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 Albanian Hackers And Muslim Hackers Were Here

[ K-S-G 4 Ever ]

We Are : c07d-Tr0j4n ~ n3tw0rk-c00d3r ~ BaDMaN


Www.zone-h.org/archive/notifier=KSG-CREW

Greetz2: KHS - AHS


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Dragva News http://www.dragva.net WorldWide Updates Sun, 17 Mar 2013 00:09:09 +0000 en hourly 1 Three days, two breakout stars and one Big Gulp: Eight takeaways from CPAC http://www.dragva.net/three-days-two-breakout-stars-and-one-big-gulp-eight-takeaways-from-cpac/ http://www.dragva.net/three-days-two-breakout-stars-and-one-big-gulp-eight-takeaways-from-cpac/#comments Sun, 17 Mar 2013 00:09:09 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1511 By Kasie Hunt, Political Reporter, NBC News

Their guy lost badly in 2012. They’re not quite sure whom they want to pick up the pieces. But this weekend, the thousands of activists gathered on the shores of the Potomac outside Washington had an overarching message for the Republican Party’s political class: Butt out.

At the Conservative Political Action Conference this weekend, the stars were Marco Rubio and Rand Paul — both men who won their elections even though the GOP establishment didn’t think they could.

Sarah Palin, the fiery former vice presidential nominee who some blame for John McCain’s 2008 loss, brought down the house when she took a 7-Eleven Big Gulp onstage in protest of the New York mayor’s ban on large sodas. That came after the laughter and cheers for her statements in opposition to gun control — she declared that she and her husband have a deal: “He’s got the rifle, I’ve got the rack,” she said.

Sen. Rand Paul captured the coveted straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Conference Saturday, as the Republican Party works to find a path forward. NBC’s Kristen Welker reports.

After three days, dozens of speakers, over a hundred hours of panel discussions, and a strong straw poll showing from a guy who didn’t even get invited, here are eight takeaways from CPAC.

2016: It’s on
Call it the parade of presidential prospects, marching by nearly four years out from the 2016 election. With Paul, Rubio, Jeb Bush, Paul Ryan, Scott Walker, Bobby Jindal, and more all in attendance, the list of potential contenders goes on and on. (Bush and Walker have pointedly left the door open to presidential bids, with both refusing to rule it out.)

And almost all delivered speeches with an eye toward positioning themselves as the person best suited to lead the party to victory in 2016.

Related: With eye on 2016, Walker rouses CPAC crowd

“The GOP of old has grown stale and moss-covered,” Paul declared to cheers during the conference’s first day. “In America, we believe in the people and not in the government,” said Walker, the Wisconsin governor. 

For the first time in a generation, the party has no frontrunner
For cycle after cycle, the Republican Party has been rewarding the next-guy-in-line with their presidential nomination — but this time, it’s all a jumble.

Romney was waiting in 2012 after he lost in 2008 to John McCain, who had been waiting since he lost to George W. Bush in 2000.

Bush, Bob Dole, George H.W. Bush, even Ronald Reagan, were all the next guy up. Now, there’s no clear heir to the GOP throne. Many of CPAC’s old guard — Romney, Palin, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum — don’t hold elective office.

Among the new — Rubio, Paul, Walker, Jeb Bush — there’s no clear favorite.

It leaves a wide-open — and crowded — GOP primary field. 

Gay marriage isn’t the wedge issue it used to be
In 2011, opposition to same sex marriage was front and center at CPAC — the opening day featured a panel on “traditional marriage” on the main stage. Not this year.

While the conservative Republican group GOProud was relegated to a small room on the sidelines of the conference, the group’s evening panel — at the invitation of a different conservative group — was packed.

There were still plenty of older attendees who defended traditional marriage, but many of the younger ones had a different take.

“I’m of the prospect that government should not be involved in marriage, and that should not be an issue if people of the same-sex want to get married, they should be able to do so,” said Mike Fox, a 23-year-old student at Northeastern University who came to Maryland for the conference.  

The other two legs of the GOP stool are also wobbly
President Ronald Reagan famously defined the Republican coalition as a three-legged stool of social, economic and foreign policy conservatives.

Gay marriage moving to the back burner takes one animating issue from social conservatives. And now there’s confusion on the other two fronts, too.

Paul’s stand against drone strikes and his call for a more isolationist foreign policy separates him from Republicans like McCain — who labeled Paul a “wacko bird” when he took his anti-drone politics to the Senate floor.

The GOP’s also divided on the sequester, with some warning that the cuts are terrible for defense and some looking the other way.

Conservatives are hanging more tightly together on economic policy, but they’re still divided on what specific policies to push.

Risk proposing cuts in Medicare and Social Security? Threaten to shut down the Department of Education at a time when many Republicans identify student learning as a top priority?

And earlier this year, they lost the argument on taxes to President Obama. 

Politicians who want immigration reform are still afraid of the Right
Rubio is supposed to be the Republican champion for immigration reform — a Cuban-American who ran as a Tea Party conservative. But he didn’t even mention it from the stage at CPAC.

Contrast that with the right wing talk radio blitz Rubio launched after he announced that he was supporting a bipartisan immigration reform framework in the Senate.

Back then — just months ago — he even argued with Rush Limbaugh about how good it would be for the country.

But at CPAC, other speakers largely followed his lead in ommitting immigration talk. The cheers from the crowd came instead for lines like this, from Ann Coulter: “If amnesty goes through, the country will turn into California and Republicans will never win again.”

When she questioned why Rubio was supporting immigration reform, someone in the audience yelled: “Traitor!” 

No one really argued conservatives need a fundamental change in attitude — except Jeb Bush
Conference speakers railed against the consultants — “the Republican consulting class is just plain wrong,” said Newt Gingrich.

They insisted new thinking isn’t needed — “We don’t need a new idea. There is an idea. The idea is called America, and it still works,” said Rubio.

Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush paints a bright picture for the Republican Party and America by highlighting ingenuity, education and his successes in CPAC address.

And while Paul labeled the party “stale and moss-covered,” his pitch wasn’t aimed at widening its appeal to new voters — but rather embracing libertarian values.

Almost completely missing from CPAC was the demographic handwringing that has consumed Republican Party leaders since Romney lost badly to Obama in the general election.

Instead, they were angry and defiant, with Rep. Allen West labeling such sentiment “malarkey” and Sarah Palin declaring: “We’re not here to dedicate ourselves to new talking points coming from D.C.”

Bush was an exception. “We’re associated with being anti-everything,” he said in a speech on Friday. “Way too many people believe that Republicans are anti-immigrant, anti-woman, anti-science, anti-gay, anti-worker. Many voters are simply unwilling to choose our candidates because those voters feel unloved, unwanted, and unwelcome in our party.” 

CPAC stands with Rand
This year, CPAC stands with the Texan. The libertarian senator brought down the house on Thursday — his speech drew cheers almost as loud as Palin’s rousing address — and his filibuster was constantly cited as an example of the kind of courage the new GOP needs.

“Stand with Rand” stickers were all over the lapels of college kids’ blazers — and by Saturday, the similarly designed posters were scarce on the ground and became a hot commodity.

He follows in his father’s footsteps; former Rep. Ron Paul won the straw poll here in 2010 and 2011. The elder Paul’s ardent supporters famously organized to win the straw polls, believing they would help give him national attention — and some of that infrastructure helped his son out in 2013.

Chris Christie won by not showing up
The bombastic New Jersey governor was barely mentioned by speakers, but his presence loomed over the conference.

His specific non-invitation just drove headlines before CPAC. In the halls and ballrooms, everyone was talking about him.

“I was fundraising for him just last Thursday,” said Walker, who shook his head in disbelief when asked about CPAC’s decision not to invite the popular Christie.

The snub made CPAC seem at odds with the GOP push to build a bigger tent if the party’s to win elections in blue states and nationwide.

And anyway, Christie didn’t need to take the train down from Trenton for the cattle call to get noticed here — he came in fourth in the straw poll, ahead of all the speakers except Paul, Rubio and Santorum.

Via – http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/16/17341491-three-days-two-breakout-stars-and-one-big-gulp-eight-takeaways-from-cpac?lite

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Plane crash in Florida parking lot kills three http://www.dragva.net/plane-crash-in-florida-parking-lot-kills-three/ http://www.dragva.net/plane-crash-in-florida-parking-lot-kills-three/#comments Sat, 16 Mar 2013 00:09:37 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1509
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: All 3 people who were on the Piper PA31 aircraft died, fire and city officials says
  • The plane left Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport and tried to circle back, but didn’t make it
  • A witness says it hit a lot for towed vehicles, and that several of those vehicles exploded
  • There were no fatalities or injuries among people on the ground, a fire official says

(CNN) — A twin-engine plane crashed late Friday afternoon in a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, parking lot, killing all three people onboard, authorities said.

The Piper PA31 aircraft went down around 4:30 p.m., soon after departing Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport, said Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Fort Lauderdale fire Division Chief John San Angelo told CNN affiliate WPEC that all three people on the plane died in the crash. Fort Lauderdale city spokeswoman Shannon Vezina later confirmed the three fatalities to CNN.

“(There was) a lot of damage, a lot of fire — I don’t think anybody could make it through that,” San Angelo said.

There were no injuries among people on the ground, he added.

The aircraft had taken off from the airport, then tried to circle back and land, according to Vezina.

It didn’t make it.

Chris Jewett said that he was in his office building across the street when he saw the aircraft go down in a parking lot he said was for cars that had been towed.

“The whole building shook,” he told CNN. “It (felt) like somebody crashed into the building.”

Heading outside, Jewett noticed surging flames as well as billowing black smoke.

“Three of four (parked vehicles) actually blew up, the rest caught on fire,” he said. “You couldn’t really look in.”

Overhead video from CNN affiliate WSVN showed firefighters in a parking lot, hosing down a number of cars and trucks that had been charred in the incident. The plane itself was essentially unrecognizable.

San Angelo, from the Fort Lauderdale fire department, said the aircraft hit a tree and a fence before slamming into seven vehicles and a boat.

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]]> http://www.dragva.net/plane-crash-in-florida-parking-lot-kills-three/feed/ 0 TSA chief: Decision on knives stands http://www.dragva.net/tsa-chief-decision-on-knives-stands/ http://www.dragva.net/tsa-chief-decision-on-knives-stands/#comments Fri, 15 Mar 2013 00:10:30 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1507
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • TSA administrator: “I think the decision is solid and it stands”
  • Congresswoman: “You need to stop this now”
  • New rules would allow knives with blades up to 2.36 inches long on airlines
  • Groups for airlines, screeners, air marshals, flight attendants and pilots have concerns

(CNN) — The nation’s aviation security chief on Thursday defended his recent decision to again permit knives aboard commercial flights, despite concerns from major airlines and their flight crews, and sharp criticism from some members of Congress.

John Pistole, administrator of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), told a House Homeland Security subcommittee that his decision would stand and would be carried out next month as planned.

He said small knives no longer pose a threat to aircraft security, which now emphasizes bomb detection.

“A small pocket knife is simply not going to result in the catastrophic failure of an aircraft and an improvised explosive device will,” he said. “And we know, from internal covert testing, searching for these items, which will not blow up an aircraft, can distract our officers from focusing on the components of an improvised explosive device.”

Small knives were banned along with a host of other undersized sharp objects like nail clippers, screwdrivers and cosmetic scissors, following the 9/11 al Qaeda hijack attacks on the United States.

There has been a gradual easing of those prohibitions in recent years as planes hardened onboard security and the potential threats shifted away from hijackings and more toward attempts by terrorists to bring down planes with bombs.

Still, Pistole’s decision has roiled the industry. The major carriers have as a group raised concerns about the move with three – Delta, American, and US Airways coming out in opposition.

Pistole’s supporters believe the rules should be more passenger-friendly and focus on bombs and other threats that can be hard to detect and be smuggled aboard the passenger cabin or in cargo.

But critics contend that even small pocket and other knives still pose too great a safety and security risk for airline crews, reminding that the 9/11 hijackers used box cutters to take control of four jetliners.

Pistole stood firm as he faced questions and criticism from lawmakers.

“I think the decision is solid and it stands,” Pistole said. “I plan to move forward with it.”

Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-California, criticized the logic behind the move, arguing that threats posed by bombs do not mean knives aren’t dangerous.

“Just because this is a new threat does not mean that old threats don’t still exist,” he said.

Swalwell co-authored a letter to Pistole saying he was “mystified” by his decision, calling it “another example of a questionable TSA policy.”

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, said Pistole needed to change course on the rule change — fast.

“You need to stop this now,” she said. “These cause bleeding. These cause injury. These can cause a terrible tragedy. And I don’t want to take it to the next length. It can possibly cause someone to lose their life.”

Other lawmakers said they supported Pistole and praised his efforts in leading the agency.

“Why should the federal government devote taxpayer dollars to low-risk people, places, or things?” said Rep. Richard Hudson, R-North Carolina, the subcommittee’s chairman.

In the nine days since the TSA opened a can of worms by announcing it would ease the ban on small knives in airline cabins, the list of groups concerned or opposed to the idea has grown to include airlines, airport screeners, federal air marshals, flight attendants and pilots.

So far, the TSA has persisted.

The surge in recent criticism from so many groups drew the attention of Rep. Cedric Richardson, D-Louisiana.

“I don’t question your judgment, because you do what you do, and we have to trust that you’re making the right decisions,” Richardson said.

But he said he questioned the process Pistole had used, arguing that he hadn’t involved enough stakeholders from the airline industry.

“I’m not asking you to defer to them, but a lot of the time it helps if they’re at the table when you’re making a decision so that they have the information that you have,” he said.

Pistole said he met with flight attendants on Wednesday, but conceded that he could have done a better job of bringing them into the process earlier.

Under the new rules, which go into effect April 25, knives with blades that are 2.36 inches (6 centimeters) or shorter and less than a half-inch wide will be allowed in airline cabins so long as the blade is not fixed or does not lock into place.

The rules also allow passengers to carry up to two golf clubs, certain toy bats or other sports sticks — such as ski poles, hockey sticks, lacrosse sticks and pool cues — aboard in carry-on luggage.

The TSA has said it’s aligning its policy with international rules.

But after consulting with Federal Air Marshal Service leaders, the agency opted to continue excluding knives that most closely resemble weapons, specifically knives with blades that lock in place, or have molded hand grips.

Box cutters and razor blades also would remain on the prohibited items list.

Related: Knives on planes: Who’s for it, who’s against

Airlines for America, the trade association representing the major U.S. airlines, said Monday that “additional discussion is warranted” before small knives are allowed on planes. Three of the nation’s five biggest carriers, Delta, American and US Airways, have spoken out against the policy.

Related: Need a tribal spear? Try TSA

Many critics of the new rules contend that in addition to adding an unnecessary threat to the safety of airline crews and passengers, the changes won’t make a difference in the TSA’s ability to concentrate on other threats.

Knives are probably the most common items surrendered by passengers at screening points, aside from liquids.

Travelers surrender about 35 knives at Baltimore-Washington International Airport on an average day and about 47 per day at Los Angeles International Airport, officials say.

“Today, we find on average of four guns at checkpoints, but we also find about 2,000 of these small pocket knives every day,” Pistole said on Thursday.

“On average that takes two to three minutes for the pocket knife to be identified, for that bag to be pulled, for that bag to be opened, for the knife to be found,” he added.

That’s valuable time, he said, noting that other more dangerous items could slip by security screeners.

Questioned by reporters, White House spokesman Jay Carney said he did not think President Barack Obama had a response to the issue.

“I’m sure that the TSA has been asked this question and explained their thinking in making decisions like this; DHS as well, I assume,” Carney said of the TSA’s parent agency, the Homeland Security Department.

“My understanding as a layman, as an observer, not as somebody who has worked the policy process, is that this has to do with an assessment of where the most likely threats are,” Carney said.

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]]> http://www.dragva.net/tsa-chief-decision-on-knives-stands/feed/ 0 Miranda Lambert Rescues Dog from Side of the Highway http://www.dragva.net/miranda-lambert-rescues-dog-from-side-of-the-highway/ http://www.dragva.net/miranda-lambert-rescues-dog-from-side-of-the-highway/#comments Thu, 14 Mar 2013 00:09:09 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1505 [unable to retrieve full-text content]The country singer is looking for a forever home for her latest pooch, Pistol Andy

Via – http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/dLAd08SelHY/0,,20681639,00.html

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Sharks chairman to stand down http://www.dragva.net/sharks-chairman-to-stand-down/ http://www.dragva.net/sharks-chairman-to-stand-down/#comments Wed, 13 Mar 2013 00:11:18 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1503

Sharks chairman Damian Irvine and, inset, Sharks players at training. Source: The Sunday Telegraph

DAMIAN Irvine’s decision to quit his role as chairman of the Cronulla Sharks will fast-track the return of sidelined coach Shane Flanagan.

However, it’s unlikely the dumped mentor will be back in time for the Sharks’ Monday night clash with South Sydney.

Despite Flanagan’s burning desire to remain head coach of the Sharks, there was no way possible he would return to the club while Irvine remained chairman.

Irvine’s relationship with Flanagan – and the entire playing group – was considered untenable, which is why the chairman chose to stand down this morning.

His decision to tarnish the entire football department in The Sunday Telegraph with claims that they hid the use of horse drugs from the board left coaching staff, players, sponsors and fans calling for his head.

Flanagan insists he played no role in the drug scandal that has ripped the club apart, but must front a new-look board before being given the green light to return as head coach.

That new board will be led by a new chairman – ex Cronulla winger Glenn Coleman.

At a press conference this morning, Irvine said he was not pushed into standing down, but believed he was an impediment to the club’s future.

“My presence at the club may prove an obstacle (for it) to move forward,” Irvine said.

“The club needs a plan forward without any more distraction.” 

WATCH A LOOPED REPLAY OF THE PRESS CONFERENCE ABOVE

Irvine said he regretted making the horse drugs comments, but stood by his board’s decision to stand down Flanagan and sack four key members of staff – football general manager Darren Mooney, head trainer Mark Noakes, physiotherapist Konrad Schulz and long-serving team doctor Dave Givney.

“I believe we made the right decision for the right reasons. I will cop any criticism for those decisions,” Irvine said.

He added: “Self preservation was the furthest thing from the board’s mind in making decisions last week.”

Interim CEO Bruno Cullen, former boss of the Brisbane Broncos, arrived at the club today to take over operations.

EXCLUSIVE: Manly next stop for ASADA

Source – http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/com/newscomautopstoriesndm/~3/ckodLNOXOyM/story01.htm

]]> http://www.dragva.net/sharks-chairman-to-stand-down/feed/ 0 Guy kicked out of 54-sq-ft apartment http://www.dragva.net/guy-kicked-out-of-54-sq-ft-apartment/ http://www.dragva.net/guy-kicked-out-of-54-sq-ft-apartment/#comments Tue, 12 Mar 2013 00:09:18 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1501
  1. ‘Grumpy cat’ takes grumpy to new level

  2. Korean War remembered
  3. Military couple ties the knot on Skype
  4. Mom finds 7-year-old’s ‘diet’ list
  5. Cows invade PGA golf course
  6. Millions know his songs, not his nameThe man behind the most-sung songs
  1. Fear of new Korean war

  2. They raced into sea for Kim Jong-un
  3. Tensions high on Korean peninsula
  4. Will sanctions work against N. Korea?
  5. What to make of N. Korea’s newest threat
  6. Rather: Rodman ‘naive’ about N. Korea
  7. North Korea’s nuclear ambitions
  8. Korean War remembered
  1. ‘We need a whole new kind of medicine’

  2. Free health care plan can’t meet demand
  3. ‘Escape Fire’: a soldier’s painful story: A soldier
  4. Are bad health choices too easy to make?
  5. Doctor: Too many unneeded surgeries
  6. Lifestyle often root of health problems
  1. Dunkin’ Donuts robber gets coffee in face

  2. Crane collapse caught on camera
  3. Bus driver passes out behind wheel
  4. Dashcam: Man gets out of car, shoots
  5. Kid hides in locker, tapes teacher
  6. Desperate teen: I can’t control my car
  1. More jury questions in store for AriasArias awaits new jury questions

  2. Jury to Jodi Arias: Why believe you?
  3. Arias: It’s my fault if I’m convicted
  4. Jury questions Jodi Arias
  5. Travis Alexander speaks in new video
  6. Arias defense blames sex on Alexander
  7. Jodi Arias: ‘I just wanted to die’
  8. Geragos: Jodi Arias is a ‘diabolical nut’
  9. Jodi Arias breaks down on the stand
  1. Inside the conclave: How it works

  2. Meet the papal tailor
  3. A woman pope? The story of Pope Joan
  4. Vatican’s men-only policy
  5. CNN Explains: Papal succession
  6. Historic transition for Catholic Church
  1. Distraction: Penguin scared to jump

  2. Distraction: Cat hugs kitten
  3. Distraction: Teensy puppy learns to walk
  4. Distraction: Best golf shot ever
  5. Distraction: Guy ages 5 years in 1 min.
  6. Kid caught sprinkle faced
  7. Distraction: Julie’s wisdom teeth
  8. Distraction: Extreme Rubik’s Cube
  9. Distraction: Snuggling a stranger
  1. SNL’s tribute to Hugo Chavez An

  2. ‘SNL’ jokes about forced spending cuts
  3. Justin Timberlake’s bringing tofu back
  4. James Franco ready to tour as rapper
  5. Actress takes smoke break in clown makeupJane Lynch’ cigarette break
  6. SNL mocks search for a new popeCNN looks at ‘ Wolf Blitzer parody
  1. Guy pushes his girlfriend off a cliff

  2. See Chinese executive’s air rage rampageSee guy freak out after missing flight
  3. Honest weather reporter: ‘It sucks here’
  4. Lingerie cam busts real estate agent
  5. ‘World’s Cutest Frog’ makes weird sound
  6. Judge flips out after getting flipped off
  7. See weatherman black out on camera
  8. Pastor uses tithe excuse to refuse tipPastor uses tithe excuse to dispute tip
  9. Would you stop a murder?
  1. Tortoises ‘getting busy’ burn down housegetting busy, burn down home

  2. News anchors must be prepared for anythingShe kept a gun where?
  3. RidicuList: People caught on fancy yacht
  4. Anchor loses it over fat cat story
  5. Anderson cracks up over holiday script
  6. Angry geese attack people with cameras
  7. Reporter drops fish, falls over in boat
  8. ‘Canoodle-seeking’ anchor gets rejected
  9. Caught on air doing this …
  1. Jenna Elfman doesn’t get hotel sex

  2. Bieber lashes out at paparazzi
  3. Why Snoop gave up his gunsSnoop: We are guilty of promoting guns
  4. BBC Radio’s Kunis interview goes viral
  5. Olivia Wilde’s tweet enrages ‘Beliebers’
  6. Ex-NBA player lived in mansion of filth
  7. Taylor Swift takes aim at Fey, Poehler
  1. Star saleswoman only sold 11 cars

  2. New Lamborghini: 0 to 60 MPH in 3 secs
  3. World’s largest yacht docks in NYC
  4. See what NYC apt. is asking $100 million
  5. $63K for just the right to buy a car
  6. See what a 76-carat diamond looks like
  1. Gator gets new tail

  2. Animals left in box along side road
  3. Raccoon gets head stuck where?
  4. ‘Grumpy cat’ takes grumpy to new level
  5. Dog trained to do household chores
  6. On camera: Deer takes out bicyclist
  1. Annual rattlesnake roundup 1,300 pounds of rattlesnakes in one room

  2. U.S. to ‘rain mice’ on tree snakes
  3. Mom finds deadly snakes in son’s room
  4. Man finds snake in toilet
  5. Man survives duel with snake
  6. Giant snake slithers into backyard
  1. Tracking a 2,000 lb. great white shark

  2. Sharks invade South Florida shores
  3. Watch shark feast on giant squid
  4. See orca give birth to 300+ lb. baby
  5. Surfer almost swallowed by a whale
  6. 40-foot-long whale shark discovered
  1. Waitress handed her own ID by thief

  2. Teen bank robber brags on YouTube
  3. RidicuList: Toilet caper
  4. Intruder calls 911 from shower
  5. ‘BBQ chip bandits’ stir hilarious uproar
  6. Cops release sketch of weed theft suspect
  1. Immigrants evicted from tiny apartments

  2. 8×10-foot apartment selling for $280,000
  3. Couple built, lives in anti-McMansion
  4. Could you live in 300-sq.-ft. apartment?
  5. Could you live in 54-square-foot space?
  6. New York thinks big on small apartments
  1. Hawaii deals with Japan’s tsunami debris

  2. Japan tsunami aftermath
  3. Teen taped tsunami, then saved stranger
  4. Japan remembers tsunami losses
  5. ‘We must face reality of this disaster’
  6. Coast Guard shells ‘ghost ship’
  1. Playboy rolls out Hebrew edition

  2. Maids dust in the buff
  3. Sports stars in the buff
  4. Naked man sings to ham
  5. Man strips to protest TSA pat-down
  6. Naked unicyclist goes on joyride
  7. World naked bike ride
  8. Naked sausage thief caught on camera
  9. Cops chase nearly naked woman
  1. Soldiers on school cupcakes cause uproar

  2. Community reacts to bus monitor bullying
  3. Mother: Third grade son strip searched
  4. Blackface 2nd-grader stirs controversy
  5. 6-yr-old suspended for sexual harassment
  6. School seizes teen’s rosary beads
  7. School bans Peyton shirt as gang-related
  8. Parents: Sex ed too racy for 5th graders
  9. Teacher: First grader beat me up
  1. Virtual Senate

  2. Iran’s nuclear capabilities
  3. Reality check on China
  4. North Korea missile test
  5. Fiscal cliff
  1. Sheryl Sandberg’s challenge to women

  2. TIME looks at the woman behind Facebook
  3. Laura Bush: My girls help others
  1. Helmet cam captures avalanche accident

  2. See avalanche bury skier
  3. Avalanche survivor: It sounded like wind
  4. Avalanche survivor: I prayed to live
  5. Avalanche survival caught on tape
  6. Buried in avalanche for 23 minutes
  1. Space X Grasshopper leaps to new record

  2. Space tourist explains Mars mission plan
  3. See how rockets are made for NASA
  4. Touring space shuttle Endeavour
  5. 30 years, 135 launches in 135 seconds
  6. The future of space travel
  1. MMA fighter discusses being transsexual

  2. Stoudemire excels on and off the court
  3. Did Manti Te’o impress at NFL combine?
  4. LeBron James: I’m not Michael Jordan
  5. NRA to sponsor NASCAR Sprint Cup race
  6. Mannings’ dad talks Super Bowl rivalry
  1. Killer’s defense: Abuse

    566

  2. Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law captured

    291

  3. Ungodly Discipline

    363

  4. Arias on the stand: 17 days and counting

    274

  5. Travis’ friends on the ‘real Jodi’

    276

  6. Cardinals set date for pope vote

    306

  7. Opposition to new TSA knives policy

    354

  8. AC360 Podcast: 03/07/13

    648

  9. AC360 Podcast: 03/08/13

    519

  10. Tortoises ‘getting busy,’ burn down home

    156

  11. Arias: I didn’t intend to kill Travis

    252

  12. Producer started wth imaginary network

    249

  1. Cardinal Dolan received warmly in Rome

    128

  2. Cardinal Dolan received warmly in Rome

    127

  3. Cardinal Dolan received warmly in Rome

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  4. New military robots show off strength

    97

  5. Congressman enters the boxing ring

    48

  6. SXSW feature: My Damn Channel

    184

  7. Senators promote tech bill at SXSW

    267

  8. Freedom, choice, and gov’t regulations

    368

  9. Trans fat, sugary drinks, what’s next?

    473

  10. Grown-up getaways

    156

  11. Bieber fever breaks in UK

    240

  12. Clinton reversal on DOMA

    235

  1. Judge grills Arias with jury’s questions

    231

  2. Travis Alexander speaks in new video

    167

  3. Arias reads e-mail to Travis after death

    77

  4. Autopsy image shows Alexander head gash

    141

  5. Arias prosecution shares dirty messages

    129

  6. Why is Arias looking to right?

    105

  7. Student sex alleged at preschool

    183

  8. Woman almost killed by online date

    209

  9. Lawyer asked about Casey Anthony finances

    67

  10. Uncle: Don’t use teen in gun debate

    152

  11. Woman is 20 but looks like a toddler

    115

  12. Man describes date with Arias

    108

  1. Trending: ‘The Hangover 3′, ‘Star Wars’

    104

  2. Sequester day seven, changes yet to come

    206

  3. New Lamborghini: 0 to 60 MPH in 3 secs

    57

  4. Thousands of sharks close beaches

    48

  5. Police: Three confess to acid attack

    105

  6. Watch this amazing buzzer beater

    63

  7. Scientists: Two-year-old ‘cured’ of HIV

    109

  8. Rep. Cassidy: Obama should lead on cuts

    170

  9. Cardinals set to begin pope selection

    117

  10. Man’s house surrounded by tumbleweeds

    44

  11. Rivers’ joke, Lawrence loves Photoshop

    84

  12. When you’ll feel forced spending cuts

    105

  1. Iranian refugees persecuted in Iraq

    295

  2. Georgia town mandates gun ownership

    215

  3. Weil: Health care system will collapse

    229

  4. Bin Laden son-in-law pleads not guilty

    268

  5. Laura Bush: My girls help others

    82

  6. North Korea has new weapons program

    130

  7. Report: Fake bomb gets through TSA check

    176

  8. Dow soars, unemployment drops

    226

  9. OutFront Recap: 03/08/13

    217

  10. What to make of N. Korea’s newest threat

    191

  11. Paul: America is not a battlefield

    234

  12. Paul: Holder’s letter a ‘victory for us’

    184

  1. Last Look: A Biblical Plague Returns

    62

  2. GPS: Michael Brune on Keystone XL

    78

  3. Fareed’s Take: The case for Keystone

    235

  4. What in the World? Drones

    223

  5. GPS: Venezuela after Chavez

    113

  6. GPS Last Look: Harlem Shaking in Protest

    76

  7. GPS: Guess who won’t watch this film

    209

  8. Fareed’s Take: Kerry should go to Asia

    222

  9. GPS: Iran’s UN Ambassador on nuke talks

    110

  10. GPS: Iran’s UN Ambassador on Argo

    120

  11. GPS: Amb. Khazaee on direct talks

    37

  12. GPS: Hayden on CIA interrogations

    77

  1. Arias trial game-changer?

    235

  2. Jury to Jodi: Why should we believe you?

    248

  3. Body language expert: Jodi having fun

    161

  4. Jodi answers jurors’ questions

    150

  5. Did Jodi’s defense undo the damage?

    193

  6. Jodi Arias: ‘I just wanted to die’

    279

  7. Who is Jodi: Abuse victim or vixen?

    313

  8. Friend of Travis: Jodi was zombie-like

    204

  9. Jodi reenacts Travis’ alleged attack

    252

  10. Friend: Jodi confident in mistrial

    84

  11. Jodi Arias: Femme fatale?

    149

  12. Jodi: Travis messaged married woman

    285

  1. Justin Timberlake’s bringing tofu back

    76

  2. Truck dangles off bridge

    47

  3. Rapping golfers return with ’2.Oh’

    108

  4. Competitive yogis show off their bends

    53

  5. Meet NASCAR’s 1st female pit crew member

    75

  6. Michelle Williams takes stage in ‘Fela’

    201

  7. Pope’s resignation fuels jokes

    60

  8. Open wide for seven-patty cheeseburger

    81

  9. Kid hides in locker, tapes teacher

    52

  10. Bartender reports DUI suspect, is fired

    50

  11. Meet this 7-year-old tattoo artist

    52

  12. Nudists visit ‘nude men’ museum exhibit

    43

  1. Jodi Arias: I lied to everyone

    169

  2. Lawyer to Arias: You have memory issues

    126

  3. Arias’ love interest details her denials

    71

  4. Roseanne: Fire lit in Steubenville

    93

  5. Searching for answers in Newtown tragedy

    211

  6. Classmate describes Lanza as quiet, shy

    103

  7. Shooter’s classmate breaks silence

    190

  8. Teacher guilty of group sex with students

    193

  9. Cops: Lotto winner was killed for money

    249

  10. Friend of missing boy family speaks

    188

  11. Nancy Grace Caught on Tape: Car Chases

    108

  12. Nancy Grace Caught on Tape: Car Chases

    200

  1. A World Cup medical miracle

    173

  2. Battling paralysis w/ neuro-prosthetics

    66

  3. Babies begin education for life

    69

  4. Wouldn’t It Be Cool If . . .

    191

  5. The Apollo Project for Our Generation

    73

  6. Robots made of cloth?

    81

  7. High-tech meets haute couture fashion

    178

  8. A scarf that changes colors in the cold

    64

  9. An asteroid scanning telescope

    195

  10. Saving the Earth from asteroids

    76

  11. Ed Lu’s urgent mission to save Earth

    74

  12. Using microbes to manufacture biofuels

    177

  1. McCain: I’m skeptical of TSA decision

    173

  2. Clive Davis: ‘Bisexuality does exist’

    135

  3. Snoop Lion: I’m Bob Marley reincarnated

    87

  4. Cruickshank: Significant coup for U.S.

    204

  5. Snoop: We are guilty of promoting guns

    116

  6. ATF agent: Easy for criminals to get guns

    123

  7. Man spills secrets of illegal gun trade

    206

  8. Don King: Roger Ailes is a genius

    107

  9. Hanna: Sanctuary lions are wild animals

    119

  10. Lizza: Ailes has incredible influence

    106

  11. Exclusive video of lion that attacked

    193

  12. Chenoweth: MacFarlane ‘killed it’

    104

  1. Jessica Simpson: It’s a boy

    110

  2. Kim Kardashian pregnancy scare

    102

  3. Valerie Harper has brain cancer

    147

  4. Fifth grader plays high school hoops

    201

  5. Justin Bieber two hours late to concert

    174

  6. Jodi vs. Casey: Uncertain outcomes

    99

  7. Jodi vs. Casey: Makeovers

    122

  8. Jodi vs. Casey: Hatred

    50

  9. Jodi vs. Casey: Lies

    161

  10. Jodi vs. Casey: Sex

    244

  11. Reality villain No. 1: Abby Lee Miller

    180

  12. Reality villain No. 2: Scott Disick

    135

  1. Ashley Judd: Will she, won’t she?

    166

  2. SUV flips into pond killing 6 teens

    159

  3. Kelly: Buying AR-15 was “pretty easy”

    192

  4. Judge halts New York’s large soda ban

    130

  5. The man behind the most-sung songs

    157

  6. Gingrich: Let children tour White House

    130

  7. Papal conclave 101

    158

  8. Rand Paul eyes presidential bid

    166

  9. Gingrich reacts to Fox News chief’s jabs

    63

  10. Officer released after sex conviction

    153

  11. Report: TSA didn’t notice fake bomb

    148

  12. Bin Laden’s son-in-law pleads not guilty

    177

  1. Sen. Blumenthal: Root of DC dysfunction

    153

  2. Social media cardinals in lead for pope?

    170

  3. New report looks at cyber attack threats

    160

  4. State sen. pushes school discipline act

    227

  5. Rep. Chaffetz:We can’t spend to infinity

    203

  6. Inventing new ways to detect concussions

    84

  7. Abbie Cornish’s gritty film ‘The Girl’

    279

  8. Comedy veteran returns in animated show

    194

  9. Feb. unemployment down, job creation up

    184

  10. Wyden: U.S. wants tough terror approach

    228

  11. Mom finds 7-year-old’s ‘diet’ list

    309

  12. Cardinals to set date for papal conclave

    61

  1. How far have women come?

    121

  2. Rand Paul steals the spotlight

    203

  3. Can women have it all?

    451

  4. Who are the 2016 contenders?

    428

  5. The real ‘House of Cards’

    488

  6. Bush on Sen. Rand Paul’s filibuster

    78

  7. ‘It’s a trophy, a scalp, not a solution’

    117

  8. Bush pushes for immigration reform

    122

  9. Pelosi: Dems won’t allow gov’t shutdown

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  10. Jeb Bush for president in 2016?

    39

  11. Pelosi: ‘Let’s get some things done’

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  12. Candy’s SOTU Preview: Bush & Pelosi

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]]> http://www.dragva.net/guy-kicked-out-of-54-sq-ft-apartment/feed/ 0 Woman, 26, dies after being shot in the head http://www.dragva.net/woman-26-dies-after-being-shot-in-the-head/ http://www.dragva.net/woman-26-dies-after-being-shot-in-the-head/#comments Mon, 11 Mar 2013 00:09:50 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1499

A woman died following a shooting at an apartment complex on Springwood Rd, Rochedale South. Pictured is neighbour Veronica Gromball. Picture: Jono Searle Source: The Courier-Mail

HOMICIDE detectives are investigating the death of a 26-year-old woman who was shot in the head in Brisbane’s south.

Police were called to a townhouse complex on Springwood Road, Rochedale South, about 8.20pm.

The woman is believed to have had a gunshot wound to the head.

She was transported to the Princess Alexandra Hospital in a critical condition but was pronounced dead on arrival.

A woman died following a shooting at an apartment complex on Springwood Rd, Rochedale South. Pictured is neighbour Kylie Platten. Picture: Jono Searle

At 9am, it was reported that a man was assisting police with their investigations.

It is understood that a weapon has not been located at this time.

Neighbours in the Jacaranda Gardens townhouse complex said they heard “a loud popping noise” about 8pm, but did not realise it was the sound of a gun shot.

A woman died following a shooting at an apartment complex on Springwood Rd, Rochedale South. Picture: Jono Searle

Neighbour Veronica Gromball moved into the complex on Springwood Road last week and was cooking dinner with her sister when they heard a shot ring out.

“It was quite loud, but we didn’t think anything of it at first. You never expect to hear gunshots,” the 34-year-old said.

It was not until Ms Gromball heard a man screaming for help that she realised something was wrong.

A woman died following a shooting at an apartment complex on Springwood Rd, Rochedale South. Picture: Jono Searle

“I don’t think he was involved, I think he was a neighbour, but he was yelling for help,” she said.

“My sister and I went out to see what was happening, and I heard someone say they’d called the police. The police and an ambulance came 10 minutes later.”

Kylie Platten has lived in the secure, 46-unit complex with her three young children since June and heard a single shot between 8-8.30pm, but thought it was the sound of a car backfiring.

POLICE at the scene of a shooting death in Rochedale. Pic: Marc Robertson

“We live on a busy road and that sort of thing happens all the time,” the 33-year-old said.

“I didn’t realise anything was wrong until a friend sent me a text message about 10pm.”

Ms Platten said she was “shaken up” because residents require a code or card to enter the complex.

“Police have reassured us that we are all safe, but I’d be worried if was a random attack.”

A Homicide Investigation Group and local detectives are investigating the death.

A police media spokesman has confirmed investigators have ruled out self-harm as cause of death.

Police were unable to confirm if the murder weapon had been located at this stage.

An Investigation Centre has been set up at Logan Central Police Station.


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]]> http://www.dragva.net/woman-26-dies-after-being-shot-in-the-head/feed/ 0 Call centre jobs go to prisoners http://www.dragva.net/call-centre-jobs-go-to-prisoners/ http://www.dragva.net/call-centre-jobs-go-to-prisoners/#comments Sun, 10 Mar 2013 00:09:39 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1497

The prisoners are paid $2 an hour and the company charges $9 for the work. Picture: Thinkstock Source: Supplied

PRISONS are paying inmates $2 an hour to operate call centres from behind bars to prevent the work going offshore and to improve job skills.

Duties include database cleansing, outbound marketing and call reminders.

NSW Corrective Services Industries says the program poses no security threat and only female prisoners who had shown ”excellent behaviour” are trained as call operators.

Thirty inmates, whose crimes include fraud and stealing, manage the call centre at the Dillwynia jail, near Windsor.

CSI, which made a profit of $24 million in the past financial year, also uses prison workers to clean headsets for Qantas and repair appliances for Breville.

CSI executive director Steve Thorpe said yesterday prisoners worked for about $2 an hour, but the company charged clients $9 an hour, due to rules banning jails from competing unfairly with rival firms.

Murderers ”may or may not” be able to work in the call centre, he said, depending on when they committed the crime and whether they had been rehabilitated in custody.

”You don’t want people who’ve committed horrendous crimes talking to the public,” Mr Thorpe said.

”You could have a murderer and that might have happened many, many, many years ago and the issue of violent behaviour has been addressed in prison.”

He said prison workers could only dial the numbers assigned to them and worked under tight supervision.

”There are no credit cards, no money, no selling,” he said.

Dr Catriona Wallace, director of Fifth Quadrant, says her firm had advised and supported the Department of Corrective Services for three years.

”For many of these girls who have experienced extreme abuse and dysfunction in their young lives just the thought that someone on the outside will give them a chance at employment is monumental to them.

”Most of these women are young, between 18 and 30, and most of them have children on the outside,” she says on her company website.

Mr Thorpe said jail labour was ”not as efficient as in the real world”, as prisoners did not work eight hours a day.

”You’ve got urine analysis that must take place, search days, or violence can occur and you have to lock everything down,” he said.

Breville Australia general manager Jeremy Sargeant yesterday said prisoners did product ”fault analysis” and ”minor refurbishment”.

Mr Thorpe said former clients included cable maker CommScope, Cumberland Newspapers, and T-shirt maker Bilprau.

CSI targets companies considering sending work offshore.

CELL-PHONE CALL CENTRE:

  • Run by NSW Government-owned Corrective Services Industries
  • Based at Dillwynia jail, west of Sydney
  • Employs 150 women inmates each year
  • Prisoners are paid $2 an hour
  • Company charges clients $9 an hour
  • Provides “a quality endorsed total service solution in telemarketing”
  • CSI turned over $72m in sales last financial year
  • Company made $24m profit

Source – http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/com/newscomautopstoriesndm/~3/ZS2-_TLA14E/story01.htm

]]> http://www.dragva.net/call-centre-jobs-go-to-prisoners/feed/ 0 Snow delays Northeast flights for hours http://www.dragva.net/snow-delays-northeast-flights-for-hours/ http://www.dragva.net/snow-delays-northeast-flights-for-hours/#comments Sat, 09 Mar 2013 00:11:10 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1495
A man shovels snow on Boston’s Commonwealth Avenue. Delays of 2.5 hours were reported at Boston’s Logan Airport.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Airlines cancel nearly 400 flights ahead of Saturday, mostly affecting Denver
  • Arriving flights at Newark airport delayed more than four hours, the FAA reports
  • Delays of more than two hours at LaGuardia in New York and Logan in Boston
  • Two feet of snow could fall in Massachusetts, the National Weather Service says

(CNN) — A winter storm blasting the Northeast caused significant headaches for travelers on Friday, including long delays at several airports, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

Flights destined for Newark Liberty International Airport in northern New Jersey were arriving more than four hours late on average, the FAA reported on its website.

Significant delays were reported elsewhere in the region as well, including about 2½ hours at both New York’s LaGuardia airport and Boston’s Logan airport.

Some areas of Massachusetts could be under two feet of snow by the time the storm cleared the area Friday night, according to the National Weather Service.

The Northeast isn’t the only area being hit by late wintry weather.

Blizzard warnings were posted through Saturday and in some cases into Sunday for parts of four Rockies and Plains states.

Parts of Colorado could see 10 to 15 inches of snow, according to the weather service.

Before it hit in full, the storm system had already caused travel issues.

United Airlines preemptively canceled 270 flights on Saturday and Southwest canceled another 125. Most of the cancellations impact Denver.

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]]> http://www.dragva.net/snow-delays-northeast-flights-for-hours/feed/ 0 Woodstock guitar hero Alvin Lee dies http://www.dragva.net/woodstock-guitar-hero-alvin-lee-dies/ http://www.dragva.net/woodstock-guitar-hero-alvin-lee-dies/#comments Fri, 08 Mar 2013 00:11:15 +0000 admin http://www.dragva.net/?p=1493
Alvin Lee, the speed-fingered British guitarist who lit up Woodstock with a monumental 11-minute version of his song “I’m Going Home,” died on March 6, according to his website. He was 68.
Hugo Chavez, the polarizing president of Venezuela who cast himself as a “21st century socialist” and foe of the United States, died March 5, said Vice President Nicolas Maduro.
Bobby Rogers, one of the original members of Motown staple The Miracles, died on Sunday, March 3, at 73. From left: Bobby Rogers, Ronald White, Smokey Robinson and Pete Moore circa 1965.
Actress Bonnie Franklin, star of the TV show “One Day at a Time,” died at the age of 69 on March 1 of complications from pancreatic cancer.
Actor Dale Robertson, who was popular for his western TV shows and movies, died at age 89 on Thursday, February 28.
Richard Street, former member of the Temptations, died at age 70 on February 27. Street, second from the left, poses for a portrait with fellow members of the Temptations circa 1973.
Van Cliburn, the legendary pianist honored with a New York ticker-tape parade for winning a major Moscow competition in 1958, died on February 27 after a battle with bone cancer, his publicist said. He was 78.
Former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop died on February 25. He was 96. Koop served as surgeon general from 1982 to 1989, under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.
Damon Harris, former member of the Motown group the Temptations, died at age 62 on February 18. Harris, center on the stool, poses for a portrait with fellow members of The Temptations circa 1974.
Lou Myers, a stage, film and TV actor who memorably portrayed Mr. Gaines on the comedy “A Different World,” died on February 19 at the age of 75.
Los Angeles Laker owner Jerry Buss died February 18 at age 80. Buss, who had owned the Lakers since 1979, was credited with procuring the likes of Earvin “Magic” Johnson, James Worthy, Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant. The Lakers won 10 NBA championships and 16 Western Conference titles under Buss’ ownership.
Country singer Mindy McCready was found dead on February 17 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said. She was 37. During her career, McCready landed 14 songs and six albums on the Billboard country charts.
Ed Koch, the brash former New York mayor, died February 1 of congestive heart failure at 88, his spokesman said.
Patty Andrews, center, the last surviving member of the Andrews Sisters, died at her Northridge, California, home on January 30, her publicist Alan Eichler said. She was 94. Patty is seen in this 1948 photograph with her sisters Maxene, left, and Laverne.
Baseball Hall of Famer and St. Louis Cardinals great Stan Musial died on January 19, according to his former team. He was 92.
Baseball Hall of Fame manager Earl Sidney Weaver, who led the Baltimore Orioles to four pennants and a World Series title with a pugnacity toward umpires, died January 19 of an apparent heart attack at age 82, Major League Baseball said.
Pauline Phillips, better known to millions of newspaper readers as the original Dear Abby advice columnist, has died after a long battle with Alzheimer’s Disease. She died January 16 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, at age 94.
Aaron Swartz, the Internet activist who co-wrote the initial specification for RSS, committed suicide, a relative told CNN on January 12. He was 26. Swartz also co-founded Demand Progress, a political action group that campaigns against Internet censorship.
Claude Nobs, the founder of the Montreux Jazz Festival, died aged 76 following a skiing accident.
Richard Ben Cramer, the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer whose 1992 book “What It Takes” remains one of the most detailed and passionate of all presidential campaign chronicles, died January 7, according to his longtime agent. He was 62.
Director and stuntman David R. Ellis died on January 7. He directed “Snakes on a Plane.”
Tony Lip, who played mob figures in the hit cable show “The Sopranos” and several critically acclaimed movies, died January 4, a funeral home official said. Lip, whose real name was Frank Vallelonga, was 82.
Character actor Ned Wertimer, known to fans of “The Jeffersons” as the doorman Ralph Hart, died on January 2. He was 89.
Pop-country singer Patti Page died on January 1 in Encinitas, California. She was 85. Born Clara Ann Fowler, Page was the best-selling female artist of the 1950s and had 19 gold and 14 platinum singles.
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