Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Stampede On Indian Temple Bridge Kills Dozens


At least 60 people reportedly died in a stampede Sunday at a temple in central India, where 25,000 people had crowded onto a bridge. Police believe a rumor that the bridge was collapsing sparked panic and confusion, according to local media.


The BBC spoke to Atul Chaudhary, a local who says he was on the bridge near the Mandula Devi temple in the state of Madhya Pradesh when he heard screams and saw panic break out.


"Several people could be seen flattened to the ground in the midst of the melee," he said. "Some of the youngsters panicked and jumped into the swollen river.


"I and my friends were close to the exit point and along with several others ran for safety. Scores of others were not so lucky."


Officials say the death toll may grow as they sort through the scene. Dozens of people remain missing; many of them may have jumped from the bridge into the Sindh river.


The Hindu devotees had been making a pilgrimage to the temple in the Ratangarh village as part of a large, days-long celebration honoring the goddess Durga.


As India's NDTV reports, some attendees blamed police for today's incident.


"Alleging that the police did not act on time to prevent the stampede, angry devotees pelted stones on them in which at least six cops were also injured," the station reports. "The devotees alleged that cops resorted to lathicharge to control the crowd, a charge denied by a senior police official."


A lathicharge, we'll note, is a coordinated charge by police using batons as a crowd-control measure.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/13/233230797/stampede-on-indian-temple-bridge-kills-dozens?ft=1&f=
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Report: NSA Collects Millions of Email Address Books and Buddy Lists


According to the latest revelation by the Washington Post, the NSA isn't just tracking what you're doing on the internet. It's also cataloging who you know, at a scope so expansive that it can barely find a way to store it all.


The latest WP report, spurred by documents provided by Edward Snowden and corroborated by senior intelligence officials, is one of the most astonishing insights into NSA activities yet. Not only does the NSA collect the contact lists and email address books of internet users—including many Americans—it does so at a rate that boggles the mind. According to the report:



During a single day last year, the NSA’s Special Source Operations branch collected 444,743 e-mail address books from Yahoo, 105,068 from Hotmail, 82,857 from Facebook, 33,697 from Gmail and 22,881 from unspecified other providers...



And that's a typical day. Which comes out to about 250 million email address books every single year. Which is to say nothing of the 500,000 instant messaging contact lists the NSA culls daily.


How It Happens


The NSA manages to acquire such voluminous records by cutting secret deals with foreign telcos, although that doesn't mean that only non-US citizens are targeted. The Post puts the number of Americans caught in the sweeping action as high as in the tens of millions. The amount of data is enough, in total, that it "has occasionally threatened to overwhelm storage repositories," according to the Post.


The NSA also skirts its legal obligation to target only non-US targets by collecting contact lists in bulk from international internet access points. And because the agency isn't lifting the information directly from corporate servers, but instead intercepts it as it passes from one internet weigh station to the next, it doesn't need to ask for the company's permission. It's easier to rob a Brinks truck than it is to pry open a bank vault.


That also may explain why Yahoo has such a higher proportion of contacts being lifted; unlike most of the other services the NSA targets, the Post points out, Yahoo does not offer encrypted connections to its users by default.


Why It Matters


Contact lists might at first blush seem less intrusive than phone or email metadata. But in practice, you can potentially glean far more about a person from their network of acquaintances than you can from those.


Knowing with whom someone is in contact allows the NSA to chart their entire lives, and those of the people they know. Email address books aren't just Hotmail addresses. They're phone numbers, home addresses, family members, aliases. It's not just your information. It's the information of everyone you've ever known.


And even more disturbing than the fact of it might be the scope; the NSA's approach has always been quite openly to collect as much information as possible, but this new report gives new definition to those possibilities. At 250 million people per year, it would take the NSA less than a decade to capture the contact information of every single person on the internet. [Washington Post]


Source: http://gizmodo.com/report-nsa-collects-millions-of-email-address-books-an-1445318661
Tags: Columbus Day 2013   BlackBerry   djokovic   aaron hernandez   Hyperloop  

Monday, October 14, 2013

The Minds Behind 'Einstein On The Beach' Talk Shop

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Composer Phillip Glass, director Robert Wilson and choreographer Lucinda Childs discuss their epic modern opera, which is currently being staged for the first time in two decades.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/CfFgvrgdEhk/the-minds-behind-einstein-on-the-beach-talk-shop
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

Jos. A. Bank plans $2.3B deal for Men's Wearhouse

HAMPSTEAD, MD. (AP) — Jos. A. Bank Clothiers says it has proposed to buy fellow retailer Men's Wearhouse for about $2.3 billion in cash in a deal that it expects will immediately help its earnings.


The Hampstead, Md., company says it has offered to pay $48 for each share of Men's Wearhouse.


That represents a 42 percent premium to the stock's closing price on Sept. 17, the day before Jos. A. Bank. pitched the deal to Men's Wearhouse executives.


The Men's Wearhouse Inc. shares climbed more than 33 percent to $47 in premarket trading Wednesday. Jos. A. Bank shares also are up almost 10 percent to $45.75.


Jos. A. Bank Clothiers Inc. says the deal will significantly help earnings. The company said last month its fiscal second-quarter net income fell 39 percent.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jos-bank-plans-2-3b-deal-mens-wearhouse-114021016--finance.html
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

A New Mexico startup goes deep

New Mexico In Depth keeps digging on a state Medicaid scandal. What can other small newsrooms learn from it?








PROVO, UT — In June, New Mexico’s Human Services Department released some news most New Mexicans weren’t prepared to hear. The state suspended Medicaid payments to fifteen of the state’s behavioral health providers after an outside audit flagged them for suspected Medicaid fraud. The funding freeze threatened to disrupt services to about 40 percent of the state’s behavioral health population—some 30,000 New Mexicans, including children in foster care, being treated for mental illnesses and substance abuse. Indeed, several health providers went out of business in the weeks that followed. Another provider stopped taking new clients.



The funding halt made national news last month. Per the New York Times:



For weeks now, New Mexico has been in the midst of a sweeping criminal investigation into 15 of its largest mental health providers, suspected of defrauding Medicaid of $36 million over three years. Arizona companies have been hired to fill in, but many patients are struggling without regular treatment. The state behavioral health system is in turmoil, with the administration of Gov. Susana Martinez under sharp attack.


New Mexico In Depth was one of the news organizations to first dig into the details of the scandal they’ve dubbed “The Medicaid Freeze.” The online nonprofit news organization is headed by Executive Director Trip Jennings, whose journalism career has had him in Georgia, Connecticut, California, and, for the last seven years, covering politics and state government for several New Mexico newspapers. In Depth, based about fifty miles southwest of Santa Fe in Rio Rancho, was launched in 2012 with a $500,000 grant from the Kellogg Foundation. I recently talked with Jennings by phone about how his startup—with a mission “to foster, promote, and publish journalism in the public interest”—has been covering the Medicaid story over the past four months. In Depth’s approach may be instructive for newsrooms with similarly small staffs and limited resources—according to its website, In Depth runs on a yearly budget of about $132,500.



Be strategic with story choice/focus. Jennings, who is the nonprofit’s only true editorial employee, and his staff of about five contractors or freelancers, don’t have the resources to report daily breaking news. For “Medicaid Freeze,” they focused on key questions raised by the state’s fraud investigation. In August, In Depth reporter Bryant Furlow outlined “10 unanswered questions about the Medicaid freeze”—ranging from, “Why has the state offered shifting explanations of the halt in payments?” to “What are the implications for Native Americans?”



When In Depth published one of its first Medicaid stories, state government officials were quick to respond with a memo saying it was acting legally because of “credible allegations of fraud.” Jennings said that wasn’t the story his organization was covering; In Depth New Mexico was mining much deeper. By July 11, In Depth was exploring what options state leaders had when they decided to halt funding to health providers, not whether they were legally permitted to do so.



Harness expertise or develop it. In the case of covering the Medicaid freeze, Jennings is well qualified. He reported on Medicaid on and off for years for the Waterbury (CT) Republican-American. He is backstopped on the project by Furlow, a medical reporter with experience covering public health funding issues.



Jennings’ advice for anyone covering a government or political beat is to ask questions beyond the politics. “If you are a state government reporter, it means understanding programs,” Jennings said. “If you are a city hall reporter, it means understanding how the programs are supposed to work. Reporters need to become somewhat knowledgeable, if not expert.”



Ask the “dumb question.” Jennings recommends “really parsing what an agency is saying or a person in power is saying.” That may also mean asking sometimes what seems like a “dumb question.”



“If you have a really dumb question at a press conference, go ahead and ask it, because there are probably other people in the crowd who want to ask it to,” Jennings said.











































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































 












Joel Campbell is CJR's correspondent for Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. An associate journalism professor at Brigham Young University, he is the past Freedom of Information
chairman for the Society of Professional Journalists and was awarded the Honorary Publisher Award by the Utah Press Association for his advocacy work on behalf of journalists in the Utah Legislature. Follow him on Twitter @joelcampbell.





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Monday, November 5, 2012

Florida State Seminoles men?s youth might derail bid to defend ACC title

The No. 25 Florida State men?s basketball team enters the 2012-13 basketball season in uncharted territory ? as the defending Atlantic Coast Conference champion.

During the past decade, coach Leonard Hamilton quietly has raised the profile of Florida State in the massive shadow cast by the school?s main staple, the football program.

Without much fanfare, Hamilton?s teams have posted seven consecutive winning records and made four NCAA Tournament appearances in a row, and last season the Seminoles finally cracked the ACC?s glass ceiling, going 4-1 against perennial stalwarts UNC and Duke on their way to the school?s first ACC basketball championship.

That team, which was knocked out of the NCAA Tournament in the third round by Cincinnati, has largely moved on.

Six seniors are gone, including the team?s most dynamic big man, Bernard James, who now plays for the Dallas Mavericks. In their place is a talented, yet inexperienced group of freshmen is trying to build on the success of that class.

?We have an unusual situation where I have six or seven guys where I?m trying to just let them learn our system a little better,? Hamilton said. ?The good thing is we have a corps of guys that if we just wanted to tighten it down and play fewer guys we could probably be a whole lot more efficient on the floor and just let the other guys come in and earn their playing time.

?But I don?t think that?s the right thing to do. We?ve got to get these guys on the floor, and we?ll have to see how liberal we?re going to be able to be subbing guys and giving them minutes.?

Fortunately for Hamilton, he returns a group that includes senior guard Michael Snaer, a consensus preseason All-American guard, as well as scorers such as juniors Okaro White and Ian Miller.

?I?m very comfortable that Michael [Snaer] and Okaro [White] are where they need to be,? Hamilton said. ?Ian [Miller] needs to improve his defense, Terrance [Shannon] hasn?t played in a year, and I thought that even though he played well the other night [in the exhibition], I think he realizes it?s a conditioning thing.?

Although FSU?s core group of veterans is extremely gifted, the season will hinge on how quickly the newcomers can produce.

?Unfortunately, we don?t have nearly as much time now to experiment,? said Hamilton, whose team will play its final exhibition against St. Leo on Tuesday.

Florida State has boasted one of the nation?s top-five defenses in each of the past three seasons. Although it will likely take some time for the newcomers to learn FSU?s complicated defensive system, this year the Seminoles offense should help carry the team.

?Just knowing we have all these weapons, I know we can win games,? Snaer said. ?I?m just confident enough our offense can actually win us games now. Before it was just straight defense without the offense being asked to win us games. Now we can play up there in the 80s with people, and even though we?re not going to want to ? we want to try to keep teams in the 60s while we?re in the 80s ? but that?s just going to make us that much better.?

But FSU knows it cannot win the ACC with offense alone. For the Noles to defend their ACC title, they will need to get their defense up to speed before conference play starts.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/11/05/3081828/florida-state-seminoles-mens-youth.html

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