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The families of two frail and elderly pensioners who died after being urgently moved from their troubled care homes have today criticised the Government's watchdog for the rushed closures. After more than a month of the authorities refusing to identify Alfred Dodd and Winifred Lake, their names were today revealed. The 85 and 91-year-old died days after they were evacuated from private care homes Merok Park in Surrey and nearby Grantley Court in Sutton, respectively. Their families fear the sudden closures caused the dementia sufferers unnecessary stress and anxiety. They want to know why a damning inspection report from health watchdogs went unpublished for eight months.
@highlight
Pensioners who died following bungled care home closures finally named
@highlight
Officials refused to reveal 85-year-old Alfred Dodd's name and how he died
@highlight
He died less than 48 hours after he was moved from Merok Park care home
@highlight
Winifred Lake, 91, died after stressful move from Grantley Court care home
@highlight
Families have questioned why the sudden closures were rushed by CQC
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Coroner, the local council, police and the NHS refused to name the pair
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Residents left shivering as Merok Park shut and ambulances did not arrive
@highlight
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But inquests have not been opened into the tragic pairs' deaths | Mr Dodd’s family accuse the @placeholder of closing the home at too little notice, causing immense upheaval. | [
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@highlight
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Estrada spoke of the moment he returned to find Figoski unresponsive and on a stretcher By Jill Reilly PUBLISHED: 12:20 EST, 29 January 2013 | UPDATED: 16:22 EST, 29 January 2013 An NYPD detective wept in court as he described chasing down a suspected cop-killer only to return to the crime scene and find his partner dying from a gunshot wound to the face Glenn Estrada was chasing Lamont Pride after he allegedly murdered policeman Peter Figoski during a botched robbery in December 2011. But today in court Estrada spoke of the moment he returned to find Figoski unresponsive and on a stretcher.
@highlight
Glenn Estrada was chasing Lamont Pride after he allegedly murdered his policeman Peter Figoski during a botched robbery in December 2011
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(CNN) -- On Monday, the world's leading technology companies, including Google and Microsoft, published an open letter to President Obama and Congress demanding reform of U.S. privacy laws to restore the public's "trust in the Internet." This comes after what seems like an endless series of revelations about government surveillance from the secret documents leaked by Edward Snowden. Let's start with the latest: American and British spies have gone into online fantasy games to snoop on players, and to see if any militants are communicating with each other dressed as elves or gnomes. Last week, the Washington Post reported that the National Security Agency is "collecting billions of records a day to track the location of mobile phone users around the world." And we learned recently that the NSA hacked fiber-optic cables and infected 50,000 networks with malware.
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The world's leading tech companies asked President Obama to reform privacy laws
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Casey Oppenheim: The scale of Big Brother spying is beyond our imagination
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Oppenheim: In this atmosphere of anxiety, more people are trying to find privacy solutions | Revelations of @placeholder spying even contributed to President Obama's approval rating sinking to a new low. | [
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Casey Oppenheim: The scale of Big Brother spying is beyond our imagination
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(CNN) -- It started with a haircut. The year was 1960, and Bela Guttmann sat in his chair at the local barber's shop. Guttman, one of the most iconic football coaches of his day, had just led Portuguese club Benfica to the European Cup and achieved legendary status. But that was not enough for him -- he wanted more. While pondering his plans, a gentleman in the next chair, who happened to be visiting the country as coach of touring Brazilian side Sao Paulo, let Guttmann in on a little secret. He told the Hungarian about "A Pantera Negra" -- the man they were calling "The Black Panther."
@highlight
Eusebio, 71, died from a heart attack, former club says
@highlight
The striker was considered one of the sport's greatest players
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@highlight
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@highlight
Eusebio, 71, died from a heart attack, former club says
@highlight
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@highlight
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@highlight
Compatriot Cristiano Ronaldo among those to pay tribute | That he did not win one does not detract from the impact he made on @placeholder and on football around the world. | [
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(CNN) -- An American being held in a Nicaraguan prison said he is innocent and described his treatment in a "hellhole" in an exclusive phone interview with CNN's Anderson Cooper on Thursday. "I don't know the reason that I'm here," Jason Puracal said. "That's been a mystery from the very beginning. What the motives behind the police and the prosecution have been." Puracal, a 35-year-old from Washington state, has been behind bars since August 2010, when Nicaraguan authorities raided his real estate office in the coastal tourist city of San Juan del Sur. CNN profiled Puracal in February. In November, a Nicaraguan judge found Puracal guilty of money laundering, drug trafficking and organized crime and sentenced the American to 22 years. But a chorus of supporters say that there is no evidence to support the charges and that Puracal's prosecution was rife with legal mistakes and misconduct.
@highlight
Jason Puracal was convicted of drug trafficking, organized crime and money laundering in 2011
@highlight
Puracal tells Anderson Cooper there is no evidence in case against him; experts agree
@highlight
U.N. group says imprisoning American is a violation of international law
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(CNN) -- Two of the richest organizations in sport announced Tuesday that they have partnered to buy a Major League Soccer franchise in New York. English Premier League side Manchester City will be the majority owner with MLB giants New York Yankees also claiming a stake in the team -- which will be named New York City FC (NYCFC). The MLS currently has 19 clubs -- including the New York Bulls -- with NYCFC looking to join the league for the 2015 season. "This is a transformational development that will elevate the league to new heights in this country," said MLS Commissioner Don Garber.
@highlight
New York City FC to become 20th club in Major League Soccer
@highlight
EPL Manchester City and MLB giants New York Yankees to partner in franchise
@highlight
Abu-Dhabi owned Man City will be majority owner
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(CNN) -- A juror in the George Zimmerman trial says she feels the man who killed Trayvon Martin "got away with murder." "George Zimmerman got away with murder, but you can't get away from God. And at the end of the day, he's going to have a lot of questions and answers he has to deal with," Juror B29 told ABC, according to an article posted on the network's website Thursday. "(But) the law couldn't prove it." The juror, who used only her first name of Maddy out of concerns for her safety, told ABC that she and others on the panel felt Zimmerman was guilty, but that wasn't enough.
@highlight
NEW: Trayvon Martin's mom: It's "devastating" to hear Juror B29's comments
@highlight
"The law couldn't prove" that Zimmerman was guilty, a juror tells ABC
@highlight
"George Zimmerman got away with murder, but you can't get away from God," she says
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By David Kent Southampton's current crop of stars are remaining upbeat despite the fact they have lost so many of their teammates. Jose Fonte has taken to Instagram to publicise Southampton's high spirits inside the Premier League's camp ahead of the new season. Southampton have had a summer to forget with Rickie Lambert, Luke Shaw, Adam Lallana, Calum Chambers and Dejan Lovren all leaving St Mary's since the end of last season. VIDEO Scroll down to watch Southampton's remaining players having fun in the water Making a splash: The remaining Southampton players will hope Saints dip into the transfer market very soon
@highlight
Jose Fonte takes to Instagram to display high spirits in Southampton camp
@highlight
Adam Lallana and Luke Shaw among stars who have left St Mary's
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Former manager Mauricio Pochettino also decided to leave the club | Remaining upbeat: @placeholder is one of the few survivors from last season | [
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By Nick Pisa In Rome PUBLISHED: 09:32 EST, 22 June 2012 | UPDATED: 10:27 EST, 22 June 2012 A model who was a guest at former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's infamous bunga bunga parties today told a court she knew of incriminating sexual photographs showing him with a teenage belly dancer. Imane Fadil, 26, described how she had heard that the pictures showed twice-married Berlusconi, 74, with his head resting on the stomach of then 17-year-old belly dancer Karima El Mahroug. He is accused of paying the teenager for sex, as well as dozens of other women, who were guests at the debauched parties he hosted where guests dressed as nuns and police officers before performing pole dances.
@highlight
Model Imane Fadil, 26, claims images show twice-married Berlusconi, 74, with his head on the stomach of then 17-year-old Karima El Mahroug
@highlight
Says she has seen photos of Miss El Mahroug 'naked as mother nature had intended' on Berlusconi's desk at Arcore near Milan, the parties venue | Prosecutors say Berlusconi had sex with 33 prostitutes at his villa over the course of several evenings but he has stressed that the parties were merely 'convivial evenings' and that nothing untoward happened - a sentiment echoed by Miss @placeholder. | [
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The government is warning that taking the psoriasis drug Raptiva could result in serious brain infection and even death. Raptiva may cause a serious brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. The Food and Drug Administration cited three confirmed cases, and a possible fourth, of people diagnosed with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) after being treated with Raptiva. "Three of those patients have died," the FDA said in a public health advisory. "All four patients were treated with the drug for more than three years." None was receiving other treatments that suppress the immune system. Raptiva's product labeling was revised in October to highlight a boxed warning about the risks of life-threatening infections, including PML.
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The government is warning that taking the psoriasis drug Raptiva could result in serious brain infection and even death. Raptiva may cause a serious brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. The Food and Drug Administration cited three confirmed cases, and a possible fourth, of people diagnosed with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) after being treated with Raptiva. "Three of those patients have died," the FDA said in a public health advisory. "All four patients were treated with the drug for more than three years." None was receiving other treatments that suppress the immune system. Raptiva's product labeling was revised in October to highlight a boxed warning about the risks of life-threatening infections, including PML.
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A woman who had a five-month-old baby die in her care has given a tearful apology to the girl's parents in a Brisbane courtroom. Emma Hicks dropped off her daughter Indianna at the home of Tracey Cross, who provided services for the Sunshine Coast Family Day Care Scheme, on the morning of July 20, 2012. That afternoon, Ms Cross checked on Indianna to find her laying face down, limp and pale. Attempts to revive her on the kitchen floor were unsuccessful and she was pronounced dead at Caloundra Hospital, a coronial inquest on Brisbane heard on Monday. Scroll down for video
@highlight
Mother Emma Hicks dropped off her baby Indianna at home of carer Tracey Cross on July 20, 2012
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That afternoon Ms Cross found the baby girl laying face down on the kitchen floor, a Brisbane court was told
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Attempts to revive her were unsuccessful and she was pronounced dead at hospital
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During the coronial inquest on Monday, Ms Cross said she thought she had been responsible
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Ms Hicks says she was reluctant to leave her in Ms Cross' care as she could smell cigarette smoke and the carer recently had a cold
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Ms Cross rejected these claims and the two-day inquest continues | 'I knew @placeholder was going to turn up and I was worried about who was going to tell her. | [
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Four bronze angels which were built for Cardinal Wolsey's tomb but vanished into obscurity for nearly 500 years are being bought for the nation - at a price of £2.8million. The opulent metre-high statues were made for Henry VIII's chief adviser in 1524 but disappeared after he fell out of the king's favour, at one point adorning the gateposts of a country manor. Now the popularity of BBC drama Wolf Hall, based on Hilary Mantel's double Booker Prize-winning book series, has helped thrust the sculptures into the limelight - and raised £87,000 from the public. Scroll down for video Preserved: Originally designed for Cardinal Wolsey's tomb, these bronze angels will be preserved permanently in Victoria & Albert Museum in London after chiefs raised £2.8million to but them for the nation
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Metre-high works made in 1524 to show wealth of Henry VIII's adviser
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All four had perched atop gateposts of a Northamptonshire country home
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Popularity of BBC's Wolf Hall has helped public campaign raise £87,000
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The rest of the cash comes from national art funds and Friends of V&A | 'We are very grateful to everyone who contributed to our fundraising appeal to ensure these outstanding sculptures, which were thought to be lost, are reunited and preserved at the @placeholder for future generations.' | [
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Manchester City star Yaya Toure says his greatest Champions League memory is keeping out Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo as Barcelona won the 2009 Champions League final. The powerhouse midfielder was deployed at centre back in the final in Rome alongside former United defender Gerard Pique as Barca ran out 2-0 winners and prevented Sir Alex Ferguson's side winning back-to-back European Cups. Yaya Toure holds Cristiano Ronaldo at bay during the 2009 Champions League final in Rome Wayne Rooney (left) challenges Lionel Messi, who would score Barca's second goal, during the match Yaya Toure is now in his fifth season at Manchester City after joining from Barcelona in 2010
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Yaya Toure discusses his greatest Champions League memories
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Manchester City star was in the Barcelona side that won 2009 final
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Toure started in defence up against Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney | Yaya Toure and @placeholder managed to keep Ronaldo and Rooney off the scoresheet in Rome | [
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(CNN) -- At least 10 people being smuggled by boat died in the Gulf of Aden "after a two-day journey from Somalia to Yemen," the United Nations' refugee agency said Tuesday. "Ten Ethiopians suffocated en route to Yemen as the smugglers crammed and confined 25 people to the engine room with no ventilation," the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said. "Survivors claim that their bodies were thrown into the sea some seven hours after departure." There were reports that another four people reportedly died in waves, the agency said. This reportedly happened as "smugglers, fearing detection by the Yemeni navy, forced the remaining passengers to disembark too far from the coast. After the exhausting trip they were simply too tired to swim and succumbed to the rough sea."
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10 Ethiopians suffocated after smugglers crammed the engine room
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There were reports of another four people dying in waves
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The Horn of Africa has endured famine, warfare and political instability | More than 9,000 @placeholder and 27,000 Ethiopians have arrived in Yemen by boat so far this year. | [
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(CNN) -- At least 10 people being smuggled by boat died in the Gulf of Aden "after a two-day journey from Somalia to Yemen," the United Nations' refugee agency said Tuesday. "Ten Ethiopians suffocated en route to Yemen as the smugglers crammed and confined 25 people to the engine room with no ventilation," the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said. "Survivors claim that their bodies were thrown into the sea some seven hours after departure." There were reports that another four people reportedly died in waves, the agency said. This reportedly happened as "smugglers, fearing detection by the Yemeni navy, forced the remaining passengers to disembark too far from the coast. After the exhausting trip they were simply too tired to swim and succumbed to the rough sea."
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A couple who began their relationship after 'meeting' on Facebook have discovered that they have known each other since primary school and had even visited each other's houses as children. Saidee Bailey and Beau Samuelson were two years apart at Westbrook Hay Prep School in Hemel Hempstead, Herts, where they sat for a group photo in 2001. They barely knew each other and went on to separate secondary schools before starting their careers. Newly-engaged Beau Samuelson (left) and Saidee Bailey (right) discovered that they have known each other since childhood after reconnecting on Facebook When Saidee, 24, joined Facebook as a teenager she added lots of people from her primary school as 'friends' including her future husband.
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Saidee Bailey and Beau Samuelson reconnected on Facebook
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When Saidee first visited Beau's house she realised she had been there before, recognising a rocking horse she had played on as a child
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The couple got engaged in December last year | In 2013 out of the blue @placeholder, 25, asked her for a date after telling her he found her Facebook updates interesting. | [
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Saidee Bailey and Beau Samuelson reconnected on Facebook
@highlight
When Saidee first visited Beau's house she realised she had been there before, recognising a rocking horse she had played on as a child
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The couple got engaged in December last year | Construction worker Beau said that he was instantly attracted to @placeholder and their joint past was just added bonus. | [
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(CNN) -- Ernie Bender was lean and athletic; he skied and walked a lot, and would go snowshoeing every Wednesday with his friends. A golf course superintendent, he lived in Vail, Colorado, with his wife and three sons. One evening in 2000, he and his buddies decided to snowshoe up Vail Mountain and ride the gondola down. Bender complained of indigestion on the way up, which was odd because his last meal had been lunch. He told his friends he needed to sit down before getting on the gondola. After the group got in the cable car, he lost consciousness.
@highlight
Heart attack risk goes up in men over 45 and women over 55
@highlight
It can happen even earlier: Sage Stallone died at age 36
@highlight
Maintaining good blood pressure and normal weight can help reduce risk | But despite appearing healthy, @placeholder died of a heart attack at age 47. | [
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Heart attack risk goes up in men over 45 and women over 55
@highlight
It can happen even earlier: Sage Stallone died at age 36
@highlight
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Heart attack risk goes up in men over 45 and women over 55
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It can happen even earlier: Sage Stallone died at age 36
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Newcastle head coach John Carver insists he is relaxed about three of his players attending the BRIT Awards after-show party. Tim Krul, Jack Colback and Steven Taylor were pictured in London in the early hours of Thursday morning having been at the late-night bash in Covent Garden, along with the likes of Ant n Dec, Ed Sheeran and Rita Ora. Goalkeeper Krul and midfielder Colback, however, were back on Tyneside later in the day. Taylor, meanwhile, is out injured with a ruptured Achilles. Jack Colback made it into training on Thursday despite attending the BRIT Awards after-show party Steven Taylor looked like he'd had a long night as he got into a taxi after attending the Warner after-party
@highlight
Newcastle's Steven Taylor, Tim Krul and Jack Colback attended the BRITs
@highlight
They later went to the Warner Music after-party near Covent Garden
@highlight
Head coach John Carver has said he is relaxed about the situation
@highlight
Krul and Taylor both turned up to training on Thursday
@highlight
Taylor is expected to be out for rest of the season with a ruptured Achilles
@highlight
Newcastle are in Premier League action against Aston Villa on Saturday | Newcastle boss John Carver revealed both @placeholder and Colback turned up for training on Thursday | [
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(CNN) -- Reaction was swift when the website TMZ released an audio recording in which a man purported to be Donald Sterling, the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers pro basketball team, made racist remarks. The n-word wasn't used, but the male voice on the audio recording complained that his girlfriend posted Instagram photos of herself with black men, including former pro basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson. "Don't bring him to my games," the male voice commanded. Current and former players castigated Sterling. Talking heads called for the National Basketball Association to kick him out of the game. Then another website posted another, similar audio recording. More angry words. This uproar won't die down any time soon.
@highlight
Kevin Johnson, mayor of Sacramento, now speaks for the players union
@highlight
Clippers player Chris Paul is in an uncomfortable spotlight
@highlight
Adam Silver faces his first test as NBA commissioner
@highlight
Donald Sterling has made millions off the Clippers | Sterling hasn't commented extensively since the audio recordings were released, but a @placeholder official said Sterling is "emphatic that what is reflected on that recording is not consistent with, nor does it reflect his views, beliefs or feelings." | [
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(CNN) -- Reaction was swift when the website TMZ released an audio recording in which a man purported to be Donald Sterling, the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers pro basketball team, made racist remarks. The n-word wasn't used, but the male voice on the audio recording complained that his girlfriend posted Instagram photos of herself with black men, including former pro basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson. "Don't bring him to my games," the male voice commanded. Current and former players castigated Sterling. Talking heads called for the National Basketball Association to kick him out of the game. Then another website posted another, similar audio recording. More angry words. This uproar won't die down any time soon.
@highlight
Kevin Johnson, mayor of Sacramento, now speaks for the players union
@highlight
Clippers player Chris Paul is in an uncomfortable spotlight
@highlight
Adam Silver faces his first test as NBA commissioner
@highlight
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@highlight
Kevin Johnson, mayor of Sacramento, now speaks for the players union
@highlight
Clippers player Chris Paul is in an uncomfortable spotlight
@highlight
Adam Silver faces his first test as NBA commissioner
@highlight
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LONDON, England (CNN) -- The most eagerly anticipated animated film this year hits big screens this weekend, as "The Simpsons Movie" opens worldwide. The Screening Room spoke to creator Matt Groening and writer Al Jean in London about everyone's favorite two-dimensional yellow family. Simpsons supremo Matt Groening with his creations at the film's premiere in Springfield, Vermont Matt Groening told the Screening Room that fans had driven the demand for the movie. "We've had fans clamoring for a movie for the past 18 years," he said. The film has taken four years to come to fruition, as writer Al Jean explained. "What really held us up for a long time was to have enough people to do the show and the movie," he said. "We talked for a while about doing the movie after the show is done, but the show is never done! So it really started in earnest in 2003, when we started working on this story that became the movie."
@highlight
Simpsons creator Matt Groening: Movie is culmination of 20 years' hard work
@highlight
Writer Al Jean says success is down to show's universal appeal
@highlight
Movie uses traditional hand-drawn animation techniques | @placeholder sees the film as the culmination of two decades of hard graft. | [
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A minute's silence will be held tonight in memory of a mother and her newborn baby who were found dead in Bristol, before a ceremony to celebrate 150 years of Clifton Suspension Bridge takes place. There had been calls for the ceremony to be cancelled after the bodies of Charlotte Bevan and her newborn daughter Zaani Tiana were found in the city last week. But organisers decided the celebration of the bridge, which was designed in 1829, will go ahead with a silence before hand to allow people to pay their respects to mother and daughter. A minute's silence will be held tonight in memory of Bristol mother Charlotte Bevan and her daughter who were found dead last week, before a ceremony to mark the 150th anniversary of Clifton Suspension Bridge begins
@highlight
Celebrations start today for 150th anniversary of Clifton Suspension Bridge
@highlight
Had been calls for event to be cancelled following death of Charlotte Bevan
@highlight
Miss Bevan was found dead in Avon Gorge after leaving hospital with baby
@highlight
Instead a one minute's silence will be held at historic bridge in Bristol
@highlight
There will then be fireworks and a procession taking place on Monday
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A minute's silence will be held tonight in memory of a mother and her newborn baby who were found dead in Bristol, before a ceremony to celebrate 150 years of Clifton Suspension Bridge takes place. There had been calls for the ceremony to be cancelled after the bodies of Charlotte Bevan and her newborn daughter Zaani Tiana were found in the city last week. But organisers decided the celebration of the bridge, which was designed in 1829, will go ahead with a silence before hand to allow people to pay their respects to mother and daughter. A minute's silence will be held tonight in memory of Bristol mother Charlotte Bevan and her daughter who were found dead last week, before a ceremony to mark the 150th anniversary of Clifton Suspension Bridge begins
@highlight
Celebrations start today for 150th anniversary of Clifton Suspension Bridge
@highlight
Had been calls for event to be cancelled following death of Charlotte Bevan
@highlight
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@highlight
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@highlight
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@highlight
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On September 13 Gabriel Agbonlahor bundled the ball past Simon Mignolet at Anfield to send Aston Villa second in the Barclays Premier League and maintain their unbeaten start to the season. Four days later Villa boss Paul Lambert was rewarded with a contract extension until 2018. Villa fans haven’t seen the net ripple since – at the right end anyway. Forty seven days, 531 minutes of football and five defeats have passed since, with 13 goals flying past Brad Guzan in the Villa goal. Paul Lambert (left) and Roy Keane's (right) side have lost five on the trot in the Premier League
@highlight
Aston Villa have not scored in 47 days, 531 minutes of football
@highlight
Cristiano Ronaldo has scored 19 for club and country since
@highlight
Watford and Leeds have had five managers since September 13
@highlight
Villa have lost five on the bounce after a fine start to the season
@highlight
They face Tottenham on Sunday, and need to score within 34 minutes
@highlight
If they don't manage it, they will break into the Premier League top 10 of minutes without scoring
@highlight
Cristiano Ronaldo has scored 19 for club and country
@highlight
146 goals have been scored by the other 19 Premier League clubs
@highlight
Mario Balotelli has scored twice for Liverpool (in all competitions)
@highlight
Watford and Leeds have had five managers (Garcia, McKinlay, Jokanovic, Milanic and Redfearn) | Villa's last goal came in a win to remember, beating @placeholder 1-0 at Anfield on September 13 | [
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Real Madrid supporters booed coach Carlo Ancelotti and goalkeeper Iker Casillas but saw their team win 2-0 against Deportivo to stay clear at the top of La Liga. There were even a few jeers for an out-of-sorts for Cristiano Ronaldo when he blasted a second half free-kick over but the Ballon D’Or set up the second for Karim Benzema after Isco had scored the first. The worst whistles were reserved for Ancelotti and Casillas and were audible when the team and managers’ names were announced before kick-off. Casillas’ error had cost Real Madrid the opening goal seven days earlier in the 4-0 derby day defeat to Atletico Madrid and Ancelotti was criticised for his team selection but as with most of the abuse levelled at Real players from their own fans – most recently to Gareth Bale – it was incomprehensible especially as it came at the start of the game and seemed to help ensure Madrid made a nervous start.
@highlight
Real Madrid opened up a four point lead in La Liga with a 2-0 defeat of Deportivo La Coruna
@highlight
Spain international Isco opened the scoring after being assisted by Alvaro Arbeloa in the first-half
@highlight
Karim Benzema silenced his personal critics again with a dinked finish from Cristiano Ronaldo's pass
@highlight
Head coach Carlo Ancelotti and goalkeeper Iker Casillas were jeered by Los Blancos supporters | @placeholder kisses his tattooed arm as Real Madrid take control after a lively start from the visitors | [
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By David Williams, James Slack and Stephen Wright PUBLISHED: 08:09 EST, 8 May 2012 | UPDATED: 19:22 EST, 8 May 2012 Thousands of passengers flew to America from UK airports last week unaware they were being guarded by US air marshals amid fears that Al Qaeda was planning to explode a bomb on a transatlantic flight. Security officials in the US said hundreds of armed sky marshals flew to Europe to accompany flights after intelligence that the terror network could be looking to mark the first anniversary of the killing of Osama Bin Laden by special forces in Pakistan.
@highlight
U.S. media says marshals sent to Europe and placed on scores of flights
@highlight
Gatwick Airport had '100 per cent coverage', according to U.S. reports
@highlight
Bomb plot mastermind believed to be killed in CIA drone attack on Sunday
@highlight
Device believed to be absent of metal and 'undetectable'
@highlight
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By David Williams, James Slack and Stephen Wright PUBLISHED: 08:09 EST, 8 May 2012 | UPDATED: 19:22 EST, 8 May 2012 Thousands of passengers flew to America from UK airports last week unaware they were being guarded by US air marshals amid fears that Al Qaeda was planning to explode a bomb on a transatlantic flight. Security officials in the US said hundreds of armed sky marshals flew to Europe to accompany flights after intelligence that the terror network could be looking to mark the first anniversary of the killing of Osama Bin Laden by special forces in Pakistan.
@highlight
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@highlight
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@highlight
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By David Williams, James Slack and Stephen Wright PUBLISHED: 08:09 EST, 8 May 2012 | UPDATED: 19:22 EST, 8 May 2012 Thousands of passengers flew to America from UK airports last week unaware they were being guarded by US air marshals amid fears that Al Qaeda was planning to explode a bomb on a transatlantic flight. Security officials in the US said hundreds of armed sky marshals flew to Europe to accompany flights after intelligence that the terror network could be looking to mark the first anniversary of the killing of Osama Bin Laden by special forces in Pakistan.
@highlight
U.S. media says marshals sent to Europe and placed on scores of flights
@highlight
Gatwick Airport had '100 per cent coverage', according to U.S. reports
@highlight
Bomb plot mastermind believed to be killed in CIA drone attack on Sunday
@highlight
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By David Williams, James Slack and Stephen Wright PUBLISHED: 08:09 EST, 8 May 2012 | UPDATED: 19:22 EST, 8 May 2012 Thousands of passengers flew to America from UK airports last week unaware they were being guarded by US air marshals amid fears that Al Qaeda was planning to explode a bomb on a transatlantic flight. Security officials in the US said hundreds of armed sky marshals flew to Europe to accompany flights after intelligence that the terror network could be looking to mark the first anniversary of the killing of Osama Bin Laden by special forces in Pakistan.
@highlight
U.S. media says marshals sent to Europe and placed on scores of flights
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Gatwick Airport had '100 per cent coverage', according to U.S. reports
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Bomb plot mastermind believed to be killed in CIA drone attack on Sunday
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LONDON, England (CNN) -- When Danish auteur Lars von Trier presented his gothic thriller, "Antichrist" at Cannes Film Festival last month, it was greeted with cat-calls, jeers and, at times, disbelieving laughter. Danish auteur Lars von Trier has been making films that shock, provoke and impress for over 40 years. Filmmakers are expected to give audiences a hard time at Cannes and the two-hander starring Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg as a couple grieving the loss of a child is no exception. But it was the level of pornographic sex and visceral brutality that outraged some and astonished many. Von Trier was labeled a woman-hater for the wince-inducingly horrific final scene in which female lead Charlotte Gainsbourg takes a pair of rusty scissors to her genitals and performs a DIY clitoridectomy right to camera.
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Pornographic sex and visceral violence in "Antichrist" shocked early audiences
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Von Trier's "The Idiots" (1998) was first mainstream film to show non-simulated sex | Misogyny couldn't be further from the truth, according to Von Trier, who says he sees himself up there on the screen: "I mostly see myself as the female character," the 53-year-old director told CNN in @placeholder. | [
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LONDON, England (CNN) -- When Danish auteur Lars von Trier presented his gothic thriller, "Antichrist" at Cannes Film Festival last month, it was greeted with cat-calls, jeers and, at times, disbelieving laughter. Danish auteur Lars von Trier has been making films that shock, provoke and impress for over 40 years. Filmmakers are expected to give audiences a hard time at Cannes and the two-hander starring Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg as a couple grieving the loss of a child is no exception. But it was the level of pornographic sex and visceral brutality that outraged some and astonished many. Von Trier was labeled a woman-hater for the wince-inducingly horrific final scene in which female lead Charlotte Gainsbourg takes a pair of rusty scissors to her genitals and performs a DIY clitoridectomy right to camera.
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Washington (CNN) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is back in the Middle East where he plans to propose a framework for a lasting peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, saying the time is close for tough decision-making. Kerry arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday and immediately headed for Jerusalem, the start of his ninth trip to the region since taking over as America's top diplomat nearly a year ago. A senior State Department official said Kerry's talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would be substantive. "It is an effort to provide agreed guidelines for a permanent status agreement, that is to say, a full and final peace treaty between the parties," the official said.
@highlight
NEW: "There is growing doubt in Israel" that Palestinians want peace, Netanyahu says
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Kerry will address issues with Israeli and Palestinian leaders in substantive way
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Talks this time are based on five months of intensive consultations with the leaders
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Washington (CNN) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is back in the Middle East where he plans to propose a framework for a lasting peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, saying the time is close for tough decision-making. Kerry arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday and immediately headed for Jerusalem, the start of his ninth trip to the region since taking over as America's top diplomat nearly a year ago. A senior State Department official said Kerry's talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would be substantive. "It is an effort to provide agreed guidelines for a permanent status agreement, that is to say, a full and final peace treaty between the parties," the official said.
@highlight
NEW: "There is growing doubt in Israel" that Palestinians want peace, Netanyahu says
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Washington (CNN) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is back in the Middle East where he plans to propose a framework for a lasting peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, saying the time is close for tough decision-making. Kerry arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday and immediately headed for Jerusalem, the start of his ninth trip to the region since taking over as America's top diplomat nearly a year ago. A senior State Department official said Kerry's talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would be substantive. "It is an effort to provide agreed guidelines for a permanent status agreement, that is to say, a full and final peace treaty between the parties," the official said.
@highlight
NEW: "There is growing doubt in Israel" that Palestinians want peace, Netanyahu says
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@highlight
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Washington (CNN) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is back in the Middle East where he plans to propose a framework for a lasting peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, saying the time is close for tough decision-making. Kerry arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday and immediately headed for Jerusalem, the start of his ninth trip to the region since taking over as America's top diplomat nearly a year ago. A senior State Department official said Kerry's talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would be substantive. "It is an effort to provide agreed guidelines for a permanent status agreement, that is to say, a full and final peace treaty between the parties," the official said.
@highlight
NEW: "There is growing doubt in Israel" that Palestinians want peace, Netanyahu says
@highlight
Kerry will address issues with Israeli and Palestinian leaders in substantive way
@highlight
Talks this time are based on five months of intensive consultations with the leaders
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(CNN) -- Two of Syria's neighbors joined growing international calls Monday for Damascus to halt its violent crackdown on anti-government protesters -- calls that came even as the violence itself continued. In Jordan, the state-run Petra News Agency reported that Prime Minister Marouf Al Bakhit had urged his Syrian counterpart, Adel Safar, "to immediately halt military operations, implement speedy reform and spare the blood of the Syrian people, expressing the kingdom's rejection and regret over the continued killing and escalation in neighboring Syria." Al Bakhit told Safar in a telephone call that "such scenes" must stop, adding that "hope still exists on the ability of our brothers in Syria to achieve this end."
@highlight
Jordan's prime minister calls on Damascus "to immediately halt military operations"
@highlight
"We hope our voice is heard," the Turkish foreign minister says
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Government-run media deny the claims of civilian casualties
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By Mark Duell A British Army sniper was fatally shot by a US fighter jet in Afghanistan after a mistake by the pilot meant he attacked the wrong site, an inquest heard today. Forces on the ground had called in air support after being attacked by insurgents in Helmand province. However, as well as having difficulty identifying landmarks when speaking to ground troops, the F18 pilot failed to enter coordinates for the strike. Fatally shot: New Zealand born Private John Howard, 23, was hit as he took cover in a ditch and died instantly As the pilot swooped to attack, Private John Howard, 23, was hit as he took cover in a ditch and died instantly, the inquest in Salisbury, Wiltshire, was told.
@highlight
Forces on ground called in air support after being attacked by insurgents
@highlight
F18 pilot had trouble identifying landmarks and did not enter coordinates
@highlight
Private John Howard, 23, was hit as he took cover in a ditch in Afghanistan
@highlight
Force had been sent to Nad-e Ali district to target 'compounds of interest'
@highlight
Coroner recorded narrative verdict and said 'communications issues' contributed to his death | An American @placeholder which had been circling the area was called in to carry out the attack, but a fault meant the pilot could not share his map with the ground commander, making it harder to be sure they were looking at the same point. | [
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Bangkok, Thailand (CNN) -- More than 2,000 illegally aborted fetuses have been recovered at a Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thai police said Friday. The fetuses were initially discovered earlier in the week, given away by the smell of decay at the Phai-nguern Chotinaram temple in central Bangkok. Friday's recovery efforts brought the total discovered to 2,002 fetuses, police Col. Metee Rakpan said. "From the confession of one of the morticians of the temple that we interrogated last night, he told us that they received these fetuses from the same places as the first lot of 348 fetus remains, and they became dry," said Col. Sombat Milintachinda, chief of the investigation team. "We think that they might have arrived here about a year ago."
@highlight
NEW: Police think the fetuses have accumulated for a year
@highlight
NEW: Three people have been charged in the case
@highlight
The fetuses were discovered at a Buddhist temple in Bangkok
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By Emily Davies PUBLISHED: 20:30 EST, 24 March 2013 | UPDATED: 20:37 EST, 24 March 2013 Victoria Cross hero Sergeant Johnson Beharry and his new bride Mallissa revealed they are expecting their first child Victoria Cross hero Sgt Johnson Beharry is seen with his new bride Mallissa and reveals they are expecting their first child. The couple tied the knot at London's Old Marylebone Hotel in front of family and friends, before moving on to a later blessing. The pair - who only met in October - are seen in their wedding finery in pictures published by Hello! magazine.
@highlight
Sergeant Johnson Beharry's new wife Mallissa announced her pregnancy
@highlight
They only met last October and were married in London last week | Speaking about the ceremony, he said: ‘I was shaking waiting for @placeholder but when I saw her I felt calmer,’ he said. | [
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A collection of letters and plans, which chart the construction and design of former US President John F. Kennedy and his wife Jackie's home in northern Virginia, is set to go under the hammer later this month. The unique 400-piece archive includes ten letters sent by Jackie to the property's architect, detailing her exact thoughts on what the home should look like - and her delight at the finished product. 'You have done the most fantastic job and everyone agrees,' the then-First Lady wrote in one letter, believed to have been sent shortly after construction on Wexford House was completed in 1963, just a few months before JFK's assassination on November 22.
@highlight
The Kennedys' property in northern Virginia, Wexford House, was completed in 1963, shortly before JFK's assassination
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Jackie first began discussing the plans and construction in 1961 and her correspondence with the designer continues into 1964
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The collection is due to go up for auction on February 19 | The finished product: Jackie was determined to make @placeholder the perfect home for her family | [
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I recently led a bipartisan congressional delegation to the Middle East and Europe to discuss regional security issues with key American partners. Beyond the strategic challenges posed by the Arab Spring lies an urgent threat -- Iran's determination to achieve nuclear weapons capability. Iran's effort, if successful, could destabilize the Middle East, spur a regional nuclear arms race and undermine America's influence in this pivotal region. Unfortunately, the window to solve this problem without conflict gets smaller with each passing day as Iran attempts to master the enrichment of uranium. Several administrations have tried engaging Iran and offering security guarantees, but that has not prevented the country from pursuing the bomb or patronizing the world's most dangerous terrorist groups. Economic and diplomatic pressures haven't worked either, but they have been episodic, gradual and largely unilateral. While the U.S. left Iran's market years ago, we can still exert great pressure through financial sanctions, and President Barack Obama should do so.
@highlight
Eric Cantor: Iran's determination for nuclear weapons capability is an urgent threat
@highlight
Cantor: We can exert stronger pressure on Iran through financial sanctions
@highlight
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By Mark Duell and Victoria Woollaston PUBLISHED: 13:43 EST, 16 July 2013 | UPDATED: 15:13 EST, 16 July 2013 Microsoft is said to have drafted in the team behind its Surface tablet to help test prototypes of its smartwatch. According to technology site The Verge, sources familiar with Microsoft's Surface plans revealed the company had taken the steps to try and get its wearable tech to market. These claims follow rumours that emerged in April which stated Microsoft was working on a touch-enabled watch as the company aims to cash in on the anticipated boom in wearable electronics.
@highlight
Sources claim Microsoft has brought in the Surface team to develop the smartwatch
@highlight
The team which helped develop the company's tablet is now believed to be testings prototypes of its wearable technology
@highlight
Microsoft experimented with smartwatches in 2004 with its product SPOT
@highlight
This used FM radio signals but production of it ceased four years later | The new @placeholder watch is believed to have a removable band that will come in a red, black, yellow and blue. | [
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Editor's note: Audrey Kurth Cronin, a professor at the U.S. National War College and research associate of the Changing Character of War program at Oxford University, is the author of "How Terrorism Ends: Understanding the Decline and Demise of Terrorist Campaigns" (Princeton University Press, September 2009). This article represents her views only, not necessarily those of any U.S. government agency. Audrey Kurth Cronin says recent events have raised new concerns about terrorism and al Qaeda. (CNN) -- President Obama entered office hoping to displace the global war on terrorism with a new age of engagement, thereby replacing fear with hope and relinquishing terrorism as the centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy.
@highlight
Audrey Cronin: Terror arrests and Afghan debate make it seem al Qaeda is gaining
@highlight
She says the reality is that the terror group is losing support
@highlight
Cronin: U.S. should encourage the disillusionment with al Qaeda in Muslim world | While the group continues to be dangerous, the faltering popularity of this campaign with most @placeholder provides clear evidence of this dynamic underway. | [
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By Associated Press PUBLISHED: 20:46 EST, 30 September 2013 | UPDATED: 06:50 EST, 1 October 2013 The bride wore white; the groom wore shackles. The marriage of Danne Desbrow and his fiancee, Destiny, came just minutes after he was sentenced to 53 years-to-life in prison for first-degree murder, U-T San Diego reported on Monday. San Diego Superior Court Judge Patricia Cookson officiated at both events. She even baked a cake for the Sept. 17 ceremony, the newspaper said. Cookson declined to respond to a request for comment from the newspaper. Destiny Winters (left) married Danne Desbrow (right) just minutes after Danny was sentenced to life in prison
@highlight
Danne Desbrow was sentenced to 53 years to life in prison just minutes before he was married
@highlight
One witness said the judge did not bring out the whole cake because she was leery of bringing the knife that would be used to slice pieces into the courtroom
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Danne Desbrow plans to appeal his murder conviction | A decorated photo of the courtroom wedding appeared on @placeholder's facebook | [
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Gays hoping to join the Boy Scouts will have to wait until at least May after the organization's executive board put off a vote on lifting its outright ban on openly homosexual scouts and troop leaders. The board had been expected to vote Wednesday on a proposal to let local groups set their own policies, but said instead that it needs more time to get comment on the issue from its members. "After careful consideration and extensive dialogue within the Scouting family, along with comments from those outside the organization, the volunteer officers of the Boy Scouts of America's National Executive Board concluded that due to the complexity of this issue, the organization needs time for a more deliberate review of its membership policy," the board said in a written statement.
@highlight
"This issue is not a gay rights issue," Utah scout leader who opposes change says
@highlight
"End this awful policy," the Human Rights Campaign urges Boy Scouts of America
@highlight
The organization said last month it would consider changing its ban on openly gay members
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Boy Scout leaders put off vote scheduled for Wednesday; it will now happen in May | Conservative groups and some religious organizations have argued against making any change, saying it would dilute the @placeholder message of morality and potentially destroy the organization. | [
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"This issue is not a gay rights issue," Utah scout leader who opposes change says
@highlight
"End this awful policy," the Human Rights Campaign urges Boy Scouts of America
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JERUSALEM (CNN) -- An unusual sight greeted Jerusalem police as they entered one of Christianity's holiest sites Sunday morning: dozens of monks punching and kicking each other in a massive brawl. Israeli police scuffle with an Armenian monk Sunday at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. Monks from the Greek Orthodox and Armenian denominations were preparing for a ceremony at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in the Old City when a disagreement led to a full-fledged fistfight. The fight began when Armenian clergy were holding a procession to commemorate the finding of the cross believed to have been used in the crucifixion of Jesus, according to The Associated Press.
@highlight
Greek Orthodox and Armenian monks punch and kick each other
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Police called to break up fight at Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem
@highlight
The site is believed to be where Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection occurred | "We were keeping resistance so that the procession could not pass through ... and establish a right that they don't have," a young @placeholder monk with a cut next to his left eye told the AP. | [
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By Tim Shipman PUBLISHED: 12:24 EST, 24 January 2013 | UPDATED: 19:29 EST, 24 January 2013 The Tory Party is failing to win over ethnic minority voters because it remains tarnished by the legacy of Enoch Powell, a Conservative minister said yesterday. Treasury minister Sajid Javid – whose father emigrated to the UK from Pakistan in 1961 with just £5 in his pocket – said the Tories are still being hurt by their association with Mr Powell. In April 1968, Mr Powell, a member of Ted Heath’s shadow cabinet, delivered his hugely controversial ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech which was widely condemned as racist.
@highlight
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By Tim Shipman PUBLISHED: 12:24 EST, 24 January 2013 | UPDATED: 19:29 EST, 24 January 2013 The Tory Party is failing to win over ethnic minority voters because it remains tarnished by the legacy of Enoch Powell, a Conservative minister said yesterday. Treasury minister Sajid Javid – whose father emigrated to the UK from Pakistan in 1961 with just £5 in his pocket – said the Tories are still being hurt by their association with Mr Powell. In April 1968, Mr Powell, a member of Ted Heath’s shadow cabinet, delivered his hugely controversial ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech which was widely condemned as racist.
@highlight
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@highlight
Son of a Pakistani bus driver calls on David Cameron to give a major speech to repair damage | Mr @placeholder has already asked for ideas for a speech to combat the idea that the spirit of Powell is alive in the modern Tory Party and is seeking ideas for policies which will dramatise the common values between Conservatives and non-white voters. | [
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Brit singer Rita Ora has jetted into LA for talks with movie bosses amid buzz over her role in Fifty Shades of Grey. The blonde star, 23, plays Christian Grey's little sister Mia Grey in the movie based on E.L. James' hit trilogy. Fifty Shades is released in February and the How We Do singer has also impressed 'Mr Oscar' himself, movie producer Harvey Weinstein, who hired her for his new film, Southpaw, starring Jake Gyllenhaal. Mr Weinstein called Rita 'breathtaking', telling MailOnline she is his 'biggest discovery' as an actress this year. Scroll down for video How We Do: Brit singer Rita Ora, pictured arriving at LAX on Wednesday night, has jetted into LA for talks with movie bosses amid buzz over her role in Fifty Shades of Grey
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(CNN) -- With a crop of political movies in the Oscar running, this weekend Hollywood is looking more like Poliwood. Best Picture contenders such as "Argo," "Zero Dark Thirty" and "Lincoln" have managed to pay off at the box office even as they brought politics and history to the big screen -- proof that we'll take smart over stupid as long as we're entertained while educated. But what's really notable about these films is that for the most part they avoid hagiography. They dare to show complexity. This doesn't mean indulging in moral relativism; evil exists and these films acknowledge it. But the human dimension is kept intact rather, with characters not divided into simply angels versus devils. The real tradeoffs behind difficult decisions are acknowledged, consistent with the idea that the truth is never pure and rarely simple.
@highlight
John Avlon: A new take on politics and realism in this year's Oscar crop. Call it "Poliwood"
@highlight
He says in "Argo," "Zero Dark Thirty," "Lincoln," films show nuance, humanity in characters
@highlight
Day-Lewis, Avlon says particularly, shows Lincoln as a flawed political animal
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Avlon: You don't need to be perfect to be a hero. Authenticity can add to heroism | But perhaps the best example of this human realism this Oscar season is @placeholder' definitive film portrayal of President Abraham Lincoln. | [
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(CNN) -- With a crop of political movies in the Oscar running, this weekend Hollywood is looking more like Poliwood. Best Picture contenders such as "Argo," "Zero Dark Thirty" and "Lincoln" have managed to pay off at the box office even as they brought politics and history to the big screen -- proof that we'll take smart over stupid as long as we're entertained while educated. But what's really notable about these films is that for the most part they avoid hagiography. They dare to show complexity. This doesn't mean indulging in moral relativism; evil exists and these films acknowledge it. But the human dimension is kept intact rather, with characters not divided into simply angels versus devils. The real tradeoffs behind difficult decisions are acknowledged, consistent with the idea that the truth is never pure and rarely simple.
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@highlight
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(CNN) -- So what did we learn at Sunday night's Golden Globe Awards? First off, we learned that sketch comedians are so much better at giving acceptance speeches than rock stars, screenwriters and actors who've won Oscars and Emmys for dramatic roles. "Who knew?" as Andy Samberg put it when he delivered one of the evening's most compact acceptances, for best lead actor in a TV comedy or musical in Fox's "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" (a surprise winner for best comedy series, by the way.) We also learned that actresses say the darnedest things on TV when they're drinking a lot. (What was that Cate Blanchett said about Judy Garland and barbiturates when she got the Globe for best actress in a drama in "Blue Jasmine"?)
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Gene Seymour: What did Golden Globes show? Actress + drinking = interesting speech
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Seymour: Globes mostly flashy kickoff of awards season; critic awards better predictor | But nothing short of a tsunami will stop her appointment with the best actress @placeholder for her rendering of a shattered socialite. | [
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(CNN) -- So what did we learn at Sunday night's Golden Globe Awards? First off, we learned that sketch comedians are so much better at giving acceptance speeches than rock stars, screenwriters and actors who've won Oscars and Emmys for dramatic roles. "Who knew?" as Andy Samberg put it when he delivered one of the evening's most compact acceptances, for best lead actor in a TV comedy or musical in Fox's "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" (a surprise winner for best comedy series, by the way.) We also learned that actresses say the darnedest things on TV when they're drinking a lot. (What was that Cate Blanchett said about Judy Garland and barbiturates when she got the Globe for best actress in a drama in "Blue Jasmine"?)
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Gene Seymour: What did Golden Globes show? Actress + drinking = interesting speech
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He says Blanchett, Bissett livened things up with frank remarks; hosts had less to do
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(CNN) -- So what did we learn at Sunday night's Golden Globe Awards? First off, we learned that sketch comedians are so much better at giving acceptance speeches than rock stars, screenwriters and actors who've won Oscars and Emmys for dramatic roles. "Who knew?" as Andy Samberg put it when he delivered one of the evening's most compact acceptances, for best lead actor in a TV comedy or musical in Fox's "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" (a surprise winner for best comedy series, by the way.) We also learned that actresses say the darnedest things on TV when they're drinking a lot. (What was that Cate Blanchett said about Judy Garland and barbiturates when she got the Globe for best actress in a drama in "Blue Jasmine"?)
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Gene Seymour: What did Golden Globes show? Actress + drinking = interesting speech
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He says Blanchett, Bissett livened things up with frank remarks; hosts had less to do
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He says even with two best picture awards, Globes are flawed predictor of Oscar winners
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Seymour: Globes mostly flashy kickoff of awards season; critic awards better predictor | But the @placeholder are when the moms, mall rats and reality-show audiences begin noticing what the more serious and solemn movies are doing with themselves as their makers and actors campaign for support from the Academy voters. | [
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By Chris Waugh Follow @@ChrisDHWaugh England's itinerary for their seven-match one-day international tour of Sri Lanka this winter has been confirmed. The England and Wales Cricket Board has announced that the national side will play four games in Colombo, two in Pallekelle and one in Hambantota during the series in November and December. The first match will take place at the R Premadasa International Stadium on November 26 and conclude at the same venue on December 16. New era: England coach Peter Moores (left) and captain Alastair Cook (right) will take their side to Sri Lanka Defeat: Cook trudges off at Edgbaston in the recent ODI series which England lost 3-2 to Sri Lanka
@highlight
ECB confirm that all matches will be 50 overs with no Twenty20s
@highlight
Four games will be in Colombo, two in Pallekelle and one in Hambantota
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There will also be two warm-up matches in Colombo in preparation
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A small Alabama community got the shock of the season on Saturday when a group of scantily clad gay African American Santas took their Christmas parade route by storm. The Prancing Elites, an all gay dance team known for their provocative moves and outfits, were confused by the invitation to walk the Semmes, Alabama (population 3,000) Christmas parade but swayed and thrust their way through outraged crowds nonetheless. Parade organizers have since apologized for including the Prancing Elites, but the five gentlemen from Mobile think it was all just part of a day’s work. Scroll down for videos... Prancing Elites: A dance team of gay black men has caused a furor in the small town of Semmes, Alabama after appearing in their Christmas parade Saturday
@highlight
The Mobile, Alabama-based Prancing Elites had visitors to the Semmes Christmas parade dropping their jaws on Saturday
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The four-man, all gay dance team specializes in J-Setting, a dance style some find provocative
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'Their costumes and the style of dancing were inappropriate': Some members of the community of 3,000 | Not your average parade: The dance group is based in nearby @placeholder, Alabama, where residents may have been a little less surprised than they were in small Semmes | [
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By Daily Mail Reporter PUBLISHED: 23:12 EST, 27 December 2013 | UPDATED: 05:03 EST, 28 December 2013 It is said that to be a truly great photobomber you must first be an artist. So in a year when the art of photobombing was added to the Oxford Dictionary ('a photograph that has been spoiled by the unexpected appearance of an unintended subject in the camera’s field of view as the picture was taken') it should come as little surprise that some of the best spoiled photos came from celebrities. In Hollywood, photobombing has become a tit-for-tat game amongs the stars, especially at big awards events, when the opportunities to intrude a photo are endless in a sea of cameras.
@highlight
It's a craze that only got crazier this year, with sabotaged photos much more popular than proper ones
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So from Queen B to 1D, here are the best Photobombs of 2013 according to Tumblr | Arguably the most famous of the year: During a concert, @placeholder notices a fan taking a selfie and ducks down to be part of it | [
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By Hugo Daniel In Los Angeles and Laura Cox Growing up in the shadow of the star known as Pretty Woman cannot be easy. But it is even tougher when you are known as her ‘fat little sister’. Julia Roberts’s youngest sibling Nancy Motes claims taunts from the Hollywood star drove her to weight loss surgery. The younger, 'fatter', sister of a Hollywood A-lister: Nancy Motes opens up about her wight problems following gastric by-pass surgery and her relationship with Julia Roberts Miss Motes, 37, who tried unsuccessfully to make it as a film actress herself, said Miss Roberts, 45, made her feel embarrassed and ashamed of her weight, which peaked at 20st.
@highlight
Younger sister Nancy Motes, 37, had £20,000 gastric bypass operation
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Nancy auditioned for Hollywood roles while working as a waitress
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She has lost 7st since the operation last June and plans to marry in May
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But production assistant's relationship with Roberts remains unsettled | got so tired of being known as ‘@placeholder’ fat little sister’ that | [
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A man armed with what police say was an assault rifle and carrying materials expressing anti-government sentiment opened fire Friday morning at Los Angeles International Airport, killing one person before being chased down himself, authorities said. Eyewitnesses said the suspect asked people, "Hey, are you TSA?" -- the acronym for the Transportation Security Administration -- according to a federal law enforcement official. If they said "no," he would move on. One of those questioned travelers was Leon Saryan. He told CNN's Anderson Cooper that the same man he'd just seen shoot a TSA officer "calmly" walked toward him and asked, "TSA?"
@highlight
The TSA officer killed was Gerardo Hernandez, 39, the agency says
@highlight
Official: Info on the suspect indicates anti-federal government sentiment
@highlight
He allegedly shot 3 police officers, 1 fatally, before getting shot himself
@highlight
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(CNN) -- Two music faculty members at Florida A&M University have been placed on administrative leave due to hazing allegations related to the marching band, university officials said. The university investigation follows the high-profile suspected hazing death of FAMU band member Robert Champion in November, but the cases are unrelated. Faculty members Diron T. Holloway and Anthony E. Simons III were placed on leave effective Wednesday because of "allegations of misconduct and/or incompetence involving reports and allegations of hazing within the Department of Music and the Marching '100,'" according to the university. The Marching 100 is the university's nationally recognized band.
@highlight
NEW: Police report describes difficulty in investigating hazing allegations
@highlight
Two music professors at FAMU have been placed on leave with pay
@highlight
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(CNN) -- Two music faculty members at Florida A&M University have been placed on administrative leave due to hazing allegations related to the marching band, university officials said. The university investigation follows the high-profile suspected hazing death of FAMU band member Robert Champion in November, but the cases are unrelated. Faculty members Diron T. Holloway and Anthony E. Simons III were placed on leave effective Wednesday because of "allegations of misconduct and/or incompetence involving reports and allegations of hazing within the Department of Music and the Marching '100,'" according to the university. The Marching 100 is the university's nationally recognized band.
@highlight
NEW: Police report describes difficulty in investigating hazing allegations
@highlight
Two music professors at FAMU have been placed on leave with pay
@highlight
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Miami, Florida (CNN) -- A weather system moving over the southern Bahamas has been upgraded to a tropical storm, with sustained winds now reported at 40 miles an hour, as it heads toward the southern tip of Florida and the Gulf of Mexico. The system has been named Tropical Storm Bonnie. At 11 p.m. ET, it was moving northwest at 14 miles an hour as it approached the northwestern Bahamas, according to the National Hurricane Center. It could pick up strength as it moves over the long stretch of open water in the Gulf of Mexico, but the latest computer models do not show it becoming a hurricane, according to CNN meteorologist Chad Myers.
@highlight
Louisiana declares emergency as storm approaches
@highlight
Thad Allen orders ships at BP well site to shore
@highlight
Weather system upgraded to tropical storm
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Latest computer models show the storm moving into the Gulf of Mexico | The hurricane center predicted that the storm would bring 2 to 4 inches of rain to south @placeholder, with isolated areas receiving as much as 6 inches. | [
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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (CNN) -- In 1982, they were young men serving their obligatory military service -- Argentine conscripts who fought against the British that year during the Falklands War. More than 25 years later, many of those former combatants are in a legal battle against their former officers, alleging torture, starvation and murder at the hands of their own military. An Argentine war cemetery near Darwin, Falklands. A lawsuit alleges officers killed some soldiers. A federal judge in the southernmost province of Tierra del Fuego, which under Argentine law claims jurisdiction over the Falkland Islands, recently ruled that the officers were responsible for crimes against humanity and human rights abuses.
@highlight
Falklands War soldiers say officers tortured, starved and murdered
@highlight
Judge rules officers committed crimes against humanity, human rights abuses
@highlight
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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (CNN) -- In 1982, they were young men serving their obligatory military service -- Argentine conscripts who fought against the British that year during the Falklands War. More than 25 years later, many of those former combatants are in a legal battle against their former officers, alleging torture, starvation and murder at the hands of their own military. An Argentine war cemetery near Darwin, Falklands. A lawsuit alleges officers killed some soldiers. A federal judge in the southernmost province of Tierra del Fuego, which under Argentine law claims jurisdiction over the Falkland Islands, recently ruled that the officers were responsible for crimes against humanity and human rights abuses.
@highlight
Falklands War soldiers say officers tortured, starved and murdered
@highlight
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@highlight
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(CNN) -- Some long-time Cuba watchers expressed skepticism Tuesday over a report by a former Mexican foreign minister that Communist leader Raul Castro removed two top-ranking officials earlier this month because they were plotting to overthrow him with the support of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Fidel Castro, beset by illness, ceded power to his younger brother, Raul, pictured, last year. Jorge G. Castaneda, who served as Mexico's foreign minister from 2000 - 2003, wrote in the March 23 issue of Newsweek, which became public Saturday, that Deputy Prime Minister Carlos Lage Davila and Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque were concerned that Raul Castro would make concessions that would betray the 50-year-old Cuban Revolution.
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(CNN) -- Some long-time Cuba watchers expressed skepticism Tuesday over a report by a former Mexican foreign minister that Communist leader Raul Castro removed two top-ranking officials earlier this month because they were plotting to overthrow him with the support of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Fidel Castro, beset by illness, ceded power to his younger brother, Raul, pictured, last year. Jorge G. Castaneda, who served as Mexico's foreign minister from 2000 - 2003, wrote in the March 23 issue of Newsweek, which became public Saturday, that Deputy Prime Minister Carlos Lage Davila and Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque were concerned that Raul Castro would make concessions that would betray the 50-year-old Cuban Revolution.
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@highlight
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@highlight
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(CNN) -- Yesterday, Team USA lost to Belgium and is out of the running. But today, you'd think American goalkeeper Tim Howard actually won the World Cup on his own. Some 1,845,345 tweets heralded Howard's historic game -- 12 saves in regulation, a rare feat, and one that allowed American fans to focus on a winning performance while ignoring the understory: Belgium controlled the game from the beginning, and even the late goal by 19-year-old Julian Green could do little to change the writing that was on the wall. As the weary American team trudged past the 90 minute mark, Americans focused on the herculean effort by Howard, crowing that he had more saves than Jesus, starting a petition to rename Reagan National for Howard, and briefly appointing him Secretary of Defense on Wikipedia.
@highlight
Amy Bass: American so nuts about Tim Howard you'd think he won the World Cup himself
@highlight
But craze likely won't last: It was more about Americans wanting in on the party, she says
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She says the Cup is suited to social media camaraderie, which has helped whip up interest
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(CNN) -- Yesterday, Team USA lost to Belgium and is out of the running. But today, you'd think American goalkeeper Tim Howard actually won the World Cup on his own. Some 1,845,345 tweets heralded Howard's historic game -- 12 saves in regulation, a rare feat, and one that allowed American fans to focus on a winning performance while ignoring the understory: Belgium controlled the game from the beginning, and even the late goal by 19-year-old Julian Green could do little to change the writing that was on the wall. As the weary American team trudged past the 90 minute mark, Americans focused on the herculean effort by Howard, crowing that he had more saves than Jesus, starting a petition to rename Reagan National for Howard, and briefly appointing him Secretary of Defense on Wikipedia.
@highlight
Amy Bass: American so nuts about Tim Howard you'd think he won the World Cup himself
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But craze likely won't last: It was more about Americans wanting in on the party, she says
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(CNN) -- Yesterday, Team USA lost to Belgium and is out of the running. But today, you'd think American goalkeeper Tim Howard actually won the World Cup on his own. Some 1,845,345 tweets heralded Howard's historic game -- 12 saves in regulation, a rare feat, and one that allowed American fans to focus on a winning performance while ignoring the understory: Belgium controlled the game from the beginning, and even the late goal by 19-year-old Julian Green could do little to change the writing that was on the wall. As the weary American team trudged past the 90 minute mark, Americans focused on the herculean effort by Howard, crowing that he had more saves than Jesus, starting a petition to rename Reagan National for Howard, and briefly appointing him Secretary of Defense on Wikipedia.
@highlight
Amy Bass: American so nuts about Tim Howard you'd think he won the World Cup himself
@highlight
But craze likely won't last: It was more about Americans wanting in on the party, she says
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She says the Cup is suited to social media camaraderie, which has helped whip up interest
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@highlight
Amy Bass: American so nuts about Tim Howard you'd think he won the World Cup himself
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But craze likely won't last: It was more about Americans wanting in on the party, she says
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She says the Cup is suited to social media camaraderie, which has helped whip up interest
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(CNN) -- This time it'll be Jason Dufner who laughs last and loudest. For months he's been ribbed by his pals for dozing off during a visit to a school arranged through the PGA Tour, creating a phenomenon that became internationally known as "Dufnering." The 36-year-old captured his maiden major title at the PGA Championship at Oak Hill in New York on Sunday, two years after his heartbreaking playoff defeat to Keegan Bradley. And don't be surprised if the Alabama resident does another spot of "Dufnering" this week, this time with a major difference -- the Wanamaker Trophy will be by his side.
@highlight
Jason Dufner celebrates his first ever major title with success at U.S. PGA Championship
@highlight
Dufner says he might celebrate by doing a spot of 'Dufnering' pose with his trophy
@highlight
The 36-year-old was teased by fellow pros for falling asleep on a school visit in Dallas
@highlight
Dufner insists his first major victory won't change him one bit as a person | Dufner has become a cult figure on @placeholder due to his "moment of relaxation" but also because of his incredibly laid back demeanor. | [
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(CNN) -- This time it'll be Jason Dufner who laughs last and loudest. For months he's been ribbed by his pals for dozing off during a visit to a school arranged through the PGA Tour, creating a phenomenon that became internationally known as "Dufnering." The 36-year-old captured his maiden major title at the PGA Championship at Oak Hill in New York on Sunday, two years after his heartbreaking playoff defeat to Keegan Bradley. And don't be surprised if the Alabama resident does another spot of "Dufnering" this week, this time with a major difference -- the Wanamaker Trophy will be by his side.
@highlight
Jason Dufner celebrates his first ever major title with success at U.S. PGA Championship
@highlight
Dufner says he might celebrate by doing a spot of 'Dufnering' pose with his trophy
@highlight
The 36-year-old was teased by fellow pros for falling asleep on a school visit in Dallas
@highlight
Dufner insists his first major victory won't change him one bit as a person | But after he fired a final round of 68 to finish on 10-under @placeholder was one of the first to congratulate him, having raced back from the airport to toast his friend's victory. | [
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By Arthur Martin and Christian Gysin and Neil Sears The brother of one of the French Alps massacre victims has denied hiring a hitman to kill the family over a £1million-plus inheritance feud. Accountant Zaid al-Hilli, 54, was arrested at his home in Surrey yesterday morning on suspicion of conspiracy to murder. His brother Saad al-Hilli, 50, was killed in a gun attack in France that left three others dead and Saad’s daughters Zainab, eight, and Zeena, five, orphaned. Arrest: The brother of Saad Al-Hilli, 53, (left), Zaid, (right), has been held on suspicion of conspiracy to murder his sibling and his family in the French Alps
@highlight
Zaid Al-Hilli was today held by Surrey Police in connection to the shooting
@highlight
Saad Al-Hilli, his wife Ikbal and her mother Suhaila al-Allaf were all killed
@highlight
Cyclist Sylvain Mollier was also shot dead near Annecy in September 2012
@highlight
Officers pictured taking bags of evidence out of Zaid's home
@highlight
French prosecutors want to talk to Saad's orphans, who survived massacre
@highlight
Police across Channel also claim Mr Al-Hilli was 'living in fear' before death
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French prosecutor Eric Maillaud said it was ‘essential’ to question the orphans, particularly because Zainab was the only witness;
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Mr Maillaud said Saad ‘feared for his life’ before the assassination because of the ‘very violent’ feud with his brother;
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Investigators were examining the inheritance left by the men’s late father Kadhim, which included several properties and £800,000 in a Swiss bank;
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The inheritance dispute was described as ‘so colossal’ that investigators expect to take two years to sift through legal papers written in four different languages; and
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French police are anxious to establish why Zaid allegedly called five telephone numbers in Romania weeks before the massacre. | Mail, @placeholder said he loved his brother and did not ‘know how he could have | [
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Judy Shepard stood before a massive crowd at the Capitol on Sunday for a single, painful reason. Sunday's National Equality March in Washington coincided with National Coming Out Day. "I'm here today because I lost my son to hate." Her gay son, Matthew Shepard, was kidnapped and severely beaten in October 1998. He died five days later in a hospital. More than 10 years later, Judy Shepard addressed the thousands of gay rights activists in Washington who wrapped up Sunday's National Equality March with a rousing rally at the Capitol. iReport.com: See photos from the march
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A massive moth measuring a foot from wing tip to wing tip has been found in Lancashire. The Giant Atlas Moth is normally seen in south-east Asia, particularly in Malaysia. However, one was found by the Blackmore family in Ramsbottom - more than 6,000 miles away. Mark Lightowler of Animal World with the foot-wide moth which turned up in a Lancashire back garden - and has already bred. Atlas moths are considered the largest moths in the world. Females are larger and heavier than males. They survive for a week after emerging as a moth. In India, Atlas moths are cultivated for their silk.
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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- They line up early every Saturday morning at the decrepit gymnasium that houses the La Matanza Barter Club. Nelly Vasquez and her 6-month-old daughter, Antonella trades wool for food. Club members shuffle in carrying sacks stuffed with everything from homemade clothing to homegrown vegetables, set up their stands and begin a day of bartering. The La Matanza Barter Club in the working-class Buenos Aires neighborhood of Isidro Casanova is one of more than 100 that now function throughout Argentina. They provide a vital service for people who are short on cash by helping them make ends meet.
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By Matt Chorley, Mailonline Political Editor PUBLISHED: 12:35 EST, 26 February 2013 | UPDATED: 13:31 EST, 27 February 2013 Chancellor George Osborne has demanded up to £30billion of extra cuts, but senior ministers are resiting attempts to slice more from their departmental budgets Tory and Lib Dem ministers are joining forces to oppose protecting pensioner benefits, the NHS and the aid budget from cuts. George Osborne is under pressure to ditch David Cameron’s pledges to protect those areas in the next spending review, so the austerity can be shared more equally. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has calculated that to stop cuts from affecting schools, defence equipment, the NHS and the international development department, other departments would need to make cuts of 35 per cent.
@highlight
Senior ministers including Theresa May, Vince Cable and Philip Hammond resisting fresh round of cuts to their departments' budgets
@highlight
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Verizon and Comcast customers are struggling to use Netflix because their connection has become too slow, it has been claimed. Customers have taken to online forums to say the service in unusable for them, and claiming the firms may be prioritising their own streaming services. Netflix revealed the providers have slipped down its ISP rankings - despite their claims to offer high speed services. Comcast and Verizon customers have taken to online forums to complain Netflix has become unusable for them There are 44 million Netflix members worldwide. Over 1 billion hours of TV shows and movies are streamed from Netflix each month.
@highlight
Ranking of internet providers released by Netflix reveals the pair are among the slowest ISPs for users
@highlight
Customers have taken to forums to claim Netflix is 'unusable' for them
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Claims capacity issues could be to blame | 'The listed speeds reflect the average performance of all Netflix streams on each @placeholder's network and are an indicator of the performance typically experienced across all users on an ISP network. | [
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(CNN) -- This month, IME hosts a special edition from Istanbul that looks at the role of women in the Middle East at a time when they are defying stereotypes as never before. Fever pitch Turkish football can no longer be claimed as a male preserve. IME visits the world famous Fenerbahce club as they attempt to confront crowd violence by banning men and permitting only female supporters to an early season game. Acient Turkey's Queen Mothers Also in Turkey, IME is granted rare TV access to the ancient harem at the Ottoman Topkapi Palace, taking a look back at some of the most famous Valide Sultans, or "Queen Mothers," who once wilded power at the Ottoman court and were patrons of architecture, leaving their mark on Istanbul's skyline.
@highlight
A special edition of IME focusses on the women of the Middle East
@highlight
Rima Maktabi travels to Cairo to meet the renowned Egyptian author and feminist, Dr. Nawal Sadawi
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Davos, Switzerland (CNN) -- Free trade, transparency and a crackdown on tax cheats will be at the heart of Britain's G8 presidency, Prime Minister David Cameron told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday as he set out his vision for a more competitive Europe. The speech comes a day after Cameron made headlines by promising the British people a vote on European Union membership if he wins the next general election in 2015. "We need more free trade. We need fairer tax systems. We need more transparency on how governments -- and yes, companies -- operate," Cameron told political and business leaders at Davos.
@highlight
NEW: David Cameron says the United States could learn from Britain on deficit reduction
@highlight
He tells Amanpour he has no regrets over promising a referendum
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Davos, Switzerland (CNN) -- Free trade, transparency and a crackdown on tax cheats will be at the heart of Britain's G8 presidency, Prime Minister David Cameron told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday as he set out his vision for a more competitive Europe. The speech comes a day after Cameron made headlines by promising the British people a vote on European Union membership if he wins the next general election in 2015. "We need more free trade. We need fairer tax systems. We need more transparency on how governments -- and yes, companies -- operate," Cameron told political and business leaders at Davos.
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NEW: David Cameron says the United States could learn from Britain on deficit reduction
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Davos, Switzerland (CNN) -- Free trade, transparency and a crackdown on tax cheats will be at the heart of Britain's G8 presidency, Prime Minister David Cameron told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday as he set out his vision for a more competitive Europe. The speech comes a day after Cameron made headlines by promising the British people a vote on European Union membership if he wins the next general election in 2015. "We need more free trade. We need fairer tax systems. We need more transparency on how governments -- and yes, companies -- operate," Cameron told political and business leaders at Davos.
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NEW: David Cameron says the United States could learn from Britain on deficit reduction
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@highlight
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We can be the generation that eradicates absolute poverty in our world," he says | Cameron said the biggest thing that Britain and America could do together is to work on an EU-@placeholder trade deal. | [
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Davos, Switzerland (CNN) -- Free trade, transparency and a crackdown on tax cheats will be at the heart of Britain's G8 presidency, Prime Minister David Cameron told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday as he set out his vision for a more competitive Europe. The speech comes a day after Cameron made headlines by promising the British people a vote on European Union membership if he wins the next general election in 2015. "We need more free trade. We need fairer tax systems. We need more transparency on how governments -- and yes, companies -- operate," Cameron told political and business leaders at Davos.
@highlight
NEW: David Cameron says the United States could learn from Britain on deficit reduction
@highlight
He tells Amanpour he has no regrets over promising a referendum
@highlight
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@highlight
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Tottenham teenager Keanan Bennetts is in the unique position of playing for England AND Germany. And even Nigeria have tried to convince the 15-year-old to join them, too. Bennetts qualifies for all three nations through his German mother, Nicole, Nigerian father, Richard, and being born in Edgware, London. The exciting winger – known for his blistering pace and technique – has been turning heads with his performances for Tottenham's youth sides, which have prompted a three-way tug of war for his services. VIDEO Scroll down to watch Keanan Bennetts plays for England in 1-0 defeat to Wales Keanan Bennetts takes on his man while playing for England against Northern Ireland earlier this month
@highlight
Spurs teen Keanan Bennetts has played at youth level for two countries
@highlight
Exciting winger eligible for England, Germany and Nigeria
@highlight
Bennetts will take his time before deciding who values him most | The young winger is a fluent German speaker and is also eligible to play for @placeholder through his father | [
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@highlight
Spurs teen Keanan Bennetts has played at youth level for two countries
@highlight
Exciting winger eligible for England, Germany and Nigeria
@highlight
Bennetts will take his time before deciding who values him most | At present, Keanan's father considers @placeholder and the distances his son would have to travel as too big a commitment, but they have not ruled out representing them in the future. | [
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