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Fort Drum soldier stationed in Afghanistan accused of watching wife on Skype while she had oral sex with 15-year-old girl

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A soldier from an upstate military reservation is accused of watching his wife have sex with a 15-year-old girl via Skype while he was stationed in Afghanistan, cops said.
Shawn S. Raymo, 22, and wife Jessica M. Raymo, 21, were each charged with one count of felony use of a child less than 17 in a sexual performance and one count of misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child, according to New York State Police.
The long-distance cyber-sex allegedly took place in July of 2011, when Jessica Raymo was at Fort Drum and her husband was in Afghanistan.
Jessica Raymo is accused of having oral sex with the minor while her husband watched.
"We are constantly trying to brief our soldiers on things that they should not be doing," Lt. Col. David Konop, a spokesman for Fort Drum told the Daily News, adding that he is unaware of anything like this happening before with Drum soldiers.
Because the case is now with civilian authorities, Konop said he was unable to give any additional information, but did say he believes people will be surprised when they hear the news.
The couple was arraigned in a LeRay court and sent to Jefferson County Correctional Facility on $5,000 cash bail or $10,000 bond, representatives there told the Daily News.
Police are waiting for action from a grand jury.

17-year-old boy arrested in death of Jessica Ridgeway, 10-year-old girl who disappeared on way to school

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WESTMINSTER, Colo. — A teenager who lived just a mile from a 10-year-old Colorado girl who was abducted and killed earlier this month has been arrested in her death, along with a May attack on a runner, authorities said Wednesday.
Police in the Denver suburb of Westminster said they arrested 17-year-old Austin Reed Sigg on Tuesday night after receiving a phone call, apparently from his mother, that led them to Sigg. He was officially arrested Wednesday.

Reached by phone Wednesday, Sigg's mother told The Associated Press he turned himself in.
"I made the phone call, and he turned himself in. That's all I have to say," said Mindy Sigg, before she broke down in tears and hung up.
Police announced the arrest as agents searched the home of Sigg, a student at Arapahoe Community College. Authorities declined to elaborate on the arrest and have released few details about the investigation. Court documents have been sealed, but a police custody report said Sigg was cooperative when he was arrested and waived his rights.
Jessica Ridgeway disappeared Oct. 5 while walking to school. Her remains were found five days later in a field at a park, and police said her body was "not intact."

The arrest case came a day after police said Jessica's abduction was linked to the May 28 attempted kidnapping of a 22-year-old runner at another area park, the Ketner Lake Open Space.
In that case, a woman fought off a stranger who grabbed her from behind and put a rag that smelled of chemicals over her mouth, authorities said. Westminster investigator Trevor Materasso said Tuesday police haven't been able to determine if the substance on the rag was meant to subdue the woman.

Authorities didn't say why they think the two cases are linked, but they noted Sigg will be charged in both crimes. His first court appearance is set for 8 a.m. Thursday.

As technicians in white coveralls searched Sigg's home, neighbors described the 17-year-old as a quiet, goth boy who often work black clothes.

"He was shy and kept to himself," said Brooke Olds, 13, who usually saw Sigg alone on a skateboard or scooter.

Sigg attended Witt Elementary — the same school Jessica went to — but he moved on to middle school in 2007, before she enrolled, Jefferson County Public Schools spokeswoman Lynn Setzer said.
Jessica was on her way to Witt when she disappeared.
Sigg later attended Standley Lake High School while also taking classes at Warren Tech, a school that offers specialized training in health science, public safety, technology and other fields.

Sigg left the school district in July after finishing the 11th grade and later earned a GED. School officials don't know why he left.

Arapahoe Community College officials confirmed that he was enrolled there but refused to say what campus he attended or what he was studying.

Police said they notified the Ridgeway family of the arrest Wednesday morning. Jessica lived in Westminster with her mother, Sarah Ridgeway. Jessica's father, Jeremiah Bryant, lives in Missouri.

"We hope and pray that this arrest brings them some measure of closure in dealing with this enormous loss that they've suffered," Police Chief Lee Birk said.
The arrest also brought relief to the community, which has been on edge as authorities searched for Jessica's killer. More parents have been waiting with their children at bus stops, and high school students have volunteered to walk younger children to school to keep them safe.

"Every parent in every Colorado community will rest a little easier tonight," said Gov. John Hickenlooper, who has a 10-year-old son. "While we still mourn the death of Jessica Ridgeway, we are relieved an arrest has been made and the pursuit of justice can continue."
A steady stream of people have paid their respects to Jessica at a memorial to her at a park near her home. It has been decorated with flowers, balloons and stuffed animals.
Jessica was walking down a quiet street in her modest neighborhood when she was last seen alive. Her school backpack was found three days later in Superior, another Denver suburb about seven miles northwest of her home.

After Jessica's disappearance, more than 1,000 officers and 10 agencies, including the FBI, investigated the case, following up on more than 4,000 leads.

Authorities had long said Jessica's killer could be someone from the community. But early on, they didn't seem to have any particular suspect in mind. They asked residents to be on the lookout for anything suspicious from their bosses, friends and family members, watching for things like leaving home unexpectedly, missing appointments or changing their appearance.

Good Thing, Small Package

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IF by chance you are a lover of dumplings (and really, Anthony Bourdain might have to mount a search party to find someone who isn’t), then consider this a very good time to be a New Yorker.
Yes, food trends beg to be quibbled over. We grow weary of cupcakes, of meatballs, of the overwhelming ubiquity of bacon. And yet it’s hard to find fault with the recent ascendancy of Asian dumplings on a lot of city menus, in part because it’s hard to snicker at the simple, plump lovability of this globe-spanning culinary trope: the very form of a dumpling, with a hidden knob of flavor all wrapped up in a bow of dough, calls to mind a tiny present that our species has decided to pass along to itself.

New York has been a dumpling town for a long time. Up and down the streets of Flushing (and at countless stuffed-pouch shrines like Vanessa’s Dumpling House, Joe’s Shanghai, Nom Wah Tea Parlor, Grand Sichuan, Prosperity Dumpling and M Shanghai Bistro & Garden), diners can feast on platters of two-bite delights while sometimes spending less than you’d pay for a morning cup of coffee.

But lately, in Manhattan and Brooklyn and Queens, at spots like Talde, RedFarm, Hakkasan, Danji, the Good Fork, the Hurricane Club, the Rickshaw food truck, Biang! and (at unpredictable intervals) Mission Chinese Food, classic dumpling forms are being executed with meticulous care — and stuffed, pinched and twisted into fresh manifestations.

In Park Slope, Dale Talde has engineered one of the most hunted-down bar snacks of 2012, a beer-friendly, street-cart collision known as the “pretzel dumpling.”

Inside, there’s some slightly cured pork. Outside, a process of boiling, brushing, pan-searing and baking creates a skin with the crust and chew of a hot pretzel. The dipping sauce echoes what you might get at a deli, or in a bag full of Chinese takeout: strong mustard.

For Mr. Talde, who grew up in Chicago and comes from a Filipino background, the goal was to summon a dish that represented a spirited take on what’s Asian and what’s American. “For us, it was a perfect way of blending the two,” he said.

If any place embodies the city’s neo-dumpling ethos, though, it’s RedFarm, whose West Village location has already spawned a forthcoming Upper West Side spinoff. At RedFarm, there are dumplings fashioned to look like Pac-Man characters and horseshoe crabs. There’s also an egg roll stuffed with pastrami.

“I call them whimsical,” said Ed Schoenfeld, the veteran restaurateur behind RedFarm. Spend an afternoon touring the kitchen, and Mr. Schoenfeld will rhapsodize about the artistry of the chef, Joe Ng. Those batter-crusted crabs might look like a cute gag, but there’s culinary precision (and greenmarket produce) inside them.

One day Mr. Schoenfeld pointed to a bowl of stuffing that Xiao Yan Mei, a prep cook, was smearing into sections of dough with a paddle that looked like a tongue depressor. That bowl held tiny cubes of roasted duck and vegetables — cut into what the French would call a brunoise, Mr. Schoenfeld said — all of which were meant to give the dumpling texture, “rather than having meatloaf inside.”

“This has a mouth feel that’s really special,” he said. “Here you can get individual bits of mushroom or sweet carrot or corn,” as opposed to the meat-and-spice mush often found inside a dumpling. “You might be getting yummy duck mush, but you’re not getting this, and there’s an appreciable difference.”

The current New York dumpling spectrum ranges from hyper-traditionalism to outlandish rule-flouting. Lawrence Knapp, the chef at the Hurricane Club, on Park Avenue South, cranks out unorthodox dumplings that riff on chicken parmigiana, pad Thai, cheesesteak and barbecued pork. “We don’t really strictly follow the guidelines of what makes sense or what a typical quote-unquote Asian dumpling is,” he said. “You can cheat more with the dumplings. You can have more fun with them, and people aren’t really going to criticize it.”

Or you can go the opposite route, as is done at Hakkasan in Midtown, where a sort of special-forces squadron of dim sum creates traditional dumplings with a level of precision that might be expected at an imperial Chinese banquet (with prices to match).

For Hooni Kim, the chef at Danji in Hell’s Kitchen, and Sohui Kim, the chef at the Good Fork in Red Hook, Brooklyn, the goal is to take a humble example of Korean street food and unpretentiously elevate it.

“Just wanting to perfect something that is really simple” is how Ms. Kim, from the Good Fork, put it. “What can I do to this already amazing food? How can I one-up this a little bit?”


University of Colorado student shot after wandering into stranger’s home pleads guilty to criminal trespassing

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Zoey Ripple was shot in the early morning hours when she entered the Boulder home of Timothy Justice and Doreen Orion.
Could a date rape drug have played a part in the bizarre events leading up to the shooting of a University of Colorado dean’s list student who wandered drunk into a stranger’s home?
Zoey Ripple, 21, pleaded guilty Wednesday to first-degree criminal trespassing and received an 18-month deferred sentence for the May incident her lawyer now says could have involved a drug like Ambien, according to local reports.
Ripple was shot in the early morning hours of May 23 when she entered the Boulder home of Timothy Justice and Doreen Orion.
Despite warnings that they had a gun and multiple requests that she leave their home, Ripple remained inside, at one point even nearing their bed with a light, according to the Daily Camera.
When Ripple was six feet from him, Justice shot her.
He was not charged because the shooting fell within the parameters of the state’s "Make My Day” law, which permits certain legal immunities for those who defend themselves with force in their homes.
The alleged intruder, however, did not fare so well.
The bullet from that night in May remains lodged in Ripple’s side. She is faced with a deferred sentence in which her felony can only be stripped from her record if she does not get another conviction for the next 18 months and her lawyer says she has been unfairly covered in the media.
"She's been portrayed as this dumb drunk who wandered into someone's house," Lawyer Colette Cribari told reporters. "This is not who Zoey Ripple is."
The student’s uncharacteristic behavior may have resulted from date rape drugs, Cribari said.
“Her statements to the police officer were pretty clear and yet she has no recollection of it at all. And that kind of fits in with a date rape drug.”
For her part, Ripple has said that she no longer drinks and that she is trying to move past the incident.
"This is something that is going to follow me for the rest of my life and I need to continue to remind myself that this doesn't define me. I know who I am," she said.


New documentary details 2008 murder case involving 1,100-lb. woman, the so-called ‘Half Ton Killer’

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A Texas woman who confessed to accidentally crushing her nephew to death with her 1,100-pound frame was actually covering for her sister, who later admitted to police she beat the boy to death, a new documentary reveals.

The TLC documentary, called "Half-Ton Killer?" follows the trial and eventual exoneration of Mayra Rosales, 31, who is one of the most obese women in the world. Rosales also discusses her weight and how she ended up at more than 1,000 pounds.

Rosales, who is bedridden inside her home in the tiny Texas border town of Sullivan City, gained national notoriety in 2008 when she told police that she rolled over while lying down and crushed her 2-year-old nephew, Eliseo. She was nicknamed the "half ton killer" in the press.

But Rosales' lawyer, Sergio Valdez, was skeptical of the confession because his client could barely move, let alone roll over.

He described to filmmakers the first time he met her.

"When you first walk in, she's got a blanket covering her; there's pillows all around her and so you don't know whether it's pillows or whether it's her," he said.

Investigators were also skeptical because the boy's injuries were not consistent with being crushed. Eventually, Rosales admitted that she saw her sister beat the young boy with a brush.

Mayra Rosales took the heat because she didn't want her other nieces and nephews to be without a mother, she says in the film.

Jaime Rosales eventually pleaded guilty to causing injury to a child and is serving a 15-year sentence.

The movie was produced by Megalomedia Inc. and premiered Wednesday night. It will air again on Nov. 7.

Hulk Hogan sex tape was leaked by Bubba the Love Sponge’s disgruntled ex-employee: report

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Hulk Hogan wants authorities to pursue criminal investigations into both the illegal recording and the leak to Gawker.com.
A new report pins the release of Hulk Hogan’s secret sex tape on a disgruntled ex-employee of Florida shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge Clem.

The former staffer felt stiffed when Clem left his job at SiriusXM in early 2011 and took the tape public as payback, RadarOnline reported Thursday.

"Even though Bubba knew how much the Hulk sex tape would be worth, he didn't stab his friend in the back, and he's not the one who released it," an unidentified source told Radar.


Hogan’s lawyer said even if the new report is true, Clem still betrayed the wrestling superstar by filming him having sex with Clem’s wife in the swinging spouses’ home six years ago.
“He’s still despondent. He had been assured repeatedly that Bubba had nothing to do with this and knew nothing about it,” lawyer David Houston told the Daily News Thursday.

Bubba the Love Sponge and his wife Heather Clem pictured in 2010.

“I appreciate the idea there are two separate issues here with recording and dissemination, but one does not cure the other. It doesn’t mean it’s okay that Bubba chose to secretly videotape his best friend if he’s not the one marketing it,” Houston said.
He said Hogan wants authorities to pursue criminal investigations into both the illegal recording and the leak to Gawker.com.
“We’re coming, there’s no question,” Houston said. “Anyone thinking Hulk is hiding in the weeds to pump up the value of this recording is sorely mistaken. He’s not going to buckle and give in and sign a ridiculous contract to distribute this trash. That’s not going to happen."

Hogan, 59, admitted Tuesday that his partner in the grainy footage is Clem’s estranged wife.
He said Clem put his blessing on the horny high jinks to help Hogan deal with depression over his crumbling marriage to ex-wife Linda Hogan six years ago.
Houston said Clem pressed record without Hogan’s knowledge and is heard at the tail end of the tape discussing its street value.
"If we ever did want to retire, all we'd have to do is use this footage,"
"[CLEM] didn’t secure the tape properly and showed it to a bunch of people," the source told Radar. "That's why they're all in this mess now."
Clem's lawyer did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
Houston said he contacted police in Florida Tuesday to ask about issues of jurisdiction ahead of filing a police report
He said Hogan also will file a civil lawsuit against Gawker.com no later than Monday.

The suit, expected in federal court in Florida, will include charges of invasion of privacy, damage to reputation and damage to commercial viability, he said.
There may be an issue with a three-year statue of limitations on a charge related to the surreptitious recording, a source told The News.
Hogan previously told NBC's "Today" show that the tape happened during a "low point" in his former marriage.

Helen Hunt and Annika Marks stun on red carpet at 'The Sessions' premiere

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Helen Hunt
Could Helen Hunt be any more stunning? The 49-year-old actress proved she still knows how to light up the red carpet when she stepped out in a beige body-skimming column gown that put her impeccably fit form on display at the premiere of her new movie, "The Sessions" in Los Angeles on Oct. 10, 2012. The former "Mad About You" actress, who plays a sex therapist in her latest film opposite John Hawkes, kept the rest of her look simple, letting her blond hair loose around her shoulders and accessorizing with a sparkly black clutch. Check out Hunt's co-stars on the red carpet, plus take a sneak peek at scenes from "The Sessions"...

Elizabeth Taylor had threesome with JFK and actor Robert Stack, affair with Ronald Reagan when she was a teen: book

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Liz Taylor had an eye for future Presidents and even had a fling with the Gipper, a new tell-all book claims.
The Hollywood legend also took part in a skinny-dipping session involving a young John F. Kennedy and the actor Robert Stack, which escalated into a three-way for the ages, the book says.
“JFK was known for swimming in the nude,” said Darwin Porter, co-author of “Elizabeth Taylor: There Is Nothing Like a Dame.”
“This one got a little wild,” Porter said of the 1948 pool hookup..


The violet-eyed actress — who was married eight times to seven men — supposedly got frisky with Ronald Reagan when she was only a teen and he was 36.
“Reagan was treating me like a grown woman, and that thrilled me. We sat on his sofa and I could tell he wanted to get it on but he seemed reluctant to make the first move,” an excerpt of the book reads, according to the London Daily Express.
“I became the aggressor.”



Ronald Reagan in the movie 'Knute Rockne-All American.'

The Hollywood temptress wanted to star in “That Hagen Girl” alongside the future Republican idol. The role went instead to Shirley Temple.
The tales from between the sheets reflect the 75-year-old Porter’s obsession with Taylor, who has captivated him for 68 years. “She was a little girl who was old before her time,” said Porter.
And if even half of the gossip is true, it gives an eye-opening view of the golden age actress.
“Everyone who I came into contact with, from Mary Astor to Tallulah Bankhead, had a tale to relate about Elizabeth — either good or bad, often a combination of both,” the writer said.
No kidding.
The list of who laid down with Liz is almost as long as the Hollywood Walk of Fame


Actor Robert Stack was known for playing crime fighter Eliot Ness in the TV series 'The Untouchables.'

The book says she lost her virginity to British actor Peter Lawford, with whom she appeared in the 1949 classic “Little Women.” She was 17 at the time; he was 26. He later married JFK’s sister, Pat.
Later she would have dalliances with actor Farley Granger and the Brooklyn-born singer Vic Damone, according to Porter. She had an affair with Frank Sinatra, got pregnant and had an abortion at his insistence, the book claims.
Errol Flynn and Paul Newman also shacked up with the starlet, the book reports.
“It’s a view of a great American movie star that wasn’t able to be portrayed at the time,” said Danforth Prince, co-author and publisher of the book.

Detroit homeowner forced to share place with squatter

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Heidi Peterson is now embroiled in a battle for control of her own home. After living away for a year, she returned to find a previous tenant, who says the home was abandoned, had moved back in, changed the locks and installed new appliances. Peterson is taking her fight to evict the woman to court, but for now, it’s a problem she’ll just have to live with.





A surprise squatter turned into an unintended houseguest for a woman who returned to her Detroit home last week after a year away.
But while the homeowner wants to boot the tenacious tenant, she legally can’t, and now they’re sleeping under the same roof,
At the heart of the bizarre living arrangement is whether the house was truly abandoned for so long, as the squatter claims, or if it still rightfully belongs to the original homeowner.
Heidi Peterson said she bought the house in the Motor City’s Boston-Edison Historic District for a bargain basement price of $23,000 in 2010.
According to Fox 2, she was leasing the home to tenants, including a woman named Missionary-Tracey Elaine Blair. But the house needed repairs, and Peterson was forced to evict the tenants when it was found to be uninhabitable.
“In February 2011, we had to vacate because the boiler was damaged,” Blair told Fox 2. “I took all my books and my writings, but my (furniture was) still left in (there).”

Squatter Missionary-Tracey Elaine Blair isn’t going without a fight. She says Heidi Peterson’s Detroit home is now hers, alleging it was abandoned. Blair, a write-in presidential candidate, said her decision to live in Peterson’s home was rooted in part in her belief in affordable housing.

Apparently, although Peterson moved out, Blair at some point decided to move back in.
It’s unclear why Peterson left the house and only returned last week, but Blair filed paperwork with the city saying it was abandoned, according to Fox 2.
In the meantime, she made herself at home: She allegedly changed the locks, put in new appliances and even managed to place an $8,500 construction lien on the house for all the repairs she had made.
“Someone had (broken) into the house on July the fourth, and they stripped the radiators. And I made a report,” Blair said.
Peterson said Blair thinks there’s a program in Detroit, which is riddled with abandoned properties, allowing a person to fix up a house and then claim it.
When asked why she was staying in the home, Blair gave a rambling answer to Fox 2 that she is an “advocate for affordable housing” and has a political campaign.
According to federal campaign finance records, Blair is a write-in candidate for President this year and is running as an independent.
The latest filing shows she started with just $500 cash on hand in January and ended with $100 in April.
Meanwhile, Peterson has had to file a civil action in court to show that she is still the house’s owner. For now, she can’t legally evict a squatter.
She has decided to stay in the house with her 1-year-old daughter because she can’t afford to go elsewhere, she said.
“I thought if the house is not safe, how can I come here with my child? There’s an issue with that,” Peterson said. “But should I lose my house to a squatter because I don’t have rights to my property, or should I fight to get it back?”



Celebrity photos of the week: Week of Oct. 8

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CeeLo Green and the Muppets in Las Vegas
The weekend is finally upon us! Take a look back at our favorite celebrity photos from the week ... CeeLo Green has a brand new entourage! The Grammy Award-winner poses with the Muppets at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas on Oct. 10, 2012.

California man who performed as clown 'El Tin Larin' gets 10 years for raping 12-year-old in 2002

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Jose Guadalupe Jimenez, 43, was sentenced to ten years in prison for raping a 12-year-old girl in 2002.
A sick sex predator who worked as a birthday clown around Los Angeles will spend 10 years behind bars for kidnapping and raping a 12-year-old girl while wearing his clown makeup and clown mask.

Jose Guadalupe Jimenez, 43, who entertained kids under the name "El Tin Larin," was busted in 2011 after investigators matched DNA taken from another crime to some from the girl's rape ten years ago.

The depraved bozo was dressed in his clown getup when he nabbed the girl from outside a fast-food joint around midnight on Jan. 19, 2002, prosecutors said.

He drove to a school parking lot, where he raped her, and then took her to a seedy motel, where the sex attack continued, prosecutors said.

The girl managed to escape when Jimenez left to talk to a motel clerk, local TV station KTLA reported.

Cops said the case went cold because the girl couldn't describe her attacker beyond saying he was a Hispanic man in a clown costume.

Jimenez, 43, was in clown makeup and a clown mask when he kidnapped and raped a 12-year-old girl in 2002, prosecutors said.

"The problem was the only description we had was 'a clown,'" Fullerton police Sgt. Andrew Goodrich said at the time.
The break in the case came when Jimenez was arrested on suspicion of abusing a relative's child in November 2010, AOL News reported.
Jimenez submitted a DNA sample, and investigators matched it with evidence from the 2002 rape.
A warrant was issued, and Jimenez was busted at a motel in Newport Beach in March 2011.
A handful of the sicko's performances as 'El Tin Larin' are still up on YouTube. In one, he performs with a ventriloquist puppet.

For nine years, Jimenez moonlighted as a pudgy Ronald McDonald lookalike at children's parties while working days in construction.
A handful of videos from his performances are still up on YouTube.
After his bust, cops found several clown masks, costumes, oversized shoes, balloons and puppets at his Anaheim home.
Jimenez pleaded guilty to two counts of lewd acts upon a child on Wednesday and will have to register as a sex offender.
With News Wire Services

Basil Plumley, legendary combat vet whose story was told in book and movie ‘We Were Soldiers’ is dead at 92

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Basil L. Plumley, a renowned career soldier whose exploits as an Army infantryman were portrayed in a book and the movie “We Were Soldiers,” died Wednesday.
He was 92 — an age his friends are amazed he lived to see.
Plumley fought in World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam and was awarded a medal for making five parachute jumps into combat.
Friends said Plumley, who died in hospice care in west Georgia, never told war stories and was known to hang up on people who called to interview him.
Still, he was near-legendary in the Army and gained more widespread fame through a 1992 Vietnam War book that was the basis for 2002’s “We Were Soldiers,” starring Sam Elliott as Plumley alongside Mel Gibson.
Plumley didn’t need a Hollywood portrayal to be revered among soldiers, said Greg Camp, a retired Army colonel and former chief of staff at neighboring Fort Benning, who befriended Plumley in his later years.
“He’s iconic in military circles,” Camp said. “Among people who have been in the military, he’s beyond what a movie star would be ... His legend permeates three generations of soldiers.”
Debbie Kimble, Plumley’s daughter, said her father died of cancer after spending about nine days at Columbus Hospice. Although the illness seemed to strike suddenly, Kimble said Plumley’s health had been declining since his wife of 63 years, Deurice Plumley, died last May on Memorial Day.

A native of Shady Spring, W.Va., Plumley enlisted in the Army in 1942 and ended up serving 32 years in uniform. In World War II, he fought in the Allied invasion of Italy at Salerno and the D-Day invasion at Normandy. He later fought with the 187th Airborne Infantry Regiment in Korea. In Vietnam, Plumley served as sergeant major — the highest enlisted rank — in the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment.


Actor Sam Elliott, left, played Plumley in the 2002 movie ‘We Were Soldiers.’ Mel Gibson, right, played Hal Moore.

“That puts him in the rarest of clubs,” said journalist Joseph L. Galloway, who met Plumley while covering the Vietnam War for United Press International and remained lifelong friends with him. “To be combat infantry in those three wars, in the battles he participated in, and to have survived — that is miraculous.”
After Plumley became ill, Galloway mentioned his worsening condition on Facebook. Fans of the retired sergeant major responded with a flood of cards and letters. The day before he died in hospice, Camp said, Plumley received about 160 pieces of mail.
“He was dad to me when I was growing up,” said Kimble, Plumley’s daughter. “We are learning every day about him. He was an inspiration to so many. He was a great person, and will always be remembered.”


Bar Refaeli: Check out her sexiest moments

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Bar Refaeli
You've seen her face - and her body - everywhere from the cover of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue to the arm of ex-boyfriend Leonardo DiCaprio. So get to know supermodel Bar Refaeli a little better ... Life's a beach for Bar Refaeli! Seriously is there ever a moment when the girl isn't wearing a swimsuit? The beautiful Israeli model hit up Twitter to share photos of herself lounging poolside in a barely-there turquoise two-piece on Oct. 11, 2012 (r.), but it's not the first time we've seen her flaunt her curves! Refaeli showed off an equally titillating black bikini while vacationing off the coast of Mykonos, Greece in August. "Good morning! I am walking on water today.. What r u doing?" she wrote.

Bam team’s bloody failure

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What is the difference between chaos and control?”

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) posed that question yesterday to a witness at a House Oversight Committee hearing into the State Department’s cascading security failures that led directly to the wanton slaughter of the US ambassador to Libya and three other Americans.

But the question also stands as an indictment of the Obama administration’s tenuous hold on the broader Middle East, where the influence and security of the United States are fading — and where al Qaeda is very much on the rise.

But first, that hearing from yesterday.

AP
Eric Nordstrom
Eric Nordstrom, the State Department’s regional security officer for Libya, twice sought to enhance security for US missions there in the wake of cutbacks in the months before the 9/11 attack.

But Nordstrom says his requests were ignored by Washington “because there would be too much political cost.”

Instead, he was given a “danger pay” hike when 16 US soldiers from a Site Security Team and 18 members of three Mobile Security Deployments were yanked.

Clearly, the hazardous-duty pay means the State Department recognized the increasing risks in Libya.

Yet State Department official Charlene Lamb — who refused the manpower requests — testified yesterday that “we had the correct number of assets in Benghazi on the night of 9/11.”

That’s self-evidently false — to say nothing of insane — but it also telegraphs the administration’s cluelessness about the region.

After the 16 soldiers were removed, “there was a complete and total lack of planning for what was going to happen next,” Nordstrom said. “There was no plan, there was just hope that everything would get better.” It didn’t.

The Benghazi mission was sacked, four Americans — including Ambassador Chris Stevens — were murdered and the White House sought to cover things up by calling the well-coordinated strike an “impromptu” protest against an obscure online video.

In fact, there was never a protest at all — just a premeditated paramilitary assault which totally surprised Washington.

No shock there.

The White House’s attention has been elsewhere: Eager to proclaim victory in the War on Terror, President Obama spent a year celebrating Osama bin Laden’s death at the hands of Navy SEALs — claiming that al Qaeda was “devastated,” “decimated” and “on its heels.”

That’s not true in Iraq, where the number of al Qaeda fighters has more than doubled, from 1,000 to 2,500, since Obama withdrew US forces last year — and where there are now 20 al Qaeda attacks every single day.

And it’s not true in Libya, where Lt. Col. Andrew Wood, the former commander of the State Department Site Security Team there, told Congress al Qaeda is on the rise.

“Their presence grows there every day. They are certainly more established there than we are,” Wood said yesterday.

Of course they are.

Just as all but the sunniest optimists said they would be as the administration’s “leadership from behind” fell quickly to pieces after Moammar Khadafy’s inglorious fall.


Alison Pill nude photo ‘The Newsroom’ actress accidentally tweets topless picture of herself

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Alison Pill admitted to accidentally tweeting a topless photo of herself on Wednesday.
Alison Pill will be the first to admit she's not tech-savvy.

On Wednesday, the star of HBO's "The Newsroom" treated her Twitter followers to a topless photo of herself that she claims was accidentally posted on the social networking site.

The photo shows the blond actress lying in bed and wearing nothing but a grin and thick-framed glasses.

Though Pill quickly deleted the tweet, the photo had already made its rounds across the Internet.
The 26-year-old then owned up to her mistake, tweeting: "Yep. That picture happened. Ugh. My tech issues have now reached new heights, apparently. How a deletion turned into a tweet... Apologies."

Her fiancé, actor Jay Baruchel, found the scenario quite amusing.

"My fiancée is an hilarious dork. #imjustgladitdidnthappentomefirst. Smartphones will get ya," he tweeted

Pakistan Taliban Shoot Girl Activist Malala Yousufzai

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MINGORA, Pakistan—A Taliban gunman walked up to a bus taking children home from school in Pakistan's volatile Swat Valley on Tuesday and shot and wounded a 14-year-old activist known for championing the education of girls and publicizing atrocities committed by the Taliban, officials said.

The attack in the city of Mingora targeted 14-year-old Malala Yousufzai, who is respected for her work to promote the schooling of girls—something the Taliban opposes. She was nominated last year for the International Children's Peace Prize.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, calling Ms. Yousufzai's work "obscenity."

"This was a new chapter of obscenity, and we have to finish this chapter," said Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan by telephone. "We have carried out this attack."


The school bus was about to leave the school grounds in Mingora when a bearded man approached it and asked which one of the girls was Ms. Yousufzai, said Rasool Shah, the police chief in the town. Another girl pointed to Ms. Yousufzai, and the gunmen then shot both of the girls, the police chief said.

Ms. Yousufzai was shot twice—once in the head and once in the neck—but her wounds weren't life-threatening, said Tariq Mohammad, a doctor at the main hospital in Mingora. The second girl was in stable condition, the doctor said. Pakistani television showed pictures of Ms. Yousufzai being taken by helicopter to a military hospital in the frontier city of Peshawar.

In the past, the Taliban have threatened Ms. Yousufzai and her family for her activism. When she was 11 years old, she began writing a blog under a pseudonym for the BBC's Urdu service about life under Taliban occupation. After the Taliban were ejected from the Swat Valley in the summer of 2009, she began speaking out publicly about the militant group and the need for girls' education.

While hosting a session of a children's assembly supported by Unicef in the valley last year, the then-13-year-old championed a greater role for young people.

"Girl members play an active role," she said, according to an article on the U.N. organization's website. "We have highlighted important issues concerning children, especially promoting girls' education in Swat."

The Pakistani military conducted a major operation in 2009 in the Swat Valley to clear out insurgents. It was a reminder of the challenges the government faces in keeping the area free of militant influence.

The scenic valley—nicknamed the Switzerland of Pakistan—was once a popular tourist destination for Pakistanis, and honeymooners used to vacation in the numerous hotels dotted along the river running through Swat. But the Taliban's near-total takeover of the valley some 175 miles (280 kilometers) from the capital in 2008 suprised many Pakistanis, who considered militancy to be a problem in Afghanistan or Pakistan's rugged tribal regions.

Militants began asserting their influence in Swat in 2007—part of a wave of al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters expanding their reach from safe havens near the Afghan border. By 2008 they controlled much of the valley and began meting out their own brand of justice.

They forced men to grow beards, restricted women from going to the bazaar, whipped women they considered immoral and beheaded opponents.

During the roughly two years of their rule, Taliban in the region destroyed around 200 schools. Many were girls' institutions, though some prominent boys' schools were struck as well.

At one point, the Taliban said they were halting female education, a move that echoed their militant brethren in neighboring Afghanistan who during their rule barred girls from attending school.

While the Pakistani military flushed out the insurgents during the military operation, their Taliban's top leadership escaped, leaving many of the valley's residents on edge.

Kamila Hayat, a senior official of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, praised Ms. Yousufzai for standing up to the militants and sending a message to the world that Pakistani girls had the courage to fight for their rights. But she also worried that Tuesday's shooting would prevent other parents from letting their children speak out against the Taliban.

"This is an attack to silence courage through a bullet," Ms. Hayat said. "These are the forces who want to take us to the dark ages."

The problems of young women in Pakistan were also the focus of a separate case before the high court, which ordered a probe into an alleged barter of seven girls to settle a blood feud in a remote southwestern district. Such feuds in Pakistan's tribal areas often arise from disputes between families or tribes and can last generations.

Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry began proceedings into the allegations, which were first reported in the local media. The alleged trade happened in the Dera Bugti district of Baluchistan province between two groups within the Bugti tribe, one of the more prominent in the province.

A tribal council ordered the barter in early September, the district deputy commissioner, Saeed Faisal, told the court. He didn't know the girls' ages but local media reported they were between 4 and 13 years old.

However, the Advocate General for the province couldn't confirm the incident.

Mr. Chaudhry, the chief justice, ordered Mr. Faisal to ensure that all members of the tribal council appear in court Wednesday, as well as a local lawmaker who belongs to one of the two sub-tribes believed involved in the incident.

The tradition of families exchanging unmarried girls to settle feuds is banned under Pakistani law but still practiced in the country's more conservative, tribal areas.



Where to Find Your Gangnam Style

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SEOUL — Until recently, few people outside of South Korea had heard of Gangnam, an upscale neighborhood in Seoul’s southeast that houses roughly 5% of the capital’s population.



More specifically, the K-pop musician’s “Gangnam Style,” which went viral on YouTube over the summer. Most of us know what happened next: An Internet-wide slurry of video imitations; “Gangnam Style” flash mobs from Australia to Peru; a U.S. record deal sealed in soju, chased with domination of American primetime television; and even chin-stroking analyses of that horsey-dance clip.

But for many, the question still remains: What goes on in Gangnam, anyway?

We have five suggestions, loosely inspired by Psy’s lyrics. For good measure, we’ve divided them up so you can see what he means when the singer calls Gangnam “noble” during the day and “crazy” after dark.

1. Get the “Gangnam Style” look

There’s no shortage of brand names in Gangnam, but for a range of upscale, niche boutiques, head to the subdistricts of Cheongdam and Shinsa. This is where you’ll find fashion-forward international concept stores like Milan’s 10 Corso Como alongside home-grown havens of chic such as Jardin de Chouette and Johnny Hates Jazz.

Stores here aren’t cheap, but that’s the price you pay to “dress classy, and dance cheesy,” as Psy puts it.

While you’re here, whip that coif into shape at one of several hair salons that cater to celebrities such as nine-piece K-pop group Girls’ Generation. Try Soonsoo, Ra Beauty Core and Jenny House, to name a few.

2. Glimpse the future of technology (before everyone else)

Gangnam-daero, a road in Gangnam’s outskirts, houses corporate heavyweights like Samsung Electronics, the world’s largest technology firm by revenue. Pay a visit to the company’s flagship store, Samsung D’light, a three-floor palace of consumer electronics located at its Seoul headquarters.

Dedicated to selling, and simply showing, Samsung’s newly released products, this is where you can buy its latest tablets and Galaxy smartphones, as well as witness the latest Samsung technology (think solar-powered handsets and fridges with see-through liquid-crystal display doors) long before it hits the broader market.

Interactivity is encouraged—you’re welcome to sit down and play videogames—and a host of staff is on hand to field questions in Korean, English, Chinese, Japanese and Spanish.

3. Delve deep into South Korea’s Buddhist history

Bongeunsa, also known as Bong-eun Temple, was originally founded in 794 A.D. Though Buddhism was suppressed in favor of Confucianism during the early Chosun dynasty, Bongeunsa began to flourish as one of Korea’s main centers for Seon (Zen) Buddhism in the mid-1500s under the guidance of a monk known as Master Bowoo.

Now located on the slopes of Gangnam’s Sudo Mountain, it’s one of the country’s most traditional temples and stands as a symbol of Buddhist aspiration. Looking to attain enlightenment? You can enroll in a two-day Temple Stay program (about $63 per adult), held once a month for up to 30 participants, and featuring mind-healing activities such as monastic meals, a tea ceremony and meditation.
Part II: Crazy After Dark

4. Strike a pose in front of an explosive backdrop, no special effects necessary

Named the world’s “longest bridge fountain” in 2008 by the Guinness World Records, the Moonlight Rainbow Fountain is 1,140 meters of cascading water illuminated with LED lights. Running along the Banpo Bridge, it draws couples and workers looking to unwind after-hours with a view of the Han River, which cuts across Seoul from east to west.

The fountain operates three times a day during weekdays, and six times a day on weekends, shooting tons of water per minute. For maximum atmosphere, get there after sunset—if you’re lucky, you might see fireworks from one of the river’s cruise boats.

5. Let your hair down while rubbing elbows with K-pop’s finest

If you, like Psy, are looking for “a girl who puts her hair down when the nighttime comes,” then you might want to make like a pony and trot to one of Gangnam’s many lavish nightclubs (either way, they’re a good place to practice that lasso move).

One of the top clubs in the country, if not Asia, is the massive Club Ellui, which hosts hot-shot K-pop stars like JYP (Park Jin-young), 2PM and GD & Top, and invites international names by teaming up with overseas clubs such as Space Ibiza and Ministry of Sound. Head there on a Friday or Saturday, the club’s official operation days, and prepare to brave a crowd—revelers gather here by the thousands and stay until the wee hours.

Classic Arnold in His Own Script

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IN the Watergate era, this might have been called a “modified limited hangout.”

Now, it’s an “apology tour.” And Arnold Schwarzenegger made a grand one last week as he worked through the confessional stops — from “60 Minutes” to Fox, pointed toward Jay Leno — while promoting a memoir that was published Monday by Simon & Schuster.

The book’s title, “Total Recall,” is not wholly apt. As with the partial revelations of Richard M. Nixon and company, it concedes fault and begs much forgiveness. But it forgets a lot of messy details.

Mildred Baena, the housekeeper by whom Mr. Schwarzenegger fathered a son while married to Maria Shriver, is there. But not by her full name, nor anywhere in the 60-plus pages of family and celebrity photos. Martin D. Singer, the legal pit bull who for years has done battle with Mr. Schwarzenegger’s detractors (in his Hollywood years, and as the governor of California) appears not at all.

Whether the book tour and its accompanying mea culpas are working for Mr. Schwarzenegger, who declined to be interviewed about his interviews, is an open question.

“He got to tell his own story in his own way, which is never a bad thing,” said Howard Bragman, a longtime Hollywood publicist who is vice chairman of Reputation.com.

But, Mr. Bragman added, Mr. Schwarzenegger’s trademark arrogance (endearing to fans of “The Expendables 2,” a turnoff to others) also became the story in these Seven Days of Arnold:

SUNDAY, SEPT. 30 “She gave up her television career for you. I mean, wow. Was this just the most unbelievable act of betrayal to Maria?” gasped Lesley Stahl on “60 Minutes.” She was speaking of Mr. Schwarzenegger’s bad faith toward Ms. Shriver.

“I think it was the stupidest thing I’ve done in the whole relationship,” Mr. Schwarzenegger answered.

As apology tours go, it wasn’t a bad beginning. He had declined news media interviews in July, when he showed up in San Diego at the Comic-Con International convention to promote “The Expendables 2” and, weirdly, to bemoan his inability to behead and kill rivals in the political arena.

Apparently, the idea was to give Ms. Stahl a clear shot at the next Arnold Schwarzenegger: Contrite. On the mend. Hoping, still, to repair his broken family. But there was just no keeping the old Arnold down.

“I wanted to write a book about me,” he explained at one point. Regrets? Certainly. But “I don’t suffer for anything that I have lost,” Mr. Schwarzenegger said.

Twitter lit up, and Joy Behar congratulated him for not groping Ms. Stahl. But 11.52 million people tuned in.

MONDAY, OCT. 1 Publication day, and Gawker struck.

“Arnold Schwarzenegger opens up about his terrible life choices while profiting from his terrible life choices” read a tweet from the gossip site. But Mr. Schwarzenegger had already tweeted of a surprise 1:30 p.m. signing at the McNally Jackson bookstore in Manhattan. Roger Pantano, a bookstore clerk, said that Mr. Schwarzenegger was gracious, even charming, signing books for 150 people in a little more than an hour. Hundreds more fans clustered outside on Prince Street, hoping for a glimpse.

“It couldn’t have gone better,” Mr. Pantano said. “He was smiling the whole time.”

On the “Hannity” show on Fox News that evening, Mr. Schwarzenegger was, of course, apologetic. “I’m ashamed about that past, the mistakes that I’ve made,” he said.

But there it was, that flicker of hubris, hiding just behind his explanation of the decision to tell all (or at least some).

“I’m not going to write a book that just shows the success of Arnold, the great immigrant story,” Mr. Schwarzenegger said.

“But it is a great immigrant story, the book,” he couldn’t resist adding.

TUESDAY, OCT. 2 “What I’ve done is just about the stupidest thing that any human being could do,” Mr. Schwarzenegger told Piers Morgan on CNN. The apologies were getting larger, as if the colossal misbehavior was an achievement in itself. But the crowds were growing, too. In the nation’s capital for a sold-out promotional event sponsored by The Washington Post, Mr. Schwarzenegger even had some debate advice for the presidential candidates: avoid details.

“My strength was not policy in 2003,” he said of his gubernatorial debate experience. “My strength was ... me.”

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3 “Total Recall” was climbing Amazon’s closely watched sales list. “He’s going to have a best seller,” Mr. Bragman said in a telephone interview that morning.

By 4 p.m. in the Midwest, the doors were finally jammed shut on a capacity crowd of 500 who turned out for a Schwarzenegger signing at a Barnes & Noble store in Columbus, Ohio.

For those who admire Mr. Schwarzenegger, the tour was assuming an aura of inspiration. For the rest, it was becoming a long week.

On the ESPN Web site, Bill Simmons weighed in with an hourlong taped interview about bodybuilding, hanging out at Elaine’s and the wonder of being Arnold.

“I would never exchange my life with anybody’s,” Mr. Schwarzenegger said on the tape, which was made about a week before the book tour began.

Nobody even mentioned Maria.

THURSDAY, OCT. 4 If it’s Thursday, it must be Minnesota, where Mr. Schwarzenegger’s schedule called for a 5 p.m. stop at the Mall of America in Bloomington. At 1 p.m., about 150 people were already lined up in the mall’s cavernous Rotunda. “We expect it to be one of our larger signings,” said Sarah Schmidt, a public relations coordinator for the shopping center.

A big event in the mall can draw a crowd of thousands, with people lining the walkways on four tiers around the Rotunda. “By 5, it’ll be like that,” Ms. Schmidt said.

FRIDAY, OCT. 5 Back on home turf in Los Angeles, things looked promising. Earlier in the week, a clerk at Barnes & Noble in The Grove shopping center recommended showing up early to get a wristband for a Friday evening book signing. “We open at 9 a.m.,” he advised.

SATURDAY, OCT. 6 A signing at Costco in Huntington Beach, Calif., was on the schedule.

Ahead lies “Meet the Press” and Jay Leno. Then it starts all over again in Europe, where Mr. Schwarzenegger is scheduled to apologize for and celebrate his life at the Frankfurt Book Fair. He will also help present an environmental award in Copenhagen, and attend the European Arnold Classic in Madrid.

Number of Protestant Americans Is in Steep Decline, Study Finds

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For the first time since researchers began tracking the religious identity of Americans, fewer than half said they were Protestants, a steep decline from 40 years ago when Protestant churches claimed the loyalty of more than two-thirds of the population.

A new study released on Tuesday by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that it was not just liberal mainline Protestants, like Methodists or Episcopalians, who abandoned their faith, but also more conservative evangelical and “born again” Protestants. The losses were among white Protestants, but not among black or minority Protestants, the study found, based on surveys conducted during the summer.

When they leave, instead of switching churches, they join the growing ranks who do not identify with any religion. Nearly one in five Americans say they are atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular.”

This is a significant jump from only five years ago, when adults who claimed “no religion” made up about 15 percent of the population. It is a seismic shift from 40 years ago, when about 7 percent of American adults said they had no religious affiliation.

Now, more than one-third of those ages 18 to 22 are religiously unaffiliated. These “younger millennials” are replacing older generations who remained far more involved with religion throughout their lives.

“We really haven’t seen anything like this before,” said Gregory A. Smith, a senior researcher with the Pew Forum. “Even when the baby boomers came of age in the early ’70s, they were half as likely to be unaffiliated as compared with young people today.”

The “Nones,” as they are called, now make up the nation’s second-largest religious grouping. The largest single faith group is Catholics, who make up about 22 percent of the population. Their numbers have held steady, mostly because an influx of immigrants has replaced the many Catholics who were raised in the church and left in the last five years, Mr. Smith said.

The rise in people who claim no religion is likely to have political consequences, said Phil Zuckerman, a professor of sociology and secular studies at Pitzer College in Southern California.

“The significant majority of the religiously unaffiliated tend to be left-leaning, tend to support the Democratic Party, support gay marriage and environmental causes,” he said.

The Pew report offers several theories to explain the rise of the religiously unaffiliated. One theory is that the young adults grew disillusioned with organized religion when evangelical Protestant and Catholic churches became so active in conservative political causes, like opposition to homosexuality and abortion.

Another theory is that the shift merely reflects a broader trend away from social and community involvement, the phenomenon dubbed “bowling alone” by Robert D. Putnam, a public policy professor at Harvard University.

Another explanation is that the United States is simply following the trend toward secularization already seen in many economically developed countries, like Australia and Canada and some in Europe.

The United States has always been the great exception to this secularizing trend, and it is not clear that Americans are necessarily moving toward the European model.

The Pew report found that even among Americans who claimed no religion, few qualified as purely secular. Two-thirds say they still believe in God, and one-fifth say they pray every day. Only 12 percent of the religiously unaffiliated group said they were atheists and 17 percent agnostic.

The Rev. Eileen W. Lindner, who has chronicled religious statistics for years as the editor of the Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches, has observed this complexity.

She said, “There will be lots of people who read this study and go: ‘Oh no, this is terrible! What’s it doing to our culture?’ I would, as a social scientist and a pastor, urge caution.

“A lot of the younger people are very spotty in their attendance at worship, but if we have a mission project, they’re here,” said Ms. Lindner, the pastor of a Presbyterian church in New Jersey. “They run the soup kitchens, they build the houses in Habitat for Humanity.”

They may not come on Sundays, she said, but they have not abandoned their faith.

U.S. Military Is Sent to Jordan to Help With Crisis in Syria

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WASHINGTON — The United States military has secretly sent a task force of more than 150 planners and other specialists to Jordan to help the armed forces there handle a flood of Syrian refugees, prepare for the possibility that Syria will lose control of its chemical weapons and be positioned should the turmoil in Syria expand into a wider conflict.


The task force, which has been led by a senior American officer, is based at a Jordanian military training center built into an old rock quarry north of Amman. It is now largely focused on helping Jordanians handle the estimated 180,000 Syrian refugees who have crossed the border and are severely straining the country’s resources.

American officials familiar with the operation said the mission also includes drawing up plans to try to insulate Jordan, an important American ally in the region, from the upheaval in Syria and to avoid the kind of clashes now occurring along the border of Syria and Turkey.

The officials said the idea of establishing a buffer zone between Syria and Jordan — which would be enforced by Jordanian forces on the Syrian side of the border and supported politically and perhaps logistically by the United States — had been discussed. But at this point the buffer is only a contingency.

The Obama administration has declined to intervene in the Syrian conflict beyond providing communications equipment and other nonlethal assistance to the rebels opposing the government of President Bashar al-Assad. But the outpost near Amman could play a broader role should American policy change. It is less than 35 miles from the Syrian border and is the closest American military presence to the conflict.

Officials from the Pentagon and Central Command, which oversees American military operations in the Middle East, declined to comment on the task force or its mission. A spokesman for the Jordanian Embassy in Washington would also not comment on Tuesday.

As the crisis in Syria has deepened, there has been mounting concern in Washington that the violence could spread through the region. Over the past week, Syria and Turkey have exchanged artillery and mortar fire across Syria’s northern border, which has been a crossing point for rebel fighters. In western Syria, intense fighting recently broke out in villages near the border crossing that leads to the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon. To the east, the Syrian government has lost control of some border crossings, including the one near Al Qaim in Iraq.

Jordan has also been touched by the fighting. Recent skirmishes have broken out between the Syrian military and Jordanians guarding the country’s northern border, where many families have ties to Syria. In August, a 4-year-old girl in a Jordanian border town was injured when a Syrian shell struck her house, and there are concerns in Jordan that a sharp upsurge in the fighting in Syria might lead to an even greater influx of refugees.

Jordan, which was one of the first Arab countries to call for Mr. Assad’s resignation, has become increasingly concerned that Islamic militants coming to join the fight in Syria could cross the porous border between the two countries.

The American mission in Jordan quietly began this summer. In May, the United States organized a major training exercise, which was dubbed Eager Lion. About 12,000 troops from 19 countries, including Special Forces troops, participated in the exercise.

After it ended, the small American contingent stayed on and the task force was established at a Jordanian training center north of Amman. It includes communications specialists, logistics experts, planners, trainers and headquarters staff members, American officials said. An official from the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugee Affairs and Migration is also assigned to the task force.

“We have been working closely with our Jordanian partners on a variety of issues related to Syria for some time now,” said George Little, the Pentagon press secretary, who added that a specific concern was the security of Syria’s stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons. “As we’ve said before, we have been planning for various contingencies, both unilaterally and with our regional partners.”

Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta met in Amman in August with King Abdullah II of Jordan and at that time pledged continuing American help with the flow of Syrian refugees. Mr. Panetta was followed in September by Gen. James N. Mattis, the head of Central Command, who met with senior Jordanian officials in Amman.

Members of the American task force are spending the bulk of their time working with the Jordanian military on logistics — figuring out how to deploy tons of food, water and latrines to the border, for example, and training the Jordanian military to handle the refugees. A month ago, as many as 3,000 a day were coming over the border. But as the Syrian army has consolidated its position in southern Syria, the number of refugees has declined to several hundred a day.

According to the United Nations, Jordan is currently hosting around 100,000 Syrians who have either registered or are awaiting registration.   American officials say the total number may be almost twice that.

The American military is also sending medical kits to the border and has provided gravel to help keep down the dust at the Zaatari refugee camp, which the task force helped set up and is now home to 35,000 Syrians. It has also provided four large prefabricated buildings to be used at Zaatari as schools. One official estimated the cost so far at less than $1 million.

Superheroes, Stitched Together in Spandex

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On the second floor of a brownstone in Ocean Hill, Brooklyn, Darlena Marie Blander lives a life that would be the dream of just about any 7-year-old.

Ms. Blander, 41, has two apartments in the building. One is decorated with lace doilies and dark wood where a cat loiters on the furniture. It is cozy, perhaps a bit dull — the unsurprising home of a soft-spoken human resource analyst for New York City Transit.

But Ms. Blander feels more at home in what she calls her “fantasy apartment,” a four-room shrine crammed with costumes, DVDs, books and “Star Trek” merchandise.

“I get out of my other apartment and walk five steps into fantasyland,” Ms. Blander said, opening the door to a room stocked with professional lighting equipment and a large piece of green felt tacked to the wall.

A table was stacked with photo albums of her in various costumes: as Supergirl, as Captain America, in medieval wear, as a mermaid.

“I take cosplay very seriously,” she said. “If someone’s going to take my picture in costume, I want to strike a pose.”

Cosplay, short for costume play, is a pop culture phenomenon that arrived from Japan, where enthusiasts wear outfits worn by characters from comic books, movies, cartoons and novels.

For Ms. Blander and others who are serious about dressing in character, a show opening on Thursday at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center is the Super Bowl and Academy Awards rolled into one.

Over four days, the New York Comic Convention, a showcase for comic books, movies and video games, is expected to attract 115,000 visitors, including many in eyebrow-raising fashion.

Ms. Blander and her friends who share the passion have spent much time and money getting ready.

The convention offers people the chance to be a celebrity for a day, Stephanie Darius said. “People talk to you as if you were the character you’re playing,” she said. “They want to hug you, take pictures with you.”

Brian Ashcraft, senior editor of Kotaku, a video game Web site, said cosplay evolved from science-fiction conventions in the United States and the term was coined by a Japanese journalist.

“Giving the hobby a name helped solidify it in Japanese subculture,” Mr. Ashcraft said. “Its popularity exploded in Japan during the 1990s and well on into the last decade.”

And now, it has taken root in this country.

Peter Tatara, international content director for the New York Comic Convention, which is being held for the sixth year, said the number of visitors in costume had grown. Some dress in store-bought Halloween garb, but others, Mr. Tatara said, “spend 10 months making costumes by hand.”

The group Ms. Blander founded, the New York Cosplayer Network, falls firmly in the latter category.

She organized the group last year as a way to knit with fellow cosplayers. Members occasionally volunteer at orphanages and at homeless shelters, passing out party favors while dressed in superhero outfits.

But the group’s main purpose is to help members create costumes. Ms. Blander and Ms. Darius spent hours last weekend at Ms. Darius’s apartment working on their outfits.

Ms. Darius, 30, a security guard, sews many of the group’s costumes. For the convention, she put together outfits for Victoria Ortegas, 29, a professional makeup artist, and Elliot Cintron, 28, who works for the American Red Cross.

Hunched over a sewing machine, Ms. Darius, a self-taught seamstress, squinted at the stitches on a black leather mask for Mr. Cintron.

Ms. Blander was busy fussing with an errant neckline, testing the gravitational resistance of a strapless pink and red bodysuit that was to be her costume for Scarlet Witch, a character from Marvel Comics.

She has three more outfits prepared for this weekend: for the characters Power Girl from DC Comics, a gothic Valkyrie and Lieutenant Uhura from “Star Trek.”
Ms. Blander and others in her group said some would wear a different outfit every day of the convention.

Theirs is an expensive devotion, costing hundreds, sometimes thousands of dollars a year.

“I’d rather give up cable television than costumes,” said Ms. Ortegas, who spent about $1,000 on fabric and props for the convention this year.

Sometimes, putting on a character’s wardrobe is not enough. “I put on 50 pounds so I can look more like Bane,” said Mr. Cintron, referring to the villain in the recent movie “The Dark Knight Rises.”

“There’s nothing like spandex to make you feel 10 times as fat or as skinny as you normally are,” he added.

Ms. Blander said it took her months to get used to some of the provocative outfits she wore. Her first superhero portrayal was of Storm, a comic book character clad in a white leotard that left little to the imagination. She ended up clutching her cape tightly around her out of embarrassment.

“People are going to look at me,” she said.

“They’re supposed to,” Ms. Darius said.

Although Ms. Blander is no longer shy about wearing costumes in public, she said most of her family and her co-workers at the transit agency knew nothing of her other life.

“It’s my private world,” she said. “It makes me feel mysterious. Like Superman.”

Obama jokes about lackluster debate performance at star-studded fundraiser

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President Obama made fun of his lackluster debate showing Sunday, marveling to a roomful of star entertainers that they invariably turn in flawless performances.
“I can’t always say the same,” Obama quipped to the audience at a Los Angeles fund-raiser that included actor George Clooney and singers Stevie Wonder, Jennifer Hudson, Jon Bon Jovi and Katy Perry.
Earlier, Obama campaign adviser Robert Gibbs acknowledged that Mitt Romney put on a “masterful theatrical performance” at the first debate but said the President is looking forward to their next clash.
Gibbs gave Romney an “F” on substance — saying he was “fundamentally dishonest,” abandoned the main tenets of his campaign, and dodged questions about financing his tax-cut plan.
Romney adviser Ed Gillespie told ABC that Obama did poorly in the debate because he couldn’t rebut Romney’s economic plan.
A poll released this weekend showed Romney pulling ahead of Obama after the debate with a two-point lead — but the President’s campaign revealed it pulled in $181 million in donations in September.

Mitt Romney's distant English relatives surprised by family ties to would-be president

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Mitt Romney's fight to become America's next president has the backing of one enthusiastic group of supporters, although they don't actually have a vote: his relatives in England.
Few associate the Republican candidate with Britain but it was in England's industrial northwest that his ancestors lived for generations and converted to Mormonism before leaving for the United States in 1841 in search of the promised land.
It was a bold escape for a family of lowly carpenters. By sailing for the New World they took a step that eventually brought the Romney clan to the fore of American politics.
But some of them stayed and their descendants still live along Britain's rainy western coast - a world away from the intrigue and glamour of Washington.
One is a 69-year-old English widow who discovered just a few weeks ago that she is a distant cousin of the former governor of Massachusetts.
"It's all come out of the blue," Jennie Iveson told Reuters in her modest home in Barrow-in-Furness, a shipyard town once at the heart of Britain's industrial revolution. "It's a surprise really. Quite a surprise. Big surprise."
Iveson's link to Romney came to light when her inquisitive grandson-in-law began tracing back their family history by delving into archives in their home county of Lancashire.
Records show that Iveson is Mitt Romney's fourth cousin — they share a great-great-great grandfather, George Romney, who died in 1859. And now she can't help but notice that her distant American relative does bear a striking family resemblance.
"I saw him on the telly twice the other day, last week I think. He looks a bit like my brother," said Iveson, a retired factory worker, most of whose children have no jobs.
"(My brother) looks quite like him. He had dark hair like him. It's all grey now. He (Romney) looks like our Mike. Same sort of face and everything."
She offers a shrug and a smile when asked about Romney's wealth and privileged status in the United States, where he is sometimes accused by critics of being out of touch with poor people. "I wish him luck and everything else," she said.



Simon Nash, his wife Maria and their 12-year-old daughter Sarah pose outside their home in Preston, northern England. Maria is Mitt Romney's fourth cousin, twice removed.


Romney is one of the wealthiest Americans ever to run for the White House. He has estimated his fortune at between $190 million and $250 million.
But for Romney, his faith and English roots remain a sensitive issue, partly because his Mormon religion is still regarded with suspicion by some American voters.
When he came to Britain in July this year, Romney did not visit the area where his family have their roots - unusual since emphasizing a European heritage is often seen as an electoral plus in U.S. politics.
Barack Obama, who faces Romney in the November 6 presidential election, went down well last year when he toured an Irish village where one of his forebears once lived.
Romney's campaign spokeswoman made no comment when asked how the Republican challenger felt about his English origins.
In Lancashire, the county the candidate's ancestors left behind, Romney enthusiasts offered their own explanation.
"He is Mormon and this is Mormon central," said Christopher Nelson, a local vicar with an interest in Romney's heritage. "Perhaps he would perceive (coming here) as highlighting his Mormonism more than highlighting his roots."



A sign for Romney Road is seen on a street in Dalton-in-Furness in northwestern England, where relatives of Mitt Romney were born and bred in the 18th and 19th Century.

His known relatives in England are genealogically so far removed that many of them were not even aware of the link until recently when the U.S. election campaign began to gather pace.
Amateur genealogist Simon Nash was astonished to discover while digging into regional records that his wife Maria was Mitt Romney's fourth cousin twice removed.
Poring over archival material and photos on his laptop in his home in the industrial city of Preston, Nash said it was a matter of tracing people back to a common ancestor - a fairly easy task since most records are available publicly in Britain.
The quest has certainly made Nash, whose day job involves dressing in a duck outfit and posing as a mascot for a local football team, more interested in U.S. politics.
"If he got in, America would be a completely different place in three years time to what it is now," he said. "I don't know if it will be for the better."
Nash's wife Maria, 32, was equally astounded by his researches.
"I was very much shocked ... It still feels like ... it's not quite happening to (me)," said Maria, who is Jennie Iveson's granddaughter. "It's quite an unreal feeling."
Would she like to meet Romney in the White House? "I think it would be very surreal," she said with a shy giggle. "I would like to go there for a brew (cup of tea) if he ever got in there."

The village of Dalton-in-Furness, a picturesque scattering of mediaeval cottages, is where the Romney clan began. Its men are still remembered there as hard-working carpenters.
One of them was William Romney, who gained notoriety for making his own coffin and putting it on display in his workshop before he died in 1915.



Mid morning sun shines on Dalton-in-Furness, where Mitt Romney's ancestors once lived.

"I get the impression that quite a few Romneys were carpenters. It seems to be a family trait," Jim Walton, a Dalton historian, said outside a canary-yellow cottage where William Romney used to live and work.
"Should Mitt Romney succeed and become the next president of the United States, he would be able to look around in pride and say: 'My great great granddad came from Dalton-in-Furness'. Well, I hope he can say that in pride."
Dalton has plenty of Romney-related history. Its most famous son was George Romney, who went to London and became one of the most celebrated portrait painters of the 18th century.
Two streets and a park are named after the artist, who is said to have had a secret affair with the mistress of Lord Nelson, the naval hero who defeated the French at Trafalgar.
George was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's parish church - where Mitt Romney's great-great grandparents, Elizabeth and Miles, were baptized and married before converting to the Mormon faith in 1837 and moving to the United States.
Their daughter Sarah's baptism record from the year before is still in the archives in Preston, with her father's vocation - joiner - scribbled in an old parish book.
"It's a fascinating story that Dalton holds," said Rev. Alan Mitchell, gazing over the town's skyline from the top of a church tower - a view that has changed little since Romneys lived here. Pointing at a couple of old communion cups, he added: "The Romneys could have touched these."
At the time, Lancashire was a tough, polluted and chaotic place to live, and disease and drunkenness were rife. Mormon promises of a better and more orderly life fell on fertile ground.
"It was a grimy, mucky hell on earth," said Nelson, the vicar. "Why on earth you would want to stay here, if somebody tells you there is milk and honey elsewhere? It was a horrible place."

Early Mormon missionaries offered not only salvation but a free ticket to the United States.
They also gave Miles Romney a position of authority aboard a ship called the Sheffield, making the arrangement all the more attractive for a young and ambitious man with a large family.
But many other Romneys never converted and stayed behind in England, and the relatives who live here today know little about Mormonism.




Mormons arrive for a service at a church beside the Preston England Temple, Europe's biggest Mormon temple.

In his autobiography, Mitt Romney said the family left England for New Orleans and travelled by steamer up the Mississippi to Nauvoo, Illinois, where they joined other Mormons. Later they followed Mormons in a trek across the plains to Utah. "Romneys are, by nature, an adventurous breed," he wrote.
The Mormon fascination with the souls of their ancestors means they have one of the world's biggest family history archives. The Mormon temple near Preston still contains records detailing the lives of British Romneys.
One document, describing the state of Miles Romney's family after emigration, listed his job as a joiner and said: "In 1850 Miles had a household of ten, and a real wealth of £200."
The area is still very much the heartland of British Mormonism. The Ribble, a local river, is known as the River Jordan of European Mormonism. This is where England's early Mormons were baptized.
A memorial near its muddy bank commemorates those early conversions. Europe's biggest Mormon temple is nearby, its spire towering high above the misty, rain-washed hills. Neatly dressed missionaries in dark suits and ties are frequent visitors.
"The missionaries that we see coming from America will have roots that originated here in England," said Bishop Michael Turner, leader of a local Mormon congregation. "It's an exciting time ... to have a candidate who is a member of the church."
But for some, Romney is an unpopular figure, particularly after he suggested during his visit this year that Britain was not ready to host the Olympic Games.
"I think Mitt Romney is rather careless in his choice of words sometimes," said Walton, the Dalton historian. "But there you are. Can't have everything, can you?"

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