Thursday, April 30, 2015

9 Ways To Show Mom (And The Rest Of The Internet) How Much You Love Her

There’s no shortage of ways to communicate with the ones we love. And whether you prefer to use Facebook or FaceTime, technology now allows us connect more visually and creatively than ever before.

Between texts, tweets, Instagram posts and more, there are many unique ways to show you care through your favorite apps and websites. In fact, it can be downright overwhelming at times. So we’ve partnered with Best Buy to bring you 12 ways to modernize the Mother’s Day “I love you” card. Put down the paper and try out these thoughtful, 21st century-inspired expressions of love your mom deserves.

1. Make her a custom emoji
Sure, you could text mom the typical hearts (red and pink, of course), roses and box of chocolate emojis, but why not go the extra mile and create an emoji of your mom? Download the imoji app and upload her photo to generate a personalized sticker that you can use on iMessage, Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.
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photo credit: imoji





2. Create a Pinterest board inspired by her hobbies
Does Mom love experimenting in the kitchen? Gardening? Travelling? Put together a custom Pinterest board inspired by the things you know she’ll love.

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3. Dedicate a #ThrowbackThursday post to her
Chime in on the always-trending #ThrowbackThursday hashtag on Instagram, Twitter or Facebook with a retro mom-and-daughter pic.
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4. Tweet her best advice
Moms are chock-full of brilliance, and let’s face it, they’re almost always right. Spread your mother’s age-old wisdom by using the #MomKnowsBest hashtag on Twitter.

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5. Share one of her Facebook posts
Give mom the Facebook love (and likes) she deserves by sharing her latest photo or status update.

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6. Make her a Spotify playlist
Remember when compiling a mix tape was the official symbol of love? Well, it still is… sort of. Gather your mom’s favorite songs -- or ones that just remind you of her -- in a Spotify playlist. Share it with her, and play it during Mother’s Day festivities.

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7. Start a virtual family tree
She always said she wanted help mapping out the family tree. Today’s the day to get one started using MyHeritage.com’s free Family Tree Builder.

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8. Include her in your cover photo
It may be a simple gesture, but the cover photo is prime real estate on your Facebook profile. Use a recent or nostalgic picture to show her (and the rest of the internet) just how much she means to you.

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9. Make a digital photo collage
Put together a collage of your all-time favorite photos of you and your mom using the Pic Stitch app. Play around with different templates to find the one that suits your mom’s taste, and share it publicly on your social media accounts, or in a personal email just to her.

photo collage


For more tokens of appreciation for your very modern mom, head over to Best Buy's Mother's Day Gift Center. Check out the slideshow below to start brainstorming!













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Jeb Bush Admires Clarence Thomas, Thinks Antonin Scalia Is The 'Most Interesting Opinion Writer'

WASHINGTON -- Two current Supreme Court justices stand out to former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R), who is almost certain to launch his campaign for president in the next several months.

Speaking at the conservative National Review Institute's ideas summit in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Bush called Antonin Scalia “far and away the most interesting opinion writer" on the court and praised the conservative justice for his textualist approach to the U.S. Constitution.

Yet the justice he is ideologically closest to, Bush said, was Clarence Thomas.

“There’s a quiet and consistency there I like and I generally agree with his views," Bush said, referring to Thomas' famous habit of not asking any questions during oral arguments.

The two justices belong to the conservative bloc that, along with swing vote Anthony Kennedy, has pushed the court to the right in recent years. The two other members of the bloc -- Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito -- were appointed to the court by Jeb's brother, former President George W. Bush.

The next president will likely make at least one appointment to the Supreme Court upon the expected retirement of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Ginsburg, a member of the liberal bloc, is currently the oldest serving justice at 82 years old. Despite calls for her to retire before the end of President Barack Obama's term to preserve the ideological balance of the court, Ginsburg has held firm to her decision to remain active.

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Mike Tyson To Floyd Mayweather: 'Greatness Is Being Accepted By The People'

Mike Tyson didn't pull any punches in bringing Floyd Mayweather down to size.

Ahead of Mayweather's Saturday megafight against Manny Pacquiao, Tyson was asked by the Undisputed Champion Network about Mayweather recently claiming he was better than Muhammad Ali. Tyson didn't duck the question.

"He's very delusional," the former heavyweight champ said. "Listen, if he was anywhere near that realm of greatness with Ali, he'd be able to take his kids to school by himself. He can't take his kids to school by himself, and he’s talking about he's great? Greatness is not guarding yourself from the people, greatness is being accepted by the people. He can’t take his kids alone to school by himself."

Then, his parting shot: "He's a little, scared man. He's a very small, scared man."

Of course, Ali had his say earlier.




H/T Bleacher Report

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Get ready, Memphis!

April showers bring more than just May flowers in Memphis! We’ve teamed up with Memphis in May to make this month unforgettable. From seeing awesome headliners to taking a taste of the best your city has to offer—we’ve got you covered with safe, affordable rides. Beale Street Music Festival | May 1-3 With headliners that include Lenny […]

Senators propose that oil companies pay fee to ship oil by train

Following a series of accidents involving trains that hauled oil and flammable materials, a group of U.S. senators from six states have proposed that oil companies pay the government a fee for using trains to carry such materials. Photo by Flickr user woodleywonderworks

Following a series of accidents involving trains that hauled oil and flammable materials, a group of U.S. senators from six states have proposed that oil companies pay the government a fee for using trains to carry such materials. Photo by Flickr user woodleywonderworks

BILLINGS, Mont. — U.S. senators from six states on Thursday proposed that the government charge companies a special fee to ship oil, ethanol and other flammable liquids in older railroad tank cars that have been involved in fiery explosions.

The proposal would be paired with tax breaks for new tank cars built to better withstand derailments. Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon told The Associated Press the intent is to offer “market-based” incentives for companies to improve safety.

On Friday, federal transportation regulators are expected to announce new rules calling for up to 155,000 flammable liquid tank cars to be retrofitted or replaced.

Industry representatives have said it could take more than a decade to get that work done — far longer than safety officials want.

Accidents involving the older tank cars, known as DOT-111s, include 47 people killed when a train carrying North Dakota crude crashed in the town of Lac-Magantic, Quebec, and one person killed during a 2009 ethanol train derailment in Rockford, Illinois.

The fee would start at $175 and increase to $1,400 per car by 2018. It would raise an estimated $600 million to train first responders, clean up spills and relocate rail tracks around populated areas.

“The idea is to speed up the phase-out of older tank cars,” Wyden said. He added it “allows us to move in a much faster and more aggressive fashion to make oil by rail transportation safer.”

Co-sponsoring the fee legislation were six Democrats: Senators Diane Feinstein of California, Charles Schumer of New York, Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Bob Casey of Pennsylvania Mark Warner of Virginia and Jeff Merkley of Oregon.

Tank cars often are owned not by railroads but by the companies that produce oil, ethanol and other fuels moved by rail. There are roughly 55,000 older DOT-111s that would be subject to the fee.

The tax breaks would apply to cars constructed since 2011 under a voluntary industry standard meant to improve safety that has proved insufficient. It would cover up to 15 percent of the expense of upgrading cars.

A study commissioned last year by the Railway Supply Institute, which represents tank car owners and manufacturers, said modifying the flammable liquids tank car fleet would cost more than $4 billion.

BNSF Railway recently imposed a $1,000 fee on older tank cars used to carry crude, drawing a lawsuit from fuel and chemical refiners who contended the surcharge is illegal. Diana Cronan with the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers said her group was reviewing the fee proposal offered Thursday.

The post Senators propose that oil companies pay fee to ship oil by train appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Law Day in the USA: Which Rights Do Americans Love Best?

May 1 in the United States in officially recognized as Law Day. President Dwight D. Eisenhower established the day, saying, "In a very real sense, the world no longer has a choice between force and law. If civilization is...

14 Things You Should Never Say To A Woman Who Lost Her Father

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I was 2 years old when my father died. The only things I remember about him are other people’s memories. It’s probably why photographs hold such a magical power over me -- they are my only way of proving that he actually existed.

As the years pass, I have more and more friends who have lost their fathers. Everyone's experience is different, and it's not always easy to explain what it's like to live with that kind of loss. But that doesn't mean we don't want to talk about it.

However, there is a right way and a wrong way to have that conversation. Even if you have the best of intentions, there are some things you just shouldn't say to women who have lost their dads. Here are 14 of them:

1. Don’t tell me that my wedding will still be nice and that he'll be there in spirit. It’s not the same as having him walk me down the aisle or picking a special song for the father-daughter dance.

2. Don’t say at least he lived a long life. This sounds like you're saying it's not so bad.

3. Or that many people die young. Age doesn't matter.

4. Don’t tell me that he’s in a better place.

5. Or that it was his time to go. Regardless of your religious or spiritual beliefs, this doesn't make the surviving family feel better.

6. Never ask if I’m over it yet. All this does is point out that he has been gone for a while. And when you lose a loved one, there is no "getting over it."

7. Don’t bring up the term "daddy issues" or ask if I’ve had healthy romantic relationships. Just because a woman lost her father doesn't mean she's broken.

8. Don’t tell me to cheer up, or that my father wouldn't want me to be sad. How would you know?

9. Eliminate the phrase "there is a reason for everything" from your vocabulary. This is neither charming nor whimsical when talking about death.

10. Don’t say at least he's not suffering anymore.

11. Don’t tell me it’s not that bad because I was young when he died...

12. ...Or imply that a cancer diagnosis makes death less shocking. Whether it was expected or unexpected, It doesn't make a major loss any easier.

13. Never tell me that everybody's parents die sooner or later...

14. ...Or remind me that at least I still have a mom, because some people don't even have that.

Here is what you can say instead:

Tell me about your father.
I wish I had known him.
I don’t know how you feel, but I am here to help in any way I can.
My favorite memory of your father is…
I wish I had the right words. Just know that I care.

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Maryland Republican Suggests Taking Food Stamps From Rioters' Parents

A Republican lawmaker in the Maryland General Assembly said it might be a good idea to take food stamps away from parents if their kids are involved in riots.

"I think that you could make the case that if there is a failure to do proper parenting and allowing this stuff to happen, is there an opportunity for a month to take away your food stamps," Maryland state Del. Pat McDonough said Wednesday during a radio broadcast clipped by The Intercept.

"It would never get past the legislature because it seems a little bit harsh, but I think the principle is there has got to be some way to connect to the lack of parenting," McDonough continued.

Violence has rocked Baltimore since 25-year-old Freddie Gray died in police custody on April 19. Rioters looted and burned businesses Monday after Gray's funeral, prompting Gov. Larry Hogan (R) to call in the National Guard.

State lawmakers don't have much power to tinker with rules for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which is overseen by the federal government, and the Maryland General Assembly is out of session until next year. But McDonough told The Huffington Post the principle of penalizing parents for their kids behavior is strong. He noted that the city of Baltimore already has a law that fines parents if their children violate a curfew.

"In Baltimore, the juvenile curfew has penalties for the parents," McDonough said. "They’re financial penalties, which could be the same as taking away your benefits because it’s impacting you economically, so I’m not establishing anything new in principle."

Baltimore police arrested 235 people on Monday night, 34 of whom were juveniles.

McDonough praised Toya Graham, the Baltimore mom who forcibly removed her teenage son from the scene of violent protests on Monday afternoon.

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This Heavenly 'Peanut Butter Cheese Ball' Is What's Missing From Every Dinner Party. And Life In General.

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Somebody pinch us. We're in peanut butter heaven.

This peanut butter cheese ball is precisely what's been missing from every cheese-and-cracker plate since the beginning of time. It's basically an orb of peanut butter and cream cheese, rolled in a heart-melting mixture of chocolate and peanut butter chips -- with just a little additional sugar.

This creation is served like a classic cheese ball, but it's scooped up with with cookies, pretzels, apples or graham crackers in place of those stale old Wheat Thins. Trust us, you will not be able to stop. See ya later, Gouda!

Get the Peanut Butter "Cheese" Ball recipe from Like Mother Like Daughter.

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PGA Pro Ben Martin Hits Gorgeous Hole-In-One To Beat Tour Star Matt Kuchar

Well, that's one way to beat a heavy favorite.

Ben Martin stunned Matt Kuchar, the top-seed in their pool, on a beautiful hole-in-one in the first round of the World Golf Championships -- Cadillac Match Play in San Francisco on Wednesday.

With the match tied at the par-3, 243-yard 17th hole at TPC Harding Park, Martin slammed his drive a few dozen meters from the hole and it rolled in. Kuchar gave Martin a sporting high-five.

Kuchar missed a short putt on the same hole that could have extended the match, allowing Martin to fully enjoy his ace.

H/T For The Win

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Flat Rates to Louisville, Just in time for the mane event

Save your wagers for the chalk and count on Uber to get you to Louisville with the tap of a button.

The post Flat Rates to Louisville, Just in time for the mane event appeared first on Uber Blog.

Can a Guilty Plea Affect My Immigration Status?

Being a non-citizen resident in the United States can a precarious position. Until you become a naturalized citizen, there are many grounds upon which you can be deported. A criminal conviction doesn't just affect your day to day life, it...

New York's Museum Of Biblical Art Is Closing Down

NEW YORK (RNS) On the heels of what seemed like its greatest triumph — a magnificent display of sculptures by the Renaissance pioneer Donatello — a small but important museum in midtown Manhattan that specialized in religious art regarded with a neutrally secular eye announced Tuesday (April 28) that it was going out of business.

A press release from the Museum of Biblical Art, known as MOBIA, explained that after learning in February that the American Bible Society, which had housed it for a decade, was selling its building and moving to Philadelphia, the museum explored multiple options but could not raise the funds needed to keep going at a new location.

The museum will close to the general public on June 14 and cease operations on the 30th, although an exhibit it co-organized on Spanish colonial religious art will open in Palm Beach, Fla., in March next year.

MOBIA’s fate was not a total surprise: The Bible Society, once MOBIA’s sole funder, had been ramping down its support by mutual agreement, and the sale of the building had been rumored since 2012. But the closing nonetheless deeply rattled the museum staff and those who treasured MOBIA as one of the few museums in the country that routinely acknowledged art’s religious context.

“I’m stunned,” said Dale T. Irvin, president of the New York Theological Seminary, who sometimes brought classes to MOBIA to see cross-cultural study of Scripture illustrated. “I can’t believe that it’s slipping away. It was such a valuable resource.”

Brian O’Neil, one of two trustees who have been on the museum’s board throughout its trailblazing 10-year run, said board members made a last-minute fundraising push in hopes that the buzz from the Donatello show might “change the game.”

But while he thinks the museum could have survived the Bible Society’s zeroing-out of its cash contributions, the addition of $5 million a year to configure a new space was prohibitive. “The possibilities were never real enough for us to say, ‘We’re just a few dollars away,’” he said.

In 1997, the Bible Society, a near-200-year-old Bible translation and dissemination ministry, decided to capitalize on its extravagantly tourist-friendly location just north of Columbus Circle by creating an art space.

But Ena Heller, the 33-year-old art historian they selected to run what became “The Gallery” at the American Bible Society, made it clear that although she was eager to concentrate on biblically based (i.e., Christian and Jewish) art, she would accept only if exhibits were addressed in a nondevotional, religiously neutral light.

“They were visionary enough to say, ‘You’re right,’” she said. “’If you do it this way you’re going to get a much broader audience.”

The result turned out to be an almost total novelty on the American cultural scene. Although it was not initially intended to do so, MOBIA filled a significant hole in American museums’ treatment of their religious holdings. Most big institutions have a tremendous amount of religious art — after all, Western art was almost exclusively religious for centuries — but until very recently they have been “notoriously bad,” as Heller put it, at addressing it in terms of belief.

By abstaining from religion-oriented exhibition themes, wall placement and even labeling, museums routinely ignored biblical inspiration, artists’ faith, ritual practice, private devotion and the role of theological debates.

This huge blind spot — traceable to the French revolutionaries who stripped all religious references out of Louis XVI’s art collection when they took the Louvre public — accumulated additional rationales over two more centuries: “art for art’s sake,” abstraction, postmodernism and culture warfare. By the late 20th century, it was a mostly unspoken assumption.

Thus Heller and her three successors had plenty of material for over 60 shows. One exhibit traced the artistic development of the motif of Christ as “the man of sorrows”; another featured the seldom-seen World War I Passion paintings of 20th-century master Georges Rouault; sleuthing by a professor at the Jewish Theological Seminary presented telltale evidence that before their expulsion from Spain, medieval Jews worked side by side with Christians creating Christian altarpieces.

Other shows expressing the topic’s endless potential included one of African-American religious art, and “Louis C. Tiffany and the Art of Devotion,” presenting the glassmeister’s religious production. All the exhibits were accomplished without evangelizing or engaging in apologetics.

This philosophy was formalized in 2005, when the museum was chartered under its current name as an independent nonprofit, and began winning grants from government bodies.

Gradually, the arbiters of the New York art world caught on. Superlatives in The New York Times became almost routine.

In February, the museum’s current director, Richard Townsend, mounted “Sculpture in the Age of Donatello: Renaissance Masterpieces From Florence Cathedral,” which continues until June 14. It includes six attributed and three confirmed Donatellos for the first (and probably last) time in the United States, while their home, the Museo dell’Opera del Duomo in Florence, is being renovated.

Any number of variables seem to have contributed to MOBIA’s outmaneuvering other museums for the show; but the Museo’s director, Monsignor Timothy Verdon, observed: “It impressed me that they focus on the meaning of the works they show. These things are usually seen in terms of their style. That’s a voluntary blindness, of course.”

Townsend notes that the show, like the rest of MOBIA’s offerings, “served both people of faith and those from the other end of the spectrum,” who are interested only in aesthetics.

But in the end, neither group felt beholden enough. O’Neil said: “The people who wanted to fund things that have a very religious mission didn’t feel that we did what they wanted. And at the same time, in an increasingly secular culture, our religious subject matter may not have been a fundraising additive. The way the world works now, the in-between has very little support.”

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UBER AND GOODWILL® MAKE SPRING CLEANING EASY IN SOUTHWEST FLORIDA

Spring has sprung, and it’s officially the time of year for cleaning out closets. In the spirit of the season, we are teaming up with our friends at select Goodwill®  locations in Florida to make donating clothing quick and convenient. This Saturday, May 2, clean out your closets and let Uber take care of the rest with […]

The post UBER AND GOODWILL® MAKE SPRING CLEANING EASY IN SOUTHWEST FLORIDA appeared first on Uber Blog.

Obama to sign bill to boost energy efficiency in buildings

A visitor tours the inside of a home called "Living Light" designed by students from the University of Tennessee competing in the Solar Decathlon in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 26, 2011. Photo by Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

A visitor tours the inside of a home called “Living Light” designed by students from the University of Tennessee competing in the Solar Decathlon in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 26, 2011. Photo by Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is signing long-delayed legislation to boost energy efficiency in buildings.

Obama plans to sign the bill into law in the Oval Office Thursday afternoon. It aims to cut energy use in commercial buildings, manufacturing plants and homes.

The measure was widely popular in both parties. But it was defeated last year after becoming enmeshed in a partisan fight over the Keystone XL oil pipeline.

The bill exempts some energy-efficient water heaters from pending Energy Department rules. It also requires federal agencies to develop best practices to increase energy efficiency in federal buildings, among other provisions.

The post Obama to sign bill to boost energy efficiency in buildings appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Ferguson Protests Flare As Baltimore Reignites The Cause

FERGUSON, Mo. -- Hundreds of protesters gathered on the main street and in front of the city police department for a second consecutive night Wednesday, the day after demonstrators hurled rocks at police vehicles and set fire to a portable toilet. Three people were shot, police said.

The Ferguson demonstrations, to show solidarity with Baltimore protests against Freddie Gray's fatal injury in police custody there, began Tuesday, with hundreds gathered on West Florissant, the center of Ferguson protests last fall against the police killing of unarmed teenager Michael Brown. Once rocks began flying, a line of officers herded protesters away and warned on a loudspeaker that they may be subject to arrest and "chemical munitions.” Three people were hospitalized with gunshot wounds and a 20-year-old was arrested, police said.

Wednesday's protest was largely peaceful.

This week's demonstrations began as they did last fall, with chants, songs and blocked streets. But as Tuesday's protest wore into the evening, peacefulness gave way to turbulence, as have many Ferguson nights since Brown's killing in August.

The Ferguson outburst followed visits to the city by Obama administration officials and famed rapper Will.i.am.

Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro on Wednesday stopped at the Ferguson community center to announce the government had designated North St. Louis and St. Louis County as a promise zone, which can prioritize federal grants.

“We live in a time when brain power truly is the new currency for success," Castro told the crowd. "Our most precious assets in this nation are our young people, who hold the hope of continuing to make the United States the strongest nation in the world."

Days earlier, Megan Smith, the chief U.S technology officer, and Grammy award-winning artist Will.i.am visited Feguson’s McCluer South Berkeley High School to encourage students to continue studies in STEM -- science, technology, engineering and mathmatics. Both preached positive change through education.

Will.i.am said he will help fund a STEM program for Ferguson-Florissant School District.

“We did this so you guys can have tools for the environment because if you don’t take science, or some engineering degree, or mathematics, Ferguson will just end up like Ferguson,” he said. ”Because ain’t nobody coming unless something’s burning. The only way to change it, is it for you to change it yourself.”

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Old Hand Found In Florida Attic With Coins And Treasure Map

If you've ever cleaned out a grandparent's attic, you know that you might find some weird things up there. One Florida family recently discovered that...

Read more: Hand Found in Florida Attic, Dead Head, Hand in Attic, Florida Attic, Florida Man, Florida, Florida Things, Jose Gaspar, Jose Gaspar Pirate, Florida Pirates, Weird News News

Prisoner In Van Said Freddie Gray Was ‘Banging Against The Walls' During Ride

A prisoner sharing a police transport van with Freddie Gray told investigators that he could hear Gray “banging against the walls” of the vehicle and believed that he “was intentionally trying to injure himself,” according to a police document obtained by The Washington Post.

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Nepal's Rural Poor, Hardest Hit By Earthquake, Now Face Massive Health Threat

SANGACHOWK, Nepal -– Food in this earthquake-shattered Nepali village will run out in a few days, fresh water is an hour's walk and disease has begun to spread.

As the sense of urgency rises, international aid agencies scramble to help those in rural areas, four days after a devastating 7.8 magnitude earthquake killed more than 5,000 people and wiped out whole villages. Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, who has declared three days of mourning, told Reuters that the death toll could reach 10,000.

Nepal’s difficult terrain and cash-strapped government mean the physical and humanitarian scale of the disaster is just beginning to reveal itself. The Nepalese army is conducting a huge relief effort, with reports that nine out of 10 soldiers are involved, airlifting the critically injured out of rural areas and overseeing logistics for medical teams. Despite these efforts, and the flood of foreign help, including the release of $15 million from the United Nations emergency fund, tens of thousands of people are still sleeping in makeshift tents with no toilets.

In addition to the toll, the crisis caused by the country’s worst earthquake in 80 years has exposed Nepal’s shoddy architecture and lack of a clear emergency plan.

In Sangachowk, whose residents are scattered across sloping hills about 25 miles northeast of Kathmandu, bodies are still being uncovered.

“Our dead cattle and goats are beginning to rot and stink, but there are humans down there, too,” said shopkeeper Bidur Giri, 51, standing beside what is left of his small convenience store. As he spoke, wafts of sour, fleshy decay drifted through the dirt roads. Giri pointed at more destruction below the cliff, where cement houses have been reduced to rubble. All that remains of his store is a green-painted wooden façade, whose doors open onto an empty void.

Many in the village work as day laborers. Now, without opportunity to work, their savings are dwindling, along with their ability to find food.

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Shopkeeper Bidur Giri, 51, stands by the remains of his store, next to Sandesh Aryal, 10, in the village of Sangachowk.

There are enough biscuits and dried noodles -– which people are eating without cooking -– to last five more days, said Chatur Giri, 56, a farmer who oversees citizen affairs in the village of 8,000. Around four-fifths of Sangachowk’s homes have been destroyed, he said.

Groups of men and women sat perched on heaps of debris, trying to shelter themselves from the relentless midday sun. Chickens and the occasional black goat ambled past. By nightfall, torrential rain will come, typical of the Himalayan weather at this time of year.

Almost all of the 1,000 natural springs in the region have been damaged, according to Oxfam, which is trying to install a 6,600-gallon water tank in the nearby town of Sindhupalchowk.

“The situation is terrible. There is no medicine, not even hand sanitizer or paracetamol,” said Sajjad Mohammad Sajid, Oxfam’s regional human coordinator for Asia. “People are developing colds, cough and fever. Diseases are growing.”

WaterAid has warned that the next weeks are crucial for the landlocked country to procure fresh water. Without it, there will be serious health risks.

Sandesh Aryal, 10, dressed in mud-caked track pants and a red shirt, said he had diarrhea. His science teacher, 22-year-old Suraj Giri, grew incensed as he talked of the lack of government response.

“People are going to the toilet everywhere," Sandesh said, punching his fist in the air. "We are getting no help at all from the government and we are very, very angry.”

Oxfam’s Sajid conceded that the government has not dispatched anyone to help the hardest-hit areas, such as Sangachowk.

Nepal’s government has admitted its response has been inadequate and that there were "weaknesses" in its relief effort. While food is an obvious priority, Maj. Deepak Gurung, who oversees military operations in the area, said lack of electricity and no drinking water could “lead to more damage than everything else combined”.

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Women who've lost their homes in Sangachowk pass time by the main road.

In the nearby town of Sindhupalchowk, the Red Cross is distributing tarpaulins and ready meals to families, and conducting rescue operations. “We are still looking for the dead and injured. Bodies can cause disease and need to be moved, and the injured need urgent help,” said Ram Jee Karki, head of International Committee of the Red Cross Nepal’s central north region, as military helicopters hovered above. He stood beside a tent for the injured, who lay strewn on thin scarves and urine-smelling hay.

Doctors from the now collapsed government-run hospital said most were suffering from head and spinal injuries and broken bones. Without electricity, doctors are unable to take X-rays, and often must guess at what may be wrong beneath the skin. Several people wore days-old blood-soaked bandages around their heads.

“The mess, the rain, we fear what this will lead to,” said Dr. Nikee Shrestha, who slept outside on the night of the earthquake, beside a mound of corpses. Cholera and other waterborne epidemics pose a “massive issue that will be hard to avoid,” she added.

With aftershocks continuing through Wednesday night, and Nepalis still camping en masse outside, the race is on to prevent a massive disease epidemic.

nepal
Soldiers carry an injured woman to a van in Sindhupalchowk.

This article was supported by the International Reporting Project.

The button below indicates how much has been raised on Crowdrise's "Nepal Earthquake Relief" page. Click to visit the site and donate.



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Keeping Work Weird (and Legal)

From cities to startups, everyone is trying to keep it weird these days. An offbeat corporate culture at your business may sound good in theory, but how do you keep it legal in practice? Here are a few tips...

If Only We Had Dating Translators, Going Out Would Be A Far More Honest Experience

What does it all mean???

Dating is stressful enough worrying about your own problems, so when you drop a second person and their problems into the picture, it's just a mixing bowl of hormonal chaos. If only we all had personal dating translators, someone to cut through the defenses and smokescreens we all put up when we first meet someone.

Comedy duo Vana Dabney and Deirdre Devlin of Honest Monster have created a sketch where just such a thing exists.

Sigh, oh well, back to jumping blindly into relationships!

Follow Huffington Post's board LOL onPinterest.


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Improving Your Daily Outlook

Since we launched the Uber app for Windows Phone , we have collaborated with the Microsoft team to make it even easier for users of both our products to move around their cities. We kicked things off at Build 2015 , Microsoft’s annual developer conference, with a sneak peek of an exciting collaboration with Outlook […]

The post Improving Your Daily Outlook appeared first on Uber Blog.

Vacant commercial building fire in Los Angeles – raw video

Fire Sunday in Westlake district

Nepal not prepared for intensity of earthquake, geologist says

A man passes a damaged statue of Lord Buddha in Bhaktapur, Nepal, a day after an earthquake struck central Nepal on April 25. Photo by Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

A man passes a damaged statue of Lord Buddha in Bhaktapur, Nepal, a day after an earthquake struck central Nepal on April 25. Photo by Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

It’s no mystery that Nepal — precariously perched atop two shifting geologic plates — is vulnerable to earthquakes. For the past decade, Nepal has been working on preparing for the next big one. It established a Department of Disaster Management and started using sturdier building codes for new construction.

But between its political and economic troubles, the impoverished nation just couldn’t get all of its disaster preparation and response systems in place in time for Saturday’s massive quake, said one geologist who had been working with the Nepalese government on its readiness.

The death toll from Saturday’s massive earthquake is now more than 5,000, with more fatalities expected in remote villages that haven’t reported in yet.

A monastery and shrines at the Swayambhunath Stupa, a UNESCO world heritage site, collapsed after Saturday's earthquake in Nepal. Photo by Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

Shrines and a monastery at the Swayambhunath Stupa, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, collapsed after Saturday’s earthquake in Nepal. Photo by Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

The Nepalese “were not prepared for such a strong earthquake. They just simply had not had time to get all of the things they’d done operationalized,” said geologist Allen Clark, a senior fellow at the East-West Center in Hawaii.

And such a major earthquake required a coordinated international response that could launch on-the-ground quickly, but in Nepal the logistics are very difficult, said Clark. Nepal’s one international airport and smaller airports can’t handle the influx of supplies, nor distribute them efficiently over damaged and landslide-blocked roads.

“It’s going to be a very difficult situation to get people and supplies and capacity into the outer areas around Kathmandu,” he said. “That’s going to take unfortunately probably several weeks, not a couple days.”

Saturday’s 7.8-magnitude earthquake that hit midway between the capital Kathmandu and the city of Pokhara was the worst to rattle Nepal since 1934, when an 8.2-magnitude quake killed more than 17,000 people.

Kathmandu is built on a large ancient lake along the front of the Himalayas, so it is primarily on sediment — not rock, said Clark. The sediment allowed the transmission of ground waves which added to the destruction.

A map shows the vulnerability of households in Nepal following the April 25, 2015, earthquake. The data model uses a range of variables related to population density, housing construction materials and household dependence on LP gas and piped water. These are combined with earthquake-specific data to create a Severity Impact Estimate Index. Map by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

A map shows the vulnerability of households in Nepal following the April 25, 2015, earthquake. The data model uses a range of variables related to population density, housing construction materials and household dependence on gas and piped water. These are combined with earthquake-specific data to create a Severity Impact Estimate Index. Map by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

For the last 10 years, Nepal had been working with the United Nations and other international groups on disaster management and preparedness. The government put an overall disaster plan in place, including reinforcing and constructing stronger buildings, and training people to monitor the construction. Clark helped set up the disaster management system and evaluated areas at risk.

“They did as well as they could under the circumstances. We have almost a decade of constant turmoil in the country, during which the disaster management system was set up and put in place,” said Clark.

It’s too early to tell if the management system worked, he said, but preliminary reports show the more modern portions of Kathmandu, including new industry- and tourist-related buildings, did not receive as much damage as the older parts, indicating Nepal’s efforts to make buildings safer seemed to be working.

“The activities that had been going on by the U.N. and other organizations were successful, they simply didn’t have enough time to revamp the system adequately,” said Clark.

Many structures built in the 1700s and 1800s — including UNESCO World Heritage Sites — were damaged or completely destroyed.

Nepalese rescuers and onlookers gather at the collapsed Dharahara Tower in Kathmandu on April 25, following a 7.8-magnitude earthquake. Photo by Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images

Nepalese rescuers and onlookers gather at the collapsed Dharahara Tower in Kathmandu on April 25, following a 7.8-magnitude earthquake. Photo by Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images

For example, the landmark Dharahara Tower, built in 1832 for Queen Lalit Tripura Sundari, collapsed in Saturday’s quake with a reported 180 bodies inside.

“It’s going to be a very significant blow to the historical legacy of the city,” Clark said.

Rebuilding will cost an estimated $10 billion, about half of Nepal’s $20 billion economy, according to Nepal’s finance chief.

But, despite the probability of more earthquakes to come, there’s no question the city will rebuild, since it’s the capital and there aren’t other options for available flat, stable space, said Clark.

“It’s going to be rebuilt and hopefully it will be rebuilt to even better standards this time,” he said. “You might think of it like Los Angeles, where there has been and going to be another major earthquake someday and yet we build right back on it all the time.”

The post Nepal not prepared for intensity of earthquake, geologist says appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Exxon vs. Apple: Who Is No. 1 for Dividends?

Exxon Mobil (XOM) increased its dividend by 6% on Wednesday to 73 cents a quarter up from 69 cents. That implies a $12.2 billion payout to investors, says Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst for S&P Dow Jones Indices. That would be just ahead of Apples (AAPL) $12 billion payout and would make Exxon the [...]

3 Things You Shouldn't Put In Your Ads

Advertising is tricky business. The right words could bring lots of money into your business. The wrong words could hurt your business' reputation and bottom line. Budweiser is learning that the hard way. As part of its "Up for...

5 ways you can help Baltimore

People stand outside the burned community center and apartments across the street from the Southern Baptist Church in Baltimore, Maryland April 28, 2015. Photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

People stand outside the burned community center and apartments across the street from the Southern Baptist Church in Baltimore on Tuesday, a day after riots across the city. Photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

The violent riots that broke out in Baltimore following the funeral of 25-year-old Freddie Gray, who is suspected of having been a victim of police brutality, ended with fires, looting and destruction that affected many of the city’s homes and businesses.

During crises like these in American cities, it’s easy to feel helpless. We’ve researched five ways you can help the city rebuild and recover:

1. Finance education

The Baltimore Community Foundation, which invests in education, and race equity and inclusion, has established a Fund for Rebuilding Baltimore and is working with the community to determine how best to apply the donations. 100 percent of donations will go to rebuilding efforts.

Click here to donate.

2. Volunteer

If you live in the area and can volunteer your time, the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhoods has created a Google doc listing places around the city that could use a few extra hands, whether it be for cleanup, delivering supplies or organizing peaceful walks around the city.

Click here to help.

In what will be a first for Major League Baseball, the Baltimore Orioles will host the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday in a stadium closed to fans as Baltimore copes with some of the worst U.S. urban rioting in years. Photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

In what will be a first for Major League Baseball, the Baltimore Orioles will host the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday in a stadium closed to fans as Baltimore copes with some of the worst U.S. urban rioting in years. Photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

3. Give to Camden Yard employees

Bill Baer, a Philadelphia sports writer, created a fund for employees of Baltimore’s baseball stadium who will be missing out on up to a week’s worth of pay, after two games were canceled, one was closed to the public and three have been relocated.

Click here to donate.

4. Help rebuild a senior center

A fund has been set up to rebuild a $16 million community center that was burned to the ground on Monday. The center was expected to house 60 low-income senior citizens and was pioneered by the Southern Baptist Church in Baltimore.

Click here to donate and specify that the donation should go to the Mary Harvin Transformation Center.

5. Invest in Baltimore’s youth

Founded in 2012, The Inner City Harbor Project is staffed and run by youth leaders from Baltimore who help train police officers on ways to better communicate and engage with young people. The program also mediates conflicts between teenagers and sends 25 “teenage ambassadors” to the Inner Harbor on the weekends and after school during the summer to promote positive behavior.

“What I see in the Inner Harbor and what was being expressed is the feeling of being discriminated, excluded from mainstream society and retaliating in the only way they know how,” Celia Neustadt, the executive director of Inner City Harbor Poject, who founded it in the summer of 2012, told NewsHour.

“These kids don’t have anything to lose. They are not engaged academically; they are not engaged in traditional social structures,” she said. “They have created their own independent structures to support the things they care about, but they don’t have anything to lose in our current mainstream society because we haven’t created space for them,” she said.

Neustadt believes the teenagers need to be a part of finding a solution to the youth violence in Baltimore. “Without the teens on the inside, we have no hope for knowing it, understanding it, or working to resolve it,” she said.

Click here to donate.

The post 5 ways you can help Baltimore appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

College President At The Party

Like many colleges and universities with students who live off campus, Quinnipiac University sometimes struggles to maintain good relations with its nonstudent neighbors, who don't like loud student parties and fear that the local college will buy up the neighborhood. So when word spread (with accompanying video) that the university's president, John L. Lahey, attended a raucous off-campus party this weekend and cheered the students on, the reaction from local leaders was intense and negative.

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Even as online learning grows, America’s students struggle with U.S. history, civics

In classrooms across the country, students work on laptops and other devices connected to the internet. Photo by Flickr user Jeff Peterson

In classrooms across the country, students work on laptops and other devices connected to the internet. Photo by Flickr user Jeff Peterson

The most recent scores of eighth graders on national tests of U.S. history, geography and civics show students’ command of those subjects haven’t increased since the tests, part of a suite of exams known as the Nation’s Report Card, were last given in 2010.

Just 18 percent of the nationally representative sample of eighth graders who took the tests in 2014 scored at a level considered proficient in U.S. history, 27 percent reached that level in geography and 23 percent did so in civics.

The percentage of students scoring at proficient ticked up just one point since 2010 for history and civics and was flat for geography.

The results prompted some concern among civics education organizations.

“The Nation’s Report Card, is a difficult and complex test that successfully measures some key areas of civic learning and how well civics is taught,” Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, director of the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning & Engagement at Tufts University, wrote in a statement. “However, as the new Nation’s Report Card: 2014 shows, we are far from achieving an acceptable quality or equality of civics education.”

When it comes to student scores, white students saw modest gains in their average scores in U.S. history and civics, while Hispanic students’ average scores increased in history and geography. The percent of students scoring in the lowest category, below basic, also fell slightly on each exam.

What the test data does show is how classrooms have changed since 2010.

The percent of students reporting that they read material from textbooks fell by 8 or 9 percent for each subject area but remained above 60 percent. The percent of students listening to online presentations or reading letters and other documents of historic people in U.S. history classes increased to nearly a quarter. The percent using a computer at school for social studies also increased to 25 percent.

Another change was that just 23 percent of teachers administering the exams reported having taken a college-level course in any of the three subjects after completing their certification coursework in the last two years. That was down from 29 percent in 2010.

When the next round of history, geography and civics tests are given in 2018, how students report learning in the classroom will likely see further change. But not only in the number of students accessing class-related materials online. The Common Core standards for what students should learn in English for each grade are now being used as guidelines in more than 40 states. Those standards include recommendations for teaching social studies like using more primary sources, having students write persuasive essays based on evidence found in documents and working in groups.

In 2014 fewer than 25 percent of students reported doing group work in social studies and less than 20 percent reported participating in debates or panel discussions and less than 10 percent wrote something for class that expressed an opinion.

PBS NewsHour education coverage is part of American Graduate: Let’s Make it Happen, a public media initiative made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

The post Even as online learning grows, America’s students struggle with U.S. history, civics appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Wynn’s Miss Stings Income Investors Too

Income investors have two reasons to bemoan the terrible results posted by Wynn Resorts (WYNN) on Wednesday. First, the dividend cut. Along with the first quarter earnings report that missed analysts’ estimates by a mile, the company founded by Steve Wynn also cut its dividend by two-thirds. Instead of $1.50 a share, it will pay just [...]

Your Complimentary Flight to Mykonos is Only a Few Rides Away

The top Uber Cairo "Rider of the Month" will win a free trip to Mykonos!!

The post Your Complimentary Flight to Mykonos is Only a Few Rides Away appeared first on Uber Blog.

5 Ways To Be A Morning Person

For night owls, there are few things more grating than cheery morning people. Their fresh faces, bright eyes, and perky personalities make us want to hit the snooze button again and again (and again). But, we have to admit we secretly envy their morning motivation, and for good reason: Research has shown a link between rising earlier and being healthier, happier, slimmer, and more proactive. Luckily, there is still hope for those of us who dread the early wake-up call. Here, five science-backed tips to help you rise and shine

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Obama honoring Texas teacher who works with war refugees

[Watch Video]President Barack Obama will honor Teacher of the Year Shanna Peeples at a ceremony from the White House at 11:35 a.m. EDT. NewsHour will live stream the event in the player above.

WASHINGTON — A high school English teacher from Amarillo, Texas, is being honored as America’s Teacher of the Year at the White House.

2015 Teacher of the Year Shanna Peeples, photo by Amarillo Globe-News

2015 Teacher of the Year Shanna Peeples, photo by Amarillo Globe-News

Shanna Peeples from Palo Duro High School is known for helping guide refugees who have been moving to Amarillo from war-torn countries.

President Barack Obama says all kids deserve a good teacher and a local library full of books to help them dream big. He’s remembering a fifth-grade teacher from his Hawaii childhood who helped him feel special even though he “was just a kid with a funny name in a new school.”

He says on Thursday that he plans to travel to a library in Washington’s impoverished Anacostia neighborhood to announce a new effort to provide books to underprivileged children.

The post Obama honoring Texas teacher who works with war refugees appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Absurd “Pedestrian Safety Kit” Highlights the Perils of Walking in America

Given how fundamental walking is to our humanity and our health, it’s sad to see how marginalized pedestrians have become in our transportation system. How absurd is it that the simple act of walking would require special equipment, with the onus for safety placed on the most vulnerable? Nathaniel Hood at Network blog Streets.mn says this attitude […]

Nota à Imprensa | 29/4

As inovações tecnológicas trouxeram inúmeras oportunidades para as pessoas e as cidades. É por meio da tecnologia que as cidades vão se tornar cada vez melhores e mais acessíveis para o cidadão, que precisa ter seu direito fundamental de escolha assegurado.

The post Nota à Imprensa | 29/4 appeared first on Uber Blog.

First Quarter GDP Growth Weaker than Expected

First quarter gross domestic product (GDP) grew at an anemic 0.2% rate, according to the Commerce Department’s first estimate released Friday. Economists had forecast an increase of 1.1% in the annualized rate. Growth was 2.2% in the last three months of 2014. Weak consumer spending contributed to the slow growth as did a decline in [...]

The 22 Most Frustrating Things About Being A Plus-Size Shopper

store mannequins

Photo credit: John Chapple / Contributor/Getty Images


We all know the struggles of shopping for our size, but those challenges can be even harder for plus-size consumers. Not only are options more limited, but designers consistently offer poor designs at high prices.

While there are a few stores on the right track, many retailers haven't made the necessary strides. So, we asked our Facebook community: What are your biggest pet peeves as a plus-size shopper? And let us tell you, the responses kept coming and coming. Plus-size retailers and designers: if you're listening, there is clearly a lot of work to be done.

Below, the 22 most frustrating things about being a plus-size shopper:

1. "Not seeing the same cuts/styles available in larger sizes as they are for smaller sizes. If a store sells a top, for example, in a size XXS, they should have it in XXL and up, too. Let ME decide what looks good [on] ME!" -- Facebook user Natalia Oleksy

plus size

2. "Looking for clothes that don't look like they are maternity clothes. There is a huge difference between a larger size and being pregnant." -- Facebook user Lilly Christine Nolta

3. "Lack of 'basic' clothing. Basic T-shirts in a decent, soft cotton are so hard to come by. They're either tent-sized or made out of awful materials." -- Facebook user Rebecca Lisi

4. "There is a serious lack of cute fitness wear." -- Facebook user Jessicah Powers

5. "Two words: Floral fabric. Why must plus-size clothing look like draperies?" -- Facebook user Micheline Worl

6. "Why is there so much polyester?" -- Facebook user Marya Clarissa Dillon

7. "Plus sizes with darts that fall in the wrong spot. Not all plus-size girls have plus-size boobs." -- Facebook user Jessica Tobalske Gathirimu

8. "I don't want to look pregnant ...not everything has to be empire wasted!" -- Facebook user Patti Bianchi Day

9. "Can we get some dresses with sleeves? Why does every cute dress have to have tank top cut? I get tired of buying cardigans." -- Facebook user Lucy Merriweather

10. "The models they use to show plus-sized clothes are not true plus-sized people." -- Facebook user Vivian Sullivan Nwankpah

store mannequins

11. "We don't own a bedazzler, stop putting that crap all over everything!!!!" -- Facebook user Trisha Gant-Lubaczewski

12. "It seems like if you are big, designers think you want to look frumpy rather than stylish." -- Facebook user Laura Anderson

13. "In order to find stylish and flattering options you have to pay outrageous prices." -- Facebook user Ashley Keith

14. "I think that stores who offer plus-sizes online should also have those options in the store, so people can try clothes on rather than take a chance ordering online, paying shipping and then having to return what doesn't fit. People shouldn't be shamed out of the stores and only have online options." -- Facebook user Christine Dolan

15. "No decent suiting. Everything is matronly." -- Facebook user Adrienne Marin

16. "Big girls like exactly the same thing that every girl likes. Get rid of those big loud colors and flowers and try making some sophisticated looking clothing.'" -- Facebook user Mary Deane

17. "The way stores squeeze in the plus-size section in the back of the store, and in the case of Target, mix it right in with maternity." -- Facebook user Kristi Vaile

target plus size

18. "Stop making tops that are cut like a perfect square. Unflattering!" -- Facebook user Susan Hörner

19. "It's like trying to decide which expensive burlap sack to buy. Ugh." -- Facebook user Figgy Pierce

20. "Lack of stylish options and one-size-fits-all-shapes reasoning." -- Facebook user Amber Gatlin

21. "The derogatory plus-size moniker." -- Facebook user Beth Jordan

22. "Everything." -- Facebook user Rachel Ann

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Wednesday's Morning Email: Baltimore Violence Ebbs

morning email


baltimore

TOP STORIES

To get The Morning Email, HuffPost's daily roundup of the news, in your inbox, sign up here.

BALTIMORE VIOLENCE EBBS The Baltimore Police Commissioner declared the city stable after a quieter, calmer night that contrasted strongly with Monday's clashes. Take a look at how Baltimore's history played into the unrest, and hear what the mom who publicly reprimanded her child for rioting said. And here's what the media didn't learn from Ferguson. [Lilly Workneh, HuffPost]

NEPAL DEATH TOLL HITS 5,000 Aid has finally reached the secluded epicenter of the earthquake. [AP]

SEC INTRODUCING NEW EXECUTIVE PAY GUIDELINES "Securities regulators want publicly traded companies to make it easier for shareholders to determine whether top executives’ compensation is aligned with the firm’s financial performance. On Wednesday, the Securities and Exchange Commission is set to propose long-awaited rules that would force thousands of companies to tell investors how the pay of top management tracked the firm’s financial results." [WSJ]

IN 2016 NEWS Bernie Sanders is running for president, and Hillary Clinton is expected to give a speech about ending mass incarceration. [Sam Levine, HuffPost]

NIGERIA SAYS IT HAS RESCUED 293 GIRLS AND WOMEN FROM BOKO HARAM None of them are believed to be a part of the group kidnapped last year. [Reuters]

SAUDI ROYAL SHAKE-UP This will lead to awkward family reunions: Saudi King Salman rearranged the royal line, displacing his brother. [Reuters]

MEET THE ONLY PERSON BEING PUNISHED AFTER THE SENATE TORTURE REPORT It's not someone involved with actual torturing. [Ali Watkins, HuffPost]

FLIGHTS GROUNDED AFTER PILOT iPAD ISSUES The glitch grounded two dozen flights. [USA Today]

WHAT’S BREWING

'THE BOXER AND THE BATTERER' "Floyd Mayweather Jr. has bobbed, weaved, and danced through domestic violence accusations for much of his career. On the verge of the biggest fight in recent history, can we separate the athlete from the abuser?" [Grantland]

PREGNANT AT HARVARD "I was shocked by how easy it was to hide my pregnancy. No one, not even my roommates or best friends, noticed how I suddenly started wearing exclusively baggy clothing, or how I kept cancelling plans last minute so I could cry in my room. No one noticed that I was vomiting on a near-daily basis, though I passed it off as 'a winter bug' for weeks on end." [The Harvard Crimson]

NETFLIX'S MOST WATCHED SHOWS AREN'T ALWAYS WHAT YOU THINK People actually watch "Daredevil." [HuffPost]

BEHIND THE FIRST VIRAL MEDIA EVENT Orson Welles knew how to terrify. [Vanity Fair]

PUT DOWN THE RED WINE, LADIES The binge drinking rates for women jumped 36% from 2002 to 2012. [HuffPost]

MISSING ELEPHANTS AT THE ZOO? The decline of elephant exhibits. [AP]

WHY YOU NEED THAT TIME ALONE We know, we know: silence and reflection are hard. [HuffPost]

WHAT'S WORKING

EXTENDING A HAND TO A COWORKER "Last week, contract workers at the U.S. Capitol went on strike to advocate for better working conditions and higher wages. Now, some of those workers are taking further action by raising money online to support their fellow workers." [HuffPost]

ON THE BLOG

TELLING THE TRUTH ABOUT MOTHERHOOD "There is a constant debate about parenting choices, and everyone knows that breastfeeding -- especially where you breastfeed -- is one of the hot button issues. Who knew breastfeeding on the toilet, taking a picture of it and posting it to share with my measly 422 followers on Instagram and 992 Facebook friends would send the Internet into a frenzy?" [HuffPost]

BEFORE YOU GO

~ Periscoping the NFL draft.

~ Because golfing was so strenuous, someone invented a Segway-esque scooter for golf courses.

~ The takeover continues: Uber now delivers food in NYC and Chicago.

~ Studying Antarctica's "Blood Falls."

~ There's hope out there, gentlemen: Hilary Duff is going on a Tinder date.

~ Cities are over the car.

~ The youngest member of the Partridge family has died.

~ The case for "nonhuman personhood."

~ The "Friends" star you can blame for the lack of a "Friends" movie.

~ Watch Paul McCartney play a song the Beatles never played live.

~ Budweiser pulls slogan after date rape backlash.

Send tips/quips/quotes/stories/photos/events/scoops to Lauren Weber at lauren.weber@huffingtonpost.com. Follow us on Twitter @LaurenWeberHP. And like what you're reading? Sign up here to get The Morning Email delivered to you.

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What the Supreme Court justices said on gay marriage

The Supreme Court is pictured in Washington March 9, 2015. Few GOP members of congress or governors have expressed support for same-sex marriage in the upcoming March 28 Supreme Court case. Photo by Joshua Roberts/Reuters

The Supreme Court heard historic arguments over the right of gay and lesbian couples to marry. Photo by Joshua Roberts/Reuters

WASHINGTON — Excerpts from arguments before the Supreme Court on Tuesday about whether states must allow same-sex couples to marry and whether states must recognize gay marriages performed in other states:

___

Chief Justice John Roberts, on the institution of marriage:

“You’re not seeking to join the institution, you’re seeking to change what the institution is. The fundamental core of the institution is the opposite-sex relationship and you want to introduce into it a same-sex relationship.”

___

Justice Anthony Kennedy:

“The word that keeps coming back to me in this case is millennia, plus time. … This definition (of marriage) has been with us for millennia. And it’s very difficult for the court to say ‘Oh well, we know better.'”

___

Roberts, to the proponents of gay marriage:

“If you prevail here, there will be no more debate. I mean, closing of debate can close minds, and it will have a consequence on how this new institution is accepted. People feel very differently about something if they have a chance to vote on it than if it’s imposed on them by the courts.”

___

Mary Bonauto, representing same-sex couples:

“In terms of the question of who decides, it’s not about the court versus the states. It’s about the individual making the choice to marry and with whom to marry, or the government.”

___

Justice Samuel Alito, to supporters of gay marriage:

“Suppose we rule in your favor in this case and then after that, a group consisting of two men and two women apply for a marriage license. Would there be any ground for denying them a license?”

___

Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, representing the federal government:

“Gay and lesbian people are equal. They deserve equal protection of the laws, and they deserve it now.”

___

Kennedy:

“Same-sex couples say, of course, we understand the nobility and the sacredness of the marriage. We know we can’t procreate, but we want the other attributes of it in order to show that we, too, have a dignity that can be fulfilled.”

___

John Bursch, representing states that ban same-sex marriage:

“If this court ensconces in the Constitution a new definition of marriage and it reduces the rate that opposite-sex couples stay together, bound to their children, because of that different understanding, even a 1 percent change … is many, many children.”

___

Justice Elena Kagan:

“It’s hard to see how permitting same-sex marriage discourages people from being bonded with their biological children.”

___

Roberts:

“If Sue loves Joe and Tom loves Joe, Sue can marry him and Tom can’t. And the difference is based upon their different sex. Why isn’t that a straightforward question of sexual discrimination?”

___

Roberts, on the question of forcing states that ban same-sex marriage to recognize those unions formed in other states:

“It’d simply be a matter of time until they would in effect be recognizing that within the state, because we live in a very mobile society and people move all the time. In other words, one state would basically set the policy for the entire nation.”

___

Douglas Hallward-Driemeier, representing same-sex couples:

“These petitioners have built their lives around their marriages, including bringing children into their families, just as opposite-sex couples have done. But the non-recognition laws undermine the stability of these families, though the states purport to support such stability.”

___

Joseph Whalen, associate solicitor general for Tennessee:

“Tennessee, Ohio, Kentucky and other states with a traditional definition of marriage have done nothing here but stand pat. They have maintained the status quo. And yet other states have made the decision, and it certainly is their right and prerogative to do so, to expand the definition, to redefine the definition, and then to suggest that other states that have done nothing but stand pat now must recognize those marriages imposes a substantial burden on the state’s ability to self-govern.”

The post What the Supreme Court justices said on gay marriage appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

You Deserve a Study Break

Finals have arrived and cramming is underway, and you need a sugary pick-me-up to push through your afternoon study session. So we’re bringing you the ultimate on-demand study break sweet treat!

The post You Deserve a Study Break appeared first on Uber Blog.

Floyd Briggs, Oklahoma Man, Stands In The Road To Stop A Speeding Motorcyclist

Definitely do NOT try this at home.

When Floyd Briggs spotted a motorcycle speeding through his Chickasha, Oklahoma, neighborhood during a police pursuit, he took matters into his own hands.

“I said ‘I gotta stop this guy before he hurts a little kid,'” Briggs told the local NBC station KFOR.

Briggs jumped out into the road to physically stop the bike, which had been clocked at up to 63 mph in a 30 mph zone.

Michael Coppedge (Grady County Sheriff's Department)



Fortunately for Briggs, the speeding biker swerved to avoid him, wiped out and hit a parked car. The suspect, identified as Michael Coppedge, then allegedly fled on foot, according to a police report cited by the Chickasha Express Star.

Briggs took off after him.

“I was running out of steam very quick. I’m not very aerodynamic,” Briggs told KFOR.

Eventually, Briggs caught up to Coppedge and let him have it... with salty language.

Briggs later apologized for his choice of words.

“I did use some language that just isn’t how I talk," he told KFOR. "Some of the words I used, I was pretty worked up. I’m sorry for that."

Coppedge was arrested at gunpoint, according to the Express Star, and treated for injuries at a local hospital. Afterwards, he was transported to the local jail and charged with eluding police, reckless driving, driving without a license, leaving the scene of an accident involving damage and driving without insurance, the website reported. He was released on bond on Monday, according to jail records from the Grady County Sheriff's Department.

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Ferguson Shooting Reported Amid Protest Near Site Where Michael Brown Died

FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — A man has been injured by gunfire amid a protest in Ferguson, Missouri, and one person has been taken into custody, according to a newspaper report.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports (http://bit.ly/1PVbiOV ) about 50 people gathered Tuesday night near the site where 18-year-old Michael Brown was fatally shot in August by a Ferguson police officer. The protest came as a much larger demonstration was ongoing in Baltimore for a second night over the death of Freddie Gray.

The newspaper reports the man was shot in the leg, and police who were on site took one person into custody and recovered a gun.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the shooting was related to the protest.

A message seeking comment from Ferguson police wasn't immediately returned. A spokesman for St. Louis County police said he had no immediate details.

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Information from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, http://www.stltoday.com

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Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Must see video: Train blown off bridge

Union Pacific train loses to high winds in Louisiana

Education Department Steers Corinthian Colleges Students To Other Troubled For-Profits

The U.S. Department of Education is telling thousands of students from now-shuttered for-profit schools owned by Corinthian Colleges Inc. to consider transferring to more than a dozen other for-profit schools also under investigation by federal or state authorities.

The department's suggestion follows Corinthian's abrupt shutdown on Monday, which left 16,000 students scrambling for options. In 31 spreadsheets on its website, the Education Department listed at least 13 for-profit schools whose corporate owners were under state or federal investigation for possibly misleading students among "viable transfer opportunities" to Corinthian's 30 locations and its online program.

One of the suggestions, ITT Educational Services, was sued in February 2014 by the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for allegedly deceiving thousands of mostly low-income students with false job prospects and then forcing them into expensive private loans that the company expected a majority of them to default on. The department doesn't disclose the lawsuit on its list. Nor does it tell Corinthian students that 12 of the other for-profits it suggests are under state or federal investigation, according to announcements by state authorities or the companies' securities filings.

The Education Department has previously warned of the dangers associated with the for-profit college industry, such as questionable job prospects and high student debt loads. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has told lawmakers that his department would not allow for Corinthian to sell its schools to buyers already facing government scrutiny.

"To be clear, the department will not approve a sale to another entity if that entity is currently under state and/or federal investigation," Duncan wrote in an Aug. 4 letter to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) sharply criticized the Education Department on Tuesday for its apparent policy reversal, asking during remarks on the Senate floor, "Why now will the department accept that outcome for these students?"

"Has the Department of Education learned nothing?" Durbin continued. "How in good faith can they tell these Corinthian students -- who just had their college disappear and are sitting on a pile of debt -- that these are viable transfer options?"

Denise Horn, an Education Department spokesman, said in a statement that at least 42 percent of Corinthian students are within six months of completing their programs. The department didn't respond to queries regarding Durbin's charge or address why it suggested embattled for-profits as transfer options.

Consumer advocates said the Education Department is trying to minimize losses that would result from forgiving Corinthian students' federal student loans, an option available to students whose colleges shut down.

Education Undersecretary Ted Mitchell, in an interview published Tuesday by the Los Angeles Times, said that while students were the department's first consideration, "We also think the taxpayer has made an investment in these students, and that the taxpayers' investment -- as well as the students' investment -- ought to be protected."

Getting Corinthian students to complete their studies at other schools, such as the for-profit colleges, would ensure that taxpayers aren't on the hook for the cost of mass loan cancellations.

Bridgepoint Education Inc., which owns Ashford University, is under investigation by at least four state attorneys general. Graham Holdings Co., which owns Kaplan University and Kaplan College, faces probes by at least three state prosecutors. At least two state attorneys general are investigating Apollo Education Group Inc., which owns University of Phoenix. And DeVry Education Group Inc., which owns Carrington College and DeVry University, faces investigations from at least three state prosecutors and the Federal Trade Commission.

Attorneys general of 20 states are investigating Career Education Corp., which owns International Academy of Design & Technology, Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts, and American InterContinental University. The U.S. Department of Justice and at least a dozen state prosecutors have pending investigations into Education Management Corp., the owner of Argosy University and the Art Institutes. And Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan has a pending 2012 lawsuit against Westwood College, alleging the school misled students about their future employment prospects while leaving them with mountains of debt.

The companies have either denied wrongdoing or said they are cooperating with the probes.

Corinthian announced Sunday it would shut its roughly 30 campuses, leaving 16,000 students across five states in the lurch after the company failed to either sell its schools or strike agreements with other colleges that would take in its students.

Federal and state authorities had sued the company for allegedly misleading potential students with false job placement and graduation rates. The Education Department, after limiting the company's access to federal student aid last summer over a paperwork dispute, struck a deal with Corinthian that freed up taxpayer cash in exchange for the company either selling all of its schools or shutting them down after all current students completed their programs.

Corinthian blamed federal and state regulators for its sudden closure. It denies wrongdoing.

Its students are now eligible for complete forgiveness of their federal student loans, unless they transfer their credits and complete their studies elsewhere. The Education Department said Monday that if all current Corinthian students requested debt forgiveness, it would face a $214 million bill. Had the company failed in September -- a few months before Corinthian announced an Education Department-brokered sale of more than half of its campuses to ECMC Group, one of the department's debt collectors -- the Education Department would've faced $639 million in potential losses.

The reduced liability is a consequence of what the Education Department called an "orderly wind-down" of Corinthian. "And efforts to help students find placement at other colleges will reduce that liability further," the department said.

Robyn Smith, a former California deputy attorney general who now works on student loan issues from Los Angeles for the National Consumer Law Center, said the department has long preferred minimizing losses from forgiving student debts over protecting students. The Education Department's emphasis on helping students complete their programs elsewhere -- rather than ensuring that students know about potential loan cancellations -- shows a lack of regard for the likelihood that many of them won't be able to finish their degrees or get jobs in their chosen fields, she said.

Smith said the Education Department "almost buries" the debt forgiveness option in its communications to students. Rep. Janice Hahn (D-Calif.) seemed to provide some evidence to support that view in a Tuesday letter to Duncan in which she alleged that his department had delayed notifying students in her district whose college had closed in 2014 about the loan cancellation option. "This cannot be allowed to happen again," Hahn said.

Other for-profit schools are eagerly trying to enroll former Corinthian students, Smith said.

"The Education Department prioritizes debt collection and making profits for the federal government over protecting students and providing relief for those harmed by for-profit schools," said Smith. "It's a problem."

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