Thursday, March 14, 2013

L.A. Archdiocese, Cardinal Mahony settle sex abuse cases

By Steve Gorman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, its former leader Cardinal Roger Mahony and an ex-priest have agreed to pay a total of nearly $10 million to settle four child sex abuse cases brought against them, lawyers for the victims said on Tuesday.

Mahony, who retired in 2011 as head of the largest U.S. archdiocese and is now in Rome taking part in choosing a new pope, was accused of helping a confessed pedophile priest evade law enforcement by sending him out of state to a Church-run treatment center, then placing the priest back in the Los Angeles ministry.

The defrocked priest named in all four cases is Michael Baker, who ultimately was convicted in 2007 and sent to prison on 12 criminal counts of felony oral copulation with a minor involving two boys who reached a previous settlement with the Church.

The latest agreement came four weeks before civil suits brought by two men, now in their 20s, who claimed they were molested as 12-year-olds in the late 1990s, were scheduled to go to trial, plaintiff's attorney Vince Finaldi said.

The two other newly settled cases are less recent. One dates to the late 1970s, before Mahony was archbishop, and the other to 1986, not long after he assumed the post, Finaldi said.

As part of the settlement, approved by a Los Angeles judge earlier this month, none of the parties admitted wrongdoing.

Finaldi said the settlement, together with the recent release of internal Church records documenting the role of Mahony and others in covering up child sexual abuse by the clergy, comes "as close to an admission of guilt as you're going to get from the archdiocese."

A lawyer for the archdiocese, Michael Hennigan, confirmed a settlement in the amount of $9.99 million was reached. He added that the archdiocese "has always taken the position that we were responsible for the conduct of Michael Baker."

Mahony has "admitted that he made serious mistakes in putting Michael Baker back in the ministry," Hennigan said, but he denied that archdiocese officials were involved in a coverup.

Clergy were not legally required under California law to report suspected child abuse to authorities until 1997. Prior to that, Hennigan said, the policy of the archdiocese was to urge families of victims to go to law enforcement on their own.

'NO REASONABLE EXCUSE'

Finaldi, however, disputed the notion that Mahony should be absolved of any obligation to alert authorities.

"You have a priest who is confessing that he sexually molested two kids, and you don't pick up the phone and call police? There's no reasonable excuse for not doing that," he said.

Scandals over sex abuse in the U.S. Catholic Church, which erupted in 1992 with a series of molestation cases uncovered in Boston, have cost the Church billions of dollars in settlements and driven prominent dioceses into bankruptcy.

The Los Angeles Archdiocese, which serves 4 million Catholics, reached a $660 million civil settlement in 2007 with more than 500 victims of child molestation, marking the biggest such agreement of its kind in the nation. Mahony at that time called the abuse "a terrible sin and crime."

The archdiocese has reached a handful of settlements in other cases since then, but the one announced on Tuesday was by far the biggest, Finaldi added.

In a rare Church rebuke of a cardinal, Mahony was censured in late January by his successor, Archbishop Jose Gomez, and stripped of all public and administrative duties, as punishment for his role in the sex abuse scandal.

The censure followed the public release of over 12,000 pages of confidential files unsealed as part of previous civil suits, revealing how numerous known or suspected pedophiles in the clergy were shielded from law enforcement scrutiny by Mahony and other Church officials.

But Mahony retained his title as cardinal and his right to take part in the Vatican conclave that selects a new pontiff to replace retired Pope Benedict XVI, an authority he chose to exercise.

The resignation of one of Mahony's former top advisers, Thomas Curry, from his post as bishop of Santa Barbara was announced by the archdiocese in conjunction with the censure.

The Church personnel files released earlier this year revealed that in addition to sending abusive priests to a Church-run pedophile treatment center in New Mexico, Mahony and Curry sought to keep priests from later revealing their misconduct to private therapists who would have been obligated to report molestation to police.

In one such memo about Baker's return to Los Angeles, Curry wrote to Mahony suggesting Baker avoid any mention of "his past problem" to a therapist after release from the Church treatment program, to which Mahony responded with the handwritten note: "Sounds good -- please proceed!!"

Baker confessed his molestation of two boys to Mahony in 1986, early in Mahony's tenure as archbishop. After six months in treatment, he was placed back in the ministry in the Los Angeles area, supposedly in a job precluding any contact with children, Finaldi said.

But according to Finaldi, Baker was assigned to a residence attached to a church that also operated a school.

(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/l-archdiocese-cardinal-mahony-settle-sex-abuse-cases-054758162.html

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Whale baleen forms a net to trap dinner

Alexander Werth

A new study shows that the baleen of bowhead whales and humpback whales is not the passive structure it was thought to be, but forms a tangled mesh in water.

By Tanya Lewis
LiveScience

Humpback and bowhead whales create their own food nets from specialized bristles in their mouths to more efficiently nab fishy morsels, a new study of baleen whales suggests.

When these whales feed, some open their jaws wide to gulp mouthfuls of seawater, whereas others swim with half-open mouths (called ramming or skim-feeding). Both rely on baleen, a system of hairy bristles that line their mouths and trap food. The new study, published Wednesday?in The Journal of Experimental Biology, shows that the baleen of bowhead whales and humpback whales is not the passive structure it was thought to be, but forms a tangled mesh in water that streams through it as the animals swim.

And how the baleen gets morphed is different depending on the specific whale's feeding style, the study found.

"Everyone assumed baleen works like a sieve," study author Alexander Werth, a biologist at Hampden-Sydney College, Va., told LiveScience. But as soon as he put pieces of baleen in a flow tank, "it became immediately apparent that it was a dynamic tissue rather than a static one."

Baleen is made up of keratin, the protein found in hair and fingernails, which forms large plates that enclose a fibrous inner core. Whales typically have about 300 plate structures on either side of their mouths, perpendicular to the direction that water flows. The whales' tongues wear away the inner edges of the plates to create a fringe that traps krill and other tasty morsels.

Baleen biomechanics
Werth wanted to compare the biomechanics of the bowhead whale?(Balaena mysticetus) with that of the humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae). He placed pieces of baleen from these whales in a giant tank, and pumped water and small latex beads (stand-ins for the food morsels they filter from water) through them, observing this with an underwater camera.?[See Video of Baleen in Motion]

Werth tested small sections of each kind of baleen at water speeds between 2 and 55 inches per second (5 and 140 centimeters per second), which is comparable to whale swimming speeds. Werth also varied the angle of the baleen between parallel and perpendicular to the flow. He observed how many beads the baleen bristles trapped for at least 2 seconds.

The single baleen plates trapped the most beads at the lowest water speeds, the results showed. As the water speed increased, the bristles streamed out ? like hair blowing in a strong wind ? creating gaps where particles could slip through.

But baleen isn't found in single plates in a whale's mouth, it's found in rows, so Werth tested a small rack of six baleen plates. Now the bristles formed a tangled net in the flowing water, with most beads being trapped at about 28 to 31 inches/s (70 to 80 cm/s) ? exactly the speed bowhead whales swim when they're "ram" feeding.

"The first thing I saw was the size of that net depends on how fast the waters are flowing through it and in what direction," Werth said. "The fringes from adjacent plates would tangle up and make a really dense knot."

Humpback whale baleen was shorter and coarser than bowhead baleen, and captured fewer beads.

Feeding styles
The findings reveal how the baleen of bowhead whales and humpbacks differs biomechanically. Those differences explain the specialized feeding styles?of the two types of whales: Bowheads feed by continuous ram feeding at slower speeds, whereas humpbacks feed in intermittent gulps at higher speeds.

The baleen of humpback whales performed best at the same speed as that of bowheads, despite the fact that humpbacks typically swim faster than bowheads when feeding.

"This is a fascinating study," marine ecologist Ari Friedlaender of Duke University, who was not involved in the study, told LiveScience in an email, adding he was surprised ?that the bowhead whale baleen functioned better at higher flow speeds than the humpback whale baleen.

"We think of (bowhead) whales generally as slow-feeding animals that are basically mowing the lawn and that humpback whales are more energetic and feed faster," Friedlaender said, but it appears humpbacks may actually be moving at a similar speed while feeding.

Werth also hopes to explore how pollutants affect the whales' baleen. "I'm really worried about what would happen if the filter gets clogged with oil or debris," he said.

Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter @tanyalewis314. Follow us @livescience, Facebook?or Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

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

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/13/17301512-baleen-forms-tangled-net-to-let-whales-trap-their-dinners?lite

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Monday, March 11, 2013

?The JSC cannot form a court?: JSC Vice Chair ... - Minivan News

?The JSC cannot form a court?: JSC Vice Chair Abdulla Didi grilled by Parliamentary Oversight Committee thumbnail

The Vice Chair of the Judicial Services Commission (JSC), Criminal Court Judge Abdulla Didi, attended parliament?s Independent Committees Oversight Committee to answer its queries about the Hulhumale? Magistrate Court and the appointment of the panel of judges hearing the Nasheed trial.

Former President Mohamed Nasheed is being tried for his detention of Criminal Court Chief Judge Abdulla Mohamed.

Abdulla Didi attended the committee despite the chair of the judicial watchdog, Adam Mohamed, disputing that the JSC was answerable to parliament on the grounds that the summons referred to an ?ongoing case?.

Asked if he believed Adam Mohamed had acted legally in unilaterally deciding that the JSC would not abide by the oversight committee?s summons, Abdulla Didi responded that he ?will not say that the Chair acted against the law,? and that he ?cannot make any comments on the matter.?

?I personally believe that we must be answerable to the oversight committee. That is why I am here today,? he said.

Conflict of Interest

Before discussions on the scheduled topic began, Abdulla Didi requested that Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) MP Ali Waheed leave the committee.

Didi said Ali Waheed currently had a case against him in the Criminal Court of which he the judge, and hence he believed there is a conflict of interest to have the MP question him during Thursday?s meeting.

?I wouldn?t have felt any hesitation if all the JSC members were here. But since I am being questioned separately, I don?t think it is a good idea to have someone who has a criminal case against him question me here,? Abdulla Didi said.

Ali Waheed said he believed he was not required to leave the committee as per the constitution, but was willing to do so as it was ?ethically the right thing to do.?

Chair of the committee MDP MP Ahmed Sameer informed Abdulla Didi that Ali Waheed had previously informed the committee that he would not be asking any questions from the JSC member, and that he was only participating in the meeting due to the quorum requirements needed to have the meeting.

?Abdulla Didi is here as a JSC member, and not as a Criminal Court Judge. Likewise, it is the citizen Ali Waheed who has a pending case in the court, not the MP for Thohdoo constituency. As there is no conflict when viewed in the light of the capacities in which you both are participating in this meeting, I am of the opinion that MP Ali Waheed is legally allowed to stay and question you. I would like to state here that if Ali Waheed is leaving, it is only out of his personal accord,? Sameer stated.

Later in the meeting, Sameer referred to Ali Waheed?s voluntary exit from the meeting as an example of abstaining from action in cases of conflict of interest, and asked Abdulla Didi why he had not similarly abstained from voting on deciding the panel overseeing Nasheed?s case.

?You are a member of the JSC which voted on choosing judges for the Hulhumale? Court panel of magistrates. You also serve as a judge in the Criminal Court. The case which this panel is to preside over concerns the Chief Judge of the court you serve under, Judge Abdulla Mohamed. Under these circumstances, why didn?t you abstain from the vote which decided upon magistrates for the Abdulla Mohamed case?? Sameer asked.

?I had no such intentions like what you are implying. The short answer to that question is that we did not decide on the panel to preside on an ?Abdulla Mohamed case?. It disturbs me when you refer to the case as such,? Didi responded.

?It is a case regarding the arrest of Abdulla Mohamed, in which some other people are accused of having committed criminal acts. The case is about them, not Abdulla Mohamed,? he said, shaking his head.

Sameer also asked about alleged conflict of interest in the vote taken by the JSC to continue running the Hulhumale? Magistrate Court itself.

?JSC Member Ahmed Rasheed, who is the husband of a Hulhumale? Court Magistrate, was among the members who voted to establish or continue the said court, isn?t he? And you voted, too. This is extremely concerning, and so I repeat: the case concerns the detention of the Chief Judge of the Criminal Court by the then government. You are a judge serving in that court. Rasheed?s wife is a magistrate in the court trying this case. Do you think this decision is impartial under these circumstances?? Sameer asked.

Didi attempted to dodge the question, stating he was unaware how Rasheed had cast his vote. MP Sameer, however stated he had seen the related documents, and informed him that four members had voted, including Rasheed and Abdulla Didi.

Didi still insisted that he ?found it difficult? to answer the question, or decide on the validity of the decision.

The Vice Chair of the judicial watchdog stated that as a norm, if a member felt that he had a conflict of interest in any matter that the commission was taking a vote on, he would state the reasons and excuse himself. He further stated that if a member failed to excuse himself, and yet JSC Chair Adam Mohamed believed such a conflict existed, the chair would then point it out and discuss with the relevant member an agreeable way to proceed.

MDP MP Hamid Abdul Ghafoor asked if any such issues had arisen during the vote taken to appoint magistrates to the Hulhumale? Court panel.

?I cannot recall if any members declared any conflict of interest. Nor can I at all remember whether the Chair noticed such a conflict,? Abdulla Didi said.

The panel

Didi said that discussion about the panel of judges of the Hulhumale? Magistrate Court initially began in the JSC after the then head of the court requested the commission assign judges from other courts to preside in a pending case at the Hulhumale? Magistrate Court.

?Once this request came in, we discussed the matter and proposed names for the bench. We then sent these names to the Supreme Court bench, otherwise known as the Judicial Council, for comment. They decided on those names and sent it back to the JSC. This is how the process went,? Didi told the committee.

?This is also completely in line with what the laws state, I refer to Articles 47 to 49 of the Judges? Act. I might be referring to the previous Judges? Act. There were some amendments made to it later, which may have changed the order of these articles I quote. I am not sure, I haven?t reviewed it that much,? Abdulla Didi said.

Article 47 of the Judges? Act states ?If a judge is temporarily transferred to preside over a case in a different court, he must be transferred to a court of the same level as the one he is serving in.?

Article 48 states ?A judge can be temporarily appointed to another court in the instance that the court is unable to sufficiently complete assigned work, or if the court had difficulties providing services, or if the judges serving in the court has been suspended from their duties, or if other circumstances which may cause a delay in the completion of work assigned to the court occur.?

Article 49 states ?It is the Judicial Services Commission, with the counsel of the Judicial Council, which will come to a decision on the transfer of judges to oversee cases in other courts.?

After listening to Abdulla Didi?s version of events, Sameer presented the information previously gathered by the commission.

?The laws state that the JSC has no right to decided on the judges on a panel. Only the head magistrate of the relevant court has the powers to do so,? Sameer said.

?Now, the Chief Magistrate at this court at the time, Huraa Magistrate Moosa Naseem, sent in three names for the panel to JSC asking only for your commission?s comments. The list included his name as well. Can you then tell me what legal right the JSC has to disregard these three names and appoint three completely different magistrates??

Abdulla Didi said in response:??We at the JSC considered the important cases pending at the Hulhumale? Court. So we proposed other names with the intention of assigning qualified, experienced judges. I don?t believe this conflicts with any existing laws. What I am saying is, I did not come to any decision. It was after discussion with the other JSC members that we passed it through a vote.?

MDP MP Ahmed Abdulla asked the JSC member why, if the selection was based on merit and experience, the three magistrates proposed by the Hulhumale? Court had been disregarded while all three were currently serving as chief magistrates of their respective courts.

?Let me explain. According to the Judge?s Act, no judge had the power to bring in judges from other courts to preside on cases. JSC considers the good magistrates in the atoll? That is not to imply that any magistrate is bad at their work, just that because of the nature of this case, we took special care to appoint the most able and appropriate judges who will treat the case with extra care and contemplate the matter deeply,? Abdulla said.

Didi insisted that the JSC that held legal powers to appoint magistrates to the panel, at which point the Chair of the parliamentary committee intervened and advised the judge to refrain from making misleading and non-factual statements.

?I am deeply disturbed that you are making these comments and passing it off ?as what the law says?. The law says perfectly clearly outlines the role of the chief magistrate, and that if other magistrates are temporarily being brought into a court, they must be from the same judicial jurisdiction,? Sameer intervened.

Didi also claimed the JSC had appointed the panel after the Hulhumale? Court requested additional magistrates to assist with their work.

However, member appointed from among the public to JSC Sheikh Shuaib Abdul Rahman, who had been interviewed by the committee prior to Abdulla Didi on Thursday, had stated that the request for additional magistrates and other support for the court had come after the appointment of the panel of magistrates.

MP Ghafoor questioned if the bench had been appointed after Nasheed?s case had been referred to the Hulhumale? Court, to which Didi replied in the affirmative.

Asked if Didi was aware that one of the magistrates appointed to the bench had allegations of disciplinary issues, sexual offences and corruption against him, he responded that he was not aware of such a case.

When MDP MP Rugiyya Mohamed said JSC Member Sheikh Rahman had confirmed that indeed such an allegation was being looked into by the commission, Abdulla Didi then responded that he had heard such rumours via media and had asked administrative staff to look into the matter.

He later said he ?did not believe any of the magistrates on the bench would have done anything of the sort.?

?I cannot confirm whether such a matter exists. The thing is, if we are to consider an allegation or a complaint, there has to be some solid reasons that should support the allegation, whether it be proved or not. If it is a solid and believable allegation, then I might not agree to have him on the bench,? he continued.

?I don?t think just being alleged of anything is reason enough to remove any magistrate from the bench. The allegation itself must carry some weight. However, such allegations can only be cleared once the relevant authority investigates it. So, I do believe any such investigations must be expedited. I don?t see any reason why such a magistrate cannot sit on the panel in the meantime.?

Is the Hulhumale court legitimate?

Asked directly whether Abdulla Didi believed the court to be a legitimate entity, he answered, ?I am not saying it is a legitimate court. Then again, nor I am I saying it is illegitimate. All I can say is I don?t believe it will be liquidated.?

?I think the JSC cannot establish a court through a vote. I can?t really recall the law too well at this moment, but the JSC certainly cannot form a court,? Abdulla Didi confirmed in response to a question posed by Sameer.

Sameer then asked if the Vice Chair of JSC had cast his vote on the matter of forming the Hulhumale? Court.

?That?s a huge misunderstanding. We never voted to form a court. We voted to establish that, in accordance with the laws, the Hulhumale? Court will not be automatically cancelled. The court was in existence even before [the vote],? Abdulla Didi answered.

However, Sameer challenged Abdulla Didi?s statement. He stated that in 2007, the President?s Office had created an administrative office called the Hulhumale? Courts Section, and not a court, saying that the existence of a magistrate court in Hulhumale? is not noted on any paperwork.

?We have documents proving that after the ratification of the Judicature Act, that under a decision of the JSC itself, the budget, stamp and even staff of this Hulhumale? Court Section office were transferred to the Family Court in Male?. And then, out of the blue, your commission decided there is a Magistrate Court in Hulhumale?,? Sameer stated.

?You are aware that a case against the Hulhumale? Court was filed in a lower court. The JSC then referred it to the Supreme Court. Then JSC Chair Adam Mohamed, who is a Supreme Court Judge, cast the deciding vote on the case. Do you believe this was conducted in due process?? Sameer asked.

Abdulla Didi refused to answer the question on the grounds that he could comment on a decision of the Supreme Court. He said ?there is no way I can call that a bad ruling.?


Source: http://minivannews.com/politics/the-jsc-cannot-form-a-court-jsc-vice-chair-abdulla-didi-grilled-by-parliamentary-oversight-committee-54340

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Big storm heads east from Rockies

Snow pounded Denver, Colo., Saturday, falling at more than an inch per hour at times. Nearly 500 flights out of Denver International Airport had to be canceled. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

A winter storm dumped more than a foot of snow on parts of Colorado and Arizona on Saturday, causing cancellation of hundreds of flights at Denver International Airport.

The National Weather Service reported snow accumulations up to 14 inches in Colorado. At 5 p.m. MT, it said the storm was pushing out of the state but warned that blizzard conditions would be possible with strong winds until nearly midnight.

Read more from weather.com

At of 8 p.m. ET, nearly 500 flights in and out of Denver had been canceled, according to the flight tracking site flightaware.com.

Travel conditions ?will be poor? on stretches of I-70, I-80 and I-25, weather.com reported.?


The bad weather caused postponement of a Major League Soccer game: The Colorado Rapids said their game against the Philadelphia Union was pushed to Sunday.?

Blizzard conditions were possible in western Nebraska, southeast Wyoming, northwest Kansas and northeast Colorado, weather.com added.

Snow and some ice was expected in parts of Nebraska to South Dakota and northern and central Minnesota.

Thunderstorms could also hit from southern Minnesota to southern Wisconsin, and southwestward to portions of Texas.

The National Weather Service said there would be ?widespread precipitation? from the Southern Plains and lower Mississippi Valley to the upper Great Lakes region Saturday and Sunday.?

?Heavy downpours and potentially severe thunderstorms will be the main threat across the southern tier of the nation as an organized line of convection fires up along a cold front marching from the southern plains to the lower Mississippi/Tennessee valley,? it said.

More than 20 inches of snow fell on parts of New England and waves pounded the shoreline as the latest winter storm hit a region already battered several times since October. Weather Channel Meteorologist Eric Fisher reports.

The latest storm comes after New England was hit by up to two feet of snow.

That storm, which moved out to sea Friday afternoon, also brought high winds that battered Nantucket, Martha?s Vineyard, and Long Island, the Weather Channel reported.

Three seaside houses on Massachusetts' Plum Island, about 40 miles north of Boston, had to be demolished after waves undermined them, NBC Nightly News reported.?

?We also have now four more that are severely structurally compromised and a total of 12 houses posted with no occupancy,? building inspector Sam Joslin told NBC Nightly News.

The owner of one of the houses lamented his loss.

?I?ve owned the house for a long, long time,? homeowner Stephen Bandoian told?WHDH in a phone interview?from Florida. ?It was a great home, it was a great place, and now it?s gone.?

NBC News' Matt DeLuca and Gil Aegerter contributed to this report.

Brennan Linsley / AP

A man struggles to walk as blizzard conditions near the U.S. Air Force Academy, in southern Colorado on Saturday.

Related

?Snowstorm misses Washington, pounds areas west of nation's capital

'Wave after wave of snow' to hit New England hard, forecasters warn

This story was originally published on

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/09/17247626-big-winter-storm-blasts-colorado-with-snow-heads-east?lite

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Pepto Bismuth

Pepto Bismol, that faintly bubblegum-flavored sludge from your medicine cabinet, was actually once considered something of a wonder drug. Bismuth subsalicylate (BSS), the active ingredient in Pepto, is derived from Bismuth salts. Even as a salt, people have used bismuth since the 18th century for its anti-inflammatory, bactericidal, and antacid properties. And when mixed with zinc salts, BSS forms a potent remedy for diarrhea—perfect for treating cholera-infected infants in the days before penicillin. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/9Wq8cvXi0Qo/the-weirdest-thing-on-the-internet-tonight-pepto-bismuth

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Fiery funeral for Venezuela's Chavez

In this photo released by Miraflores Press Office, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad kisses the flag-draped coffin of late Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez during the funeral ceremony at the military academy in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. (AP Photo/Miraflores Press Office)

In this photo released by Miraflores Press Office, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad kisses the flag-draped coffin of late Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez during the funeral ceremony at the military academy in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. (AP Photo/Miraflores Press Office)

In this photo released by Miraflores Press Office, Latin American and Caribbean leaders stand around the flag-draped coffin of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez during the funeral ceremony at the military academy in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. Front row, from left to right are Colombia's President Jose Manuel Santos, Guatemala's President Otto Perez Molina, Guyana's President Donald Ramotar, and Antigua and Barbuda's Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer. On the other side of the casket are, from right, Guatemala's President Otto Perez Molina, Haiti's President Michel Martelly and Honduras' President Porfirio Lobo. (AP Photo/Miraflores Press Office)

A screen showing a video image of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez plays in front of the site where Chavez's funeral ceremony will take place as people gather outside the military academy in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. Friday's funeral promises to be a final turn on the world stage for Chavez after 14 years in power, though in some ways the former paratrooper is not going anywhere: Venezuela announced Thursday that it would embalm his body and put it on permanent display. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

A girl dressed in Chavez military fatigues, including his trademark red beret, salutes to the camera as she lines up with others outside the military academy where the funeral ceremony for Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez will take place in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. Friday's funeral promises to be a final turn on the world stage for Chavez after 14 years in power, though in some ways the former paratrooper is not going anywhere: Venezuela announced Thursday that it would embalm his body and put it on permanent display. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Supporters of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez shout slogans as they line up outside the military academy where a funeral ceremony will take place for him in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, March 8, 2013. At right, a Chavez supporter holds up a doll in his likeness. Friday's funeral promises to be a final turn on the world stage for Chavez after 14 years in power, though in some ways the former paratrooper is not going anywhere: Venezuela announced Thursday that it would embalm his body and put it on permanent display. Chavez died on March 5 after a nearly two-year bout with cancer. He was 58. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

(AP) ? President Hugo Chavez was lauded as a modern-day reincarnation of Latin American liberator Simon Bolivar and a disciple of Cuba's Fidel Castro at a fiery, foot-stomping state funeral Friday as presidents, princes and left-wing glitterati looked on.

Chavez's hand-picked successor emotionally eulogized the fallen leader at the military academy where the funeral was held, his voice booming over Chavez's flag-draped casket as he pledged eternal loyalty in a ceremony that at times smacked of a political rally.

"Here we are, Comandante, your men, on their feet," Nicolas Maduro shouted, government officials rising behind him. "All your men and women ... loyal until beyond death."

"Chavez Lives!" he declared. "Mission Accomplished!"

But all was not peace and harmony in a country deeply divided by Chavez's 14 years in power.

Venezuelan opposition leader Henrique Capriles called Maduro a bald-faced liar and accused him of using the funeral to campaign for president. The opposition said it would boycott Maduro's swearing-in later Friday at the National Assembly, calling it unconstitutional, and Capriles spoke condescendingly of Maduro, calling him "boy."

Capriles, who is likely to face Maduro in a special presidential election that is supposed to be called within 30 days of Chavez's death, said the opposition had asked to attend Chavez's funeral, but was told "better that you don't come."

The funeral began with Venezuela's national youth orchestra singing the national anthem, led by famed conductor Gustavo Dudamel. A government-allied congressman later belted out cowboy songs from Chavez's native Barinas state.

The streets outside the military academy took on a carnival atmosphere, with military bands launching into marches and an expanse of supporters wearing the red of Chavez's socialist party. Street vendors sold paper replicas of the presidential sash, which many people in the line slipped over their shoulder.

Throngs watched the ceremony on huge monitors under the blazing sun, while a line to see Chavez's body stretched 1 ? miles (2 kilometers) but was halted as the funeral got under way.

In the funeral hall, more than 30 political leaders including Cuba's Raul Castro, Spanish Crown Prince Felipe de Borbon, and Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stood at attention before Chavez's flag-draped coffin, which was closed for the ceremony.

Maduro said that no Venezuelan leader, even Bolivar, who died in exile, faced and overcame such treachery and opposition as Chavez, who succumbed to cancer on Tuesday, at the age of 58

"Here you are, unconquered, pure, transparent, unique, true and always alive," Maduro shouted as many in attendance cried. "Comandante, they couldn't defeat you and they will never, ever defeat us."

Despite the blustery language of his speech and the expulsion on Tuesday of two U.S. military attaches on suspicion of spying, Maduro made a point of welcoming the U.S. delegation led by Rep. Gregory Meeks, a New York Democrat, and former Rep. William Delahunt, a Democrat from Massachusetts. Chavez often railed against America even as he sold the country billions of dollars in oil each year.

State Department officials have voiced hope that Maduro will prove a more pragmatic leader than the often bombastic Chavez, assuming he wins a full term.

Television cameras captured Hollywood star Sean Penn in attendance at the funeral, while the Rev. Jesse Jackson preached rapprochement between his country and Venezuela.

"We pray to God today that you will heal the breach between the U.S. and Venezuela," Jackson said.

But U.S. enemies such as Castro and Ahmadinejad also won loud applause.

"It is a great pain for us because we have lost a friend," Ahmadinejad said upon his arrival at the airport the night before. "I feel like I have lost myself, but I am sure that he still lives. Chavez will never die. His spirit and soul live on in each of our hearts."

Maduro announced Thursday that the government would embalm Chavez's body and put it on permanent display, a decision that touched off strong passions on both sides.

Most of the normally traffic-choked streets of Caracas were empty, with schools and many businesses shuttered. The government also prohibited alcohol sales.

Venezuelans watched the funeral from cafes, with many saying they were flattered to be the subject of the world's attention.

"If my Comandante was such a divisive man who fought with everyone and with other countries, wouldn't he be alone (at his funeral)?" asked Argenis Urbina, a 51-year-old bookseller who was riveted to the coverage on TV.

Others said they were put off by what they saw as an excess of pomp, particularly the plan to put Chavez's body on display.

"He was a president, and I would say not a good one. Not a hero," said Gloria Ocampos, a retired office manager. "He should be buried, just like any other president. They are treating him like he was the father of the country ... It's crazy."

Some 300 people also watched the funeral on screens set up in the Simon Bolivar plaza in Chavez's plains hometown of Sabaneta, where people had laid out flowers, candles and photos of the late leader.

Chavez was particularly beloved by the poor, whose lot he championed. But critics say he left his successors a monumental task, with annual inflation of more than 20 percent and public debt that quadrupled to more than $100 billion. Crime is endemic and Chavez's chaotic management style has been blamed for a breakdown in infrastructure, particularly in the key oil industry.

The government gave national and international media no direct access to the funeral, a measure of the strict control with which Chavez and his followers have ruled the country for years. On Thursday, Foreign Minister Elias Jaua appealed to local media not to publish critical political analyses "which could be a provocation for a pained people."

___

Associated Press writers E. Eduardo Castillo, Christopher Toothaker and Paul Haven in Caracas contributed to this report.

___

Vivian Sequera on Twitter: www.twitter.com/VivianSequera

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-08-Venezuela-Chavez/id-e145eb7355b2422bb81718d266dbcbea

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Youth villages give Israeli immigrant children a place to belong

Israel's youth villages, first created in the country's earliest years for Holocaust survivors, are now tasked with integrating children from places as disparate as?Ethiopia?and Russia.

By Chelsea Sheasley,?Correspondent / March 8, 2013

Education manager Naama Katz (l.) of the Kiryat Yearim Youth Village says soccer was the one thing that kept Nidan Eliezer functioning when he was on the verge of dropping out. 'Our children here are at the end of the road,' says Katz.

Christa Case Bryant/The Christian Science Monitor

Enlarge

The cafeteria at Kiryat Yearim Youth Village buzzes with chatter as children make return trips to the counter for more pita and falafel.

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But while the menu is quintessentially Israeli, the students are not. Their parents come from as far afield as Cuba, Iraq, Russia, and Ethiopia. Struggling to fit in, they have been kicked out of one, two, even four schools. Some are as many as seven grades behind in reading or math when they arrive at this boarding school on the outskirts of Jerusalem.

?Our children here are at the end of the road,? says educational manager Naama Katz.?

So three years ago, she and her colleagues turned to a Native American educational philosophy that?focuses on developing a complete person through values like independence and generosity,?that they feel is overlooked as a resource for children today. They say it?s hard to quantify the benefits of the new approach, but the fact that 80 to 90 percent of their students graduate and are accepted by the army gives them encouragement.?

Kiryat Yearim is one of 60 youth villages in Israel that educate an estimated 25,000 students per year,?putting them on a path?toward?becoming productive members of Israeli society, despite troubled pasts and higher rates of unemployment and poverty among their families.?

The work of these schools, where as many as 70 percent of the students are Ethiopian, is particularly critical at a time when anti-immigrant tensions are running high ? from recent reports that the government systematically administered contraceptive drugs to Ethiopian women, to racial profiling after last year?s protests against African illegal immigrants, to recent deportations of Sudanese refugees.

While children at youth villages are legal immigrants, they are often still the target of discrimination because of their skin color, immigrant activist groups contend.?

Although Kiryat Yearim and other youth villages are achieving important successes, significant challenges remain. While Ethiopian graduates of youth villages are three times more likely to attend university than their peers in other schools, for example, the percentage who attend is still a mere 10 percent, according to a 2011 study.

?There are indications that there is a major effort going on to help these young adolescents, but in terms of success, there is still much more to be done,? says Prof. Rami Benbenishty of Bar-Ilan University, who co-authored the study. ?We identify a need for more focus on higher education.?

Israel's promise falls short?

Modeled on now-defunct youth villages in Germany and Austria, Israel's youth villages are boarding schools that evolved from educating Holocaust survivors?in the 1950s?to catering to mainly Ethiopian and Russian immigrants as well as some at-risk Israeli youths?today.

Enrollment at youth villages has always been free for most students. The Ministry of Education provides 85 percent of each youth village budget and the rest is drawn from donors, often from Europe and the United States.

?Emmanuel Grupper, former Ministry of Education director for youth villages, recalls preparing for 2,200 new Ethiopian students in the summer of 1991 after ?Operation Solomon? airlifted thousands of Ethiopian Jews out of Ethiopia?s civil war. The government asked the youth villages if they could absorb the newcomers.?They prepared by?buying extra beds and developing?Hebrew?textbooks?that included?pictures of black children.?

The waves of mass immigration, including 1 million from the former Soviet Union?in the 1990s,?reinvigorated the purpose of youth villages, but also brought new ethnic and cultural gaps to Israel that have been difficult to close.?

The differences are most acute in the Ethiopian community. The average Ethiopian household spent 45 percent less than the general Israeli household in 2009, according to Israel?s Central Bureau of Statistics, and 50 percent of the roughly 120,000 Ethiopians in Israel have eight or fewer years of school compared with only 5 percent of the general population.??

While Ethiopian children under 18 are only 2 percent of the total population, they make up 22 percent of students in the youth villages,?underlining the higher rates of poverty that might lead them to seek the resources of youth villages.??

A 2009 study by Prof. Anat Ziera of Hebrew University shows that while youth village alumni are making gains in some key areas like employment and housing, Ethiopian graduates almost always trail Russian immigrants and both groups often fall below national averages,?often because they lack strong social support networks.?

Her survey of 4,391 alumni of youth villages found that 79 percent of graduates have a steady monthly income, but 63 percent of Ethiopians and 58 percent of Russian graduates have salaries below the average monthly income.?

Outcasts

Ms. Katz and her colleagues at Kiryat Yearim say that one of the key challenges is helping students overcome a feeling of being outcasts. Many come from homes where the parents are still learning Hebrew and looking for jobs, and are stuck in poor neighborhoods with weak schools because they can't afford to live elsewhere.

On top of that, the students have been expelled from school, often multiple times.?

"They don't feel like they belong to anything," Katz says. "They have to feel they can contribute in society."

The professors behind the ?Circle of Courage? curriculum that Kiryat Yearim has adopted argue that Native American culture provides a holistic approach that resonates with children anywhere who are distanced from traditional society. It promotes?four interconnected virtues ? belonging, skills mastery, independence, and generosity ??and is drawn from a book ?Reclaiming Youth At Risk? authored by professors from Augustana University in South Dakota.

Re-imagining Israeli childhood

Early Israelis idealized communal living, such as the socialist kibbutz movement. But as those ideals fade, Israelis are increasingly resistant to the idea of sending kids away to youth villages says Professor Benbenishty of Bar-Ilan University.?

?Once they were associated with the positive image of the kibbutzim and the agricultural way and a way of really being the new Israeli, the Zionist, and a good way of getting into Israeli society at large,? he says. ?Things are changing now. I think that more Israelis have the idea that they?d rather not have their kids in out-of-home care.?

The percentage of Israeli youth age 12-18 who study away from home at all boarding schools, including youth villages, welfare residences, and religious schools, is still high ? in fact, the highest in the world at 9 percent, according to the National Council for the Child. But that?s a drop from 14 percent in the 1980s.

?It?s very tempting, but it?s a very hard age to separate parents and kids,? says Sara Revkin, executive director of Yedid, an Israeli nonprofit that works with immigrants.?

Furthermore, she says the Israelis who enroll in the youth villages tend to have more learning challenges or troubled histories than the immigrants.

?They?re mixing with an Israeli population that is not pulling them up.?

But Kiryat Yearim student Adam Lopez, a rare Cuban emigrant, enjoys rooming with two Israeli students. Two years after a juvenile court referred him to the youth village, Lopez says the court's advice was good.

"It feels like a second family here," he says. "It's better here. There's no place to run from school."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/e9Ek3NyVMlg/Youth-villages-give-Israeli-immigrant-children-a-place-to-belong

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Friday, March 8, 2013

This Cheat Sheet Makes Learning Your Way Around Linux Easy

This Cheat Sheet Makes Learning Your Way Around Linux Easy Whether you're experimenting with Linux or making the switch, you'll need to get your bearings. This Linux cheat sheet runs you through common and helpful commands you'll need to know as you get comfortable with the command line.

It doesn't matter if you're configuring your system's network information, installing applications from packages, or compressing and packaging directories, you'll need to be familiar with the terminal commands used for those operations, especially if the GUI either isn't working the way you'd like or you want a faster, more efficient way to get things done. Thankfully, this cheat sheet has the commands to do all of those things and then some.

Granted, with many modern distributions you won't have much need for the command line, but it's one of the most powerful tools available in the operating system, so you may as well learn to use it if you don't already know how. It's also worth noting that the Linux Cheat Sheet is aimed at new users to help them get started, or as a reference for experienced users. If you're old hat, you may not see much you don't already know. Either way, it's still worth a look. Hit the link at Github below to check it out.

Linuxgems Cheat Sheet | Github

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ukSQifrgww8/this-cheat-sheet-makes-learning-your-way-around-linux-easy

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PFT: Falcons ramp up talks with Moore, Baker

Matt HasselbeckAP

Add Titans backup quarterback Matt Hasselbeck to the pay-cut-or-be-cut club, and at least the veteran passer understands exactly what?s going on.

Hasselbeck said his agent and the Titans are still talking about what his contract will look like, understanding it might not necessarily be the $5.5 million on base salary he stands to collect now. If they can?t agree, he figures he?ll have to look elsewhere.

?Well, yeah, if we can?t come to an agreement, I guess that?s what they?d have to do. That?s just how it goes,? Hasselbeck told John Glennon of the Tennesseean. ?Right now I?m working out hard, getting prepared and ready, trying to have the best year I can. Again, I?m really hopeful that it?s here, but I understand that some things are more out of your control.?

Unlike when he walked in the door two years ago, he?s entrenched as the backup behind Jake Locker, and the Titans are leaning toward the compensation matching that status.

?I believe in what we?re doing. I believe in [general manager] Ruston Webster and [coach] Mike Munchak. I believe in my teammates like Jake,? Hasselbeck said. ?But , . . . anything can happen. Surprises come. We?ll see. I don?t know. Some of it is out of my hands, and some of it is in my hands.

?I?m really wanting to be part of something special, part of something good, something I can be proud of and things like that will far outweigh salary or whatever. My feelings for wanting to stay haven?t changed. My feelings for how easy it?s been for us to plug into this community in Nashville haven?t changed.?

While he?s not going to play for free, Hasselbeck?s approach to this makes it more likely a deal gets worked out that keeps him making a living wage, while the team re-adjusts the books to reflect his status on the depth chart.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/08/falcons-have-ramped-up-negotiations-with-william-moore-sam-baker/related/

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