Monday, 5 August 2013

UPDATE: Teen dies after being run over by float at Caribbean parade

UPDATE: Teen dies after being run over by float at Caribbean parade

An 18-year-old has died after falling and getting run over by a float at the Toronto Caribbean Carnival Saturday night.?

It happened just before 9 p.m. in the Lake Shore Blvd. West and Dowling Ave. area.?

Police say they responded to a call about a pedestrian being hit. They say the teen was on a float, fell off and was hit by the vehicle.?

He was taken to hospital with life threatening injuires and later died.?

Festival organizers have released a statement.

"We are deeply saddened?by this loss," said Denise Herrera-Jackson, CEO of the Festival Management Committee, in a written statement. "The Toronto police are conducting a full and thorough investigation and we will assist them in any way we can."?

Toronto Police are appealing for anyone who saw what happened to come forward and contact Traffic Services at 416-808-1900.

?

Full statement from festival:

On behalf of the organizers, volunteers and revellers involved in today's Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival parade, we would like to express our heartfelt sympathies to the friends and family of a young man who died in a tragic accident earlier today.

"We are deeply saddened?by this loss," said Denise Herrera-Jackson, CEO Festival Management Committee. "The Toronto police are conducting a full and thorough investigation and we will assist them in any way we can."?

?

Statement from Scotiabank:

It is with great sadness that we learned of the tragic death earlier this evening of a young man at the Scotiabank Toronto Caribbean Carnival parade. On behalf of Scotiabank and our employees, we extend our sincere sympathies to the family and friends of this young man.

The Toronto Police Service is investigating and we understand that event organizers will cooperate fully with this investigation.

Source: http://www.newstalk1010.com/News/localnews/blogentry.aspx?BlogEntryID=10574623

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Georgia University System tries to improve use of building space

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Source: chronicle.augusta.com --- Sunday, August 04, 2013
ATLANTA -- The state entity with the largest number of buildings uses them an average of one-quarter of the work week, leaving them empty the rest of the time, a new study shows. The University System of Georgia studied the issue itself at all 31 of the state?s public colleges and universities and found it could be more efficient. ?We think we need to do some improvement. We need to work with some institutions, quite frankly,? said University Chancellor Hank Huckaby in an interview with Morris News Friday. read more ...

Source: http://chronicle.augusta.com/news/government/2013-08-04/georgia-university-system-tries-improve-use-building-space

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Spring Grove eliminated from Pa. legion baseball tourney

BOYERTOWN -- When Spring Grove's unforgettable American Legion baseball season came to an end on Saturday afternoon, the players took time to say goodbye.

The ones who won't return next season exchanged hugs and handshakes with the players who will return in 2014.

Together, they combined to make history this year with a pair of program firsts: a Region 4 championship and a berth in the state tournament.

The York County team continued its fine play at states, winning three of its first four games before bowing out of the double-elimination tournament with a 6-1 loss to Twin Valley on Saturday.

Twin Valley moved on to play Boyertown in the title game later in the afternoon while Spring Grove closed with a third-place finish in the eight-team event. Boyertown eventually won the state title with an 11-1 win over Twin Valley.

"I cant say enough about the way we played, and the run we had," said Spring Grove manager Matt Spangler, who announced his retirement as a manager after the game. "This one hurts, but to go out third in the state tournament is nothing to hang our heads about."

Spring Grove, which split two games on Friday, took the early lead in Saturday's contest by scoring a run in the bottom of the first inning.

Nick Spangler led off the inning with a single to right-center and moved to second when Dalton Hoiles beat out an infield single.

Following a force out on which Spangler took third, Trevor Troxel lifted a fly ball to left field which was deep enough to score Spangler.

That was it, though, offensively for Spring Grove. It managed just two hits the rest of the way against Twin Valley right-hander Tyler Sternat.

"He (Sternat) changed speeds and had us off balance," Matt Spangler said. "We had a lot of games this year where the bats go silent."

Spring Grove also received excellent pitching from its starter, Brandon Warner.

Warner worked the first seven innings and allowed two runs, but neither one was earned. The right-hander struck out one and walked two.

"I didn't try to overpower guys, I tried to hit spots and keep them off balance," Warner said. "Jonny (Spring Grove catcher Jon Gross), he couldnt have called a better game."

Twin Valley scored single runs off Warner in the fifth and sixth innings, but both runners who scored reached on errors.

"I trust my defense," Warner said. "We're human, we make mistakes."

Warner, the team's starting shortstop, didn't get a lot of work on the mound this season for a team deep in pitchers.

"Brandon, that was a gutsy effort," Matt Spangler said. "He pitched his heart out and probably deserved the win."

Spring Grove was in striking distance to seize the victory until Twin Valley's Izzack Albright crushed a two-out grand slam in the top of the ninth inning. The ball cleared the right-field fence between the 320 and 350 signs.

Nick Spangler collected two of Spring Grove's four hits.

Spangler's teammate, Levi Krause, who finished 1-for-4, was robbed of a second hit by Twin Valley third baseman Matt McInaw, who made a diving stop of Krause's hard grounder down the line and threw out the Spring Grove standout at first.

Krause also made solid contact in the sixth inning with runners on first and second and one out.

"As soon as I hit it, I thought, 'sweet, someone is going to score,'" Krause said. "Then, I saw it (the ball) was right at the shortstop. (Twin Valley then turned an inning-ending double play). "This is my luck"

Spring Grove finished its breakthrough season with a 22-10 record. After a 10-5 record in the York-Adams regular season, it won 12 of its final 17 games.

"This (season) was incredible," Krause said. "I've never been with a closer group of guys. Making states was our goal, and we were in the winners' bracket final (Spring Grove bowed, 8-7, to Boyertown in that game on Friday)."

Reach Dick VanOlinda at dvanolinda@yorkdispatch.com

Source: http://www.yorkdispatch.com/ci_23788611/updates-from-spring-grove-twin-valley-legion-baseball?source=rss_viewed

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Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Biden to tout progress on executive actions to reduce gun violence

Biden (Fernando Vergara/AP)

Two months after the Senate failed to support the expansion of background checks for gun purchasers, Vice President Joe Biden is hosting an event at the White House Tuesday to show how the administration continued their efforts to reduce gun violence despite that failed vote.

Biden in a speech will discuss the administration?s progress on 21 out of 23 executive actions to reduce gun violence, which were produced by a gun violence task force led by Biden following the deadly Dec. 14 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The actions were issued by issued by President Barack Obama in January.

The actions taken include ending a ban on government research of gun violence, taking steps designed to increase reporting from states about potentially dangerous gun purchasers, and actions the White House believes enhance tracking of guns recovered in criminal investigations, according to a progress report on the actions to be released by the White House.

But the progress report will make clear that it is Congress whom the White House believes should take the next step to reduce gun violence.

?The Administration has more work to do to complete the remainder of the executive actions that the President announced in January" and work to continue "these important steps in the weeks and months ahead. But Congress must also act,? the progress report reads. ?Passing common-sense gun safety legislation, including expanding background checks and making gun trafficking a federal crime, remains the single most important step we could take to reduce gun violence.?

The administration in its report repeated a line often used during the Senate?s debate of expanded background checks: "A vast majority of the American people? support these steps.

?It is time for Congress to take action and get this done," the report reads.

A senior administration official said Monday that the actions ?are in no way a replacement for concrete legislative action."

An official confirmed that background checks would be part of the vice president?s speech Tuesday but declined to offer specifics.

Many stakeholders in the gun debate believed that the administration?s best chance to get Congress to pass gun reform measures died with the failed vote for expanded background checks in April-- when Newtown was fresh in the minds of the public and politicians and many interest groups were active in the debate over gun violence.

But the administration and Senate Democratic leaders were unable to wrangle support from key Democrats from guns rights states in addition to select Republicans.

?It came down to politics,? Obama said as he chastised Congress from the Rose Garden the night of the April 17 vote. ?They caved to the pressure.?

?All in all, this was a pretty shameful day in Washington,? Obama then said.

Since then, the White House has held few public events related to gun violence other than Biden?s recent event on mental illness.

Therefore, the public has seen little evidence of the public courtship the White House says it has continued with Congress.

When pressed about whether the administration is just as actively pursuing potential swing Senate Democrats on the issue of background checks with the same intensity as during the Senate?s spring gun debate, the White House has mostly declined to offer any specifics, other than to confirm that conversations are ongoing.

A senior administration official once again Monday declined to release details about these types of meetings, saying that the White House remains "engaged with members of Congress" on the issue.

The two executive actions where progress has not been made, according to the report, are confirming a director to head the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (something up to Congress since the administration has already nominated Todd Jones, who has served as acting director), and hashing out mental health benefits with Health and Human Services.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/biden-tout-progress-executive-actions-reduce-gun-violence-114010300.html

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AP EXCLUSIVE: US war games send signal to Assad

U.S. Navy sailors stand in formation aboard the USS Stockdale before maneuvers with the Jordanian Navy in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise, Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian soldiers are holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria. There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

U.S. Navy sailors stand in formation aboard the USS Stockdale before maneuvers with the Jordanian Navy in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise, Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian soldiers are holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria. There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

An Iraqi Counter Terrorist forces soldier participates in a rehearsal with forces from Jordan and Lebanon as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise in Zarqa, Jordan, Monday, June 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

U.S. Navy Ensign Shin Knoll watches a Jordanian patrol craft from aboard the USS Stockdale during maneuvers with the Jordanian Navy in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise, Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian soldiers are holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria. There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

Jordanian naval patrol craft are seen during joint maneuvers with the U.S. Navy in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise, Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian soldiers are holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria. There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

U.S. Navy sailors make final checks to a weapon mounted on the USS Stockdale ahead of joint maneuvers with the Jordanian Navy in the Gulf of Aqaba, Jordan as part of Eager Lion, a multinational military exercise, Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian soldiers are holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria. There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

(AP) ? Under the watchful eye of stern-faced American advisers, hundreds of U.S.-trained Jordanian commandos fanned across this dusty desert plain, holding war games that could eventually form the basis of an assault in Syria.

With the recent deployment of Patriot missiles near the Syrian border, and the mock Syrian accents of those playing the enemy, the message was clear: There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical weapons stockpiles should Bashar Assad's regime lose control.

Dubbed Eager Lion, the 12-day exercise involves combined land, air and sea maneuvers across the country. It brings together 8,000 personnel from 19 Arab and European nations to train on border security, irregular warfare, terrorism and counterinsurgency.

Marine Corps Lt. Col. Duke Shienle said Syria "is a concern that all our regional partners share."

The Syrian crisis is "causing all military in the region to increase intensity," he said as he supervised masked commandos in black uniforms from Jordan and two other Syria neighbors ? Iraq and Lebanon ? in a mock exercise to free a hijacked aircraft on an airstrip in the eastern Jordanian desert.

Nearby, U.S. military strategists taught Jordanian riot police to quickly contain a mock protest by angry mobs in a crowded refugee camp. The trainers refused to name the camp, but the trainees said it was "Zaatari," a reference to a refugee settlement straddling the border with Syria that shelters around 185,000 displaced Syrians.

"We want freedom! We want a free Syria!" the trainees shouted, speaking the Syrian dialect as they depicted Syrian refugees. Others looked on from under dusty tents pitched on a strip of desert outside a Jordanian army compound. The location of this exercise and others could not be disclosed in line with Jordanian army regulations.

Elsewhere, in the south, hundreds of masked Jordanian commandos in black uniforms used machine-guns, rocket propellers and tanks to overwhelm an enemy target as Jordanian helicopters and fighter jets ? all part of previous American donations ? buzzed the skies overhead.

"We want to tell anyone with malicious intentions toward Jordan that we can hit back where it hurts most painfully," said one Jordanian commando, speaking under scorching sun in the arid mountain region. He could not be named under army regulations and declined to say if the enemy he was fighting was Assad's army.

Other training focused on humanitarian relief and crisis management and involves 7,000 civilians from non-governmental organizations engaged in providing assistance to Syrian refugees, said Tawfiq Hennawi of the International Committee of the Red Cross, one of the participating NGOs.

Jordan hosts more than half a million Syrians who fled Assad's military onslaught and that number is expected to rise to 1.2 million by the end of the year.

"These exercises bolster our defense capabilities," said Jordanian army Maj. Gen. Awni Edwan, adding that the Eager Lion exercises, which end Thursday, are routine, having being held twice before at the same time.

"We don't intend to attack anybody," he said.

Jordan has been leery that Assad may eventually use his chemical weapons against his neighbors, or if his regime starts to collapse, his stockpile may fall into the hands of al-Qaida or other militants who are trying to rise to power in Syria.

There has been mounting speculation that should Assad's regime begin to lose control, Jordan will dispatch its highly-skilled, U.S.-trained and equipped commandos to secure Assad's chemical weapons and create a safe haven for Syrian refugees along the 230-mile (375-kilometer) border with Jordan, according to a Western diplomat who monitors Syria from his base in Jordan.

The purpose is to prevent a further influx of Syrian refugees into Jordan out of fear that Shiite militants from the Lebanese Hezbollah group or other Iranian agents may slip across the border to destabilize this key U.S. ally, said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because identifying him might jeopardize his intelligence-gathering on Syria.

Jordan's predominantly Sunni Muslim population is traditionally a fiery critic of the growing influence of Iran and its rival Shiite sect.

Regional media reports this week suggesting that Hezbollah activists are deploying near the Jordanian border to help Assad regain control of southern Daraa province? which has been a lifeline for arms shipments to rebels seeking to topple him ? sent jitters across Jordan. Officials said that security was immediately beefed up, with more Jordanian soldiers deployed along the border with Syria.

In recent weeks, Assad's forces have appeared to be regaining control over areas seized by rebels, particularly the strategic town of Qusair.

Jordan also fears that Assad's sleeper cells, including Hezbollah, may already be in the country and would act if instructed by Iran or Syria, where an uprising that started in 2011 has descended into all-out civil war.

Eager Lion coincides with Washington deploying one or two Patriot batteries along the border with Syria and agreeing to keep a squadron of 12 to 24 F-16 fighter jets after the exercises ? a move Syria's regime and its Russian patron have expressed concern over.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was quoted by Russia's Interfax news agency as saying that the deployment of the air-defense systems in Jordan in order to set up a no-fly zone over Syria would be a violation of international law.

The United States has said it has no plans for military intervention in Syria, although President Barack Obama has left the door open for any possibility.

"With this exercise being the biggest fire power show ever in Jordan, coupled with the deployment of Patriot air defense systems and U.S. fighter jets, it is clear that the ground is being set for military intervention in Syria," said Col. Khalil Rawahneh, a Jordanian military strategist who participated in at least 16 U.S. and British-sponsored maneuvers until he retired four years ago.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-18-Jordan-Syria-War%20Games/id-a7d30ba5f0df4a0884b537be1dde12c6

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Snowden: U.S. gov't destroyed my chance for fair trial (cbsnews)

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Why is it so hard to find great apps? - Talk Mobile

Between the iOS App Store, BlackBerry World, Google Play, and Windows Phone Store, there are more than 1.7 million apps available for smartphone and tablet users to choose from. The explosion in apps has been fueled by an explosion in users, who to date have downloaded well over 100 billion apps.

With so many apps to choose from, taking the virtual step into an app store presents a bewildering selection. Does it really matter how many apps a platform has in its store, or should we be worrying about which apps there are and how good they are?

How are we supposed to sort the good apps from the bad? Are reviews the answer, or can a managed store make a difference? Search might dig up something - if you know what you're looking for. Big name developers might offer some predictability, yet independent developers are often where you can find the innovation. Then again, big and small developers alike aren't immune from pumping out poor quality material.

So how do we sort through that to find the good apps, the best apps, the apps that really work for what you need?

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/bUT_RdokA3o/story01.htm

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