segunda-feira, 30 de abril de 2012

Former Miss New Hampshire Arrested

ap nicole Houde Arrest jt 120429 wblog Former Miss New Hampshire Attacks, Bites Boyfriend, Cops Say Credit: Manchester Police Department

A former Miss New Hampshire USA title holder was arrested Wednesday for allegedly assaulting her boyfriend, according to police.

An argument between 26-year-old beauty queen Nicole Houde and her boyfriend, 33-year-old Scott Nickerson, turned violent when Houde allegedly began punching, kicking, scratching and biting Nickerson, police said.

Manchester Police Sgt. Todd Boucher said Nickerson accused Houde of having an affair. The two began arguing, and Nickerson took Houde’s cell phone. When he refused to give it back, things got ugly, police said.

Houde, who was crowned Miss New Hampshire USA in 2010, was arrested at work and charged with simple assault.


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Obama, Bill Clinton team up on campaign trail

AP  By JULIE PACEWASHINGTON -- Once a tense rivalry, the relationship between President Barack Obama and Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton has evolved into a genuine political and policy partnership. Both sides have a strong incentive in making the alliance work, especially in an election year.

For Obama, Bill Clinton is a fundraising juggernaut, a powerful reminder to voters that a Democrat ran the White House the last time the economy was thriving. For the spotlight-loving former president, stronger ties with the White House and campaign headquarters mean he gets a hand in shaping the future of the party he led for nearly a decade.

Obama's re-election campaign has put Bill Clinton on notice that he will be used as a top surrogate, further evidence of how far the two camps have come since the bitter days of the 2008 Democratic primary between Obama and Hillary Clinton, now his secretary of state.

The current and former president teamed up to address supporters in Virginia Sunday night, the first of three joint appearances at fundraisers for Obama's campaign. The Obama campaign expected more than 500 people at a reception at the home of Terry McAuliffe, a close adviser to both Clintons and one of the most ardent protectors of their political brand, with tickets starting at $1,000. Eighty people paid $20,000 a head for a dinner afterward.

Clinton told the crowd that Obama is "beating the clock" to restore the economy to health. Digging out of similar financial holes has historically taken five to 10 years, Clinton said.

"Barack Obama deserves to be re-elected president of the United States," Clinton said, because he has clear objectives for the country and is meeting them.

Neither Clinton nor Obama mentioned presumed Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney by name, but both Democrats zinged Romney for his economic plan and foreign policy credentials.

Romney "basically wants to do what they did before, on steroids," Clinton said, "which will get you the same consequences you got before, on steroids."

Obama said he and Hillary Clinton have "spent the past three-and-a-half years cleaning up after other folks' messes."

He ridiculed "the presumptive nominee on the other side" for "suddenly saying our No. 1 enemy isn't al-Qaida, it's Russia."

"I didn't make that up," Obama said to loud laughter. "I suddenly thought maybe I didn't check the calendar, and we're back in 1975."

Obama stood smiling as Bill Clinton spoke. The two men appeared relaxed and cordial. Clinton guffawed when Obama made gentle fun of him, and himself, by noting that every presidential candidate always says the next election is crucial.

Obama acknowledged that he was about to make the same argument. "Well, let me tell you," he said to laughter and applause, "this one matters."

Clinton's willingness to be a good soldier for the Obama campaign could end up paying political dividends for his wife, who is frequently talked about in party circles as a potential presidential candidate in 2016 despite her repeated denials. Hillary Clinton has benefited enormously from her partnership with Obama, with her popularity skyrocketing during her time in his Cabinet.

Democrats say the overt signs of unity between the Clintons and Obama put the president at a distinct advantage over Romney. The former Massachusetts governor must soothe the wounds from his GOP primary fight and figure out whether the last Republican president, George W. Bush, will have a role in the 2012 race.

"It makes absolutely clear that, to the extent that there were different wings of the Democratic party, there is now one wing of the Democratic party," said Chris Lehane, a Clinton backer. "And it's the president's party."

Discussions are under way at Romney's Boston headquarters about the degree to which Bush will participate, if at all, in the general election. Many Republicans are reluctant to publicly associate with Bush, who left office deeply unpopular, especially as the Obama campaign seeks to tie Romney to Bush's economic and foreign policy positions.

While Obama and the Clintons are rarely described as friends, people close to them say the relationship has warmed significantly since the 2008 nomination contest. In that race, the former president slammed Obama's candidacy as a "fairy tale" while Obama sarcastically told Hillary Clinton that she was "likable enough."

The thaw started as a matter of political necessity: Their party was desperate to retake the White House after eight years of Republican rule. Hillary Clinton offered Obama a gracious endorsement, both Clintons campaigned for Obama, and the newly elected president picked his former rival to be America's chief diplomat.

It took longer for Obama's relationship with Bill Clinton to soften as the two men found common ground in the pressures of the presidency.

When Obama's health care bill was in trouble, he and his staff, which included several veterans of the Clinton White House, called on the former president for help. In late 2009 and early 2010, Bill Clinton went to Capitol Hill to rally support and worked the phones with wary Democratic lawmakers.

After the Democratic party was battered in the 2010 elections, Obama called in Clinton for an Oval Office meeting. Afterward, the two made an impromptu appearance in the White House briefing room to talk to reporters. When Obama had to leave for a holiday party, Clinton stuck around, relishing in the attention and the give-and-take with the press.

That day in the briefing room underscored what some Democrats see as their one major worry in pairing Obama with Clinton too often. The ease with which Clinton connects with a range of audiences can call attention to the challenge Obama sometimes faces in doing the same thing.

But that certainly hasn't stopped the Obama campaign from seeking Clinton's help in winning a second term, and Clinton has made it clear he is ready and willing.

Obama's campaign advisers have sat down with Clinton for strategy and advice-seeking sessions, and the former president had a prominent role in movie produced by the campaign in which he promoted, among other things, Obama's decision to order the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

"There is no better Democratic ally than President Clinton," said Jim Messina, Obama's campaign manager.

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domingo, 29 de abril de 2012

Yacht debris, bodies found off US-Mexico coast

Coast Guard crews searching for a missing yacht racer after the accident that killed three crew members. Coast Guard crews searching for a missing yacht racer after the accident that killed three crew members.

AP  By ELLIOTT SPAGATLOS ANGELES -- A 37-foot racing yacht was reduced to debris that looked it "like it had gone through a blender," a searcher said Sunday after the boat apparently collided with a larger vessel, killing three sailors and leaving a fourth missing.

The U.S. Coast Guard, the Mexican navy and civilian vessels scoured the waters off the shore of both countries for the missing sailor from the Aegean, which was taking part in a 124-mile race that began Friday from Newport Beach, Calif., to Ensenada, Mexico. The sailboat, carrying a crew of four, was reported missing Saturday.

It was California's second deadly accident this month involving an ocean race.

Race officials said they had few explanations for what may have happened to the Aegean other than it must have collided with ship like a freighter or tanker that did not see the smaller vessel. The Coast Guard said conditions were fine for sailing, with good visibility and moderate ocean swells of 6-to-8 feet.

If the smaller boat was bobbing around in light wind, the crew might not have been able to get out of the way of a larger ship, perhaps a freighter, said Rich Roberts, a spokesman for the Newport Ocean Sailing Association, the race organizer.

The race goes through shipping lanes and it's possible for a large ship to hit a sailboat and not even know it, especially at night, Roberts said.

A race tracking system indicated the Aegean disappeared about 1:30 a.m. PDT (4:30 a.m. EDT) Saturday, he added.

Searchers were focusing on an area about 10 miles off the Mexican coast and about 10 miles south of U.S. waters, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Henry Dunphy.

Other yachts near the Coronado Islands in Mexico - four small, mostly uninhabited islands - reported seeing debris Saturday morning.

Two of the dead were William Reed Johnson Jr., 57, of Torrance, Calif., and Joseph Lester Stewart, 64, of Bradenton, Fla. The San Diego County Medical Examiner's office was withholding the name of the third sailor pending notification of relatives.

Calls to Johnson's and Stewart's homes went unanswered Sunday.

The Aegean is registered to Theo Mavromatis, 49, of Redondo Beach, Calif. The race association didn't know if he was aboard, but Gary Gilpin at Marina Sailing, which rents out the Aegean when Mavromatis isn't using it, said the 49-year-old skipper took the yacht out earlier in the week for the competition.

Gilpin said Mavromatis, an engineer, was an experienced sailor who had won the Newport to Ensenada race in the past. A woman answering a call at a number listed for Mavromatis declined to answer questions.

Eric Lamb was the first to find debris of the boat - most no larger than six inches - scattered over about two square miles Saturday as he worked safety patrol on the race. He saw a small refrigerator, a white seat cushion and empty containers of yogurt and soy milk.

"We pulled a lot of boats off the rocks over the years and boats that hit the rocks, they don't look like that. This was almost like it had gone through a blender," said Lamb, 62.

A Coast Guard helicopter circling overhead directed him and a partner to two floating bodies. Both had severe cuts and bruises, and one of them had major head trauma.

Two race participants who were in the area at the time the Aegean disappeared said they saw or heard a freighter.

Cindy Arosteguy of Oxnard, Calif., remembers hearing on her radio someone say, "Do you see us?" as she saw a tanker about a half-mile away.

"I got back on the radio and said, 'Yes, I see you,'" she said. "It was definitely a freighter."

In Ensenada, several hundred people held a minute of silence for the victims at an awards ceremony that spilled out in a courtyard from a large white canopy at a hotel that served as race headquarters.

Chuck Iverson, commodore of the sailing association, said in an interview that the collision was a "fluke," noting how common night races are along Mexico's Baja California coast.

"We're all shocked by this whole event," he said.

The deaths are the first fatalities in the race's 65 years, the sponsor said.

Racing boats are required to use lights at night, Iverson said, although the boats are not inspected unless a competitor suspects a problem and tells race officials.

The race attracts sailors of all skills, including some who are new to long distances.

"You get world-class sailors and you get first-timers. That's the good thing about it. ... It's kind of a safety-in-numbers thing," said Lamb, who has worked safety patrol for eight years.

The Newport Beach Patch website posted a photo of the Aegean's crew at the start of the race Friday. Four men in royal blue T-shirts are on the deck as the boat cuts through calm waters.

A total of 213 boats were registered, and the winner, Robert Lane of Long Beach Yacht Club, finished Saturday in 23 hours, 26 minutes, 40 seconds. Some boats still were arriving Sunday morning in Ensenada, and about 50 people gathered in the morning fog at a marina to watch. A notice tacked to a bulletin board alongside the racing times informed spectators of the tragedy.

The deaths come two weeks after five sailors died in the waters off Northern California when their 38-foot yacht was hit by powerful waves, smashed into rocks and capsized during a race. Three sailors survived the wreck and the body of another was quickly recovered. Four remained missing until one body was recovered Thursday.

The deadly accident near the Farallon Islands, about 27 miles west of San Francisco, prompted the Coast Guard to temporarily stop races in ocean waters outside San Francisco Bay. The Coast Guard said the suspension will allow it and the offshore racing community to study the accident and race procedures to determine whether changes are needed to improve safety. U.S. Sailing, the governing body of yacht racing, is leading the safety review, which is expected to be completed within the next month.

In 1979, a freak storm in the Irish Sea led to the deaths of 15 sailors in the Fastnet Race. In the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race off Australia, a freak storm with hurricane-force winds struck the fleet in the Bass Strait, sinking several boats and killing six sailors.

Gary Jobson, president of the U.S. Sailing Association, said there have been too many accidents during races in the past year, and that the association is working to make the sport safer.

"I'm horrified. I've done a lot of sailboat racing and I've hit logs in the water, and I've seen a man go overboard, but this takes the whole thing to a new level," Jobson said. "We need to take a step back and take a deep breath with what we're doing. Something is going wrong here."

Jobson said U.S. Sailing will appoint an independent panel to investigate the Ensenada incident, as it has done in the Farallon Islands accident.

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Reinstate the Ban on Guns in National Parks and National Wildlife Refuges

New hope in case of missing Arizona girl

AP  Eyewitness NewsTUCSON, Ariz. -- There is new hope in the search for missing Arizona girl Isabel Celis.

A possible eyewitness, seen in a surveillance video in the area of Isabel's home the night she vanished, has come forward.

Tucson police hope he or the people with him may have seen something having to do with the 6-year old's disappearance.

Meanwhile, authorities in Mexico have joined the search, in case Isabel was taken across the border.

Her parents say she vanished last weekend after she was put to bed.

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Weaker al-Qaida still plots payback for US raid

See it on TV? Check here.An undated photo of al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Afghanistan. (AP) An undated photo of al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Afghanistan. (AP)

AP  KIMBERLY DOZIERWASHINGTON -- A year after the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, al-Qaida is hobbled and hunted, too busy surviving for the moment to carry out another Sept. 11-style attack on U.S

But the terrorist network dreams still of payback, and U.S. counterterrorist officials warn that, in time, its offshoots may deliver.

A decade of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that has cost the U.S. about $1.28 trillion and 6,300 U.S. troops* lives has forced al-Qaida's affiliates to regroup, from Yemen to Iraq. Bin Laden's No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahri, is thought to be hiding, out of U.S. reach, in Pakistan's mountains, just as bin Laden was for so many years.

"It's wishful thinking to say al-Qaida is on the brink of defeat," says Seth Jones, a Rand analyst and adviser to U.S. special operations forces. "They have increased global presence, the number of attacks by affiliates has risen, and in some places like Yemen, they've expanded control of territory."

It's a complicated, somewhat murky picture for Americans to grasp.

U.S. officials say bin Laden's old team is all but dismantled. But they say new branches are hitting Western targets and U.S. allies overseas, and still aspire to match their parent organization's milestone of Sept. 11, 2001.

"Each will seek opportunities to strike Western interests in its operating area, but each group will have different intent and ability to execute those plans," Robert Cardillo, a deputy director at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, told reporters Friday.

The deadliest is the affiliate in Yemen.

There's no sign of an active revenge plot against U.S. targets, but U.S. citizens in Pakistan and beyond are being warned to be vigilant ahead of the May 2 anniversary of the night raid. U.S. helicopters swooped down on bin Laden's compound in the Pakistani army town of Abbottabad, killing him, one of his sons, two couriers and their wives.

The last view for Americans of the mastermind behind the Sept. 11 attacks was that of a wizened old man sitting in front of an old television, wrapped in a blanket.

The world may never see photographic proof of his death. U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg in Washington ruled last week that the Obama administration, under the Freedom of Information Act, would not have to turn over images of bin Laden during or after the raid.

"Verbal descriptions of the death and burial of Osama Bin Laden will have to suffice," Boasberg wrote in his ruling on the lawsuit by the public interest group Judicial Watch.

Bin Laden's killing and al-Qaida's stumbling efforts to regroup are now the national security centerpiece of President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

The White House frequently cites the president's decision to approve the raid, with only a 50-50 chance that bin Laden was even at the compound. Obama could have gone down in history as the man who put the Navy SEALs and the relationship with Pakistan in jeopardy, while failing to catch the al-Qaida leader.

"Al-Qaida was and is our No. 1 enemy," White House spokesman Jay Carney said last week. "So it's a part of his foreign policy record, obviously, but it's also part of a very serious endeavor to keep our country safe."

How safe remains in question.

U.S. officials say al-Qaida is less able to carry out a complex attack like Sept. 11 and they rule out al-Qaida's ability to attack with weapons of mass destruction in the coming year. These officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they say publicly identifying themselves could make them a target of the terrorist group.

U.S. counterterrorist forces have killed roughly half of al-Qaida's top 20 leaders since the raid. That includes U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, killed by a drone in Yemen last September, less than six months after bin Laden's death.

Only a few of the original al-Qaida team remain, and most of the new names on the U.S. target lists are relative unknowns, officials say.

"The last terror attack was seven years ago in London and they haven't had any major attacks in the U.S." says Peter Bergen, an al-Qaida expert who once met bin Laden. "They are recruiting no-hopers and dead-enders."

Yet Zawahri is still out there. Though constantly hunted, he has managed to release 13 audio and video messages to followers since bin Laden's death, a near record-rate of release according to the IntelCenter, a private intelligence firm. He has urged followers to seize on the unrest left by the Arab Spring to build organizations and influence in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere, and back rebels in Syria - a call that U.S. intelligence officials say is being heeded.

U.S. attempts to deliver a "knockout punch" to Zawahri and his followers in Pakistan have been hamstrung by a breakdown in relations with Pakistan's government over the bin Laden raid.

Pakistani officials saw the raid as a violation of their sovereignty, made worse by a U.S. friendly fire attack that killed almost two dozen Pakistani troops on the border with Afghanistan last fall. Pakistan's parliament called for a redrafting of what the U.S. is allowed to do, and where.

CIA drone strikes in Pakistan's border area continue, but are limited to a relatively small area of the tribal region. "Our efforts are focused on one small kill box and, we've hit them hard, but they still maintain a vital network throughout Pakistan" says Bill Roggio, editor of the Long War Journal, which tracks U.S. counterterrorism efforts worldwide.

Al-Qaida also takes shelter in Pakistan's urban areas, as shown by the bin Laden raid, and the CIA's efforts to search those areas is often blocked by the Pakistani intelligence service.

U.S. officials say they believe factions within the agency shelter and even fund al-Qaida's senior leaders and related militant groups such as the Haqqani network, which attacks U.S. troops in Afghanistan, from their Pakistani safe haven. Pakistan denies the charge.

Afghanistan is the temporary home to up to 100 al-Qaida fighters at any single time, U.S. officials say, adding that a steady series of U.S. special operations raids is essential to keeping them out. With the withdrawal of U.S. forces, U.S. counterterrorism officials fear al-Qaida could return.

By the numbers, al-Qaida's greatest presence is still greatest in Iraq, where intelligence officials estimate up to a 1,000 fighters have refocused their campaign from striking now-absent U.S. troops to hitting the country's Shiite-dominated government.

Yemen's al-Qaida of the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) is becoming a major draw for foreign fighters as it carves out a stronghold in the south of the country, easily defeating Yemeni forces preoccupied battling tribal and political unrest. The White House recently agreed to expanded drone strikes to give the CIA and the military greater leeway to target militant leaders.

This al-Qaida group has been a major threat since 2009, when one of its adherents tried to bring down a jetliner over Detroit.

Al-Qaida affiliates such as al-Shabab in Somalia are struggling to carry out attacks in the face of a stepped up CIA-U.S. military campaign, and a loss of popular support after blocking U.N. food aid to some 4 million starving Somalis, officials say.

But the group is kept afloat by a stream of cash, partly from piracy and kidnapping of the Somali coast. White House counterterrorism chief John Brennan told an audience of CIA officers that total ransom payments paid to Somali pirates increased from approximately $80 million in 2010 to $140 million in 2011, according to remarks obtained by The Associated Press.

Cutting off those finances by persuading companies and U.S. to stop paying up is now central to the terrorism-fighting effort.

So, too, is the strategy of fighting small, smartly and covertly, avoiding land invasions such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan that caused Muslim outrage and helped draw fresh recruits, says Rand's Jones.

Many U.S. officials cite the Yemen model as the way ahead: a small network of U.S. intelligence and military forces working with local forces to selectively target militants.

"The key challenge will be balancing aggressive counterterrorism operations with the risk of exacerbating the anti-Western global agenda" of al-Qaida and its affiliates, Cardillo says.

In other words, adds Jones, "it is a war in which the side that kills the most civilians loses."

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New Rules for Secret Service Agents

No more exotic strip clubs and nights of heavy drinking for Secret Service personnel on foreign trips. And inviting foreign nationals back to the hotel room is now definitely off-limits.

In the wake of a scandal involving prostitutes on a presidential trip to Colombia, Secret Service management this afternoon issued new regulations for agents on a foreign assignment.

The new rules say:

"Patronization of non-reputable establishments is prohibited.

"Alcohol may not be consumed at the protectee hotel once the protective visit has begun.

"Foreign nationals, excluding hotel staff and official counterparts, are prohibited in your hotel room."

"Alcohol may only be consumed in moderate amounts while off-duty on ... assignment and alcohol use is prohibited within 10 hours of reporting for duty."

Several Secret Service agents on a presidential trip to Colombia have lost their security clearances or their jobs over alleged misbehavior said to include heavy drinking at a sex club and hotel, and the use of prostitutes.

The behavior raised ethical and security questions about the agency charged with protecting the president.

House Homeland Security Chairman Peter King, R-N.Y., told ABC News the Secret Service is making it clear to agents that, "if you have any doubt, don't do it."

"They are putting regulations into writing that they thought agents should have known all along," King said.

King praised Secret Service director Mark Sullivan for his "swift and certain" action, and expressed confidence in the ongoing investigation into the scandal.

The new regulations also will require all agents to complete ethics training before being eligible for travel assignments.

In addition, agents will be briefed on standards of conduct before departing on a trip, and a supervisor from the Secret Service's Office of Responsibility will travel with all agency teams to make sure standards are observed.

Finally, the new regulations say that the laws of the United States shall apply to Secret Service personnel while abroad.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, has been pushing for an independent investigation of the Colombia misbehavior, and suggested the new rules aren't a substitute for such an investigation.

"New conduct rules are necessary to preventing more shenanigans from happening in the future, and whether these are the best, and most cost effective, rules to stop future misconduct remains to be seen," he said in a written statement. "That's why a sheet of paper with new rules doesn't negate the previous actions, and why it remains necessary to hold the agency and the agents accountable, following a complete and independent investigation."


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Nations of the World - Fun Facts About Mozambique!

RV Camping - California's National Parks

1 dead after storm blows St. Louis beer tent over

See it on TV? Check here.AP  By JIM SALTERST. LOUIS -- High winds swept through a beer tent where 200 people gathered after a Cardinals game Saturday, killing one and seriously injuring at least five others, authorities said.

The owner of the bar where the tent was set up said firefighters told him that the patron who died was struck by lightning, but Deputy Fire Chief John Altmann and Public Safety Director Eddie Roth said they didn't know what killed the man.

At least 17 people were hospitalized, including five who were initially in critical condition but are now said to be in serious condition. Up to 100 people were treated at the scene, mostly for minor injuries such as cuts and bruises.

Officials said straight-line winds whipped through the large tent outside Kilroy's Sports Bar, near Busch Stadium. The crowd was celebrating after the Cardinals beat Milwaukee 7-3 earlier in the afternoon.

Roth said winds of about 50 mph shattered aluminum poles that held up the tent, which was located south of the stadium. The force of the wind blew the tent onto an adjacent railroad bridge.

"It was crazy, scary," said Annie Randall, whose family owns Kilroy's. "We're just so sorry this happened."

Kilroy's owner Art Randall described a short burst of a storm - perhaps five seconds, he said - with a massive wind that lifted the huge tent, threw it perhaps 100 feet into the air and sent the aluminum poles and most everything in the tent airborne.

When he heard the boom, he initially thought a train had derailed into the tent.

As the wind blew, a bolt of lightning crashed into the bar, Randall said. He said firefighters told him it was a lightning strike - not flying debris - that killed the man.

"At some point in that five seconds, we were getting lightning strikes, and apparently one of our customers got hit by lightning right in the middle of the dance floor," Randall said.

The bar owner said he screamed for help and three customers ran over to administer CPR, but they couldn't save the man.

Randall said he looked around "and saw 50 bodies scattered everywhere."

The man who died appeared to be in his 50s, Roth said. His name has not been released.

Roth said the tent had passed inspection and it didn't appear there would be any violation, although the investigation is ongoing.

Randall described a scene in which barstools, pedestals and a 100-pound bass amplifier were flying through the air. The disc jockey working the party was struck by the amp and knocked unconscious, the bar owner said, and people were scurrying to help one another.

"My wife had people in the beer cooler - we had the beer cooler loaded with injuries," Randall said. "It was a triage deal."

Kilroy's is among several bars near Busch Stadium, and many bars set up tents for the excess business after Cardinals games. Crowds were also large because the St. Louis Blues were playing against the Los Angeles Kings Saturday night in the first game of the NHL's Western Conference semifinals.

The St. Louis area was under thunderstorm and tornado warnings several times Saturday. About two hours after the incident at Kilroy's, tornado sirens blared throughout the city after a funnel cloud sighting. There were several reports of tree damage, power lines down and damage from hail that in some parts of the region reportedly was as big as tennis balls.

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Police blow Wash. mountain bunker, find man dead

AP  By GENE JOHNSONNORTH BEND, Wash. -- Peter Keller spent eight years carving his hole in the side of the mountain, camouflaging the rugged underground bunker with ferns and sticks and stocking it with a generator and ammunition boxes sealed in Ziploc bags. Suspected in the deaths of his wife, daughter and pets last weekend, he headed there prepared for the long haul with high-powered rifles, scope and body armor.

Seattle-area tactical officers who slogged for hours over dangerously steep, muddy ground to find him were prepared too. They pumped in tear gas, called for him over bullhorns, and, after 22 hours, set off explosives along the top of the bunker Saturday.

Keller was inside, already dead of a self-inflicted gunshot. A handgun was next to his body.

The 41-year-old hadn't been seen since his wife, Lynnettee, and 18-year-old daughter Kaylene were found shot dead in their home last weekend.

The raid ended a tense week for law enforcement officials who tried to track down Keller, a gun enthusiast described by his family as having a "survivalist mentality." That Keller was likely armed and on the loose in an extremely popular hiking and mountain-biking area east of Seattle kept many people on edge.

"The gas didn't work, we've got fresh people here, it was time to take the next step," said King County Sheriff's Sgt. Katie Larson. "There's been a huge sigh of relief. Our people are out safe, and the trails are now safe for the community to use."

The bunker, tucked into Rattlesnake Ridge, was "amazingly fortified" with at least 13 guns inside, propane tanks, a large gun scope, gas cans and binoculars, said sheriff's Sgt. Cindi West. Photos released by police showed stacks of ammunition in plastic bags on shelves.

SWAT teams spent a grueling seven hours in the Cascade Mountains foothills Friday morning, virtually crawling over terrain slick with mud from recent rains, before they found the bunker. A number of officers were treated intravenously for dehydration, and one broke his ankle, said sheriff's Sgt. Cindi West.

The officers appeared exhausted, their faces smeared with camouflage paint, as they rode down the mountain in sport-utility vehicles or armored carriers to be replaced by fresher teams.

SWAT officers who kept watch on the bunker through Friday night said they saw lights going on and off, and they believed its occupant had everything necessary to remain inside for a long time - including a generator, food, gas mask, bullet-resistant vest and guns.

Photographs found in Keller's home after they found his wife and daughter gave authorities an idea of where it was; in one picture that they enhanced, detectives could make out buildings in nearby North Bend. Combined with reports from alert hikers who remembered seeing his faded red pickup truck at the Rattlesnake Ridge trailhead, the sheriff's office sent experienced trackers to the area, where they found off-trail boot prints confirming their belief that he was somewhere on the ridge.

They could smell smoke from its woodstove before they found it.

Authorities pumped tear gas into the structure Friday, but it failed to flush the man out, either because it didn't penetrate deep enough into the structure or because the person had a gas mask.

Court documents described Keller as a loner who has a survivalist mentality and has been stockpiling supplies in the woods.

An arrest warrant issued Wednesday accuses Keller of two counts of first-degree murder and one count of first-degree arson; the home was set on fire after Lynnettee Keller, 41 and Kaylene were shot in the head.

Their bodies were found in their bedrooms April 23. The family cat and dog were also killed.

The fire at Keller's home was stopped before the house burned down, and authorities said they found seven gasoline cans placed in different areas of the home.

Kaylene's boyfriend told detectives that Peter Keller had shown him his gun collection and several large-caliber rifles and handguns, court documents said.

The boyfriend, who was not identified, said Kaylene had told him her father took long hikes on the weekends and was stockpiling supplies at a fort in the woods.

Peter Keller withdrew $6,200 from a bank last week and told one of his co-workers at a computer refurbishing store in Preston that he might not return, according to court documents.

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Earthquake rattles Southern California

AP  by CHRISTOPHER WEBERLOS ANGELES -- Some Southern Californians were shaken out of bed Saturday morning by a small earthquake that rattled homes across the Inland Empire region and caused buildings to sway in downtown Los Angeles.

The magnitude 3.8 earthquake struck at 8:07 a.m. The U.S. Geological Survey said it was centered about two miles northwest of Devore, in San Bernardino County. The quake was downgraded from an initial magnitude of 4.1.

"It felt like a sonic boom," said Letty Salgado, a server at Papa Tony's Diner in San Bernardino. "Everybody was startled. Customers all looked at each other, then went right back to their breakfasts. It was real quick."

A San Bernardino County Sheriff's dispatcher in nearby Rancho Cucamonga said the station shook for a few seconds, but there were no calls about damage or injuries.

A small 2.0 magnitude aftershock hit about a half-mile away about two minutes later, the USGS said. That was followed by a 1.8 magnitude shock at 8:14 a.m.

Dr. Lucy Jones with the USGS said the quake was located in an area where three faults come together. Early reports that the quake occurred on the San Andreas Fault were incorrect, Jones said.

"I was just sitting in my old chair when the house started shaking," recalled Frank Chavez of Crestline, a mountain town just east of the epicenter. "I looked at my wife and we both said, 'earthquake!'. It was no big deal. These get to be old hat if you live in California awhile."

Chavez said dishes rattled in the kitchen but nothing was damaged.

Some buildings swayed in downtown Los Angeles, about 60 miles to the west, and residents reported shaking along LA County's beaches.

Paul Harrington was reading in bed at his home in Hesperia, about 20 miles north of the epicenter, when he felt the quake hit.

"It started out as a little tremble, like a plane passing overhead. Then a few seconds later, there was a real jolt," Harrington said. "A few seconds after that there was another smaller jolt."

Harrington said he felt the shaking for several seconds. His home was not damaged.

The epicenter was approximately near the junction of the 15 and 215 freeways at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains below the Cajon Pass.

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sábado, 28 de abril de 2012

Betsey Johnson stores go bankrupt

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- Fashion designer Betsey Johnson is looking at more than a wardrobe change.

The chain of stores named after her is bankrupt, and most of her 63 boutiques will close.

Johnson, however, still has a lower price line of clothing at Macy's and other stores.

She and her daughter also plan to star in a reality TV show.

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Senate renews Violence Against Women Act

AP  LAURIE KELLMANWASHINGTON -- The Senate overcame election-year gender politics Thursday to pass a bill renewing the government's main domestic violence program.

The 68-31 vote marked the first time since the Violence Against Women Act first passed in 1994 that its renewal has drawn opposition in the Senate, reflecting the increasing polarization of the chamber and hair-trigger political sensitivities over women's issues in this presidential and congressional election year.

"In 2012, we should be beyond questioning the need for the Violence Against Women Act," Vice President Joe Biden said in a statement. He urged the House to act quickly so President Barack Obama can sign the renewal into law.

But the path there could be equally tricky. Majority Republicans are writing their own version, which is likely to resemble a GOP alternative widely rejected by the Senate.

Twice renewed without opposition in the Senate, the bill of programs to prevent domestic violence and sexual abuse ran headlong into the partisan warfare that has shut or slowed legislative business since the 2010 elections. Not helping smooth the way: the broader political fight for pivotal female voters and the Democrats' election-year narrative that accuses Republicans of waging a "war on women."

The bill would reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act for five years with funding of $659.3 million a year, down $136.5 million annually from the last act, which has expired. The money pays for such programs as legal assistance for victims, enforcement of protection orders, transitional housing and youth prevention programs.

Democrats sought to expand the law by adding protections certain to draw conservative opposition. One would explicitly name gays, lesbians and transgender people to the group of those protected under the law. Another would raise the cap on visas granted to abused legal and illegal immigrants from 10,000 to 15,000. A third would expand the authority of Native American officials to handle cases of abuse of Indian women by non-Indians.

The bill drew 61 co-sponsors, more than enough to block filibusters and set up a political dare to Republicans: Vote no, and you're waging a "war against women."

The strategy raised hackles among Republicans, who insisted they had women's interests at heart, too. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said the narrative was a distraction from issues Democrats would rather not discuss, such as the economy and gas prices.

"We face an abundance of hard choices," said McCain, the GOP's 2008 presidential nominee and a leading supporter of Republican hopeful Mitt Romney this year. "Divisive slogans and declaring of phony wars are intended to avoid those hard choices and to escape paying a political price for doing so."

To prove it, Republicans offered alternatives that would delete the references to gays, lesbians and transgender people, keep the cap on visas at its current level and allow tribal authorities to go to federal court for protective orders on behalf of abused Native American women.

But the Senate rejected the options overwhelmingly. And in the end, even its sponsor, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas and McCain, were among the 15 Republicans who voted for the final Democratic bill.

The 31 Republicans who voted no said they support the spirit of the act but had problems with the Democratic rewrite up for consideration.

Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., for example, said he opposed the bill in part because he believes abused women are best served by state and local governments.

And Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said he voted no because he believes the tribal provisions in the bill would be unconstitutional. Under the measure, Native American officials would be allowed to arrest, prosecute and imprison non-Indians, who cannot vote in tribal elections or have a say in crafting laws that could be used against him, Kyl said.

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Four shots fired at HISD bus with kids on board

See it on TV? Check here.HOUSTON -- HISD and Crime Stoppers are hoping a short video clip will help catch a criminal. The video shows what happened inside a school bus full of students when someone started shooting at it.

It happened last month on the frontage road of Highway 59 at Fondren Road in southwest Houston.

Investigators are hoping the public can help identify the shooter. A bullet struck near one of the windows on the bus. The close call left students and parents shaken.

It was a bus ride home Kirkland Jacobs won't forget.

"They were just shooting at us," Jacobs said.

"What was your reaction?" we asked.

"To duck."

Investigators are now releasing video from the bus of what happened with the hopes of catching the person responsible.

"It was kind of scary," Jacobs said.

HISD says the bus left Beechnut Academy with about 26 students on board on March 27. District police say some students on the bus flashed gang signs at someone walking on the street. That person then pulled a gun and fired at the bus on the Southwest Freeway Feeder near Bellaire.

Shavonne Hopper was trying to find her son that day.

"It's sad that children, because it was a group of teenagers right, are walking around like this is the wild, wild west ready to shoot at innocent buses," she said.

She called different bus barns after learning the bus had been involved in some type of incident.

"I'm so grateful that nothing happened to him," Hopper said.

One student had minor cuts from broken glass from a shattered window. The close call left many of the students shaken.

"All I hope is they catch whoever did it and why would you shoot at us if we are already in alternative school?" Beechnut Academy sophomore Michelle Rhodes said. "Maybe if the kids would have been sitting down and doing what they were supposed to, none of that would have happened. If I'd lose my life, my mom would have been crying hard -- anybody could have lost their life but I thank God we didn't."

If you have any information on the bus shooting you are asked to call Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS. You can remain anonymous and claim up to $5,000 in reward money.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Ex-Edwards aide to retake the stand for 5th day

See it on TV? Check here.AP  MICHAEL BIESECKERGREENSBORO, N.C. -- Opposing lawyers in the John Edwards trial wrangled Friday over whether to allow as evidence a sex tape of the former presidential candidate and allegations of an extramarital affair involving an ex-aide who is the prosecution's chief witness.

Prosecutors objected when a defense lawyer for Edwards asked former aide and confidante Andrew Young whether he had threatened to release a "private video" to expose Edwards' affair with Rielle Hunter.

U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Eagles instructed Edwards lawyer Abbe Lowell to proceed with his cross-examination of Young without mentioning the tape, saying she would rule whether it was admissible later Friday.

Hunter sued Young in state court two years ago over ownership of the sex tape and other personal items in Young's possession. That civil suit was settled earlier this year with an agreement to destroy all copies of the tape, though there are suggestions in court documents that federal investigators may still have a copy.

Defense attorneys had no intention of showing the tape to the jury, but wanted to mention it in the context of the allegation that Young threatened Edwards.

Young was the first witness called by prosecutors after opening statements Monday and he has remained on the stand all week. His testimony is essential to making the government's case that Edwards directed a conspiracy to use nearly $1 million in secret payments from two political donors to help hide his pregnant mistress as he sought the White House in 2008. Edwards denies knowing about the money and has pleaded not guilty.

On the witness stand, Young has admitted much of the money at issue in the case was siphoned off to pay his family's personal expenses, including the construction of his $1.5 million home, and not to buy Hunter's silence.

Later, Lowell questioned Young about his contacting three witnesses in the case following the release of the defense's witness list. Despite having been instructed by prosecutors not to contact any other witnesses, Young admitted he called two men and a woman.

Without the jury present Monday, Judge Eagles told the defense it could mention Young had called the witnesses in opening statements, but barred Edwards' lawyers from characterizing the contact as "witness tampering" or mentioning that Young had previously had a "one-night stand" with one of the witnesses.

On Friday, Lowell asked Young what he had asked the woman when he called.

"It was for a personal issue, sir," Young replied.

Asked how the woman described her potential testimony, Young replied that she said she would tell the truth. That prompted Lowell to ask Young if he responded by telling her that the truth would "mess up everything."

Young said he may have said that, but couldn't recall.

Concerned about the direction of the testimony, Eagles dismissed the jury and broke for lunch early.

Both Young and the female staffer in question, who was named in court, are married. Young's wife, Cheri, is expected to be called to the witness stand after her husband completes his testimony.

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Stray puppy 'Cactus Jack' gets new home

  Eyewitness NewsARIZONA (WABC) -- A stray puppy in Arizona that tugged at heartstrings after getting himself into a sticky situation now has a new home.

The 8-week-old Yorkie terrier mix received worldwide attention when pictures came out showing cactus needles all over his body.

The removed needles filled a 5- gallon bucket.

He's now been named Cactus Jack.

The Humane Society says 73 people entered a lottery to adopt Jack after seeing his story.

One lucky woman has now welcomed Jack into her home.

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Prince William, Kate Middleton eye anniversary


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TSA defends pat down of 4-year-old at Kansas airport

AP  ROXANA HEGEMANKANSAS -- The grandmother of a 4-year-old girl who became hysterical during a security screening at a Kansas airport said Wednesday that the child was forced to undergo a pat-down after hugging her, with security agents yelling and calling the crying girl an uncooperative suspect.

The incident has been garnering increasing media and online attention since the child's mother, Michelle Brademeyer of Montana, detailed the ordeal in a public Facebook post last week. The Transportation Security Administration is defending its agents, despite new procedures aimed at reducing pat-downs of children.

The child's grandmother, Lori Croft, told The Associated Press that Brademeyer and her daughter, Isabella, initially passed through security at the Wichita airport without incident. The girl then ran over to briefly hug Croft, who was awaiting a pat-down after tripping the alarm, and that's when TSA agents insisted the girl undergo a physical pat-down.

Isabella had just learned about "stranger danger" at school, her grandmother said, adding that the girl was afraid and unsure about what was going on.

"She started to cry, saying 'No I don't want to,' and when we tried talking to her she ran," Croft said. "They yelled, 'We are going to shut down the airport if you don't grab her.'" But she said the family's main concern was the lack of understanding from TSA agents that they were dealing with a 4-year-old child, not a terror suspect.

"There was no common sense and there was no compassion," Croft said. "That was our biggest fault with the whole thing - not that they are following security procedures, because I understand that they have to do that."

Brademeyer, of Missoula, Mont., wrote a public Facebook post last week about the April 15 incident, claiming TSA treated her daughter "no better than if she had been a terrorist." The posting was taken down Wednesday. Another post said the family had filed formal complaints with the TSA and the airport.

The TSA released a statement Tuesday saying it explained to the family why additional security procedures were necessary and that agents didn't suspect or suggest the child was carrying a firearm.

"TSA has reviewed the incident and determined that our officers followed proper screening procedures in conducting a modified pat-down on the child," the agency said.

The statement noted that the agency recently implemented modified screening procedures for children age 12 and younger to further reduce the need for pat-downs of children, such as multiple passes through a metal detector and advanced imaging technology.

"These changes in protocol will ultimately reduce - though not eliminate - pat-downs of children," the statement said. "In this case, however, the child had completed screening but had contact with another member of her family who had not completed the screening process."

U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, a Montana Democrat, pressed the TSA for more information Wednesday. Tester, a member of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said he was concerned the TSA went too far.

"I am a staunch advocate for effective transportation security, but I'm also a strong advocate for common sense and the freedoms we enjoy as Americans," Tester wrote to TSA Administrator John Pistole. "Any report of abuse of the power entrusted to officers of the TSA is especially concerning - especially if it involves children."

In a phone interview from her home in Fountain Valley, Calif., Croft said Brademeyer tried to no avail to get TSA agents to use a wand on the frightened girl or allow her to walk through the metal detector again. She also said TSA agents wanted to screen her granddaughter alone in a separate room.

"She was kicking and screaming and fighting and in hysterics," Croft said. "At that point my daughter ran up to her against TSA's orders because she said, 'My daughter is terrified, I can't leave her.'" The incident went on for maybe 10 minutes, until a manager came in and allowed agents to pat the girl down while she was screaming but being held by her mother. The family was then allowed to go to their next gate with a TSA agent following them.

Croft said that for the first few nights after coming home, Isabelle had nightmares and talked about kidnappers. She said TSA agents had shouted at the girl, telling her to calm down and saying the suspect wasn't cooperating.

"To a 4-year-old's perspective that's what it was to her because they didn't explain anything and she did not know what was going on," Croft said. "She saw people grabbing at her and raising their voices. To her, someone was trying to kidnap her or harm her in some way."

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Bank Forgives Dead Student's Loan After 6 Years

Six years after the death of Christopher Bryski, a 23-year-old student at Rutgers University, Key Bank has agreed to forgive his student loan. But Bryski's family is not stopping there: It's now fighting to change the laws in the hope of sparing others the trauma it endured as lenders continued to hound it for payment on its dead son's debts.

Christopher Bysksi died on July 16, 2006, after sustaining a traumatic brain injury in a fall that left him in a coma for two years.

Because his father had co-signed his student loan from Key Bank, he was obligated to continue to make payments under the terms of the private loan agreement. He paid more than $20,000 of the $50,000 debt, coming out of retirement to make the monthly payments, according to Ryan Bryski, 34, Christopher's brother.

But Ryan Bryski, an Air Force veteran, said various lenders continued to call the family and ask to speak to Christopher, despite the family informing them of, first, Christopher's vegetative state, and later, his death.

Bryski said the family lawyer sent "threatening letters" to two credit card companies to put an end to the continual postal mail, always addressed to Christopher, and phone calls requesting payment. Bryski said the credit card companies eventually forgave those debts. And Christopher's student loan from Sallie Mae was forgiven upon his death, according to the federal lender's policies.

But Key Bank, which held the private student loan, ignored requests to pardon the loan, Bryski said.

On April 18, the family started a petition on Change.org after the online petitioning platform contacted the Bryskis. With a petition signed by more than 81,000 individuals requesting to "discharge" the student loan debt, bank executives reached out to the family on April 23 and a settlement was reached on Wednesday, according to Megan Lubin, communications manager at Change.org. Change.org was also behind the petition that got Bank of America to cancel its proposed $5 debit card usage fee.

"My family is very grateful for Key Bank finally contacting us and doing the right thing," Bryski told ABC News. "It's just unfortunate it took eight years and 80,000 signatures to get their attention."

"First and foremost, we are so sorry for the tragic loss of Christopher Bryski," David Reavis, a spokesman for Key Bank, said in a statement.

The bank said that, by law, it could not comment on matters involving an individual client or clients, but that it "regularly and continually reviews its practices, policies and procedures to ensure they are aligned with best practices and a constantly changing environment.

"Going forward, we will evaluate any similar situation involving a deceased student with outstanding loans – and we sincerely hope there are none – on a case-by-case basis," the bank's statement read.

Though the family is relieved that its own ordeal has been resolved and a bill has been introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives proposing more transparency for families who co-sign loans, Bryski is still hoping for change in other areas of death and disability policies of financial service companies. The family has also set up a website to provide updates about some of these issues.

"I asked myself what my brother would do. If he had the opportunity to help other people even if it didn't help him, he absolutely would. He was always helping others," said Bryski. "It's unfortunate that we lost him so young."


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Student banned from prom because she has no date

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsPENNSYLVANIA (WABC) -- A Catholic high school student in Pennsylvania has been banned from attending the prom because she does not have a date.

Amanda Dougherty had already shelled out nearly $1,000 on a prom dress, shoes and tickets.

But when her date suddenly backed out, she was told by the school that she could not go alone.

A rule by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia bans students from attending the dance without a date.

Dougherty is fighting to get the policy changed.

"For them to say that we're not good enough to go unless we have a guy standing next to us, it's just kind of sickening," she said.

"Amanda has been waiting for this for two years," her dad, Jack Dougherty, said. "To not be able to go. I feel horrible."

The school released a statement saying, in part: "Our high schools offer numerous dances and events throughout the year where dates are not required, but we view the prom as a special social event where a date is required to attend."

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Obama kicks off campaign with two rallies

ap Barack Obama jt 120421 wblog Swing State Scuffle (The Note) Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo

By MICHAEL FALCONE (@michaelpfalcone) and AMY WALTER (@amyewalter)

NOTABLES:

BATTLE FOR THE BATTLEGROUNDS:  As Team Obama announced the president’s first two official campaign rallies of 2012 — in Ohio and Virginia next weekend — the message from Chicago to Boston is simple: Congrats on winning that primary, Mitt Romney, now welcome to the NFL. http://abcn.ws/JApNsgNOT ON OUR DIME. Yesterday, the Republican National Committee filed a formal complaint with the Government Accountability Office, accusing President Obama of misusing taxpayer dollars to hold campaign events masquerading as official presidential trips. The White House fought back, ABC’s Jake Tapper reports: http://abcn.ws/IdO5afFIRE AND VICE: Vice President Joe Biden will talk about “keeping our fellow citizens safe and our nation secure” in New York City today. “On this fundamental issue,” Biden will say, the contrast between President Obama’s record and Governor Romney’s rhetoric could not be greater.” Preview of his speech below.NOTE IT! In today’s virtual roundtable, ABC’s Rick Klein on President Obama’s re-election kick-off, Amy Walter on the end of Candidate Newt and Jonathan Karl on why one salacious Capitol Hill yarn may be too good to be true.

THE NOTE:

With the general election now officially upon us, President Obama and his campaign team are ready to rip that microphone right out of Mitt Romney’s hands.

“The monologue is over,” Obama campaign manager Jim Messina said on a conference call with reporters yesterday, previewing the president’s first two public campaign events of 2012 next weekend.

“Now he has to put his record and agenda up against the president’s,” Messina said of Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee, “and we look forward to the debate.”

The Obama campaign picked Ohio and Virginia to formally kick-off their general election effort next Saturday with rallies in both places featuring the President and First Lady.

It’s particularly telling that the president will be heading to Columbus and Richmond for these rallies.  Both are key areas for Obama to carry.  Both are swing counties that went overwhelmingly for Obama in 2008, but swung back to GOP post-2008.

In 2008, Obama won Henrico County, which includes Richmond, with 55 percent of the vote. A year later, GOP Gov. Bob McDonnell carried the county by 56 percent.

Obama carried Franklin County, Ohio, which includes Columbus, in 2008. Two years later, Rob Portman won the county in his Senate race.

The evident frailty of the president’s base means a tough road to November.

NOTED: As for whether the May 5 events mean Obama is flipping the switch on campaign mode, ABC’s Devin Dwyer notes that campaign manager Jim Messina said it would continue to be a gradual transition that balances the demands of the presidency. “This will be a ramp up, not a zero-to-60 moment,” he said. “So, we won’t start doing a bunch of these rallies. These will be the first two, and we’ll have more to come.” http://abcn.ws/JApNsg

VIDEO OF THE DAY: President Obama and Mitt Romney may agree on student loan interest rates, but listen to their starkly different advice to college students. ABC’s David Muir reported for “World News” on the dueling messages coming from the two campaigns. Muir says to expect both sides to keep hammering away at this issue at the race continues. WATCH: http://abcn.ws/Infh2S

NOTE IT!

ABC’s RICK KLEIN: Team Obama is declaring that the “monologue is over.” In that case, the dialogue that’s about to begin will seem familiar — the re-election bid is starting with President Obama’s strengths, with huge, boisterous rallies scheduled for next weekend. But familiarity may breed comfort for the Romney campaign. Remember, Mitt Romney doesn’t care if you like Barack Obama, so long as you don’t for him.

ABC’s AMY WALTER: Forget the huge debt, his inability to capitalize off his big win in South Carolina or his penguin bite. The biggest disappointment for Gingrich had to be the fact that the man who got into the race to infuse it with “big ideas” will only be remembered for his talk of moon colonies. Before this race began in earnest, many smart GOP strategists were convinced that Newt would at least inject some smart ideas and important policy discussion into the contest. In the end, the only thing he managed to trademark was #250gas.

ABC’s JONATHAN KARL on the so-called ‘Girls Gone Wild’ internship on Capitol Hill: Why “an eye-popping story about a soft-core pornographer and a U.S. Senate office may be too good to be true.” http://abcn.ws/IEAZB8

ROMNEY COUNTER-PROGRAMMING. As word of the president’s trip to the two battleground states of Ohio and Virginia leaked out, the Romney campaign deployed two of their surrogates (and potential vice presidential contenders) to do some early pre-butting:

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell: “In less than two weeks, President Obama will bring his failed policies and broken promises to Virginia. His policies have taken our country in the wrong direction, and Virginia and the rest of the nation can’t afford four more years of the same. Mitt Romney is a results-oriented conservative with a bold plan to create jobs, shrink government, and reduce our debt burden.”

Ohio Sen. Rob Portman: “After three and a half years, it is clear that President Obama does not have a plan to get spending under control or our economy back on track. In less than two weeks, President Obama will be in Columbus, where he will argue for four more years of the same failed policies that have produced record unemployment and skyrocketing gas prices.”

BIDEN WARNS OF ROMNEY’S ‘BACK TO THE FUTURE’ FOREIGN POLICY APPROACH. Vice President Joe Biden will today give his fifth in a series of campaign issue speeches, drawing contrasts with Mitt Romney on foreign policy, ABC’s Devin Dwyer notes. In excerpts of the speech, to be given this morning at New York University, Biden boils down the administration’s record to a “bumper sticker” slogan: “Osama bin Laden is dead, General Motors is alive,” he says. He will hit Romney for “counting on our collective amnesia” to return to policies of Obama’s predecessor. “Americans know that we cannot afford to go back to the future.  Back to a foreign policy that would have America go it alone… shout to the world you’re either with us or against us… lash out first and ask the hard questions later, if at all… isolate America instead of our enemies…waste hundreds of billions of dollars and risk thousands of American lives on an unnecessary war… and see the world through a Cold War prism that is totally out of touch with our times.”

In addition, the Obama campaign released a new web video this morning calling Romney’s foreign policy record into question. The message, according to the campaign: “Mitt Romney’s foreign policy agenda is stuck in the last century and stands in stark contrast to President Obama’s forward-looking vision.” WATCH: http://bit.ly/JB8GGP

REPUBLICANS ACCUSE OBAMA OF MISUSING TAXPAYER DOLLARS. ABC’s Jake Tapper reports: In response to the Republican National Committee earlier today filing a formal complaint with the Government Accountability Office and the comptroller general alleging that the Obama campaign “has been cheating the American taxpayer by using taxpayer dollars to fund their general election efforts,” White House spokesman Eric Schultz asserted that the president’s travel “has been part of the president’s official responsibility.” RNC Chairman Reince Priebus alleged in his letter, “Throughout his administration, but particularly in recent weeks, President Obama has been passing off campaign travel as ‘official events,’ thereby allowing taxpayers, rather than his campaign, to pay for his reelection efforts. Given the recent excesses, waste, and abuse uncovered in the General Services Administration, the GAO should be particularly sensitive to misuse of taxpayer dollars.” http://abcn.ws/IdO5af

But an RNC official e-mails The Note: “The difference between Obama and other presidents who have done it: he promised to do things differently and he’s done nearly twice as many fundraisers/political events in 3.5 years than Bush did in 8 years.”

THE BUZZ

with ABC’s Christopher Good (@c_good)

ANN ROMNEY’S MS SCARE ON THE TRAIL. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1998, Ann Romney tells Entertainment Tonight how her condition flared before Super Tuesday, ABC’s Shushannah Walshe reports: “There have been some days, like the day before Super Tuesday, I was quite fatigued and I knew I couldn’t quit. I didn’t tell anybody I was tired … I just kept going, I kept going. I had a little bit of a scare … What happens with me is that I start to almost lose my words. I almost can’t think. I can’t get my words out. I start to stumble a little bit and so those things were happening and I thought, ‘Uh oh, big trouble.’” http://abcn.ws/JArwO6

NEWT’S ENDGAME. The candidate will make his exit from the 2012 race on Tuesday, ABC’s Elicia Dover and Amy Bingham confirm: “The former House speaker will make the announcement from Washington D.C., where he will be in town for the White House Correspondents Association dinner this weekend. It is ‘highly likely’ Gingrich will endorse Mitt Romney during Tuesday’s announcement, a source close to the campaign said. … ‘I do think it’s pretty clear that Gov. Romney is ultimately going to be the nominee,’ Gingrich said during a campaign stop at Georgio’s restaurant in Cramerton, North Carolina. ‘And we’re going to do everything we can make sure that he is in fact effective, and that we as a team are effective both in winning this Fall and then, frankly, in governing.’” http://abcn.ws/IeEekv

PERRY FLIPS TO ROMNEY. The two were once bitter rivals, but ABC’s Arlette Saenz has the statement on Romney from the Texas governor and former GOP presidential candidate: “Mitt Romney has earned the Republican Presidential nomination through hard-work, a strong organization, and disciplined message of restoring America after nearly four years of failed job-killing policies from President Obama and his administration … So today I join the many conservative Republicans across the nation in endorsing Mitt Romney for President and pledge to him, my constituents and the Republican Party.” http://abcn.ws/KbThrm

RUBIO: TALK TO IRAN, TAKE DOWN ASSAD. From Sen. Marco Rubio’s foreign-policy speech, delivered Wednesday at the Brookings Institution amid VP speculation: “‘Preferably, we can succeed through coercive means short of military force. We should be open to negotiations with Iran. But always remember that they should not be deemed a success when they only lead to further negotiations. Stronger pressure shouldn’t be postponed in the expectation our forbearance will encourage Iran to act in good faith. Nothing in our experience with Iran suggests it considers such gestures as anything other than a lack of resolve on our part,” Rubio said. “Unfortunately, if all else fails, preventing a nuclear Iran may tragically require a military solution.’ Rubio called for a more active role in taking down the government of Bashar Assad in Syria, which he believes would be ‘a significant blow to Iran’s ambitions.’” http://abcn.ws/IdsxdU

NOTED: MISSING PAGE. Rubio’s lone flub: he forgot the last page to his speech. Sen. Joe Lieberman, who introduced Rubio, handed it to him. http://abcn.ws/Ioqv6d

INTEREST GROUPS FACE OFF IN INDIANA. Outside groups are piling onto the GOP primary between Sen. Richard Lugar and state Treasurer Richard Mourdock, the latest being the Young Guns Network, a group founded by former Eric Cantor aides. “Nearly $2.2 million has  been spent by a total of eight groups formed outside Indiana. … Groups supporting Mourdock have spent a total of nearly $1.5 million, while a handful of groups have come to Lugar’s aid, spending nearly $800,000 in response. … YG Network, a Virginia-based 501(c)4 group formed by former aides to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, weighed in on Wednesday with a $104,000 mailer supporting Lugar. The spending was part of a larger energy-issue campaign involving other candidates.” http://abcn.ws/JanHJJ

HOUSE TO VOTE ON STUDENT LOAN RATES FRIDAY. Republicans have gotten on board with extending the current 3.4-percent interest rate on student loans, and the question now becomes how to pay for it. “House Speaker John Boehner announced today that the House of Representatives will vote Friday to extend the current student loan interest rate of 3.4 percent for one year, just months before current law is set to double the rate. … ‘We will pay for this by taking money from one of the slush funds in the president’s health care law,” Boehner, R-Ohio, said as he explained how the cost of the bill would be paid for. ‘This is this prevention of public health slush fund that was put into the bill by one of the senators from Iowa, I believe.’” http://abcn.ws/Ih6jsh

WILL CONSERVATIVE JUSTICES BACK THE ARIZONA IMMIGRATION LAW? ABC’s Ariane de Vogue reports that Justices John Roberts and Antonin Scalia seem fine with the most controversial portion of SB 1070. “Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito zeroed in on one blocked provision of S.B. 1070 that requires Arizona law enforcement to ask someone they stop for their papers proving they are in the country legally if the officer has a reasonable suspicion that those individuals are in the country illegally. Law enforcement would later confer with the federal government on the legal status. Roberts indicated that provision of the Arizona law does not interfere with federal law, but only notifies the federal government that someone is in the country illegally.” http://abcn.ws/JGK1ia

NEVER TOO EARLY: 2012 PREVIEW: CLINTON VS. CUOMO? Politico’s Maggie Haberman opens the speculation, looking at the Democratic Party’s top two prospects: “Publicly and privately, Clinton has discussed how exhausted she is and how much she looks forward to taking a rest from public life when she leaves the Obama administration. She’s also told friends that she’s not starstruck by her own poll numbers, which currently show her as the most popular national figure around. Yet future aspirations are a question, a number of sources close to Hillaryland say, that she is not closed off from, given how high she’s soaring now and how close she came four years ago to being the Democratic nominee. If Clinton ran, not everyone thinks Cuomo would be cowed — or that Clinton would be able to clear the field, something she wasn’t able to pull off four years ago when she was the clear early favorite.” http://politi.co/IMZVWK

WHO’S TWEETING?

@AlexConant: Must read Washingon Post story about the WH’s political response to Sen. Rubio’s Dream Act alternative:http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/marco-rubios-dream-act-alternative-a-challenge-for-obama-on-illegal-immigration/2012/04/25/gIQA5yqxhT_story.html?hpid=z2

@HotlineJosh: This Michael Gerson column is ahead-of-the-curvehttp://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/apr/25/a-new-blueprint-for-conservatism/

@RealClearScott: Romney bundlers see renewed enthusiasm among NYC-area donors:http://bit.ly/JTFU3V

@SJLorber: MT @shiratoeplitz@MyManMitch made case to @RollCall yesterday: no one shud say no to VP offer. So don’t ask him, OK?http://roll.cl/Iq7a5C

@ZekeJMiller: Happy Birthday @emilyrs!

POLITICAL RADAR

Vice President Joe Biden will deliver remarks on the president’s commitment to keeping America safe and our nation secure at NYU School of Law this morning.

Mitt Romney holds fundraising events in New York City.

Newt Gingrich makes campaign stops throughout North Carolina.

Ron Paul is in Austin, Tex. And attends a luncheon and town hall meeting at the University of Texas at Austin.

Rep. Paul Ryan delivers “America’s Enduring Promise” lecture at the Georgetown Public Policy Institute in Washington, DC. At 10 a.m.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie holds a town hall meeting in Springfield, NJ at 10:30 a.m.

 Check out The Note’s Futures Calendar: http://abcn.ws/ZI9gV

* Get The Note delivered to your inbox every day.

* For breaking political news and analysis check out The Note blog: http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/and ABCNews.com/Politics: http://abcnews.com/politics


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Economic growth slows in the first quarter

AP  by CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABERWASHINGTON -- The U.S. economy grew more slowly in the first three months of this year. Governments spent less, and businesses cut back on investment. But consumers spent at the fastest pace in more than a year.

The result suggests that the economy will continue to expand, slowly but steadily.

The Commerce Department estimated Friday that the economy grew at an annual rate of 2.2 percent in the January-March quarter, compared with a 3 percent rate in the final quarter of 2011. But growth is expected to rebound to around 3 percent for all of 2012 as stronger job growth spurs more consumer spending.

Consumer spending accelerated to an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the first quarter. The strength came from a second robust quarter of growth in auto purchases.

Here's what The Associated Press' reporters are finding:

A GLASS HALF-FULL

Is the weaker first-quarter growth worth worrying about?

Not according to Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at the Smith School of Business at California State University. He thinks the economy will be boosted this year by a more confident consumer as hiring grows and business investment strengthens.

Sohn expects growth this year of 2.5 percent, better than last year's 1.7 percent.

"The economy is firmly on a growth trajectory," Sohn says. "The first-quarter slowdown will be temporary."

SPENDING WARMS UP...

A warm winter probably pulled some consumer spending into the January-March quarter that would normally have occurred this quarter. Auto sales, for example, accounted for nearly 30 percent of growth last quarter. Many car buyers probably came out earlier than usual.

Without autos, growth would have been about 1.5 percent.

"The second quarter won't have the advantage of unseasonably warm weather that likely goosed auto sales," says Beata Caranci, deputy chief economist at TD Economics.

... ON THE OTHER HAND

The warmer weather also sapped strength from the economy: Americans spent less on utilities from January through March for a second straight quarter.

That reduced growth.

Perhaps a hot summer will add to growth later this year as Americans crank up their air conditioners.

WEAK GROWTH, WEAK HIRING

How weak was the economy's 2.2 percent growth rate from January through March? It depends.

A growth rate of 2.5 percent or higher is good when the economy is healthy. But not at a time of high unemployment.

With 12.7 million people unemployed, today's economy needs much faster growth to boost hiring. Growth would have to be roughly 4 percent for a full year to lower the unemployment rate, now 8.2 percent, by 1 percentage point.

U.S. ECONOMY STILL TOPS

Even when growth is tepid, as it was last quarter, the dollar figure for the U.S. economy exceeds that of any other country's.

Adjusted for inflation and seasonal factors, first-quarter output weighed in at an annual rate of $13.5 trillion.

At its lowest point during the Great Recession, the figure was $12.6 trillion.

The size of the world's second-largest economy, China's, is roughly $11.3 trillion.

A DIFFERENT GAUGE OF GROWTH

The drop from a 3 percent growth rate in the October-December quarter to 2.2 percent last quarter partly reflected a slower pace of restocking by businesses.

Such inventory building had contributed more than half the growth in the final three months of 2011. But last quarter, it contributed less than one-third.

Many economists exclude inventories to better gauge the economy's underlying strength. By that measure, the output of goods and services grew at an annual rate of 1.6 percent last quarter - up from a 1.1 percent increase in the fourth quarter.

PRESSURE ON CONGRESS

There may be a bright side to the weaker-than-expected growth in the January-March quarter: It could push Congress to reach a budget deal before the end of the year.

Otherwise, automatic tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to start Jan. 1 would send the nation over a "fiscal cliff" and drastically weaken economic growth, according to Bank of America.

"Lawmakers need a reminder that they must reduce the fiscal drag," says Ryan Sweet, senior economist at Moody's Analytics.

SAVING LESS OF WHAT WE EARN

The increase in consumer spending comes with a caveat: People spent more in part because they socked away less.

After-tax income grew at an annual rate of 2.8 percent from January through March. That was about the same pace as in the final three months of last year.

But over the same period, the savings rate fell to 3.9 percent of after-tax income, down from 4.5 percent.

Economists worry that people won't keep spending more unless their income grows.

HOUSING PERKING UP

One surprising bright spot in the first quarter's data: housing.

Spending on home construction and renovations rose by the most in nearly two years. Some of that gain was likely fueled by the warm winter. Many construction projects are usually put on hold when building sites are covered with snow and ice. That didn't happen so much this winter.

Housing is expected to contribute to growth this year for the first time since 2005.

FIRST DRAFT OF HISTORY

Friday's GDP report is just the initial estimate for first-quarter economic output. As is customary, the government will update its estimate in May and June.

And then in July, the first-quarter numbers will be tweaked yet again. That's when the government will revise its estimates of growth from 2009 through the first quarter of this year.

Last year, figures on incomes and saving were revised to show that Americans earned and saved more than previously estimated. Some economists think the current numbers on savings and income will also be revised higher later this year.

BETTER THAN OVERSEAS

As disappointing as the first-quarter numbers were, the U.S. economy still looks a lot stronger than most of the rest of the developed world. It's expected to grow at least 2.5 percent for the full year.

By contrast, Britain's economy will only grow 0.8 percent and Japan's about 2 percent, according to forecasts from the International Monetary Fund. Things are even worse in Europe. The 17 countries that use the euro as their currency are expected to see growth shrink 0.3 percent.

"Growth is an increasingly rare commodity in the global economy, but the US has got it," says Jason Conibear of Cambridge Mercantile, which specializes in trading currencies.

NOT FAST ENOUGH

This was the 11th quarter since the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009. The fastest rate of economic growth has been 3.9 percent in the first quarter of 2010. Normally, a much bigger bounce would follow a deep recession like the one the United States sank into in December 2007.

When the economy emerged from the recession of 1981-1982, for instance, growth hit an 8 percent annual pace for four straight quarters in 1983 and 1984.

THE WEIGHT OF GOVERNMENT

Government spending cuts are weighing on the U.S. economy in a way that hasn't been seen in generations. Those cuts have reduced growth for six straight quarters - the longest stretch since 1955.

Reduced government spending subtracted 0.6 percentage point from the first quarter's growth.

That drag may ease the rest of this year. Defense spending fell sharply in the past two quarters, which isn't likely to continue. And state tax revenue is recovering, closing budget gaps.

"It's hard for the economy to accelerate when the government has its foot on the brake," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors.

WILL FED INTERVENE?

The Federal Reserve might have to rethink its forecasts and its policies, economists say. One economist thinks the Fed is now more likely to pursue a third round of bond purchases to try to push down long-term interest rates to stimulate the economy.

It's "back on the table," says Bernard Baumohl of the Economic Outlook Group.

WHY IT MATTERS

The U.S. gross domestic product is the bedrock of the economy. It measures the output of all goods and services produced in the United States, from cars to electricity to manicures. GDP growth drives job creation, pay, corporate profits and stock prices.

---
AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

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