শনিবার, ৯ মার্চ, ২০১৩

American Cancer Society: Budget cuts threat in NY

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- The American Cancer Society said Wednesday that the across-the-board federal cuts that went into effect this month and proposed New York spending reductions could cost residents in the state their lives.

The group said the federal cuts alone will mean 1,670 fewer free screenings for breast and cervical cancer for New York women who have no health insurance. The federal cuts amount to a 5 percent drop in cancer screenings in New York, and Gov. Andrew Cuomo's proposed budget would add a 10 percent cut to the program, according to the American Cancer Society.

"The potential cuts will lead to more cancer misery for future patients and a bigger health care tab for New York taxpayers," Blair Horner of the American Cancer Society said at a news conference. "These programs have been proven to save lives and reduce the cancer burden. They deserve more ? not less ? funding."

Susan Farr of Saratoga County, who attended the news conference, said the free screenings she saw offered in her local newspaper saved her life. The former substitute teacher said she and her husband began struggling to pay for groceries, utilities and the mortgage after he was laid off from work. That's when she noticed a lump in her breast.

"And I was really scared," the 43-year-old Farr said. "I had two little kids, no health insurance and a husband working three jobs to make ends meet.

Farr said the free screening found the breast cancer and she subsequently had surgery and radiation treatments, also free under the government-funded program.

"The cancer services program truly saved my life," Farr said. "I believe my physical, emotional and financial life was saved by this program."

The cuts, both federal and state, are the result of years of overspending and rising taxes, sharp declines in tax revenues from the Great Recession and a slow, uneven recovery.

Legislative leaders and Cuomo are meeting behind closed doors, and are expected to propose budget changes and a state budget soon. The final product is expected to be adopted by March 21, well before the April 1 deadline. Legislative leaders had no comment Wednesday on what they might change in the health spending.

Cuomo's proposed budget would require preventive programs, including anti-smoking and other efforts aimed at certain cancers, to compete for financial support from a funding pool, instead of 89 separate line items. The governor's approach is similar to what he has done with some school aid, based on the belief that competition will make programs more efficient and result in more effective use of taxpayers' dollars.

Cuomo proposes a total spending cut of $63 million in a budget of about $143 billion for the fiscal year that starts April 1. Cuomo spokesman Richard Azzopardi defended the governor's proposal.

"Effective programs will continue to thrive and will even have an opportunity to receive additional funding under our reforms," he said. "Replacing an ineffective bureaucracy of 89 separate programs with a more streamlined process will result in better and more efficient services at less cost."

Under state budget law, consolidating the line items also gives the governor potentially more leverage in how programs are funded since the Legislature would have fewer items to change. But it also makes state spending less transparent to the public.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/american-cancer-society-budget-cuts-131045450.html

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শুক্রবার, ৮ মার্চ, ২০১৩

The Hangover III Trailer: It All Ends

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/the-hangover-iii-trailer-it-all-ends/

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Malaysia says 31 Filipinos fatally shot in Borneo

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) ? Malaysian security forces gunned down 31 Filipino intruders in Borneo on Thursday, the highest number of casualties in a single day since nearly 200 members of a Philippine Muslim clan took over an entire village last month, police said.

However, representatives of the Filipino group denied their members had been killed.

The armed clansmen have wreaked political havoc for both Malaysia and the neighboring Philippines by trying to stake a long-dormant royal territorial claim to Malaysia's sprawling, resource-rich state of Sabah in Borneo.

Most of the Filipinos had eluded capture in a coastal Sabah district filled with palm oil plantations and forested hills after Malaysian forces attacked them with airstrikes and mortar fire on Tuesday.

Police and military forces tracking them waged a fierce gunbattle that ended in the deaths of 31 clansmen Thursday, national police chief Ismail Omar said, adding that no Malaysians were injured.

But Abraham Idjirani, a Philippine-based representative for the clansmen, said he spoke by telephone Thursday evening with the group's leader, who insisted all of them remained accounted for. He claimed Malaysian forces had instead killed dozens of civilian villagers.

The conflicting claims could not immediately be explained.

Ismail said at least 52 Filipinos have now been killed in the past week since hostilities in the Sabah security crisis escalated. Eight policemen also were fatally shot by the Filipino clansmen and their allies last week in various parts of Sabah.

Less than two hours before the announcement of the casualties, Prime Minister Najib Razak rejected a cease-fire call by Philippine-based members of the clan led by Jamalul Kiram III, who claims to be the sultan, or hereditary ruler, of the southern, predominantly Muslim province of Sulu in the Philippines.

A brother of Kiram, the sultan who lives in Manila, is heading the group in Sabah. Kiram had ordered them to observe a unilateral cease-fire starting Thursday afternoon by holding their current position and taking a defensive posture.

Najib responded by saying Malaysia would accept only unconditional surrender by the clansmen, who slipped into Sabah by sea around Feb. 9.

"They have to surrender their arms. They have to do it as soon as possible," Najib said at a nationally televised news conference.

"Don't believe this offer of a cease-fire by Jamalul Kiram," Malaysian Defense Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi wrote on Twitter. "For the sake of the people of Sabah and Malaysia, eliminate all militants first."

Idjirani said a cease-fire would be in line with a statement of concern by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon late Wednesday.

Ban "urges an end to the violence and encourages dialogue among all the parties for a peaceful resolution of the situation," according to the statement issued by Ban's representative.

Ban voiced concerns about how the crisis might affect civilians, including Filipino migrants in Sabah, and urged "all parties to facilitate delivery of humanitarian assistance and act in full respect of international human rights norms and standards," according to the statement.

Malaysia's government has insisted it made every effort to coax the Filipinos to leave and had to use force after the group fatally shot two policemen last week. Six other police officers were ambushed and killed by other Filipinos believed to be linked to the clansmen in another Sabah district.

The Filipinos say Sabah belonged to their royal sultanate for more than a century and should be handed back. Malaysia has dismissed their claim to the state, which has been part of Malaysia for five decades.

An estimated 800,000 Filipinos, mostly Muslims from insurgency-plagued southern provinces, have settled in Sabah over the years to seek work and stability.

___

Associated Press writers Hrvoje Hranjski and Oliver Teves in Manila, Philippines, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/malaysia-says-31-filipinos-fatally-shot-borneo-094739303.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৭ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Catholics to embrace change? View from a Rome parish

Keir Simmons / NBC News

Built in the 1970s, Rome's Our Lady of Guadalupe brings together a community of elderly and young families.

By Keir Simmons, Correspondent, NBC News

ROME -- Only a couple of miles from the Vatican, Our Lady of Guadalupe is a parish church much like thousands of others around the world.

Yet even in this relatively small congregation there are examples of division between those who want to look to the future and others who hope to hold on to the past ? a rift that is reflected right the way up to the College of Cardinals gathering this week to choose the new pope.

Built in the 1970s, Our Lady of Guadalupe?brings together a community of elderly and young families. During Mass, children sit at the front so that the priest can speak directly to them. The young generation is the center of the congregation.

Asked what he wants from the next pope, parishioner Dario Appetiti holds his wife's hand and gently rocks the buggy in which his 14 month old son, Lorenzo is resting.

There will be no more press conferences from U.S. Cardinals in Rome. A series of press briefings were a popular way of providing information, but provoked ire in some quarters.? NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

?I think it's important that he will be able to reach the young people,? he says.

Many of the older members of this local church agree, but they aren't sure that the church should modernize too fast.

?I think it's tough because they're used to the pope waiting until he passes away,? says Father Brian Coe, a priest from Annapolis, Md., who is working at Our Lady of Guadalupe as part of his introduction to priesthood.

He explains that he sees wisdom in Pope Benedict XVI?s decision to abdicate, but that for older Italians it was a break from tradition that was hard to comprehend.

?Many Italians would like to see another Italian pope,? Coe says. But some of the cardinals who have arrived from around the world are hoping to look beyond Europe.

'Change must come'
The church's name comes from a celebrated icon of the Virgin Mary found in Mexico City. Some believe a pope from Latin America, Africa or Asia would help the church usher in a new era.

?No matter who it is, these people will follow him, because they believe he is the vicar of Christ,? says Father Dermot Ryan, an Irish priest who also preaches at Our Lady of Guadalupe.

/

The pope delivers his final audience in St. Peter's Square as he prepares to stand down.

He is a traditionalist but says change is inevitable. ?There will be changes and certainly, as in all institutions, I think change must come,? he says.

One reason there must be change, he recognizes, is the sex-abuse scandals that have rocked the church. ?It's very sad to see what has happened.? As a younger priest he thought the abuse was ?just rumors?. But now ?all this blows up and I realize it wasn't just rumors,? Ryan says.

?Many other storms have hit the church in other centuries. This is one storm that has hit now, and I think we're pulling through, we're getting out of it. There are so many good faithful people working in the church for the good of all.?

With more than a billion followers worldwide, different views within the Catholic Church are inevitable ? and are reflected within the College of Cardinals whose discussions this week in Rome are already shaping the outcome of the yet-to-be announced papal conclave.

?I can imagine these meetings getting a bit chippy, challenging, interesting... hard-hitting at certain points," said George Weigel, NBC News' Vatican analyst.

But even the smallest congregations agree on what is important, according to Ryan. ?Simple people who believe and come to Mass ... they want to reach out for the weak, to listen to words of God.?

Follow NBC News' Keir Simmons on Twitter.

Related:

Riots, revenge, rigging: A history of papal conclaves

American cardinals fall silent amid Vatican concern at media leaks

Full coverage of the papal abdication from NBC News

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/07/17212387-will-catholics-embrace-change-the-view-from-one-parish-in-rome?lite

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Bolshoi's 'Ivan the Terrible' confesses to acid attack

Russia Interior Ministry Press Service handout, via Reuters

Pavel Dmitrichenko -- seen after his arrest, left, and performing as Ivan the Terrible, right -- suggested he had not meant for the attack to go so far.

By Thomas Grove and Maria Tsvetkova, Reuters

MOSCOW - A dancer at Russia's Bolshoi ballet who made his name playing villains has confessed to ordering the acid attack that nearly blinded its director. Sources said he was angry that his lover was being kept out of leading roles.

Pavel Dmitrichenko, who has danced the crazed monarch in Ivan the Terrible and the villain in Swan Lake, was detained on Tuesday over a crime that shocked Russia and blackened the reputation of the world-famous theater.

Haggard and unkempt, Dmitrichenko was shown in a police video confessing to plotting the attack, in which a masked man threw a jar of sulphuric acid in the face of artistic director Sergei Filin late on Jan. 17.

"I organized this attack, but not to the extent that it happened," he said, apparently meaning he did not intend the attack go so far.

Russian police say that 29-year-old Pavel Dmitrichenko, a star dancer with the renowned Bolshoi Ballet, has admitted masterminding the January acid attack on the ballet's artistic director, who suffered severe burns to his hands and face.

Two other men who had no known connection to the Bolshoi also confessed in the video released by police. One said he had thrown the acid at Filin and the other that he had driven the getaway car.

LifeNews, a Russian website with close ties to the police, said the suspected attacker, Yury Zarutsky, and his driver Andrei Lipatov were found by tracking cellphone calls made from the crime scene.

Dmitrichenko, who is in his late 20s, said he had given the reasons for the attack in a written statement to police but did not say what they were on camera.

A source at the Bolshoi confirmed media reports that the outspoken dancer was angry that his partner, ballerina Anzhelika Vorontsova, had missed out on top roles including the lead in Swan Lake.

"Filin certainly squeezed out Vorontsova, but that is not a reason to throw acid in someone's face," the source told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Russia Interior Ministry Press Service handout, via Reuters

Andrei Lipatov, left, allegedly drove the getaway car and Yury Zarutsky, right, is accused of carrying out the attack.

Before flying to Germany for treatment last month to save his sight, Filin, 42, said he believed he knew who was behind the attack and that he thought it was connected with his work. He is recovering and is expected back at work this summer.

The management of the Bolshoi, which declined to make any comment Wednesday, had been hoping none of the ballet company was involved in the attack as this might limit damage to its reputation and morale.

Dmitrichenko, born in Moscow to a family of dancers, had been at the Bolshoi since 2002 and was to dance in "Sleeping Beauty" this month. He could face jail and the end of his dance career.

As artistic director of the Bolshoi's ballet company, Filin had the power to make or break careers in the fiercely competitive world of ballet. Tales of his uncompromising grip on the troupe and his disagreements with dancers have been widely reported in the Russian press.

Bolshoi Ballet's artistic director, Sergei Filin, recalls the "unbearable pain" from January's acid attack as he leaves a Moscow hospital for treatment in Germany. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

Related:

Bolshoi director describes 'unbearable' pain of acid attack

Russia Bolshoi Ballet acid victim: I forgive my attacker

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/06/17207161-bolshois-ivan-the-terrible-confesses-to-acid-attack-on-moscow-ballet-director?lite

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শুক্রবার, ১ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Ford to sell cars and pickup trucks in Myanmar

FILE - In this Aug. 20, 2006 file photo, the company logo shines on the grille of a 2006 Ford Escape outside the showroom of a Ford dealership in the south Denver suburb of Littleton, Colo. Ford Motor Co. has signed a deal to distribute vehicles in Myanmar, the head of Ford's local partner said Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 20, 2006 file photo, the company logo shines on the grille of a 2006 Ford Escape outside the showroom of a Ford dealership in the south Denver suburb of Littleton, Colo. Ford Motor Co. has signed a deal to distribute vehicles in Myanmar, the head of Ford's local partner said Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) ? Ford Motor Co. has signed a deal to distribute cars and pickup trucks in Myanmar, the head of Ford's local partner said.

The automaker's first showroom in the country's largest city, Yangon, could open as early as May, Khin Tun, the director of Capital Automotive, said Thursday.

Ford spokesman Neal McCarthy said the company is "gearing up for market entry" and has a local distributor, but declined to discuss details.

American brands PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, GE, Caterpillar and Danish brewer Carlsberg have all signed distribution deals in Myanmar, as rapid political and economic reforms transform the country from pariah state to investor darling.

Though lingering uncertainties about the stability of Myanmar's transformation and fears that the U.S. could reinstate sanctions have discouraged many Western companies from making large, long-term investments, the deals show how Myanmar's economic landscape is starting to change. Much of the old economic order still prevails, but a few industries once monopolized by military and crony businesses are beginning to open to new players.

Businessmen who have avoided the taint of Western sanctions are snapping up deals with foreign partners and some of the old "cronies," long disparaged for their links to the country's repressive military leaders, are now trying to rebrand themselves to attract some of the rush of foreign capital.

Vehicle imports, for example, used to be so tightly controlled ? and highly prized ? that the government was able to cover much of the construction cost of its new capital city, Naypyitaw ? which rose from scrubland and rice paddies about seven years ago ? by paying "crony" businessmen with permits to import vehicles, rather than with cash.

Myanmar loosened vehicle import restrictions in late 2011, transforming the streets of the country's commercial capital, Yangon, from quiet lanes to gridlock. Old Japanese cars still dominate the streets here.

Carlsberg's joint venture with Myanmar Golden Star Breweries to distribute and eventually produce beer here, announced earlier this month, is remarkable because it marks the entry of a foreign player into a sector dominated by military-owned companies. The deal also shows how far Myanmar has come since 1996, when Carlsberg abandoned plans to work with Golden Star because of pressure from human rights activists, according to Vriens & Partners, a consulting company with offices in Yangon.

Ford's Myanmar distributor, Capital Automotive, is a unit of the Capital Diamond Star Group, whose managing director, Ko Ko Gyi, has managed to build a successful conglomerate with interests ranging from trading and distribution to construction and real estate, without running afoul of U.S. sanctions.

This is his second big win with a U.S. company. Diamond Star Co., another group company, became the sole importer and distributor for PepsiCo's Pepsi-Cola, 7-Up and Mirinda brands in Myanmar in August.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-28-Myanmar-Ford/id-216369e1b4404c24ad86e792b72f241d

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Mastermind of UK's 'Great Train Robbery' dies

Popperfoto / Getty Images

Detectives inspect the Royal Mail train from which over 2.6 million pounds was stolen, on Aug. 8, 1963, in Cheddington, Buckinghamshire, England.

By Clare Hutchison, Reuters

LONDON ? The mastermind behind Britain's "Great Train Robbery," a 1963 heist that turned its perpetrators into celebrities, has died at age 81, local media reported Thursday.

Bruce Reynolds died in his sleep at his home in London after a period of ill health, reports from news media including the BBC said, citing comments from Reynolds' son, Nick.


Paul Popper / Popperfoto / Getty Images

A photo issued by Scotland Yard on Aug. 2, 1963, shows Bruce Reynolds, who has died at home in London.

His death came just months before the 50th anniversary of the Great Train Robbery, which was at the time Britain's largest robbery.

In August 1963, Reynolds, along with an 11-member gang, tampered with railway track signals and stopped a Royal Mail night train travelling from Glasgow to London carrying letters, parcels and large amounts of cash.

Reynolds and his men stormed the train and made off with 2.6 million pounds, equivalent to about 40 million pounds or $61 million in today's money.

Train driver Jack Mills was struck over the head during the robbery. He died seven years later, and many people believed the injuries he sustained during the heist contributed to his death.

Most of the gang members were caught and given prison sentences totaling more than 300 years, but Reynolds evaded capture, fleeing Britain with his wife and son. He spent five years as a fugitive in places as far afield as Canada and Mexico.

On his return to Britain, Reynolds was caught by police and sentenced to 25 years in prison, of which he served just 10.

Reynolds later found fame as an author after penning his memoirs, titled "Autobiography of a Thief."?

His accomplice Ronnie Biggs achieved similar notoriety after he escaped from the prison where he was serving a 30-year jail sentence for his part in the robbery.

Biggs spent 36 years on the run, leading a playboy lifestyle in South America, before finally surrendering to British police in 2001. Biggs was freed in 2009 on health grounds.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/28/17132265-mastermind-of-britains-great-train-robbery-dies-at-81?lite

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