward. (The Daily Caller outed the responsible party as Brooks Bayne, a conservative blogger who admitted he was behind the reward.) That rationale may strike some as a little flimsy, given that Obama was president of the Harvard Law Review, taught constitutional law, has two bestselling books to his credit and is, at the moment, leader of the free world. We do know a few things about the president's college career. In his new book, "Barack Obama: The Story," David Maraniss quotes Obama as saying that his grade point average at Columbia was an impressive 3.7. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, which cannot happen with poor grades. The president’s presumptive opponent, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, was no academic slouch either. According to various news reports, Romney graduated from Brigham Young University with a 3.97 grade point average and was in the top 5% of his class at Harvard Business School, where he simultaneously earned a law degree. Unfortunately for transcript transparency advocates, school transcripts, like tax returns, are private. They are protected by a 1974 law, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, or FERPA. "There are all kinds of exceptions, but the rule is records may only be released with signed written consent of the individual,” said Barmak Nasserian, associate executive director of the American Assn. of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. The group counts more than 2,600 degree-granting institutions among its members. "Barack Obama, like every other American, is entitled to privacy rights under federal law." In any case, said Nasserian, he doesn’t see much benefit in allowing voters to peruse candidates' college transcripts. "I am not sure looking at 20-year-old Mitt Romney or Barack Obama at that granular level of detail would make a difference," he said. "It's kind of a stretch to say performance in a particular course, or that they took a course with a professed Marxist, or they studied Russian for heaven's sakes, is going to be relevant or helpful to someone making up their mind." Though it may be true that college transcripts are not determinative, they can certainly be revealing. In 1999, the New Yorker published an apparently purloined copy of George W. Bush's Yale transcript before he became the Republican nominee for president. Bush, it turned out, was basically a C student. Was this a scandal? Hardly. He never cast himself as an intellectual or brainiac, and, despite his Harvard MBA, often made fun of highly credentialed people.

Boxer Johnny Tapia's 'crazy life' ends

The crazy life of Johnny Tapia -- a five-time world champion boxer who once wrote that he had been "raised to fight to the death" -- ended this week at age 45.
"A family member came home, found him deceased and called us," Officer Robert Gibbs, an Albuquerque, New Mexico, police spokesman, said Monday.
Tapia's body was found Sunday night at his home in Albuquerque. Foul play is not suspected; an autopsy and toxicology tests will be carried out, Gibbs said.
In his autobiography, "Mi Vida Loca: The Crazy Life of Johnny Tapia," the fighter says that his father was murdered before he was born and that he was eight when he saw his mother murdered.
"She got stabbed 22 times with an ice pick and raped," he told "In This Corner With James Smith" in a 2004 interview.
Relatives raised him and he followed in the footsteps of his grandfather, who had himself been a boxer.
"I was raised as a pit bull," he wrote in the book, which was co-authored by Bettina Gilois. "Raised to fight to the death."
Tapia started boxing at age 9 and had his first amateur fight at 11. In 1988, he began is professional career, which was interrupted by bouts outside the ring with substance abuse followed by treatment in rehab centers.
"Four times I was declared dead. Four times they wanted to pull life support. And many more times I came close to dying.
"But I have lived and had it all. I have been wealthy and lost it all. I have been famous and infamous. Five times I was a world champion. You tell me. Am I lucky or unlucky?"
In 1990, he had just won a $1 million commercial for Pepsi when he "tested dirty and got kicked out," losing his boxing license, said his wife and manager, Teresa Tapia, in the same 2004 interview.
"That's when I met him," she said. "He was at his lowest, he was living on the streets. He did everything illegal that he could to make money. That was his life."
Fed up, she said, she locked him in her apartment, whose windows were covered with bars, and refused to let him out for six weeks while he broke free of the drugs' grip.

5 of the World’s Wildest Water Slides

It's heating up out there, which means you and the fam will likely be searching out ways to cool down over the next couple months. That probably means at least one trip to the chlorine rivers of your local water park, where you will undoubtedly be tempted to risk life and limb simply to plummet down a giant wet slide.
But all rides are not created equal, so if you really want to challenge your intestinal fortitude, search out the parks that hold these truly spectacular slides.

Insano
Location: Beach Park, Fortaleza, Brazil
Everything you need to know about this water slide — or water cliff, we should say — is in its name. This is an insane water slide.
Standing a stomach-churning 41 meters (that's 14 stories) high, Brazil's Insano is officially the tallest water slide in the world. Unofficially, it's the one that gives us the most willies. After what looks more like stepping out of plane than scooching down a slide, riders plummet down the near-vertical ride for about four or five seconds, during which they'll reach the ungodly speed of about 65 mph. The ride then terminates with what the creators call a 'relaxing dive into the swimming pool.' Relaxing might not be the right word.


Scorpion's Tail
Location: Noah's Ark Family Park, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin
It might not be as tall as Insano, but the ten-story high Scorpion's Tail at the popular Noah's Ark Water park in Wisconsin is equally gut-wrenching. Why? Because it's essentially one giant, water-slick loop. It's not quite vertical, though considering you'll be hurtling through it at about 50 feet per second, that's probably a good thing.
But Scorpion's Tail packs an even nastier surprise for those willing to brave its sting: a freefall drop to get you started. Rather than gently pushing themselves off, riders stand in a capsule for a few seconds until the ground abruptly gives way. Suddenly, that loop makes more sense, as it's the only thing slowing you down from the 2.5 gs of gravitational force driving you through the spray. Yikes.


Summit Plummet
Location: Disney's Blizzard Beach at Walt Disney World Resort, Orlando, Florida
The family-friendly folks at Disney aren't necessarily known for pushing the envelope when it comes to thrill rides. The Summit Plummet at Disney's Blizzard Beach Water Park, however, is as extreme as water slides come.
It's 12 stories high -- good enough to be the tallest in the U.S. -- and features a 360-foot flume that carries riders to speeds between 50 and 60 mph. And did we mention much of that takes place in a darkened tunnel? Because what better to mix with your crippling fear of heights than your crippling fear of the dark? Is this really Mickey-approved?

 

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Think twice before rejecting request for an extension

In today's market, sellers may be wise to compromise with buyers In some cases, your past experience will help you make a good decision about what to do in a current home-sale transaction. But if you rely only on past real estate experience to make decisions about selling a home today, you could end up with an unsatisfactory result. The old rules, such as they were, don't always work for the current home-sale market. For example, more purchase contracts specify that time is of the essence. In other words, contingencies will be met on time. In today's market, it's often difficult for buyers to remove their financing contingencies on time unless they are paying all cash and don't need to go through the rigors of mortgage underwriting. Due to no fault of the buyers, they often need to ask the sellers for an extension in order to satisfy a contingency. Extensions should be reasonably granted but only after making due diligence investigations. For instance, it wouldn't be wise to grant an extension to a buyer that hasn't even submitted a loan application. In this case, it would be better to find yourself another, more dedicated buyer. However, if the lender is so backlogged that it hasn't had a chance to underwrite the buyers' loan package, and there doesn't appear to be a problem other than the time delay, grant the extension. HOUSE HUNTING: To make it through a home purchase or sale in the current market, it's important to understand the point of view of the person on the other side of the transaction. It's impossible to control all facets of a home-sale transaction. Patience and compromise are essential. When buyers are doing everything they can to make a deadline in the contract, or the closing date, but are delayed for conditions beyond their control, they are doing what they agreed to do.

Cities with the most homes in foreclosure

According to data released last week, the worst effects of the housing crisis are beginning to wind down. RealtyTrac’s latest report shows the number of foreclosures in the U.S. in April is down 13 percent to 188,780 from 219,258 a year ago. However, some of the largest cities in the U.S. continue to lag behind the rest of the country, and still have long to go before the housing crash has fully run its course. RealtyTrac published the number of new home foreclosures in April in the 50 largest metropolitan statistical areas in the U.S. Of those 50 areas, 10 had more than double the national foreclosure rate, which is one out of every 698 new homes In California’s Inland Empire metropolitan area, the rate was more than triple that. Using RealtyTrac’s foreclosure rates and and home price data from Fiserv Case-Shiller, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the metropolitan areas with the highest foreclosure rates. The continuing high rates of foreclosures in some areas is a disturbing trend, says RealtyTrac’s vice president, Daren Blomquist. Although the national foreclosure rate appears to have peaked, he explains, the massive number of remaining properties yet to be foreclosed may continue to hurt the U.S. market in the long term. The large number of new foreclosures “means that distressed property sales will continue to represent a large portion of overall sales for at least the remainder of this year, which in turn will keep a lid on any robust home price recovery,” Blomquist says. After reviewing the markets with the highest foreclosure rates, it is clear that regions with the most foreclosures to date are the ones worst affected by the housing crisis. Seven of the 10 metro areas on this list had among the top 10 largest declines in home value from their pre-recession peaks. In six of the 10 regions, houses lost more than half their value in less than six years. In Las Vegas, home prices plummeted 61.8 percent between the beginning of 2006 and the end of last year. 24/7 Wall St. examined RealtyTrac’s latest foreclosure figures of new homes for April 2012, as well as the changes in the number of new foreclosures from a month prior and a year prior. In addition, we reviewed historical, current, and projected home price changes, provided by Fiserv-Case Shiller.

Laura Bailey discusses perfect picture

The 39-year-old model says the same rules apply whether posing for fashion images or vacation pictures. The key is not to look like you’re trying too hard. “Good posture is key. Change everything to black and white – I even shoot on my BlackBerry in black and white! And don’t try too hard. Look as though you’re caught unaware. Assume nonchalance, real or otherwise. As Yves Saint Laurent said, ‘Isn’t elegance forgetting what one is wearing?’” she said. Laura has been modeling for many years and finds things have eased as she’s got older. She now cares less about embarrassing herself. “It’s about the chemistry between photographer and model. On set, you have to let it happen… to surrender to the creative but not in a passive way. It’s a combination of the ability to relax and to get lost in the story. As I’ve got older I’ve got braver as a model because you lose your inhibitions,” she told British newspaper The Observer. Laura is an ambassador for Oxfam and champions ethical clothing. She tries hard to think about the environment when she is shopping and has some easy rules she tries to live by. “I buy much less these days and when I do I treat myself – I want something to last forever. Anything I fall out of love with goes straight to Oxfam… where I inevitably leave with a vintage scarf or an old man’s overcoat,” she said. Read more:

Baroness Warsi: My Expenses Claims Were 'In The Spirit Of The Rules'

Conservative co-chairman Baroness Warsi has referred herself to the Lords Commissioner for Standards amid allegations over her expenses. A Conservative Party spokeswoman said the Cabinet minister asked Paul Kernaghan to investigate allegations she claimed for accommodation while staying at a friend's house rent-free. Lady Warsi said on Monday she would co-operate with any inquiry, but declined to answer questions over whether she would resign over the row. Speaking to ITV News during a visit to Malaysia, she said: "I take these allegations very seriously; it's why I said right at the outset that I would fully co-operate with any investigation. I believe that being a member of the House of Lords is a privilege. I take that privilege seriously. "It's why I have always insured that my conduct including in relation to expenses and allowances is both in accordance with the law and the spirit of the rules." Downing Street has so far made no show of support for the peer. Tory deputy chairman Michael Fallon said only that Lady Warsi "believes" she acted within the rules, but he admitted that the controversy was embarrassing for the party. Lady Warsi insisted she made an "appropriate payment" to her friend - Tory official Naweed Khan, who is now one of her aides - for the nights she stayed at the property in Acton, west London. Mr Khan supported her assertion, releasing a statement saying she made a payment each time she stayed. But the property's owner, GP and former Conservative donor Wafik Moustafa, denied receiving any income from either Lady Warsi or Mr Khan. The peer, now a Cabinet Office minister, was claiming Lords subsistence of £165.50 a night at the time in 2008 to which the allegations relate. Earlier the former sleaze watchdog Sir Alistair Graham suggested that Lady Warsi should relinquish her ministerial office until any inquiries were complete. The ex-chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, said: "At the moment it all looks very muddy and blurred. "I personally am always of the view, when ministers face very serious allegations that seem to have some strength to them, then it's better that they stand down from their ministerial post while that investigation takes place, but of course that is a matter for the Prime Minister." Mr Mann said he would be writing to the Lords standards commissioner requesting an investigation. "If you are paying no rent where you are staying, you can't possibly be claiming subsistence for staying there," he said.

Pedro Hernandez's Family Shocked Over Arrest In Etan Patz Case

When police dug up a Manhattan basement last month in a fruitless search for the remains of Etan Patz, a 6-year-old boy who disappeared in 1979, Lucy Suarez saw the news on TV and wished that the family of the missing child would finally get some peace. "My sister and I prayed about it. We prayed and we said, `Let justice be done,'" Suarez said. "Never did we think it was going to be done with our family." On Friday, her older brother was charged with Etan's murder. Police said Pedro Hernandez, a 51-year-old, churchgoing father described by some friends as quiet and timid, had given an emotional confession earlier in the week to luring the little boy away from his school bus stop with a promise of a soft drink, and then strangling him in the basement of a convenience store where he had been working as a stock clerk. The admission surprised investigators, who had been confounded by the disappearance for three decades and never considered Hernandez a suspect until this month. Just weeks ago, they had focused their attention on another man, and even ripped up a basement he had once used as a workshop in the hope of finding clues. Suarez said her family is reeling, too, despite having had concerns for years that her brother had once done something bad to a child. Hernandez, now living in Maple Shade, N.J., was 18 when Etan vanished. When he moved to New Jersey not long after the disappearance, he said something to relatives about having hurt a child back in New York. Suarez said her brother never spoke to her directly about what had happened, and the family's knowledge of the incident was vague. "He didn't say, `I killed somebody,'" she said. "My conclusion was that it was a hit and run, or he hit someone with a bike. Nothing like a murder." Suarez said she was shocked to find out about his arrest early Thursday, but another of the suspect's sisters, Norma Hernandez, said at least some relatives had heard something far more horrifying about what he had done. In the 1980s, she said, Pedro had confessed to a church prayer group that he had killed a boy. Norma Hernandez said she didn't have firsthand knowledge of this confession, and didn't learn about it until later. If she had known, she said, she would have turned her brother in. "Even if it is my own child I will go to the police station and say, `You'd better check them out,'" she said. "I'd consider the mother and her child and her wondering what happened to her child."

XOJane & Gabi Fresh Fatkini Gallery Shows Off Body Diversity In Swimwear

Every year, dozens of magazine covers and websites shout about the latest celebrity showing off her "bikini body" and promise women a "surefire way" to "get bikini body ready!" Of course, the result of all of these headlines is that many women never feel as as though their own bodies are "ready" enough. A recent SHAPE Magazine survey found that a whopping82 percent of women feel pressured to "slim down" for swimsuit season. Now, plus-size style blogger Gabi Gregg has created the antidote to traditional women's media's approach to summer fashion. After she came back from a beach vacation back in April, Gregg posted photos of herself in a bathing suit and she got an overwhelmingly positive response. She was inspired by the barrage of comments and by XOJane's previous Real Girl Belly Project to turn her personal photo collection into something larger. Gregg writes on XOJane: I asked Lesley [Kinzel, an XOJane Associate Editor] if she'd be into the idea of posting a gallery of fat girls in bikinis (or "fatkinis," as we so lovingly refer to them in our lil' community). I know first-hand how inspiring it can be to see people with bodies that look similar to my own feeling confident and happy on the beach in something other than a Hawaiian-print skirted one piece. The result is a 31-image gallery that shows women of a diversity of shapes and sizes rocking their two-pieces.

Boxing Report: Ex-champ Tapia found dead

Johnny Tapia, the five-time boxing champion whose turbulent career was marked by cocaine addiction, alcohol, depression and run-ins with the law, was found dead Sunday at his Albuquerque home. He was 45. Authorities were called to the house at about 7:45 p.m. on Sunday, spokesman Robert Gibbs said. The death didn't appear to be suspicious, he said. Tapia won five championships in three weight classes, winning the WBA bantamweight title, the IBF and WBO junior bantamweight titles and the IBF featherweight belt. He was regarded as the consummate underdog by his fans. The more trouble he found outside the ring - including several stints in jail - the more they rallied around him. In a 1990s-era feud with fellow Albuquerque boxer and former world champion Danny Romero, Tapia's fans anointed him with the slang Spanish title of ''Burque's Best.'' But his life was also marked by tragedy. He was orphaned at 8, his mother stabbed 26 times with a screwdriver and left to die. In 2007, he was hospitalized after an apparent cocaine overdose. Several days later, his brother-in-law and his nephew were killed in car accident on their way to Albuquerque to see the ailing boxer. Tapia was banned from boxing for 3 1/2 years in the early `90s because of his cocaine addiction. But he knocked out Henry Martinez to win the WBO bantamweight title in 1994, and won four more championships over the next eight years.

Gail Posner's Home Bequeathed To Dog Conchita Sells For $8.4M

Every dog has its day, and last Friday clearly belonged to a chihuahua named Conchita: a Miami Beach mansion bequeathed to the pampered pup and 2 others sold for $8.4 million. Conchita made national headlines in 2010 when socialite Gail Posner was found to have left both the Sunset Island home and a $3 million trust fund to the 3 dogs, who slept in their own rooms and traveled in their own gold Cadillac Escalade to weekly spa appointments. Several members of Posner's household staff were also left a total of $27 million, and allowed to live rent-free in the mansion after Posnter's death -- provided, of course, they continue to care for Conchita and her "sisters" April Maria, a Maltese, and Lucia, a Yorkshire Terrier. (Posner's son was apparently in a different sort of dog house: an irate Bret Carr was left just $1 million, and quickly contested the will, claiming conspiracy.) While it's not immediately clear where Conchita and her cohorts will now reside, it's obvious someone in Miami is getting one heck of a house. Posner's pad is a posh 9,696 square feet with direct Biscayne Bay access. The 7 bedroom, 8-and-2-half baths property boasts a lush center courtyard, large rooftop terrace, elevator, marble floors, separate gym, and luxurious master suite with 2 huge baths. Before her death, Posner, the daughter of "master of the hostile takeover" Victor Posner, told Broward New Times that Conchita loved to shop, wore a diamond collar from Tiffany's, and slept in a cashmere sweater.

Miami Police Shoot, Kill Man Eating Another Man’s Face

Miami police are still tight-lipped about the man they shot and killed on the MacArthur Causeway Saturday afternoon, but new details back claims they had no choice: the naked man they shot was trying to chew the face off another naked man, and refused to obey police orders to stop his grisly meal, which one source now claims included his victim’s nose and eyeballs. Surveillance video taken from security cameras at the nearby Miami Herald building show a police officer arrive on the scene, appear to be startled by the spectacle of two naked men lying on the street, and draw his service weapon. It appears that the officer shot one of the men, but it was difficult to tell in the video. The bizarre shooting happened shortly after 2 p.m., when police responded to a 911 call about two naked men fighting on a bike path along the Causeway, which was packed with traffic on a busy holiday weekend. Miami police have not confirmed the details of what happened next, but sources close to the investigation told CBS4 News that officers found one man gnawing on the face of another, in what one police source called the most gruesome thing he’d ever seen. The fight was taking place at the causeway exit near the Miami Herald building, and amazed officers tried to stop it, ordering the man making a meal out of the other man to stop.

Naked Man Allegedly Eating Victim's Face Shot And Killed By Miami Police

One man is dead and another hospitalized after a bizarre assault off Miami's MacArthur Causeway reportedly forced a police officer to open fire. City of Miami police say the incident began Saturday afternoon about 2 p.m. when an officer responded to reports of 2 men fighting in the bike path of the Biscayne Boulevard exit ramp, alongside the Miami Herald's parking garage. There, according to the Herald, the officer observed a naked man eating another man's face: The officer...approached and saw that the naked man was actually chewing the other man's head, according to witnesses. The officer ordered the naked man to back away, and when he continued the assault, the officer shot him. The attacker continued to eat the man, despite being shot, forcing the officer to continue firing. Witnesses said they heard at least a half dozen shots. According to CBS Miami, police sources said the victim had "virtually no face" and was unrecognizable. View surveillance video of the shooting below. (May not be suitable for all viewers.) "[Officers] attempted to separate them, there was some sort of confrontation," Miami Police spokesman Willie Moreno told Local10. Photographs taken from the Herald's garage show the naked man lying dead at the scene. Police said his victim was transported to Ryder Trauma Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital. Officials have yet to identify the officer involved, the deceased, or the victim. The incident snarled traffic on the causeway for hours during busy Memorial Day weekend as multiple lanes of vehicles were routed around the crime scene.

Palme d'Or Goes To Michael Haneke As Director Takes Cannes' Top Prize For Second Time

The Cannes Film Festival rewarded one of its favorite directors Sunday, as Michael Haneke won the top prize for a second time with his stark film about love and death, "Amour." The Austrian director's powerful and understated film stars two French acting icons – 85-year-old Emmanuelle Riva and 81-year-old Jean-Louis Trintignant – as an elderly couple coping with the wife's worsening health. Cannes jury member Jean Paul Gaultier praised the performances of the two actors and the "incredible connection" they established in the movie. Haneke said he made the film because "I experienced something in my family that touched me." He thanked his wife and – in a rare personal comment – said he had promised her "we would never leave each other, like in the film." Some viewers were surprised by the movie's frank humanity, coming from a master of tightly controlled cinema whose movies often contain sudden bursts of violence. The director said his reputation for delivering shocks was unjust. "Journalists always try to stick a label on directors," he said. "For a long time I've been the expert in violence." But he said a film's style should match its subject matter, not its director, and "this film is about love." Haneke has brought 10 films to Cannes over the years, including "Funny Games" and "Hidden." He previously won the Palme in 2009 for "The White Ribbon," and is only the seventh director to take the top prize twice. The festival jury awarded the second-place Grand Prize to Matteo Garrone's Italian satire "Reality," while Ken Loach's whiskey-tasting comedy "The Angels' Share" won the third-place Jury Prize. Both have won Cannes prizes before – Garrone took the Grand Prize for "Gomorrah" in 2008 and Loach won the Palme d'Or in 2006 for "The Wind That Shakes the Barley." Mexico's Carlos Reygadas was named best director for his surrealism-tinged family story "Post Tenebras Lux." The best actor prize went to Mads Mikkelsen as a man ostracized by his small-town community when he is accused of child abuse in "The Hunt."

Lady Gaga Cancels Indonesia Concert After Religious Threats

Lady Gaga has cancelled her upcoming concert in Indonesia amid security concerns after weeks of mounting protests from religious groups in the country. The pop superstar was due to perform in the capital Jakarta on 3 June (12), but the concert was left hanging in the balance after local police recommended the singer be denied a performance permit due to pressure from conservative campaigners opposed to her saucy onstage antics. However, the Poker Face hitmaker, who offered to tone down her act or even perform solo to avoid causing offence, has now axed the show after protesters threatened to intercept her upon arrival in Indonesia. Minola Sebayang, a lawyer for promoters Big Daddy, says, "Lady Gaga's management has considered the situation minute to minute, and with threats if the concert goes ahead, Lady Gaga's side is calling off the concert. This is not only about Lady Gaga's security, but extends to those who will be watching her... Gaga's camp did not want this show to cause any harm to anybody." Gaga added in a post on her Twitter.com page, "There is nothing Holy about hatred." Around 52,000 tickets for the concert have been sold and the promoters will now issue refunds.

Audrey Tautou At Cannes: 'I Want To Go To The Darker Side Of Humanity'

Actress Audrey Tautou, known for her sweet and light roles in such films as "Amelie," praised the late director Claude Miller as a "bright and passionate" filmmaker who helped her turn in a darker direction in his final film. The French star plays a husband-poisoner in Miller's "Therese Desqueyroux," which closed the Cannes Film Festival on Sunday at a special screening celebrating the lauded New Wave filmmaker, who died last month of cancer at age 70. The contemporary of Francois Truffaut, whose large body of work includes 1998's Cannes Jury Prize winner "Class Trip," helped Tautou to take on the role in the adaptation of Francois Mauriac's novel about a frustrated wife who slowly tries to kill her husband with arsenic to get freedom. The gritty role, and Miller's acuity and patience, helped her unlock her inner dark side. "It didn't exactly free me, but it did make more want to explore cinema even more," she said, in an interview with The Associated Press, wearing shades on a terrace overlooking the French Riviera. "I really liked the experience... I had to try to not be scared of Therese. I want to go to the darker side of humanity." The film is set in the French region of Landes, near Bordeaux, where the young, cerebral Therese is forced to marry authoritative Bernard, played by Gilles Lellouche, whom she grows to despise. The role is a far cry from "Amelie," the touching 2001 story of a shy Parisienne waitress who changes the lives of those around her through eccentric acts of kindness. That role shot her to stardom, but 10 years later, Tautou seized upon her "dream script" as an opportunity to grow up. "I'm not the same woman I was when I was 22-years-old. I don't feel genuine in young ingenue parts any more. Therese led me to entirely new terrain," said Tautou. She said Miller's talents remained with him right until he died. "Claude really gave us a life lesson on the shoot of `Therese.' When you see the film he made – brilliant and unrelenting – you think how crazy it is that a film like that could be made with such simplicity," Tautou said. She recalled her last conversation with Miller in April. "Yes, I remember, yes," she said, with hesitation. "The thing is, right until the end his eyes would sparkle. He was so bright and passionate." Tautou said she was deeply sad that Miller cannot grace the red carpet with her at the festival, but laughed and remembered something he said just before he succumbed to the illness.

Amanda Bynes Accused Of Another Hit-And-Run

Amanda Bynes slammed into a car on the 101 Freeway in the San Fernando Valley on April 10 ... then fled the scene -- according to the victim who told cops the troubled actress was the culprit. The culprit was driving a 5 series BMW at the time of the accident. The victim gave chase, got off the freeway, but the culprit blew a red light, never to be seen again. The victim was able to write down the license plate number. She only got a profile view of the woman driving the BMW. CHP showed up, ran the plate and determined it was a rental vehicle. Officers told the victim the culprit was driving an Enterprise rental car. The victim then contacted Enterprise, who told her the person who had rented the car was Amanda Bynes. The victim then showed up at a CHP substation and ID'd Amanda from a photo lineup. And get this ... the photo of Amanda was taken just 4 days earlier -- it was her mug shot from a DUI arrest. Amanda was driving in West Hollywood on April 6 when she clipped a cop car and was immediately popped for DUI. Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... the case was referred to a filing officer at the L.A. City Attorney's Office who immediately rejected it because there was no independent witness fingering Amanda as the phantom driver. Amanda was accused earlier this month of hitting a car in Hollywood and then fleeing the scene. She told cops she did not feel the impact and was not ticketed.

Harden can't match Manu outburst

We can toss all of those James Harden-Manu Ginobili comparisons into the trash can if it's only going to be a matter of style and not production.
It was the trendy pre-series link, the two sixth man left-handers who can shoot the 3-pointer, drive to the hoop with their Euro-step and pester opponents defensively. As much as I'd love to celebrate the moment for finally breaking through the racial barrier to find the similarities between an Argentine and an African-American from California, it all must come to a halt if Harden can't come closer to matching Ginobili's output and impact.
Ginobili scored 26 points to lead the Spurs to victory in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals. He needed only 14 field-goal attempts to get them.
For Harden, the slight inconvenience of his poor shooting since the start of the second round has turned into a serious issue. He has made only 37 percent of his shots the past six games, including a 7-for-17 night Sunday. He had 19 points, which makes his output seem closer to Ginobili than it really was.
James Harden
Ginobili's buckets were more timely. It was the difference between scoring seven points in 52 seconds to give the Spurs a six-point lead and momentum at the end of the first quarter, as Ginobili did, versus making a meaningless 3-pointer at the final buzzer that served only to make the final score a little closer, 101-98, as Harden did.Ginobili had moments when he took the game over. Harden had two charging fouls while the Thunder were in the midst of a four-minute scoring drought in the fourth quarter, as a nine-point lead and a golden opportunity to steal a road game and puncture the Spurs' aura of invincibility slipped away.
It's not that the Thunder's loss hangs entirely on Harden. He can't be blamed for the Thunder's lack of ball movement or defensive coverage in the fourth quarter. It's not Harden's fault that Serge Ibaka, Kendrick Perkins and Thabo Sefolosha could barely top the number of field goals made by Tiago Splitter.
But the playoffs are the province of the stars, and Harden is a star for Oklahoma City. People like to think of the Thunder as the polar opposites as the Miami, but the truth is they work on a similar fundamental premise: They'll both win if they have the two best players on the court. Russell Westbrook struggled, missing 14 shots and matching his turnover total for the entire Lakers series (four).
Durant managed to score 27 points, in addition to 10 rebounds, but Westbrook left a void that Ginobili filled and Harden didn't.
"I couldn't make a layup," Harden said. "I couldn't make a shot."
Even worse, he couldn't make a free throw … because he didn't attempt any.
"It affected me," Harden said. "I live at the line. Getting to the free-throw line and getting easy points, it definitely helps me. I've just got to be ready. Got to be more aggressive at getting to the basket and being able to finish in Game 2."
Hmm, getting to the basket might not be an option. The Spurs did a tremendous job of collapsing their defense around the rim, the main reason all of the Thunder players struggled to score inside. The Spurs enjoyed a 50-26 advantage in points in the paint, as the Thunder missed 20 of their 33 shots in the lane."We can't guard them one-on-one, there's no way, so team defense is even more important than it was during the regular season," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said.

Women who witness violence more prone to risky sexual behaviour!

Risky sexual behaviour Witnessing crimes and other forms of violence in both childhood and adulthood has a profound effect on women — it makes them more prone to having “risky” sex with a high number of sexual partners, a study has said.
Women who have been abused themselves were more likely to have unprotected sex, and use drugs or alcohol before having sex, said the study by the Miriam Hospital’s Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine in the US.
According to the Daily Mail, the findings offer a new insight on the link between exposure to violence and HIV risk behaviour, particularly among low-income, urban women.
“Sadly, our results show that many women must cope with multiple forms of violence, and that some combinations of violent experiences put women at risk for HIV, other STDs or unplanned pregnancy – not to mention the risks from the violence itself,” said lead author Jennifer Walsh.
The study included 481 women attending an urban STD clinic. They were assessed for previous history of violence and current sexual risk-taking behaviour.
The women were primarily African American and most were socio-economically disadvantaged, the daily said.
The team found women who reported experiencing multiple forms of violence and those who were exposed to community violence had the highest levels of sexual risk behaviour, including a large number of sexual partners and alcohol and drug use before sex.
Source: IANS

Sex with a robot – are you game?


In a recent research paper, Michelle Mars and Ian Yeo envision a future where brothels will offer sex-for-hire robots. It really appeared like a very interesting concept and we tried to imagine what it could mean for humanity in general. Here are some things that could happen if the robot-sex dolls do come into being:  
A world without AIDS and other STDs
The government of India recently deigned that sex workers were the third highest AIDS risk groups after intravenous drug addicts and MSMs. Imagine how bad the situation will be by 2050. Unless there is a major paradigm shift, AIDS could attain pandemic status. 5% people in sub-Saharan Africa have AIDS. Sub-Saharan Africa gives the perfect example of how quickly it could spread in vulnerable conditions. No disease has ever hit the human race like AIDS and it has been around for barely 60 years. In 50 years, things could get a lot worse. If robot sex workers do materialise there’d be no transmission of STDs. These robots will be made with bacteria resistant fibre and could be cleaned for human fluids between uses which would prevent transmission of STDs between clients.
 It would allow everyone to have sex
 All beings have needs and sex robots could finally remove the stigma attached to sex. Sex would just be about sex and not procreation. People who haven’t been blessed with the classic mating qualities (height, broad shoulders for men or waist-hip ratio, bosom size for women) can experience the joys that is almost exclusive to a small segment of society lucky to be born with those characteristics. Sex dolls and other objects are slowly becoming acceptable and the way the world is moving having sex with a robot might even become acceptable to the public at large by 2050.
 No more infidelity
 humans are becoming more casual about sex, the definition of infidelity hasn’t really changed. Numerous studies have shown that more than sex it’s the emotional connect with another human being that hurts a partner. Thus, robot-sex dolls could usher in an era without infidelity.
 Every position is available
 It will allow people to experience sex in a manner that simply wouldn’t be feasible with other human beings. Due to various reasons, taboos, stigmas or even lack of athleticism or flexibility attached to several sexual acts or positions people often find it hard to convince their partners physically or otherwise to do certain things. The sex robot will never say no anything and every desire can be fulfilled. In addition, a more advanced, multi-purpose, shape-shifting robot could cater to all sexual orientations and genders. There will be no physical parameters that won’t be fulfilled. In addition, you could finally have sex without any attachment whatsoever.

Hundreds of words to avoid using online if you don't want the government spying on you

The Department of Homeland Security has been forced to release a list of keywords and phrases it uses to monitor social networking sites and online media for signs of terrorist or other threats against the U.S. The intriguing the list includes obvious choices such as 'attack', 'Al Qaeda', 'terrorism' and 'dirty bomb' alongside dozens of seemingly innocent words like 'pork', 'cloud', 'team' and 'Mexico'. Released under a freedom of information request, the information sheds new light on how government analysts are instructed to patrol the internet searching for domestic and external threats. The words are included in the department's 2011 'Analyst's Desktop Binder' used by workers at their National Operations Center which instructs workers to identify 'media reports that reflect adversely on DHS and response activities'. Department chiefs were forced to release the manual following a House hearing over documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit which revealed how analysts monitor social networks and media organisations for comments that 'reflect adversely' on the government. However they insisted the practice was aimed not at policing the internet for disparaging remarks about the government and signs of general dissent, but to provide awareness of any potential threats. Read more:

RPMT Admit Card 2012 | Rajasthan Pre Medical Test 2012 Admit Card

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5-time champ Johnny Tapia found dead in NM

Johnny Tapia, the five-time boxing champion whose turbulent career was marked by cocaine addiction, alcohol, depression and run-ins with the law, was found dead Sunday at his Albuquerque home. He was 45. Authorities were called to the house at about 7:45 p.m. on Sunday, spokesman Robert Gibbs said. The death didn't appear to be suspicious, he said. Tapia won five championships in three weight classes, winning the WBA bantamweight title, the IBF and WBO junior bantamweight titles and the IBF featherweight belt. He was regarded as the consummate underdog by his fans. The more trouble he found outside the ring — including several stints in jail — the more they rallied around him. In a 1990s-era feud with fellow Albuquerque boxer and former world champion Danny Romero, Tapia's fans anointed him with the slang Spanish title of "Burque's Best." But his life was also marked by tragedy. He was orphaned at 8, his mother stabbed 26 times with a screwdriver and left to die. In 2007, he was hospitalized after an apparent cocaine overdose. Several days later, his brother-in-law and his nephew were killed in car accident on their way to Albuquerque to see the ailing boxer. Tapia was banned from boxing for 3 1/2 years in the early '90s because of his cocaine addiction. But he knocked out Henry Martinez to win the WBO bantamweight title in 1994, and won four more championships over the next eight years. He last fought in June, outpointing Mauricio Pastrana in an eight-round decision. He finished with a 59-5-2 record. Gibbs said an autopsy will be performed in the next few days.

Gordon Ramsay taken off on stretcher after getting flattened in Soccer Aid match

The biennial Soccer Aid match benefiting UNICEF was once again held at Old Trafford on Sunday, pitting England against the Rest of the World. As usual, both teams were comprised of a mix of celebrities and football legends, but this year one of those celebrities probably regretted stepping on the pitch with one of those legends. Playing for the Rest of the World team along with the likes of Will Ferrell, Gerard Butler, Mike Myers, Ed Norton and Woody Harrelson (who scored the winning penalty two years ago) under recently sacked Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish (see full rosters here), chef and profanity connoisseur Gordon Ramsay was taken off on a stretcher an hour into the game after former Manchester United striker Teddy Sheringham smashed into him. Ramsay, who was a trialist with Rangers in his younger days before a knee injury ended his hopes of a career as a footballer, didn't get much sympathy from Sheringham after the hit. Instead, the England striker gave him a pat on the face as Ramsay winced in pain before being carried off and replaced by "X-Men: First Class" actor James McAvoy. England (under manager Sam Allardyce) went on to win the match 3-1 with their first goal coming from Sheringham himself just nine minutes after crushing Ramsay, but the goal of the day belonged to the RotW team's Serge Pizzorno, lead guitarist for Kasabian, who chipped a beauty over legendary Arsenal keeper David Seaman. "I told my careers adviser I wanted to be centre forward for Leicester City. When he said 'No' I thought I'd be in a rock 'n' roll band," Pizzorno said before the match, showing that he was a bit too easily swayed as a youth.

Chris Hayes: I'm 'Uncomfortable' Calling Fallen Military 'Heroes'

Effete: affected, overrefined, and ineffectual; see "Chris Hayes." OK, I appended the name of the MSNBC host to the dictionary definition. But if ever you wanted to see the human embodiment of the adjective in action, have a look at the video from his MSNBC show this morning of the too-refined-by-half Hayes explaining why he is "uncomfortable" in calling America's fallen military members "heroes." Hayes is worried that doing so is "rhetorically proximate" to justifications for more war. Oh, the rhetorical proximity! View the video after the jump. In fairness, Hayes and the other panel members distinguished between their respect for the valor of the individual military members who had given their lives with the worthiness of the various causes in which they fought. Even so, what does it say about the liberal chattering class, which Hayes epitomizes, that it chokes on calling America's fallen what they rightly and surely are: heroes? Watch the hesitant Hayes in what almost seems a parody of the conflicted intellectual. CHRIS HAYES: Thinking today and observing Memorial Day, that'll be happening tomorrow. Just talked with Lt. Col. Steve Burke [sic, actually Beck], who was a casualty officer with the Marines and had to tell people [inaudible]. Um, I, I, ah, back sorry, um, I think it's interesting because I think it is very difficult to talk about the war dead and the fallen without invoking valor, without invoking the words "heroes." Um, and, ah, ah, why do I feel so comfortable [sic] about the word "hero"? I feel comfortable, ah, uncomfortable, about the word because it seems to me that it is so rhetorically proximate to justifications for more war. Um, and, I don't want to obviously desecrate or disrespect memory of anyone that's fallen, and obviously there are individual circumstances in which there is genuine, tremendous heroism: hail of gunfire, rescuing fellow soldiers and things like that. But it seems to me that we marshal this word in a way that is problematic. But maybe I'm wrong about that.

Media hastily erase articles about Malia Obama’s appearance at One Direction concert

Several media outlets have again pulled or edited already-published articles about the activities of President Barack Obama’s daughter, even though the stories appeared to pose no active security risk to the first family. On Thursday, 14-year-old Malia Obama attended a concert by the British boy band One Direction at the Patriot Center in Fairfax, Va., flanked by Secret Service agents who attempted unsuccessfully to blend in with the crowd of mostly pre-teen girls. At one point during the concert, the boy bands’ teen heartthrobs sang, “You’re insecure, Dunno what for, You’re turning heads when you walk through the door” — words that managed to take on some meaning for Malia, who looked less than enthused by the presence of multiple middle-aged federal agents at her side. On Friday, the story was picked up by the liberal website The Huffington Post, which ran the headline, “Malia Obama, One Direction Fan: First Daughter Attends Boy Band Concert with Secret Service in Tow.” Within hours, the entire post was scrubbed from the site without explanation, and the post’s URL was hastily changed to direct users to the site’s celebrity section. The next day, news aggregation website Buzzfeed ran a story on the event, accompanied by a picture of Malia in attendance at the concert. The headline was “Malia Obama Goes to the One Direction Concert with the Secret Service,” and the story’s picture showed Malia standing awkwardly in front of a scowling male Secret Service agent, with what appear to be two additional female Secret Service agents standing to her right. By Sunday, the headline had changed to “Secret Service Agent Does Not Appear To Enjoy One Direction Concert,” and Buzzfeed had cropped the photo to remove Malia entirely, leaving only a narrow shot of the unhappy Secret Service agent. Again, the author of the post, Hillary Reinsberg, left no explanation for scrubbing Malia from the story and the picture, nor did she provide any indication to readers that it had occurred.

Arianny Celeste Arrested, But UFC’s White Has Her Back

UFC ring girl Arianny Celeste was arrested Saturday on allegations of domestic violence, according to TMZ. Fortunately for her, Dana White, president of mixed martial arts powerhouse UFC, said he has "her back." Celeste, whose full name is Arianny Celeste-Penelope Lopez Marquez, was taken into custody at 7:30 a.m. local time on Saturday in Nevada. At 7 p.m., she was released on a $3,000 bond. A hearing will take place Wednsday, according to Yahoo! Sports. After White learned of Celeste's arrest, he gave the following statement to TMZ: "Arianny is our baby. She has been with us for over five years. She is a good girl and an amazing ambassador for UFC. I don't know all the details of what happened but we have her back and support her 100 percent." Later on Saturday night, Celeste showed up at UFC 146 in the MGM Grand Garden Arena, although she missed the event's prelims, according to Fox Sports. Celeste, 26, joined the UFC in 2006. Since then, she's parlayed her fame into multiple modeling gigs. Sports Illustrated named her "Lady of the Day" on Feb. 4, 2010, Maxim voted her "The Hottest UFC Octagon Girl" in May 2010 and MMA Awards named her "Ring Girl of the Year 2010."