Monday, October 21, 2013

iPhone 5S, iPhone 5C head to Boost Mobile on November 8

Sprint's other prepaid provider finally gets Apple's latest smartphones. It's both the latest and one of the last carriers to offer the two devices.


Apple's iPhone 5C.

Apple's iPhone 5C.


(Credit: CNET)

Apple's iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C are finally making their way to Boost Mobile.


Boost, a unit of Sprint, said Monday that Apple's latest smartphones will be available on November 8. It's both the latest and one of the last carriers to offer the two phones.



Apple typically pushes its new iPhones to the large big-box retailers and national wireless carriers before expanding the distribution to partners focused on prepayment customers. Virgin Mobile, Sprint's other prepaid business, got the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C last month. A smaller number of users purchase the iPhone prepaid because customers are required to pay the higher unsubsidized price.


Boost declined to provide its prices for the iPhone 5S or iPhone 5C.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-57608406-94/iphone-5s-iphone-5c-head-to-boost-mobile-on-november-8/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple
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Burundi Genocide Survivor: Running Eases Mind


Twenty years ago today, Burundi's first democratically elected Hutu president was assassinated by Tutsi extremists. It sparked a genocide. Guest host Celeste Headlee speaks with survivor Gilbert Tuhabonye about how forgiveness — and running — helped him heal.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=236996063&ft=1&f=1004
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Yahoo writer ponders, what 'If Kennedy lived?'


Jeff Greenfield's new book, "If Kennedy Lived: The First and Second Terms of President John F. Kennedy: An Alternate History" will be published Tuesday, October 22 by G.P. Putnam's Sons. This is an excerpt from the book's introduction.

It was Thursday, July 14, 1960 in Room 9333 of the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, and Kenny O’Donnell was furious at the man he had just helped nominate to be president of the United States.

Again and again, Sen. John F. Kennedy had assured the unions, the civil rights leaders, the liberals and intellectuals whose support he was seeking that Texas Sen. Lyndon Johnson would not be his choice for vice-president. Yet now, little more than 12 hours after the Massachusetts Democrat had won a first ballot nomination with a razor-thin margin of five delegates, he had offered the second slot on the ticket to Johnson—and Johnson had accepted.

“I was so furious I could hardly talk,” O’Donnell remembered years later. “I thought of the promises we had made…the assurances we had given. I felt that we had been double-crossed.”

So O’Donnell demanded to confront Kennedy face to face and the nominee complied, taking O’Donnell into the bathroom, and assuring him that the job would actually diminish Johnson’s power by placing him in a powerless, impotent job.

“I’m forty-three years old,” Kennedy said, “and I’m the healthiest candidate for president in the United States. You’ve traveled with me enough to know that I’m not going to die in office. So the vice presidency doesn’t mean anything.”

The man who gave his disaffected aide this reassurance had lost a brother and a sister in airplane crashes; had almost died when his ship was destroyed in the South Pacific during World War II; had been stricken with an illness so serious in 1947 that he had been given the last rites of his church; had undergone a life-threatening operation in 1954 to save him from invalidism, an operation so serious that he was away from his Senate seat for nine months; who was living with a form of Addison’s disease—hidden from the press and public—that required a regular dose of powerful medicine; and who lived virtually every day in pain.

For a man so often described as “fatalistic”—who on the day of his murder mused to his wife, and to that same Kenny O’Donnell, about the ease with which “a man with a rifle” could kill him—Kennedy’s blithe assurance about his invulnerability to fate seemed astonishing. (If nothing else, his immersion in history must have taught him that seven presidents had died in office).

Maybe, though, Kennedy’s words were not so astonishing. They reflect an impulse deep within the human spirit: to push aside the power of random chance, in favor of a more orderly, less chaotic universe. What has happened, the argument goes, is what had to happen. Even for someone like John Kennedy, who had seen sudden, violent death take two of his siblings, and come close to taking him more than once, had dismissed the whole idea of considering that possibility when choosing the man to stand “a heartbeat away.”

For most historians, the idea of lingering over the roads that might have been taken, but for a small twist of fate, to project what might be different about our lives, or our country, or the world, seems at best a parlor game, at worst a fool’s errand, like asking “What if Spartacus had a plane?” That is the view that most historians share, in dismissing “counter-factual” history, the “what-if?” questions.

It is, however, not a unanimous view. In his book “Virtual History,” Harvard University historian Niall Ferguson offers a different approach: to examine “plausible or probable alternatives… only those alternatives which we can show on the basis of contemporary evidence that contemporaries actually considered.” It is an approach he calls “virtual” history, and it is anchored in the concept of “plausibility.”

This is the approach I’ve taken in “If Kennedy Lived,” a book that tries to answer in fictional terms a question that is very much alive today: what if John Kennedy had not died fifty years ago in Dallas. The small alteration of history that saves his life, in my account, is no high drama; it is, simply, a minor meteorological matter; had the rain not stopped in Dallas minutes before the President’s arrival, the bubbletop would have remained on the Presidential limousine, greatly improving the odds of Kennedy’s survival.

And after that tiny twist of fate saved the president? Any speculation about the alternative history has to put aside political ideology, or personal affection or distate for JFK, and turn to what we know about his beliefs, impulses, and character. For me, for instance, his innate caution, his skepticism about Vietnam--expressed long before he’d become president--his distrust of his military advisors’ advice, and his fear of miscalculation and misguided assumptions that shaped his behavior during the Cuban missile crisis, all point to the liklihood that he would have disengaged.

But his political calculations, his fear of being tagged with a “Who Lost Vietnam” label, would have made him disengage by stealth, rather than by an open acknowledgement that victory was beyond our power. And a 1960s with no massive war in Vietnam would have meant a very different counter-culture, one where “sex, drugs and rock and roll" still emerged, but where convulsive violence did not. In short, Woodstock, yes; Altamont, no.

Similarly, knowing JFK had little legislative skill and few ties to the Congressional power brokers (as opposed to Lyndon Johnson) made it far less likely that he could have passed the groundbreaking Civil Rights Act of 1964, or pushed a Great Society agenda through the Congress, even if he had wished to. (And his skepticism about ambitious government programs might have kept him from even proposing so grand--or grandiose--an idea).

Beyond questions of policy, there are more personal matters: would his extramarital sex life have been threatened with exposure? In fact, it nearly became a public matter in the weeks before his assassination, and had such exposure been a threat after Dallas, history tells us the Kennedys would have worked to keep the story quiet by means fair and foul. (If you doubt this, look at what the administration did in 1962 to force steel companies to toll back their price hikes. “Abuse of power” is not too strong a term).

All this is by way of saying that alternative history cannot be hagiography, nor “pathography.” Anyone seeking to imagine an 8 year Kennedy presidency has to come to grips with his strengths and weaknesses, his admirable and deplorable character traits, in trying to determine how a change in the weather in Dallas would have changed—and not changed—one of the most turbulent periods in our history.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/what-if-kennedy-lived--161515971.html
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Markets flat-footed at start of busy week


LONDON (AP) — Financial markets were flat-footed Monday at the start of a busy week that will see a number of key economic releases published and the U.S. corporate earnings reporting season pick up steam.

Oil was the standout mover as the benchmark rate briefly fell below $100 a barrel for the first time since early July.

Most attention in recent weeks has centered on the prolonged stalemate in Washington to raise the country's debt ceiling and reopen the government. Now that a deal has been agreed upon, albeit a short-term one, investors can focus on other matters, such as the underlying health of the global economy and when the Federal Reserve will start reducing its monetary stimulus.

During the partial U.S. government shutdown of recent weeks, much of the U.S. economic data was postponed. With the government now functioning fully, many of those data reports will be released over the coming days, including September's nonfarm payrolls figures. That's due on Tuesday and could provide investors a steer as to when the Fed will start reducing its $85 billion-worth of monthly asset purchases.

In addition, investors will be monitoring the next round of earnings, particularly out of the U.S. — around 30 percent of the S&P 500 is due to unveil reports this week. Monday's batch were fairly mixed — while McDonald's confirmed that it faces greater competition, shifting eating habits and tough economic conditions around the world, toy maker Hasbro saw its share price spike sharply after reporting better-than-expected results.

"Investors are again focusing on fundamental matters, particularly in the form of earnings," said Dan Greenhaus, chief strategist at BTIG in New York. "A number of issues remain equity supportive, indicating higher prices ahead. These include ongoing earnings growth, seasonality and a Federal Reserve that very well may stay accommodative until January if not March."

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closed up 0.5 percent at 6,654.20 while Germany's DAX was flat at 8,867.22. The CAC-40 in France ended 0.2 percent lower at 4,276.92.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was down 0.1 percent at 15,379 while the broader S&P 500 index fell the same rate to 1,743. Last week, relief over the U.S. debt ceiling helped the S&P hit an all-time high.

Earlier, Asian markets were fairly buoyant after Friday's solid session in the U.S., where stocks were boosted by unexpectedly strong profits from General Electric Co., Morgan Stanley and other companies. Google surged nearly 14 percent, topping $1,000 a share for the first time.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 0.9 percent to 14,693.57 while China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index added 1.6 percent to 2,229.24. Hong Kong, Seoul and Sydney also rose.

In the currency markets, trading was lackluster. The euro was down 0.1 percent at $1.3672 — on Friday, it rose above $1.37 for the first time since February, largely because of the dollar's weakness in the wake of the debt ceiling crisis.

In the oil markets, a barrel of benchmark New York crude was down 94 cents at $100.17 a barrel. Earlier it had fallen below $100 for the first time since early July to $99.64 a barrel.

"The ample and rising supply of oil, combined with weaker demand growth prospects, point towards lower prices in the months ahead," said Fawad Razaqzada, a technical analyst at GFT Global Markets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-flat-footed-start-busy-week-143623635--finance.html
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Kelly Clarkson Drops “Underneath the Tree”: Listen Here!

Getting a jump start on the holiday season, Kelly Clarkson just released her new track “Underneath the Tree” from her forthcoming Christmas album Wrapped in Red.


Following up her previous “White Christmas,” the “Since You’ve Been Gone” songstress sounds outstanding on the Yule Tide ditty.


Clarkson confessed, "I've been dying to make a Christmas album. I always get asked what genre I'm in: 'Is this country or pop or rock? What are you?'"


“And what's cool about making the Christmas album was, 'Oh, there are no limitations! We can do whatever we want!'"






Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kelly-clarkson/clarkson-under-tree-1030195
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Greinke, Dodgers beat Cardinals 6-4 to extend NLCS

LOS ANGELES (AP) — It took the Dodgers five games to hit a home run in the NL championship series. Once Adrian Gonzalez powered up for the first one, their dormant offense broke loose.


Gonzalez homered twice and Zack Greinke came through with the clutch performance Los Angeles needed in a 6-4 victory over the Cardinals on Wednesday that trimmed St. Louis' lead to 3-2 in the best-of-seven playoff.


"Guys weren't ready to lose today," said Carl Crawford, who also went deep to help the Dodgers save their season.


Los Angeles held on in the ninth, when St. Louis scored twice off closer Kenley Jansen before he struck out pinch-hitter Adron Chambers with two on to end it.


The series shifts back to St. Louis for Game 6 on Friday night, with ace Clayton Kershaw scheduled to start for Los Angeles against rookie Michael Wacha.


When those two squared off in Game 2, the Cardinals won 1-0 on an unearned run.


"We've kind of become America's team because everyone wants to see a seventh game," Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. "Probably even the fans in St. Louis would like to see a seventh game, so I figure that everybody's for us to win on Friday night."


The Cardinals also led last year's NLCS 3-1 before losing three straight games to the eventual World Series champion San Francisco Giants.


"We're looking to do the same thing," Gonzalez said.


Desperate to avoid elimination, the Dodgers brought in some Hollywood star power for pregame introductions. Will Ferrell announced their lineup and lent a comic spin to each player's name, capping it by introducing Greinke as "today's winning pitcher."


Ferrell knew what he was talking about.


Greinke got into a bases-loaded jam with none out in the first but escaped with no damage. From there, he pitched seven strong innings and even delivered an RBI single.


"That was big. I was real nervous out there with that situation," Greinke said.


A.J. Ellis also homered at Dodger Stadium, where it is tougher to clear the fences in the heavy night air.


Helped by playing in 82-degree heat on a sunny afternoon, the Dodgers rediscovered their power stroke just in time to extend the series. They hit .274 in three games at home after batting .184 during the first two games in St. Louis.


"It was just one of those days that we were a little better, got some runs, good feeling," Mattingly said.


The Dodgers regrouped after Greinke squandered an early 2-0 lead just as he did in Game 1, which Los Angeles lost 3-2 in 13 innings on the road.


After neither team homered in the first three games for the first time in NLCS history, the big bats came out. The Cardinals used a two-run homer by Matt Holliday and a solo shot from pinch-hitter Shane Robinson to win 4-2 on Tuesday night.


This time, Gonzalez went 3 for 4 with two solo homers and three runs scored. His two-out shot in the eighth made it 6-2.


"We have a team that can bounce back and do some pretty incredible things out there," he said.


The Cardinals tied it at 2 in the third on Carlos Beltran's RBI triple and Holliday's run-scoring double before Yadier Molina grounded into his second inning-ending double play against Greinke.


"He wasn't as sharp as he was the first time we faced him," Beltran said. "But guys like that, the best guys in the game, they're able to regroup and find a way to help their team win."


Los Angeles answered in the bottom of the third. Mark Ellis singled leading off but was erased when Hanley Ramirez grounded into a double play.


Gonzalez followed with the Dodgers' first homer of the NLCS, slugging the ball an estimated 428 feet into the right-field pavilion for a 3-2 lead.


As he headed toward the dugout, Gonzalez cupped his hands to his ears and wiggled them in a gesture resembling mouse ears. It was an apparent jab at Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright, who said Gonzalez had done "some Mickey Mouse stuff" in celebrating a double on Monday night.


"It's just having fun," Gonzalez said. "I'm going to retire them so they're not talked about once again."


Crawford egged Gonzalez on.


"I'm pretty sure it rubbed them the wrong way and they're going to use that as some kind of fuel, so you might as well keep doing it," Crawford said, laughing.


Gonzalez replied: "Hey, if Carl wants them. It's for him, not for anybody else."


After wriggling out of big trouble in the first when Molina bounced into a double play, Greinke allowed two runs and six hits. He struck out four and walked one.


"He made his pitches, we made the plays, got out of it," Gonzalez said. "We were able to get run support for him. All he needed was a few runs."


Jansen gave up RBI singles to Matt Adams and Pete Kozma in the ninth.


A.J. Ellis homered in seventh, sending an 0-2 pitch from Edward Mujica into the left-field pavilion to make it 5-2.


Crawford homered with one out in the fifth, extending the Dodgers' lead to 4-2. He walloped a 3-2 pitch from starter Joe Kelly an estimated 447 feet into the right-field pavilion.


Kelly gave up four runs and seven hits in five innings. He struck out three and walked none.


"I made a few bad pitches on heaters and didn't locate that well, and they turned into home runs," he said. "With guys on base, I was going after them and attacking them with the fastball, but they're good hitters and they put good swings on them and hit them out of the park."


Beltran's triple went over the head of Andre Ethier and to the wall in center, scoring Matt Carpenter, who singled. Holliday followed with a double to deep center, but that was it for St. Louis until the ninth.


"We had a couple of opportunities to do something, and we just couldn't make it happen," manager Mike Matheny said. "These guys have done a tremendous job in those exact same situations all season long. You're going to have games where you just can't make it happen, and we've got to figure out a way to get it done the next time we get a chance."


NOTES: Molina went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts. ... Greinke's hit in the second was the third of his postseason career. ... Ramirez, playing with a broken left rib, left after six innings. ... In the three games Ramirez has started with the injury, only two grounders have been hit to him at shortstop. ... The homers by Gonzalez and Crawford were the first given up by Kelly in 24 career postseason innings. He allowed two homers in a game twice during the regular season. ... The Dodgers are trying to become the 12th team to rally from a 3-1 deficit to win a best-of-seven series. ... Beltran's triple was his first ever in the postseason. ... Former Dodgers star Orel Hershiser tossed out the first pitch on the 25th anniversary of his three-hit shutout against Oakland in Game 2 of the 1988 World Series.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/greinke-dodgers-beat-cardinals-6-4-extend-nlcs-232114831--spt.html
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Obama says new U.S. farm bill is near-term priority


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama, in a rebuke to proposals by House Republicans for steep cuts in food stamps for the poor, urged Congress on Thursday to pass a farm bill "that protects children and vulnerable adults in time of need."


Obama put the long-delayed bill, more than a year overdue, among three priorities for resolution by end of the year. Also on the list were immigration reform and a budget agreement.


Food stamps, the major U.S. antihunger program, are the make-or-break issue for the $500 billion, five-year farm bill. House Republicans want to tighten eligibility rules and save $39 billion over a decade. The Democratic-run Senate suggested $4.5 billion could be squeezed out by closing certain loopholes.


In remarks at the White House, Obama said "we should pass a farm bill, one that American farmers and ranchers can depend on; one that protects vulnerable children and adults in times of need; one that gives rural communities opportunities to grow and the long-term certainty that they deserve."


The administration has threatened twice to veto large cuts in food stamps. It said Congress should instead end the $5 billion-a-year "direct payment" subsidy to farmers and scale back on federal subsidies for crop insurance.


Obama credited the Senate for writing "a solid, bipartisan" bill. "If House Republicans have ideas that they think would improve the farm bill, let's see them. Let's negotiate. What are we waiting for? Let's get this done," said Obama.


In response, the House Agriculture Committee said the four leaders of the House and Senate committees met on Wednesday to get negotiations moving. The first meeting of the 41 "conferees" from the House and Senate, appointed to write a compromise farm bill, was expected by the end of the month.


An estimated 3.8 million people would lose food stamp benefits in 2014 under the House bill, mostly by shortening the time able-bodied adults can receive benefits and by eliminating a provision, created as part of welfare reform, that allows benefits to people with more assets than usually permitted.


A near-record 47.8 million people received benefits at latest count. Enrollment surged by more than 20 million people since the recession of 2008-09. Republican say continued high enrollment is a sign the program needs reform. Democrats say it shows weak economic recovery.


(Reporting by Charles Abbott; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-says-u-farm-bill-near-term-priority-214440466--sector.html
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U.N. appeals for more troops, helicopters for Mali mission


UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The United Nations appealed on Wednesday for more troops and helicopters needed so its peacekeeping mission in Mali can effectively stabilize the north of the country and protect civilians from attacks by Islamist extremist and armed groups.


The U.N. force, known as MINUSMA, assumed authority on July 1 from a U.N.-backed African force in Mali. But while the U.N. Security Council mandated a 12,600-strong force, there are only some 5,200 troops on the ground.


"We are faced with severe challenges," U.N. Mali envoy Bert Koenders told the U.N. Security Council. "The mission lacks critical enablers - such as helicopters - to facilitate rapid deployment and access to remote areas to ensure the protection of civilians. Troop generation will have to accelerate."


A report by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that to reach its authorized strength the force still needs two infantry battalions, an airfield engineer company for the rehabilitation of the airstrips in northern Tessalit and Kidal, an information operations unit and a special forces company.


The mission was dealt a blow by the withdrawal in August of some 1,200 Nigerian troops, who returned home to fight their own homegrown Islamist insurgency. Then last month about 150 Chadian troops abandoned their posts in protest at the length of time they had served and demanded their rotation be speeded up.


Tuareg separatists and Islamist rebels seized three northern regions, covering an area the size of France, last year as the government disintegrated following a March 2012 coup. A successful seven-month-old campaign by France to destroy the Islamist enclave has killed hundreds of fighters linked to al Qaeda.


France still has 3,200 soldiers in Mali, aiding the U.N. peacekeepers against Islamist threats, but plans to reduce that number to about 1,000.


"It's a success story. When you look at where Mali was last year, it was a country collapsed, it was a country where the terrorists were moving towards the capital," French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters after Koenders' briefing.


"But we have to be vigilant, we know we will face problems down the road, we know that the terrorists have not been eradicated," Araud said.


National elections were held in July and August. Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, a former prime minister, was elected by a landslide with a pledge to reunify the country and restore its pride. Legislative elections are due to take place in November.


(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Jackie Frank)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-n-appeals-more-troops-helicopters-mali-mission-210138672.html
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Legislator questions ongoing oversight of Orchestra Hall (Star Tribune)

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When Playing Video Games Means Sitting On Life's Sidelines





The reSTART center for Internet addiction is in the woods outside Seattle. The initial, in-patient part of the program is held on a property that has a tree house and a garden.



Rachel Martin/NPR


The reSTART center for Internet addiction is in the woods outside Seattle. The initial, in-patient part of the program is held on a property that has a tree house and a garden.


Rachel Martin/NPR


A facility outside Seattle, surrounded by pine trees, is a refuge for addicts — of technology.


There are chickens, a garden and a big tree house with a zipline. A few guys kick a soccer ball around between therapy appointments in the cottage's grassy backyard.


The reSTART center was set up in 2009. It treats all sorts of technology addictions, but most of the young men who come through here — and they are all young men — have the biggest problem with video games.


There are beds for seven patients at a time. After they spend six intensive weeks of rehab here, they go to a transitional situation — an apartment close by, where they live with other former reSTART patients.


That step used to be called Level 2, but program manager Rachell Montag says that was too similar to video game language, so they changed it.


"In gaming, the goal is always to be moving forward and leveling up, and so we didn't want our language to parallel that, because it can actually have an effect on their behavior and their recovery process in that phase," she tells NPR's Rachel Martin.


'Good, Clean Fun,' At First


Joey M'Poko's story is like a lot of people who come through this place. His personal life was unstable, his parents divorced, and he moved around a lot. A few years ago, he ended up in Chicago, where his grandparents live. He was lonely, shy, insecure, and he found a kind of escape in front of his computer.





Joey M'Poko is a patient at the Washington facility, after finding himself unhealthily immersed in a virtual community.



Caitlin Dickerson/NPR


Joey M'Poko is a patient at the Washington facility, after finding himself unhealthily immersed in a virtual community.


Caitlin Dickerson/NPR


M'Poko says he would spend hours at a time gaming or watching movies. He says had bad hygiene and lost weight — but he was a part of a virtual community.


"I mean, I have people I would consider to be friends there, only because I spent most of my time with them. I got to know them," he says.


The kicker here is that M'Poko thought he was doing pretty well, because a couple years before, he was smoking a lot of pot. He started getting heavy into gaming as an alternative to getting high.


"It was just an environment to meet new people who had no interest in drugs or whatever — they're just looking for good, clean fun, I guess," he says.


M'Poko says he understands how using video games to escape can be damaging. But in his case, he says it made him "feel like socializing again."


"I started to feel like a person again. I could totally zone out all the pain, all whatever, and just go into this total world of fantasy, and it was awesome," he says. "I didn't have to care about anything else."


A 'Flood' Of Addiction


Hilarie Cash, who founded the rehab program, has been studying Internet and technology addiction since the 1990s. She noticed a pattern early on in her patients about how the Internet was affecting their lives.


"And [I] had this sense back then that I was seeing the trickle before the flood. And the flood is upon us," she says.




Weekend Edition is delving into the topic of addiction, speaking to people with dependencies on alcohol, technology and food.






But in today's increasingly digital world, it can be difficult to sense the point at which extensive Internet use actually becomes an addiction.


A common thread between all addictions, Cash says, is that addicts use the chemical or behavior to find either a high or relief. The behavior becomes an addiction when you are "doing it to such an extent that it begins to control you rather than you being able to control it," she says.


Are you getting enough exercise, sleep and quality time with the people you care about? "If [the behavior] is interfering, then there's a problem there somewhere," Cash says.


Typically, she says, those who come to her facility for help have been gaming from a young age, and the addiction has "been growing over many years." Also, they've been engaging in activity online rather than developing personal relationships.


Often, families will push their sons to limit their activity while they're living at home and going to high school. But once college hits, Cash says, that structure is lost. "And so that's when everything starts falling apart."


Rebuilding A Life


Building patients back up happens in a lot of ways. Some are very basic, like teaching them how to cook healthy meals. M'Poko is in the kitchen with a couple of the other patients, making Italian chicken and pasta for dinner with help from the house manager.


A big guy dressed in workout clothes walks in, with a bald head and a quick smile. There are high fives and friendly slaps on the back.


Isaac Veisburg was born in Venezuela and raised between there and Miami. He's all done with the reSTART program and is now working as a personal trainer. But it was a long road. He went through the six-week, in-patient part of the program twice.


"The first time, I was very guarded. I didn't want to hear the word 'addict.' As far as I was concerned, I could stop whenever I wanted," he says.


He bailed on the program after a few weeks and went back to college in Washington, D.C. At first he tried to stay away from gaming, but he was depressed, fighting with his parents and had car problems.


The stress started to mount, and the Saturday before classes even began, Veisburg was back in front of the computer. He says he downloaded a game and didn't leave his computer for 42 hours.


"And then I slept. I slept through my first class Monday, and I didn't go to class the rest of that day, and the day after, or for five weeks after that," he says.


His parents sent him back to the reSTART program, and eventually he finished the whole thing. Veisburg is now living in Redmond, Wash., hoping to eventually become a counselor for other people working through technology addiction.


He says he doesn't miss gaming — "not even a little bit" — or the people he used to interact with online.


"How well can you really know someone over the Internet? ... Out here is real relationships," he says, "the relationships I have with the guys in [reSTART], you know, with my girlfriend, with my parents, now that we can actually talk. Those are relationships."


Veisburg appears to be on the right track now, but not everyone's path is so clear.


The Need For A Plan


Nov. 5 is the anniversary of Will's arrival to the reSTART program. Will, who asked NPR not to use his last name, has had a series of relapses. At one point, he left the program and lived in a homeless shelter for a month.





A sign inside the reSTART clinic asks that cellphones be turned off. Creating structure is key to patients' recovery once they leave the facility.



Caitlin Dickerson/NPR


A sign inside the reSTART clinic asks that cellphones be turned off. Creating structure is key to patients' recovery once they leave the facility.


Caitlin Dickerson/NPR


After a year in rehab, he's finally done and planning to move back home to Oklahoma to try to find a job. But that's tough to do without using a computer and an Internet connection.


"It's a constant struggle," he says. "It's just that I have to structure my life to a point where I don't feel tempted to waste time on it."


He says he has to hold himself accountable, by having a job, a social life and exercising — and by setting time limits on his Internet usage. He's not planning to get a smartphone any time soon, either.


Cash, the head therapist and founder of reSTART, says those kinds of boundaries are crucial to any kind of addiction recovery. "All addictions, they say, it takes about two years for the brain to really heal itself," she says.


Before they leave, patients have to form a "life balance plan." They outline their goals and the possible pitfalls ahead.


"Once they leave here, they actually starting implementing that," Cash says. "What's hardest is implementing it successfully. But if they can do that for six months or more, then we're looking at somebody who has a really good shot at living a good, healthy life."


One Step At A Time


Finding that healthy balance also means learning to relax in new ways, which is why reSTART includes weekly meditation sessions. M'Poko is sitting with the rest of the patients in a semicircle in the living room. The instructor is in the middle, leading the meditation.


He's done with the in-patient program in a just a couple days. He's not sticking around for the second, transitional phase. He wants to move on now. He may move to Japan to teach English.


His family life is still shaky. His dad is moving back to his native Congo, his mom is in Vermont, and M'Poko doesn't know where home is anymore.


"Anyone who's been in a 12-step program or any kind of recovery program will tell you that the addiction is just a symptom of something else," he says. "I feel like I'm slowly cultivating skills that would help me deal with that and make me see that I don't have to escape, and it's much healthier and it feels much better to just ride the storm."


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/20/238095806/when-playing-video-games-means-sitting-on-lifes-sidelines?ft=1&f=1003
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McConnell Says He Will Not Allow Another Shutdown (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Another fraud elected to the Senate (Powerlineblog)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334596037?client_source=feed&format=rss
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Freeformer industrial 3D printer creates complex items in batches, can combine soft and hard parts



Regular 3D printers (from pens to desktop models) debut quite frequently these days, but a new machine named Freeformer was created with industrial-grade manufacturing in mind. The device was designed by German company ARBURG and employs a proprietary process called ARBURG Plastic Freeforming or -- we swear this acronym's not a typo -- AKF. It takes 3D CAD data and uses it to make functional parts out of liquid plastic without the need for molds. The Freeformer has a stationary nozzle that relies on piezo technology to spray plastic in layers on a moving platform, and it does so until the entire shape is done. Unlike many other 3D printers, though, this one can create geometrically complicated items with a combination of soft and hard materials. Not only that, but it can produce these in small batches, too. The first Freeformer units will be available commercially early next year, but we bet they won't be included in anyone's list of affordable 3D printing machines. Folks in Germany, however, can check it out at the K Trade Fair in DĂ¼sseldorf, where it'll remain on display until October 23rd.







Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/17/freeformer-industrial-3d-printer?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000589
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Mischa Barton Opens Up about Her Breakdown, Recovery and Comeback

Mischa Barton speaks out for the first time about her struggles with drugs, body image and the breakdown. She reveals, in her own words what happened to her, as the world witnessed her downward spiral which lead to psychiatric hospitalization. She shares this and more in a People magazine cover story. The 27-year-old London-born actress — who got her initial start in theater in New York City — suddenly skyrocketed to fame in 2003 when she was just 16 years old, portraying Marissa Cooper in the internationally popular teenage drama series on Fox, “The O.C.” She got the usual accolades that attractive young up-and-coming actresses receive including the “one to watch” kind of magazine coverage, the solid placing on the usual lists; People Magazine’s “Most Beautiful” people and so on. Looking back, Mischa Barton has much to say about what she now is calling a “full-on breakdown” as she speaks out in the aptly titled “My Hollywood nightmare” cover story. What began as the heights of fame for which she was not, as a teenager, prepared for led — as we have sadly witnessed so many times before — to the partying which led to substance abuse, which led to [...]Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/nOzWfg9uBgI/
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AP source: Govt, JPMorgan reach tentative deal


WASHINGTON (AP) — JPMorgan Chase & Co. has tentatively agreed to pay $13 billion to settle allegations surrounding the quality of mortgage-backed securities it sold in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis, a person familiar with the negotiations between the bank and the federal government said Saturday.

If the agreement is finalized it would be the government's highest-profile enforcement action related to the financial meltdown that plunged the economy into the deepest recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal has not been finalized, said Attorney General Eric Holder, Associate Attorney General Tony West, J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon and the bank's general counsel, Stephen Cutler, negotiated the tentative settlement in a Friday night phone call.

The person said the tentative agreement does not resolve a criminal investigation of the bank's conduct. It is being handled by federal prosecutors in Sacramento, Calif.

On Friday night, Holder told the bank that a non-prosecution agreement was a non-starter — meaning that the Justice Department will continue to conduct the criminal investigation of the financial institution, said the person. As part of the deal, the Justice Department expects JPMorgan to cooperate with the continuing criminal probe of the bank's issuance of mortgage-backed securities between 2005 and 2007, the person said.

JPMorgan spokesman Brian Marchiony and Justice Department spokesman Brian Fallon declined to comment.

Of the $13 billion, $9 billion is fines or penalties and $4 billion will go to consumer relief for struggling homeowners, the person said.

When the housing bubble burst in 2007, bundles of mortgages sold as securities soured and the investors who bought them lost billions. In the aftermath, public outrage boiled over that no high-level Wall Street executives had been sent to jail. Some lawmakers and other critics demanded that the big bailed-out banks and senior executives be held accountable.

In response, the government in January 2012 set up a task force of federal and state law enforcement officials to pursue wrongdoing with regard to mortgage securities.

In September, JPMorgan agreed to pay $920 million and admit that it failed to oversee trading that led to a $6 billion loss last year in its London operation. That combined amount, in settlements with three U.S. and one British regulator, is one of the largest fines ever levied against a financial institution. In another case, the company agreed to pay a $100 million penalty and admitted that its traders acted "recklessly" with the London trades.

In August, the Justice Department accused Bank of America Corp., the second-largest U.S. bank, of civil fraud in failing to disclose risks and misleading investors in its sale of $850 million in mortgage bonds in 2008. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a related lawsuit. The government estimates that investors lost more than $100 million on the deal. Bank of America disputes the allegations.

The latest action against the beleaguered JPMorgan brought the weight of the Obama administration against the bank, which has enjoyed a reputation for managing risk better than its Wall Street competitors. JPMorgan came through the financial crisis in better shape than most of its rivals and Dimon, its CEO, charmed lawmakers and commanded the attention of regulators in Washington.

A number of big banks, including JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, previously have been accused of abuses in sales of securities linked to mortgages in the years leading up to the crisis. Together they have paid hundreds of millions in penalties to settle civil charges brought by the SEC, which accused them of deceiving investors about the quality of the bonds they sold.

JPMorgan settled SEC charges in June 2011 by agreeing to pay $153.6 million and reached another such agreement for $296.9 million last November.

The banks in all the SEC cases were allowed to neither admit nor deny wrongdoing — a practice that brought criticism of the agency from judges and investor advocates.

But in a first for a major company, JPMorgan admitted in the agreement with the SEC over the $6 billion trading loss in its London operation that it failed in its oversight. The admission could leave the bank vulnerable to millions of dollars in lawsuits. JPMorgan also reached settlements over the trading loss with the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Britain's Financial Conduct Authority.

The Justice Department is still pursuing a criminal investigation of the trading loss and a possible cover-up at the bank. Two of the bank's former traders in London are facing criminal charges. The SEC also is investigating individuals involved in the trading loss.

Mounting legal costs from government proceedings pushed JPMorgan to a rare loss in the third quarter, the first under Dimon's leadership. The bank reported Oct. 11 that it set aside $9.2 billion in the July-September quarter to cover a string of litigation stemming from the financial crisis and its "London Whale" trading debacle. JPMorgan said it has placed a total of $23 billion in reserve to cover potential legal costs.

___

Associated Press writer Marcy Gordon in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-source-govt-jpmorgan-reach-tentative-deal-221902504--finance.html
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Lamar Odom Gets Sober! See How He’s Doing Now


It’s been a crazy week for the Kardashian and Jenner family, as parents Kris and Bruce Jenner announced their separation. But what about the other troubled marriage in the family? It seems that Lamar Odom is doing much better!


OK! News: Lamar breaks his Twitter silence to defend the Kardashians.


FameFlynet

FameFlynet



Lamar Odom has been sober for over a week so far. A source tells E! Online that “He just wants to get healthy and be there for his kids.” While he and wife Khloe Kardashian don’t have any children, Lamar has two kids from a previous relationship. The embattled pair were photographed together last week visiting the Jenner family home following news of the separation.


Photos: It was just Khloe and Lamar’s anniversary! Check out their sweetest selfies.


Instagram

Instagram



“He is taking steps to get himself back on track,” the source continued. “He wants his old life back, although he realizes that might not include Khloe.” Lamar has battled rumors of substance abuse all summer long, and was arrested on suspicion of DUI in August. He and Khloe haven’t been photographed much together since earlier in 2013, but have yet to address the future of their relationship in any major way.


When do you think Khloe and Lamar will open up about their issues? Do you think the couple is meant to be? Tell us in the comments below or tweet us @OKMagazine.



Source: http://okmagazine.com/meet-the-stars/lamar-odom-gets-sober-see-how-hes-doing-now/
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SwiftKey 4.3 beta debuts with new keyboard layouts, we go thumbs-on

SwiftKey 4.3

New 'thumb,' 'compact' and undocked modes make it easier to type on larger screens

The team behind popular third-party keyboard SwiftKey has announced a new version of the app today — SwiftKey 4.3. Dubbed "layouts for living," the new version of SwiftKey introduces a host of new layout options designed to make it easier to type on all kinds of Android devices, from smartphones to tablets and everything in between.

There are three main layout modes to choose from in SwiftKey 4.3, all accessible by pressing long-pressing the SwiftKey menu button. "Full" is the regular SwiftKey layout existing users will already be familiar with. "Compact" gives you a smaller keyboard aligned to the left or right side, depending on which hand you want to use. And "thumb" mode gives you a split keyboard for easier two-handed thumb-typing, best suited for tablet users.

More after the break.

read more


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/FdgOyMvJBjo/story01.htm
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The Nexus 5 Accidentally Pops Up Early on Google Play for $350


Google's worst kept secret and possibly best upcoming Android phone has just unofficially revealed itself in the most official way possible... inside the actual Google Play Store.



That's right, the Nexus 5 is listed as "starting at $349" for the 16GB version and looks exactly like how we expected it to look like. One thing though: even though you can see the Nexus 5 on the store page, you can't actually buy it yet. The store link doesn't go anywhere.


Here's a closer press shot of the Nexus 5:


The Nexus 5 Accidentally Pops Up Early on Google Play for $350S


[Google Play via Engadget, 9to5Google]



Source: http://gizmodo.com/nexus-5-pops-up-on-google-play-for-350-1447507439
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Gittler's all-titanium guitar has no neck or body, demands more than the intro to 'Stairway' (video)

"An out of this world guitar playing experience." That's what Gittler promises from its aircraft-grade titanium axem and has launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund production. Based on Alan Gittler's original 1978 design, which is now housed at MoMA, it maintains the same simplified structure, ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/E5CzZw9SWZc/
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Canada to bring in law ensuring federal budget must balance, barring crises


OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's Conservative government promised on Wednesday to introduce new legislation that will require balanced budgets except during economic crises, and renewed a pledge to balance its books by 2015.


In a speech setting out priorities for the second half of its mandate, the government said it would freeze the federal operating budget and make further targeted cuts to internal government spending.


The government will also:


- Target a debt to GDP ratio of 25 percent in 2021 and reduce that ratio to pre-recession levels by 2017


- Invest C$70 billion ($68 billion) in infrastructure over the next decade


- Review federal assets and sell them when it is in the best interest of Canadians


- Require rail shippers to carry more insurance and take steps to increase the safety of the transportation of dangerous good


- Ensure natural resource sectors remain open to foreign investment "when it is market-oriented and in the long-term interests of Canadians"


(Reporting by Randall Palmer; Editing by Janet Guttsman)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canada-bring-law-ensuring-federal-budget-must-balance-210514895--sector.html
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TV Ratings: Sunday Night Football Rises Against MLB Postseason Competition



Averaging a 7.3 rating among adults 18-49 and 19.6 million viewers, Sunday Night Football topped all telecasts in Fast National returns. The scores, which will see further improvement when final ratings arrive, are massive 28 percent improvement from last week's initial numbers. The three half-hour installments of Football Night in America averaged a 1.9, 3.2 and 5.8 adults rating, giving NBC an early nightly average of a 6.0 rating with adults 18-49 and 16 million viewers.



PHOTOS: Hollywood's Connections to the NFL


Sports coverage served Fox well, with NFL overrun surging at 7 p.m. (8.0 adults), thanks to the Patriots' nail-biting win over the Saints. A special broadcast of the ALCS championship series, also subject to adjustments, averaged a 2.4 rating with adults 18-49 -- up from the 1.3 Fast National rating for last year's comparable game. Fox averaged a 4.1 rating with adults 18-49 and 12.7 million viewers.


Without the benefit of NFL overrun this week, 60 Minutes (1.5 adults) dropped 61 percent from the previous week. The Amazing Race (1.8 adults), The Good Wife (1.2 adults) and The Mentalist (1.3 adults) all hit series lows in early returns, falling a respective six-, four- and two-tenths of a point. CBS took a 1.5 adults rating for the night and 9.1 million viewers.


ABC also saw lows in the face of twice the sports competition. America's Funniest Home Videos (1.1 adults) returned four-tenths of a point down from last year's opener for its lowest premiere to date. Once Upon a Time (2.3 adults) and Revenge (1.7 adults) were both at fall lows, dropping a respective three- and two-tenths of a point. Betrayal (0.9 adults) fell another two-tenths for a series low. ABC averaged a 1.5 rating with adults 18-49 and 5.4 million viewers.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/A6rCttsiqMQ/tv-ratings-sunday-night-football-648185
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Friday, October 18, 2013

Cheney feared heart device in assassination effort




FILE - In this April 17, 2013 file photo, former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney leaves after attending the funeral service of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at St. Paul's Cathedral, in London. In an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes," Cheney says he once feared that terrorists could use the electrical device that had been implanted near his heart to kill him and had his doctor disable its wireless function. (AP Photo/Olivia Harris, Pool, File)





WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Vice President Dick Cheney says he once feared that terrorists could use the electrical device that had been implanted near his heart to kill him and had his doctor disable its wireless function.

Cheney has a history of heart trouble, suffering the first of five heart attacks at age 37. He underwent a heart transplant last year at age 71.

In an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes," Cheney says doctors replaced an implanted defibrillator near his heart in 2007. The device can detect irregular heartbeats and control them with electrical jolts.

Cheney says that he and his doctor, cardiologist Jonathan Reiner, turned off the device's wireless function in case a terrorist tried to send his heart a fatal shock.

Years later, Cheney watched an episode of the Showtime series "Homeland" in which such a scenario was part of the plot.

"I found it credible," Cheney tells "60 Minutes" in a segment to be aired Sunday. "I know from the experience we had, and the necessity for adjusting my own device, that it was an accurate portrayal of what was possible."

Cheney and Reiner are promoting a book they co-authored, "Heart: An American Medical Odyssey."

In the "60 Minutes" interview, Reiner says he worried that Cheney couldn't stand the pressure that came on Sept. 11, 2001, the day terrorists attacked the U.S. Medical tests seen that morning showed Cheney had elevated levels of potassium in his blood, a condition called hyperkalemia, which could lead to abnormal heart rhythms and cardiac arrest.

Reiner says he watched news coverage of the day's events on television and thought, "Oh, great, the vice president is going to die tonight from hyperkalemia."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cheney-feared-heart-device-assassination-effort-233137563--politics.html
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Your Afternoon “Aww”: Can You Guess Which Boy Bander This Alaskan Klee Kai Belong To?



By Jillian Kirby

University of Florida grad turned Assistant Editor — loves shoes, baked goods and all things Bravo.




Have you ever heard of #FoxPhotoFriday? The boy bander featured as today’s Afternoon “Aww” loves his pup so much that he dedicates an Instagram pic every Friday to the cute little guy! The Alaskan Klee Kai has not only been to star-studded soirĂ©es, but behind-the-scenes of the hottest TV and movie sets. Take a guess at the mystery celeb owner by checking out the adorable snapshot and five clues below.


1. Appeared on 49 episodes of ABC’s Wipeout.


2. Was apart of the Macy’s Day Parade in 2010.


3. Before making it big, the singer landed an episode on the hit show, iCarly.


4.  Knows how to make the ladies swoon on the piano, guitar and drums.


5. The success of his boy band’s career led to a four season show on Nickelodeon.


Find out which hottie Fox belongs to by scrolling down!


Courtesy of Instagram

Courtesy of Instagram



Who does the adorable Alaskan Klee Kai above belong to? James Maslow of Big Time Rush! Thanks for playing and come back Monday through Friday for new installments of Afternoon “Aww.”


Photos: See Yesterday’s Afternoon “Aww” of Rob Kardashian’s New Dog


Is James Maslow your favorite member of Big Time Rush? Sound off in the comment section below and @OKMagazine.



Source: http://okmagazine.com/meet-the-stars/your-afternoon-aww-can-you-guess-which-boy-bander-this-alaskan-klee-kai-belong-to/
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Former House Speaker Tom Foley Dies At 84





House Speaker Tom Foley (back, right) and Vice President Al Gore applaud during President Bill Clinton's State of the Union address on Jan. 24, 1994.



Ron Edmonds /AP


House Speaker Tom Foley (back, right) and Vice President Al Gore applaud during President Bill Clinton's State of the Union address on Jan. 24, 1994.


Ron Edmonds /AP


Former House Speaker Tom Foley, who led the chamber from 1989 to 1995, has died, according to his family. He was 84.


The Associated Press says Foley's wife, Heather, confirmed that the Washington state Democrat died at his Washington, D.C., home.


He had reportedly been in ill health in recent months.


The AP says:




"Foley became the first speaker since the Civil War to fail to win re-election in his home district.


"The courtly politician lost his seat in the 'Republican Revolution' of 1994. The Democrat had never served a single day in the minority. He was defeated by Republican Spokane lawyer George Nethercutt.


"Foley served as U.S. ambassador to Japan for four years during the Clinton administration. But he spent the most time in the House, serving 30 years including more than five as speaker."




The Spokesman-Review, in Foley's native Spokane, says the former House speaker, the son of a Spokane County Superior Court judge, was "a young deputy Spokane County prosecutor before going to Washington, D.C., as an aide to Sen. Henry 'Scoop' Jackson in the early 1960s."




"He ran against a well-established Republican incumbent, Walt Horan, in 1964.


"Foley often told the story of his entry into that race, on the last day of filing week. He had asked longtime Democratic leader Joe Drumheller for support in 1966, when it was assumed Horan would retire; Drumheller fumed against young politicians who were always putting things off, adding that he'd back Foley that year but not two years hence. Foley thought it over, wired his resignation to Jackson, and got in a car with a couple friends to drive to Olympia, where his paperwork had to be filed by 5 p.m. that day.


"They arrived in Olympia and ran out of gas. Foley had to run to the Secretary of State's office, arriving just before closing time."




Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/18/237016359/former-house-speaker-tom-foley-dies-at-84?ft=1&f=
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