Showing posts with label record. Show all posts
Showing posts with label record. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Piss Off: University students pee in cups for Guiness World Record STD test attempt

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Piss Off: University students pee in cups for Guiness World Record STD test attempt

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Correcting the Record on Another Misleading CalPERS Press Release

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Correcting the Record on Another Misleading CalPERS Press Release

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Louie Gohmert adds Palin ‘can see Russia from my house’ to the Congressional Record

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Louie Gohmert adds Palin ‘can see Russia from my house’ to the Congressional Record

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Record Jobs For Old Workers; Everyone Else - Better Luck Next Month

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Record Jobs For Old Workers; Everyone Else - Better Luck Next Month

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Graph of the Day: Arctic sea ice at record low for February

graph-of-the-day
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Arctic sea ice growth has slowed dramatically in recent weeks, thanks in large part to abnormally warm air and water temperatures. Sea ice now sits at record low levels for mid-February.


According to the National Snow and Ice Data Center, as of February 18, sea ice covered about 14.36 million square kilometers in the Arctic. The previous low on this date was 14.37 million square kilometers in 2006.


The main culprit — in addition to the overall trend of global warming — is likely the rash of warm temperatures. With the polar vortex bringing cold air down to the U.S. this winter, warmer temperatures have been the norm in the Arctic. From February 1-17, temperatures were 7.2° to 14.4°F above normal for much of the Arctic. Some areas have been even warmer.



A look atArctic sea ice extent. The gray line is average for 1981-2010 and the dashed line shows the extent for 2011-12, the years when a record-low summer minimum occurred. The blue line is this year through February 18.


Click the image to enlarge. Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center


“Right now, the Arctic is pretty warm everywhere. If I look at temperature anomalies, there’s a huge anomaly over the Barents Sea and Sea of Okhotsk of about 10°C (above normal) compared to 1981-2010,” said Julienne Stroeve, a senior scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.


Stroeve also said that warm waters in the North Atlantic have slowed ice growth, which is part of a decades-long trend due to both natural variability and human influences.


The decline in sea ice is one of the key indicators of climate change. Sea ice in January, the last full month for which data is available, has declined 3.2 percent per decade since 1979 compared to the 1981-2012 average. That equals roughly 18,500 square miles in ice lost per decade, the same area as Vermont and New Hampshire combined. This past January ranked as the fourth-lowest year on record, with 2011 being the all-time record lowest.


Summer sea ice decline is even more precipitous, dropping 13.7 percent per decade over the same period according to the Arctic Report Card.


Record low ice extent in winter doesn’t directly translate into record low extent in the summer in a given year. Stroeve said low winter ice could affect some aspects of the melt season, though.


With more ocean exposed to the sun, melt season can get started sooner. That’s because the dark ocean water absorbs more incoming sunlight than ice. Stroeve recently published a paper showing this and that more heat being absorbed has pushed the autumn freeze later as well. Those two factors have contributed to Arctic sea ice melt season lengthening by a month since 1979, though there’s still considerable year-to-year variability.


Local weather patterns also have a great impact on the amount of ice that melts during the summer. When Arctic sea ice reached a record low minimum in 2012, a two-week period of stormy weather quickly broke up ice and kickstarted the melt season.


While predicting individual storms is near-impossible, starting the melt season with less ice lowers the margin for error said Malte Humpert, executive director of the Arctic Institute.


“One bad weather event might be enough (to cause extensive melting), but if you have more ice coming out of winter, it requires multiple variables,” he said.


Arctic sea ice usually peaks in mid to late March so colder temperatures in the next few weeks could help ice growth rebound. In 2005, sea ice extent was also significantly lower than normal in mid-February, but rebounded more than 190,000 square miles in less than a month. Despite the rapid growth, that year was still 550,000 square miles below the 1981-2010 average.


The quality of new ice isn’t the same as old sea ice, which tends to be thicker, harder, and more resilient to warmer temperatures. Ice at least 4 years old has declined from 26 percent of the Arctic’s ice pack at the end of winter in 1988 to 7 percent in 2013 according to climate.gov.


For the next week, temperatures look to remain at or above normal for much of the region, lowering the odds of a speedy increase in ice extent.




GeoengineeringWatch.org



Graph of the Day: Arctic sea ice at record low for February

Graph of the Day: Arctic sea ice at record low for February

graph-of-the-day
Share

Arctic sea ice growth has slowed dramatically in recent weeks, thanks in large part to abnormally warm air and water temperatures. Sea ice now sits at record low levels for mid-February.


According to the National Snow and Ice Data Center, as of February 18, sea ice covered about 14.36 million square kilometers in the Arctic. The previous low on this date was 14.37 million square kilometers in 2006.


The main culprit — in addition to the overall trend of global warming — is likely the rash of warm temperatures. With the polar vortex bringing cold air down to the U.S. this winter, warmer temperatures have been the norm in the Arctic. From February 1-17, temperatures were 7.2° to 14.4°F above normal for much of the Arctic. Some areas have been even warmer.



A look atArctic sea ice extent. The gray line is average for 1981-2010 and the dashed line shows the extent for 2011-12, the years when a record-low summer minimum occurred. The blue line is this year through February 18.


Click the image to enlarge. Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center


“Right now, the Arctic is pretty warm everywhere. If I look at temperature anomalies, there’s a huge anomaly over the Barents Sea and Sea of Okhotsk of about 10°C (above normal) compared to 1981-2010,” said Julienne Stroeve, a senior scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.


Stroeve also said that warm waters in the North Atlantic have slowed ice growth, which is part of a decades-long trend due to both natural variability and human influences.


The decline in sea ice is one of the key indicators of climate change. Sea ice in January, the last full month for which data is available, has declined 3.2 percent per decade since 1979 compared to the 1981-2012 average. That equals roughly 18,500 square miles in ice lost per decade, the same area as Vermont and New Hampshire combined. This past January ranked as the fourth-lowest year on record, with 2011 being the all-time record lowest.


Summer sea ice decline is even more precipitous, dropping 13.7 percent per decade over the same period according to the Arctic Report Card.


Record low ice extent in winter doesn’t directly translate into record low extent in the summer in a given year. Stroeve said low winter ice could affect some aspects of the melt season, though.


With more ocean exposed to the sun, melt season can get started sooner. That’s because the dark ocean water absorbs more incoming sunlight than ice. Stroeve recently published a paper showing this and that more heat being absorbed has pushed the autumn freeze later as well. Those two factors have contributed to Arctic sea ice melt season lengthening by a month since 1979, though there’s still considerable year-to-year variability.


Local weather patterns also have a great impact on the amount of ice that melts during the summer. When Arctic sea ice reached a record low minimum in 2012, a two-week period of stormy weather quickly broke up ice and kickstarted the melt season.


While predicting individual storms is near-impossible, starting the melt season with less ice lowers the margin for error said Malte Humpert, executive director of the Arctic Institute.


“One bad weather event might be enough (to cause extensive melting), but if you have more ice coming out of winter, it requires multiple variables,” he said.


Arctic sea ice usually peaks in mid to late March so colder temperatures in the next few weeks could help ice growth rebound. In 2005, sea ice extent was also significantly lower than normal in mid-February, but rebounded more than 190,000 square miles in less than a month. Despite the rapid growth, that year was still 550,000 square miles below the 1981-2010 average.


The quality of new ice isn’t the same as old sea ice, which tends to be thicker, harder, and more resilient to warmer temperatures. Ice at least 4 years old has declined from 26 percent of the Arctic’s ice pack at the end of winter in 1988 to 7 percent in 2013 according to climate.gov.


For the next week, temperatures look to remain at or above normal for much of the region, lowering the odds of a speedy increase in ice extent.




GeoengineeringWatch.org



Graph of the Day: Arctic sea ice at record low for February

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Ukraine Government Delays Vote, Currency Hits Record Low, Default Feared; Ukraine Asks for $35B, Bank Runs Underway

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Ukraine Government Delays Vote, Currency Hits Record Low, Default Feared; Ukraine Asks for $35B, Bank Runs Underway

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Record snowfall hits Japan killing 3, injuring over 800

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Record snowfall hits Japan killing 3, injuring over 800

Friday, February 14, 2014

CBS Featured ‘futurist’ as Climate Expert Blaming Record Cold on ‘global warming’


Physicist promotes paranormal phenomena of ‘Telepathy, Telekinesis, & Mind reading’


Marc Morano
Climate Depot
February 14, 2014


Physicist Michio Kaku

Physicist Michio Kaku / Image: Wikimedia Commons



CBS This Morning featured a futurist who promotes paranormal phenomena like ‘telepathy, telekinesis and mind reading’ as climate expert during its February 13 broadcast. CBS only identified physicist Michio Kaku (mkaku@aol.com) as a New York City College professor, with no mention of his special abilities. See: CBS Blames Global Warming for Harsh Winter Weather: Prof. Michio Kaku: ‘Excess heat generated by all this warm water is destabilizing this gigantic bucket of cold air….So that’s the irony, that heating could cause gigantic storms of historic proportions

Kaku’s website (http://mkaku.org/home/) promotes his book: “THE FUTURE OF THE MIND: The scientific quest to understand, enhance, and empower the mind.” And his quest to promote: “Telepathy. Telekinesis. Mind reading. Photographing a dream. Uploading memories. Mentally controlled robots.”



Kaku claims all of “these feats” have already been acheieved. “These feats, once considered science fiction, have now been achieved in the laboratory, as documented in THE FUTURE OF THE MIND,” Kaku’s website declares.


Kaku notes that his “book goes even further, analyzing when one day we might have a complete map of the brain, or a back up Brain 2.0, which may allow scientists to send consciousness throughout the universe.”


Kaku’s global warming comments were not well received by the scientific community:


‘No effing clue what he is talking about’: Meteorologist Dr. Ryan Maue Calls Warmist Physics Prof. Michio Kaku of NY City College ‘a festering wound on field of meteorology’ for Kaku’s blaming ‘excess heat’ on record cold and snow


Meteorologist Dr. Ryan Maue of Weather Bell tweeted on Kaku: He’s ‘like a festering wound on field of meteorology, Michio Kaku says ‘we think’ harsh winter is due to global warming,” Maue wrote.


“Kaku has no effing clue what he is talking about – ‘unstable jet stream’ — huh? How could someone supposedly so learned sound so doltish?,” Maue asked on Feburary 13, 2014.


“Must apologize to Bill Nye — he is now number 2 most egregious butcher of meteorology and climate science. New rankings come out weekly,” Maue quipped.


Houston Chronicle climate reporter Eric Berger joined in the Kaku bashing, noting Kaku is “a physicist (and not a well-regarded one among his peers) not an atmospheric scientist.”


Related Link:


CBS BLAMES GLOBAL WARMING FOR BAD WINTER -  Guest Michio Kaku, a physics professor from New York City College–not a climatologist, but a physicist–claimed that the “wacky weather” could get “even wackier” and its all because of global warming. “What we’re seeing is that the jet stream and the polar vortex are becoming unstable. Instability of historic proportions. We think it’s because of the gradual heating up of the North Pole. The North Pole is melting,” professor Kaku said. “That excess heat generated by all this warm water is destabilizing this gigantic bucket of cold air… So that’s the irony, that heating could cause gigantic storms of historic proportions,” the prof explained.


This article was posted: Friday, February 14, 2014 at 12:14 pm










Infowars



CBS Featured ‘futurist’ as Climate Expert Blaming Record Cold on ‘global warming’

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

From RealClearPolitics: Another Obamacare Delay; GOP Demographics; Christie"s Fundraising Record


Good morning. It’s Tuesday, February 11, the birthdays of inventor Thomas Edison, former governors Jeb Bush and Sarah Palin, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, actor Burt Reynolds, singer Sheryl Crow, and professional surfer Kelly Slater.


An 11-time world champion, Slater blew the judges’ minds—they gave him a perfect 10—for his artistry in the pipeline at a pro tour event in Hawaii last week. Today he turns 42. Happy birthday, dude.


When George Washington was a boy in Virginia, he would have celebrated February 11, 1731, as his birthday. But in 1752 Great Britain and its colonies switched from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, which made the future general one year and 11 days “younger”—as Washington’s birthday is now demarked as February 22, 1732.


Tonight, Barack and Michelle Obama host a state dinner in honor of Francois Hollande, the president of France. Yesterday, Obama took his counterpart on a trip to Monticello, the estate of France’s former ambassador and good friend Thomas Jefferson. The president showed Hollande a sweeping view of the Virginia countryside from a Monticello terrace normally barred to tourists. “That’s the good thing as a president,” Obama quipped. “I can do whatever I want.”


Monday was perhaps not the right day to offer that witticism, as White House officials were simultaneously confirming that the administration had unilaterally executed yet another delay in implementing key components of the Affordable Care Act. But in the morning note this week we are concentrating on other historical events, namely, interesting mileposts in the relationship between France and the United States this week.


In that spirit, we note that 60 years ago today, President Eisenhower convened a top-secret meeting of the White House National Security Council. The subject: how the U.S. could assist the French in their quest to hold onto its colonial empire in Vietnam.


I’ll have more on that ominous meeting in a moment, after first pointing you to our front page, where we aggregate stories and columns spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s staff and contributors:


* * *


GOP Irked by New Delay of Obamacare Mandate. Republicans expressed outrage Monday after the administration again extended deadlines for employers to comply with the law. Alexis Simendinger has the story


Do Demographics Really Work Against the GOP? Sean Trende takes issue with a fellow analyst’s commentary that Republicans need to heed demographic trends and “reach groups that have not traditionally been supportive” of the party. 


Nonbeliever PAC Gets Into the Midterm Game. Jose Gonzalez reports on a new political action committee dedicated to supporting humanist ideals and candidates opposed to religious influence on government policy.


Christie-Led RGA Sets Fundraising Record. Adam O’Neal has the numbers


Clay Aiken Running for Congress as Defense Hawk. The onetime “American Idol” celeb surprised many observers by announcing his candidacy. But as Adam reports, the openly gay political novice had another surprise in store in his first campaign video. 


Poll: Coloradans Say Pot Law Hurts State’s Image. Adam has the details here too. 


10 Surprising Facts About the Sochi Games. RealClearSports reprises this info-graphic


Was Mantle Was Better Than Mays? Also in RCS, Sheldon Hirsch lays out his case.


 * * *


More than eight years after the end of World War II, the situation was deteriorating rapidly for the French forces in Indochina. France had requested—and had been given—American military assistance in the form of 200 U.S. airmen, various warplanes, and some replacement parts and mechanics.


 It wasn’t proving nearly enough, and at the White House, Dwight D. Eisenhower convened a top-secret war council that included three cabinet officials, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and top presidential advisers.


“The President commented on the extraordinary confusion in the reports which reached him from the area of Indochina,” according to the now-declassified notes of the meeting taken by the NSC staff. “There were almost as many judgments as there were authors of messages. There were, nevertheless, only two critical factors in the situation. The first was to win over the Vietnamese population; the other to instill some spirit into the French.”


Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Eisenhower’s recently appointed U.S. ambassador to the U.N., who had had a great deal of experience dealing with the French, said “that if you get behind them and push hard enough they will do what is required.”


Eisenhower responded to this sentiment indirectly, according to the minutes of the meeting, and in two ways. First, he said he’d concluded that it was probably time for a change of ambassadors in Vietnam, which is ironic, because John F. Kennedy would later give that thankless job to Lodge.


Ike also subtly reminded his advisers that he himself had some experience with the French—and with war—by offering a prescient thought:


“The President commented that the mood of discouragement came from the evident lack of a spiritual force among the French and the Vietnamese. This was a commodity which it was excessively difficult for one nation to supply to another.”


Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau Chief
RealClearPolitics
Twitter: @CarlCannon
We update throughout the day at www.realclearpolitics.com.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



From RealClearPolitics: Another Obamacare Delay; GOP Demographics; Christie"s Fundraising Record

Friday, February 7, 2014

Record Breaking Hypocrisy on Fox News

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Record Breaking Hypocrisy on Fox News

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF

Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF
http://s1.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20140207&t=2&i=836125695&w=580&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBREA160I3V00




TOKYO Fri Feb 7, 2014 1:31am EST



A worker stands in a container area at a port in Tokyo January 27, 2014. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

A worker stands in a container area at a port in Tokyo January 27, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai




TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan is on track to post a record trade deficit in January, preliminary data showed on Friday, in a warning sign that consistently weak export demand could weigh on economic growth.


The data also provide further evidence that a weak yen is doing more to push up import costs than it is to boost exports as many Japanese manufacturers have shifted factories overseas.


A record trade deficit would also suggest that overseas demand may not be strong enough to offset the negative impact of a scheduled sales tax increase in April.


“It may be difficult to expect consumption to continue to lead growth as wages will not rise as fast as prices,” said Norio Miyagawa, senior economist at Mizuho Securities Research & Consulting Co.


“If external demand doesn’t pick up, the overall trend for growth would weaken.”


For the first 20 days of January, Japan’s trade deficit was 2 trillion yen ($ 19.6 billion), data from the finance ministry showed on Friday.


That would put it on track to surpass the current record high deficit, which was 1.6 trillion yen in January 2013. The finance ministry will release trade data for all of January on February 20.


Exports rose 11.3 percent in the first 20 days of January, compared with the same period a year ago. Imports, however, jumped an annual 30.2 percent.


The yen has fallen around 23 percent versus the dollar since late 2012 as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government embarked on a bold plan to end 15 years of deflation with expanded quantitative easing from the Bank of Japan.


The yen’s decline has helped consumer prices rise as it pushes up import costs, which is contributing toward reaching the Bank of Japan’s 2 percent inflation target.


Many in the government also expected the yen’s fall to boost exports, but this has largely failed to materialize as Japanese companies are producing more goods outside of the country.


Growing signs of weakness in emerging market countries has also raised concerns that demand for Japanese exports could deteriorate further.


The economy is likely to boom until March as consumers rush to beat the sales tax hike, and many analysts agree with the BOJ’s view that the pain from the higher tax will be temporary.


However, weak exports could mean that the rebound is slower than some economists anticipate. ($ 1 = 101.8600 Japanese yen)


(Editing by Kim Coghill)






Reuters: Economic News




Read more about Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Gunman in mall shooting had no criminal record

Gunman in mall shooting had no criminal record
http://hosted2.ap.org/CBImages/?media=photo&contentId=1b203b6489e5f503490f6a7067002ad8&fmt=jpg&Role=Preview&reldt=2014-01-25T21:46:34GMT&authToken=eNoFwrkNwCAQBMCKTlruWSCgGLBBInPogOLRzJl%2fo4XSw0gD4LBynt3SUNigS6kzZAVMvGIJewYzoP0tZ39NkiYNV9QL5NAS8w%3d%3d







Howard County police chief William McMahon speaks to reporters at the parking lot of the Mall in Columbia, Md., after a shooting at the mall on Saturday Jan. 25, 2014 in Howard County, Md. Police in Maryland say three people died Saturday in a shooting at a mall in suburban Baltimore, including the presumed gunman. ( AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)





Howard County police chief William McMahon speaks to reporters at the parking lot of the Mall in Columbia, Md., after a shooting at the mall on Saturday Jan. 25, 2014 in Howard County, Md. Police in Maryland say three people died Saturday in a shooting at a mall in suburban Baltimore, including the presumed gunman. ( AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)





The home of Darion Marcus Aguilar of College Park, Md., is seen Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Police say Aguilar carried out Saturday’s attack with a shotgun at a skateboard shop at the Mall of Columbia before killing himself. Howard County Police Chief William McMahon said investigators are trying to determine whether Aguilar knew either of the victims and whether he had a criminal record. They offered no motive for the shooting. (AP Photo/Ben Nuckles)





The home of Darion Marcus Aguilar of College Park, Md., is seen Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Police say Aguilar carried out Saturday’s attack with a shotgun at a skateboard shop at the Mall of Columbia before killing himself.Howard County Police Chief William McMahon said investigators are trying to determine whether Aguilar knew either of the victims and whether he had a criminal record. They offered no motive for the shooting. (AP Photo/Ben Nuckles)





A Montgomery County, Md., police officer walks in a parking lot at The Mall in Columbia, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014, in Columbia, Md., following a shooting that police say three people died at the mall including the presumed gunman. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)





Restaurant general manager Heather Saffield, watches though the glass door from her restaurant at The Mall in Columbia Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014, in Columbia, Md., as police continue the evacuation of the remaining mall visitors following a shooting that police say three people died including the presumed gunman. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)













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(AP) — The gunman who shot two people to death at a Maryland shopping mall had no criminal record, police said Sunday, but little else was known about the 19-year-old and whether he knew his victims.


Darion Marcus Aguilar of College Park, Md., carried out Saturday’s attack with a 12-gauge shotgun at a skateboard shop at the Mall in Columbia in suburban Baltimore before killing himself, police said.


Howard County Police Chief William McMahon said investigators are trying to determine whether Aguilar knew either of the victims, who were both employees of a shop called Zumiez, which sells skateboards, clothing and accessories.


Police identified the victims as 21-year-old Brianna Benlolo of College Park, Md., and 25-year-old Tyler Johnson of Mount Airy, Md. McMahon offered no motive for the shooting.


“There are a lot of unanswered questions,” McMahon said at a news conference. Aguilar purchased the shotgun legally last month at a store in neighboring Montgomery County.


It took hours to identify the gunman since he was carrying ammunition and a backpack containing homemade explosives, McMahon said. Officers searched Aguilar’s home Saturday night, recovering more ammunition, computers and documents, police said.


The home is a two-story wood-frame house in a middle-income neighborhood called Hollywood, just off U.S. Route 1 and near the Capital Beltway. No one answered the door Sunday morning at the house, which had a Christmas wreath on the front door, signs that read “Beware of Dog” and warnings about an alarm system.


Aguilar and his mother were renters at the home. Sirkka Singleton, who owns the property with her husband and lives a block away, said they use a property manager to find tenants and they have never met the Aguilars. She declined to say who the property manager was.


Residents described the neighborhood as a mix of owners and renters, including some University of Maryland students.


Katie Lawson, director of communications at the university, said campus police told her that Aguilar has never had been a student there. She said she had no information on the two victims.


Aguilar graduated in 2013 from James Hubert Blake High School in Silver Spring, said Dana Tofig, a Montgomery County schools spokesman.


A person who attended the high school with Aguilar told The Associated Press that he was an avid skateboarder.


Tydryn Scott, 19, said she was Aguilar’s lab partner in science class and described him as tall, skinny and quiet. She said he was interested in skateboarding and hung out with other skaters.


She said she was stung by the news that he was the shooter.


“It was really hurtful, like, wow — someone that I know, someone that I’ve been in the presence of more than short amounts of time. I’ve seen this guy in action before. Never upset, never sad, just quiet, just chill,” Scott said. “If any other emotion, he was happy, laughing.”


A man who answered the phone at Johnson’s residence in Mount Airy, northwest of Baltimore, said the family had no comment. But the victim’s aunt told a local television station that she did not believe her nephew knew Aguilar.


Sydney Petty, in a statement to WBAL-TV, also said she did not believe her nephew had a relationship with Benlolo outside work.


“Tyler didn’t have anything beyond a working relationship with this girl, and he would have mentioned it if he did, and we’re just as confused as anybody,” Petty said.


She said her nephew also worked at a drug rehabilitation center in Mount Airy, for which she served on the board.


Five other people were hurt in the attack and its aftermath, but only one was hit by gunfire. All were released from hospitals by Saturday evening, police said.


At the time of the shooting, the mall was busy with weekend shoppers and employees.


“There were a lot of people very close to where this happened,” Howard County Executive Ken Ulman said.


Police searched the mall with dogs overnight, and stores were to remain closed through Tuesday.


Benlolo’s grandfather, John Feins, said in a telephone interview from Florida that his granddaughter had a 2-year-old son and that the job at Zumiez was her first since she went back to work after her son’s birth.


“She was all excited because she was the manager there,” he said.


He described his daughter’s family as a military family that had moved frequently and had been in Colorado before moving to Maryland about two years ago. He said his granddaughter was on good terms with her son’s father, and they shared custody.


“I mean what can you say?” he said. “You go to work and make a dollar and you got some idiot coming in and blowing people away.”


___


Associated Press writers Jessica Gresko and Martin Di Caro in Washington contributed to this report. Eric Tucker contributed from Columbia, Md., and Kasey Jones reported from Baltimore.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines




Read more about Gunman in mall shooting had no criminal record and other interesting subjects concerning U.S. News Report at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, January 17, 2014

California declares statewide emergency amid worst drought on record


By Agence France-Presse
Friday, January 17, 2014 14:29 EST


[Image via NASA/NOAA]







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  • California’s worst drought in a century is devastating the state’s agriculture and destroying its forestland, which is being consumed by wildfire, Governor Jerry Brown said Friday as he declared a state emergency.


    The emergency declaration allows California to access federal help to battle the drought, which has left huge swathes of tinder-dry forest vulnerable to catching fire.


    On Thursday, a massive blaze raged just outside Los Angeles, damaging several homes and forcing residents to evacuate the area, where the fire risk had been elevated for weeks.


    Brown urged residents of his state to reduce their water use by at least 20 percent.


    “I’ve declared this emergency and I’m calling on all Californians to conserve water in every way possible,” he said in his statement.


    “We can’t make it rain,” he added.


    “But we can be much better prepared for the terrible consequences that California’s drought now threatens, including dramatically less water for our farms and communities, and increased fires in both urban and rural areas.”


    Brown told reporters in San Francisco that the current conditions were “the worst drought that California has ever seen since records (began) about 100 years ago,” media reports said.


    The region is suffering its third dry winter in a row, highlighted by the Los Angeles blaze.


    California and other western US states are routinely hit with wildfires during the summer, but winter fires like the ones currently raging, are relatively rare.


    California’s rivers and reservoirs have reached record lows, with only 20 percent of the normal average supplies of water from melting snowpack, which flows down from mountains like the Sierra Nevada north-to-south range.


    [Image via NASA/NOAA]



    Agence France-Presse


    Agence France-Presse


    AFP journalists cover wars, conflicts, politics, science, health, the environment, technology, fashion, entertainment, the offbeat, sports and a whole lot more in text, photographs, video, graphics and online.








    The Raw Story



    California declares statewide emergency amid worst drought on record

California declares statewide emergency amid worst drought on record


By Agence France-Presse
Friday, January 17, 2014 14:29 EST


[Image via NASA/NOAA]







  • Print Friendly and PDF

  • Email this page

  • California’s worst drought in a century is devastating the state’s agriculture and destroying its forestland, which is being consumed by wildfire, Governor Jerry Brown said Friday as he declared a state emergency.


    The emergency declaration allows California to access federal help to battle the drought, which has left huge swathes of tinder-dry forest vulnerable to catching fire.


    On Thursday, a massive blaze raged just outside Los Angeles, damaging several homes and forcing residents to evacuate the area, where the fire risk had been elevated for weeks.


    Brown urged residents of his state to reduce their water use by at least 20 percent.


    “I’ve declared this emergency and I’m calling on all Californians to conserve water in every way possible,” he said in his statement.


    “We can’t make it rain,” he added.


    “But we can be much better prepared for the terrible consequences that California’s drought now threatens, including dramatically less water for our farms and communities, and increased fires in both urban and rural areas.”


    Brown told reporters in San Francisco that the current conditions were “the worst drought that California has ever seen since records (began) about 100 years ago,” media reports said.


    The region is suffering its third dry winter in a row, highlighted by the Los Angeles blaze.


    California and other western US states are routinely hit with wildfires during the summer, but winter fires like the ones currently raging, are relatively rare.


    California’s rivers and reservoirs have reached record lows, with only 20 percent of the normal average supplies of water from melting snowpack, which flows down from mountains like the Sierra Nevada north-to-south range.


    [Image via NASA/NOAA]



    Agence France-Presse


    Agence France-Presse


    AFP journalists cover wars, conflicts, politics, science, health, the environment, technology, fashion, entertainment, the offbeat, sports and a whole lot more in text, photographs, video, graphics and online.








    The Raw Story



    California declares statewide emergency amid worst drought on record

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Alexander touts bipartisan record

Lamar Alexander is pictured. | AP Photo

The Republican senator says he has to have support from Democrats as well. | AP Photo





Washington may be toxic to voters — especially Republicans — but Lamar Alexander believes his incumbency will be an asset as he fights off a conservative primary challenge in Tennessee.


The Republican senator said he is emphasizing — even to GOP primary voters — the areas where he has been able to work with Democrats to pass laws during a particularly dry season of lawmaking in Congress. The strategy of highlighting his bipartisan dealmaking is a marked contrast to other Republicans dealing with challengers from the right, many of whom are highlighting their rock-solid opposition to Democratic policy.







“It takes 60 votes to get a result and we have 45 Republicans. If I’m going to fix the debt or lower the student loan rate or give parents more school choice, I’m going to have to have some Democratic support to do it. Tennesseans understand that,” Alexander said in a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO.


(PHOTOS: 10 must-watch House races in 2014)


To rebut conservative groups like Club for Growth and Heritage Action for America that take a dim view of Alexander each year in their annual scorecards, the two-term senator is releasing his own scorecard that highlights his stewardship of nine bills into law. Among the accomplishments he is hyping are a revamp of the federal student loan program and a new drug safety law — achievements Alexander believes stick out in a gridlocked 2013.


“Congress and the president only signed into law 72 laws and I found a way to be a part of nine of those,” Alexander said. “It’s very satisfying to me when I get a chance to work and work across party lines.”


That’s not to say even he believes his record is perfect. Alexander admitted he now regrets his vote in support of the “Cash for Clunkers” program, intended to spur the American auto industry. But he stands strong behind a vote that most riled grassroots conservatives: His support of the Senate’s comprehensive immigration bill.


He said he hears little from people back home criticizing his vote for the immigration legislation, which spurred the conservative machinery back home to find a candidate to challenge him.


(PHOTOS: Lamar Alexander’s top aide investigated for child porn)


“I hear about it from people who like that fact I did something about it,” Alexander said. “For the Congress not to deal with immigration is indefensible. The Nashville City Council can’t do it, the governor of Tennessee can’t do it. It’s the job of the president and the Congress to do and we’re just allowing de facto 11 million people to break the rule of law when we don’t do something about it.”


The former governor, presidential candidate and education secretary insulated himself from higher-profile challenges by locking up endorsements from much of the Tennessee congressional delegation, which means he won’t be facing the same sort of conservative firepower in his August primary as some other Senate GOP incumbents.


The highest-profile challenger Alexander has drawn is conservative state Rep. Joe Carr, and there has been little comprehensive polling done on the race.


Manu Raju contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Alexander touts bipartisan record

Norwegian students blow U.S. algebra record away with 5 million equations

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Norwegian students blow U.S. algebra record away with 5 million equations

Monday, January 13, 2014

Number of US Prison Inmates Serving Life Sentences Hits New Record


A report released by The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit criminal justice advocacy group, reveals that the number of prisoners serving life sentences in the US state and federal prisons reached a new record of close to 160,000 in 2012. Of these, 49,000 are serving life without possibility of parole, an increase of 22.2 percent since 2008.


The study’s findings place in relief figures being promoted by the federal government indicating a reduction in the overall number of prisoners in federal and state facilities, from 1.62 million to 1.57 million between 2009 and 2012.


Ashley Nellis, senior research analyst with the Sentencing Project, argues that the rise in prisoners serving life sentences has to do with political posturing over “tough on crime” measures. “Unfortunately, lifers are typically excluded from most sentencing reform conversations because there’s this sense that it’s not going to sell, politically or with the public,” Nellis says. “Legislators are saying, ‘We have to throw somebody under the bus.’”


At 40,362 California holds a quarter of lifers, followed by Florida (12,549) and New York (10,245), Texas (9,031), Georgia (7,938), Ohio (6,075), Michigan (5,137), Pennsylvania (5,104) and Louisiana (4,657).


Sources:


David Krajicek, “Hard Time: Prisons Are Packed With More Lifers Than Ever,”, WhoWhatWhy.com, September 18, 2013, http://whowhatwhy.com/2013/09/18/hard-time-prisons-are-packed-with-more-lifers-than-ever/.


Ashley Nellis, “Life Goes On: The Historic Rise in Life Sentences in America,” The Sentencing Project, September 2013, http://sentencingproject.org/doc/publications/inc_Life Goes On 2013.pdf.


Student Researcher: Isabella Diaz (Florida Atlantic University)


Faculty Evaluator: James F. Tracy (Florida Atlantic University)





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Number of US Prison Inmates Serving Life Sentences Hits New Record