Friday, October 25, 2013

Japan industrial output expected to recover on domestic demand


By Stanley White


TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese industrial output is expected to have rebounded in September, fuelled by strong domestic demand and business investment, a Reuters poll showed, highlighting the strength of the economy as government policies bolster growth.


Indicators of Labor demand, consumer spending and real estate investment next week are also likely to come in strong, showing that Japan is making steady progress towards beating deflation.


"Companies are going to start building up inventories to meet demand brought forward before the sales tax hike in April," said Hiroshi Miyazaki, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.


"They will also produce more capital goods as capital expenditure plans are strong," he said.


Industrial production is forecast to have risen 1.8 percent in September, according to the Reuters poll, following a 0.9 percent decline in August. The data is due at 8:50 a.m. on Wednesday in Tokyo (1950 ET Tuesday).


Manufacturers, surveyed by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, will also give forecasts for production in October and November, which will help measure how quickly output will grow as the year-end approaches.


The jobs-to-applicants ratio, a measure of Labor demand, is expected to have risen to a five-year high of 0.96 in September from 0.95 in the previous month, the survey also showed.


Growing demand for workers is a positive sign in Japan's battle to end 15 years of deflation as this should push wages higher and spur consumption.


Household spending in September likely rose 0.5 percent from a year earlier, recovering from a 1.6 percent slide in August, the poll showed. Retail sales are forecast to have risen 1.9 percent year-on-year in September, up for the second straight month in a sign of solid consumer sentiment.


The employment, household spending and retail statistics are all scheduled for release on Tuesday morning in Tokyo.


Japan's property market has been another bright spot as people rush to buy homes and apartments before an increase in the sales tax in April to 8 percent from 5 percent.


Data due at 2 p.m. (0100 ET) on Thursday is expected to show that housing starts jumped an annual 12.2 percent in September after a 12.0 percent rise in August.


Japan's economic growth has outpaced its Group of 7 rich-country peers so far this year as stock market gains stoked personal consumption, prompting some companies in the service sector to expand payrolls.


There is also growing evidence that companies are more willing to raise wages and invest in factories and equipment, two steps that many government officials say are necessary for Japan to end deflation and shift its economy into a higher gear.


(Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-industrial-output-expected-recover-domestic-demand-093247471--business.html
Category: BBM   washington post   dancing with the stars   vince young   Jason Dufner  

Engadget Eurocast 040 - 10.24.13

This week's Eurocast is all about the numbers. Nokia's 1520, 2520, 1320 and 1520. Phew! Our host Daniel Cooper feels they've gone in the wrong direction with all those digits, but its new pal and partner Microsoft, on the other hand, chose to keep it simple, dropping the RT and going with the ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/w59V6vlvjJ4/
Category: john lennon   Jeff Daniels  

50 Shades Of Grey Casting Not Complete! Who Will Play Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!


jamie dornan 50 gallery edit


The search for seksi Christian Grey appears to be over!


Now that Jamie Dornan is tied down to take Dakota Johnson to Poundtown, it's only a matter of time before the rest of the Fifty Shades Of Grey cast gets filled out!


But who do you want to see in these roles?!


Don't you think Blake Lively would be oh so delectable as Anastasia drop dead gorgeous roommate, Kate Kavanagh?


Or how dreamy would Chris Hemsworth be as Christian's hunky big brother Elliot Grey?


We've lined up all of our own personal frontrunners for these supporting parts! And we're hoping our fantasies become reality real soon!


CLICK HERE to see the gallery, "50 Shades Of Grey: Who Will Be Cast As Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!"


CLICK HERE to see the gallery, "50 Shades Of Grey: Who Will Be Cast As Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!"


CLICK HERE to see the gallery, "50 Shades Of Grey: Who Will Be Cast As Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!"


CLICK HERE to see the gallery, "50 Shades Of Grey: Who Will Be Cast As Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!"


CLICK HERE to see the gallery, "50 Shades Of Grey: Who Will Be Cast As Elliot Grey And Kate Kavanagh??!"



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Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-24-50-shades-of-grey-casting-not-over-who-will-play-elliot-grey-and-kate-kavanagh
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Met Museum, NYC amend lease over admission fees

(AP) — The Metropolitan Museum of Art says it has signed an amendment to its lease with New York City that confirms the museum can set its own admission fees.

The amendment comes as the museum faces lawsuits filed earlier this year that accuse the Met of fooling visitors into thinking they have to pay.

The museum says a policy requiring visitors to pay at least something has been around for four decades, and the amendment codifies it in the lease and also gives the museum the ability to consider any other price modifications it might need in the future.

A lawyer for the museum visitors who sued said Thursday the change is actually an admission that the museum didn't have the authority to charge fees over those years.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-24-Museum%20Admissions/id-559906b9b90c46c5abff19647336b8d6
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Zac Hanson, Wife Kate Welcome Third Child, Baby Boy George Abraham Walker


MMMBaby! Zac Hanson has become a dad for the third time, a rep for the musician confirms to Us Weekly. The "MMMBop" singer and his wife Kate welcomed a baby boy on Thursday, Oct. 17.


PHOTOS: The biggest boy bands of all time


"We are very excited to share the addition of George Abraham Walker Hanson to our growing family," Zac tells Us. "Abraham is healthy and we are happily sharing a little down time together as a family." The couple's new baby boy arrived weighing 8 lbs. and 7 oz.


PHOTOS: The hottest teen idols ever


Hanson, 27, confirmed to Us in May that he and his wife were expecting again. "We are so happy and thankful to add more life and love to our family!" the singer said.


He added: "It's fun this time to watch the little ones so excitedly anticipating their new sibling."


PHOTOS: Young celebrity parents


Zac and Kate, 29, married in 2006 and already have two children together -- son Shepherd, 5, and daughter Junia Rosa Ruth, 2.


The couple's new addition will sure have plenty of cousins to call his playmates. The new bundle of joy now joins Zac's nieces and nephews. His brother Isaac, 32, has two kids with his wife Nicole -- daughter Everett, 6, and son James Monroe, 4. Frontman Taylor, 30, has five kids with his wife Natalie -- Ezra, 10, Penelope, 8, River, 6, Viggo, 4, and Wilhelmina Jane, 12 months.


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/zac-hanson-wife-kate-welcome-third-child-baby-boy-george-abraham-walker-20132410
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British newspapers to seek judicial review of tougher regulation


LONDON (Reuters) - A newspaper industry group will go to court on Friday to seek a judicial review of plans by the British government for tougher press regulation following a string of high-profile scandals.


Last November, senior judge Brian Leveson concluded a year-long public inquiry into press ethics with a 1,987-page report denouncing some newspaper tactics and calling for an industry watchdog, enshrined in law, to regulate journalists' behavior.


Earlier this month the three main political parties reached a deal after months of fraught debate, announcing a new set of rules to regulate the often rough-and-tumble press.


The government said the parties had agreed a system to be enshrined under a Royal Charter setting out a code of practice to editors, with an arbitration system to deal with complaints.


Some proposals were amended in response to press lobbying, including one that would require those wishing to complain about the media to pay a small fee, and another that would allow editors to play a greater role on the regulatory committee.


But the newspaper industry remained concerned that the current package could curtail press freedom, and so decided to ask for judges to check the legal basis of the decision to reject their own counter-proposal.


The Press Standards Board of Finance, which funds the current system, blamed the government for their decision to launch a legal challenge, saying it should have done more to protect press freedom in its new proposals.


"They singularly failed to do so, and that is why - as the issues at stake are so extraordinarily high - we are having to take this course of action," Chairman Guy Black said in a statement on Thursday.


The group will apply for a judicial review at London's High Court on Friday. This could delay implementation of the new rules despite opposition from high-profile celebrity victims and members of the public who have fallen foul of press abuse.


Hacked Off, a group set up on behalf of those who feel mistreated by the press, faulted Thursday's decision, accusing parts of the newspaper industry of being "desperate and deaf".


In a statement, the government defended its proposals, arguing they struck the right balance press freedom and safeguards for victims.


(Reporting by Costas Pitas; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/british-newspapers-seek-judicial-review-tougher-regulation-210031233--finance.html
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Jamie Dornan replaces Hunnam in 'Fifty Shades'

In this photo released by ABC, Jamie Dornan guest stars as Sheriff Graham on ABC's "Once Upon a Time." “Fifty Shades of Grey” has its male lead, again. Dornan has been cast as Christian Grey, the lead role that Charlie Hunnam withdrew from recently. (AP Photo/ABC, Craig Sjodin/Kharen Hill)







In this photo released by ABC, Jamie Dornan guest stars as Sheriff Graham on ABC's "Once Upon a Time." “Fifty Shades of Grey” has its male lead, again. Dornan has been cast as Christian Grey, the lead role that Charlie Hunnam withdrew from recently. (AP Photo/ABC, Craig Sjodin/Kharen Hill)







(AP) — "Fifty Shades of Grey" has its male lead, again.

Jamie Dornan has been cast as Christian Grey, the lead role that Charlie Hunnam withdrew from recently. Dornan will star alongside female lead Dakota Johnson, with Sam Taylor-Johnson directing. Shooting is planned to begin in November, with a release in August next year.

Hunnam's departure left the project momentarily reeling. The big-screen adaption of E L James' bestselling erotic novel has been carefully followed by its fans, who were critical of Hunnam's casting.

The 31-year-old Dornan, a former model from Northern Ireland, is relatively unknown. He's starred in the British TV series "The Fall" and the ABC series "Once Upon a Time."

Unlike with Hunnam, social media reaction to Dornan's casting was generally positive.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-24-Film-50%20Shades%20of%20Grey/id-e195d72b155e4e4c8f16bac76c52acbc
Category: big bang theory   liberace   big brother   krispy kreme   taylor swift  

Scientist who sought to predict quakes dies at 92

(AP) — A prominent University of California, Los Angeles, seismologist and geophysicist who sought to predict earthquakes has died.

The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/17eYJtS) that the Oct. 19 death of 92-year-old Vladimir Keilis-Borok was announced by UCLA, where he had been a professor since 1998.

The Russian scientist became well-known after a large earthquake in Japan and another in Central California occurred in 2003 within a time frame that was forecast by his international team of quake experts.

He then announced that an earthquake of magnitude 6.4 or larger would strike before Sept. 5, 2004, in a 12,000-square-mile area of the Mojave Desert. But that prediction failed, and skeptics scoffed that he had simply been lucky the first two times.

Other experts continued to respect his efforts.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-10-24-US-Obit-Keilis-Borok/id-899848f9293a4cff9f421f9a5a960b9b
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First Look: Aziz Ansari Talks About The Insanity Of Marriage In His Upcoming Netflix Comedy Special







'I wanna keep doing that... 'till you're dead.'






Fans of the lovable, huggable Aziz Ansari should start mentally preparing themselves for November 1 because it’s going down! The stand up comedian who tells the absolute best Kanye West and R. Kelly jokes in the history of Kanye West and R. Kelly jokes has a new standup special coming to Netflix. Today we get our first look at Buried Alive and I can’t wait! Aziz explains marriage, from a very creepy, slightly morbid perspective and it’s awesome. Peep the video for more!


[Source]



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LinkedIn tool shares user info on iPhone email

(AP) — LinkedIn just gave its users another reason to ensure their resumes are up to date. The online professional network has introduced a mobile feature that shows information about people's careers in emails being read on iPhones.

The tool, called Intro, pulls details from the profiles of LinkedIn's more than 238 million users so the recipient of an email can learn more about the sender.

The information will be limited to what the email senders already allow anyone to be seen on their LinkedIn accounts, unless they already have granted the recipient broader access through a connection on the service.

The feature released Wednesday works with Gmail, Yahoo Mail, AOL Mail and Apple Inc.'s iCloud when any of them are plugged into the iPhone's built-in email app. LinkedIn Corp. plans to update the feature so it also works with Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook.com and Exchange email. It's available at https://intro.linkedin.com/ .

Intro also works on Apple Inc.'s iPad, although the feature isn't tailored for that device. LinkedIn eventually will release a version of Intro designed especially for the tablet format.

LinkedIn imported the technology powering the Intro feature from its acquisition last year of Rapportive, a startup that had already been mining online social networks to include personal information in correspondence sent to Gmail accounts.

Intro is part of LinkedIn's push to make its network indispensable on mobile devices as more people manage their personal and professional lives on smartphones and tablets.

LinkedIn says about 38 percent of the traffic to it networking services now comes through mobile devices, up from just 8 percent in early 2011. LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner predicted Wednesday that mobile devices would be reeling in more than half the service's traffic at some point next year.

As part of its effort to make its network more alluring on mobile, LinkedIn also released a new version of its service's app for the iPad.

LinkedIn's strategy has been paying off since the company went public nearly two-and-half years ago. The Mountain View, Calif. company has consistently been delivering earnings that exceed analyst projections, helping to lift its stock by more than five-fold from its initial public offering price of $45.

The shares shed $3.60 to $241.35 in Wednesday afternoon trading, as the broader markets ticked down..

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-23-LinkedIn-Email%20Intro/id-374c55e19a154efda29c761d7542dea2
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Here’s Everything You Need to Know About Today’s Apple Event

Here’s Everything You Need to Know About Today’s Apple Event
Here's a summary of everything Apple announced at today's San Francisco event.


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Sony Explains Why Its PlayStation 4 Costs $1,845 In Brazil





Sony announced U.S. and European prices for its new PlayStation 4 at a news conference this summer. The game system will cost some $1,845 in Brazil, angering fans.



Eric Thayer/Getty Images


Sony announced U.S. and European prices for its new PlayStation 4 at a news conference this summer. The game system will cost some $1,845 in Brazil, angering fans.


Eric Thayer/Getty Images


Sony's new PlayStation 4 won't be on store shelves until next month, but the gaming console has already raised eyebrows in Brazil, after reports that it would cost 3,999 Brazilian real — or about $1,845 at today's exchange rate.


The company says the steep cost isn't a case of price gouging, but instead a sign of Brazil's heavy taxes and fees on imported electronics.


The game system will be released in the United States on Nov. 15 and in countries including Brazil later that month. Large retailers in the U.S. will offer the PS4 at a base price of around $400.


This week, negative public response to the high cost in Brazil led Mark Stanley, Sony general manager for Latin America, to offer an explanation for the high price tag in a post on the company's Brazilian PlayStation blog.


Stanely said about the high retail price, "it's not good for our gamers and it's not good for the PlayStation brand," in remarks published by the Gamespot blog.


Of the $1,845 price, 63 percent goes toward paying import taxes that are imposed on the PlayStation 4 when it's imported to Brazil, Sony says.


Stanley's blog post included a graphic breaking down the costs, listing the "transfer cost" of importing the system as 21.5 percent, or nearly $400. An additional 22 percent represents the margin for Sony and retailers. His numbers totaled 106.5 percent of the final price in Brazil, which is arrived at after assessing a 6.5 percent discount, Stanley says.


Sony says the price of the new PlayStation could come down "significantly" if it's able to shift production of the consoles to Brazil. The system is currently being produced at only one factory, in China, according to Brazil's Valor Economico.


In his blog post, Stanley also thanked Sony customers for sending "thousands of passionate comments."


After the price was announced in a post on Sony Brazil's blog last week, more than 1,250 people commented on it, with many of them expressing their displeasure.


"There goes my Christmas present," one prospective customer wrote.


Others said that at that price, it could be cheaper simply to fly to the United States, pick up a console, and fly back home with it.


Some also noted that Sony's rivals are able to get gaming consoles on the market at a lower price. Microsoft, for instance, has set a price for its upcoming Xbox One at around 2,200 real — a bit more than $1,000.


But as NPR's Lourdes Garcia-Navarro tells us from Brazil, it's common to see high prices for electronics there. "It's a good indicator of the expense of imported electronic goods here," she says.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/22/239860325/sony-explains-why-its-playstation-4-costs-1-845-in-brazil?ft=1&f=1019
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Bad guy blues: Myanmar villains struggle to get by

In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, actors wait in their dimly lit office in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren - all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains - arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster design studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. Hoping for day work, they order coffee or tea, and they hope. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, actors wait in their dimly lit office in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren - all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains - arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster design studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. Hoping for day work, they order coffee or tea, and they hope. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, A Yaing Min, the "King of Cruelty," second left, and Phone Naing, second right, sit in their dimly lit office in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren - all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains - arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster design studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. Hoping for day work, they order coffee or tea, and they hope. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, Kyaw Htoo, one of Myanmar's best-known comedians sits and waits for work in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Myanmar's movie industry is organized in a unique way. Actors and actresses congregate - form unions, develop health-care plans, lobby for benefits - based on the roles they play on screen. There is an aging mothers' guild, a spinsters' guild, a comedians' guild. It is typecasting, pulled into the real world. These days, in the hierarchy of movie roles, comedians seem to fare better. Perhaps because Myanmar is hungry for laughter, not villainy, most movies made inside the country these days are comedies. Thus, those who make people smile are higher on the food chain. This is of no small import to the villains, befuddled by a world where the jokester outpaces the scoundrel. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, Kyaw Htoo, center in blue, one of Myanmar's best-known comedians sits and drinks tea with his friends as he waits for work in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Myanmar's movie industry is organized in a unique way. Actors and actresses congregate - form unions, develop health-care plans, lobby for benefits - based on the roles they play on screen. There is an aging mothers' guild, a spinsters' guild, a comedians' guild. It is typecasting, pulled into the real world. These days, in the hierarchy of movie roles, comedians seem to fare better. Perhaps because Myanmar is hungry for laughter, not villainy, most movies made inside the country these days are comedies. Thus, those who make people smile are higher on the food chain. This is of no small import to the villains, befuddled by a world where the jokester outpaces the scoundrel. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







In this Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2013 photo, A Yaing Min, the "King of Cruelty," stands in his dimly lit office with its facade clad with local movie posters, in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren - all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains - arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster design studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. Hoping for day work, they order coffee or tea, and they hope. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)







(AP) — In a dimly lit alley on a cramped side street of a teeming Southeast Asian city, the bad guys cluster together, plotting their next move.

There is A Yaing Min, the "King of Cruelty," who twirls his mustache as he talks and cultivates a pointy beard with a pointed message: Mess with me, and I will end you. There is Myint Kyi, who has been dispatching enemies — typically with spears — since 1958. There is Phone Naing, muscular and sinewy in tight military pants, who talks only in a low snarl.

Granted, these are not actual evildoers. They are longtime cinematic villains who gather each morning in a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. In the heart of Yangon's Little Hollywood, they sit on tiny plastic chairs, glowering, spitting carmine betel-nut saliva onto the ground. They wait, and wait, and wait some more, stalking a quarry that is becoming ever more elusive: a day's work.

For decades, as Myanmar endured dictatorship and international isolation, these actors were the twisted faces of wrongdoing that the country's struggling film industry showed the Burmese people in movies that rarely made it out of the country — and even more rarely dealt with anything that really mattered. Now this nation is opening to a wider world brimming with pop-culture choices, big-budget special effects and international bad guys who jet from Stockholm to Shanghai to wreak destruction on shiny, globalized levels.

The struggle is a microcosm of change in the country once known as Burma, whose military dictatorship handed power to a civilian government in 2011 after elections the previous year. What happens when the world opens up to you? For Myanmar's movie industry, one of the answers was this: It got harder to earn a living being evil.

"The market is in trouble," says A Yaing Min, a former boxer who turned to on-screen villainy in the early 1980s and became a fixture in such Burmese staples as "The Bad Guy with a Pure Heart."

"In other countries," he says, "villains don't have to walk the streets to get their jobs."

Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren — all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains — arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, order coffee or tea, and hope for work.

It comes more rarely every day. When it does, it is hardly lucrative — a day or two on bottom-budget videos, a few dollars here and there, perhaps not even practicing the villainy that has been their bread and butter for so long.

Several things made this happen. The government privatized the state-controlled film industry in 2010. Decaying theaters, unable to afford new digital systems to project DVDs, began to close; today, many sit crumbling on street corners. Films were supplanted by a sausage-grinder glut of cheap home videos made in mere days, even hours.

The masses began turning away from overwrought Burmese action movies, electing — in, finally, times of tentative hope — to favor romance, comedy and supernatural horror. And, of course, the arrival of movies from India, South Korea and Thailand, plus visually arresting Hollywood epics like "The Amazing Spider-Man" and "Wolverine," pointed up the lack of production values in the homegrown, B-movie culture.

"I worry very much these days. I used to work nonstop. But I haven't had regular work in six months," says Phone Naing, 45, a movie villain for the last quarter century. His compatriots nodded vigorously. Things have gotten so bad, he complained, that directors will press their film technicians into service to play bad guys.

"They'll be working on a set and someone will say, 'Hey, can you be a villain?'" Phone Naing says. "You use cheap villains, you get what you pay for."

Membership in the villains' union helps, a bit. Some of the group's 100 members contribute money to support others. And this year, a coalition of stars got together to donate 100 bags of rice each month to the society. A Yaing Min points proudly to a recent newspaper tabloid that shows him receiving rice from actress Wut Hmone Shwe Yi, Myanmar's latest It girl.

Myanmar's movie industry is organized in a unique way. Actors and actresses congregate — form unions, develop health-care plans, lobby for benefits — based on the roles they play on screen. There is an aging mothers' guild, a spinsters' guild, a comedians' guild. It is typecasting, pulled into the real world.

The villains' union was founded in 1990 to offer such assistance. Myint Kyi, 73, one of its founding members, talks not only of aging but of the injuries that many villains suffered during filming of acrobatic, athletic scenes that usually were done without any stuntmen.

"There was no one to help us when we die, nobody to pay for our funerals or help with our hospital bills when we were injured," says the soft-spoken Myint Kyi, known for the 2000 movie "Blood: A Love Story" and probably one of the few villains seen in public wearing a fanny pack.

He learned his craft from a 1950s screen villain known as "Spear Prince." It was not exactly a safe apprenticeship. "I would get cut all the time," he says. Once his mouth was cut open and he had to have surgery to fix it — on his own dime.

These days, in the hierarchy of movie roles, comedians seem to fare better. Perhaps because Myanmar is hungry for laughter, not villainy, most movies made inside the country these days are comedies. Thus, those who make people smile are higher on the food chain. This is of no small import to the villains, befuddled by a world where the jokester outpaces the scoundrel.

Just up the street, clustered around a plastic table drinking tea, the comedians see it differently. Kyaw Htoo, one of Myanmar's best-known, says the video industry's rise glutted the market for everyone, not just villains. And like so much media today, an easy overabundance means cheaper production values. He talks of Indian movies with multiple generations in the same movie. But in Myanmar, "they let Father die, they let Mother die. It's cheaper to have a boy without parents."

"We face the same obstacles," Kyaw Htoo says. "There's just not enough money."

The numbers seem bleak. Last year, just 17 feature films were produced, down from more than 60 five years ago, according to the Myanmar Motion Picture Organization. By contrast, more than 1,000 videos were made — and that official figure probably excludes hundreds of others, according to U Aye Kyu, a screenwriter and the organization's vice president.

"When we were young, it took many months to shoot a film. Casting was careful, and people were committed," says Aye Kyu. "I'm worried. If they just show foreign films, that's bad news for Myanmar movies."

One contributing factor: whether a coherent international strategy for Burmese movies eventually emerges. Few Burmese films have gone beyond the country's borders, says Tom Vick, author of "Asian Cinema: A Field Guide," and those that have are more on the serious side — hardly the crime-and-potboiler fare that these villains are accustomed to.

"They've been thinking about the local audience and what a local audience wants to see. The question is, would any of these films translate well or will they only appeal to people there and just be a curiosity in other places?" says Vick, the curator of film at the Smithsonian Institution's Freer/Sackler Gallery.

"They have to decide how to focus their film industry," Vick says. "Once countries open up, suddenly Hollywood dominates the movie screen. ... If 'Skyfall' is taking over, what hope does a local filmmaker have?"

That's precisely the worry that consumes our Central Casting of villainy down on 35th Street. Accustomed for so long to being despised and loving it, they never imagined they'd wind up at the margins of the Burmese show-business caste system, lost in a confusing landscape after being so delightfully nefarious to so many for so long.

"I want to see our industry be alongside the international movie industry," says A Yaing Min, the bearded King of Cruelty. "But you have to think of the right people for the right characters, or we villains are done for."

___

Follow Ted Anthony on Twitter at http://twitter.com/anthonyted

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-24-Myanmar-Bad%20Guy%20Blues/id-175a710be17f4941b2cec0b87507daf7
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Child born with HIV still in remission after 18 months off treatment, experts report

Child born with HIV still in remission after 18 months off treatment, experts report


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

23-Oct-2013



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Contact: Ekaterina Pesheva
epeshev1@jhmi.edu
410-502-9433
Johns Hopkins Medicine






A 3-year-old Mississippi child born with HIV and treated with a combination of antiviral drugs unusually early continues to do well and remains free of active infection 18 months after all treatment ceased, according to an updated case report published Oct. 23 in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Early findings of the case were presented in March 2013 during a scientific meeting in Atlanta, but the newly published report adds detail and confirms what researchers say is the first documented case of HIV remission in a child.


"Our findings suggest that this child's remission is not a mere fluke but the likely result of aggressive and very early therapy that may have prevented the virus from taking a hold in the child's immune cells," says Deborah Persaud, M.D., lead author of the NEJM report and a virologist and pediatric HIV expert at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.


Persaud teamed up with immunologist Katherine Luzuriaga, M.D., of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and pediatrician Hannah Gay, M.D., of the University of Mississippi Medical Center, who identified and treated the baby and continues to see the child.


"We're thrilled that the child remains off medication and has no detectable virus replicating," Gay says. "We've continued to follow the child, obviously, and she continues to do very well. There is no sign of the return of HIV, and we will continue to follow her for the long term."


The child was born to an HIV-infected mother and began combination anti-retroviral treatment 30 hours after birth. A series of tests in the subsequent days and weeks showed progressively diminishing viral presence in the infant's blood, until it reached undetectable levels 29 days after birth. The infant remained on antivirals until 18 months of age, at which point the child was lost to follow-up for a while and, physicians say, stopped treatment. Upon return to care, about 10 months after treatment stopped, the child underwent repeated standard HIV tests, none of which detected virus in the blood, according to the report.


The child's experience, the authors of the report say, provides compelling evidence that HIV-infected infants can achieve viral remission if anti-retroviral therapy begins within hours or days of infection. As a result, a federally funded study set to begin in early 2014 will test the early-treatment method used in the Mississippi case to determine whether the approach could be used in all HIV-infected newborns.



The investigators say the prompt administration of antiviral treatment likely led to the Mississippi child's remission because it halted the formation of hard-to-treat viral reservoirs dormant HIV hiding in immune cells that reignites the infection in most patients within mere weeks of stopping drug therapy.


"Prompt antiviral therapy in newborns that begins within hours or days of exposure may help infants clear the virus and achieve long-term remission without the need for lifelong treatment by preventing such viral hideouts from forming in the first place," Persaud says.


Remission, defined in this case not only by absence of infection symptoms but also by lack of replicating virus, may be a stepping stone toward a sterilizing HIV cure complete and long-term eradication of all replicating virus from the body. A single case of sterilizing cure has been reported so far, the investigators note. It occurred in an HIV-positive man treated with a bone marrow transplant for leukemia. The bone marrow cells came from a donor with a rare genetic mutation of the white blood cells that renders some people resistant to HIV, a benefit that transferred to the recipient. Such a complex treatment approach, however, HIV experts agree, is neither feasible nor practical for the 33 million people worldwide infected with HIV.


In the Mississippi child, tests for HIV-specific antibodies the standard clinical indicator of HIV infection remain negative to date, as do tests that detect the presence of immune cells known as cytotoxic, or killer, cells deployed to destroy viral invaders and whose presence indicates active infection. Ultrasensitive tests designed to sniff out trace amounts of virus intermittently detected viral footprints, Persaud and team say. However, this "leftover" HIV appears incapable of forming new virus and reigniting infection.



Importantly, the child exhibits none of the immune characteristics seen in the so-called "elite controllers," a tiny percentage of HIV infected people whose immune systems allow them to naturally keep the virus in check without treatment. Such people's immune systems are revved up to suppress viral replication. This is not the case with the Mississippi child. The absence of immune system characteristics seen in elite controllers in this child is an indicator that early therapy, rather than natural immune mechanisms, led to the child's remission, authors of the report say.


Currently, high-risk newborns those born to mothers with poorly controlled infections or whose mothers' HIV status is discovered around the time of delivery receive a preemptive combination of antivirals to prevent infection. They do not start treatment at full antiviral doses until infection is confirmed. While this prophylactic approach is important in preventing at-risk infants from acquiring the virus, it does nothing for those already infected. It is precisely these infants who stand to benefit from prompt treatment with full therapeutic doses, as was the case with the Mississippi baby.


"This case highlights the potential of prompt therapy to lead to long-term remission in those already infected by blocking the formation of the very viral reservoirs responsible for rekindling infection once treatment ceases," says Luzuriaga, senior author of the NEJM report. "This may be particularly true in infants, whose developing immune systems may be less amenable to the formation of long-lived virus-infected immune cells."


Indeed, recent studies in HIV-infected infants have shown a marked reduction in the numbers of circulating virus-infected cells when babies are treated during the first few weeks of infection. Research has also shown that many hard-to-eradicate viral reservoirs begin to form very early, within weeks of infection. Taken together, these findings mean that the window of opportunity to achieve remission may close very quickly.


The experts emphasize that despite the promise this case holds, preventing mother-to-child transmission remains the primary public health goal. Authors of the report caution the approach is still considered preliminary and future studies are needed to confirm if, how and in whom it should be used. In addition, children with confirmed HIV infection should not be taken off antiviral treatment, the experts say.


Nearly 3.3 million children live with HIV worldwide, and more than 260,000 acquire the virus from their mothers during delivery despite advances in preventing mother-to-child infection.


###


The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health under grant numbers AI93701 and HD0577849, and by the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amFAR). Additional grant support came from the International Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials Network (IMPAACT) and from the The Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradication (CARE).




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Child born with HIV still in remission after 18 months off treatment, experts report


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

23-Oct-2013



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Contact: Ekaterina Pesheva
epeshev1@jhmi.edu
410-502-9433
Johns Hopkins Medicine






A 3-year-old Mississippi child born with HIV and treated with a combination of antiviral drugs unusually early continues to do well and remains free of active infection 18 months after all treatment ceased, according to an updated case report published Oct. 23 in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Early findings of the case were presented in March 2013 during a scientific meeting in Atlanta, but the newly published report adds detail and confirms what researchers say is the first documented case of HIV remission in a child.


"Our findings suggest that this child's remission is not a mere fluke but the likely result of aggressive and very early therapy that may have prevented the virus from taking a hold in the child's immune cells," says Deborah Persaud, M.D., lead author of the NEJM report and a virologist and pediatric HIV expert at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.


Persaud teamed up with immunologist Katherine Luzuriaga, M.D., of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and pediatrician Hannah Gay, M.D., of the University of Mississippi Medical Center, who identified and treated the baby and continues to see the child.


"We're thrilled that the child remains off medication and has no detectable virus replicating," Gay says. "We've continued to follow the child, obviously, and she continues to do very well. There is no sign of the return of HIV, and we will continue to follow her for the long term."


The child was born to an HIV-infected mother and began combination anti-retroviral treatment 30 hours after birth. A series of tests in the subsequent days and weeks showed progressively diminishing viral presence in the infant's blood, until it reached undetectable levels 29 days after birth. The infant remained on antivirals until 18 months of age, at which point the child was lost to follow-up for a while and, physicians say, stopped treatment. Upon return to care, about 10 months after treatment stopped, the child underwent repeated standard HIV tests, none of which detected virus in the blood, according to the report.


The child's experience, the authors of the report say, provides compelling evidence that HIV-infected infants can achieve viral remission if anti-retroviral therapy begins within hours or days of infection. As a result, a federally funded study set to begin in early 2014 will test the early-treatment method used in the Mississippi case to determine whether the approach could be used in all HIV-infected newborns.



The investigators say the prompt administration of antiviral treatment likely led to the Mississippi child's remission because it halted the formation of hard-to-treat viral reservoirs dormant HIV hiding in immune cells that reignites the infection in most patients within mere weeks of stopping drug therapy.


"Prompt antiviral therapy in newborns that begins within hours or days of exposure may help infants clear the virus and achieve long-term remission without the need for lifelong treatment by preventing such viral hideouts from forming in the first place," Persaud says.


Remission, defined in this case not only by absence of infection symptoms but also by lack of replicating virus, may be a stepping stone toward a sterilizing HIV cure complete and long-term eradication of all replicating virus from the body. A single case of sterilizing cure has been reported so far, the investigators note. It occurred in an HIV-positive man treated with a bone marrow transplant for leukemia. The bone marrow cells came from a donor with a rare genetic mutation of the white blood cells that renders some people resistant to HIV, a benefit that transferred to the recipient. Such a complex treatment approach, however, HIV experts agree, is neither feasible nor practical for the 33 million people worldwide infected with HIV.


In the Mississippi child, tests for HIV-specific antibodies the standard clinical indicator of HIV infection remain negative to date, as do tests that detect the presence of immune cells known as cytotoxic, or killer, cells deployed to destroy viral invaders and whose presence indicates active infection. Ultrasensitive tests designed to sniff out trace amounts of virus intermittently detected viral footprints, Persaud and team say. However, this "leftover" HIV appears incapable of forming new virus and reigniting infection.



Importantly, the child exhibits none of the immune characteristics seen in the so-called "elite controllers," a tiny percentage of HIV infected people whose immune systems allow them to naturally keep the virus in check without treatment. Such people's immune systems are revved up to suppress viral replication. This is not the case with the Mississippi child. The absence of immune system characteristics seen in elite controllers in this child is an indicator that early therapy, rather than natural immune mechanisms, led to the child's remission, authors of the report say.


Currently, high-risk newborns those born to mothers with poorly controlled infections or whose mothers' HIV status is discovered around the time of delivery receive a preemptive combination of antivirals to prevent infection. They do not start treatment at full antiviral doses until infection is confirmed. While this prophylactic approach is important in preventing at-risk infants from acquiring the virus, it does nothing for those already infected. It is precisely these infants who stand to benefit from prompt treatment with full therapeutic doses, as was the case with the Mississippi baby.


"This case highlights the potential of prompt therapy to lead to long-term remission in those already infected by blocking the formation of the very viral reservoirs responsible for rekindling infection once treatment ceases," says Luzuriaga, senior author of the NEJM report. "This may be particularly true in infants, whose developing immune systems may be less amenable to the formation of long-lived virus-infected immune cells."


Indeed, recent studies in HIV-infected infants have shown a marked reduction in the numbers of circulating virus-infected cells when babies are treated during the first few weeks of infection. Research has also shown that many hard-to-eradicate viral reservoirs begin to form very early, within weeks of infection. Taken together, these findings mean that the window of opportunity to achieve remission may close very quickly.


The experts emphasize that despite the promise this case holds, preventing mother-to-child transmission remains the primary public health goal. Authors of the report caution the approach is still considered preliminary and future studies are needed to confirm if, how and in whom it should be used. In addition, children with confirmed HIV infection should not be taken off antiviral treatment, the experts say.


Nearly 3.3 million children live with HIV worldwide, and more than 260,000 acquire the virus from their mothers during delivery despite advances in preventing mother-to-child infection.


###


The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health under grant numbers AI93701 and HD0577849, and by the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amFAR). Additional grant support came from the International Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials Network (IMPAACT) and from the The Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradication (CARE).




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/jhm-cbw102213.php
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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Frustrated Dems lament damage from website bugs

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures as she speaks to reporters during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)







House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures as she speaks to reporters during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)







House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks during a new conference following a meeting at the Republican National Committee offices on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







(AP) — Frustrated Democrats lamented Wednesday that persistent problems with new health care exchanges have inflicted damage on the public's perception of the already unpopular "Obamacare" — with some lawmakers insisting President Barack Obama should ensure those responsible lose their jobs.

Emerging from a closed-door briefing with health officials from the Obama administration, House Democrats appeared to have at least as many questions as answers about how and when the beleaguered website will be fixed. Although they resolved not to let setbacks with one aspect of the health law outshine the parts that are working, they griped that the shoddy website had given Republicans an opening to do just that.

"I think the president needs to man up, find out who was responsible and fire them," Rep. Richard Nolan, D-Minn., said after the briefing. He said Obama should tell Democrats when the problems will be fixed so they can prepare to move on. "You don't get many second chances to get a good first impression."

Nolan wasn't the only one.

"Somebody should be held accountable," said Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif. "Absolutely."

The briefing with House Democrats came as the Obama administration was appealing to its allies in Congress, on Wall Street and across the country to stick with the health care law despite embarrassing problems that continue to crop up. On Wednesday, lawmakers heard from Gary Cohen and Julie Bataille, two high-level officials with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a federal agency with major responsibility for the website where millions of Americans are expected to purchase insurance.

Democrats say they requested the briefing. A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said House Republicans were arranging to hold a similar briefing with health officials in the coming days.

Echoing Democratic leaders and even Obama himself, Democrats said it was unacceptable that the website's debut had been so flawed. But Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., said it was critical Democrats not lose sight of the bigger picture and law's other benefits.

"It's regrettable. It can't be accepted. Gotta move on," DeLauro said.

Obama has turned to longtime adviser Jeffrey Zients, a veteran management consultant, to provide advice to help fix the system. And Obama has said he's instituted a "tech surge," bringing in leading technology talent to repair the painfully slow and often unresponsive website. But the administration has repeatedly declined to say how long that will take, raising questions about whether the full extent of the problems has been fully determined.

"They were reluctant to give a date — I don't blame them — on the fixes," said Rep. Janice Schakowsky, D-Ill. But they said the problems would be fixed in time for people to get enrolled by Jan. 1, the day that coverage through the exchanges begins.

The website's troubled debut was overshadowed by the partial government shutdown that started the same day the website went live. Last week, Obama and Democrats walked away from a no-holds-barred fight with Republicans over debt and spending with a remarkable degree of unity, made all the more prominent by the deep GOP divisions the standoff revealed.

The debt-and-spending crisis averted for now, the spotlight has shifted to Obama's health care law and the web-based exchanges, beset by malfunctions, where Americans are supposed to be able to shop for insurance. The intensified focus has increased the pressure on Democrats to distance themselves from Obama's handling of the website's rollout as both parties demand to know what went wrong and why.

As the administration races to fix the website, it's deploying the president and top officials to urge his supporters not to give up.

"By now you have probably heard that the website has not worked as smoothly as it was supposed to," Obama said Tuesday in a video message recorded for Organizing for America, a nonprofit group whose mission is to support Obama's agenda. "But we've got people working overtime in a tech surge to boost capacity and address the problems. And we are going to get it fixed."

The group has been organizing a multitude of events and social media campaigns around the health care law's implementation. OFA said those efforts will continue, but the group is not adjusting its strategy in response to the website's issues.

Meanwhile, Vice President Joe Biden and top White House officials held a call with business leaders Tuesday about the health law and other issues. Business Forward, a trade group friendly to the White House, said the administration asked the group to invite leaders to hear directly from Biden.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Fram and Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

___

Follow Josh Lederman at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-23-Health%20Overhaul-Obama's%20Allies/id-63860596ca9e4e74bcaf8a668a83e11b
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Ultra-Orthodox Israeli Women Lose Election, Vow To Return





Michal Chernovitsky was one of several ultra-Orthodox women who ran for a seat on the all-male local council in El'ad, Israel. None of the women won a spot in Tuesday's vote, but they said they would continue to be active in politics.



Emily Harris/NPR


Michal Chernovitsky was one of several ultra-Orthodox women who ran for a seat on the all-male local council in El'ad, Israel. None of the women won a spot in Tuesday's vote, but they said they would continue to be active in politics.


Emily Harris/NPR


We wanted to follow up on our story about the ultra-Orthodox women in Israel who were running for the local council in El'ad, or Forever God, a small, religious Jewish town.


Five women had challenged not only El'ad's norms, but practices across Israel's various ultra-Orthodox communities just by getting their names on the ballot and running a campaign.


None of them won a seat, but they say they will be back.


"We're not giving up," said Michal Chernovitsky, the leader of Mothers for El'ad, after learning her small coalition of candidates won 260 votes in a community of 17,000 eligible voters.


A minimum of 740 votes was needed to win a spot on the council. Despite earning only a third of that, Chernovitsky, who is ultra-Orthodox, felt victorious.


"We are happy that some people want women [on the council] in an ultra-Orthodox town," she said. "This is amazing to me."


This may also be a reflection of both internal differences and external pressures on Israel's fast-growing ultra-Orthodox population.


All ultra-Orthodox - "Haredi" in Hebrew - are not cut from the same cloth.



Ethnic divides play out in ultra-Orthodox power struggles as they do in the rest of Israel.


Subsects follow different religious leaders, wear different clothes, and hold different attitudes, even toward Israel.


Outside pressure is also challenging ultra-Orthodox communities, which have clashed repeatedly with less strict religious sectors of Israeli society over practices such as separating men and women on public transportation, or walkways in ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods.


The most high-profile fight, over requiring ultra-Orthodox men to serve in the Israeli military, will be dealt with again in a new session of parliament. And as Haredi society grows, the battle lines blur.


One new ultra-Orthodox political movement supports the draft, along with greater integration into wider Israeli society.


That group sticks to tradition in at least one way. Its slate of candidates was all men.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/23/240272488/ultra-orthodox-israeli-women-lose-election-vow-to-return?ft=1&f=1004
Category: Brian Hoyer   Jordan Linn Graham   monday night football   Jeff Tuel   antigua  

Boston Marathon suspect may pin blame on brother

FILE - This file photo released Friday, April 19, 2013 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation shows Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. Lawyers for Tsarnaev will ask a judge to address the death penalty protocol during a status conference in federal court Monday, Sept. 23, 2013, in Boston. Tsarnaev is accused in two bombings that killed three people and injured more than 260 others near the finish line of the April 15 marathon. (AP Photo/Federal Bureau of Investigation, File)







FILE - This file photo released Friday, April 19, 2013 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation shows Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. Lawyers for Tsarnaev will ask a judge to address the death penalty protocol during a status conference in federal court Monday, Sept. 23, 2013, in Boston. Tsarnaev is accused in two bombings that killed three people and injured more than 260 others near the finish line of the April 15 marathon. (AP Photo/Federal Bureau of Investigation, File)







This May 4, 2013 police mugshot provided by the Orange County Corrections Department in Orlando, Fla., shows Ibragim Todashev after his arrest for aggravated battery in Orlando. Todashev, who was being questioned in Orlando by authorities in the Boston bombing probe, was fatally shot Wednesday, May 22, 2013 when he initiated a violent confrontation, FBI officials said. According to a filing made Monday, Oct. 23, 2013, Ibragim Todashev told investigators that Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the slain Boston Marathon bombing suspect, participated in a triple killing in Waltham, Mass. on Sept. 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Orange County Corrections Department)







(AP) — Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's lawyers may try to save him from the death penalty in the Boston Marathon bombing by arguing he fell under the murderous influence of his older brother, legal experts say.

The outlines of a possible defense came into focus this week when it was learned that Tsarnaev's attorneys are trying to get access to investigative records implicating the now-dead brother in a grisly triple slaying committed in 2011.

In court papers Monday, federal prosecutors acknowledged publicly for the first time that a friend of Tamerlan Tsarnaev told investigators that Tamerlan participated in the unsolved killings of three men who were found in a Waltham apartment with their throats slit, marijuana sprinkled over their bodies.

The younger Tsarnaev's lawyers argued in court papers that any evidence of Tamerlan's involvement is "mitigating information" that is critical as they prepare Dzhokhar's defense. They asked a judge to force prosecutors to turn over the records.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 20, faces 30 federal charges, including using a weapon of mass destruction, in the twin bombings April 15 that killed three people and injured more than 260. Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died in a gunbattle with police days later.

The government is still deciding whether to pursue the death penalty for the attack, which investigators say was retaliation for the U.S. wars in Muslim lands.

Miriam Conrad, Tsarnaev's public defender, had no comment.

Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, said the defense may be trying to show that the older brother was the guiding force.

"If I was a defense attorney and was seeking perhaps to draw attention to the influence the older brother had in planning the bombing, I would use his involvement in other crimes to show that he was likely the main perpetrator in the Boston bombing," Dieter said.

"I would take the position that my client, the younger brother, was strongly influenced by his older brother, and even if he is culpable, the death penalty is too extreme in this case."

Similarly, Aitan D. Goelman, who was part of the legal team that prosecuted Oklahoma City bombing figures Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, said the defense may be looking to minimize the younger brother's role in the bombing.

"I think the mostly likely reason is that if they are arguing some kind of mitigation theory that the older brother was a monster and the younger brother was under his sway or intimidated or dominated by him," he said.

Investigators have given no motive for the 2011 slayings. One victim was a boxer and friend of Tamerlan Tsarnaev's.

Federal prosecutors said in court papers that Ibragim Todashev, another friend of Tamerlan's, told authorities that Tamerlan took part in the killings. Todashev was shot to death in Florida in May by authorities while being questioned.

Prosecutors argued that turning over the records would damage the investigation into the killings.

___

Smith reported from Providence, R.I. Associated Press writer Pete Yost in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-23-Boston%20Marathon%20Bombing/id-56a08c9416df4f2b83f7ab0c21020bf9
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