Monday, August 5, 2013

1 dead, 1 detained as car rams beach crowd

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A driver plowed into a crowd walking along one of the most popular beach boardwalks in Southern California Saturday evening, killing one person, injuring 11 others and leaving behind a chaotic scene strewn with bleeding victims, officials and witnesses said.

The victim died at a hospital a few hours after the crash at the Venice Beach boardwalk, Los Angeles police Lt. Andy Neiman said.

At about the same time a person was taken into custody for questioning and a car was impounded in neighboring Santa Monica, and detectives were determining if both were the ones they'd been seeking, Neiman said.

Neiman would give no details on the identity of the victim or the person of interest.

The sandy-haired man drove the powerful midsized Dodge Avenger into vendors and tourists as they walked along the paved pedestrian walkway of the storied boardwalk. Police and witnesses said bloodied victims and knocked over mannequins and lawn chairs were left in the wake.

Witnesses told firefighters it appeared the man was in control of his car as he ran people down, but police said they did not know his motives.

"If this was an intentional act that certainly raises the stakes quite a bit," Neiman said.

Ten of the 12 victims were taken to hospitals, city Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey said. Of the 11 survivors, one was in critical condition and two in serious condition, Humphrey said.

Alex Hagan, 22, who was working the front desk at the Cadillac Hotel, said the man was sitting in his parked car on the street right next to the boardwalk and his hotel when he suddenly started the engine and accelerated, swerving past yellow poles meant to keep cars off the pedestrian walkway.

"I heard a big 'boom, boom,' like the sound of someone going up and down the curb, it was super loud," Hagan told The Associated Press."

The car knocked down two mannequins then ran into vendors selling at their booths, Hagan said.

Many rushed to help the injured while others ran after the car screaming and cursing, Hagan said.

Firefighters surveyed the sprawling crowd looking for injured immediately after the crash, Humphrey said. Hours later police surveyed the same ground for evidence.

The Venice boardwalk is a cultural hub in a part of Los Angeles known for its circus-meets-gritty-city eccentricities.

The 1.5-mile ribbon of asphalt that runs along the sand a few hundred yards from the ocean is home to galleries, restaurants, tattoo shops, skateboard parks and the famous outdoor weight room known as Muscle Beach.

It can draw as many as 150,000 people on summer weekends.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lapd-1-dead-1-detained-car-rams-beach-053504814.html

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Video: Market pretty fairly valued: Roth

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52658978/

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Whirlwind wedding allows dying tot to be best man for his parents

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Couple weds with their terminally ill son, 2, as best man
  • The marriage took place in the backyard of the family's home
  • After a grim diagnosis from doctors, the wedding was planned within a week

(CNN) -- Dressed in a tan suit and an orange shirt matching his mom's bouquet, 2-year-old Logan looked on as his parents exchanged vows and rings at a backyard wedding.

Guests who gathered under a white arbor in the Jeanette, Pennsylvania, home applauded -- but many with tears in their eyes.

Because this union of Christine Swidorsky and Sean Stevenson was no ordinary wedding.

The couple had planned it for ages, and had penciled July 2014 as their special day. But that was before they learned that their best man -- Logan -- had just weeks to live.

The boy is suffering from leukemia, brought on by a genetic disorder, Fanconi anemia.

"We've been waiting for this day for a long time, but under the circumstances with Logan being sick all the time, we just held off," Stevenson told CNN affiliate KDKA. "We always knew he was going to get better."

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"But under the circumstances of what the doctors told us, we just decided to go ahead and do it while he was still with us."

Christine Swidorsky carried Logan down the aisle. His grandmother cradled her in his arms, his favorite brown teddy bear by his side.

"This is our dream come true, all our family together, and we're all together celebrating. The celebration of my son's life and the celebration of our marriage," Swidorsky said, as Etta James' "At Last" played in the background.

Fighting since birth

Born on October 22, 2010, Logan weighed just three pounds. Eating troubles kept Logan in the hospital, but he kept fighting, kept growing, and was soon home with his parents and his two older sisters.

And for his first year, he grew, he was healthy, and he made his family unspeakably happy. Even today, as his life nears an end, Swidorsky struggles to find words to say what an amazing little boy he is.

Just after Logan's first birthday, Swidorsky noticed that he wasn't feeling well again, and his lips and fingernails had turned white. Over the course of a month, she took Logan to the pediatrician four times before the head pediatrician tended to him. When he did, he quickly called 911.

Swidorsky said Logan shocked doctors at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. His leukemia had progressed so far, they were surprised he was still alive. Chemotherapy was started right away, taking an extraordinary toll on his body.

The couple learned more devastating news shortly after: Logan has a genetic disorder called Fanconi anemia, which most frequently results in death, most commonly from cancer, between the ages of 25 and 30.

But Logan fought hard, just like he had done as a newborn. He landed in the ICU but pulled through, and by July 13, 2012, doctors were prepared to give him a blood stem cell transplant.

After his stem cell treatment, he was free of leukemia for nine months, eating and acting like any other child. Life started to feel normal for Logan's family.

But Swidorsky's gut feeling returned when she saw Logan acting strange again.

Cancer again

It was cancer again: a mass the size of an orange on Logan's larger and better-functioning kidney. Doctors had no choice but to remove the kidney, just a week before Easter this year.

Life gained a long-sought-after normalcy for Logan and the family, except for the twice-weekly visits to a clinic for his chemotherapy. The therapy, though not a perfect solution for Logan, would hopefully prevent a recurrence of the cancer, despite being a lower dose than average.

Logan's life continued to improve.

"He was eating bowl after bowl" of spaghetti, Swidorsky said. "It was a wonderful feeling."

But then he started getting fevers and throwing up.

Logan's left side swelled as the mass returned, where the kidney once was.

"I thought he was doing so well. It's like you take two steps forward, 15 back," Swidorsky said.

The doctors told Logan's family that they could only do more harm than good.

In June, as the family's fortunes continued to fail, the Make a Wish Foundation treated them to a trip to Disney World.

But after just four hours there, Logan was back in the hospital.

Eight days of torture ensued, as he had developed an infection and eventually needed to be flown home to Jeannette, about 40 minutes from Pittsburgh.

Finally, on July 26, doctors gave Logan one to two weeks to live.

Not giving up

But that doesn't mean Logan's parents are giving up.

"We're just blessed everyday that he's here with us," Stevenson said Saturday, after the ceremony. "We're not going to stop fighting. We have nothing to lose.

"I'm going to try until God says otherwise."

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_mostpopular/~3/lNnRCXed9SE/index.html

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Joel Kotkin: California homes require real reach

In the 1950s and 1960s, Southern California was ground zero for the "American Dream" of owning a house. From tony Newport Beach and Bel-Air to the more middle-class suburbs of the San Fernando Valley and Garden Grove to working-class Lakewood, our region created a vast geography of opportunity for prospective homeowners.

Today, with house prices again skyrocketing, Southern California is morphing into something that more resembles a geography of inequality. Now, even the middle class is forced into either being "house poor" or completely shut out of homeownership, or may simply be obliged to leave the area. Even more troubling is that the working class and the poor suffer from the kind of crowded, overpriced housing conditions sadly reminiscent of those experienced during the Depression and the Second World War.

Judged by the "median multiple" ? the median income divided by the median house price ? California's prices for a generation have soared well above the national averages. Demographer Wendell Cox notes that, until the early 1970s, California's house prices were similar to those in the rest of the United States. National Association of Realtors data indicate that the median house price in California at that time was 7 percent above the national average. By 2013, the price differential had risen to 109 percent.

This has little to do with such things as construction costs, which have not risen as quickly in most of California as elsewhere, but are largely the result of soaring land costs and stiff fees imposed on housing. Attributable largely to regulatory factors that restrict building in many areas, the cost of finished land for comparably priced houses has increased nine times as much in California as in the rest of the nation since 1970. Portland State University economist Gerald Mildner refers to this as "Economics 101," indicating that "as the demand for property in a region grows, the increase in demand translates into some combination of more space and high prices, depending upon the elasticity of supply."

Beside regulatory restraints, California housing prices are driven up by the highest impact fees in the nation. An annual survey by Duncan and Associates shows that the average impact fee in California for single-family residence in 2012 was $31,100 per unit, nearly 90 percent higher than the next most expensive state and 265 percent higher than the norm among jurisdictions that levy such fees, which typically pay for capital improvements, like water and wastewater facilities, required by a new development. Many states and localities on the other side of the Sierras do not.

These fees also impact multifamily housing; the state's fees on multifamily units averaged $18,800, 290 percent above the average outside the state.

Construction penalized

California's emerging housing crisis, then, is not, as some suggest, a reflection of the state's constrained geography or economic superiority. The two most-recent spikes in housing costs have occurred as the state's median income has dropped from well above to just about the national average. Neither can we blame a huge surge of new residents, since California's once-buoyant population growth has slowed to levels similar to those of the rest of the country.

Instead, the roots of our state's massive social regression lie in political choices made by the state, counties and cities. This trend likely will intensify, as regulators interpret the state's climate-change legislation to further penalize construction of single-family houses preferred by most California families. Particularly vulnerable will be the starter-home market, once the engine of California's egalitarian middle-class culture.

Some "new urbanists" and greens argue that such restrictions will eliminate wasteful "McMansions" and spur construction of more "sustainable" dense housing for the working masses. Yet, in reality, the impact of highly restrictive housing polices tend to be felt most by both middle-class families and the least-affluent, who find themselves unable to buy housing or, in some cases, are forced to spend huge percentages of their income on rent.

The growing affordability crisis seems likely to worsen as the housing market recovers. Given the paucity of new home construction, and ever-tightening regulation, California's housing market is particularly vulnerable to wild swings in prices; the year-on-year median house price increase as of May 2013 was the greatest since 1980, even greater than in any of the past decade's "bubble" years. Overall, price gains in the state were two to three times stronger than that in the rest of the nation.

This process has been further accelerated by the presence of investors in the local market. Investors, many from Asia, now account for upward of one in four home purchasers in the state.

Among the biggest losers here is California's middle class, particularly young families without large family endowments. Some 60 percent of U.S. households can now afford to buy a house, according to the National Association of Home Builders / Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index, but that percentage has dropped even in the Riverside-San Bernardino (40 percent) and Sacramento (50 percent) metropolitan areas, while San Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego had affordability levels of 20 percent to 30 percent. The lowest level, 17 percent, was found in the San Francisco metropolitan area. We can expect these numbers to worsen in the immediate future.

These numbers will impact a wide range of people, including many with skills desired by employers. According to an analysis of Orange County average salaries for National Core, a nonprofit housing developer based in Rancho Cucamonga, even a biomedical engineer or a nurse in O.C. does not earn enough to buy a house there. As economist and author Claude Gruen has suggested, more restrictive land-use regulation "is to the middle class what the economic disaster of slum clearance was to the poor."

Renters don't escape

Nor will the poor, or renters, benefit from these policies. The nation, and the state, have had programs to help lower-income residents, but these programs meet only a fraction of the need. Los Angeles County had a waiting list 17 times its potential supply of housing, according to a 2004 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition. With relatively little new product being produced, it's unlikely this situation can improve, as potential homeowners are shoved into the rental market, boosting rents higher.

The net result is that more Californians are becoming house poor or "rent" poor. According to American Community Survey data analysis done for National Core by this author and demographer Wendell Cox, this state has four of the six major metropolitan areas with the largest share of renters spending more than 30 percent of their income on rent ? led by Riverside-San Bernardino, Los Angeles-Orange County, Sacramento and San Diego ? are located in the Golden State. This includes a majority of renter household in the cities of Los Angeles, Glendale, Anaheim and Santa Ana.

Even more troubling is a growing percentage of working households suffering housing-expense burdens of 50 percent or more of income. California again leads the way, according the National Housing Conference, with Los Angeles and San Diego among the top five major metro areas.

This emerging social disaster has received little attention from the so-called progressives, whose policies in part are responsible for the state's growing housing crisis. In large part due to housing, and lack of good middle-class jobs, California now has the highest poverty rate (when adjusted for the cost of housing) of any state.

Not only are working-class Californians poorer, they also are subject to ever-higher levels of overcrowding. On a percentage basis, four California major metropolitan areas are in the 10 regions in the country with the most families doubling up. The top two are Riverside-San Bernardino and Los Angeles, followed by San Jose and San Diego.

Overcrowding is particularly tough on children, who suffer greater problems with health and academic performance. Another study associated psychological problems with children from overcrowded housing.

Long drives to work

Finally, the housing crisis also creates significant environmental problems. The unaffordability of housing has forced many Californians to seek shelter far from work. Among commuters traveling 60 minutes or more to work, Riverside-San Bernardino is third-highest, followed by Los Angeles, eighth, and San Francisco, ninth. Among major metropolitan areas with the highest share of commuters traveling 90 or more minutes one way, Riverside-San Bernardino ranks second, in a virtual tie with New York, followed by Sacramento, seventh, and Los Angeles, eighth.

For both California's middle- and working-class, our housing regulatory regime serves as a kind of tax ? a nearly confiscatory one ? that works particularly against families, the poor and those who do not possess considerable family wealth. The result is a California that is increasingly out of sync with the very dream that has brought millions from all over the country.

Register opinion columnist Joel Kotkin is R.C. Hobbs Professor of Urban Studies at Chapman University. He is the executive editor of www.newgeography.com.

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Source: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/housing-519482-california-state.html

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Carter's induction into hall concludes festivities

CANTON, Ohio (AP) ? Forcefully and emotionally, Cris Carter summed up the 50th induction ceremony for the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday night.

The seventh and final inductee from the Class of 2013, Carter honored dozens of people in his life who were "going into the Hall of Fame with me tonight," as he followed Jonathan Ogden, Dave Robinson, Larry Allen, Bill Parcells, Curley Culp and Warren Sapp in being inducted.

More than 120 hall members, a record, and a crowd of 11,500 was on hand at Fawcett Stadium for the golden anniversary celebration of the shrine.

"I appreciate the process you have to go through to get to be a Hall of Famer," Carter said. "To be able to join these men on this stage in football heaven is the greatest day of my life."

Carter needed six tries to make the hall even though he retired as the No. 2 career receiver behind Jerry Rice. He choked back tears as he made his speech after being presented by his son, Duron, and he spoke of his problems with alcohol while playing three years for the Eagles before being released.

He hooked on immediately with the Vikings and hooked onto nearly everything throw his way: Carter finished his 16-season career with 1,101 catches for 13,899 yards and 130 touchdowns.

"This game gave me identity, gave me a sense of purpose," he said.

Parcells also seemingly spoke for everyone in the Hall of Fame, and all the people gathered Saturday night.

"There's a kinship created that lasts for the rest of your life," he said about his experience as one of the NFL's most successful coaches.

The master of the franchise turnaround as the only coach to take four teams to the playoffs, Parcells won Super Bowls with the New York Giants in the 1986 and 1990 seasons.

"Every organization I worked for supported me to the fullest," Parcells said. "Without that, you've got no shot."

Parcells was Coach of the Year honors in 1986 and 1994. He asked to have his bust placed somewhere near Lawrence Taylor in the hall "so I can keep an eye on that sucker."

As relaxed as if he had no one to block, Ogden became the first Baltimore Raven enshrined. The first player drafted by the Ravens after the franchise moved from Cleveland in 1996 and was renamed, Ogden was presented by the man who made that selection, fellow Hall of Famer Ozzie Newsome, now Baltimore's general manager.

A former college shot putter at UCLA, the 6-foot-9, 345-pound Ogden starred at tackle for a dozen seasons in Baltimore, winning the 2000 NFL championship.

"He is part of the foundation of this franchise, part of the reason we have two Super Bowl championships," Newsome said.

Ogden, who was given a 2013 Super Bowl ring by the team, made the hall in his first year of eligibility. He was a six-time All-Pro, made the Pro Bowl 11 times and was the main blocker when Jamal Lewis rushed for 2,066 yards in 2003.

"Talent isn't enough," Ogden said. "A lot of people have talent, they don't always live up to it. For me it is about maximizing, striving for perfection."

Allen, who sniffled his way through his speech, was just as dominating a blocker as Ogden. He also was the NFL's strongest man, once bench-pressing 700 pounds, saying "I did it naturally."

A lead blocker for Dallas as Emmitt Smith became the NFL's career rushing leader, Allen made six All-Pro squads and 11 Pro Bowls in his 14 seasons, the final two with San Francisco. He won the Super Bowl in the 1995 season and was voted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility,

"I just knew I had to win every play," he said. "That's the reason I am here. I knew if I lost a play, I had 45 seconds to get even."

Sapp became only the second Tampa Bay Buccaneer enshrined, 18 years after Lee Roy Selmon made it. He was elected in his first year of eligibility following 13 seasons in which he went from instant starter after being selected 12th overall in the 1995 draft to Defensive Player of the Year in 1999. That season, he had 12 1/2 sacks as the Bucs won their first division title in 18 years. For his career, Sapp had 96 1/2 sacks, extremely high for a defensive tackle.

"I sit here with the greatest among the great," Sapp said, breaking into tears. "We're here, baby."

Presented Saturday night by his 15-year-old daughter, Mercedes, Sapp made the NFL's All-Decade squads for the 1990s and the 2000s.

Sapp, who both Ogden and Allen said was as tough to handle as any player they faced, paid tribute to his roots in Plymouth, Fla.

"That dirt road was something rough," he said. "We sure turned it into something special."

Robinson became the 12th inductee from the vintage Packers coached by Vince Lombardi to be enshrined. Robinson was a prototype outside linebacker who could rush the quarterback, cover tight ends or running backs on pass plays, and stop the run. He made the NFL's All-Decade team of the 1960s and won three NFL titles, including the first two Super Bowls.

"This is the biggest day of the 21st century for the Robinson family," he said, adding that he "lives 25 miles from here but it took me 38 years to get here.

"Now, I am immortalized."

As is Culp, one of the game's most dominant defensive tackles for much of his 14 pro seasons, including the 1969 season when he helped Kansas City win the NFL title.

A five-time Pro Bowler, Culp also played for Houston and Detroit, retiring in 1981, then waiting more than three decades to be enshrined Saturday as a senior nominee.

"It gives me joy and inspiration that will last the rest of my life," Culp said. "I am just overwhelmed by the struggles, joys and tears of those who made it here. I'm happy to join them in the Hall of Fame.

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/carters-induction-hall-concludes-festivities-023557519.html

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General Motors? China Operations Split from Rest of International Group

As if we needed any more evidence that China is an important market for multi-national automakers, General Motors has announced that the company?s China operations are going to be split off into its own business unit separate from the rest of international operations. Heading up GM China will be Tim Lee, who will retain his position of global manufacturing chief. Taking over the rest of GM?s international operations will be Stefan Jacoby, formerly of Volkswagen and Volvo.

Jacoby will oversee operations in 100 countries including Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Bob Socia, current president of GM China, will retain his position and report to Lee. Lee will have responsibility for 12 joint-ventures, two wholly-owned foreign enterprises and more than 55,000 employees.

China is a critical market for General Motors, where it narrowly leads Volkswagen for overall sales volume. Many credit China for the survival of the Buick brand during the company?s 2009 restructuring. Buick is one of GM?s most popular brands in China, where its popularity dates back decades, when it was one of the preferred brands of the elite and powerful.

The Buick Excelle compact sedan, sold in the U.S. as the Verano, is one of GM?s and Buick?s most popular models in China, selling more than 270,000 in 2012, compared to sales of 167,091 of all Buick models in the U.S. in 2012. Sales of Buick models in China topped 700,000 units in 2012.

Source: Reuters, General Motors

Source: http://rumors.automobilemag.com/general-motors-china-operations-split-from-rest-of-international-group-238213.html

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Berlusconi aides seeking presidential pardon

ROME (AP) ? Top Silvio Berlusconi aides are maneuvering to win a presidential pardon so the ex-premier can avoid a prison term and ban on holding office, with one loyalist warning of possible "civil war" unless punishment for his tax-fraud conviction is lifted.

Renato Brunetta, a leader of Berlusconi's People of Freedom party, said Saturday he and another aide requested a meeting with Italy's president, who can issue pardons. Separately, longtime Berlusconi loyalist Sandro Bondi said Italy risks "civil war" if the 76-year-old media mogul isn't spared punishment.

A law to reduce prison overcrowding slashes Berlusconi's four-year sentence to one year. Since he is over 70, he can choose house confinement or perform social services in lieu of prison.

Premier Enrico Letta's fragile coalition risks collapse if Berlusconi's party withdraws support.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/berlusconi-aides-seeking-presidential-pardon-132059086.html

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