Archive for June, 2012

Annan: Nations back Syria transition plan

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

Handout / Reuters

Demonstrators protest against Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad after Friday prayers in Habeet, near Idlib, Friday

Updated 1:30 p.m. ET: Major Western and Arab powers meeting in Geneva on Saturday adopted a watered-down version of special envoy Kofi Annan’s Syria peace plan that leaves open whether President Bashar al-Assad can be part of the transition government.

“It is for the people of Syria to come to a political agreement.” Annan said. ”I will doubt that the Syrians who have fought so hard to have independence … will select people with blood on their hands to lead them,” he said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the deal in Geneva “paves the way” for a post-Assad unity government. Assad should hear “loudly and clearly” that his days are numbered, she said. “It is now incumbent on Russia and China to show Assad the writing on the wall,” Clinton said.


Russia had refused to back a provision that would call for Assad to step down, insisting that outsiders cannot order a political solution for Syria.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov underscored the point that the plan does not require Assad’s ouster, saying there is “no attempt in the document to impose on the Syrian people any type of transitional process.”

Lavrov warned that there is an attempt to provoke a spiral of violence and incite sectarian hatred in Syria.

A transitional governing body could include members of the current government and opposition and would be formed by mutual consent, Reuters reported. The pact calls for constitutional reform and free and fair elections, Reuters reported.

Annan said the Syria action group nations did not set a time for its next meeting.

On Friday, Syrian troops shelled a suburb of Damascus, killing an estimated 125 civilians and 60 soldiers, Syrian human rights activists said. The uprising in Syria since March of last year has killed some 14,000 people. 

Syria on Saturday retook control of the restive Damascus suburb of Douma, where fleeing residents said most civilians had cleared out.

Syria retakes Damascus suburb

Foreign ministers from Western powers and Arab countries attended the meeting convened by Annan to try to forge a common strategy to end the 16 month-old conflict in Syria but differences remained over the fate of Assad.

Clinton held talks on Friday night in St. Petersburg with Lavrov but failed to resolve differences, Reuters said.

Russia, Assad’s main ally, insists that any transition plan must not be imposed on Syria by foreign powers.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, arriving for the talks, told Reuters that it was “absolutely essential that the violence stops and that a political transition can begin.”

“Kofi Annan made reasonable propositions and I hope that they will be upheld and that’s the point of today’s discussions,” he added.

Syria rebels: Assad forces bombard towns as 170 tanks mass near city

Hopes have centered on persuading Russia — Syria’s most important ally, protector and arms supplier — to agree to a plan that would end the four-decade rule of the Assad family dynasty.

But the Russians want Syria alone to be the master of its fate, at a time when Assad’s regime and the opposition are increasingly bitterly polarized.

A bomb targeting Syria’s highest court has exploded in Damascus. NBC’s Bill Neely reports.

“Ultimately, we want to stop the bloodshed in Syria. If that comes through political dialogue, we are willing to do that,” said Khalid Saleh, a spokesman for the Syrian National Council, a coalition of Syrian opposition groups based in Istanbul, Turkey. “We are not willing to negotiate (with) Mr. Assad and those who have murdered Syrians. We are not going to negotiate unless they leave Syria.”

Turkey sends military convoys toward Syrian border

International tensions also heightened last week after Syria shot down a Turkish warplane, leading to Turkey setting up anti-aircraft guns on its border with its neighbor. 

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Mansion featured on ‘Real Housewives’ burns

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

The Beverly Hills mansion that caught fire Friday evening, injuring a responding firefighter, was under major renovation after having been sold recently by “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Laura Vanderpump, sources told NBC4 News.

Vanderpump and Ken Todd sold the home for nearly $20 million last year, sources told NBC4 News. It is the location where her daughter was married, and the home can be seen in the opening credits and titles of the Bravo! show.

“I feel sorry for the new owners. I mean, they paid a lot of money for it, let’s be honest, and now I don’t know. What is it, three years under construction? I mean, it’s a nightmare,” Vanderpump said.

See the original report at NBCLosAngeles.com

About 120 firefighters put out the blaze that ripped through the mansion, fire officials said.

One of the firefighters was injured when part of the ceiling collapsed on his head, officials said. He was transported to the hospital with minor injuries, officials said.

“Possessions, houses, they can be replaced, you know, my heart goes out to the firefighter that was injured,” Vanderpump said, adding that she chose not to watch the footage of the fire.

Click here to see photos of the blaze

The blaze in the 100 block of Beverly Park Way (map) was reported at about 6:30 p.m. and was reported knocked down shortly before 8 p.m., said Erik Scott with the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Within minutes of issuing a media alert, fire officials reported they had requested additional units to respond to the blaze, which had fire and smoke billowing from at least three sections in the home’s roof.

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Battle plan: Apple vs. Microsoft vs. Google

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

8 hrs.

Devin Coldewey / msnbc.com

In the last few weeks, the tech industry’s biggest players have shown off their newest software and hardware, all aiming to make big moves before the end of the year. Apple has iOS 6 and the new MacBook Pros, Microsoft unveiled the new Surface and is preparing Windows 8 for launch, and Google has shown off the new version of Android and entered the tablet game.

It should be much more exciting than last year. What did 2011 have? A spec bump on the iPhone and iPad, a slow warming to the Windows Phone ecosystem, and the lackluster launches of a social network and (failed) desktop platform by Google. By comparison, 2012 should be a battle royale.

(Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal, but that doesn’t grant reporters privileged access to Microsoft products and services, nor does it influence their opinion of them.)

Let’s look at what each company has in store:

Apple

Apple
Big changes are afoot this year: a truly new iPhone is expected, sure, but June’s announcements already telegraphed their intentions: a return to the high end, and freezing out Google.

After aggressively pricing almost all their hardware via partnerships and ruthless negotiation with manufacturers, Apple has managed to push its products down from luxury to the mainstream. The iPhone is now considered a standard device, and the MacBook Air, once incredibly overpriced, is now setting the bar for PC laptops.

This has given Apple the market share to start selling extremely expensive things again, starting with the Retina MacBook Pro. Soon there will likely be a 13-inch version as well, and they will both sell like hotcakes — even at around $2,000 per unit. The cheapest new iPhone will probably still cost $200 to consumers, but only because Verizon and ATT will have no choice but to subsidize it.

iOS 6 is on its way as well, and it’s evident that Apple is using its mobile platform as both carrot and stick. Facebook, Twitter, Yelp, and more are getting the red carpet treatment, integrated right into the OS. But Google is getting the cold shoulder as Apple moves to its own maps and tries to get users to ask Siri instead of Google.

What could go wrong? If Google’s Android OS was more mature and more evenly upgraded (that is, less “fragmented”), it could pose a threat to Apple’s near-monopoly in the hugely profitable paid-apps ecosystem. And Apple is still lagging behind in cloud services, losing out on many fronts — including file sharing and storage, streaming media, email and Web apps — to Google, Microsoft, and smaller companies. Apple can only keep you attached to their services if those services are competitive, and the competition is moving faster than they are. And be honest: iOS and OS X are both starting to look a bit old.

Microsoft

Microsoft
The year 2012 will be looked on as a watershed moment in the company’s history: Windows 8 is the biggest change ever made to the world’s most popular OS, and opinions are in no way unanimous on the new look and feel. But Microsoft hopes to build on their success in the living room and make Windows and Xbox an ecosystem families and friends can live in, not just a set of isolated products.

The Surface tablet is Microsoft’s way of telling the world that it’s ready to move on from the desktops and laptops that put the company where it is today. And Windows Phone 8 is Microsoft learning from its mobile OS mistakes and saying “this time for real.” The next Xbox isn’t ready, but you’d better believe it’s being conceived as the third piece in this puzzle.

Connecting the TV, PC and mobile (the so-called “three screens” strategy) has ever been a hope of Microsoft’s, but it’s not until now that the company’s had the presence on the TV, the credibility on mobile, and the audacity to actually change what constitutes a PC. This year and the next will be a crucible for the company as it is forced to abandon traditions and partners, but if it’s going to remain a force in consumer tech, these are necessary steps.

Plenty could go awry, though, and if one piece fails, the others are weakened. Windows 8 could fail to gain traction as a replacement for Windows 7, to which many millions of people and companies have only recently switched. Leaving behind 10 or 20 years of applications and hardware isn’t something small businesses and casual computer users are likely to do.

Similarly, Windows Phone 8 will have a lot to prove when it debuts, first because the platform may have lost the support of many early adopters by not fully upgrading devices currently running Windows Phone 7 and 7.5, and second because Microsoft may simply not have the superstar hardware that will be needed to take consumers’ eyes off the next iPhone.

Google

Google
The challenge Google will be facing is presenting a single aspect to the consumer. There are 10 different versions of Android out there by 10 different manufacturers, all getting updates at the whim of the carriers. Meanwhile, the Chrome browser is coming out for iPad, and yet Google is making its own laptop OS and its own Android tablets, and trying to one-up Facebook with a proprietary social network, too? Every corner of the tech world seems to have a different Google, focused on a different task. Android 4.1 is the company’s way of roping everything back together.

With one OS for tablets and phones, a plea to developers and partners to get on board, and a new tablet that sets a high bar for a budget product, Google is trying to unify a core brand after its initial meteoric rise and sprawl.

Another goal seems to be having one big Google that looks more or less the same wherever you go, and from whichever device you use. Chrome syncs tabs between devices, sure, but ultimately what Google wants is for you to think of Google as a place, not a set of services and websites. One place that you can view from multiple windows — your phone, your TV, your PC and, at some point, your vision overlay device, such as Google Glass.

In order for that to happen, though, Google has to make its world look, act and respond in a similar way no matter where you are. No small task when there are huge differences in interface, connectivity and screen size. Not to mention hardware partners like Samsung and HTC putting custom interfaces all over the place. (Those overlays are probably not going to survive for much longer, by the way.)

Unfortunately for Google, too much of this is out of the company’s control. The very nature of open systems like Android prevents Google from yielding to this kind of unifying influence, and companies may (as Amazon did) simply take what they want and tell Google to go fly a kite. So Google needs cooperation from its friends in turning its patchwork systems and platforms into a single powerful, useful and affordable one.

What will happen?
How it will likely play out is this: Google and Microsoft will both take a hit as they regroup and put their weight behind their new unifying efforts. This will be because they have to build up brand and trust over again.

Meanwhile Apple will continue to dominate in hardware, selling iOS and OS X devices by the million, but even its most dedicated customers must acknowledge that both operating systems aren’t as fresh as they used to be.

So while it’ll be another year of big sales for Apple, you’ll see a creeping discontent with its software offerings. A full overhaul will be due — maybe even overdue — by June of next year, when Apple again gathers its global cadre of developers. But by that time, who knows? Maybe Google and Microsoft will have gotten their acts together, and the sparks of their own reinventions will be catching fire.

19 days

New MacBook Pro

Apple unveils latest MacBook Pros, iOS 6 for iPhone and iPad

3 days

Google I/O

Google I/O keynote: Nexus 7 tablet, Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, Nexus Q and more

11 days

Microsoft Surface

Up close with Microsoft ‘Surface’ tablets for Windows 8

10 days

live tiles

Windows Phone 8 adds navigation, custom-size tiles, shared Windows code

Close post

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Leyva, Orozco lock up US men’s gymnastics spots

Saturday, June 30th, 2012


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Danell Leyva<!––> and John Orozco<!––> have locked up tickets to London by virtue of their 1-2 finish at the Men’s gymnastics Olympic Trials in San Jose.

The top two finishers were guaranteed spots if they could also finish in the top three on at least three events. Leyva and Orozco fulfilled this requirement and earned themsleves what must be the biggest sigh of relief of their lives.

The remaining athletes will sweat it out while the selection committee decides who will fill out the remaining 3 spots.

2008 Beijing Olympian Jonathan Horton<!––> finished third and is expected to be named, but will have to wait it out with the rest of the athletes.

Sam Mikulak<!––> is also expected to be named to the team but because of  a bad landing on vault Night One, was only able to compete pommel horse on night two. With the crowd clapping rhythmically in the background, he completed a clean routine. But will it be enough to assure him a spot in London?

Jake Dalton<!––> is favored to round out the team, but will wait it out with ‘on the bubble’ gymnastsChris Brooks<!––>, Alex Naddour<!––> and Steven Legendre<!––>.

The full team is expected to be announced at 10am PT on Sunday.

© 2012 NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Any use, reproduction, modification, distribution, display or performance of this material without NBCUniversal’s prior written consent is prohibited.

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Rodney King called ‘symbol of forgiveness’

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

Joe Klamar / AFP – Getty Images file

Rodney King is seen on April 30 speaking with fans in Los Angeles before an event promoting his autobiographical book “The Riot Within…My Journey from Rebellion to Redemption.”

Rodney King, a symbol of racial tension in Los Angeles and catalyst for sweeping law-enforcement reforms after his 1991 beating by police officers, was mourned by hundreds Saturday at a public memorial in Hollywood Hills.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who delivered the eulogy at Forest Lawn Hall, said King never showed bitterness to the officers who beat him, The Associated Press reported. Sharpton called king “a symbol of forgiveness,” the AP reported.

King was found by his fiancée Cynthia Kelly drowned on June 17 at the bottom of his backyard swimming pool in Rialto, California, a suburb about 50 miles east of Los Angeles. He was 47. 


 

King’s death is being treated as an accidental drowning, but authorities are awaiting autopsy results to determine the official cause of death.

Results of toxicology and tissue studies were still pending, authorities said, and there were questions about how King, who by all accounts was an avid swimmer, ended up drowning in his own pool.

Among the mourners gathered for the 2 p.m. (2100 GMT) service were King’s three daughters – Dene, Candice and Tristan.

Rodney Glen King, the man who was at the center of a national debate on civil rights after he was brutally beaten by LAPD in 1991 is dead at the age of 47.

The service was held in the auditorium that was also used for the private 2009 funeral of Michael Jackson before the pop star’s public memorial service at the Staples Center.

The beating of King, who was black, was caught on videotape and widely replayed. His death came two months after the 20th anniversary of Los Angeles riots triggered by the acquittal of four white police officers prosecuted for the beating.

During the racially charged unrest, which killed more than 50 people and caused more than $1 billion in property damage, King famously appealed for calm in a televised appearance in which he asked rhetorically, “Can we all get along?”

The case helped bring attention to the issue of racial profiling by law enforcement and led to far-reaching reforms in the Los Angeles Police Department.

King, who long struggled with drug and alcohol abuse, financial difficulties and legal problems, had this year published a memoir entitled “The Riot Within: My Journey from Rebellion to Redemption.”

King’s daughter Dene, 28, said her father would be remembered for his smile, his heart and his unconditional love. Following the funeral, a reception was to be held at the Universal City Sheraton.

Two of the four white officers acquitted of state charges by a jury in 1992 were later convicted of federal charges and sentenced to 30-month prison terms. A civil jury later awarded King $3.8 million in damages. One of the jurors was Kelly, who became his fiancée.

Msnbc.com staff contributed to this report by Reuters and NBCLosAngeles.com.

Grant Hindsley / AP

The Rev. Al Sharpton, right, speaks to reporters before the public memorial service for Rodney King at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles on Saturday.

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Egypt turns new page; citizens await results

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

Mohammed Morsi officially became the president of Egypt on Saturday, as a new era of government takes shape. NBC’s Kate Snow reports.

CAIRO — Egypt, lovingly called the “Mother of the World” by its people, turned a new page in its fabled history Saturday.

It saw the first ever democratically elected civilian president take the oath of office, not once but twice.

After President Mohammed Morsi swore in officially before the General Assembly of the Constitutional  Court, he addressed the nation from Cairo University and swore his oath of office a second time before the currently dissolved parliament.  He then attended an official military ceremony celebrating his inauguration.


The nation watched and this is what its citizens had to say.

“The speech was beautiful but the most important thing to us is carrying it out,” said Sayed Mohamed, taxi driver. “The most important thing we need is work. Security brings work, work brings money, money brings tourism. Morsi is trying to gather all the Muslims, all the Christians, all the institutions.  He came through the ballot box, we have to stand by him and have patience.”

Ever pragmatic, most Egyptians prefer action to words.

Islamist Mohammed Morsi sworn in as Egypt president

“It’s a new era for all Egyptians, bank employee, Mohamed Sayed, 42, a bank employee. “The government’s character will appear in time, whether they are good or bad. We want them to be just. We want them to change the image of the old days that everybody had. When I hear the words (Morsi) says, will he carry them out? For how many thousands of years have people have been talking,  but what do they do?”

Egyptian Presidency / EPA

The head of the military council, Field Marshal Hussein Tantaw, left, presents the ‘shield of the Armed Forces,’ the Egyptian military’s highest honor, to Egyptian President President Mohammed Morsi during a ceremony Saturday at a military base in Cairo.

Hiba al Bandari, a fashionably dressed middle-age Egyptian woman, found in Morsi’s populist message a sign of hope and change.

“Today is a great day in Egypt,” said Hiba al Bandari. “Most Egyptians are happy about practicing democracy and I hope it will be much better in the future.  We are expecting much from this president.  He gave Egyptians and himself a chance of one hundred days to see what will happen.  He promised to work with all people and movements. This is the first time in Egypt. In the past, nobody has done this.  All the past rulers governed alone. But today he is talking to the people from those on the bottom to those on top. His speech was democratic.”

Others expressed deep concern about Morsi’s ties to the Muslim Brotherhood.

As Morsi takes office, many fear the ‘Islamization of Egyptian society’

Miyvin Sedqi, a 29-year-old software engineer, worried, “I don’t feel they are ones who can represent all the different trends in Egypt, they don’t believe in democracy and are not open to different opinions.  I’m kind of skeptical of what they are going to do. I don’t want them to succeed, because they are mixing religion with politics, but I don’t want them to fail as well because it would be bad for the revolution.”

Mona al Tahawy, columnist, found no reason for jubilation in today’s transfer of power.

New York-area politicians condemn Egypt’s new leader over bid to free terrorist

 

“I think today was a big charade. I don’t think it was a historical day at all. I think it was the culmination of weeks of negotiation between (the ruling military council) and the Muslim Brotherhood. I’ve seen no reason to celebrate whatsoever today.”

Al Tahawy says Morsi’s presidency is a speed bump on the road to fulfilling the goals of the revolution.

“He took an oath today to respect institutions that have curbed his power, so I don’t know what he can do without a constitution, without a parliament and without clear delineation of what his powers are.  Many of us are continuing as if the revolution is continuing and this is just an obstacle in the way.

Charlene Gubash is NBC News’ producer in Cairo.

Newly elected Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi was sworn into power on Saturday, leaving many across the country to wonder what will be included in a new constitution. NBC’s Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

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Former Israeli leader Yitzhak Shamir dies

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

Yitzhak Shamir, the hawkish Israeli leader who balked at the idea of trading occupied land for peace with the Palestinians, died on Saturday after a long illness. He was 96.


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He was twice prime minister in the 1980s and early 1990s. Rather than seek accommodation with the Palestinians, Shamir championed new Jewish settlements.

Israeli media said Shamir, who had Alzheimer’s disease, died at a nursing home in Herzliya Saturday.

Shamir served as prime minister for seven years, from 1983-84 and 1986-92, leading his party to election victories twice, despite lacking much of the outward charm and charisma that characterizes many modern politicians.

“Yitzhak Shamir was a brave warrior for Israel, before and after its inception. He was a great patriot and his enormous contribution will be forever etched in our chronicles,” President Shimon Peres said in a statement obtained by YNet news of Israel.

“Yitzhak Shamir belongs to a generation of giants, who founded the State of Israel and fought for the freedom of the Jewish people in its land,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “He led Israel with deep loyalty to both the people and the land.”

Gilada Diamant, Shamir’s daughter, said that her father “belonged to a different generation of leaders, people with values and beliefs. I hope that we have more people like him in the future. His political doing has undoubtedly left its mark on the State of Israel.

“Dad was an amazing man, a family man in the fullest sense of the word, a man who dedicated himself to the State of Israel but never forgot his family, not even for a moment. He was a special man,” she added.

Barely over 5 feet tall and built like a block of granite, Shamir projected an image of uncompromising solidity at a time when Palestinians rose up in the West Bank and Gaza, demanding an end to Israeli occupation.

Defeated in the 1992 election, he stepped down as head of the Likud party and watched from the sidelines as his successor, Yitzhak Rabin, negotiated interim land-for-peace agreements with the Palestinians.

The agreements, including Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s recognition of Israel, did nothing to ease his suspicion. In a 1997 interview with the New York-based Jewish Post, he declared: “The Arabs will always dream to destroy us. I do not believe that they will recognize us as part of this region.”

Image: Israeli Premier Yitzhak Shamir, left, speaks in Madrid with his adviser Benjamin Netanyahu, October 30 1991, at the Madrid Middle East Peace conference.

Patrick Baz
 / 
AFP – Getty Images

He embraced the ideology of the Revisionists — that Israel is the sole owner of all of the biblical Holy Land, made up of Israel, the West Bank and Jordan.

The Labor movement, in power for Israel’s first three decades, agreed to a 1947 U.N.-proposed partition plan to allow the creation of the Jewish state alongside a Palestinian entity. To Shamir and other Revisionists, that was tantamount to treason.

In later years, asked his view of territorial compromise for peace, Shamir said often that Israel had already given up 80 percent of the Land of Israel — a reference to Jordan.

Polish born

Born Yitzhak Jazernicki in Poland in 1915, he moved to pre-state Palestine in 1935. He joined Lehi, the most hardline of three Jewish movements resisting British mandatory authorities, taking over the Lehi leadership after the British killed its founder.

Captured twice, he escaped from two British detention camps and returned to resistance action. The second camp was in Djibouti, in Africa.

After Israel was founded in 1948, Shamir was in business for a few years before entering a career in Israel’s Mossad spy agency.

In the mid-1960s he emerged to join the right-wing Herut party, which evolved into the present-day Likud.

Image: An Aug. 7, 1989, photo shows Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, left, and Finance Minister Shimon Peres as they wait to receive a report on the Israeli Civil Service in Jerusalem.

Menahem Kahana
 / 
AFP – Getty Images

Shamir succeeded Menahem Begin as prime minister in 1983 in the aftermath of Israel’s disastrous 1982 invasion of Lebanon.

His term was marked by the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation, and the 1991 Gulf war, when Iraq fired 39 Scud missiles at Israel.

Arguing with the US

During the Gulf war, Shamir went along with American demands not to retaliate for the Iraqi missile strikes. After the war, the United States stepped up pressure to start a Middle East process that could lead in only one direction — compromise with the Arabs.

Exasperated by Shamir’s stubborn refusal to go along with their plans for a regional settlement, then-U.S. Secretary of State James Baker once went on television, recited the switchboard number of the White House and told Shamir to call when he got serious about peace.

In the end, American pressure bent even Shamir. Despite his deep mistrust of Arab intentions, he agreed to attend the 1991 Middle East peace conference in Madrid, sponsored by the United States and Russia.

Shamir hotly rejected the deals his successors made with the Palestinians, in which Israel turned over control of some West Bank land to the Palestinians.

His pleasure at the 1996 election victory of Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu soured when Netanyahu continued to negotiate with the Palestinians and carry out land-for-security deals.

Before the 1999 election, Shamir resigned from the Likud and joined a new right-wing block called National Union, headed by Begin’s son, Ze’ev Binyamin.

The party, which rejected any turnover of land to the Palestinians, won only four seats in parliament, though it had seven members of the outgoing legislature on its list.

In 2001, Shamir was given his nation’s highest civilian honor, the Israel Prize awarded annually to outstanding citizens in several fields.

Shamir will receive a state funeral, which has been set for Monday, YNet reported. He will be laid to rest in the Nation’s Great cemetery on Mount Hertz.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Hotter, drier day tests Colorado fire crews

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

A day after firefighters made great progress against the fire outside Colorado Springs, hotter and drier conditions on Saturday made for a major test.

“Today is going to be our test day,” Jerri Marr of the U.S. Forest Service said at a morning briefing.

“Fire activity is expected to increase today and tomorrow,” the incident command said in its written update. “Possible afternoon thunderstorms could also bring strong, gusty winds. Temperatures are expected to reach at least 15 degrees above season normal.”

The 26-square-mile Waldo Canyon fire, one of many burning across the West, is now 30 percent contained, up from 15 percent early Friday.

More than 150 National Guard soldiers and airmen are helping Colorado Springs police staff roadblocks and patrol streets after a deadly wildfire killed two people and destroyed nearly 350 homes.

Police Chief Pete Carey said Saturday the presence of military personnel will allow his department to resume normal police work in the rest of the city.

“We’re grateful for the help,” he said.

About 10,000 people remain evacuated on Saturday, down from 35,000 at the fire’s peak.

Image: Save home next to destroyed ones

Spencer Platt
 / 
Getty Images

Investigators haven’t been able to visit the area where the fire broke out on June 23 to determine the cause.

Two bodies were found in the ruins of one house. The victims’ names haven’t been released.

Police say fewer than 10 people may be unaccounted for.

There were plans to let people whose residences burned take weekend bus trips to the affected neighborhoods to take a look, but they would not be allowed to leave the vehicles.

After growing explosively earlier in the week, the Colorado Springs fire gained no ground overnight, authorities reported Friday. And the weather was clear and mostly calm, a welcome break from the lightning and high wind that drove the flames.

Exhausted firefighters fresh off the front lines described the devastation in some neighborhoods and the challenges of battling such a huge blaze, now the most destructive in Colorado history.

“It looks like hell. I would imagine it felt like a nuclear bomb went off. There was fire everywhere. Everything had a square shape to it because it was foundations,” said Rich Rexach, who had been working 12-hour days since Tuesday, when flames swept through neighborhoods in this city of more than 400,000 people 60 miles south of Denver.




Story: Wildfire crews fight for health coverage in online campaign

President Barack Obama toured the stricken areas Friday after issuing a disaster declaration for Colorado that frees up federal funds. He thanked firefighters and other emergency workers, saying: “The country is grateful for your work. The country’s got your back.”

As residents waited anxiously to see what was left of their homes, police reported several burglaries in evacuated areas, along with break-ins of cars packed with evacuees’ possessions outside hotels. Carey said Friday a person wearing protective fire gear in an evacuated area was arrested on charges of impersonating a firefighter and influencing a public official.

Community leaders began notifying residents Thursday that their homes were destroyed. Many lost almost everything.

“The blanket that was on my bed when I grew up, a bunch of things my mother had made,” said Rick Spraycar, listing what he lost when his house in the hard-hit Mountain Shadows subdivision burned down. “It’s hard to put it into words. Everything I owned. Memories.”

For Ernie Storti the pain of knowing that his was one of a handful of homes spared in his neighborhood was hard.

“Our home was standing, and everything south of us was gone,” he said as tears streamed down his face outside a Red Cross Shelter where he had met with insurance agents.

Authorities were still trying to figure out what caused the fire. They said conditions were improving and they hoped experts would soon be able to work to determine a cause.

More than 1,200 personnel and six helicopters were fighting the fire.

All eight Air Force firefighting planes from four states will be at Colorado Springs’ Peterson Air Force Base Saturday and available to fight the fire, marking the first time the entire fleet has been activated since 2008, Col. Jerry Champlin said.

Among the fires elsewhere in the West:

  • Wyoming: A wildfire in a sparsely populated area of southeastern Wyoming exploded from eight square miles to nearly 58 square miles in a single day in hot, windy weather. Authorities said Saturday the Arapaho Fire has some structures but the area is still too dangerous to allow a detailed survey.
  • Idaho: At least 60 homes near Pocatello, Idaho, burned in a fast-moving wildfire that started Thursday evening. The blaze covered more than 1½ square miles. Officials said it was human-caused but gave no details.
  • Utah: Residents of nearly a thousand homes in Herriman, just southwest of Salt Lake City, were under an evacuation order Saturday after a wildfire burned through the area, destroying at least four houses and several other structures, authorities said. Fire crews appeared to have the 350-acre Rose Crest fire at bay Friday evening. A 70-square-mile wildfire in Utah’s Sanpete County destroyed at least 160 structures, more than 50 of them primary homes. A similar sized blaze in Utah was threatening about 75 structures.
  • Montana: Residents of eastern and central Montana who evacuated due to wildfires are returning to find neighborhoods scorched and many houses reduced to piles of ash. Fire officials said Friday that 70 homes burned in the 20,000-acre Dahl fire south of Roundup. At least two dozen structures were reported burned in a 270-square-mile fire in the Ashland.

Authorities battling six wildfires in Utah said Colorado was taking most of the available fire crews, leaving them short-handed.

Utah fire commander Cheto Olais said leaders at one Utah blaze had requested about 200 additional firefighters but will probably get no more than 20. “A lot of assets are going to Colorado,” Olais said.

“We’re strapped nationally,” he told The Associated Press. “There’s only so many firefighters, and they’re already out in the field.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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100-degrees plus as millions suffer power outages

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

As temperatures again reached triple digits Saturday, millions of people in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest were without power after violent storms toppled trees, cut power lines and killed at least 13 people, 6 of them in Virginia.

Ohio also saw up to 1 million homes and businesses without power due to overnight storms, and at least one person died there.

Two cousins, ages 2 and 7, were killed by a falling tree at a campsite in New Jersey’s Parvin State Park. Two people were also killed in Maryland, one in Kentucky and one in Washington.

Five other deaths in recent days are thought to have been tied to the heat wave hanging over much of the nation.

100-degree plus temperatures were expected in areas across 25 states, a heat scenario impacting 47 million people, the Weather Channel’s Julie Martin said on NBC’s TODAY show.

By early Saturday afternoon, cities across the Southeast — from Tennessee to the Carolinas — saw triple digits, while Washington, D.C. was in the 90s and Baltimore at 100.

Atlanta saw 106 degrees, breaking its all-time record of 105 degrees, set in 1980.

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The storms cut power more than 2 million homes and businesses across the Mid-Atlantic area — including 1.5 million in the Washington, D.C., area, NBCWashington.com reported.

“We have more than half our system down,” said Myra Oppel, a spokeswoman for Pepco, a utility serving the D.C. area that had 400,000 customers without power after 80 mph gusts knocked down trees and power lines.

“This is definitely going to be a multi-day outage,” Oppel added — not good news for those relying on air-conditioning to deal with the muggy, triple-digit temperatures this weekend.

Image: An uprooted tree blocks a street in DC

Mandel Ngan
 / 
AFP – Getty Images

Repairing damage “is a monumental task,” added Ed McDonough, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Emergency Management. “This is something that is going to take days, not hours.”

Water restrictions were  ordered in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties because the storms had knocked out power to its filtration plants and other facilities.

And the high heat prompted the ATT National golf tournament at the Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md., to close the competition to spectators and volunteers on Saturday. Play was delayed for hours as crews cleaned up fallen trees.

In suburban Washington, residents were told to call non-emergency phone numbers or go to fire and police stations if they needed help because even 911 emergency call centers were without electricity.

Trees were blamed for two deaths in Springfield, Va. — a 90-year-old woman in her home and a man driving a car.

Gov. Bob McDonnell in a statement said four others were killed by falling trees in Virginia, which saw its largest non-hurricane power outage in history. Some 250 roads in Virginia were blocked by trees, the state said.

In addition, a park police officer was injured by an uprooted tree in northern Virginia, and an 18-year-old man was struck by a power line. He was in stable condition after receiving CPR.

Damage in the D.C. area included a rooftop blown off a 7-story apartment building, and dozens of damaged homes.

Image: Storm-damaged trees litter the east lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington

Jonathan Ernst
 / 
Reuters

Widespread power outages were reported from Indiana to New Jersey.

On Friday, the nation’s capital reached 104 degrees — its hottest June day on record.

‘Everything good is down’: Storm knocks out Netflix, Instagram

The heat is also suspected to have been the cause of the deaths of two young brothers in eastern Tennessee, Reuters reported. The boys, aged 3 and 5, had been playing outside Thursday. The younger boy died Thursday, and the older boy on Friday afternoon, according to Eric Blach, administrator for the Bradley County Medical Examiner’s Office.



Video: Record Heat and Big Storms Possible (on this page)

In Kansas City, Mo., city health officials said Friday they were investigating the deaths of three area residents, including a baby boy, to determine if they were heat-related, according to Reuters.

Early Saturday, the National Weather Service issued excessive heat warnings for parts of Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee and Arizona.

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Families brace for mental health cuts

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

By Lauren Hasler
Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism

Donovan Richards first attempted to take his own life at age 4. The Wisconsin boy, who has bipolar disorder and autism, already had been kicked out of three day care programs, and his doctors were sure he would be in an institution before he turned 10.

To get the intensive treatment her son needed, but she could not afford, Paula Buege, Donovan’s mom, had to win approval from a review board made up of Dane County officials.

“I had 10 minutes to present his case. And my argument was, ‘If we don’t help him now, you’re going to read about him in the paper one day,’ ” said Buege, of Middleton, who now helps the parents of mentally ill children with a Madison-based nonprofit, Wisconsin Family Ties.

After years of treatment, Donovan is now a 17-year-old who plays in a band and wants to be a music teacher. While he continues to struggle, he has not been hospitalized for mental health problems in 10 years.

What saved Donovan from suicide or another tragic fate was a mother’s perseverance and taxpayer-funded mental health services.

But those public mental health systems in Wisconsin and across the nation increasingly face cuts as they compete for scarce resources, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity, prepared in collaboration with the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism and other nonprofit newsrooms.

States, desperate to close cavernous budget gaps, have cut $2.1 billion from their mental health budgets over the past three fiscal years, according to a study from the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors’ Research Institute, an independent nonprofit that collects and analyzes mental health services data.

The problems go beyond money. In interviews with mental health advocates and county and state officials, the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism found that Wisconsin’s public mental health system — once viewed as a national model — has become fragmented and underfunded.

And many experts fear that as Gov. Scott Walker moves to close the state’s budget deficit, the mental health system will be weakened even further. One county official predicted Walker’s changes could “devastate” taxpayer-financed mental health care in Wisconsin.

Among the problems facing the state’s public mental health system:

  • The Wisconsin Council on Mental Health, the governor’s mental health planning council, estimates 232,932 adults and 106,149 children in Wisconsin have serious mental health conditions.
  • Overall, 100,238 people received taxpayer-subsidized mental health services through their local county in 2009, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.
  • Walker warned in his March 1 budget address that a “serious and long-term solution” is needed for Medicaid. Demand for existing Medicaid-funded services is expected to create shortfalls of $150 million by June 30 and $1.8 billion in Wisconsin over the next two years as federal stimulus funding ends.
  • The state Department of Health Services (DHS) plans to replace $1.3 billion of that gap with state funds and make up the difference with $500 million in cuts to the Medicaid program —possibly by cutting eligibility, benefits or reimbursement rates.

“Services have been underfunded with the current budget, and now we’re going to see a $500 million cut to providing essential services to vulnerable populations,” said state Rep. Sandy Pasch, D-Whitefish Bay, a member of the Assembly’s committee on public health.

Pasch estimates Medicaid cuts could leave 65,000 Wisconsin residents without subsidized health insurance to pay for mental health treatment.

Untreated mental illness isn’t just a personal hardship; it’s a major driver of Wisconsin homeless and prison populations. Nearly one-third of all inmates in the state prison system are classified as mentally ill, the state Department of Corrections estimates.

Wisconsin DHS secretary to make big changes
As part of Walker’s controversial budget-repair measure, Dennis Smith, the Republican governor’s DHS secretary, has been given a mandate to reshape Medicaid-funded services to close the budget gap.

Smith hinted that big changes may be coming. In a statement, Smith said the state will focus its mental health care dollars on models that are centered on people’s needs, are community-based and are statistically proven to work. Mental health experts say such programs are in short supply in Wisconsin.

Smith said state officials will “examine the entire continuum of care at every age” and coordinate mental health care with other medical needs —a move long sought by mental health advocates.

Integration of mental health care with physical health care would help identify and prevent mental illnesses and reduce social stigma, said William Greer, president and CEO of the Mental Health Center of Dane County, a nonprofit agency that provides mental health and substance abuse services.

“The human mind and body are one and the same,” Greer said at a February symposium, adding that treatment should be available “under one roof.”

The new health secretary vowed to work with legislators, consumers, advocates and taxpayers in an “an open and deliberative process,” to identify ideas that will improve health while controlling spending, DHS spokeswoman Beth Kaplan said.

But some advocates are still leery about how Smith will manage a $500 million cut to the state’s health services for the poor. In a previous position as a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., Smith encouraged states to opt out of Medicaid to save money and shed federal control over health care spending.

In one of his first moves, Smith announced on March 18 that enrollment for the BadgerCare Basic program, which covers adults without dependent children who were unable to enroll in BadgerCare Core, is now frozen.

Buege is worried about how her family may be affected by changes to Medicaid. Losing the benefit would leave her son without his medications and access to psychiatrists — the tools, she said, that have kept him mentally well instead of mentally ill.

“We’re going to still go to the hospital, we’re still going to go to the doctor,” Buege said. “People can’t afford to pay the bill. So who’s it going to impact? It’s going to impact everybody.”

Jane Pedersen of Menomonie in northwest Wisconsin has watched someone suffer needlessly because of a lack of affordable health insurance.

Pedersen has traveled to Madison seven times to protest Walker’s budget repair bill. She said she knows a person with a mental health disability and no insurance who stopped taking medication when he could no longer afford it. When he began to hallucinate, he spent several days in a hospital’s intensive care unit, she said.

“These people without health insurance tend to wait until they’re very sick to get help. ER care is the most expensive,” Pedersen said.

Counties run mental health programs
In Wisconsin, unlike in most other states, county governments run the publicly funded mental health care system, which is supported primarily by three funding streams: Federal Medicaid dollars matched by the county, state funding and local property taxes.

Walker has proposed cuts to Medicaid and funding to local governments. He also is seeking to freeze local property taxes to prevent officials from making up for the loss of state funding by raising taxes.

Some local officials are alarmed by Walker’s plan.

“This could significantly devastate mental health and substance abuse (services),” said William Orth, director of the Sauk County Department of Human Services.

While many states have cut funding in recent years, Wisconsin has maintained support for mental health services — although advocates say the system still falls far short of meeting the state’s needs.

Mental health expenditures in Wisconsin at the county level actually increased by about 16 percent between 2005 and 2009, to more than $428 million, according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

But those increases may not mean more services, considering that “the cost of doing business has gone up” in health care, according to Ted Lutterman, director of research analysis for the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors Research Institute in Alexandria, Va.

It’s not clear what’s in store for mental health care in the current budget. The few broad categories in the governor’s budget that mention mental health care, including operation of the state’s two mental health institutes, show small increases from current funding levels, but little detail is available.

“Funding is being cut everywhere and mental health is getting increases. I think that shows where Walker’s priorities are. It clearly displays he has compassion for the mental health community,” said state Sen. Mary Lazich, R-New Berlin, a member of the Senate public health committee.

But Pasch said she is “very concerned” how well services for the mentally ill will fare when local governments start cutting their budgets.

“When resources start becoming more and more scarce, my experience being a psychiatric nurse for 30 years is that mental health services are one of the first things to get cut,” Pasch said.

If fewer poor people are insured under Walker’s proposed budget, counties still will be on the hook to pay for core mental health services, including hospitalization, according to Kathy Roetter, director of Wood County Unified Services, which provides mental health care to residents in central Wisconsin. But counties would lose federal Medicaid matching funds for those newly ineligible people, she said.

DHS statement on mental health care
The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism asked Smith to comment on the future of the state’s public mental health care system.

On the state’s overall mental health funding: We are concerned that some individuals with mental illness are under-served in the current system or must navigate through a complex delivery system on their own. We will examine the entire continuum of care at every age. Our approach will be to identify models of care that work, support them, and replicate them. These models should be person-centered, community-based, and use evidence-based practices. Individuals will benefit from the coordination of their mental health services with other acute care medical services they need. We have already met with a variety of partners in the mental health community and have heard directly from consumers themselves. We look forward to working with everyone who is involved with improving the care to individuals in need of mental health services.

On how the governor’s plan for $500 million in cuts is reflected in the budget: The Medicaid program faces a $1.8 billion shortfall, largely because of the expiration of more than $1 billion of federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds on July 1. We are replacing those funds for DHS with $1.3 billion in new state General Purpose Revenue (GPR). To make up the rest of this federal shortfall, we will be looking for $500 million in savings in our Medicaid program. To bend this cost curve, and reduce expenditures by the projected amount, the Department will commence an open and deliberative process with legislators, stakeholders, advocates and taxpayers to identify and implement ideas aimed at improving health outcomes and controlling spending growth.

Care for mentally ill shifts, leaving gaps
Over the past 50 years, public mental health care in the United States has moved away from locked hospitals to community-based programs. Shifting federal budget priorities, a movement that advocated for the least-restrictive environment for the mentally ill, and a new generation of drugs for psychiatric disorders allowed more people to remain in the community.

In 1955, psychiatric hospitals in the U.S. housed more than 550,000 people, according to research by Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, a research psychiatrist and founder of the nonprofit Treatment Advocacy Center, which is based in Arlington, Va. By 1994, that number had dropped by 87 percent to 71,619 people.

But as hospitals emptied out, the funding didn’t necessarily flow to those community programs. Much of it simply disappeared.

A recent study from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) found that when adjusted for population and increased medical costs, the United States spent $261.7 billion in 1955 and only $30.9 billion in 2006 in funding for mental health care.

Wisconsin lacks services for young
Hugh Davis, executive director of the nonprofit Wisconsin Family Ties, says funding isn’t the only problem afflicting Wisconsin’s public mental health system. One of the greatest problems he and other advocates see is the lack of adequate mental health care for children and teenagers.

“There is ample evidence that that system has been neglected by our state for a long time,” said Davis, whose organization helps families with children who have emotional, behavioral and mental disorders.

He points to data that show Wisconsin is last among all Midwestern states in the percentage of children with serious emotional disturbance who are served by the public mental health system.

In an investigation of rural health care last year, the Wisconsin State Journal found the state has just 90 child psychiatrists, forcing some children in northern Wisconsin to wait up to two years to get counseling or medication.

System ‘just too complicated’
Lori Krinke of Madison, who has three children with disabilities, said it took her a long time to get help for her youngest son. Krinke is associate director of Wisconsin Family Ties.

Krinke said last year, it was nearly two months before she could find a bed at a state-run mental health facility for her teenager, who was no longer safe at home because he was chronically suicidal.

“Honestly, if he hadn’t gone to Winnebago (Mental Health Institute), he would not have made it to his 14th birthday,” she said.

Krinke says people with serious mental illnesses in Wisconsin have to jump through too many hoops to get the help they need.

“When it came to looking for resources for mental health for children, I didn’t even know where to turn. Frequently, the people who work within the system don’t know how to navigate the system. It’s too complicated,” Krinke said. “And the funding isn’t there.”

Smith, the new health secretary, acknowledged the complexity and gaps in the system.

“We are concerned that some individuals with mental illness are underserved in the current system or must navigate through a complex delivery system on their own,” he said.

Community-based programs underfunded
The outpatient programs that partly replaced hospitalization — including drugs, counseling, case management and day programs — are cheaper and more effective for maintaining mental health for all but the most serious cases. But in some parts of Wisconsin, they’re hard to come by.

About 30 years ago, Wisconsin was seen as having one of the top mental health systems in the country because of its strong county system, according to Shel Gross, director of public policy for Mental Health America of Wisconsin, a Milwaukee-based nonprofit advocacy group. But in recent years that system has actually become a liability, he said.

There is significant variation from county to county in the quality of mental health care because county boards decide what to offer and how many people they can afford to help.

As one measure, Shawano County spent the least on each person receiving services in 2009 at $1,534, while Jackson County spent $9,571 on each client — six times as much, according to figures provided by DHS and analyzed by the Center.

“It’s not fair that residents get different services depending on where they live,” said Roetter from Wood County.

Demand, cost up; community aid down
State funding for human services, including mental health care, comes to counties primarily in what are called community aids. While medical costs have risen and demand has increased, the state’s community aids funding has remained nearly flat for more than 20 years, according to a report by the Wisconsin Council on Mental Health.

Community aids funding for the current year is $257.6 million. If adjusted for inflation, the amount of community aids has actually fallen by more than $185 million in 20 years, according to the council.

Another stream of funding from the state to counties is shared revenue, which usually goes to pay for highways and other county services. The governor’s budget cuts shared revenues to counties by $36.5 million in calendar year 2012, from an estimated $183 million in 2011.

If the cuts in shared revenue and freeze in property taxes proposed by Walker are approved by the Legislature, counties will need to cut somewhere.

“How do you choose?” said Sarah Diedrick-Kasdorf, a senior legislative associate with the Wisconsin Counties Association. “How do you pick? Children or the elderly? Someone with a mental illness or a mother who needs help?”

Buege is glad that when her son needed it the most, the help was there.

“My kid is living proof; he would be costing us all a lot of money right now if we didn’t get those services,” she said. “And instead he’s going to be a taxpaying member of society.”

Reporter Kate Golden of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Reporting contributed to this report. The nonprofit center (www.WisconsinWatch.org) collaborates with Wisconsin Public Television, Wisconsin Public Radio and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication and other news media. Lauren Hasler is at lhasler@wisconsinwatch.org.

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