Saturday, June 22, 2013

Ex-Border Patrol agents get at least 30 years

SAN DIEGO (AP) ? Two brothers who worked as Border Patrol agents were sentenced to at least 30 years in prison each for smuggling hundreds of immigrants into the United States, crimes that the judge termed a threat to national security.

U.S. District Court Judge John Houston sentenced Raul Villarreal on Friday to 35 years in prison for being the ring leader and ordered him to pay a $250,000 fine. His brother, Fidel Villarreal, was sentenced to 30 years for managing the illicit business.

The sentences are among the longest given to border law enforcement officials for corruption.

Houston said he gave the severe sentences to deter other agents who have been entrusted by the American people to protect the border. The judge called their smuggling operation "disgusting."

Prosecutors said Raul Villarreal ? who made television appearances as an agency spokesman and once played the role of a smuggler in a public service ad ? recruited his brother to his ring. The veteran agents worked in cahoots with a corrupt Tijuana police officer and a network of others, including foot guides and drivers.

The agents would abandon their job duties manning the border to transport the migrants in Border Patrol vehicles ? sometimes several times a day from the Mexican city of Tijuana to a rugged mountainous area along the California border, federal officials said. Prosecutors said they smuggled in as many as 1,000 Mexicans and Brazilians; the judge put the figure at more than 500.

The ring smuggled in immigrants in groups of 10 and charged them about $10,000 per group, said prosecutors who alleged the brothers made more than $1 million from the scheme. The judge put the figure closer to $700,000.

"This long-term guaranteed method of bringing aliens into the United States was disgusting, pervasive and impacted significantly the national interest," Houston told the court before handing down their sentences.

Raul Villarreal thanked the court for giving him a "good trial, a fair trial." His brother echoed that. They did not show any emotion when the sentences were announced.

The federal probe began in May 2005 when an informant tipped off the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Investigators installed cameras in areas where migrants were dropped off, planted recording devices and placed tracking instruments on Border Patrol vehicles. They also trailed the ring's smuggling operations by airplane.

Prosecutors said when the brothers learned they were being investigated in June 2006, they quit their jobs and fled to Tijuana.

Two years later, the brothers were arrested there and extradited to the U.S. where they were charged with human smuggling, witness tampering and bribery.

Raul Villarreal's attorney, David Nick, had argued the prosecution's witnesses were not credible and surveillance yielded no evidence his client was the ring leader.

Fidel's attorney, Zenia Gilg, echoed that argument, saying the prosecution's case rested largely on two alleged accomplices who were promised leniency for testifying and "inconsistent statements" from migrants.

Gilg said an appeal will be filed.

"I was just disappointed," Gilg said after the sentencing. "The one thing I'm troubled by is the credibility that was given to the government's lead witness (an alleged smuggler). I felt the jury had rejected everything he said."

The Border Patrol has suffered a string of such embarrassments since doubling its size in less than a decade, including the case of an agent who pleaded guilty in April to smuggling marijuana while on duty along the Arizona-Mexico border.

But prosecutors and Judge Houston said the Villarreal case stands out as being among the worst corruption cases.

"They used their positions as Border Patrol agents to line their pockets," Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy Salel said, adding later: "Unlike other corruption cases where agents have been led astray to join an organization, these agents created the organization. They called the shots. They were the ring leaders."

The defense asked the judge to request that the brothers be locked up at the same prison, but Houston declined.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-border-patrol-agents-least-30-years-005107685.html

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Wisconsin lawmakers approve $68 billion state budget

By Brendan O'Brien

MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - Wisconsin lawmakers approved on Friday a two-year spending package that featured several fiscally conservative provisions, including an income tax cut, a broadening of the state's educational voucher program and a rejection of federal funds for Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act.

The Republican-led state Senate passed the $68 billion budget with a 17-16 vote shortly after midnight on Friday, sending the legislation to Republican Governor Scott Walker, who is expected to sign it.

The proposed budget, which contained a $650 million income tax cut over the next two years, was approved by the Republican-led Assembly with a 55-42 vote on Wednesday.

"We believe it will lead to generating more jobs and creating more revenue," said Republican Senator Alberta Darling on Thursday as the budget was debated.

"This budget positions us to live within our means, grow the economy (and) to hold the line on taxes."

Democrats argued that the spending plan fell short of addressing the state's lagging job growth and helping those living in or near poverty.

"If you are poor, this is a punishing budget," said Democrat Senator Jon Erpenbach.

He said during his floor speech on Thursday that Wisconsin ranked 44th in the United States in job growth in 2012.

"This budget doesn't help the majority of Wisconsinites, it hurts the majority of Wisconsinites."

The budget expands the educational voucher program statewide, which is currently only available in Racine and Milwaukee.

The provision allows 500 students, whose families earn less than 185 percent of the federal poverty line, to use publicly-funded vouchers to attend private schools throughout the state in 2013-14, and 1,000 students in subsequent years.

The legislation also formalizes Walker's refusal to expand BadgerCare, the state's Medicaid program and, as a result, rejects federal money made available by the Affordable Care Act.

The state would have received $4.2 billion during the next five years in federal money if it expanded BadgerCare, according to HealthWatch Wisconsin, an organization that analyzes health care policy.

The budget legislation also moves about 87,000 recipients off the program and into the health insurance marketplace created by the Affordable Care Act and makes about 82,000 childless adults who are under the federal poverty line eligible for BadgerCare.

A tuition freeze throughout the University of Wisconsin system, a provision giving the governor more latitude to sell state property and legalizing bail bondmen are also part of the spending plan.

(Reporting By Brendan O'Brien)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wisconsin-lawmakers-approve-68-billion-state-budget-061817382.html

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Instagram Video First Look: Good for People, Better ... - The Next Web

Yes, you heard right: you can now?upload videos?to Instagram. As of today, the Facebook-owned photo sharing network supports 15-second clips, ships with?13 video-only filters and includes a new stabilization feature dubbed ?Cinema.?

Of course, Instagram fans will likely be concerned about this change, and for good reason; Instagram has thrived on simplicity and video has a habit of complicating things.

The update is still hot off the presses, so shift your eyes below for a first look at what?s new.?Then, we?ll get to our thoughts on the change.

Using The App

The first thing you?ll notice when shooting a video in Instagram is that photos still have top billing. The big take-a-photo button remains, but off to the side you?ll see a new camcorder icon. Click that and you?ll be prompted to shoot a video.

takingavid 730x533 Instagram video first look: Good for people, better for brands

Instagram lets you record up to 15 seconds of video, which feels pretty long in practice. Of course, you can record as short a video as you?d like, and you?re able to combine multiple clips ? just like Vine. Unlike Vine, however, basic editing features let you delete clips without starting over entirely.

As you gear up to shoot your first Instavid??, your instinct may be to shoot in landscape mode. Sadly, Instagram does not currently flip videos recorded in that position. Facebook tells us this is a bug and will be fixed soon.

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Trying out Instagram?s new video filters.

When Instagram founder Kevin Systrom announced that video for Instagram would ship with 13 new filters, all the hipster-haters probably let out a nice, loud groan. But after experimenting with these filters, it appears this is something Instagram got right.

Filtering requires no loading, and they?re applied instantly as your video plays back (pictured above). Our only complaint is that many of these filters fail to stand out from one another; all of them have a similar vintage flair with a generic-but-somehow-nostalgic touch.

cinema Instagram video first look: Good for people, better for brands

Instagram?s Cinema feature in action.

Now, on to?Cinema:?That little icon above your filter options turns Instagram?s Cinema stabilization feature on and off. It?s on by default, and works surprisingly well ? so much so that we didn?t notice it was on until tapping it off. Be careful when turning it off, or else you?ll be taken aback by horrible shaky cam. Or, maybe I just have shaky hands.

Moving along, after you?ve filtered your video, Instagram tasks you to pick a cover frame. This determines what users see as they scroll by your video. From there, the recording is uploaded and ready for likes.

choose your cover Instagram video first look: Good for people, better for brands

Choose your cover frame.

Will It Work?

The video feature is still quite new, but our first impressions are largely positive. That said, almost immediately after you see a few videos in your stream, your view of Instagram will start to change.

Videos are a higher-friction medium, but they?re also more engaging than photos. In this way, videos seem to diminish the importance of photos on the network. This isn?t necessarily a bad change, either, but it?s a change that not everyone will love.

Put another way, if you don?t like Vine, you won?t be very happy with Instagram right now.

Screen Shot 2013 06 20 at 3.30.54 PM 730x533 Instagram video first look: Good for people, better for brands

In the feed, videos auto-play by default, but this can be tweaked in your settings. They blend right in with your photos, aside from the overlaid icons in the top-right corner.

A Business Opportunity

In a relatively short amount of time, brands like Urban Outfitters and Oreo?flocked to Vine in hopes of connecting with new customers. Like Vine, videos on Instagram present a new way to sell products, and there?s no doubt companies will quickly start finding ways to get your attention.

It?s easy to imagine how brands might take advantage of this new functionality in an irritating way. Indeed, companies like?Lululemon and Burberry?have already started experimenting with the feature.

As of right now, this system is entirely opt-in: you have to follow a company to see their photos and videos. But with in-stream ads and promoted posts on the horizon, videos could be more beneficial for brands than they are for people.

With a change as significant as this, there will be backlash, but likely from a small subset of users. Videos bring in new ways for users to share their lives with others and express themselves. I don?t believe that?s something most users will reject.

Are you ready for clips of cute?kittens, poolside lounging, or even ::gasp:: video selfies? Brace yourself.?Your feed will never be the same.

Image credit:?Ryan McVay / Thinkstock

Source: http://thenextweb.com/apps/2013/06/20/first-look/

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Where did ?King Mo,? New York and ?The Korean Zombie? fall on Cagewriter?s Hot or Not list?

Who is having a good week in the world of MMA, and who isn't? Check it out in Cagewriter's version of hot or not.

Hot -- "King Mo" Lawal: What's the best way to respond to a knockout loss? Returning with a knockout win. Lawal did that on Wednesday and took out Seth Petruzelli with one punch. Lawal moved on in the Bellator tournament, while Petruzelli decided to retire.

Not -- Bellator ratings: Lawal delivered the memorable knockout, but not that many people watched it live. The ratings from Wednesday's fights were nearly half that of the last Bellator fight, and they got worse for "Fight Master," Bellator's new reality show.

Hot -- "The Korean Zombie:" Chan Sung Jung mentioned last week that Anthony Pettis had cut in line for a shot at the UFC featherweight belt. Pettis suffered a training injury, so now Jung doesn't have to wait for a title shot any more. He's fighting Jose Aldo at UFC 163 in Pettis' place.

Not -- Anthony Pettis: When he suffered the knee injury, Pettis hoped that it wouldn't take too long to heal, and maybe he could slide into UFC 164 and the already-scheduled fight between T.J. Grant and lightweight champion Benson Henderson. Unfortunately, the knee injury will take longer to heal than he had hoped, and he won't be fighting on either pay-per-view card in August.

Not -- New York: The state with the largest city is also the last state to consider professional MMA fighting illegal. MMA's status in New York took a blow this week as the bill to make MMA legal and regulated never made it to a vote.

Still taking temperature -- Invicta FC: After previously showing their fights just through online streaming, the all-women's promotion is making the jump to television pay-per-views. Fans will have the chance to purchase the July 13 event, headlined by Marloes Coenen vs. Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos, via iNDemand, Dish and Avail-TVN for $14.95. Will it work?

As always, thank you for reading Cagewriter. We appreciate each and every one of you. For more Cagewriting fun, check us out on Facebook and Twitter.

Related coverage on Yahoo! Sports:
? Invicta ready for prime time
? Ricardo Lamas bypassed for title shot again
? Junior dos Santos says UFC champ ?hits like a girl?

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/where-did-king-mo-york-korean-zombie-fall-171628039.html

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Tank at Washington state nuclear site may be leaking radioactive waste

By Eric M. Johnson

SEATTLE (Reuters) - A storage tank holding radioactive waste at a decommissioned nuclear weapons site in Washington state may be leaking but poses no immediate threat to public safety, state and federal officials said on Friday.

The underground tank is one of 28 double-walled containers into which waste from older, single-shell tanks was pumped during a decades-long cleanup at Hanford Nuclear Reservation, according to Lori Gamache, a U.S. Energy Department spokeswoman.

In October, officials determined waste was leaking in the primary tank but had not breached its outer shell. Then on Thursday, workers found increased radioactivity levels in pumps used to remove water and sediment from the tank's "leak detection pit," Gamache said.

News of the possible leak comes the same week Ernest Moniz made his first visit as U.S. Energy Secretary to the 586-square-mile (1,518-square-km) site along the Columbia River, established in 1943 as part of the Manhattan Project, the U.S. government program that developed the first atomic bombs.

Production of weapons-grade plutonium there resulted in more than 43 million cubic yards of radioactive waste and 130 million cubic yards of contaminated soil and debris.

As part of the cleanup - projected to cost nearly $115 billion by the end of the century - as much remaining liquid waste as possible was pumped out of older single-shell tanks into sturdier double-walled tanks in a process completed in 2005.

In all, there are 177 tanks holding some 56 million gallons of waste, 149 of which are single-shell. Six of those tanks were discovered in February to be leaking at a rate of about 1,000 gallons annually. The double-shelled tanks were thought to be safe.

Washington state Governor Jay Inslee described the news as disturbing.

"I continue to have serious concerns regarding the pace of addressing the leaking tanks," Inslee said in a statement.

(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tank-washington-state-nuclear-may-leaking-radioactive-waste-224014557.html

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Wambach breaks Hamm's mark for career goals

United States' Megan Rapinoe, right, celebrates with Abby Wambach as teammates rush in after Wambach scored a goal against South Korea during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. With the goal, Wambach broke Mia Hamm's national goal-scoring record. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

United States' Megan Rapinoe, right, celebrates with Abby Wambach as teammates rush in after Wambach scored a goal against South Korea during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. With the goal, Wambach broke Mia Hamm's national goal-scoring record. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

United States' Abby Wambach, center right, reacts after scoring a goal against South Korea as United States' Heather O'Reilly (9) and Crustal Dunn (6) and South Korea's Jeoun Eunha (18) look on during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

United States' Abby Wambach, left, reacts after scoring a goal against South Korea during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. With the goal Wambach ties for most scored goals with former US player Mia Hamm. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

United States' Abby Wambach kisses a soccer ball after scoring against South Korea during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. With the goal, Wambach broke Mia Hamm's national goal-scoring record. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

United States women soccer players mob Abby Wambach after she scored a goal against South Korea during the first half of an international friendly soccer match at Red Bull Arena, Thursday, June 20, 2013, in Harrison, N.J. With the goal, Wambach broke Mia Hamm's national goal-scoring record. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

(AP) ? Abby Wambach broke Mia Hamm's record for international career goals by a soccer player, scoring four times in the first half against South Korea to push her total to 160.

Wambach tallied three times in the first 29 minutes to break Hamm's mark of 158 international goals, and she added another in injury time to give her a nice round number.

The historic 159th came on a line-drive header that ripped into the twine in the back of the net off a corner kick by Megan Rapinoe.

The 33-year-old Wambach turned and ran a couple of steps in the direction of the U.S. bench, then stopped as Rapinoe jumped into her arms. The Rochester, N.Y., native was then mobbed by teammates on the field and those who streamed off the bench as the crowd at Red Bull Arena cheered wildly.

After the hugs, Wambach turned to the stands and blew a kiss toward her parents, Judy and Peter.

Chants of "Ab-bee, Ab-bee, Ab-bee," cascaded through the stadium as officials got the ball and gave it to the U.S. bench.

"I'm just so proud of her," Hamm said. "Just watching those four goals, that's what she is all about. She fights for the ball, she's courageous and she never gives up. Her strength and perseverance is what makes her so great and it's what defenders and opposing teams fear.

"From being her teammate early in her career, I know all she ever wanted to do was win, and she continues to do that. I'm just glad I got to share 158 with her. It was short, but it was fun."

Her first goal Thursday came on a shot in the box past South Korean goalkeeper Kim Jung-mi in the 10th minute. The second came nine minutes later in the friendly on a flicking header.

Lauren Cheney set up the first two goals on crossing passes on plays that Wambach eluded Korean defender Shim Seo-yeon.

Wambach's fourth goal was an easy tap-in after Alex Morgan made a run down the right side and centered the ball to the on-rushing Wambach, the 2012 FIFA Women's World Player of the Year.

She was replaced in the 58th minute by Christen Press.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-20-SOC-Wambach-Record/id-ac1319769f574c59bdf704ef90ae1439

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Lenovo Miix is a watered-down ThinkPad Tablet 2, starts at $500 (hands-on)

Lenovo Miix is a watered-down ThinkPad Tablet 2, starts at $500 (hands-on)

Comb through Lenovo's current product lineup, and you'll find a little something for everyone. A Windows 8 tablet for businesses? Check. How 'bout a consumer model? Yep, that too. But hey, you can never have too many, right? After releasing the IdeaTab Lynx tablet, Lenovo is now launching the Miix, a 10-inch model that's also meant to be used with a keyboard. All told, it's sort of like a watered-down ThinkPad Tablet 2, insofar as it has the same rubbery, soft-touch finish and some very similar specs. Chiefly, it has a dual-core Intel Atom processor along with a 10.1-inch, 1,366 x 768 display, 64GB of on-board storage, an optional keyboard case and a battery rated for 10 hours of runtime. The two even weigh about the same: 1.27 pounds for the Miix, and 1.25 pounds for the WiFi-only TP Tablet.

What's missing, of course, are all the goodies that make the ThinkPad more of a premium device -- you know, NFC, mobile broadband and an active digitizer for pen input. Also, whereas the TP Tablet 2 sports dual cameras, the Miix has just a front-facing webcam, and the resolution's been downgraded from two megapixels to 1.3. Expect it to hit shelves in Q3, with a starting price of $500 (that keyboard will cost $49 extra). For now, check out our hands-on photos below.

Gallery: Lenovo Miix

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ZP3xqEvjh3Q/

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Samsung Galaxy NX Hands-On: I Can't Take My Eyes Off You (Should I?)

The first thing that strikes you about Samsung's new Android-powered interchangeable-lens camera is how big that 4.8-inch AMOLED screen looks on the back of a camera. Even when it's turned off, the blackness stares back at you like an enrapturing abyss.

Read more...

    


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Student engagement more complex, changeable than thought

June 20, 2013 ? A student who shows up on time for school and listens respectfully in class might appear fully engaged to outside observers, including teachers. But other measures of student engagement, including the student's emotional and cognitive involvement with the course material, may tell a different story -- one that could help teachers recognize students who are becoming less invested in their studies, according to a new study coauthored by a University of Pittsburgh researcher.

More importantly for educators, the study, published online in the professional journal Learning and Instruction, suggests that student engagement -- essential for success in school -- is malleable, and can be improved by promoting a positive school environment. The result paves the way for future work to offer teachers diagnostic tools for recognizing disengagement, as well as strategies for creating a school environment more conducive to student engagement.

"Enhancing student engagement has been identified as the key to addressing problems of low achievement, high levels of student misbehavior, alienation, and high dropout rates," said Ming-Te Wang, assistant professor of psychology in education in the School of Education and of psychology in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences at Pitt, who coauthored the study with Jacquelynne S. Eccles, the Wilbert McKeachie and Paul Pintrich Distinguished University Professor of Psychology and Education at the University of Michigan.

"When we talk about student engagement, we tend to talk only about student behavior," Wang added. "But my coauthor and I feel like that doesn't tell us the whole story. Emotion and cognition are also very important."

Wang and Eccles' study is among the first attempts by researchers to use data to explore a multidimensional approach to the question of student engagement. In the past, only behavioral measures of student engagement -- such as class attendance, turning in homework on time, and classroom participation -- had been evaluated when gauging student engagement. By conducting a study linking students' perceptions of the school environment with behavior, the authors have provided one of the first pieces of empirical research supporting the viability of the multidimensional perspective, which had previously been largely theoretical.

The researchers designed a 100-question survey that includes the evaluation of emotional engagement and cognitive engagement. Sample survey questions that tested emotional engagement in classes across all subject areas asked students to agree or disagree with statements such as "I find schoolwork interesting" and "I feel excited by the work in school." Sample questions concerning cognitive engagement asked students to provide ratings to questions like "How often do you make academic plans for solving problems?" and "How often do you try to relate what you are studying to other things you know about?"

Using the survey, Wang and Eccles conducted a two-year longitudinal study, tracking approximately 1,200 Maryland students from seventh through eighth grade. The authors also measured students' perceptions of their environment by having them answer questions in five areas: school structure support, which gauged the clarity of teacher expectations; provision of choice, which assessed students' opportunities to make learning-related decisions; teaching for relevance, which evaluated the frequency of activities deemed relevant to students' personal interests and goals; students' perceptions of the emotional support offered by teachers; and students' perceptions of how positive their relationships were with fellow students.

The authors found that students who felt that the subject matter being taught and the activities provided by their teachers were meaningful and related to their goals were more emotionally and cognitively engaged than were their peers. Adding measures of emotional and cognitive engagement could broaden researchers' perspectives on student engagement in future work in this area.

Also among the paper's main findings is that the school environment can and, indeed, should be changed if it is impeding student engagement. A positive and supportive school environment is marked, Wang said, by "positive relationships with teachers and peers. Schools must provide opportunities for students to make their own choices. But they also must create a more structured environment so students know what to do, what to expect, from school." Wang also noted, however, that there is no "one size fits all" strategy to the problem of student engagement.

"Usually people say, 'Yes, autonomy is beneficial. We want to provide students with choices in school,'" Wang said. "This is the case for high achievers, but not low achievers. Low achievers want more structure, more guidelines."

As a result, Wang said, teachers must take into account individual variation among students in order to fulfill the needs of each student.

Wang's current work, undertaken in partnership with six Allegheny County school districts, focuses on developing a diagnostic tool that teachers can use to identify students who are disengaged from school, with a specific emphasis on math and science classes.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/jF-qLxjHgqg/130620162844.htm

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Samsung reportedly rejects Zuckerberg?s ?Facebook Phone? overtures

By Francesca Trianni NEW YORK (Reuters) - Anthony Marshall, the only child of late millionaire philanthropist Brooke Astor, has been a Broadway producer, a decorated war hero and U.S. diplomat and is set to add prison inmate to his life story. On Thursday, barring a last-minute reprieve, Marshall will be known by the number on his New York State Corrections Department identification card when he begins serving a one- to three-year sentence for siphoning millions of dollars from his ailing mother incapacitated by dementia. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-reportedly-rejects-zuckerberg-facebook-phone-overtures-142043375.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

LED-powered 'privacy visor' thwarts facial recognition

privacy

3 hours ago

Visor

National Institute of Informatics

Isao Echizen wearing the privacy visor.

Worried that your face is being detected and recorded on everything from security cameras to Google Glass? Don these infrared-emitting glasses to prevent your face from being recognized, and your only worry will be how dorky you look.

The "privacy visor," created by associate professor Isao Echizen at Japan's National Institute of Informatics, use bright, near-infrared LEDs to blast cameras with light that they can see but humans can't. The software that detects faces gets confused and decides that this brightly lit object isn't a face.

It's an idea that has existed in various forms since facial recognition became possible: whether wearing sunglasses, contorting one's features or just growing a beard, faking out the cameras has always been a possibility. These glasses are just a little more convenient.

facerec demo

National Institute of Informatics

With the IR emitters adding noise to the camera's image, the face cannot be detected.

While it works, this system can still be fooled. Many cameras filter out the type of light generated by the LEDs, for instance, and in some conditions the LEDs might not produce enough light to dazzle the camera. And, of course, there's nothing actually preventing pictures or video from being taken, even if your face couldn't be automatically detected in them.

The privacy visor won't be going on sale any time soon, but if wearable cameras get any more popular, there will surely be a demand for something like it before long. Watch the technology in action in this video from Diginfo.tv:

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2d92f392/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cled0Epowered0Eprivacy0Evisor0Ethwarts0Efacial0Erecognition0E6C10A393893/story01.htm

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Faith Prince to play evil Miss Hannigan in 'Annie'

NEW YORK (AP) ? Faith Prince will soon be getting in touch with her mean side ? she's about to play Miss Hannigan in the "Annie" revival on Broadway.

Prince, who will begin performances on July 19, won a Tony Award in 1992 for "Guys and Dolls" and was nominated three other times for "A Catered Affair," ''Bells Are Ringing" and "Jerome Robbins' Broadway."

Emmy Award-winning "Glee" star Jane Lynch will play her final performance as Miss Hannigan on July 14. She had taken over from Tony-winning Katie Finneran as the evil orphanage matron.

Prince will star opposite Lilla Crawford in the title role and Anthony Warlow as Daddy Warbucks. The musical has such gems as "Tomorrow" and "It's the Hard Knock Life."

___

Online: http://www.AnnieTheMusical.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/faith-prince-play-evil-miss-hannigan-annie-211916665.html

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Gold hits two-and-half year low as Fed flags end to easy money

By Jan Harvey

LONDON (Reuters) - Gold plunged to its lowest in more than 2-1/2 years on Thursday, with investors exiting in droves after the U.S. Federal Reserve gave its most explicit signal yet that it plans to bring the era of easy money to an end.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the U.S. economy was expanding strongly enough for the central bank to begin slowing the pace of its bond-buying stimulus later this year.

Losses picked up momentum after bullion broke through its April low at $1,321 an ounce, a key support level, knocking it to a low of $1,285.90, down 4.5 percent and its weakest since September 2010.

Spot gold was down 4 percent at $1,296.60 an ounce at 10:54 a.m. ET, while U.S. gold futures for August delivery were down $77.20 an ounce at $1,297.00.

"Precious metals, in particular gold and silver, are losing their status as a viable asset class to hold," Viktor Nossek, head of research at Boost ETP, said. "The macroeconomic backdrop shows that the U.S. is recovering, Europe is restructuring and China is rebalancing."

He added, "Risk assets further out probably have more appeal because they have an underlying income stream that backs them up. Investors are pre-empting the view of global stabilization by selling precious metals."

The ultra-loose monetary policy brought in by the Fed to boost U.S. growth, which kept interest rates at rock bottom levels while stoking concerns about inflation, was a major factor fuelling a more than decade-long bull run in gold.

Indications that the policy was nearing an end have helped push prices down more than 20 percent this year after 12 straight years of gains. Gold is now firmly in bear market territory, more than 30 percent below its record high of $1,920.30 an ounce, set in September 2011.

"There's always been an expectation that there's inflation lurking around the corner with QE being instigated by the West, but it has never materialized," Nossek said. "The idea of pent-up inflation is not only dissipating, but is nowhere to be seen."

SILVER TUMBLES

Swiss bank UBS early on Thursday slashed its one-month target price for gold to $1,250 from $1,425 previously and its three-month forecast to $1,350 from $1,500, citing the Fed's move.

"This creates an increasingly difficult environment for gold," it said. "Slowing Fed asset purchases, with the end now potentially in sight, higher yields, a stronger dollar and continued improvements in the economy are significant obstacles that perpetuate an already very weak investor sentiment."

Physical gold demand in India, the world's biggest consumer of the metal, remained lackluster on Thursday despite a 4 percent drop in Indian gold prices, in sharp contrast to the response seen in April when spot prices plunged. Gold in rupee terms remains well above its April lows.

Silver was the biggest faller among the precious metals, sliding more than 6 percent to a session low at $19.68 an ounce, its weakest since September 2010. The metal was later down 6.1 percent at $20.02 an ounce.

Spot platinum was down 2.5 percent at $1,375.24 an ounce, while spot palladium was down 4.1 percent at $665. 72 an ounce.

(Additional reporting by Veronica Brown; editing by Jane Baird)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gold-hits-two-half-low-fed-flags-end-161417771.html

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With Congress, the Safe Bet Is Failure

IN THE NEWS: Deal struck in Senate on border security ? Farm bill fails in House ? Senators want cameras in SCOTUS ? Howard Kurtz leaving CNN ? Can fast food lead to a healthier U.S.? ? House hopeful gets Wu-Tang Clan endorsement

THE TAKE

With Congress, the Safe Bet Is Failure

If you think it's a good-news day in the Capitol, just wait a minute.

Progress was in the air today on comprehensive immigration reform. Republican Sens. John Hoeven and Bob Corker, offering a "border surge" that Democrat Chuck Schumer described as "a breathtaking show of force," seemed to have figured out how to attract more Republicans without losing any Democrats. More hope came in the form of a compromise to prevent a spike in student-loan interest rates, crafted by a Democrat (Joe Manchin), a Republican (Tom Coburn), and an independent (Angus King).

But before anyone could bask in things working more or less the way they should, at least in the Senate, the House stunned the city?and House Speaker John Boehner?by rejecting a $939 billion farm bill. Democrats were down on its cuts in nutrition programs, while Republicans said it didn't cut enough. Who had the worst week in Washington? Our pick so far is Boehner.

Jill Lawrence
@JillDLawrence

TOP NEWS

GOP SENATORS, 'GANG OF EIGHT' REACH DEAL ON BORDER SECURITY. Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and John Hoeven, R-N.D., reached agreement with the "Gang of Eight" senators today on a plan to strengthen border-security provisions in the comprehensive immigration-reform bill pending in the Senate. The Republicans' measure would increase from 21,000 to 40,000 the number of border-patrol agents and add 700 miles of fencing along the nation's southern border. Corker told MSNBC's Daily Rundown this morning, "For people who are concerned about border security, once they see what is in this bill, it's almost overkill." The Corker-Hoeven measure is expected to gain some GOP backing. "We've got to see how many people this brings to the table," Corker said. "We'd like for it to go over to the House with momentum." Read more

  • "I don't know what the hell is going to happen," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., "but we're on the verge of doing something dramatic on the border, and if it happens it will be due to Hoeven and Corker and a lot of our colleagues."

AMERICANS WANT IMMIGRANTS WITH SKILLS, JUST NOT HIGH-TECH SKILLS. Immigration-reform proponents already are navigating conflicting interests in the Senate. Now they must also contend with conflicting messages from the American people. A sizable plurality of Americans want the U.S. immigration system to favor immigrants with needed job skills, but they do not support increasing the number of guest workers for some of the industries most hungry for new employees, according to the latest United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll. See the full topline results. Read more

HOUSE REJECTS FARM BILL. The House defeated the five-year farm bill on a 195-234 vote, with 62 Republicans opposing the measure, Roll Call reports. The rejection followed the House's approval of an amendment backed by House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, which would have eliminated subsidies for dairy producers. Read more

PAKISTAN'S MILITARY CRUCIAL IN HELPING BRING TALIBAN TO PEACE TALKS. Pakistan's strong military has been vital in convincing Afghanistan's Taliban rebels to come to the table in the on-again, off-again peace negotiations with the U.S., Reuters reports. Pakistan, though a U.S. ally, has a long history of supporting the Taliban insurgency, but Western officials believe the country may now view Afghan peace as most likely to serve their regional interests. Meanwhile, the Taliban has offered to release a captive U.S. soldier held since 2009 in exchange for five senior operatives imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay. Read more

  • Al-Qaida's forces in Mosul?Iraq's third-largest city and one of the country's main gateways to Syria?are gaining strength and bolstering their coffers, the Associated Press reports. Read more

DURBIN, GRASSLEY WANT CAMERAS IN SCOTUS CHAMBER. Calling for greater transparency and accountability ahead of major Supreme Court rulings, Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced legislation today that would put cameras in the nation's highest court and televise its proceedings, Talking Points Memo reports. "Decisions made by the Supreme Court impact the lives of Americans in every corner of the country, but their proceedings often don't reach beyond the four walls of the courtroom," Durbin said. Grassley called the bill necessary because the Supreme Court is a "symbol of justice and fairness" that "considers some of the most important issues of our time." Read more

  • CBS News outlines the four high-profile cases remaining on the Supreme Court docket, which address affirmative action, same-sex marriage, and the Voting Rights Act.

FORMER OBAMA CAMPAIGN STAFFERS URGE HIM TO REJECT KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE. Almost 150 people who worked on President Obama's 2012 campaign are urging their reelected commander in chief to reject the Keystone XL pipeline, National Journal's Amy Harder reports. In a letter unveiled at an event in Washington today, 145 former campaign staff members use Obama's own words to convince the president he should not approve the project, which would send 35 million gallons of carbon-heavy oil sands every day 1,700 miles from Alberta to the Gulf Coast. The letter signers stress that young people throughout the country voted for Obama because he would support strong action on climate change, which?the staff writes?includes rejecting the pipeline. Read more

TECH COMPANIES FACE BATTLE IN PUSH FOR GOVERNMENT TRANSPARENCY. One after another, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo have all shifted from playing defense?disavowing any knowledge of PRISM?to playing offense. While none are legally able to talk about PRISM's specifics, the tech companies are not afraid to take aim at the culture of secrecy that created it. Their call for more government transparency, however, is at odds with the nation's intelligence apparatus, a bureaucracy so big nobody knows how much it costs or how many people are in its employ, National Journal's Brian Fung reports. Against that, what chance does Silicon Valley have? Read more

KURTZ, CNN 'RELIABLE SOURCES' HOST, MOVES TO FOX. Media reporter Howard Kurtz, who hosted CNN's "Reliable Sources" for the past 15 years, is leaving his job and will become a contributor to the Fox News Channel, CNN reports. Kurtz was a longtime Washington Post reporter and for the last several years had reported for the Daily Beast. Kurtz's tenure at the Daily Beast ended earlier this year following a post Kurtz wrote that mistakenly accused the NBA's Jason Collins, who had come out as gay, of failing to disclose that he had once been engaged to a woman. Kurtz said his departure had been in the works prior to the erroneous piece. Read more

TOMORROW

McCONNELL TO SPEAK ON STIFLING SPEECH. The American Enterprise Institute will host a talk on the use of government power to stifle speech at 10 a.m. Friday. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., will participate. Read more

QUOTABLE

"I told him I was glad an Italian played me ? swear words and all. We laughed together at the fact that tough guys can have a heart of gold. He did, and we will miss him." ? Leon Panetta, on the sudden death of James Gandolfini, who played then-CIA Director Panetta in Zero Dark Thirty. (Washington Post)

BEDTIME READING

COULD FAST FOOD HELP LEAD TO A HEALTHIER COUNTRY? Despite popular opinion, fast-food companies can potentially do more to improve the country's health than a strict push toward wholesome or non-processed foods, The Atlantic's David Freedman reports, noting that "when it comes to food and obesity, technology?or at least food-processing technology?is widely treated as if it is the problem." On average, Americans get 11 percent of their total calories from fast food -- and it's probably higher in some neighborhoods -- giving the industry, which has taken small steps toward introducing healthier items, a role in changing the way people eat for the better. Read more

TOP TWEETS

THE QUIRK

HOUSE HOPEFUL GETS COVETED WU-TANG ENDORSEMENT. Roy Cho, a Democrat who is taking on Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., got a shout out on Twitter from Wu-Tang Clan cofounder Ghostface Killah, Roll Call reports, giving him instant "mad street cred." Cho, a corporate attorney, said his sister works in the entertainment industry and spoke to the artist about his bid. Read more

CORRECTION: An item in Wednesday's Edge incorrectly reported that a Senate committee would on Thursday mark-up legislation regarding helium. That mark-up occurred on Tuesday.

Subscribe to The EdgeSee The Edge Archive

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/congress-safe-bet-failure-160911971.html

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Corruption, drugs, profanity: Mayors pull lid off 'boring' Canada

Toronto mayor Rob Ford, who was allegedly caught on video smoking crack cocaine, has been joined by Montreal's interim mayor, charged with corruption, fraud, and extortion.?

By Jeremy Ravinsky,?Contributor / June 18, 2013

Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum walks out of Surete du Quebec headquarters after his arrest in Montreal, June 17. Applebaum was arrested on charges of corruption, becoming the city's second mayor in a year to be publicly disgraced.

Christinne Muschi/Reuters

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Canada, North America?s friendly and reasonable northern neighbor is often seen as the United States' more sensible counterpart. But now there?s reason to cast doubt on those stereotypes. In the past month, local politicians in Toronto and Montreal, Canada?s two largest cities, have been embroiled in public scandals.

Last month, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford was caught on film allegedly smoking crack, among other things. And just yesterday, Montreal?s interim Mayor Michael Applebaum was arrested on charges of corruption, becoming the city?s second mayor in a year to be publicly disgraced.

Mr. Ford, who has been in office since 2010, was allegedly caught on video last month smoking crack cocaine out of a glass pipe. The video, which had been shopped around to various news outlets including Gawker and the Toronto Star, also appeared to show Ford making racist and homophobic comments. Canadian television network CTV later reported that the Toronto police had been investigating claims about the video for weeks before the story broke.

The scandal has since exploded to include investigations into Ford?s brother, city councilman Doug Ford, over the sale of hashish, and the murder of an alleged drug dealer, according to The Week.?

This is not Ford?s first controversy either. He has been expelled from sports games for drunkenness, condemned for making racist remarks about Asian-Canadians, and been caught on tape discussing how to ?score? OxyContin ? to name just a few.

But his behavior and the use of racist and homophobic epithets are not the only reasons that Richard Florida, director of the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto, called Ford the ?worst mayor in the modern history of cities,? in an article for the Globe and Mail. As The Christian Science Monitor reported, many say Ford?s gravest offense is exacerbating the urban-suburban divide in Toronto.?

During his mayoral campaign, Ford railed against taxes and ?the gravy train? of public spending, a popular sentiment among suburbanites whose time spent downtown was often limited to commuting by car to work and cheering at hockey or baseball games.

And Ford has remained markedly anti-urban in office, which impacts daily life for millions. Despite leading a cosmopolitan city that imagines itself in a European mold, Toronto lags in walkability and quality of life for urbanites.

In Montreal, interim Mayor Michael Applebaum?was arrested yesterday on 14 charges of corruption, fraud, and mafia extortion in connection to real estate handlings made before he took office, according to Agence-France Presse.

Quebec?s Unite Permanente Anticorruption (UPAC), or permanent anticorruption unit, arrested Mr. Applebaum at his home early Monday morning and spent 10 hours interrogating him, reports CTV. The charges date back to between 2006 and 2011, when Applebaum was the mayor of the Cote St. Luc/Notre Dame de Grace borough of Montreal. Former city councilman Saulie Zajdel and former director of permits Jean-Yves Bisson have also been arrested.?

Applebaum, Montreal?s first English-speaking mayor in 100 years, assumed the office a little more than six months ago, after his predecessor, Gerard Landry, resigned following allegations of illegal fundraising. Applebaum took on the post on a temporary basis, promising to end corruption.

Ironically, as the Globe and Mail reports, his arrest comes on the heels of a poll indicating that Montrealers are satisfied with city hall?s anti-corruption efforts.

This is only one episode in a sordid history of corruption that has plagued Montreal for years, as Huffington Post Canada has pointed out:?

The ongoing Charbonneau Commission investigating Montreal's construction industry is showing all of Canada just how rotten the city is. It has uncovered a litany of offenses among a dozen or so construction companies who conspired for years and gamed the municipal contracts system so that they could get paid more for doing less work. But much, much worse than that, what has been revealed is that politicians from every major party in the city? are alleged to have been in on the scheme and to have lined their pockets with kickbacks and illegal donations from the construction companies.

Officials from all over Quebec, including the province?s Premier Pauline Marois, have called on Applebaum to resign, according to Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). The disgraced mayor is supposed to make a public appearance sometime today.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LOmYbHMZ_Ak/Corruption-drugs-profanity-Mayors-pull-lid-off-boring-Canada

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Tea Partiers Boo Marco Rubio's Support For Gang Of Eight Immigration Bill

WASHINGTON -- Erin Konkel traveled from Houston, Texas, to go to a daylong tea party rally on immigration reform Wednesday in front of the Capitol, where she held up a handmade sign for more than an hour. "RUBIO CONSERVATIVE RINO," it read, or Republican In Name Only.

She used to be a fan of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who is now pushing a comprehensive immigration bill in the Senate with the so-called gang of eight. Konkel, as a Texan, is concerned about the border, and she is deeply opposed to the gang of eight bill. By supporting it, Rubio seemed to be going against the views of those who voted him into office, she said.

"I believed in him," she said of Rubio. "I thought he was the real deal, but I was wrong."

The gang of eight bill would provide a path to citizenship for some of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the U.S., while also requiring increased border enforcement and a streamlined legal immigration system. Rubio's work on immigration reform won't necessarily damage his chances for a presidential run in 2016, according to conservative observers. Still, many conservatives at two tea party rallies on Wednesday were disappointed with Rubio.

When Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, took to the stage with Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) to decry the gang of eight bill, the crowd booed loudly for Rubio in particular.

"No matter what Marco Rubio says -- who has not read his own bill, incidentally," Rector said, interrupted by screams from the crowd, before going on to say that the bill would give welfare to undocumented immigrants.

There was a palpable anger toward Rubio among some at a nearby rally, which was on the other side of the Capitol with many of the same attendees.

"Traitor," interjected one woman passing by as she overheard The Huffington Post asking another attendee about Rubio.

"I think he's a sell-out. I think he got power mad," said Matthew Bishoff, who waved a sign that read, "No Amnesty 1 Law 4 All."

Bishoff, who lives in Ohio, said he and his dad came to D.C. by bus to attend the rally. He said he didn't know much about Rubio before the immigration debate, but had heard some of his speeches and was impressed with him.

"I thought he spoke really, really well and thought he was maybe a future leader for us," Bishoff said. But after watching Rubio in the immigration debate, he said he thought, "Ok, you were in it more for the power than to truly lead us."

"Why is he trying to pair up with Obama?" he asked. "I think it's his lust for power."

Another Ohio attendee, who only gave her first name, Jane, said she used to like Rubio but she's not sure what he "really stands for at this point." She had a bullseye on her shirt that read, "In the crosshairs of the IRS," with a sad face in the middle.

"I'm surprised he's taken this role," Jane said of Rubio, "but my basic observation of Washington, D.C., is people come here and they lose their perspective of the real world in this bubble."

Like Jane, many of the people HuffPost talked to said they used to admire Rubio but have soured on him because they say the immigration bill he's pushing grants a pathway to citizenship but doesn't do enough on border security.

"We need to secure the borders before anything," said Debbie of Maryland, who declined to give her last name. "So much bad stuff coming over the borders. We need to secure that first."

She grumbled, "I was a fan of Rubio's before this."

Fred and Bonnie, a couple from New Jersey who have been together for 45 years, echoed others' complaints that power has gotten to Rubio's head.

"He was the one saying we were going to do the border first or he's not going to do anything. Now he's on board, all macho, this is what I'm doing," Bonnie said. "It's not right."

Bonnie said her biggest concern with the immigration bill is that Americans will have to shoulder the costs of the millions of undocumented immigrants as they work toward a pathway to citizenship. She emphasized that her opposition to the bill wasn't personal, though.

"I worked in a public school, and I'm still volunteering to help illegals at a Catholic Church," Bonnie said. "It's not the people that I have a problem with. I'm there for them. But I don?t want them taking money away from my children and grandchildren. We can't support them."

Bob Henderson, who came to the rally from Winchester, Va., said he thinks Rubio may be regretting his decision to go along with the gang of eight plan.

"He's a young man who let himself get hoodwinked," he said. "It appears to me he's headed down the wrong path and trying to figure out how to turn around and save some face."

Despite their anger, though, some rally-goers said Rubio's immigration views weren't a deal-breaker if it's between him and a Democrat on the next presidential ballot.

"You have to take the bad with the good," said Jim Murphy, who traveled to D.C. from Lake Gaston, N.C., with the Roanoke Valley Patriots, a tea party group. "So if he were to be the nominee in 2016, yes, I would go to the booth, I would cast my vote for him although I disagree with him on that issue. We can go through the entire Senate, and I think we can find at least one issue with each senator that I disagree with."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/19/tea-partiers-marco-rubio-immigration_n_3468160.html

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'Masterpiece' prepping 'Breathless' medical drama

NEW YORK (AP) ? "Masterpiece" is prescribing a new drama set in a London hospital in the early 1960s.

The series, "Breathless," will put medical practice at the brink of the tumultuous '60s. Set in a busy gynecology unit, it inhabits a world where abortion is illegal and the new contraceptive pill is only available to married women.

Premiering on "Masterpiece" in 2014, "Breathless" was announced Thursday by its co-producers, PBS/WGBH and ITV Studios.

The series will star Jack Davenport, most recently seen on the NBC series "Smash." Other cast members include Zoe Boyle and Iain Glen from "Downton Abbey."

"Masterpiece" executive producer Rebecca Eaton called "Breathless" a "sharp, visually rich" portrait of characters "on the cusp of change."

"Breathless" is co-created and written by Paul Unwin ("Shameless," ''Agatha Christie's Miss Marple" and "Poirot").

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/masterpiece-prepping-breathless-medical-drama-084743483.html

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New Roads: Crimefest Writers, and Camilleri's Sicily | Brian Stoddart

New Roads: Crimefest Writers, and Camilleri?s?Sicily

Posted by Prof. Brian Stoddart on June 18, 2013 ? 1 Comment?

Montalbano 10Ragus 2013 003After three days of an excellent crime fiction convention, what?s the next move? Go to Sicily and the province of Ragusa to visit the setting for Andrea Camilleri?s Inspector Montalbano novels and home to the TV series, of course.
Um, how did this happen?
After a lifetime of research and a string of non-fiction books, I?m writing a crime novel. Crime fiction has long been my default reading away from professional demands, with ?crime and place? set in distinctive locations high in the priorities. I swear I knew my way around Venice before I first went there, by reading Donna Leon and walking with Inspector Brunetti (who these days is a touch tired, almost tiresome). Following the rule that says write what you know, my novel is set in 1920s Madras in India, and is now in heavily edited second draft.
Thinking I needed pressure to produce the thing, I entered the Crime Writers Association Debut Dagger competition. That meant producing the first three thousand words plus synopsis, which was all sent off.
Given I would be in the UK anyway, it seemed logical to go to Crimefest 2013 (http://www.crimefest.com/ ) where the Debut Dagger shortlist would be announced. In late May, then, Sandi and I turned up in Bristol for what, it occurred to me, was my first non-academic, non-professional meeting in a very long time. .
For three days, we enjoyed an exhausting schedule of panels and interviews across all aspects of the genre, meeting writers already prized and discovering new talent.
One great moment was meeting William (Willie) McIlvanney whose three Laidlaw books (I now have a signed copy of the first) sparked the Tartan Noir movement made famous by Ian Rankin, Christopher Brookmyre, Kate Atkinson, Alan Guthrie, Stuart McBride, Lyn Anderson and many others, including the articulate Denise Mina whose joint session with Willie was sparkling. McIlvanney eschews the Tartan Noir tag, thinking it a marketer?s rather than writer?s tag and, rightly, considers his books as social novels that just happen to have a cop and crim storyline. Speaking as wonderfully as he writes, he delivered everything with his self-deprecating, deadpan Scottish humour. (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Books/s?ie=UTF8&field-author=William%20McIlvanney&page=1&rh=n%3A266239%2Cp_27%3AWilliam%20McIlvanney ).
Three things stood out at this convention.
First, the atmosphere was far more collegial than most academic conferences I ever attended. Bar the very exceptional ego, published writers were more than happy to meet aspiring ones and be extremely encouraging.
Second, there were a lot of writers there, at times outnumbering readers. This was a chance to speak with fellow writers, sharing the industry?s production agonies and pains. One night, Sandi and I found a tiny, out of the way Italian restaurant. We left after a great meal, to spy off in another corner a gaggle of European authors, mainly Scandinavian, come to Bristol, as it were, to talk to each other. Most nights, and even afternoons, a gathering of stars could be seen in and about the bar.
Many ?readers? were veterans of the now-regular crime fiction festivals in the UK and the USA, especially, with declaring Crimefest to be the one they enjoy most. So do the writers.
Third, the writers say breaking in and through is tough, but keeping up the pace almost more so, especially as publishing and reading undergoes massive technical and social change. For that reason, most have dark humoured stories about getting a break or publishers wanting them to write something different in order to meet mainstream markets. That was insightful for the many aspiring writers in the audience.
The friendly atmosphere made it easy to speak with writers. I mentioned to Jeff Siger that I liked his Chief of Police Kaldis series set in Mykonos. ( http://www.jeffreysiger.com/ ). Jeff was open and friendly, kindly introducing us to several people throughout the conference, including all those who run the Murder Is Everywhere blog. (http://murderiseverywhere.blogspot.it/ ). It was not so much meeting a writer as making a new friend.
William (Bill) Ryan I had already met at the London launch of his new Korolev novel set in Stalinist Russia. For anyone writing historical fiction set in the twentieth century, he is an excellent role model: solid research, good feel for the period, strong characters, believable plots, and good pace. (http://www.william-ryan.com/ ). That launch, incidentally, was at Goldsboro Books in Cecil Court, a rich source for signed editions of crime books. (https://www.goldsborobooks.com/about-us.html . The bookshop is owned by David Headley, of whom more later.
Then there was Stav Sherez. (http://stavsherez.com/ . A Dark Redemption, set in London, is excellent, and the recently appeared Eleven Days looks as good. A brilliant moderator for an early panel, he was very approachable and we had a few good discussions over the days. He is definitely worth a ?Follow? on Twitter. His hairstyle is distinctive, and a recent tweet reported a woman in a bank telling him he appeared to be from outer space. His only response was ?have you ever been to Alpha Centauri??
The Michael Stanley partnership was instructive. (http://www.detectivekubu.com/ ). South Africans Michael Sears and Stanley Trollip both had academic careers before writing the Inspector Kudu books based in Botswana. They talked about how they made the transition, and again were open in introducing us to other people, like Annamaria Alfieri who, in her early seventies, is making a new career as a writer. She was very encouraging to aspirant writers.
The blockbuster writers present were Jeffrey Deaver and Robert Goddard, with the interview featuring the latter another convention highlight. It was fascinating to hear Goddard say that the late Michael Dibdin, creator of the Aurelio Zen series, had a strong influence on him. Dibdin remains one of my favourites. (http://www.amazon.com/Michael-Dibdin/e/B000APLL6M ).
By sheer chance I sat next to Ruth Downie for the entertaining special session on the making of the TV series, Sherlock. We discussed e-books and industry changes, and that had me downloading to Kindle the first in her Medicus series set in Roman Britain, something I would not have done otherwise. Am I glad I did. It is brilliant. A contemporary-style dialogue applied to back then carries the story and plot in compelling fashion. (http://rsdownie.co.uk/ ). Unexpectedly, Ruth says her style guide is Elmore Leonard, so now I must re-read him, rather than simply watching Justified which is based on a couple of his stories.
At the other end of the scale, with me, were people like new friend Rob Darke. After a career in customs and excise and computer systems and several other things he retired, bought a Harley trike, and begun writing full time. http://www.robertdarke.com/index.html ). We shared tales about the struggle for the breakthrough.
The biggest learning curve came in spending ten minutes each with three of the top crime fiction agents: Camilla Bolton, Broo Doherty and David Headley. For a modest fee, they read the opening three thousand words written by each of us who signed up for the session. Waiting outside was daunting, a reminder of interviews past, but the trio were terrific, having read the work and made notes, providing constructive criticism that showed why they are the best. And they were encouraging, even while emphasising high standards and a tough way ahead.
One, at least, of them wants to hear back so I have already rewritten the first four chapters to purge unnecessary characters, tighten the dialogue, heighten the storyline and increase the atmosphere.
As usual, it all made sense when they explained their reactions, the only question being why had I not seen it all earlier? It was no surprise, then, when later that day I did not make the Debut Dagger shortlist. Among those who did, many had published in other fields, been shortlisted before, or written a lot of fiction. There was a touch of disappointment, inevitably, but well offset by the agents? positive comments from the morning, so going off to Sicily to write seemed a good idea.
But, in all truth, this was no Hemingway/Jack London/Jack Kerouac instant odyssey. The trip was planned in advance and followed an earlier visit, stimulated by Andrea Camilleri?s wonderful novels. After the agent session, it seemed an even more perfect thing to do.
So Bristol cool morphed into the early summer heat of Pozzallo beaches, Agrigento ruins, Modica hill country and various Montalbano sites: the TV house at Ponta Lucca (it?s green, was it not cream in the series?), the seaside walk at Donnalucata, the brickworks at Sampieri, and all the rest. Watching Pozzallo close for three hours every afternoon, then opening in time for the evening promenade was straight out of the novels. The promenade itself requires sipping local wine on the steps of Sapori Doc, a magnificent wine bar, while watching a string of Camilleri characters pass by.
Camilleri?s earlier Montalbano novels, especially, provide a master class in character creation, plot development, cultural contexting, and landscape description. It is usually hot, lunch is long and leisurely, food is a preoccupation along with wine, gossip is rife, there is much noise, the Mafioso provides a permanent backdrop, and people are larger than life. He captures the atmospherics.
So much so that he has created a tourism industry. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2013/jun/07/british-tourists-trail-inspector-montalbano ). Thousands of Italian and international tourists now come to see the Inspector?s territory, and the bookshop owner in Ragusa Ibla tells me Montalbano is now a big part of her sales. Among those is Giovanni Sarto?s Italian/English Montalbano: I Luoghi della Fiction (http://www.giovannisarto.it/ ) and the little tourist guide, A Spasso Con Montalbano. Just up the road at La Rusticana Restaurant (where the TV series crew eats regularly and where some scenes have been set) the story is similar: most customers come because of Montalbano, including the German couple with their small dogs whom we saw a couple of days earlier at Villa Romana further across the island.
Now any writer would like that impact.
Can I do the same for Madras, now called Chennai? Probably not, but Bristol and a return trip to Camilleri country have reinforced to desire to try. Stay tuned.

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Filed under Andrea Camilleri, Uncategorized ? Tagged with Annamaria Alfieri, Broo Doherty, Camilla Bolton, Crimefest, David Headley, Donnalucata, Jeffrey Siger, Michael Stanley, Modica, Ragusa, Rob Darke, Ruth Downie, Stav Sherez, William McIlvanney

Source: http://professorbrianstoddart.wordpress.com/2013/06/18/new-roads-crimefest-writers-and-camilleris-sicily/

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