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Information to be Announced
Information to be Announced
Student Council: Amon Lynch (President), Katherine Goldsworthy (Vice President), Belial Lynch (Secretary)
Music Club: Katherine Goldsworthy, Nyomie Guyreki, Rin Choi Lee, Callista Soul, Samantha Rose Campos, Tulio Byan
Tennis Team: Erin Conahey
Track Team: Erin Conahey
Girls Lacrosse Team: Anita Ashburn
Art Club: Nyomie Guyreki, Izuma Takumi
Cheer Squad: Nyomie Guyreki, Belial Lynch
Dance Club: Izuma Takumi, Callista Soul
Cooking Club: Izuma Takumi, Tulio Byan
Fencing Team: Amon Lynch (Captain)
Magical Arts Club: Allen Tabernathy (Captain)
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MEXICO CITY ? ?Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, the notoriously brutal leader of the feared Zetas drug cartel, was captured before dawn Monday in the first major blow against an organized crime leader by a Mexican administration struggling to drive down persistently high levels of violence, officials announced.
Trevino Morales, 40, was captured by Mexican Marines who intercepted a pickup truck with $2 million in cash on a dirt road in the countryside outside the border city of Nuevo Laredo, which has long served as the Zetas' base of operations. The truck was halted by a Marine helicopter and Trevino Morales was taken into custody along with a bodyguard and an accountant and eight guns, government spokesman Eduardo Sanchez told reporters.
Sanchez said the Marines had been watching rural roads between the Texas border states of Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas for signs of Trevino Morales, who is charged with murder, torture, kidnapping and other crimes.
The Zetas leader and his alleged accomplices were flown to Mexico City, where they are expected to eventually be tried in a closed system that usually takes years to prosecute cases, particularly high-profile ones.
Trevino Morales, known as "Z-40," is uniformly described as one of the two most powerful cartel heads in Mexico, the leader of a corps of special forces defectors who went to work for drug traffickers, splintered off into their own cartel in 2010 and metastasized across Mexico, expanding from drug dealing into extortion, kidnapping and human trafficking.
Along the way, the Zetas authored some of the worst atrocities of Mexico's drug war, leaving hundreds of bodies beheaded on roadsides or hanging from bridges, earning a reputation as perhaps the most terrifying of the country's numerous ruthless cartels.
On Trevino Morales' watch, 72 Central and South American migrants were slaughtered by the Zetas in the northern town of San Fernando in 2010, authorities said. By the following year, federal officials announced finding 193 bodies buried in San Fernando, most belonging to migrants kidnapped off buses and killed by the Zetas for various reasons, including their refusal to work as drug mules.
Trevino Morales is charged with ordering the kidnapping and killing of the 265 migrants, Sanchez said.
President Enrique Pena Nieto came into office promising to drive down levels of homicide, extortion and kidnapping but has struggled to make a credible dent in crime figures. And his pledge to focus on citizen safety over other crimes has sparked worries among U.S. authorities that he would ease back on predecessor Felipe Calderon's U.S.-backed strategy aimed above all at decapitating drug cartels.
The arrest of Trevino, a man widely blamed for both massive northbound drug trafficking and the deaths of untold scores of Mexicans and Central American migrants, will almost certainly earn praise from Pena Nieto's U.S. and Mexican critics alike.
Trevino Morales' capture adds to the long list of Zetas' leaders who have been arrested or killed in recent years, including Zeta head Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, whose fatal shooting by authorities last year left Trevino Morales in charge.
"There continues to be the perception that capturing this type of individual has a strategic value and the logic persists that it's preferable to fragment criminal groups and reduce them in size. On this point there isn't much change," said Alejandro Hope, a former member of Mexico's domestic intelligence service.
The debilitation of the Zetas has been widely seen as strengthening the country's most-wanted man, Sinaloa cartel head Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who has overseen a vicious turf war with the Zetas from hideouts believed to lie in rugged western Mexico.
"El Chapo is greatly strengthened because he will now have access to the crown jewel of narco-trafficking, Nuevo Laredo," said George Grayson, an expert on the Zetas and professor of government at the College of William & Mary.
Trevino Morales is expected to be succeeded by his brother, Omar, a former low-ranking turf boss seen as far weaker than his older brother.
Miguel Angel Trevino Morales began his career as a teenage gofer for the Los Tejas gang, which controlled most crime in his hometown across the border from Laredo, Texas. He soon graduated from washing cars and running errands to running drugs across the border, and was recruited into the Matamoros-based Gulf cartel.
Trevino Morales' brother, sister and mother lived in Dallas but he had many relatives around Nuevo Laredo and, while moving frequently to avoid authorities, he was believed to often return to his hometown, the U.S. official said.
Trevino Morales joined the Zetas, a group of Mexican special forces deserters who defected to work as hit men and bodyguards for the Gulf cartel in the late 1990s.
Stories about the brutality of "El Cuarenta," or "40" as Trevino Morales became known, quickly become well-known among his men, his rivals and Nuevo Laredo citizens terrified of incurring his anger.
One technique favored by Trevino Morales was the "guiso," or stew, in which enemies would be placed in 55-gallon drums and burned alive, said a U.S. law-enforcement official in Mexico City, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic. Others who crossed the commander would be beaten with wooden planks, the official said.
Around 2005, Trevino Morales was promoted to boss of the Nuevo Laredo territory, or "plaza" and given responsibility for fighting off the Sinaloa cartel's attempt to seize control of its drug-smuggling routes, according to U.S. and Mexican officials. He orchestrated a series of killings on the U.S. side of the border, several by a group of young U.S. citizens who gunned down their victims on the streets of the American city.
In 2006, the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas defeated the Sinaloa cartel in Nuevo Laredo, a victory that emboldened them as they began spreading south to towns and cities that had never before seen extensive organized crime. They set up criminal networks to control transit routes for drugs, migrants, extortion, kidnapping, contraband of pirated DVDs and CDs and countless other criminal activities, intimidating local residents and committing gruesome murders as an example to the uncooperative.
According to the U.S. official, Trevino Morales was in charge of Nuevo Leon, Piedras Negras and other areas until March 2007, when he was sent to the city of Veracruz following the death of a leading Zeta in a gunbattle there.
That same year, Trevino Morales and Lazcano began pushing for independence from the Gulf cartel after cartel head Osielo Cardenas Guillen's extradition to the U.S.
The Zetas split from the Gulf cartel and by 2008 had operations in 28 major Mexican cities, according to an analysis by Grupo Savant, a Washington-based security think tank.
In February 2008, Lazcano sent Trevino Morales to Guatemala, where he was responsible for eliminating local competitors and establish Zetas control of smuggling routes. Trevino Morales was then named by Lazcano as national commander of the Zetas across Mexico despite his lack of military background, earning him the resentment of some of the original ex-military members of the Zetas, the official said.
The promotion involved Trevino Morales in virtually every decision by the Zetas, the official said.
Trevino rose to the top of the Zetas last year after leader Lazcano died in a shootout with Mexican marines in Coahuila state.
Trevino Morales was indicted on drug trafficking and weapons charges in New York in 2009 and Washington in 2010, and the U.S. government issued a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest.
According to the indictments, Trevino Morales coordinated the shipment of hundreds of pounds of cocaine and marijuana each week from Mexico into the U.S., much of which had passed through Guatemala. He also moved bulk shipments of dollar bills back into Mexico, the documents say.
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The Texas Senate has passed the controversial SB-1 that majorly restricts the paths to abortion in the state of Texas. We hit the streets and opened our mic to the public to get Texans' thoughts and reactions.
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Source: http://www.foxreno.com/videos/news/open-mic-abortion-bill-sb-1-passes-whats-next-for/v6fJ6/
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Falling Skies?followed up last week?s intense culmination of the ?evil Hal? storyline with an episode that cut back and forth between the citizens of Charleston and the Masons on their search for Anne and Lexi. In the latest 2nd Watch, the Wil Wheaton-hosted talk show about Falling Skies, Doug Jones (Cochise), Stephen Collins (President Hathaway), and executive producer Greg Beeman discuss the most recent developments on the TNT sci-fi series.
SPOILER ALERT: Don?t read on if you don?t want to find out what happened on tonight?s episode of Falling Skies, ?The Pickett Line.?
In ?The Pickett Line,? while Tom Mason and his sons clash with a backwoods family trying to survive, things get chaotic in Charleston: Pope is stirring up trouble, the return of President Hathaway and Cochise is shaking up the balance of political power in Charleston, and more revelations about the massive Vohm weapon is raising questions about just how the human race can possibly survive. Most shocking of all is Lourdes? assassination of the President and the reveal that she has not just one but at least a dozen or so alien eye-worms crawling around inside her.
Check out the newest episode of 2nd Watch?below to see Jones and Collins discuss their experience working together,? learn how Seychelle Gabriel (Lourdes) responded to the news of her character?s murderous turn, and more.
TNT?s?Falling Skies?airs on Sundays at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
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9:00 PM: The Frederick News-Post profiles Robbie Shaffer, a 19-year-old with cerebral palsy who works two days a week as a statistician for the Frederick Keys minor league baseball team.
8:45 PM: Allen Hornthall, who has served over 30 years as tennis coach for Edenton Holmes High School in North Carolina, is back on the court after undergoing a lung transplant last February.
8:30 PM: Kobe Bryant shares a quote from Frederick Douglass: "Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe."
8:15 PM: Baylor football coach Art Briles doesn't believe UCLA's last-second TD in last season's Holiday Bowl should have counted, so the Bears' Holiday Bowl rings reflect Briles' belief by showing a final score of 49-19 instead of 49-26.
8:00 PM: Paul Lukas of UniWatch has a photo of the new SEC football championship game trophy.
7:45 PM: The New York Knicks announce J.R. Smith is expected to be out for 12-16 weeks after undergoing surgery to repair a patella tendon & torn meniscus in his left knee.
7:30 PM: Sports Business Daily reports the Cleveland Browns have hired an architect & general contractor to start working on a two-year, $100 million renovation of FirstEnergy Stadium.
7:15 PM: Deuce, a border collie mascot of the Durham Bulls, has been missing since Saturday night. Deuce ran off from the ballpark after being frightened by post-game fireworks.
7:00 PM: University of Texas-San Antonio defensive end Will Ritter has been suspended indefinitely from the team after his arrest on assault charges early Sunday morning. Ritter reportedly punched two females & another male at bar in Austin.
6:45 PM: Washington Nationals player Ian Desmond tweets that the only way teammate Bryce Harper won't win tonight's MLB All-Star Home Run Derby "is if he gets ejected."
6:30 PM: Maria Sharapova will not play in next week's Bank of the West Classic in Stanford, California due to suffering a left hip injury during Wimbledon.
6:15 PM: Vanderbilt University revealed the names of the four football players who were kicked off the team amid a sex crimes investigation. Neither of the players had yet played in a game for the Commodores.
6:00 PM: Florida International starting running back Kedrick Rhodes has been dismissed from the team following his arrest Saturday night on charges of discharging a weapon on school property & discharging a firearm while under the influence.
5:45 PM: Tennis player Agnieszka Radwanska has been dropped as a member of a Catholic youth organization in her native Poland after she appeared nude in this year's edition of ESPN The Magazine's Body Issue.
5:30 PM: Japan defeated the U.S. 6-3 on Sunday to win the World Cup of Softball held in Oklahoma City.
Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=53986
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We already know from many (a lot of) previous reviews that the ipad tablet mini Two will be delayed to 2014, but new rumours have surfaced about a rejuvenated version of the current little for those excited beaver Apple fiends.
"Market supply archipelago sources" purportedly expected Digitimes off about an updated ipad tablet mini being released the end of the year.
Since the iPad mini Two has been apparently put on the actual back-burner, this may be a move by Apple company to produce tablets to the holiday season.
Apple loves updates
We probably won?t observe an apple ipad tablet mini Two this year however Apple may be updating the specs about the current tiny (iPad tiny S probably? Or ipad tablet mini 2S?) start by making it light and thin in the process and providing an "almost bezel-free look."
Maybe we?ll in addition see the supplement of Retina show on a rejuvenated mini. Or Apple could save that for the tiny 2.
There are certain to be more rumours floating around in regards to the Apple supplements so can be if any of them are accurate.
Want more Apple news? Properly look out for iOS 6 coming to you in the slide.
Source: http://www.lazyhacks.com/2013/07/is-the-ipad-mini-receiving-refreshed.html
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CAIRO (AP) ? A senior U.S. diplomat has dismissed accusations Washington backs any one side in Egypt, saying the administration supports a balanced and inclusive democratic process.
Deputy Secretary of State William Burns is making highest level visit to Egypt by an American official since Islamist President Mohammed Morsi was overthrown by the military on July 3 following days of mass protests.
Burns held talks Monday with Egypt's interim leaders and the head of the military.
Washington has been sharply criticized by both Morsi's supporters and opponents for what each side perceives as support for their rival's position.
Burns told reporters Washington backs those siding with the aspirations of Egyptians who went out during the 2011 uprising against longtime autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
A senior U.S. diplomat held talks Monday with Egypt's interim leaders as well as the head of the military in the highest level visit by an American official since the Egyptian army ousted the country's first democratically elected leader.
The two-day visit by U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns to Cairo comes nearly two weeks after Islamist President Mohammed Morsi was overthrown by the military following days of mass protests. Washington has been sharply criticized by both Morsi's supporters and opponents for what each side perceives as support for their rival's position.
Burns met with the military-backed administration led by interim President Adly Manour and Prime Minister-designate Hazem el-Beblawi, as well as army chief and Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.
There was no immediate word on the discussions with the interim civilian leaders. But the military said in a statement posted on the army spokesman's Facebook page that Burns and el-Sissi discussed "the recent political developments in Egypt ... and ways to reinforce cooperation" between the two countries.
Burns, the No. 2 American diplomat, is also expected to meet with civil society groups and business leaders during his trip.
Ahead of the visit, the State Department said Burns would stress in his talks in Cairo U.S. support for the Egyptian people and an inclusive democratic process in which all political groups can participate.
A Muslim Brotherhood official said the group does not currently have a meeting scheduled with Burns.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/american-diplomat-us-not-backing-side-egypt-161702704.html
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Visions for Minnesota's energy future vary widely, while the state becomes a leader in incorporating wind, solar energy into the power source grid. On this week's Capitol Report program, Julie Bartkey delves into the ongoing energy conversation with key Senate policymakers.
Senate Environment and Energy Chair John Marty, DFL-Roseville, describes his vision for a "clean energy environment," one fueled by a greater share of renewable energy sources. In contrast, Senator David Brown, R-Becker, stresses the economic value of coal and nuclear energy.
Also on this week's program, Rep. Ryan Winkler, chair of the Select Committee on Living Wage Jobs, previews the work of his committee in striving to foster a strong economy and good wages. Plus, Sen. Julie Rosen, R-Fairmont, offers her perspective on the detriment of mandatory minimum wage requirements on small businesses.
Finally, the Capitol Preservation Committee reviews the forthcoming work at the Capitol, and Governor Dayton shares his opinion on the impact it will have on Capitol tenants and visitors.
Capitol Report is produced by Minnesota Senate Media Services, a non-partisan, taxpayer-funded organization.
Mobile users, click here to watch this video.
Source: http://twinports.wdio.com/news/politics/66522-capitol-report-shaping-minnesotas-energy-future
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PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? Representatives of a downtown Philadelphia building owner repeatedly warned city and Salvation Army officials that demolition of the building could endanger the adjacent thrift store weeks before last month's collapse that killed six people, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported Saturday.
The Inquirer report (http://bit.ly/15CWcrs) said its review of emails and letters indicates that the warnings didn't prompt the city to step in ? and didn't stop the owner from continuing demolition of the empty four-story building, which fell onto the adjoining thrift store June 5.
According to the paper, Thomas Simmonds Jr., property manager for owner STB Investments Corp., complained to a deputy mayor's office about an impasse in negotiations with the Salvation Army, which was seeking assurance that the demolition wouldn't proceed until legal agreement was reached about several issues. Those issues included protection of the thrift store roof, partial removal of a chimney and repairs to the common wall and sidewalk.
"This nonsense must end before someone is seriously injured or worse: those are headlines none of us want to see or read," Simmonds wrote in a May 22 email, according to The Inquirer.
A phone listing for Simmonds tried by The Associated Press on Saturday was not in service and an attorney for STB did not immediately respond to an email from the AP seeking comment. The attorney, Peter Greiner, told the Inquirer that Simmonds and STB would not comment because of pending litigation over the collapse.
According to the Inquirer, the correspondence indicates that STB, which was seeking access to the thrift store property, asked city officials to intervene with the Salvation Army to enable completion of the demolition "in a professional, legal manner."
In that email, Simmonds wrote the situation "poses a threat to life and limb" because the Salvation Army had not responded to his communications.
The day before the collapse, a Salvation Army lawyer in Harrisburg was pressing for assurances that STB would protect the store, the paper reported.
The Inquirer said the correspondence also indicates that STB promised in May to use a safer demolition method than the one that was actually used. An STB attorney outlined a plan to use a boom truck that would extend a long metal arm with a large bucket in which workers would stand to demolish the building, the paper reported.
However, officials have said heavy equipment was used at the site. A subcontractor is charged with six counts of involuntary manslaughter after police alleged that he was impaired by marijuana and painkillers while operating heavy equipment just before the collapse.
City spokesman Mark McDonald told The Inquirer that the deputy mayor urged the parties to work out their differences and was told that they would meet. He said he didn't know if the city Licenses and Inspections department had been told about a potential problem at the site.
Salvation Army attorney Eric Weiss disputed STB's contention that his organization wouldn't permit access to the store, calling the contention "nonsense" and the issue a "red herring."
"We were looking for an overall agreement . . . for assurance of what they're going to do on four basic issues," he told the paper. "All we were saying is: 'Give us an answer, please. What are you going to do?' And they never did."
___
Information from: The Philadelphia Inquirer, http://www.philly.com
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/paper-philly-building-owner-warned-danger-215638168.html
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MADRID (AP) ? After spending several days in the hospital, opera singer Placido Domingo said Sunday that an early diagnosis for a blocked blood vessel by a medical team in Madrid saved him from possibly more serious medical complications.
Speaking at Madrid's opera house alongside one of the doctors who treated him, the 72-year-old Domingo said he had felt unwell after a rehearsal and quickly sought medical help. The tenor said Dr. Carlos Gonzalez then detected a case of deep vein thrombosis and applied the appropriate treatment.
"I thought I would return from the check-up straight away back to the rehearsal," Domingo said. "But I was told, 'No, there is something serious here'."
Gonzalez explained that a blood clot had formed in Domingo's right leg and moved up to his lungs where it then lodged in an artery. He said it was not an unusual condition, and that it was often linked to spending hours sitting down on long flights.
"It sounds catastrophic, but it didn't turn out like that," Gonzalez said. "We established an early diagnosis, and there should be a good recovery, a complete and full recovery."
Domingo said he had studied Giuseppe Verdi's "Giovanna d'Arco" during the five days he was in the hospital, and he hopes to be well enough to sing his part in it at the Salzburg Festival in early August.
"I tried to cancel it," the Spaniard said, but he was told by festival organizers that the baritone they had to replace him hadn't fully learned the role, so he decided to continue.
"He also looks forward to keeping his engagements in Verona where he will sing and conduct 'Operalia,'" said Nancy Seltzer, the singer's representative in the U.S.
Domingo spoke just before attending a piano dress rehearsal of Daniel Catan's "Il Postino" in Madrid on Sunday evening, a day after being released from hospital. The hospitalization forced him to cancel a handful of appearances, including six shows of "Il Postino" at the Spanish capital's Teatro Real.
"I am very sad not to be able to sing in today's dress rehearsal," Domingo said. "My doctor has told me that with a degree of caution, everything is still possible. I have been very well looked after."
Alvaro Domingo, the tenor's son, told The Associated Press earlier that he expects his father to spend three weeks recuperating in Madrid and that the singer isn't contemplating retirement.
On Sunday, Domingo addressed the media alongside Gonzalez as well as his two young grandsons, Placido and Alvaro.
The Spanish opera star has maintained a vigorous schedule since recovering from colon cancer surgery in 2010. He said he had already worked out "very lightly" on an exercise bike.
Before going in to see the dress rehearsal, Domingo sang the first few bars of "Il Postino" to journalists.
___
AP Music Writer Chris Talbott in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/opera-star-domingo-leaves-hospital-eager-sing-185152228.html
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Milwaukee Bucks coach Larry Drew is getting acquainted with a new situation after spending the last nine years in Atlanta, including the last three as head coach of the Hawks. He answered a few questions recently before heading to Estonia on Saturday to watch first-round draft pick Giannis Antetokounmpo, who is playing for Greece in the Under-20 European Championship.
Q.Do you see promise in the front line featuring Ersan Ilyasova, Larry Sanders and John Henson?
A. There's a lot of potential there, a lot of length. You know with John and Larry you've got two guys back there that can erase a lot of mistakes. Ersan has ability to make shots. Summer league is going to be great for John. Larry participating with Team USA (in a minicamp) will be a great experience for him. I've had a chance to sit down with both of them and talk about basketball and pick their brains. There are a lot of good things in the works. And we have Ekpe (Udoh), who is long and a really good worker. Those guys are very solid. My job is to try to put all three of those guys (Sanders, Udoh and Henson) in a position to be a success, particularly on the offensive end. They've shown what their capabilities are defensively.
Q.What are the goals for the Bucks summer league team in Las Vegas?
A. It's tough playing in the summer league. I want them to compete at a high level and to play together. I know the tendency in playing in summer league is everybody wants to look good and showcase themselves. We want to make sure we play together and we're organized. This will be very good for Nate Wolters, for John Henson, for Goose (Gustavo Ayon). These guys have an opportunity to play a lot of minutes. We'll gradually implement some of the things that I do, so they can get a jump start on learning some of this stuff.
Q.You added former Bucks big man Scott Williams as an assistant coach. What can he bring to the young players on the team and particularly the big men?
A. He's experienced it. He did it the hard way. A lot of people didn't think he would have the type of career he had. But it says a lot about him, not just as a player but as a person. He persevered. There were plenty of guys who might have been better, but he found his niche within the league and he was able to survive. When he speaks, our big guys definitely have to listen.
Q.The Bucks have been making big changes in free agency, losing some players and picking up others. Is that unsettling as a coach?
A. Any time you're in a situation where you have a lot of free agents and you have open spots, you're always concerned about your roster. This is an exciting time; it's kind of a nail-biting time as well, because you don't know how things are going to turn out. But I have all the confidence in the world those guys up there in that room (general manager John Hammond and his staff) will get the pieces that we want and we'll move forward.
Q.Bucks owner Herb Kohl recently said he did not want to go into a full rebuilding mode with his team. But there seems to be an effort to look toward the future, as evidenced by the pick of Antetokounmpo, the youngest player in the draft. How do you see it as you start your tenure as Bucks coach? Is it a young team that is going to take some time to jell?
A. We've got some young pieces, no doubt about it. But my focus right now is, however we put this thing together, is to put the best product out there. We've got some young guys that certainly have some really good days ahead of them. As we go through this process, we want to make sure we find the right mix, the right blend. Character is important. That brings about good chemistry and that's what we're trying to do here.
Q.Monta Ellis opted out of the final year of his contract in mid-June rather than returning to the Bucks. Were you disappointed?
A. That's the NBA. Players get in those situations, and it's just how it is. Agents put those kinds of contracts together (with an option year) to position themselves to make a decision.
Q.What stands out about your first-round pick, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and how tough will the adjustment to the NBA be?
A. This kid has a chance to be very, very special. At 6-9 he handles the ball and sees the floor. He does defend. He's very rangy. He's been taught some defense over his years. We have some work to do with him, no doubt about it. We've got to get him adjusted to playing with stronger guys. But I think this kid will be a player who will learn fast. He wants to prove he can get better.
Q.What about the culture shock he may experience?
A. This is a big change for an 18-year-old kid. I have a 19-year-old son. I know if he had to leave the States and go play in Europe, I know from a parent's standpoint how much that would weigh on me as a dad. Coming here is going to be a big adjustment.
Q.What do you think about Milwaukee so far?
A. After getting around it and really seeing it, this is a beautiful place, an absolutely gorgeous place. I'm excited about being here and getting in the community.
Q.You received a three-year contract when you were hired as coach. What are your expectations for the long term as Bucks coach?
A. I take it a year at a time. I don't look down the road. It starts this summer. When we roll into the fall and start getting ready for training camp, I have my work cut out. I'm coming into a new situation, and there are going to be a lot of new faces here. But I know going into this thing we will be on the same page, from start to finish. One thing I can assure you, we're going to be a committed group. My job is to put together a team this city can be proud of. That's my goal, and I plan on doing that. There will be a lot of challenges along the way. Our character will be tested when we get to those bad times, how we respond to it. Either we can fragment or we can stay together and dig ourselves out of a hole. It will be a year-by-year process.
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Source: http://www.lucianne.com/thread/?artnum=743810
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Say you're working at your desk, and you feel your phone buzz in your pocket. It's not exactly onerous to pull it out, but doing so can break your workflow. Desktop Notifications solves this all-too-common minor annoyance by displaying device's notifications on your main screen, with practically no setup.
Once you grab the free app from Google Play, it will direct you to install a browser extension on either Firefox or Chrome. From here, you just add your Android device's unique identifier obtained from the Desktop Notifications app, and everything should be synced up. Now, any notifications on your phone will pop up in the corner of your screen, assuming your browser is running. As the app routes more notifications to your computer, it will detect the apps sending them, and let you disable them piecemeal to keep the onslaught under control.
The idea is a lot like previously-mentioned Android Notifier, but it's a lot easier to set up since everything runs in the browser. It also doesn't require your phone and computer to be on the same network, or paired via Bluetooth, which can be handy at work if your phone can't access the main network.
Desktop Notifications (Free) | Google Play via Ghacks
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Before Asiana Flight 214 crash-landed in San Francisco, the last time the Korean airlines' flight attendants made news it was over an effort by their union earlier this year to get the dress code updated so female attendants could wear trousers.
Now, with half of the 12-person cabin crew having suffered injuries in the accident and the remaining attendants receiving praise for displaying heroism during the emergency evacuation, the focus has shifted from their uniform looks to their heroic actions.
In the July 6 crash three members of the crew were ejected from the plane's sheared off tail section while still strapped in their seats. Those who were able, meanwhile, oversaw the emergency evacuation of nearly 300 passengers ? using knives to slash seatbelts, slinging axes to free two colleagues trapped by malfunctioning slides, fighting flames and bringing out frightened children.
"I wasn't really thinking, but my body started carrying out the steps needed for an evacuation," head attendant Lee Yoon-hye, 40, said during a news conference Sunday night before federal safety investigators instructed the airlines not to let the crew discuss the accident. "I was only thinking about rescuing the next passenger."
Such conduct has given a measure of pride to members of a profession who often are recognized only for their appearance and customer service skills.
"In the face of tremendous adversity and obstacles, they did their job and evacuated an entire wide-bodied aircraft in a very short period of time," said Veda Shook, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants and an Alaska Airlines flight attendant.
"It's such a shining reflection, not just of the crew, but of the importance of flight attendants in their roles as first responders," Shook said.
Along with training in first aid and firefighting, flight attendants every year are required to practice the moves needed to get passengers off a plane in 90 seconds or less, Shook said. They go through timed trials, practicing skills that include shouting over pandemonium and engine noise, communicating with people frozen in fear and opening jammed doors and windows, she said. The goal is to make performing these tasks automatic.
"We have the muscle memory," Shook said.
It's a significant departure from the days when flight attendants were always women and known as stewardesses or air hostesses. In that era decades ago, members of the cabin crew weren't expected to play much of a role in emergencies.
Laura Brentlinger, who spent 31 years as a United Airlines flight attendant, recalled having no idea how much danger everyone was in during one of her first emergency landings in 1972. She didn't realize the severity of the situation until it was over and she saw the pilot's face.
"In those days, it was like pat you on the head, just go back and keep the people nice and smile. That's how far we've come, thank the Lord," Brentlinger said. "We were just little Barbie dolls back there."
The role of flight attendants in the U.S. expanded significantly in 1989 after Air Ontario Flight 1363 crashed after taking off in Canada. An investigation revealed that a flight attendant had seen ice on a wing but did not speak up, assuming the pilots knew and would not welcome the information from her.
Since then, FAA rules have required that cabin crew members be incorporated into the communications system known as "crew resource management" that empowers all airline personnel to voice concerns to the cockpit even if it means challenging senior pilots.
The philosophy also authorizes flight attendants to order emergency evacuations. Hearing that the pilots of Asiana Flight 214 told the flight attendants to delay an evacuation for 90 seconds after the crash landing in San Francisco, giving the order only after a flight attendant spotted flames outside, made Brentlinger wonder whether Asiana Airline's attendants have the same authority.
"I'm sure they have a very different hierarchy and can't do anything without the pilot's permission," she said. "There is no doubt in my mind I would have evacuated that aircraft immediately."
Brentlinger said her heart aches when she thinks about what Asiana's flight attendants are going through now and are likely to go through in the months to come.
She was aboard a 747 that lost a cargo door at 22,000 feet, sucking nine passengers to their deaths over the Pacific Ocean in 1989.
After the disaster aboard United Flight 811, Brentlinger said she suffered severe post-traumatic stress disorder and was unable to get back on a plane for more than four years. Handling the emergency itself was "the easiest part of the whole process ... because you train for it and you just do it," she said.
She went on to say that "after the dust settles, so to speak" and one tries to get on with life, "it's horrific, at least it was for me."
The Flight 214 cabin crew consisted of 11 women and one man, ranging in age from 21 to 42, according to the airline. Spokeswoman Lee Hyomin said Asiana is not sharing information on emergency training hours of its flight attendants because the National Transportation Safety Board asked it not to share any information related to the accident while it's being investigated.
Jean Carmela Lim, 32, a Sydney-based travel consultant, spent a year working as an Asiana flight attendant eight years ago and posted pictures from her experience on her travel blog, Holy Smithereens, this week. She recalls her weeks-long safety training as rigorous.
"We needed to be able to swim while dragging another human ? dead weight ? in one hand, and hoist ourselves and the dead weight onto the safety raft," Lim said.
The appearance standards were almost as demanding. Lim, who was 23 when she applied for the job, initially was told she too old. During the interview, she was required to wear a short skirt without stockings. Flight attendant school included sessions on hair, makeup and comportment. During flights, the cabin manager inspected the attendants to make sure they were wearing the right color of nail polish and had their aprons properly ironed.
Lim said that appearance is important, but seeing pictures of Flight 214's attendants outside the burned-out aircraft in skirts made her hope their union prevails on the pants issue.
"If there's evidence that wearing a skirt will enable you to save more lives than wearing pants, then by all means keep them in skirts," she said. "If I'm trapped in a burning aircraft , I doubt I'll notice if the cabin crew saving me had lipstick on her teeth or had a tuft of hair out of place."
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Lee reported from Seoul, South Korea.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/flight-attendants-heroic-actions-focus-crash-225507086.html
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