Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Actelion buys U.S.-based firm with cancer drug in development

ZURICH (Reuters) - Actelion said it will acquire Ceptaris, a privately held U.S.-based specialty pharmaceutical company developing a topical drug, Valchlor, to treat a form of cancer.

Allschwil-based Actelion said it already paid Ceptaris $25 million and will pay another $225 million when the deal closes. The deal is contingent on Valchlor clinching approval from the U.S. health regulator.

"We expect the transaction to become cash-accretive before the end of 2014," Actelion executive Nicholas Franco said in a statement on Wednesday.

(Reporting By Katharina Bart)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/actelion-buys-u-based-firm-cancer-drug-development-155811086.html

slainte the quiet man yellow cab dropkick murphys guernsey colcannon dystonia

Guns in schools: Arkansas district will arm 20 teachers and staff

A small school district in Arkansas will arm 20 volunteer teachers and staff with handguns starting in the fall, reigniting debate about the best way to protect children in schools.

The district will be the first in the state to arm teachers and is doing so under a state law that allows licensed, armed security guards on campus. The school?s participants in the program, whose identities will be kept secret, will be considered security guards after undergoing 53 hours of training.

"The plan we've been given in the past is, 'Well, lock your doors, turn off your lights and hope for the best,' " Superintendent David Hopkins told the Associated Press. "That's not a plan.?

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about the Second Amendment? A quiz.

Mr. Hopkins said a wave of parent calls after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings last December caused him to reevaluate their procedures, even though the town of 9,200 people about 100 miles northwest of Little Rock isn't known for being dangerous.

State officials have not blocked the plan, even though Arkansas Education Commissioner Tom Kimbrell has said that he opposes arming teachers and staff. Instead, he supports hiring law enforcement officers as school resource officers.

Participating staff in Clarksville?s schools will be given a one-time $1,100 stipend to purchase a handgun and holster. The district will pay about $50,000 for ammunition and for training by Nighthawk Custom Training Academy, a private training facility in northwest Arkansas.

Want your top political issues explained? Get customized DC Decoder updates.

?That teacher is going to respond to one thing and one thing alone, and that's someone is in the building either actively or attempting to kill people," Jon Hodoway, director of training for Nighthawk said. "That's it. They're not going to enforce the law. They're not going to make traffic stops. If somebody is outside acting the fool, they're going to call the police."

At a recent training session teachers and administrators practiced using airsoft pellet guns to shoot a student pretending to hold another at gunpoint.

One of the student simulators, Sydney Whitkanack, said she?s not concerned about having teachers or staff armed.

"If they're concealed, then it's no big deal," she said. ?It's not like someone's going to know, 'Oh, they have a firearm.' "

Others, like former president of the Arkansas Education Association Donna Morey, strongly opposed the plan, citing concerns over a student accidentally getting shot or taking a gun.

"We just think educators should be in the business of educating students, not carrying a weapon," she said.

The Clarksville school district is the latest example of localities trying to form responses to the Sandy Hook shooting last December that killed 20 children and six teachers.

Like Clarksville, some districts have decided to beef up armed security, in line with the National Rifle Association?s recommendation for every school to have an armed security guard, police officer, or staff.

In May, a rural Colorado school district voted to allow two top administrators to carry guns. They were able to circumvent Colorado?s gun laws by changing the job title of the superintendent to security officer. In Arizona's Maricopa County, Sheriff Joe Arpaio organized a posse of armed volunteers to patrol local schools, although he drew criticism for hiring a former child-sex offender.

In 2013, seven states passed legislation permitting teachers or administrators to carry guns in schools and more than 30 state legislatures introduced bills that would permit staff members to carry guns in public or private schools, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

But most proposals to arm teachers or staff have failed, even in conservative states more likely to support an expanded role for guns, according to The New York Times.

A key reason for fewer districts arming teachers is the potential cost, according to the Times report. Some insurance companies are declining coverage to schools that allow employees to carry handguns, or are raising their premiums.

In Kansas, for instance, the liability insurance provider for about 90 percent of Kansas school districts said it would not cover schools that permit employees to carry concealed handguns. A dozen Kansas school districts that were considering arming their staff changed their minds after the decision, the state employee who oversees insurance programs at the Kansas Association of School boards told the Times.

?Some [insurance providers] are saying this is so high risk we?re not going to touch it,? Kenneth Trump, the president of National School Safety and Security Services, which discourages districts from implementing concealed carry policies told the Times. ?Others may say this is so high risk that you?re going to pay through the nose.?

? Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about the Second Amendment? A quiz.

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

Become a part of the Monitor community

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/guns-schools-arkansas-district-arm-20-teachers-staff-190939220.html

barista university of kentucky oakland news pinnacle airlines kansas vs kentucky oakland college basketball

California rehab clinics bill taxpayers for fake clients, addictions

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Fraud is rampant in California's drug rehabilitation program for the poor, with clinics cheating taxpayers by billing for counseling that never happened
  • Clinic operators are accused of pressuring staff to forge and falsify paperwork to pad bills
  • California's Medicaid system, the biggest in the nation, paid $94 million in the past two fiscal years -- half of public rehab funding -- to clinics that have shown signs of fraud or deceptive billing

Editor's note: To uncover this story on widespread fraud linked to California's drug rehab program, CNN's Special Investigations Unit has teamed up with the independent, nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting. Join CNN's Anderson Cooper on AC360 for more on this yearlong investigation Tuesday and Wednesday at 8 and 10 p.m. ET on CNN.

(CNN) -- Victoria Byers did not drink alcohol. She did not abuse drugs. But when she was a teenager in foster care, several times a month, she would board a van at her group home and go to rehab.

Byers couldn't figure out why she had to take drug tests and sit in group therapy sessions on addiction at So Cal Health Services, a clinic tucked in an office park in Riverside, California.

"And I told them, you know, 'Why should I be here? I have no drug issue,' " said Byers, now a slow-to-smile 22-year-old.

The director of Byers' group home confirmed Byers was clean but said she sent all six girls under her care to the clinic because she didn't have enough staff to separate those with substance abuse problems.

Troubled drug rehab clinics

Troubled drug rehab clinics

Troubled drug rehab clinics

Troubled drug rehab clinics

Troubled drug rehab clinics

Troubled drug rehab clinics

HIDE CAPTION

The arrangement was strange. It was also a scam.

So Cal Health Services was ripping off taxpayers, part of a pattern of fraud by rehabilitation clinics that collect government funding to help the poor and addicted, a yearlong investigation by The Center for Investigative Reporting and CNN has found. The investigation, which included undercover surveillance and stakeouts, uncovered a rehab racket that continues to this day.

Thousands of pages of government records and dozens of interviews with counselors, patients and regulators reveal a widespread scheme to bilk the state's Medicaid system, the nation's largest. Witnesses to the fraud laid out its inner workings in minute detail, some speaking of it publicly for the first time.

In the underbelly of the Drug Medi-Cal program, clinics pad client rolls by diagnosing people like Byers with addictions they don't have. They round up mentally ill residents from board-and-care homes to sit in therapy sessions they can't follow. They lure patients in from the street by handing out cash, cigarettes and snacks. They have patients sign in for days they aren't there.

One Inglewood clinic fabricated notes and billed for "ghost clients" who never came in. They couldn't show up, a counselor discovered: Some were behind bars; one was dead.

Even caught red-handed, operators have polished techniques to ward off official scrutiny and keep the money flowing. One Los Angeles County clinic director lodged a complaint against a government auditor, and another called on a local lawmaker for help. In both cases, it worked.

The populous Los Angeles region is one of the nation's top hot spots for health care fraud, and former state officials agree it is also ground zero for the rehab racket.

Drug Medi-Cal paid out $94 million in the past two fiscal years to 56 clinics in Southern California that have shown signs of deception or questionable billing practices, representing half of all public funding to the program, CIR and CNN found. Over the past six years, more than half a billion dollars have poured into the program statewide.


Victoria Byers said that as a teenager, her group home took her to So Cal Health Services in Riverside, California, for rehab even though she didn't drink or do drugs. (Photo: CNN)

Following a year of public records requests and questions from CIR and CNN, state regulators announced a crackdown in mid-July. The action came two and a half weeks after reporters submitted a final list of their findings.

The state Department of Health Care Services temporarily suspended 16 clinics suspected of flouting the law and pledged to tighten oversight and on Tuesday announced it had suspended 13 more. Officials would not identify the targeted clinics, saying the information would compromise the investigation.

But veteran operators have become adept at sidestepping trouble.

Among them was Tim Ejindu, who ran the clinic where Byers was sent.

Nearly one-third of the foster children who showed up at Ejindu's clinics in Riverside and Pomona had no drug or alcohol problem, estimated TaMara Shearer, a former addict who worked as a supervisor.

"Any loopholes, he knows how to find them. I've watched him do it," Shearer said. "He thinks Americans are dumb."

Under pressure to diagnose teenagers with fake addictions, counselors at the clinics reverted to racial stereotypes, according to Shearer. They labeled white teens as alcohol drinkers and black or Latino teens as marijuana smokers, she said.


TaMara Shearer, who worked at So Cal Health Services and the Pomona Alcohol and Drug Recovery Center, says the clinics billed for services that didn't happen and diagnosed teenagers with fake addictions. (Photo: CNN)

Ejindu did not respond to an interview request or a letter outlining allegations against him. When contacted by reporters at his clinic, he declined to answer questions, closing the clinic door and refusing to reopen it.

Joy Jarfors, a manager with the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs until she retired in 2010, said "fraud and abuse (are) rampant" in the system.

"I'm not the employee anymore that has to look at this every day, but I'm a taxpayer that knows that this is going on," Jarfors said. "It angers me. And there's story after story after story about Medicaid dollars being cut from people who need the services."

The cost of failing to treat addicts is high. Drug overdose and excessive alcohol consumption are among the top causes of premature death in Los Angeles County, killing two people nearly every day. Statewide, the Legislative Analyst's Office has found taxpayers spend more than $1 billion a year on hospital stays related to substance abuse for those on Medi-Cal.


"Everyone talked the talk, everyone was zero tolerance for fraud and abuse, but nobody would do anything about it," said Joy Jarfors, a manager with the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs until 2010. (Photo: CNN)

The rehab centers promise a chance to start over in their very names, which include phrases like "new hope," "new beginning," "renew" and "U-turn." But they don't always deliver.

Vredette Hawkins was one woman who could have used some help. The South Los Angeles mother of four smoked marijuana and was under scrutiny from child welfare officials, she said, after someone accused her of using methamphetamine.

She went to a nearby Drug Medi-Cal clinic a year ago to get counseling for depression. She encountered a chaotic free-for-all, a clinic filled with people who came only because they wanted money.

At Basen Inc., clients received $5 each time they showed up, she said. Hawkins said counselors often abandoned group therapy sessions after 15 minutes, leaving clients to chat about sexual exploits and getting high. Two former Basen employees also told CIR that the clinic paid clients, although one said that the practice stopped amid worries about getting caught.

A county investigation last year found "extremely serious violations," such as falsified paperwork, but couldn't substantiate allegations that Basen was paying clients.

"The only one that's basically benefiting from all this," Hawkins said, "is ... the person that's running the program."

Bassey Enun-Abara, the counseling center's executive director, said he does not pay clients and disputed Hawkins' description of the clinic. "I can't believe a client would tell you that," he said.

As director of the state Department of Health Care Services, Toby Douglas has primary responsibility for Medi-Cal, including the rehab system. Douglas, appointed by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2011, declined repeated interview requests.

Douglas' boss, Secretary Diana Dooley of California's Health and Human Services Agency, also declined interview requests. Approached by CNN in June outside a public meeting in Sacramento, Dooley headed for a restroom, which was locked.

She then said: "The state of California takes fraud very seriously, and there are many investigations that are underway. The allegations -- all allegations are given full and fair consideration."

Dooley added that her agency's fraud and investigation unit is "one of the best in the country." She ended the brief conversation with, "That's all I have to say."

Asked again whether Douglas would sit down for an interview, as she stepped into an elevator, Dooley put her hand over CNN's camera and called for security. Later, her spokesman offered a sit-down interview with Douglas if CNN discarded the footage of Dooley. CNN and CIR would not agree to that condition.

A month later, Douglas announced his crackdown.

The agency's chief deputy director, Karen Johnson, declined to discuss accusations about specific clinics and acknowledged that the state does not yet "know the expanse of the problem."

Related: Rehab racket includes frauds, felons and fakes

Unreachable clients

Addiction counselor Tamara Askew discovered something wrong soon after she started working at Pride Health Services in Inglewood, southwest of downtown L.A., in 2009.

Askew grabbed a stack of files and began contacting patients to introduce herself. That was harder than she had figured.

Some were in jail, Askew said. Several never showed up. One man she reached out to was dead.

"After that, it was like, 'Are you kidding me?' " Askew said in an interview. "God rest his soul but, I'm like, 'How are you billing (for him)?' "

When it came time to bill Drug Medi-Cal for services rendered, Askew said her boss, Godfrey Nwogene, wanted her to submit paperwork showing that all of those clients, living and dead, had been attending counseling sessions.

The more clients Pride Health Services reported treating, the more money it could charge the government.

"He basically said, 'How do you think you're going to get paid?' " Askew said.

When Askew would not sign off on billing for clients she hadn't seen, her boss unplugged her computer, she said, and told her to leave.

Askew sued Pride, claiming she was fired for refusing to falsify records. Pride Health Services contended in court filings that Askew was laid off because there wasn't enough work. Askew and Pride eventually settled, and a judge ordered the clinic to pay her $15,500.

The clinic kept reaping more than $800,000 annually in government funding, despite persistent allegations of fraud and serious violations documented by auditors.

This year, a whistle-blower told Los Angeles County officials that Nwogene still was billing for "ghost clients." When confronted by county regulators, Nwogene and his staff denied wrongdoing.

Without hard evidence, auditors couldn't substantiate the allegations. They might have had more luck if they had visited Pride on a Wednesday.

Inside Pride's Inglewood clinic, between a dairy mart and a gas station on busy Crenshaw Boulevard, a small lobby was empty April 3, save for artificial plants and a 1990s-era anti-alcohol poster.

A receptionist told reporters there were no counseling sessions that day.

The office offered no group therapy on Wednesdays, she specified, in an exchange caught on a video camera hidden in a watch.

Yet billing records obtained by CIR and CNN show that Pride Health Services charged taxpayers for counseling 60 people at the clinic that day, at a cost of about $1,600. The clinic was reimbursed for 62 patients the following Wednesday as well.

Nwogene, whose salary has reached as high as $120,000 a year, did not respond to requests for an interview or to a letter seeking responses to specific allegations. When reporters asked for him at Pride's Inglewood clinic, a staffer denied wrongdoing. Workers then called police and closed the office mid-day.

Fake diagnoses among foster children

In California's public drug rehab program, clients equal cash. State and federal taxpayer money flows to the local privately run clinics based on the number of people they serve. The counseling is free to those on Medi-Cal.

California spent nearly $186 million on the program in the past two fiscal years, according to figures from the Department of Health Care Services. That doesn't include methadone clinics for heroin addicts, a separate wing of Drug Medi-Cal.

The state has the nation's largest population of people who qualify for the benefit, a pool poised to grow sharply under the Affordable Care Act. But recent history suggests that expansion might shovel more funding to clinics that game the system.

A specialty of So Cal Health Services, the Riverside clinic to which Victoria Byers was sent, was diagnosing foster children with fabricated drug and alcohol problems and billing taxpayers for the unneeded services, according to former employees and whistle-blower complaints.

The clinic billed Riverside County between $31 and $75 for each counseling session a child attended, documents show.

"You'd have to make up a summary of them trying this drug and make up scenarios of how they tried it, how they got it," said Nadine Cornelius, a former counselor. "It was all lies."

Cornelius tried making her group therapy sessions educational, she said during an interview at a diner near her San Bernardino County home. But eventually, she gave up. Instead, she said she let the teenagers play bingo and watch movies.

An anonymous whistle-blower told county officials that So Cal was paying group homes for "access" to the foster children. Byers' group home director, Angelina Farmer, told CIR that wasn't the case.

Riverside County cut So Cal Health Services' contract in 2010 because so many of its clients had dropped out. That failure was easier to prove than the fake diagnoses of teenagers, according to Karen Kane, the county's substance abuse program administrator.

Kane said her agency was especially concerned that a false addiction diagnosis could negatively affect the foster children later in life.

"Our goal was to stop them from harming people and get them out of the business -- and that's what we did," Kane said.

By then, the county already had paid So Cal $1 million, dating back to mid-2007.

After the closure, clinic director Tim Ejindu moved some staff members from Riverside to his other clinic in eastern Los Angeles County. There, under the red-tiled roof of the Pomona Alcohol and Drug Recovery Center, problems persisted.

Shearer, the Pomona center's assistant program manager before she left last year, said the overriding goal of the operation was to "get money." Staff billed for therapy that didn't happen, she said. They billed for clients who didn't show up. They billed for pizza parties and basketball games as if they were counseling sessions.

Ejindu was authoritarian and intimidating, said Shearer, who worked for him for six years. Inexperienced counselors making $9 an hour were under constant stress, she said, caught between doing something unethical and losing their jobs if they refused.

"And he made it very clear that your job depended on what you do and what you don't do," Shearer said.

When a government auditor showed up for an annual review, she said Ejindu would have his staff sneak files into his office so he could examine them. Then, Shearer said, he would send the files back to the counselor to change before the auditor saw them.

"Mind you, there's no way to ... go back and correct," she said. "There's only forgery."

Ejindu, who tax records show makes $150,000 a year running the clinic, branched out last year to provide addiction counseling at seven middle and high schools in the Pomona Unified School District.


Tim Ejindu, who runs the Pomona Alcohol and Drug Recovery Center, called his clinic a "pillar in our community." (Photo: CNN)

A school district spokesman, Ryan Hightower, said there have been complaints about the program but would not elaborate except to say, "Whenever something is brought up, we deal with it."

Fighting audits

As business boomed at the Pomona clinic, Mary Brantley couldn't keep up.

Brantley started as a counselor at Ejindu's Riverside clinic. After it closed, she moved on to the Pomona clinic. She said under Ejindu's watch, she was expected to produce paperwork and signatures for rehab counseling that never took place.

"When he had the schools in on it, I left because I couldn't do that much forging," Brantley said.

Ejindu's strategies for handling regulators became clear after Shearer took her story to county authorities in September.

As an auditor investigated Shearer's accusations of fraud, Ejindu offered the investigator a job, according to a county email. The auditor turned him down.

The 2012 investigation determined that the Pomona clinic had billed for 230 counseling sessions at times when the counselors were off work or at lunch. The inspector discovered that Ejindu himself had filled out, signed and dated patient records for a future date.

Six treatment plans and medical waivers lacked the required doctor's signature when the auditor first examined them. Weeks later, physician signatures appeared on the same documents, along with dates indicating they had been signed before the audit, according to the investigation report.

The tricks used to fudge paperwork had become so prevalent in the Drug Medi-Cal program that John Viernes Jr., Los Angeles County's Substance Abuse Prevention and Control director, warned all rehab providers in a 2010 memo that the practices were fraudulent and "will result in immediate contract termination." Viernes also warned that any offer of a bribe to a county staffer would be grounds for termination.

Over and over again, however, that threat fizzled.

Ejindu fought back. He filed a complaint against the county auditor, citing "illegal pilfering of documents." The allegations against his clinic, Ejindu wrote, came from disgruntled ex-employees who had been fired for not meeting standards.

"This agency has been around for 15 years for a very good reason," he wrote. "We are a pillar in our community and well respected."

Ejindu met with Viernes, who asked another county division to investigate the complaint of auditor misconduct. The inquiry determined that the auditor didn't have permission to take papers off the desks of clinic staff, Viernes said. As a result, he said, the findings of serious violations were "set aside."

Meanwhile, the Pomona clinic continued to rake in cash as part of its $800,000 annual contract. Vans still dropped off teenagers for rehab, and Shearer has grown cynical about the value of blowing the whistle.

"The funny thing is that it has been reported, many times, and nothing has ever been done," she said. "He's always found a way to circumvent that."

Looking back, Victoria Byers is upset, too. It bothers her that somewhere in official patient records, someone labeled her with an addiction she didn't have.

"Maybe if I wanted to get a job and that comes up, maybe I can't get that job because of drugs," she said. "I didn't do drugs, and that's kind of messed up."

'Ghost clients'

At Pride Health Services, addictions weren't the only things that Stephanie Jackson Parnell made up.

The former employee said the clinic operator, Godfrey Nwogene, would ask her to bill Drug Medi-Cal for clients she'd never seen.

"I just had to come up with stories," she said. "Using your imagination. Like as if it's someone standing right there."

Pride staffers would go through files of old clients to check whether their Medi-Cal numbers remained active, Parnell said. Each active number would become a Pride client again.

Parnell, who left and filed a whistle-blower complaint with the state in 2009, said she invented life stories for her fake clients. She still can rattle off vignettes of rehab fiction: "Client stated that she went to a party and relapsed. ... Client is saying she doesn't want to go out with those same friends."

Or sometimes, Parnell just copied and pasted notes from one file to another.

"It got so raggedy ... I would put one floppy disk in there and do 15 charts with everybody saying the same thing," she recalled.

When people did come in, Parnell would take down their information, and Pride would bill for them even if they never came back, she said. When the fake clients were due to complete their rehab program, Pride employees created diplomas to put in their files, she said.

"I was getting freaked out about it, but the money was good," said Parnell, who made $13 an hour.

Whistle-blower emails sent to a Los Angeles County auditor in 2011 accuse Nwogene of leaning hard on his workers to carry out the scheme.

"I refuse to do any ghost writing because that is illegal," one of the emails said. "The owner of Pride Health (Godfrey) had an emergency meeting last week and stated that if we didn't want to do the paper work the Pride Health way, then we should resign."

Nwogene seemed unstoppable. A Pride employee wrote in another email to an investigator, "One thing im (sic) kinda scared of is that he has told us that no one has been able and will never be able to take him down."

Nwogene's skill at avoiding a crackdown played out in full force in 2011, as he faced heat from both state and county authorities.

An auditor sat in on a group therapy session -- but no one showed up. The auditor reported that Pride "appear(s) to have developed fraudulent documentation to support their billing claims," according to a county memo.

"A serious problem has come up with this agency," one county regulator wrote in an email obtained under the California Public Records Act. "ALL ROSTERS SIGNED IN THE SAME HANDWRITING by, it appears ... the same person and all billing for this program will be disallowed."

The county froze funding and conducted a follow-up investigation that found "extremely grave violations" and "deficiencies that warrant the termination" of Pride's contract. Los Angeles County drafted letters notifying state officials and Nwogene that it was cutting off funding.

The state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs drafted a letter to temporarily suspend Pride from the Drug Medi-Cal program because of "severe deficiencies" from 2005 to 2011.

Neither of the letters, according to county and state representatives, ever was sent.

Political intervention

Nwogene had been asking for help from the office of Mark Ridley-Thomas, one of five county supervisors. Now chairman of the county board, the former state senator represents the district where Pride operates.

The politician's aide, Salya Mohamedy, inquired, and Viernes, the county substance abuse prevention director, detailed the clinic's violations and allegations of fraud. Still, Mohamedy asked Viernes to set up a meeting "so that we can resolve this matter once and for all."

Internal emails show that this was not an unusual request: During the second half of 2011, Ridley-Thomas' aide contacted Viernes on behalf of half a dozen other rehab providers facing problems with regulators.

Nwogene met with Viernes on August 10, 2011. In a thank-you letter to Ridley-Thomas' aide, Nwogene called the meeting successful.

"Your intervention opened the door to dialogue," Nwogene wrote. "That dialogue led to a resolution."

While Pride may have had flaws, Nwogene wrote, "reckless and mean spirited" county staff treated the organization unfairly.

In the end, Pride Health Services' contract wouldn't be terminated. The funding spigot was on again.

In an interview, Viernes expressed frustration that supervisors urged him to meet with clinic owners even when they knew about the serious problems found by auditors.

"I get emails from the supervisors, (saying), 'When are these people gonna get paid!'" Viernes said.

Ridley-Thomas' top health deputy, Yolanda Vera, denied pressuring Viernes. The lawmaker's office got involved, she said, to "make sure that these agencies at least are getting some access and having their concerns addressed."

Asked about the CIR/CNN findings regarding Pride's billing, Vera expressed concern. "If true," she said, "I would ask the question as to why are we contracting with this agency."

But Viernes said the message is pretty clear: Help the clinics improve instead of cutting them off.

"There's so much political pressure on us about giving them a second chance," he added. "After all, we're a rehab agency, we believe in giving second chances."

And, as CIR and CNN found, government regulators will dole out second and third chances to just about anyone.

Got a story idea or tip for CNN's investigations team? Go to cnn.com/investigate or click here to submit. CNN senior investigative producer Scott Zamost, CNN investigative correspondent Drew Griffin and CIR intern Mihir Zaveri contributed to this report. This story was edited by Amy Pyle, Robert Salladay and Mark Katches, with contributions from Richard T. Griffiths of CNN. It was copy edited by Nikki Frick and Christine Lee.

Reprinted with permission of Center for Investigative Reporting.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_latest/~3/LVvDFzzLovg/index.html

columbus day Stacy Dash Amber Tamblyn Lilit Avagyan Nashville TV Show VP debate sandusky

Community Health to buy Health Management for $3.9 billion

(Reuters) - U.S. hospital chain Community Health Systems Inc said on Tuesday that it would buy smaller Health Management Associates Inc for $3.9 billion to increase its base during the overhaul of the country's healthcare system.

Both companies' hospitals are primarily in smaller cities and rural areas. Health Management has a strong presence in the U.S. Southeast, including Florida. Community Health is the second-largest for-profit chain behind HCA Holdings Inc .

Community Health said that based on Monday's share prices, it would pay $13.78 per share in cash and its own stock. The deal would give Health Management shareholders a 16 percent stake in the new company and an additional contingent value right worth up to $1 per share.

Health Management shares fell 6.9 percent to $13.89 before the market opened, while Community Health rose 2.4 percent to $48.35.

The contingent value right payment depends on the outcome of certain legal proceedings, the companies said in the statement, but they did not provide further details and were not immediately available for comment.

Health Management cut its earnings outlook in April, citing weak patient admissions. The company in December was the subject of a "60 Minutes" television news story that described aggressive policies aimed at increasing admissions. Health Management denied the allegations.

In its first-quarter financial filing, Health Management said it had received a subpoena from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for documents involving accounts receivable, billing write-downs, contractual adjustments, reserves for doubtful accounts, and revenue.

In a separate statement in which Health Management forecast second-quarter earnings of 10 cents to 11 cents a share due to weak hospital admissions, it said that it received additional subpoenas from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services about emergency room operations that supplemented ones received in 2011. It also received an additional subpoena on physician relationships.

Health Management also had faced a looming proxy fight with hedge fund Glenview Capital Management, which wanted to replace the entire board. In June, Health Management said it had hired Morgan Stanley and law firm Weil, Gotshal and Manges to consider its response to Glenview's campaign.

Glenview, which owns 14.6 percent of Health Management, said in a June letter to the hospital operator that there was "significant room for improvement" at the company, which it said had fallen short in its financial performance for more than a decade.

Health Management Chief Executive Officer Gary Newsome was due to retire at the end of the month. On Tuesday the company said John Starcher would be interim president and CEO.

The Community Health deal is the second major hospital merger agreement in as many months as the companies, faced with declining patient admissions and rising bad debts, struggle to shore up their finances as they await an expected influx of newly insured patients beginning next year under healthcare reform.

Last month, No. 3 hospital chain Tenet Healthcare Corp announced a deal to buy Vanguard Health Systems Inc for $1.73 billion.

Community Health, based in Franklin, Tennessee, on Monday reported a drop in second-quarter profit due to weak admissions and a rise in bad debt.

The boards of both companies have approved the deal, which they expect to close by the end of March.

Community Health said it had a financing commitment from its advisers on the deal, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse . Kirkland & Ellis also advised the company.

(Reporting by Susan Kelly in Chicago and Caroline Humer in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Jeffrey Benkoe and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/community-health-buy-health-management-3-9-billion-111105172.html

fbi most wanted list stuttering james van der beek dyngus day indonesia quake stephen strasburg shabazz

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Nasdaq stocks posting largest volume decreases

NEW YORK (AP) -- A look at the 10 biggest volume decliners on Nasdaq at the close of trading:

ASB Bancorp Inc. : Approximately 100 shares changed hands, a 97.9 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares fell $.17 or 1.0 percent to $17.18.

Colonial Financial Services Inc. : Approximately 100 shares changed hands, a 97.0 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares fell $.40 or 2.8 percent to $14.10.

First South BanCorp. Inc. : Approximately 300 shares changed hands, a 95.4 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares fell $.01 or .2 percent to $6.63.

IF Bancorp Inc. : Approximately 100 shares changed hands, a 96.3 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares remained unchanged at $15.69.

Mayflower Bancorp Inc. : Approximately 500 shares changed hands, a 96.1 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares fell $.08 or .4 percent to $19.60.

Old Line Bancshares Inc. : Approximately 600 shares changed hands, a 96.2 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares rose $.14 or 1.1 percent to $13.18.

PHI Inc. voting : Approximately 100 shares changed hands, a 95.4 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares rose $.05 or .1 percent to $36.00.

QCR Holdings Inc. : Approximately 100 shares changed hands, a 97.2 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares rose $.01 or .1 percent to $16.01.

Rush Enterprises B : Approximately 300 shares changed hands, a 96.4 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares rose $.14 or .7 percent to $21.41.

United Community Bancorp : Approximately 200 shares changed hands, a 95.5 decrease from its 65-day average volume. The shares fell $.09 or .9 percent to $10.06.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nasdaq-stocks-posting-largest-volume-230826852.html

nbc news msnbc reddit abc news Boston Police Scanner Jeff Bauman cbs news

House GOP bows to fossil fuel bosses.

  • Home
  • Places
  • News
  • Forums
  • Issues
  • Blogs
  • About
  • Actions??
? Copyright 2013.?? All Rights Reserved.?? Privacy Policy
PO Box 73, Atlantic Highlands, NJ 07716
info@shore11.org

Source: http://www.shore11.org/node/17462

Audrie Pott Bombing In Boston Rebel Wilson Patriots Day boston marathon turbotax leonhard euler

Ex-U.S. President Carter Plans to Visit North Korea

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter is planning to visit North Korea soon to try to win the release of a U.S. citizen held for committing crimes against the reclusive state, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported on Monday.

Carter has made contact with the North to arrange for the visit, and he is likely to make the trip in a personal capacity to secure the release of Kenneth Bae, the U.S. citizen, a source in Washington was quoted as saying by Yonhap.

"The issue of Kenneth Bae who has been held in the North for nine months is becoming a burden for the United States," the diplomatic source was quoted as saying by Yonhap.

"Even if Carter's visit materialises, it will be focused on the issue of Kenneth's Bae's release more than anything else."

Bae, who is in his mid 40s, was sentenced in May to 15 years hard labour by North Korea's Supreme Court after being detained in November as he led a tour group through the northern region of the country.

North Korea said Bae was participating in activities designed to overthrow the government, by infiltrating at least 250 students into the country.

Bae has acknowledged to being a missionary and has said he had conducted services in the North.

Bae said he had been moved by his faith to preach in North Korea, ranked the most hostile to Christianity by Open Doors International, a Christian advocacy and aid group, since the late 2000s.

His arrest and conviction came as the North and the United States remain locked in a diplomatic standoff surrounding Pyongyang's missile and nuclear tests and its claim that Washington was plotting to attack the country.

In two months of daily verbal assault earlier this year prompted by annual drills by U.S. and South Korean militaries, Pyongyang threatened to attack the two allies using its nuclear weapons.

Pyongyang has had a history of trying to use American captives as a bargaining chip to drag Washington into talks but the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama has been reluctant to respond.

Bae has sent letters to his family in the United States pleading for help because his health was failing, his sister said in a media interview last week.

Carter has made trips to the North on diplomatic missions and in 2010 helped earn the release of another American, Aijalon Mahli Gomes, a Boston native who had been sentenced to eight years hard labour for illegally entering the country.

Former President Bill Clinton flew to North Korea in 2009 and won the release of two American women media workers who had been sentenced to 12 years for illegally entering the country.

? 2013 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/carter-to-visit-north/2013/07/29/id/517439

Feliz Navidad Ryan Freel Melissa Nelson sound of music foot locker champs champs

The Staycation in Park Royal Penang - Places and Foods, Travel ...

Home ? Beaches, Hotels / Resorts, MALAYSIA, Malaysia - Hotels / Resorts, Malaysia - Penang, Places, TRAVEL

28 July 2013 270 views No Comment

The Staycation in Park Royal Penang

When you mentioned Park Royal Penang in Batu Ferringhi, many will tell you stories on the history of the hotel. While many locals still live in the past, the hotel has move on. In fact, the hotel has gone through a revamp with a huge renovation on their hotel rooms. The legacy remains with new directions.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi hotel entrance
Penang has changed for good in the past few years. More places for good food and more hotels are opening on the island. To drive from Kuala Lumpur to Penang, it should take less than five hours drive (without speeding) with leisure speed and it will take an hour for a plane ride. We chose to drive because we wanted to travel freely on the island.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi lobby
It didn?t take us long to reach Park Royal Hotel. Even though the exterior looks the same but the interior is a world of its own. I always feel that hotel services in Malaysia fares poorer compare to our neighbours but in Park Royal Penang they proved me wrong. Doormen and front desk staffs were helpful and friendly.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi hotel room
We got ourselves a beautiful seaview room. I love how the newly renovated hotel rooms. It looks like new!
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi hotel room seaview

?

parkroyal penang batu ferringhi swimming pool

The swimming pools in Park Royal Penang must be mentioned. They have two swimming pools, one for the adults and one for the children.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi kids swimming pool
If you are bringing your kids for a staycation in Park Royal, they will love the children?s pool. It is like mini water theme park but it is always advisable parents or guardians should be around when the kids are playing in the pool
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi beach evening
If you are a beach person, just walk a few steps and you will be greeted by the beautiful Batu Ferrighi white sandy beach. Facing the Strait of Malacca, there are varieties of sports activities available.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi beach
Having a brisk walk or even a jog at this beautiful beach during morning or evening is relaxing. Usually the sea water here is not that rough so swimming in the sea is consider safe. Jelly fish attacks are rare in Penang.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi beach benches
If you don?t want to soak into the sea water, you can always sun bathing at the benches available exclusive for hotel guests.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi breakfast
Breakfast in Parkroyal Penang was not disappointing as well. I thought it will be the same old typical ?Malaysia hotel breakfast? and I was wrong. They have local Penang food like char kuey teow and nasi lemak for breakfast.
parkroyal penang batu ferringhi lobby at night
I stayed two nights in Parkroyal Penang and it was blissful. Due to Rachel?s pregnancy, we stayed in the hotel most of the time and we didn?t even make time for the Batu Ferringhi night market. Please don?t be fooled by the exterior and the history of the hotel as the rooms were renovated and rejuvenated. If you are planning to visit Penang for a staycation, ParkRoyal Penang Batu Ferringhi is an option for you.

Park Royal Penang ?Address:

Batu Ferringhi Beach, 11100 Batu Ferringhi, Penang, Malaysia

Phone: +60 4-881 1133

Website: http://www.parkroyalhotels.com/en/hotels/malaysia/penang/parkroyal/location/index.html

?

?

?

Blog Widget by LinkWithin

Popularity: 1% [?]

About us, PlacesAndFoods.com

Source: http://www.placesandfoods.com/2013/07/the-staycation-in-park-royal-penang.html

ozzie guillen fidel castro darvish george zimmerman website edmund fitzgerald uss enterprise white house easter egg roll 2012 andy cohen

Monday, July 29, 2013

Newport Folk Festival wrapping up another year

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) ? The Newport Folk Festival is capping another year with sets from Beck and the Lumineers, 54 years after the event was first held in Rhode Island's city-by-the-sea.

The venerable festival was set to wrap up Sunday following three days of performances from nearly 50 bands.

Tickets for the Saturday and Sunday shows sold out five months early ? the fastest tickets for the main two days of the festival have gone in the event's history.

The event has boasted a "who's who" of stars since it began in 1959 and is known as the place where Bob Dylan went electric in 1965.

Ticketholder Alex Kimball of New London, Conn., says the festival succeeds through its diverse mix of performers and a beautiful setting at historic Fort Adams on Narragansett Bay.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/newport-folk-festival-wrapping-another-205053218.html

reddit abc news Boston Police Scanner Jeff Bauman cbs news Boston.com NBA Playoffs 2013

Police: $53 million in jewels stolen in Cannes

PARIS (AP) -- A staggering 40 million euro ($53 million) worth of diamonds and other jewels was stolen Sunday from the Carlton Intercontinental Hotel in Cannes, in one of Europe's biggest jewelry heists in recent years, police said. One expert noted the crime follows recent jail escapes by members of the notorious "Pink Panther" jewel thief gang.

The hotel in the sweltering French Riviera was hosting a temporary jewelry exhibit over the summer from the prestigious Leviev diamond house, which is owned by Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev.

A police spokesman said the theft took place around noon, but he could not confirm local media reports that the robber was a single gunman who stuffed a suitcase with the gems before making a swift exit. The spokesman spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter on the record.

The luxury Carlton hotel is situated on the exclusive Promenade de la Croisette that stretches a mile and a half along the French Riviera, and is thronged by the rich and famous throughout the year. The hotel's position provides not only a beautiful view of the sea but also an easy getaway for potential jewel thieves along the long stretch of road.

"It's a huge theft. Anytime you talk about a heist with many millions of dollars it turns heads and feeds the imagination," said Jonathan Sazonoff, U.S. editor for the Museum Security Network website and an authority on high-value crime.

He said the likelihood of recovering the stolen diamonds and jewels is slim, because the thieves can easily sell them on. "The fear is, if you're dealing with high-quality minerals, it's hard to get them back," Sazonoff said. "They can be broken up and so they can be easily smuggled and sold."

The valuable gems were supposed to be on public display until the end of August. It was not immediately clear how many pieces were stolen.

Several police officers were placed in front of the Carlton exhibition room ? near a Cartier diamond boutique ? to prevent the dozens of journalists and photographers from getting a look at the scene of the crime.

Europe has been struck by several brazen jewelry thefts in recent years, some of which have involved tens of millions of dollars in treasure.

On Feb. 18 in Belgium, some $50 million worth of diamonds were stolen. In that heist, robbers targeted stones from the global diamond center of Antwerp that had been loaded on a plane headed to Zurich. Authorities have since detained dozens of people and recovered much of the items stolen in that operation.

Five years ago, in December 2008, armed robbers wearing women's wigs and clothing made off with diamond rings, gem-studded bracelets and other jewelry said then to be worth $108 million from a Harry Winston boutique in Paris.

Also in 2008 ? in February of that year ? in a scene reminiscent of the movie "The Italian Job," masked thieves drilled a tunnel into a Damiani jewelry company showroom in Milan, Italy. They tied up the staff with plastic cable and sticky tape, then made off with gold, diamonds and rubies worth some $20 million. The robbers had been digging for several weeks from a building under construction next door.

Cannes appears to be a favorite target this year ? in May it was struck by other two highly publicized jewelry heists during the Cannes Film Festival.

In the first theft, robbers stole about $1 million worth of jewels after ripping a safe from the wall of a hotel room. In the second, thieves outsmarted 80 security guards in an exclusive hotel and grabbed a De Grisogono necklace that creators said is worth 2 million euros ($2.6 million).

Sazonoff said it is normal for robbers to gravitate to a place like Cannes, whose glimmering harbor and glamorous film festival attract the world's rich and famous. "Why do thieves target Cannes? It's simple ... On the Cote d'Azur, it's where the monied people flow," he said.

Sazonoff also said police would likely probe whether Sunday's heist is linked to recent jail escapes by alleged members of the Pink Panther jewel thief gang.

On Thursday, gang member Milan Poparic escaped his Swiss prison after accomplices rammed a gate and overpowered guards with bursts from their AK-47s, police said.

Police say the Pink Panther network's members are prime suspects in a series of daring thefts. According to Interpol, the group has targeted luxury watch and jewelry stores in Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the United States, netting more than ?330 million (?285m) since 1999.

Poparic is the third member of the Pink Panthers to escape from a Swiss prison in as many months, according to Vaud police.

"The brazen drama of it is their style... The possibility of the reemergence of the Pink Panther gang is very troubling and taken seriously by law enforcement worldwide," Sazonoff said. "The theft of high value diamonds is exactly what they do, so it's not a great leap to assume they are on the warpath again. They are a crime wave waiting to happen."

___

Thomas Adamson can be followed at Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-53-million-jewels-stolen-133207329.html

airhead atherosclerosis steven tyler tropic thunder carnie wilson missing reese witherspoon pregnant

Friday, July 26, 2013

Sanchez Energy scoops up more Eagle Ford acreage for $29 million

Sanchez Energy Corp. has purchased the mineral rights to additional acreage of land targeting the Eagle Ford Shale.

Oil exploration and production company Sanchez Energy Corp. will acquire 10,800 net acres in South Texas? Fayette, Gonzales and Lavaca counties from an unidentified seller for $29 million.

The acreage, located across the Eagle Ford Shale region, has an estimated net production of 250 barrels of oil equivalents per day, officials at the Houston-based company said in a shareholder update.

Sanchez Energy now has 25 wells in various stages of drilling, completion or initial flowback.

The company?s second-quarter production of 682,000 barrels of oil equivalents was a 92 percent increase over the first quarter of 2013 and a 772 percent jump from the same period a year ago, officials also said.

?Our production and reserve growth continues to be strong, with both nearly doubling in the first half of the year,? President and CEO Tony Sanchez III said in a written statement.

Sanford Nowlin covers energy/utilities, transportation/aviation and manufacturing.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_16/~3/zCwpdKFuvk0/sanchez-energy-scoops-up-more-eagle.html

mike d antoni nba trade rumors desean jackson 2012 ncaa tournament schedule laurent robinson dantoni black and tan

Skydiver Hits Player: Baseball Player Done for the Season After Being Kicked in Head [VIDEO]

A baseball player is done for the season after being kicked in the head by skydiver.(Photo : Reuters)

Wait a second, that's not a ball! A skydiver fell from the sky and hit a baseball player in the middle of a game. Now he's done for the rest of the season.

Mattingly Romanin, a sophomore infielder/outfielder from Chicago State University, was playing summer ball for the Hannibal Cavemen, a summer collegiate baseball team is Missouri that compete in the Prospect League, but after a strange event, he won't be playing until further notice. He was knocked out by a skydiver that landed on the field. The incident was caught on video.

Romanin initially took to Twitter to let people know that he was feeling fine, but just a bit sore. Romanin's injuries were more serious than he initially though. He was evaluated by a doctor on Monday and was told that he suffered a concussion and wouldn't be able to complete the season.

Romanin spoke to the Quincy-Herald Whig about his condition and not being able to finish the season

"I still have headaches and stuff like that, and I just feel a little slow," Romanin said during a phone interview Tuesday. "It is unfortunate that it ended my season, and I'm a little upset about that, but you know what, it's just a freak accident and there's nothing we can do now. So I'm still trying to be upbeat it, and I'm still laughing with everybody."

The skydiver was one of three that were supposed to deliver the first pitch of the game. The first skydiver landed without any issues, but the second one landed too quickly and kicked Romanin in the head.

"They told us not to move and they won't hit us... guess not'," Romanin joked on Twitter.

Surprisingly, Romanin was able to finish out the game. The skydiver was not hurt in the incident.

?

Source: http://www.travelerstoday.com/articles/6971/20130725/skydiver-hits-player-baseball-done-season-being-kicked-head-video.htm

Celeste Holm Stephen Covey klimt breaking bad breaking bad food network star British Open 2012

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Coastal Antarctic permafrost melting faster than expected: Arctic-like melt rates appearing in Coastal Antarctica

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Scientists have documented an acceleration in the melt rate of permafrost in a part of Antarctica where the ice had been considered stable. The melt rates are comparable with the Arctic and could preview melting permafrost in other parts of a warming Antarctica. In Garwood Valley, scientists found melt rates accelerated consistently from 2001 to 2012, rising to about 10 times the historical average.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/FQhIXNgJWsg/130724103003.htm

peyton manning 49ers

'Blackfish' doc looks at SeaWorld's captive whales

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? What the Oscar-winning 2009 documentary "The Cove" did for dolphin slaughter in Japan, "Blackfish" may do for killer whales living in captivity while performing at marine parks.

"Blackfish," explores what may have caused Tilikum, a 12,000-pound orca, to kill three people, including veteran SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010.

News of Brancheau's death during a show at SeaWorld in Orlando inspired director Gabriela Cowperthwaite to explore what happened. SeaWorld first claimed that the trainer had slipped and fallen; later, it said Tilikum had been spooked by Brancheau's ponytail.

The director, who has made documentaries for ESPN, National Geographic, Animal Planet, and the Discovery and History channels, said it took two years to make the film. She procured footage from local and national newscasts, people's personal archives, and through the Freedom of Information Act.

"It was just perseverance when it came to getting footage," she said in an interview. "I couldn't believe what I was seeing. Once you see that, you can't unsee it. In my mind that gave me my directive. Now that I know the truth, I have to tell the truth. I didn't imagine that I was going to be making this film. I thought I was gonna be making a completely different film about relationships with our animal counterparts. So it was really learning through interviews and stuff and seeing footage."

Key footage became public after the Occupational Safety and Health Administration took SeaWorld to court and the images became exhibits in the case, she said.

She recruited animal-behavior experts, marine park patrons who witnessed whale attacks during performances and former SeaWorld trainers willing to go on the record.

"Personally, I started learning stuff about the animals I didn't know, and I was working there," said former SeaWorld orca trainer Samantha Berg.

Tilikum, born in the wild near Iceland in 1983, was captured and sent to a marine park near Vancouver before he was sold to SeaWorld in Orlando. The film shows divers trapping and kidnapping baby whales for shipment to theme parks while their mothers watched and screeched in agony.

The director says she sought comment from SeaWorld, which owns parks in Orlando, San Diego, and San Antonio. But the company declined to appear in "Blackfish."

Another former SeaWorld orca trainer, Carol Ray, said whale watching is a wonderful way to see these majestic animals up close.

"If you could afford to take a family of four to a SeaWorld Park somewhere around the country, then you can also take your family to a place where you can watch the whales from the shore," Ray said. "Those are great opportunities for seeing them where they're supposed to be... When I have friends that come to me and say things like, 'Yeah I really want my kids to see them up close,' (I say), 'You know your kids love dinosaurs right? They do. They are fascinated by them. They have never seen a dinosaur have they?'"

"Blackfish" opens in Los Angeles and New York on Friday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blackfish-doc-looks-seaworlds-captive-whales-132623991.html

casey anthony cory monteith al sharpton george zimmerman Pacific Rim Travon Martin riots

Spanish town decides to stay painted Smurf blue

Jon Nazca / Reuters

The Andalusian village of Juzcar has decided to remain painted blue to attract tourists.

By Jon Nazca, Reuters

JUZCAR, Spain - A Spanish hilltop village has found a way to chase away the country's recession blues by keeping all its buildings blue, the way they were painted in 2011 for a promotion for a Smurf cartoon movie.

"We calculate that around 210,000 tourists have visited us since we painted ourselves blue two years ago, and people keep on coming," Juzcar Mayor David Fernandez told Reuters Tuesday.

Tourism is one of the few bright spots in Spain's recession-bound economy.

A traditional village nestled among chestnut forests in the southern region of Andalusia, Juzcar, with a population of fewer than 250 people, painted everything blue, including its church and town hall, when it was chosen by Sony Pictures to host an event to promote the movie, "The Smurfs 3D."


Promoters pledged to repaint the town white after the event, but residents voted to keep it blue because of the economic benefits brought by Smurf-seeking tourists.

The fictional blue creatures are based on a Belgian cartoon series, in which they are depicted as living in mushroom-like houses.?

Related:

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2f104712/sc/30/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C230C19640A3110Espanish0Etown0Edecides0Eto0Estay0Epainted0Esmurf0Eblue0Dlite/story01.htm

wiz khalifa and amber rose oh the places you ll go blunt amendment justin bieber birthday read across america vikings stadium breitbart dead

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Sahara Force India looks forward to Hungarian Grand Prix

Vijay?s Vision
Team Principal, Dr Vijay Mallya, looks back on the first half of the season.

At the halfway point of the season how would you sum up the first nine races?
I think the first nine races have probably exceeded the expectations we set ourselves over the winter. The first mission was to start the year well and that?s what we?ve done. In fact, it?s been our best start to a season ever: we?ve shown good pace and had some excellent races. At the same time we recognise that we haven?t made the most of all the opportunities and we?ve had our fair share of bad luck. But I prefer to focus on the positives and there?s no doubt that the VJM06 is the best car we have ever produced and I?m proud of the hard work from everyone in the team.

Paul di Resta, Sahara Force India VJM06 leads Adrian Sutil, Sahara Force India VJM06

Paul di Resta, Sahara Force India VJM06 leads Adrian Sutil, Sahara Force India VJM06

Photo by: XPB Images

What are the objectives for this weekend?
The priority remains the same as the Silverstone test: to get better understanding of the new Pirelli tyres. That?s been a key factor in our strong performances so far this year so we need to make sure we continue to deliver good tyre management. As a venue, the Hungaroring has not traditionally been our strongest track. Paul scored points a couple of years ago and it?s important to add some more to our tally this weekend.

What about your goals for the second half of the year?
I would expect the remainder of the season to be more competitive than the first half of the year. We?ve seen the progress of McLaren, especially in Germany, and it?s clear we have a big fight on our hands to beat them in the remaining races. Toro Rosso have also looked more competitive recently so I think we will see tight grids and very close racing all the way through until the final race in Brazil.

Paul on Budapest

Paul, Budapest brings us to the halfway point of the season. How are you feeling ahead of the weekend?
I?m feeling positive. At the start of the year it would have been hard to imagine that we would be fifth in the championship after nine races, but that?s what we?ve achieved. Every part of the team is working well and that?s been the key. There have been some missed opportunities, but we?ve always recovered well and been able to keep the momentum going.

What memories do you have from your previous visits to Hungary?
I?ve always enjoyed going to Budapest since I first visited in 2010 when I was the team?s third driver. It?s an historic city and I usually stay very close to the river in the centre. It?s full of interesting places and great restaurants. My racing memories are mixed, but the 2011 race was an exciting one on a damp track. I finished seventh ? which was my best finish in Formula One at the time.

Tell us about the challenge of the track?
It?s very demanding physically and mentally because you are nearly always in a corner. The layout feels more like a street track and all the corners flow into each other so you need to find the rhythm of the track and build your confidence with each lap. By the time the track is fully rubbered in it feels very satisfying to drive.

How do you rate your chances for this year?s race?
There?s no reason why we can?t be competitive. The big unknown is the new Pirelli tyres. It?s a big challenge for all the teams to try and get on top of them quickly. It?s hard to say if they will impact on the performance level of the teams, but we will go into the weekend with the same approach and then target Q3 on Saturday and points on Sunday.

Adrian on Budapest

Adrian, the Hungarian Grand Prix is your 100th race in Formula One. How does it feel to reach this landmark?
It?s hard to believe how quickly time goes by! It?s a big milestone, for sure, but in the end it doesn?t really change anything. My goals remain the same as when I started my first event and that?s to win races. I still love the sport and I hope I can continue to drive these amazing cars for a long time.

What memories do you have from your previous visits to Hungary?
I?ve always enjoyed this event. It?s the mid-way point of the year just before the holidays and the weather is usually very nice. But it?s one of those places where I?ve not had much success. I?ve never scored points in Budapest so that?s the first objective this year.

Tell us about the challenge of the track?
It?s very tight and twisty and there are not many places where you can catch your breath, apart from the pit straight. It?s dusty, too, and the track takes a while to clean up on Friday during practice. We usually run with maximum downforce there because after Monaco it?s the slowest circuit on the calendar.

How do you rate your chances for this year?s race?
It?s difficult to say because it?s the first race with a new tyre construction. The track is tight and we need to qualify well because there are not many opportunities to overtake.

Sahara Force India

Source: http://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/sahara-force-india-looks-forward-to-hungarian-grand-prix/

Plaquemines Parish michigan football michigan football askew blue moon ann romney Paul Ryan Speech

Jennifer Lawrence: My parents took my Oscar!

Celebs

8 hours ago

Jennifer Lawrence with her brother Ben (l.), her mother Karen, her father Gary (second to r.) and her brother Blaine after the 2013 Oscars.

LUCAS JACKSON / REUTERS

Jennifer Lawrence with her brother Ben (l.), her mother Karen, her father Gary (second to r.) and her brother Blaine after the 2013 Oscars.

Jennifer Lawrence won the Oscar for Best Actress this year, but the ?Hunger Games: Catching Fire? star says her parents now have custody of the coveted gold statue.

?My parents took it back to Kentucky, ?cause I felt odd having it, like, on display in my house,? the 22-year-old star ? who won the Academy Award for her performance in ?Silver Linings Playbook? ? told Access Hollywood?s Scott Mantz at Comic-Con 2013 in San Diego, Calif., on Saturday.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Hollywood stars at Comic-Con 2013

?If anybody?s coming over to my house, I didn?t want them to remember that. Just kind of puts a weird energy out,? she explained.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Hollywood?s Hottest Archers

The actress initially tried placing the prestigious award in an inconspicuous place, before surrendering it the care to her parents.

?I put it in the hallway towards the bathroom, and my mom was like, ?I?m taking it. It shouldn?t be here.? And now it?s on a piano in Kentucky!?

VIEW THE PHOTOS: "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" ? all the Capitol portraits!

Jennifer also dished on the advice she recently gave fellow young star Shailene Woodley, who was nervous about how her life would change if she took on the role of Beatrice ?Tris? Prior in the upcoming film, ?Divergent.?

?She asked, basically, ?If you had the opportunity to do this again, would you? Because it?s scary. It?s life changing,?? Jennifer, who had her own doubts about signing on to play Katniss Everdeen in ?The Hunger Games? movies, shared. ?And I said, ?Yes. As many things change, as many things are horrible and scary, it?s worth it if you love the movie,? which she did.?

VIEW THE PHOTOS: "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" ? new posters revealed!

?The Hunger Games: Catching Fire? hits theaters on Nov. 22.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/jennifer-lawrence-my-parents-took-my-oscar-6C10699400

romney michigan railgun jk rowling new book between two ferns statins chardon

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Android hackers went and fixed up Google Voice on their own


Voice Plus only does one thing, and here it is.

Photo by author

I've been frustrated for some time by Google Voice's problems in working with other smartphone apps, even on its native Android turf. There is talk of a coming integration with Hangouts, or some other major upgrade, but for now, Google Voice doesn't let other apps read your texts out loud, automatically reply when you're driving, or send out messages to friends with game links. There are other failings, but the lack of inter-app sending is my pet peeve.

Lo and behold, somebody else shares my frustration with seeing Google Voice force its users to ignore text-connected apps and use only the modest Google Voice app for everything. Koushik Dutta, the hacker behind the ClockworkMod apps, has added a "Google Voice Plus" feature to the latest nightly builds of CyanogenMod, allowing Android users running the bleeding-edge ROM to use their Google Voice numbers through standard SMS apps.

Oh, you wanted a plain English version. Sorry about that. In other words: people who have hacked their phones to allow for custom Android systems, or firmware, can grab a very unstable build of a popular firmware and use Google Voice as if it were just any old SMS number, rather than being stuck inside one single app.

That also means Google Voice users can use whatever SMS app they would like to text. Handcent is popular, as is GO SMS Pro. I wouldn't have known until today, because there was no other way to send and receive texts as a Voice users.

So, yes, it's a very limited group of nerds who don't mind using thoroughly untested Android builds who have access to this feature (which is pulled off through Android's robust Accessibility access). But it's intriguing, and heartening, to see that Voice can work with other apps through standard messaging tools, even it it requires a little work-around. And now, through an even nerdier tool called Tasker, my phone is now set to automatically respond with a "Driving -- ping you back soon" whenever I get a text while my phone is in the car (connected by Bluetooth or a car dock).

Source: http://www.itworld.com/mobile-wireless/366150/android-hackers-went-and-fixed-google-voice-their-own

Ray Donovan despicable me dwyane wade anna nicole smith Meagan Good janelle monae Jessica Korda

Demi Lovato Is 'Really, Really Good Friends' With Nick Jonas

Lovato tells MTV News that she's proud of Disney friends despite competition.
By Christina Garibaldi

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711038/demi-lovato-nick-jonas-friends.jhtml

gmail down ryan oneal file taxes online tupac shakur sledge hammer tax day freebies madison bumgarner

Why the iPad continues to succeed where the Surface RT did not

Last week during their earnings report, Microsoft reported a $900 million write-down in relation to unsold Surface RT inventory. It's just over a year since the Surface RT launched, and yet despite continual efforts from Microsoft, including iPad baiting commercials, things don't seem to be going so well. There's sure to be several reasons behind it, but Nick Bilton at the New York Times makes a valuable point:

Today?s consumers don?t want options. They are impatient. They want to tear their new shiny gadget from the box and immediately start using it. They don?t have time to think about SD cards or USB drives or pens or flip stands.

The Surface RT didn?t allow that. Customers had to think about it.

The iPad is one of the simplest mobile computing devices money can buy, and accounts for some of its popularity. It runs iOS just the same as the iPhone and iPod touch and you get all your apps from the App Store. The only concerns when buying one; storage size and whether to go for a cellular or WiFi only version. You buy it, tear open the box and start using it.

Sadly, for the average tablet buyer, there's surely too much confusion surrounding the Surface. Top of the list; Windows RT or Windows 8 Pro. While there's a monumental price difference between the two, the fact it needs explaining at all doesn't help good marketing. I actually really like the Surface as a piece of hardware, but it is confusing if you're not someone in the know. The iPad doesn't suffer this way. It's just an iPad. No gadgets and gizmos to consider. Do average consumers even care so much for hardware specs?

It comes down to preference of course, but user experience is also one of the key differentiators. Example; "But, why can't I install Photoshop on my Surface RT, it runs Windows 8, right?" It's confusing. The iPad experience is familiar, and familiar comforting. Windows 8 is still confusing, it still requires some thought as to what you want to do and how you're going to do it. Windows is known primarily as being a desktop OS, a productivity machine, a computer. Surface RT isn't that, it's closer to the iPad, a more casual experience. But does the average person know that walking into a store?

We're suckers for simplicity. The whole "it just works" is a little cliche, but it's true. The iPad is simple, and it just works. If Microsoft is planning a successor to the Surface, I'm really hopeful it's more successful. No one device, one brand, can be everything to everyone, so we need the likes of Microsoft and Google to continue to push, continue to compete. Taking a $900 million write-down has to be tough to swallow though. It's an interesting discussion, and I'd like to hear your thoughts. What do you think sets the iPad apart as a success against the Surface RT? Do you think its the simplicity like I, or something else? Let me know in the comments!

Source: New York Times

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/J0BeFnAH47Q/story01.htm

Tony Kanaan Hangover 3 earthquake UFC 160 criminal minds London attack Doodle 4 Google