Monday, December 30, 2013

Robin Roberts publicly acknowledges girlfriend

news
After an incredibly difficult year that included battling a rare blood disorder called MDS and receiving a successful bone marrow transplant, Robin Roberts is looking back on 2013 with gratitude.

In an end-of-year Facebook post on Sunday, Dec. 29th, the 'GMA' host writes:
"At this moment I am at peace and filled with joy and gratitude. I am grateful to God, my doctors and nurses for my restored good health," she wrote. "I am grateful for my sister, Sally-Ann, for being my donor and giving me the gift of life. I am grateful for my entire family, my long time girlfriend, Amber, and friends as we prepare to celebrate a glorious new year together. I am grateful for the many prayers and well wishes for my recovery. I return every one of them to you 100 fold. On this last Sunday of 2013 I encourage you to reflect on what you are grateful for too."

Though the two have been together for 10 years, PEOPLE reports, this is the first time she is publicly revealing the very special woman who has been by her side in sickness and in health: Amber Laign.

Media Bistro reports that Laign is a licensed massage therapist and a San Francisco Bay area native. Laign and Roberts reportedly met through mutual friends.


Friday, December 27, 2013

Jahi McMath's Family Wants To Transfer Her To Nursing Home

 jahi mcmath nursing home
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — A lawyer for the family of a 13-year-old girl who was declared brain dead after complications from a tonsillectomy says Jahi McMath's relatives want to transfer her to a nursing home that is willing to keep caring for her.
But lawyer Christopher Dolan said Thursday that doctors at Children's Hospital Oakland need to insert breathing and feeding tubes into the girl before the nursing home can take her.
Dolan declined to name the care facility, but said it is located in the San Francisco Bay Area and is not equipped to perform surgeries.
Children's Hospital wants to take Jahi off life support, a move that her family opposes.
A judge this week gave the hospital permission to proceed after 5 p.m. on Monday to give the girl's mother time to appeal.

First-class stamp prices to rise as of Jan. 26

First-class stamp prices to rise as of Jan. 26


Postal Problems
FILE - In this Feb. 7, 2013 file photo, U.S. Postal Service letter carrier Michael McDonald gathers mail to load into his truck before making his delivery run in the East Atlanta neighborhood, in Atlanta. The U.S. Postal Service says it will delay plans to cut Saturday mail delivery because Congress isn't allowing the change. The Postal Service said in February that it planned to cut back in August to five-day-a-week deliveries for everything except packages, as a way to hold down losses. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mailing a letter is about to get a little more expensive. Regulators on Tuesday approved a temporary price hike of 3 cents for a first-class stamp, bringing the charge to 49 cents a letter in an effort to help the Postal Service recover from severe mail decreases brought on after the 2008 economic downturn.
Many consumers won't feel the price increase immediately. Forever stamps, good for first-class postage whatever the rate, can be purchased at the lower price until the new rate is effective Jan. 26.
The higher rate will last no more than two years, allowing the Postal Service to recoup $2.8 billion in losses. By a 2-1 vote, the independent Postal Regulatory Commission rejected a request to make the price hike permanent.
The higher cost "will last just long enough to recover the loss," Commission Chairman Ruth Y. Goldway said.
Bulk mail, periodicals and package service rates rise 6 percent, which is likely to draw significant consternation from the mail industry.
Its groups have opposed any price increase beyond the current 1.7 percent rate of inflation. They say charities using mass mailings and bookstores competing with online retailer Amazon will be among those who suffer. Greeting card companies also have criticized the plans.
The Postal Service is an independent agency that does not depend on tax money for its operations but is subject to congressional control. Under federal law, it can't raise prices more than the rate of inflation without approval from the commission.
The service says it lost $5 billion in the last fiscal year and has been trying to get Congress to pass legislation to help with its financial woes, including an end to Saturday mail delivery and reduced payments on retiree health benefits.
The figures through Sept. 30 were actually an improvement for the agency from a $15.9 billion loss in 2012.
The post office has struggled for years with declining mail volume as a result of growing Internet use and a 2006 congressional requirement that it make annual $5.6 billion payments to cover expected health care costs for future retirees. It has defaulted on three of those payments.
The regulators Tuesday stopped short of making the price increases permanent, saying the Postal Service had conflated losses it suffered as a result of Internet competition with business lost because of the Great Recession. They ordered the agency to develop a plan to phase out the higher rates once the lost revenue is recouped.
It's unclear if that would take rates for first-class postage back to 46 cents in 2016 or to a level somewhere in between that takes into account future inflation.
The new price of a postcard stamp, raised by a penny to 34 cents in November, also is effective next month.

Police: 4 dead after Louisiana shootings, 3 injured

news
RACELAND, La. (AP) - A south Louisiana man attacked his former in-laws, his current wife, and the head of a hospital where he'd worked, killing three before killing himself, authorities said.

The shootings happened at four locations in two parishes about 45 miles southwest of New Orleans on Thursday. The first report came about 6:40 p.m., when Lafourche Parish Councilman Louis Phillip Gouaux - who was shot in the throat - called 911 from his home in Lockport, Houma, La., newspaper The Courier reported.

The suspect, Ben Freeman, 38, was the ex-husband of Gouaux's daughter Jeanne, Lafourche Parish Sheriff's Office spokesman Brennan Matherne said in a news release.

Gouaux's wife, Susan "Pixie" Gouaux, was dead when deputies arrived, Matherne said. Louis Phillip Gouaux and his daughter, Andrea Gouaux, were injured and taken to University Hospital in New Orleans. Both were in critical but stable condition, Matherne said.

About 20 minutes later in Raceland, Ochsner St. Anne General Hospital administrator Milton Bourgeois was shot and killed at close range at his home, Matherne said. His wife, Ann Bourgeois, was shot and taken to the New Orleans hospital, where she was listed in stable condition.

Raceland police said Bourgeois was shot at close range and his wife was shot in the leg.

Freeman had been employed at three area hospitals over the last few years, including St. Anne, where Lafourche Parish Sheriff Craig Webre said he had been a registered nurse before he was fired in 2011. All three hospitals were put on lockdown for a while Thursday.

Freeman's wife, Denise Taylor Freeman, was found dead in the couple's home in Houma in Terrebonne Parish. Matherne said her cause of death was not immediately known.

A shotgun was used in the shootings, deputies said.

Ben Freeman was found along U.S. Highway 90 near Bayou Blue, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The Lafourche Parish sheriff said Jeanne Gouaux had filed multiple protective orders against Freeman, who had pleaded guilty to harassment charges and was allowed only supervised visits with their four children. The last protective order expired less than a month ago, he said.

"Clearly, there has been a very difficult and complicated divorce/custody issue going on," Webre said during a news conference late Thursday.

Webre could not comment on why Ben Freeman was terminated from St. Anne Hospital, but noted that police were called there after Freeman damaged a room. He told police then that he would seek mental help, Webre said.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Yes, It’s Real: Tim Draper Gives Details On Ballot Initiative To Make Silicon Valley A State


Silicon Valley is no stranger to unusual ideas, and today the world got to witness another: noted investor Tim Draper is proposing a ballot proposition to split California into six separate states. There were obviously a lot of questions raised by Draper’s “Six Californias” proposal after we first broke the news last Thursday, so the man with the controversial plan held a press conference this afternoon.
“The status quo is just not going to work,” said draper. “The existing breadth of industry and various interests in California is untenable.”
Draper’s ballot proposition itself breaks California into six entities: Silicon Valley, West California, Jefferson, South California, Central California and North California.
Other than Draper’s desire to decentralize Californian governance, we really didn’t know how it would all go down until today. So, here are your burning questions answered:
How Will California Be Redrawn?
“We allowed great flexibility” for individual counties to finely tune the rough outline of the six different territories, Draper said during the press event. He expects the citizens to crowdsource many of the ideas around water rights, a new state flag, and other official duties.
What About Congress?
Each state is supposed to get two senators, this would add 10 more to Congress (five additional states total). So, presumably, federal authorities will have to buy more chairs for the Senate floor, and also completely shift around the tight two-party balance that the Senate has maintained for over 200 years.
“They’ll be nervous about change,” says Draper, who thinks government will eventually accept a better governed region.
Who’s Paying For This?
Draper is bootstrapping his own political brainchild. “I will make sure it gets on the ballot, he said. This can cost millions of dollars and there’s no big partners yet on board. But Draper says he’s seen a lot of grassroots interest.
There’s still a lot of process questions that have to be worked out. What happens after it passes? Who’s in charge of creating new governors, redrawing congressional districts, and distributing natural resources? Draper couldn’t answer these in great detail, because they’ll supposedly be answered over the next several months.
When Draper first proposed this idea to me at the Nantucket Project conference, I had my doubts. But, yes, this is in fact happening. Six Californias. Draper expects to hold another press conference when he gets a million signatures.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Rodman holds tryouts for Pyongyang exhibition game


APTOPIX North Korea Rodman
Former NBA basketball star Dennis Rodman holds a cigar as he speaks to North Korean basketball players during a practice session in Pyongyang, North Korea, Friday, Dec. 20, 2013. During the session, Rodman selected the members of the North Korean team who will play in Pyongyang against visiting NBA stars on Jan. 8, 2014, the birthday of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)


PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) -- Former NBA star Dennis Rodman held tryouts Friday for a North Korean team to face a dozen NBA veterans in an exhibition game on leader Kim Jong Un's birthday next month - though he hasn't convinced all the players on the American team that it's safe to come to Pyongyang.
The flamboyant Hall of Famer said plans for the Jan. 8 game are moving ahead but some of the 12 Americans he wants are afraid to come.
Some foreign analysts say the dramatic purge and execution of Kim's once-powerful uncle less than a week ago has cast doubt on Kim's future. But officials here say there is no instability and Kim remains firmly in control.
"You know, they're still afraid to come here, but I'm just telling them, you know, don't be afraid man, it's all love, it's all love here," Rodman told The Associated Press after the tryouts at the Pyongyang Indoor Gymnasium. "I understand what's going on with the political stuff, and I say, I don't go into that venture, I'm just doing one thing for these kids here, and for this country, and for my country, and for the world pretty much."
Rodman, who arrived in Pyongyang on Thursday, said he expects to announce the roster soon. He also said he is planning another game in June.
Rodman, wearing a pink button-down shirt and puffing on a cigar, watched as a couple dozen local players took to the basketball court for the tryouts. After the session, he told the players that each of the 12 he chooses will get two new pairs of tennis shoes.
When asked why he liked basketball, North Korean player Kim Un Chol told Rodman he started playing the game because he was impressed by it on TV, and said he also wants to be good at the sport because it is a favorite of leader Kim and his late father, Kim Jong Il.
Rodman asked all the players if they felt the same way. They nodded in unison.
"I want you guys to do one thing for your leader," Rodman then told them. "It's his birthday. It's a very special, special day for the country."
Rodman and Kim have struck up an unlikely friendship since he traveled to the secretive state for the first time in February with the Harlem Globetrotters for an HBO series produced by New York-based VICE television.
He remains the highest-profile American to meet Kim since the leader inherited power from his father in 2011.
Known as much for his piercings, tattoos and bad behavior as he was for basketball, Rodman has mostly avoided politics in his dealings with the North and has avoided commenting on the North's human rights record or its continued detainment of American Kenneth Bae for allegedly committing anti-state crimes.
On Friday, he stressed that he hopes the game will be friendly, without political or nationalistic overtones.
He said the former NBA players will take on the North Koreans in the first half, but the teams will be mixed for the second half.
"It's not about win or loss. It's about one thing - unite two countries," Rodman said.

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Rodman visits North Korea to train national team

China North Korea Rodman
PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) -- Former NBA star Dennis Rodman arrived in North Korea on Thursday to help train the national team and renew his friendship with the North's young leader, Kim Jong Un, a visit unaffected by the recent execution of Kim's uncle in a dramatic political purge.
Rodman was met at Pyongyang's airport by Vice Sports Minister Son Kwang Ho. He made no public comments, but told a mob of reporters earlier at Beijing's airport that he expected, as on previous visits, to meet with Kim and make final arrangements for a Jan. 8 exhibition game in Pyongyang marking the leader's birthday.
"I know (Kim) is waiting for me to come back. So hopefully we will have some conversation about some things that's going to help the world," Rodman said.
His visit comes less than a week after North Korea announced the execution of No. 2 official Jang Song Thaek, an unprecedented fall from grace of one of the most powerful figures in the country.
Jang's execution marks North Korea's most serious political upheaval in decades and has sent North Korea watchers speculating over the stability of the Kim dynasty. However, Rodman's visit - should it proceed uneventfully - could be a sign that Kim is firmly in charge and unconcerned with any potential challenges to his rule.
Asked about the execution, Rodman said that had nothing to do with his visit. He said he wasn't worried about his personal safety in the North, despite the recent detentions of two Americans there, one of whom, Kenneth Bae, has been held for more than two years.
Rodman and Kim have struck up an unlikely friendship since the Hall of Famer traveled to the secretive Communist state for the first time in February with the Harlem Globetrotters for an HBO series produced by New York-based VICE television.
He remains the highest-profile American to meet Kim since the leader inherited power from father Kim Jong Il in 2011.
Known as much for his piercings, tattoos and bad behavior as he was for basketball, Rodman has mostly avoided politics in his dealings with the North. He's mainly focused on using basketball as a means of boosting understanding and communication and studiously avoided commenting on the North's human rights record, regarded as one of the world's worst by activists, defectors and the U.S. State Department.
Defectors have repeatedly testified about the government's alleged use of indiscriminate killings, rapes, beatings and prison camps holding as many as 120,000 people deemed opponents of Kim, the third generation of his family to rule.
Rodman said he planned to return to North Korea in two weeks with a roster of 12 American basketball players, but offered no names.
"I hope this game brings a lot of countries together, because as I said, sports it is so important to people around the world," Rodman said. "So I hope this is going to engage American people, especially (President Barack) Obama, to just to try to talk to them."

Target Hacked: Retailer Confirms 'Unauthorized Access' Of Credit Card Data


Target confirmed Thursday that previous reports about the unauthorized access of customers' credit card data were true.
In a press release posted on the Target website, the Minneapolis-based retailer admitted that approximately 40 million credit and debit card accounts may have been impacted by the breach.
Affected customers made purchases in U.S. stores from Nov. 27 and Dec. 15, 2013.
Target is currently working with law enforcement and financial institutions to resolve the issue.
“Target’s first priority is preserving the trust of our guests and we have moved swiftly to address this issue, so guests can shop with confidence. We regret any inconvenience this may cause,” Gregg Steinhafel, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Target stated in a press release. “We take this matter very seriously and are working with law enforcement to bring those responsible to justice.”
Here's more from the Associated Press:
Target Corp. advised customers who suspect there has been unauthorized activity on their cards should call them at 866-852-8680. Target is just the latest retailer to be hit with a data breach problem. TJX Cos., which runs stores such as T.J. Maxx and Marshall's, had a breach that began in July 2005 that exposed at least 45.7 million credit and debit cards to possible fraud. The breach wasn't detected until December 2006. In June 2009 TJX agreed to pay $9.75 million in a settlement with multiple states related to the massive data theft but stressed at the time that it firmly believed it did not violate any consumer protection or data security laws.

These 10 Billionaires Made the Most Money in 2013


Many familiar faces make an appearance on Wealth-X's list of the billionaires who made the most money this year.

Businessmen like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, who have dominated wealth rankings for years, continued to add billions of dollars to their already sizable fortunes.

Here's the full list, ranked by billions made from Jan. 1 to Dec. 11, 2013:

10. Carl Icahn made $7.2 billion

The corporate raider had a big year after bets on Netflix and Herbalife (HLF) yielded Icahn Capital Management $800 million and $500 million profits, respectively. He tweeted his thanks to Netflix (NFLX) CEO Reed Hastings and Kevin Spacey, star of the streaming service's hit show, "House of Cards."

9. Lui Chee Woo made $8.3 billion

The founder of Galaxy Entertainment Group became Asia's second-richest man in 2013 as gambling revenue grew at a record pace in Macau. Lui is looking to expand his flagship casino in the city's Cotai area, which is known by many as the Asian version of the Las Vegas Strip.

8. Larry Page made $9.3 billion

Google's co-founder and CEO made $3 billion in 24 hours when Google (GOOG) stocks hit an all-time high in October, breaking $1,000 for the first time. Android became the world's most popular operating system, running on 43 percent of the globe's smartphones.

7. Sergey Brin made $9.3 billion

Brin, Google co-founder and head of special projects with Google X, made $2.9 billion in the October stock surge. As of Dec. 11, Brin is worth an estimated $30 billion, a 4.8 percent percent increase over the year.

6. Masayoshi Son made $10.3 billion

The founder of Softbank, Asia's top Internet and telecommunications corporation, lost $70 billion in the dot-com crash, but he's surging back in a big way.
The purchase of Sprint (S) and a large investment in Finnish game-maker Supercell are highlights in a year that saw Son's personal net worth more than double, growing from $8.8 billion to $19.1 billion.

5. Mark Zuckerberg made $10.5 billion

Facebook (FB) stock hit an all-time high in October, and revenue continues to grow despite questions about the longevity of the product.

4. Jeff Bezos made $11.3 billion

The founder and CEO of Amazon (AMZN), which made $17.1 billion in net sales in the third quarter, raised some eyebrows when he bought the Washington Post for $250 million this summer.

3. Sheldon Adelson made $11.4 billion

According to Wealth-X, the casino mogul's personal net worth grew to an estimated $35.3 billion this year thanks to profits from his gambling properties in Las Vegas, Macau, and Singapore.

2. Bill Gates made $11.5 billion

The world's wealthiest man ended the year with a personal net worth of $72.6 billion, up nearly 19 percent from $61.1 billion in 2012.

1. Warren Buffett made $12.7 billion

Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK-A) (BRK-B) CEO personally made about $37 million a day in 2013, a year that saw the company's acquisition of Heinz and Nevada's NV Energy.

Disclosure: Jeff Bezos is an investor in Business Insider through his personal investment company Bezos Expeditions.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Target Refuses To Sell Beyonce's New Album


If you were planning on heading down to your local Target to buy the new Beyonce album, think again.
Target has opted out of selling "Beyonce" at its stores once iTunes' exclusive sale ends after Dec. 18, according to Billboard. Retailers are expected to have the album on shelves by Friday, Dec. 20, but it likely won't come with any bonus material or exclusive content.
"At Target we focus on offering our guests a wide assortment of physical CDs, and when a new album is available digitally before it is available physically, it impacts demand and sales projections," Target spokesperson Erica Julkowski told Billboard. "While there are many aspects that contribute to our approach and we have appreciated partnering with Beyonce in the past, we are primarily focused on offering CDs that will be available in a physical format at the same time as all other formats. At this time, Target will not be carrying Beyonce's new self-titled album 'Beyonce.'"
A representative from Target was not immediately available for further comment.
Back in 2011, Beyonce partnered with Target for the release of "4" with a deluxe version of the album. At the time, Target’s vice president of entertainment, John Butcher, told The Hollywood Reporter that the superstar singer had saved some of her favorite tracks just for the retail chain.
This time around, Beyonce's only target was her fans.
She released her self-titled album on Dec. 13 without any promotion or fanfare. The work came complete with 14 songs and 17 videos, making it an immersive "visual album."
"Now ... it's all about the single and the hype," Beyonce said. "It's so much that gets between the music and the artist and the fans. i felt like I don't want anybody to give the message when my record is coming out. I just want this to come out when it's ready and from me to my fans ... I would make my best art and just put it out."
The 32-year-old is certainly is doing just fine without Target. "Beyonce" has already shattered records selling 828,773 copies over the weekend. It's set to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard chart.

2 winning tickets sold in $636 million Mega Millions drawing

Mega Millions Lottery Jackpot Rises Past $600 Million
ATLANTA (AP) -- Two lucky winning tickets were sold in Tuesday's near-record $636 million Mega Millions drawing: one at a tiny newsstand in Atlanta, and the other more than 2,000 miles away in California.
The lucky Georgia ticket was sold at a Gateway Newsstand in Atlanta's affluent Buckhead area, Mega Millions Executive Director Paula Otto said.
Newsstand owner Young Soolee grinned as she arrived Wednesday morning at the shop off the lobby of the Alliance Center office building. The newsstand is frequented by workers at the office building, which sits across the street from an upscale mall.
"I'm so excited and so happy now," Soolee said. "I love my store and the customer now."
Buckhead is a financial center of Atlanta and one of its largest neighborhoods, a vast northern area known for upscale shopping centers such as Lenox Square and Phipps Plaza, both a short walk from the store that sold the winning ticket.
The California ticket was sold at Jennifer's Gift Shop in San Jose.
The winning numbers in the drawing were: 8, 14, 17, 20, 39; Mega Ball: 7.
The jackpot was the second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history. It started its ascent Oct. 4. Twenty-two draws came and went without winners, Otto said.
Otto said $336 million in tickets were sold for Tuesday's drawing - they had projected $319 million.
"Sales were a little better than we'd anticipated," Otto said. "It was a fun run; it was our first holiday run for either of the big jackpot games."
The winners can choose to be paid over time or in a cash lump sum, Otto said. Based on the $636 million figure, the winners would receive $318 million each over time or $170 million each in cash.
Mega Millions changed its rules in October to help increase the jackpots by lowering the odds of winning the top prize. That means the chances of winning the jackpot are now about 1 in 259 million. It used to be about 1 in 176 million, nearly the same odds of winning a Powerball jackpot.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Kelly Rowland Is Engaged (And It Happened on Skype!)

Kelly Rowland
Fans had a hunch that singer Kelly Rowland would be headed down the aisle soon after spotting beautiful new bling on her left hand ring finger back in November, and it looks like the rumors are true.

In an interview for The Queen Latifah Show, the X Factor judge confirmed that she and her manager Tim Witherspoon got engaged over Skype when he proposed to her while she was in Bulgaria. The interview will run on Wednesday, reports E! News.

"He put a ring on it," says Rowland. "We've kept it very, very low – for years, to be completely honest."

She can say that again! Their proposal may have been long distance, but that didn’t make it any less romantic.

"It was so late, I remember we were both just kinda like, honestly, just staring at each other,” Rowland adds. “And he asked me, and it was just that simple to say yes. I was like, 'I got my best friend to ride through life with.' He really is my best friend."

Although the low-key couple likes to stay out of the spotlight, we’re hoping to see more of them around as they prepare to say “I do.”

Congrats, you two. Leave your well wishes for the happy couple below!

Mega Millions Jackpot Climbs To $586 Million

Mega Millions Jackpot
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - The Mega Millions jackpot soared to $586 million on Monday amid a frenzy of ticket purchases, a jump that pushed the prize closer to the $656 million U.S. record set last year.
Paula Otto, executive director of the Virginia Lottery and Mega Millions' lead director, said ticket sales are ahead of projections for Tuesday's drawing, increasing the likelihood that the record could fall by then. If the prize goes unclaimed for a 22nd consecutive drawing, the next one likely would shatter the record, set in March 2012, she said.
"I think we'll be very close to the record, and maybe even surpass it," Otto said, adding that sales are difficult to predict.
That was enough for Drew Gentsch to play one ticket Monday morning. The attorney from Des Moines never plays, but the jackpot was too good to pass up.
"I think it's ridiculous but you have to dream big," he said. "The odds of winning are so low, there's no real reason to play. But it's fun to do so once in a while."
Between 65 and 75 percent of the roughly 259 million possible number combinations will be in play when the numbers are drawn, Otto estimated. She said the jackpot may be increased one more time on Tuesday morning in advance of the evening drawing.
"Lotto players are procrastinators. They tend to buy on the day of the draw," she said.
No ticket matched the six numbers needed to win Friday's $425 million prize. The jackpot was raised Saturday to $550 million before Monday's jump to $586 million. It is currently the fourth-largest jackpot in U.S. history.
Some players were taken aback by the growing jackpot and the possibility that it could keep getting bigger.
"It gets the excitement up, but there's a point when it's too much," said Justiniano Pahl, who works in human resources. "$5 million would be good; $550 million would be good. Either one would change your life."Natali Justiniano Pahl, 47, bought five tickets from a convenience store in downtown Des Moines. She said the growing jackpot made her excited, albeit somewhat weary.

I Was Married To A Real 'Wolf Of Wall Street'

real wolf of wall street
"The Wolf Of Wall Street" doesn't hit theaters until December 25, but one ex-wife is opening up about what it was like being married to the real-life "wolf"'s right-hand man.
In a recent article in the New York Post, Nancy Porush gives us a glimpse into her relationship with ex-husband Danny Porush, who is portrayed by Jonah Hill in the film.
"I saw him morph from a nice wholesome guy into showy narcissist whom I hardly recognized anymore," Nancy told the paper of Danny's transition to a stock swindler in the mid-'90s.
Alongside Jordan Belfort, Danny co-founded the Long Island brokerage house Stratton Oakmont and used a “pump and dump” scheme to scam Wall Street investors out of $200 million before both were eventually prosecuted and sent to prison.
Though Nancy said the man she married in 1986 was the kind of guy "whose idea of a good time had once been grilling in the backyard with a beer in his hand," that quickly changed as Danny became more involved in the investing scam and the "frat-house lifestyle" spearheaded by Belfort.
"Danny changed with money; he’d frequently stay out late at night, saying he had a business meeting in the city that he couldn’t get out of. I was a young mom with two babies," Nancy told the paper. "'I’m not stupid or naive -- but I really didn’t know what was going on. I was home watching 'Sesame Street' with our sons."
The con eventually caught up with Belfort and Porush, though. In 1999, after being investigated by the Securities & Exchange Commission, Danny pleaded guilty to security fraud and money laundering and was sentenced to 39 months in prison. (Belfort, too, was convicted of securities fraud and served 22 months in prison before being released in 2006.)
Danny got out of prison in 2004 and now lives in a multi-million dollar mansion in Boca Raton with his current wife, whom he left Nancy for even after she'd stuck by his side throughout his criminal case.
Because Nancy failed to realize her husband was putting assets in her name as part of his defrauding scheme, she considers herself one of his victims.
"There were many victims Danny defrauded -- but I was one of them. And the government validated that. Legally, I too was a victim," Nancy said. "I sold off everything to support my family -- teaching yoga and pilates, selling clothes, skin care, anything to provide for the kids... I got nothing, not even alimony, and I didn’t want anything -- I just wanted out."
Nancy isn't the only one telling the her story in light of the film's upcoming release. In an interview with MotherJones.com, Danny himself talked about seeing his life portrayed on the big screen and took issue with the wild exploits -- sale-room parties with strippers and chimpanzees, threeways -- portrayed in the film, which is based Belfort's memoir.
"Stratton was like a fraternity," Porush told the website. "A lot of goofing around, hazing -- but the worst we ever did was shave somebody's head and then pay 'em ten grand for it."

2 Ohio kidnapping survivors ink book deals

Missing Women Found
FILE - These undated handout file photos provided by the FBI show Amanda Berry, left, and Georgina "Gina" Dejesus. Ohio State Rep. John Barnes Jr. wants the state to provide years of relief payments and a free ride to college for the three Cleveland women abducted and held in captivity for about a decade. Barnes Jr. is introducing his Survivors of Abduction Act on Tuesday, June 4, 2013. It would provide Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight at least $25,000 a year in reparations for the years they were restrained and tuition, fees and living expenses at a public college. (AP Photo/FBI, File)


NEW YORK (AP) - Two of the three Ohio women held captive for years in a Cleveland house have a book deal. Viking announced Monday that it has acquired the planned book by Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus. The book is currently untitled and is scheduled to come out in 2015.
Berry and DeJesus are working with Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporters Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan. Negotiations were handled by Washington attorney Robert Barnett, whose clients have ranged from President Barack Obama to Amanda Knox.
Berry, DeJesus and Michelle Knight were rescued in May and their kidnapper, Ariel Castro, was arrested and eventually sentenced to life in prison. He was found hanged in his cell in September.
Knight is working on her own memoir, which Weinstein Books plans to publish next spring.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Jameis Winston wins Heisman Trophy



NEW YORK (AP) -- Jameis Winston left voters no choice but to give him the Heisman Trophy. And like every other Florida State victory this season, it was a blowout.
The quarterback they call Famous Jameis became the youngest Heisman winner and the second straight freshman to win the trophy Saturday night, earning college football's most prestigious individual trophy award with a performance so dominant even a criminal investigation couldn't derail his candidacy.
"I cannot explain the feeling that I have inside right now," Winston said. "I'm so overwhelmed. It's awesome."
When his name was announced, he popped from his seat and quickly made his way to his mom and dad for hugs and kisses. He smiled and laughed through most of his acceptance speech.
He talked about trusting in the "process" on the field and in life and "after all the things I've been through this past month." He got choked up a bit when talking about his parents.
"When you see your mom and you see your dad and they've been struggling through this whole process and now you see a smile on their face, it comforted me," he said later.
Winston received 668 first-place votes and 2,205 points. He finished 1,501 points ahead of Alabama quarterback AJ McCarron for the seventh-largest margin of victory in Heisman history, despite being left off 115 of the 900 ballots returned.
Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch was third, followed by Boston College's Andre Williams, Texas A&M's Johnny Manziel and Auburn's Tre Mason.
Manziel was the first freshman to win the Heisman last year, and was trying to join Ohio State's Archie Griffin as a two-time winner. Instead, Winston made it two redshirt freshman winners in the 79-year history of the Heisman. He also became the youngest winner at 23 days short of 20.
The 19-year-old also was investigated last month for a year-old sexual assault complaint, but no charges were filed and the case was closed four days before Heisman votes were due.
"I really believe that people actually just trusted me. People obviously saw us play. But that comes from my team, too," Winston said.
Winston is the nation's top-rated passer and has led the top-ranked Seminoles (13-0) to a spot in the BCS championship game against No. 2 Auburn on Jan. 6, his birthday. The former five-star recruit from Bessemer, Ala., made college football look easy from his very first game. On Labor Day night, on national television, Winston went 25 for 27 for 356 yards and four touchdowns in a victory at Pittsburgh.
"I can't explain how truly intelligent he is," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said. "He always wanted to know why he had success or why he had failure so he could either repeat it or fix it."
There wasn't much failure on the way to becoming the third Seminoles quarterback to win the Heisman. The last was Chris Weinke in 2000.
Winston and Florida State were cruising toward an undefeated season when news broke of an unresolved sexual assault complaint against him made to the Tallahassee Police Department last December.
The dormant case was handed over to the state attorney's office for a full investigation. A female student at Florida State accused Winston of rape. Winston's attorney said the sex was consensual.
During three weeks of uncertainty, Winston continued to play sensationally, while other contenders stumbled or failed to distinguish themselves. If voters were looking to Manziel or McCarron or Lynch or Williams or even Marcus Mariota of Oregon to give them a good alternative to Winston, it didn't happen.
The Heisman Trust mission statement says: "The Heisman Memorial Trophy annually recognizes the outstanding college football player whose performance best exhibits the pursuit of excellence with integrity."
It's a statement that has put the Heisman in awkward situations before. In 2010, Cam Newton played the season under the cloud of an NCAA investigation. He had also had legal troubles while in college. But like Winston, there was no doubt he was the best player and he won the award.
Reggie Bush had his 2005 Heisman stripped after the NCAA determined he had violated its rules during that season. But the Heisman trust did not ask Billy Cannon and O.J. Simpson to return their Heismans after they were sent to prison.
The accusations against Winston were serious and documents released by the police with the accuser's allegations were not flattering to him. It probably explains why so many voters left him out of their top three. Last year, Manziel appeared on 92 percent of the ballots. Winston appeared on 87 percent this year.
"Everyone has their own opinion," Winston said. "It's basically a numbers game and I was blessed to have the majority vote."
There was no doubting his on-the-field credentials. Winston is on pace (190.1) to break Russell Wilson's record for best passer efficiency rating in a season and set FBS freshman records for yards passing (3,820) and touchdown passes (38). Florida State's average margin of victory is 42 points, and Winston has spent most of the Seminoles' fourth quarters resting.
The investigation has taken some of the shine off Winston's Heisman coronation, at least for some people. But if the question is simply who was college football's best player in 2013, Famous Jameis was the clear answer.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

More Than 110 Million Brace for Weekend Snowstorm


 
Heavy snow and travel disruptions will spread from St. Louis to Pittsburgh Friday night, then to Philadelphia, New York City and Boston Saturday.

The snowstorm will span more than 1,000 miles.

Thanks to recent Arctic air making roads and sidewalks much colder compared to previous storms, enough snow to shovel and plow is in store from parts of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland and New Jersey to much of Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.

Not only will the storm make roads and sidewalks slippery, raising the risk for slip-and-fall incidents and auto accidents, but it is likely to cause many flight delays and cancellations. The visibility will be poor, runways will become snow covered and aircraft will need to be de-iced.

Snow will fall on and impact every major city and rural area from St. Louis to Boston, including Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and New York City. The area encompasses about 110 million people.

The storm will spread across the Midwest late Friday into Friday night and over the Northeast Saturday and Saturday night.

A mixture of snow, sleet and rain will mitigate accumulations across central Missouri and eastward along the Ohio River. However, enough wintry mix will fall to make roads slippery.

Long stretches of along the I-70, I-75, I-80 and I-90 corridors may be snow covered in the Mid

Karl Pierson ID'd As Arapahoe High School Shooting Suspect

Karl Pierson Arapahoe Shooting
Authorities have identified 18-year-old Karl Pierson as the student who allegedly opened fire at Arapahoe High School in Centennial, Colo. on Friday afternoon.
At a press conference, Sheriff Grayson Robinson said the suspect entered the school armed with a shotgun and asked for a specific teacher. When that teacher heard that the armed student was asking for him, he left the school immediately, and was uninjured. The suspect then opened fire, leaving one 15-year-old girl in critical condition.
Pierson died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
This story has been updated to reflect the number of students injured.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Home Khloe Kardashian Filing for Divorce -- TODAY Khloe Kardashian Filing for Divorce ... TODAY!!!!! TMZ


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Khloe Kardashian is filing for divorce from Lamar Odom ... TODAY ... TMZ has learned.

Sources tell us, Khloe will be citing irreconcilable differences in her legal docs. The split should be pretty cut and dry -- an ironclad prenup which kept all their assets separate ... and no kids.

As we reported, Lamar's bizarre freestyle rap video -- in which he brags about cheating on Khloe -- was the last straw in their crumbling relationship.  Immediately after TMZ posted the video last month, Khloe stopped wearing her wedding ring.

The end was a long time coming ... Khloe had expressed dire concerns about the marriage ever since she learned about Lamar's crack addiction earlier this year, but she forestalled divorce for fear he'd OD or worse.

Lamar and Khloe tied the knot in September 2009.

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Taye Diggs & Idina Menzel Split


 Idina Menzel and Taye Diggs
After a decade of marriage, Taye Diggs and Idina Menzel have separated, PEOPLE has learned.

"Idina Menzel and Taye Diggs have jointly decided to separate at this time," reps for the couple tell PEOPLE. "Their primary focus and concern is for their son. We ask that you respect their privacy during this time."

Diggs and Menzel, both 42, met as costars in the original production of the Broadway musical Rent in the mid-1990s. They married in 2003 and had a son, Walker, in 2009.

Menzel, a Tony Award winner for Wicked, spoke to PEOPLE about the marriage earlier this year, saying it wasn't always smooth sailing.

"We work at it," she said. "I'm not going to glamorize it or glorify it – we go through tough times like everybody else, but we love each other very much. We try not to be away from each other for more than two weeks at a time, and we try to find new ways to communicate."

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

GM CEO known for approachability, effectiveness


AP Auto Writers

GM CEO
DETROIT (AP) -- Kettering University President Robert McMahan was traveling in China a few months ago when he bumped into one of the university's board members at an airport in Shanghai.
Mary Barra, the busy global product development chief at General Motors Co., might have just said hello and turned back to her phone. Instead, she had a long discussion with McMahan's teenage son about his education and his efforts to learn Mandarin.
"I turned to my son after she left and said, `I put a month's pay on the fact that you just met the next president and CEO of GM,'" McMahan said. "Even he, as a 16-year-old, was impressed by her approachability."
McMahan can keep his pay. On Tuesday, GM's board named Barra, a 33-year company veteran, as its next CEO, making her the first woman to lead a major car company.
Barra replaces Dan Akerson, who moved up retirement plans by several months to help his wife, Karin, battle advanced cancer.
When Barra starts her new job Jan. 15, she will lead a company that's made nearly $20 billion since emerging from bankruptcy in 2010, much of it from the cars and trucks she helped develop. But she still faces challenges of paring down GM's costs and winning over buyers in international markets such as India and South America.
Akerson, 65, said he had planned to stay at least until spring, but his wife's diagnosis changed that. He said the board unanimously picked Barra from several internal candidates because of the breadth of her experience, her management record, her people skills and her understanding of GM's operations.
"This is an executive who has a vision of where she wants to take the organization," he said.
Since February 2011, Barra has held what many say is the most important job at GM. She joined the company in 1980 as an engineering student at Kettering - then known as General Motors Institute - and became a plant manager, executive director of engineering and head of human resources.
Along the way, she earned a reputation as a manager who made tough decisions, yet was able to get people to follow her lead and work as a team, according to current and former GM executives. Noting her talent, GM sent her to Stanford University to get an MBA.
The 51-year-old executive has been in charge of design, engineering and quality for all GM vehicles and has shepherded most of the company's recent new vehicle introductions. Under her command, GM rolled out brawny new full-size pickup trucks, the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra, and the Chevrolet Impala full-size car, which earned the highest score for a sedan in testing by Consumer Reports magazine.
During her tenure, GM's quality scores rose in surveys done by J.D. Power and Associates. She also streamlined the organization, eliminating positions and putting one engineer in charge of each vehicle.
"I don't see any reason why she won't be a huge success," said Ed Whitacre, a former CEO and chairman who promoted Barra to head human resources.
Akerson hinted at Barra's promotion earlier this year when he told a women's business group in Detroit that a "car gal" would someday run one of the Detroit Three automakers. But he made it clear Tuesday that she wasn't picked because she's a woman.
"Mary's one of the most gifted executives I've met in my career," he said.
Among Barra's biggest tasks is executing plans designed to cut costs and putting out better products, Akerson said. One big step in getting there: making more vehicles off the same underpinnings, or platforms, that can be sold in multiple markets, like the Chevrolet Cruze compact car.
In 2009, GM had 30 different vehicle platforms, adding to manufacturing complexity and cost. Under Barra's leadership, it's moving to build nearly 90 percent of its cars and trucks off five or fewer platforms by the end of this decade, Akerson said.
In an October interview with The Associated Press, she said GM is also moving to build vehicles with more common parts to trim costs where customers won't notice.
As product development chief, Akerson challenged Barra to bring vehicles to market faster. She responded with swift introductions of the Cadillac ATS, a BMW 3-Series competitor, and the Impala. When the midsize Chevy Malibu didn't sell well, Barra's team gave it new looks, more interior space and a new engine with better gas mileage - all in less than a year.
"She is polished, soft-spoken, invariably polite, but firm and goal-focused. She will have a learning curve, but will be an excellent CEO," said Bob Lutz, a retired GM vice chairman who once led product development.
Barra grew up near Pontiac, Mich., in a car-oriented family. Her father was a die maker who retired from GM after 39 years. GM's previous two CEOs, Akerson and Whitacre, came from outside the auto industry and lacked the experience that Barra has, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business.
"There's nobody with more years of honest `car-guy' credentials than she has," Gordon said. "She's the one to do the breakthrough."
Akerson took over GM in September 2010, as the company prepared to return to the public stock markets. During his tenure, GM has made billions of dollars in profits and is sitting on $26.8 billion in cash. Its profit margins in North America are healthy.
Akerson had been waiting for GM to officially shed the derisive moniker of "Government Motors" when the government sold the last of the GM shares it got as part of a bailout in 2008 and 2009. That happened Monday, clearing the way for the Barra announcement.
The GM board also decided to separate the positions of chairman and CEO. Barra gets a board seat, but director Theodore Solso will succeed Akerson as chairman. Solso, a GM board member since June 2012, is the former chairman and CEO of engine maker Cummins Inc.

10 Foods That Fight Illness


It’s flu-fighting season and time to stock up on vitamin C, vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin E, B vitamins, selenium, zinc, probiotics, flavonoids, certain amino acids and fibers … or just eat the foods that contain them. Here, then, is a list of the top 10 immune boosters, tasty chow with nutrients sure to power up your immune system this winter.
1. Yogurt
Eat yogurt with probiotics, or “live active cultures,” which are healthy bacteria that keep the gut and intestinal tract free of the disease-causing bacteria and germs. A study from the University of Vienna in Austria found that a daily 7-ounce dose of yogurt was just as effective in boosting immunity as medications.  Look for yogurt with a “Live and Active Cultures” seal. Also look at the label for Vitamin D, as a deficiency of this vitamin is associated with increased risk of cold and flu.
2. Oats or Barley
Oats and/or barley contain a special fiber called beta-glucan, which acts as both an antioxidant and an antimicrobial, two very important substances that protect cells from damage caused by unstable molecules or micro-organisms. According to a Norwegian study, the antioxidant and antimicrobial capabilities of oats or barely are more potent than the popular herb echinacea. Among their powers are helping antibiotics work better.
3. Garlic
Garlic contains the active ingredient allicin, which fights against infection and bacteria. In one British study, garlic eaters were two-thirds less likely to catch a cold than participants who ate placebos. Other research indicates that persons who eat more than six cloves of garlic a week have half the rate of stomach cancer and approximately one-third lower rate of colorectal cancer.
4. Fish
Fish contains selenium, which help white blood cells produce cytokine-proteins that rid the body of flue viruses. An extra bonus of eating fish like salmon, mackerel, and herring is loading up on omega-3 fats, which reduce inflammation, increase air flow, and protect lungs from colds and respiratory infections
5. Beef
Beef is an excellent source of zinc, which helps the development of white blood cells. Persons with even a mild zinc deficiency are more susceptible to infection.
6. Sweet Potatoes
This starch is rich in Vitamin A, which helps build the connective tissue of the skin. As the first line of defense in fighting bacterial and other infections, maintaining healthy skin is a critical part of staying well.
7. Mushrooms
Mushrooms increase the production and activity of white blood cells. Shiitake, maitake, and reshi mushrooms seem to be the best for immune systems.
8. Berries
Dark or bright berries—blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, and strawberries—contain anthocyanins, which strengthen the immune system and fight disease.
9. Tea
In a Harvard study participants who drank five cups of black tea a day for two weeks had ten times more virus-fighting interferon in their blood than the participants who drank a placebo hot drink. Both black and green tea contain L-theanine, a water-soluble amino acid which builds proteins and aids the immune system.
10. Chicken Soup
Chicken soup, the ultimate food when you’re feeling bad, keeps mucus thin and clears nasal congestion in the same way cough medicines do. Chicken soup also has an anti-inflammatory agent. The sulfur amino acid cycsteine, released from chicken during cooking, contributes a powerful boost to the immune system.

Pope Francis is Time's Person of the Year


Vatican Pope
Pope Francis listens to a speaker delivering his message translated in different languages during his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2013. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)


NEW YORK (AP) - Pope Francis has been selected by Time magazine as the Person of the Year. In only his first year, the pope was selected by the magazine's editors as the person who had the greatest impact on the world, for good or bad, during 2013.
Time Managing Editor Nancy Gibbs said Pope Francis had changed the tone, the perception and focus of one of the world's largest institutions in an extraordinary way.

Leaker Edward Snowden finished second as Time announced its choice on the "Today" show Wednesday.

The other nine finalists include:

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Nelson Mandela Memorial Draws Mourners And Leaders From Around The World

Nelson Mandela Memorial Draws Mourners And Leaders From Around The World

South Africa Obama Mandela
President Barack Obama, left, and first lady Michelle Obama, right, arrive at Waterkloof Air Base for a memorial service in honor of former South African leader Nelson Mandela on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013, in Centurion, South Africa. World leaders, celebrities, and citizens from all walks of life gathered for a memorial service on Tuesday to pay respects to Mandela. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)
JOHANNESBURG (AP) - World leaders and joyous, singing South Africans gathered Tuesday to honor Nelson Mandela at a Soweto soccer stadium that was half full, amid cold, driving rain.
The crowds twice booed South African President Jacob Zuma, who was to give the keynote address at the service, which started an hour late.
Crowds converged on FNB Stadium in Soweto, the Johannesburg township that was a stronghold of support for the anti-apartheid struggle that Mandela embodied as a prisoner of white rule for 27 years and then during a peril-fraught transition to the all-race elections that made him president.
Steady rain kept many people away. Shortly before the start of the ceremony, the 95,000-capacity stadium was about 50 percent full. The ceremony began at noon local time with the singing of the national anthem.
The mood, though, was celebratory. A dazzling mix of royalty, statesmen and celebrities was in attendance.
Thabo Mbeki, the former South African president who succeeded Mandela, got a rousing cheer as he entered the stands. French President Francois Hollande and his predecessor and political rival, Nicolas Sarkozy, arrived together. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon waved and bowed to spectators who sang praise for Mandela, seen by many South Africans as the father of the nation.
"I would not have the life I have today if it was not for him," said Matlhogonolo Mothoagae, a postgraduate marketing student who arrived hours before the stadium gates opened. "He was jailed so we could have our freedom."
Rohan Laird, the 54-year-old CEO of a health insurance company, said in the stadium that he grew up during white rule in a "privileged position" as a white South African and that Mandela helped whites work through a burden of guilt.
"His reconciliation allowed whites to be released themselves," Lair said. "I honestly don't think the world will see another leader like Nelson Mandela."
Workers were still welding at a VIP area as the first spectators arrived amid an enormous logistical challenge of organizing the memorial for Mandela, who died Dec. 5 in his Johannesburg home at the age of 95.
United States President Barack Obama landed in South Africa early Tuesday. Besides Obama, eulogies were to be delivered by U.N. chief Ban, Chinese Vice President Li Yuanchao and Cuban President Raul Castro.
Other speakers include the presidents of Brazil, Namibia and India, as well as tributes from Mandela's grandchildren.
Mandela's widow, Graca Machel, and former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela were at the stadium. So were actress Charlize Theron, model Naomi Campbell and singer Bono.
Tuesday was the 20th anniversary of the day when Mandela and South Africa's last apartheid-era president, F.W. de Klerk, received the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to bring peace to their country.
Mandela said in his acceptance speech at the time: "We live with the hope that as she battles to remake herself, South Africa will be like a microcosm of the new world that is striving to be born."
The sounds of horns and cheering filled the stadium ahead of the ceremony. The rain, seen as a blessing among South Africa's majority black population, enthused the crowd.
"In our culture the rain is a blessing," said Harry Tshabalala, a driver for the justice ministry. "Only great, great people are memorialized with it. Rain is life. This is perfect weather for us on this occasion."
People blew on vuvuzelas, the plastic horn that was widely used during the World Cup soccer tournament in 2010, and sang songs from the era of the anti-apartheid struggle decades ago.
"It is a moment of sadness celebrated by song and dance, which is what we South Africans do," said Xolisa Madywabe, CEO of a South African investment firm.
The soccer venue was also the spot where Mandela made his last public appearance at the closing ceremony of the World Cup. After the memorial, his body will lie in state for three days at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, once the seat of white power, before burial Sunday in his rural childhood village of Qunu in Eastern Cape Province.
Police promised tight security, locking down roads kilometers (miles) around the stadium. However, the first crowds entered the stadium without being searched.
John Allen, a 48-year-old pastor from the U.S. state of Arkansas, said he once met Mandela at a shopping center in South Africa with his sons.
"He joked with my youngest and asked if he had voted for Bill Clinton," Allen said. "He just zeroed in on my 8-year-old for the three to five minutes we talked."
___
Follow Jon Gambrell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.
___
Follow Alan Clendenning on Twitter at www.twitter.com/alanclendenning.

Jameis Winston leads crowded Heisman field to New York

When asked if Jameis Winston was the best player in the country Saturday, Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher let out a short laugh.
"I'm going to say this," Fisher said. "If he isn't it's a short roll call, I'll promise you that."
Florida State QB Jameis Winston (AP Photo)
Winston, a redshirt freshman quarterback, was named one of six of Heisman Trophy finalists Monday, along with Texas A&M's Johnny Manziel, Alabama's AJ McCarron, Auburn's Tre Mason, Boston College's Andre Williams and Northern Illinois' Jordan Lynch.
MORE: Top 10 freakish athletes in BCS | Week 15 photos | Bowl matchups
Winston set FBS records for a freshman in passing yards (3,820) and TDs (38) in the 45-7 win against Duke in the ACC Championship Game on Saturday.
"It means a lot, but as a teammate and having the guys right here beside me, our team is trying to make history," Winston said. "We're trying not to look at individual stats and things like that."
LINEMAKERS: Winston the favorite on our mock Heisman board
Winston’s breakout season hasn’t been without controversy. He was investigated for sexual assault, but was cleared of those charges on Dec. 5. Florida State cornerback Lamarcus Joyner said the adversity has made Winston a better leader.
PHOTOS: All-time Heisman Trophy winners
"To keep all that weight on his shoulders and step up like a grown man just because of his brothers, he's a special young man," Joyner said. "He deserves everything that is coming to him."
The Heisman Trophy presentation is Saturday. Winston leads No. 1 Florida State (12-0) against No. 2 Auburn (11-1) in the BCS championship on Jan. 6.

THE FINALISTS

QB: Jameis Winston, Fr., Florida State
Stats: 3,820 passing yards, 38 TDs, 10 INTs
Worth knowing: Winston is trying to become the third Florida State quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy, joining Charlie Ward (1993) and Chris Weinke (1999).
RB: Andre Williams, Sr., Boston College
Stats: 2,102 rushing yards, 17 TDs
Worth knowing: Williams has the ninth highest single-season rushing total in FBS history.
QB: A.J. McCarron, Sr., QB, Alabama
Stats: 2,676 passing yards, 26 TDs, 5 INTs
Worth knowing: McCarron is 36-3 as a starter and has won two BCS championships at Alabama.
QB: Johnny Manziel, So., QB, Texas A&M
Stats: The defending Heisman Trophy winner actually had more passing yards (3,732) and TDs (33) in 2013.
Worth knowing: Manziel became the first freshman to win the Heisman when he took home the award last year.
RB: Tre Mason, Jr., RB, Auburn
Stats: Mason's 304-yard effort in the SEC championship game helped, and he tied for third in the nation with 22 rushing TDs.
Worth knowing: Mason is not far behind Bo Jackson's single-season rushing record (1,786 yards) at Auburn. Jackson won the Heisman in 1985 and had 17 TDs. Mason has 1,621 rushing yards.
QB: Jordan Lynch, Sr., Northern Illinois
Stats: 1,881 rushing yards, 22 TDs and 2,676 passing yards with 23 TD passes
Worth knowing: No non-BCS school player has finished above third in the voting.

Monday, December 9, 2013

BCS championship: Florida State vs. Auburn will play for title


For weeks it looked certain that the BCS would go out with a bang.
Undefeated teams from power conferences were piling up with space for only two in Pasadena on Jan. 6.
But a series of upsets, culminating with Michigan State’s win against Ohio State on Saturday night wrapped up the final BCS matchup nice and neat.
HAYES: With FSU, Auburn — last team with ball wins
MORE: SEC photos | ACC photos | Big Ten photos | Spartans fans get wild
Florida State, No. 1 in the final BCS standings, will play No. 2 Auburn, which began the season unranked and bull-rushed its way through the field one season after finishing 3-9 and 0-8 in the SEC.
It's a matchup that most didn't see when the season began. In fact, Sporting News ranked FSU No. 18 to start the season. As for Auburn, SN had the Tigers finishing fifth in the SEC West. "Guarded optimism has greeted the start of the Malzahn era on the Plains, but despite Auburn's rocket ride to glory in 2010, realistic fans know the Tigers' football fortunes won't be rebuilt in one season," SN wrote in its preseason analysis.
The Seminoles will be making their second consecutive BCS bowl appearance. Last season, they beat Northern Illinois in the Orange Bowl.
Auburn QB Nick Marshall (AP Photo)
“I built our program like I thought we need to build it to win a championship,” said FSU coach Jimbo Fisher, who is a former QB coach at Auburn. “We don’t model ourselves after nobody. We’re Florida State, we do things the way we do them and the way I think you have to play to win a championship and the kind of team you have to have to win a championship. That’s the way I think we tried to build this team.”

The Seminoles (12-0) moved just ahead of Oregon into the No. 2 spot in Week 11. After the Ducks lost to Stanford, the discussion turned to which team — No. 2 FSU or No. 3 Ohio State — would play top-ranked Alabama for the BCS title.
Then Auburn stunned Alabama on the game’s final play last week and the debate became something different: Is a one-loss SEC team a better choice to play for the BCS title than an undefeated Big Ten champion in a down year for the Big Ten?
Auburn (12-1) beat Missouri in the SEC Championship Game and the Spartans beat the Buckeyes and the argument was no more.

Here’s the BCS bowl games:

BCS Championship (Jan. 6): Florida State vs. Auburn
Orange Bowl (Jan. 3): Clemson vs. Ohio State
Sugar Bowl (Jan. 2): Alabama vs. Oklahoma
Fiesta Bowl (Jan. 1): Baylor vs. UCF
Rose Bowl (Jan. 1): Michigan State vs. Stanford

Final BCS standings

1. Florida State: .9957
2. Auburn: .9638
3. Alabama: .9061
4. Michigan State: .8600
5. Stanford: .8191
6. Baylor: .7722
7. Ohio State: .7705
8. Missouri: .7256
9. South Carolina: .7152
10. Oregon: .5811
MORE: Bowl schedule, matchups
11. Oklahoma: .5756
12. Clemson: .5553
13. Oklahoma State: .5233
14. Arizona State: .4416
15. UCF: .4343
16. LSU: .4322
17. UCLA: .3703
18. Louisville: .3199
19. Wisconsin: .2365
20. Fresno State: .1675
21. Texas A&M: .1663
22. Georgia: .1594
23. Northern Illinois: .1572
24. Duke: .1134
25. USC: .0672

Big storm dumps snow on East Coast, travel dicey


By DAN GELSTON and MICHAEL RUBINKAM

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A plodding storm that dumped heavy snow on the unsuspecting Mid-Atlantic region threatened to make roads dicey in the northeast corridor for Monday's commute while travel disruptions continued to ripple across the country days after the same system first began wreaking havoc in the skies.
The seemingly never-ending storm that coated parts of Texas in ice struck with unexpected force on the East Coast, blanketing some spots in a foot of snow and grinding highways to a halt.
Travel problems could linger into Monday afternoon, with freezing rain and icy conditions sticking around as wintry weather stretched from Missouri to Maine.
The storm canceled more than 2,500 flights Sunday and delayed thousands more, according to estimates from the website Flightaware.com. More than 1,000 of Monday's flights were already canceled, the greatest share from Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, which was still reeling from the effects of the ice storm that brought North Texas to a standstill.
The forecast for Monday remained up in the air for the northeast, depending on how quickly the system moves and temperatures rise, according to the National Weather Service. Meanwhile, a winter storm warning was in effect until 10 a.m. for Washington, D.C., and Baltimore where up to a quarter inch of ice was expected because of freezing rain that could cause power outages.
The expectation was for another weather system moving out of Virginia to follow the same path as Sunday's storm overnight. It was expected to dump icy drizzle and eventually freezing rain through the New York City area and into Boston, National Weather Service meteorologist Greg Heavener said.
Indeed, slippery conditions were reported overnight in the New York City area: a crash involving about 20 vehicles closed southbound lanes of Interstate 95 in Greenwich, Conn., for a couple of hours. No serious injuries were immediately reported.
Forecasters said air travel would likely remain a hassle, too.
"I think the further north you look, departures and arrivals could be affected because of icy issues," Heavener said.
What was forecast in the Philadelphia area to be a tame storm system with about an inch of snow gradually changing over to rain mushroomed into a full-blown snow storm. Bands of heavy snow made for a wide range of accumulation: a foot was reported in Newark, Del. Philadelphia International Airport received 8.6 inches, more than it had all of last year. Other areas received far less: a little over an inch was reported in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley, which usually is hit harder than downtown Philadelphia.
Sunday's snow fell so heavily in Philadelphia that yard markers at Lincoln Financial Field - where the Eagles beat the Detroit Lions - were completely obscured. It was almost as bad in Pittsburgh, where the snow intensified after the opening kickoff.
Philadelphia fan Dave Hamilton, of Ivyland, layered up for the game in Eagles gear.
"Twenty-seven years I've been a season-ticket holder, I've never seen snow at the game like this," he said. "It just kept coming down."
Heavy snow in the Philadelphia area led to a number of accidents, including a fatal crash on the Pennsylvania Turnpike that spawned fender-benders involving 50 cars, stranding some motorists for up to seven hours. More than two dozen vehicles were involved in another series of crashes on nearby Interstate 78.
Paul Jones, 24, a youth hockey coach from Warminster in the Philadelphia suburbs, was on his way to a game in Lancaster when he got stuck - along with his fiancee, another coach and three players - in a major backup on the turnpike.
The roadway was "snow-covered, slick," Jones said in an interview from the car, where he was a passenger and had been at a standstill for more than an hour.
"People are in and out" of their vehicles, he said. "Kids are having a snowball fight on the side of the road, making snow angels, people are walking their dogs.
Philadelphia International Airport spokeswoman Stacey Jackson said a number of passengers were expected to remain in the airport overnight since area hotels had been full for several days. She said staff would hand out pillows and blankets to travelers to make them "feel at home even though they are not."
Air passengers in the Washington-area experienced increasing delays at both Dulles International and Ronald Reagan Washington National airports.
Virginia, parts of West Virginia and the metropolitan Washington, D.C., area braced for blackouts under steady freezing rain, wet snow and sleet. Parts of northwest and southwest Virginia and southern West Virginia got snow, while sleet and freezing rain prevailed west and north of Richmond.
In Maryland, a chain-reaction accident on Interstate 81 in Washington County involving more than 20 vehicles delayed snow removal efforts for hours. The highway was closed for more than three hours after a tractor-trailer ran into the median to avoid cars that had spun out. It was hit by another tractor-trailer that overturned and spilled its load. Several other tractor-trailers ran off the road and jackknifed as their drivers tried to avoid the crash.
But the nasty weather wasn't limited to the East Coast. Nebraska and Iowa saw snow; multiple weather-related crashes were reported in Wisconsin, including two that were fatal; thousands of customers lost power in Mississippi because of sleet and freezing rain.
A snowstorm that hit along the Utah-Arizona border left hundreds of travelers stranded on Interstate 15 overnight into Sunday. The Arizona Highway Patrol said passengers in about 300 vehicles became stranded after up to 10 inches of snow and slick road conditions prompted the closure of part of the highway. There were no immediate reports of serious injuries.
The specter of bad driving conditions for Monday's commute had some motorists concerned not just about getting to work, but getting out at all. New Jersey's new U.S. senator, Cory Booker, tweeted a promise to one Mount Holly resident to help him shovel out his car if he still needed the help in the morning.