Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Yemeni Air Force suffers embarrassing crashes ? and Yemenis get angry at the US

After two recent high-profile military plane crashes, Yemenis are increasingly frustrated with their sub-par Air Force ? and accuse the government for outsourcing Air Force duties to the US.

By Adam Baron,?Correspondent / February 20, 2013

Military personnel and people gather at the site of a military aircraft crash in Sanaa February 19. A Yemeni fighter jet crashed in the centre of the capital Sanaa on Tuesday, killing at least six people, medical sources said.

Khaled Abdullah/Reuters

Enlarge

For the second time in less than three months, residents of the Yemeni capital were startled to hear that a military plane had fallen from the sky.

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The pilot of the transport plane that crashed in November was able to steer it towards an empty area before it was brought down by a technical problem, killing all 10 aboard. But yesterday?s crash proved more tragic, as a Yemeni fighter jet crashed directly into a residential neighborhood, killing 12, including two children, as it ignited nearby homes.

The heartrending absurdity of yesterday?s incident has tempered the typically ubiquitous conspiracy theories, while activists have reiterated calls ? first made in the wake of an apparently accidental explosion at an arms depot in the capital last December ? for military installations to be removed from Yemeni cities.

The plane crash has also served as a tragic reminder of the state of Yemen?s dysfunctional, unequipped Air Force. In Yemen itself, the poor state of the Air Force is often embarrassingly cited as a symbol of rampant government corruption, but it is ultimately an issue with international significance.

Yemen is a key focus of US counterterrorism efforts, and in recent years the US has launched a series of air strikes, largely by unmanned drone, against suspected Al Qaeda targets there. The Yemeni government has allowed the strikes, but as their frequency has increased, opposition to the long-controversial policy has grown vocal.

Few Yemenis question the danger that local militants pose, but many argue that the current strategy is flawed. Some accuse the government of violating Yemens' sovereignty by virtually outsourcing the duties of its Air Force to a foreign nation as it fails to bring its own aircraft up to snuff.?

Yemen?s current president, Abdo Rabbu Mansour Hadi, has openly backed the US strikes ? a break from the quiet consent granted by his predecessor, Ali Abdullah Saleh. Fielding questions at the Wilson Center in Washington, DC last September, Hadi explicitly tied his decision to the state of the country?s Air Force and its inability to battle Al Qaeda-linked militants in the country on its own.

?The Yemeni Air Force cannot carry out missions at night,? he said. ?Even if they did, its highly unlikely they will be successful.?

Misgivings about the drone campaign have been heightened by sporadic cases of civilian casualties, most notoriously a strike last fall that missed its target and killed 13 civilians in a bus whose passengers included women and children.

And as the frequency of the strikes have increased, Yemenis have balked, calling it a violation of the nation?s sovereignty, complaining of the opacity of the operations, and saying the strikes have lead to militant blowback and a public outcry that could destabilize the country.

US officials have pushed back against such claims, but many here insist that the strikes have led to an uptick in anti-American sentiment and fueled further distrust of the government in Sanaa.

Locals in the central province of al-Bayda say resentment over American air strikes has prompted many local tribal leaders to refuse to cooperate with the government?s recently launched military offensive against Al Qaeda-linked militants based in the north of the province. And east of Sanaa, a recent attack on an oil pipeline in the restive province of Mareb has been characterized as the result of the failure of negotiations between the government and local tribesmen seeking compensation for damage caused by recent drone strikes.

?The [Yemeni] State?s lack of capacities has left it dependent on the US. But American airstrikes have killed many civilians ? including women and children; this is totally against human rights,? says Hooriya Mashoor, Yemen?s Minister of Human Rights. ?A good strategy would be [working] to build the capacity of national forces. There are other ways to fight terrorism that have less of a negative impact on civilians.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/oFm3trJMHSI/Yemeni-Air-Force-suffers-embarrassing-crashes-and-Yemenis-get-angry-at-the-US

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North Korea nuclear test sparks China protest

Video: Page (1) of 1 - 02/18/13

By GrabNetworks

Chinese protesters denounce Beijing's tolerance of Pyongyang's nuclear test as China says any U.N. action should be to maintain peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).


Source: http://www.itbusinessnet.com/articles/viewarticle.jsp?id=2435994

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

NJ's newest casino, Revel, to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March to eliminate $1B in debt

(AP) NJ's newest casino, Revel, to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March to eliminate $1B in debt.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.cfnews13.com/content/news/cfnews13/news/article.html/content/news/articles/ap/2013/02/19/NJ_s_newest_casino_Revel_to_file_for_Chapter_11_bankruptcy_in_March_to_eliminate_1B_in_debt/?cid=rss

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Home Business Advice | Grandparenting

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Source: http://grandparenting.nazuka.net/2013/02/18/home-business-advice/

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Destiny Not Coming To PC, Bungie Deny Reality | Rock, Paper ...

By John Walker on February 17th, 2013 at 10:44 pm.

Obviously concept art, what with this not being on PC graphics.

Halo creators Bungie have announced the platforms for their next game, online shooter Destiny, and PC is not amongst them. With 360 and PS3 versions certain, and next-gen consoles hinted at, it would seem to make a certain degree of sense to release the game on the format most suited to online FPS. But no, because according to Bungie, of mouse and keyboard players, ?Nobody plays shooters the way they used to? ?cause nobody wants to.?

This was the studio?s co-founder, Jason Jones, according to Destructoid. To give you the full statement, so you can make your own interpretation of his words, he said:

?We did a bunch of ambitious things on Halo deliberately to reach out to people. We limited players to two weapons, we gave them recharging health, we automatically saved and restored the game ? almost heretical things to first-person shooters at the time. We made the game run without a mouse and keyboard. And now nobody plays shooters the way they used to play them before Halo ?cause nobody wants to.?

There are two possibilities. Jason Jones has never heard of Team Fortress 2, Counter-Strike, or any other number of hugely played online FPS games for the PC. Or this is a misunderstanding. I?m sure what he meant to say was, ?We couldn?t be bothered to make a PC version,? but for some reason it came out as, ?Blurble flurble flipple-flopple ploooooooo.?

Perhaps he misspoke, perhaps he?s a braggart who thinks Halo changed the face of FPS while no one else noticed, perhaps he just meant the regenerating health thing, and not PC at all? But I?m pretty sure I?d like to see him going up against some of the best online FPS players in the world, him with his joystick, them with their mice and keyboards that they haven?t been told they don?t want to use any more.

Source: http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2013/02/17/destiny-not-coming-to-pc-bungie-deny-reality/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

BC wins 4th straight Beanpot, 6-3 over N'eastern

BOSTON (AP) ? Johnny Gaudreau scored twice and Parker Milner stopped 20 shots to lead No. 4 Boston College to a 6-3 victory over Northeastern on Monday night and give the Eagles their fourth consecutive Beanpot title.

Already the defending national champions ? the Eagles (17-7-2) have won three of the last five NCAA titles ? this class of BC seniors is the first in school history to go unbeaten in the annual tournament for college hockey bragging rights in Boston.

Harvard (6-15-2) beat No. 13 Boston University 7-4 in the consolation game earlier Monday.

Kevin Roy, who had a hat trick in Northeastern's first-round victory over BU (13-12-1), had a pair of goals for the Huskies. Despite the loss, Roy was named the tournament's most outstanding player.

Milner, the most outstanding player from last year's NCAA Frozen Four, received the Eberle Award as the Beanpot's best goaltender.

Chris Rawlings made 24 saves for Northeastern (8-14-3), which surprised Boston University in the first round by sending the Terriers to the consolation game, where they've played just four times in 30 years.

Boston College fans chanted "Four more years!" as the final seconds ticked off the clock, then threw red and yellow streamers toward the ice as the Eagles spilled out of their bench for the now-familiar celebration.

Bill Arnold and Patrick Brown also scored for BC, and Steven Whitney beat the buzzer with 0.4 seconds left in the second period to give the Eagles a 4-1 lead.

Northeastern made it a one-goal game on a goal from Roy just 11 seconds into the third period and one from Braden Pimm less than four minutes later. But Eagles defenseman Michael Matheson stickhandled through the middle, drawing the defense to him before backhanding it by Gaudreau to make it 5-3 with 5:23 left.

Pat Mullane added an empty-netter with 88 seconds left.

Northeastern has not won the tournament since 1988 ? the longest losing streak of the area's four college hockey powers. Harvard last won in 1993, and BU won its unprecedented 29th Beanpot in 2009 before BC went on its current run.

BC beat Harvard 4-1 in the first round and Northeastern beat BU 3-2.

Roy was denied another hat trick when Milner stopped him on a second-period breakaway. The BC goalie also protected a 4-3 lead midway through the third by poking the puck away from Roy, who was alone in front of the net.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bc-wins-4th-straight-beanpot-6-3-over-033107347--spt.html

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Beyonce covers Vogue's March issue

This magazine cover image released by Vogue shows singer Beyonce on the March 2013 issue of the popular fashion magazine. (AP Photo/Vogue)

This magazine cover image released by Vogue shows singer Beyonce on the March 2013 issue of the popular fashion magazine. (AP Photo/Vogue)

(AP) ? Beyonce calls the making of her upcoming HBO documentary "Life is But a Dream" a therapeutic process.

She tells the March issue of Vogue, "this movie healed me in so many ways" and thinking about it makes her "want to cry."

The film addresses topics that the notoriously private singer normally doesn't address in public. It chronicles her 2011 decision to no longer have her father Matthew Knowles as her manager, her miscarriage and even the rumors that she was faking her pregnancy with daughter Blue Ivy by really using a surrogate.

"That was very odd," says the singer.

"Life is But a Dream" airs Feb. 16 on HBO.

___

Online:

http://www.vogue.com/

http://www.hbo.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-10-US-People-Beyonce/id-e43f3c920cf74177a8d759f9c8932fce

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