Friday, August 31, 2012

FOXNews.com: Up to 10K Yosemite Visitors May Be at Risk of Virus

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Up to 10K Yosemite Visitors May Be at Risk of Virus
Sep 1st 2012, 06:56

Published August 31, 2012

Associated Press

  • YosemiteRodent.jpg

    Aug. 28: Glenn Dean, a National Parks Occupational Safety and Health Specialist, inspects tent cabins for mice entry points at Curry Village at Yosemite National Park.AP Photo/San Francisco Chronicle, Michael Macor

FRESNO, Calif. –  Yosemite National Park officials are saying up to 10,000 people who were guests in certain lodging cabins might have been exposed to a deadly mouse-borne virus.

Park concessionaire Delaware North Co. sent letters and emails this week to nearly 3,000 people who reserved the insulated "Signature" cabins between June and August, warning them that they might have been exposed.

The cabins hold up to four people. Spokesman Scott Gediman said Friday that could mean up to 7,000 more visitors might have been exposed.

The park is receiving more than 1,000 calls a day as visitors frightened about a growing outbreak flood phone lines seeking reassurance.

Six people have contracted the virus, and two of whom have died.

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FOXNews.com: Feds Close Criminal Probe Into Sheriff Arpaio

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Feds Close Criminal Probe Into Sheriff Arpaio
Sep 1st 2012, 04:55

PHOENIX –  Federal authorities said Friday that they're closing their abuse-of-power investigation into a sheriff in Arizona without filing charges against him.

Authorities were investigating America's self-proclaimed toughest sheriff, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, for his part in failed public corruption cases against officials who were odds with him. Arpaio brought cases against a judge and two county officials in 2009.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ann Birmingham Scheel released a statement saying her office "is closing its investigation into allegations of criminal conduct" by current and former members of the sheriff's and county attorney's offices.

Scheel, who is based in Arizona, didn't elaborate but said she was acting on behalf of the U.S. Department of Justice.

The federal probe focused specifically on the sheriff's anti-public-corruption squad. In a separate probe, the U.S. Justice Department has accused Arpaio's office of a wide range of civil rights violations, and in another case, a federal judge has yet to rule in a civil case brought by a group of Latino plaintiffs that claimed Arpaio and his deputies engaged in racial profiling.

Arpaio was scheduled to give a news conference Friday night after returning from the Republican National Convention in Florida.

His deputy chief Jack MacIntyre, said, "the U.S. attorney's office and its investigators recognized what sheriff's office has said all along: We did not make any prosecutorial decisions, even though things were referred to the then-county attorney."

The timing of the federal authorities' announcement -- at 5 p.m. on a Friday before a holiday weekend -- was questioned by some Arpaio critics.

"It is a miscarriage of justice that the federal government is dropping its case against Sheriff Arpaio and to make such an announcement on the Friday night before the Democratic National Convention can only be politically motivated to shield the administration from criticism," Pablo Alvarado, director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said in a statement.

The 79-year-old sheriff and his top ally, former County Attorney Andrew Thomas, were embroiled in a three-year feud with county officials and judges and defended their investigations as necessary to root out corruption.

The officials who were targets of the investigations contend the probes were trumped up as retaliation for political and legal disagreements with the sheriff and prosecutor.

Criminal cases against former Superior Court Judge Gary Donahoe and county supervisors Mary Rose Wilcox and Don Stapley were dismissed after a judge ruled that Thomas prosecuted one of the three officials for political gain and had a conflict of interest in pressing the case.

Authorities say the charges against Donahoe were filed in a bid to prevent the judge from holding a hearing regarding Arpaio and Thomas' claim that judges and county officials conspired to hinder a probe into the construction of a court building.

Donahoe had disqualified Thomas from handling the court building investigation and was poised to hold another hearing over a request to appoint special prosecutors to handle the probe. The hearing was called off after the charges were filed against the judge.

The judge also had been critical of the ability of Arpaio's office to bring inmates to court on time for hearings.

Thomas was disbarred in early April by an ethics panel of the Arizona courts that found he brought unsuccessful criminal cases against the judge and two county officials for the purpose of embarrassing them.

In the separate probe, which is still ongoing, the Justice Department says Arpaio's office racially profiles Latinos, retaliates against critics of its immigration patrols and bases its immigration patrols on racially charged citizen complaints that did not allege crimes. The sheriff denies the allegations.

And in the civil case, the Latino plaintiffs aren't seeking monetary damages. Instead, they want a declaration that Arpaio's office uses racial profiling and an order requiring policy changes. If Arpaio loses the case, he won't face jail time or fines.

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FOXNews.com: Ohio Can't Limit Early Votes to Military

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Ohio Can't Limit Early Votes to Military
Sep 1st 2012, 03:20

COLUMBUS, Ohio –  A federal judge in Ohio on Friday granted a request from President Barack Obama's campaign to give all voters in the swing state the option of casting their ballot in person during the three days before Election Day.

U.S. District Judge Peter Economus in Columbus issued a preliminary injunction in the case involving state law that cuts off early voting for most residents on the Friday evening before a Tuesday election. The law makes an exception for military personnel and Ohio voters living overseas.

Economus concluded that the law was unconstitutional in changing the in-person early voting deadline and that the state was wrongly valuing certain votes above others.

Attorney General Mike DeWine quickly announced he would appeal the decision.

The judge's ruling said he expects Ohio's elections chief, Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted, to direct all county elections boards to maintain a specific, consistent schedule on those three days "in keeping with his earlier directive that only by doing so can he ensure that Ohio's election process is `uniform, accessible for all, fair, and secure."'

A spokesman said Husted's office was reviewing the decision and declined to comment further. A message left with the Obama campaign in Ohio was not immediately returned.

Obama's campaign and Democrats sued Husted and DeWine over the legality of the law. They argued everyone should have the chance to vote on those three days before the election.

The Obama campaign and Democrats said a series of legislative changes by state lawmakers arbitrarily eliminated the opportunity for most Ohioans to vote in person on those days, while giving military or overseas voters the chance to do so.

Attorneys for the state have said many laws already grant military personnel special voting accommodations, such as requirements for states to send absentee ballots to them 45 days before the election. And they contend local boards need those three days to prepare for the election.

But the judge said the voters' right to cast ballots in person on those days outweighs the state's reasons for limiting that opportunity.

Economus found that the Obama campaign was likely to succeed on the merits of its claim, and he granted the preliminary injunction blocking Husted from enforcing the law.

Ohio is among 32 states, plus the District of Columbia, that allow voters to cast an early ballot by mail or in person without having to give a reason.

Economus had pointed out during an early hearing that Ohioans can cast ballots by other methods -- in person on Election Day or by mail beginning 35 days before the election. Lawyers for the state also noted the multiple ways voters can cast a ballot this fall, including casting an early ballot in person on other days.

Before the law, local boards of elections previously set early voting hours on those three final days, and weekday hours and weekend voting varied among the state's 88 counties.

Democrats estimated in their lawsuit that 93,000 people voted during the final three-day window before the 2008 election.

Democratic lawmakers praised the judge's ruling.

"Today's decision reinstates fairness for Ohio's busy working voters," said Ohio House Democratic Leader Armond Budish of Beachwood.

Following the ruling, the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio called on Husted to restore in-person voting opportunities during every weekend in the early voting period, not only the weekend before the election.

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FOXNews.com: Wrongfully Convicted Nebraskan, 80, 'Not Bitter'

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Wrongfully Convicted Nebraskan, 80, 'Not Bitter'
Sep 1st 2012, 01:57

LINCOLN, Neb. –  Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning apologized Friday to an 80-year-old man wrongfully convicted in the 1955 killing of his wife, and asked a judge to approve a $500,000 award from the state.

Bruning announced that his office would no longer fight a lawsuit filed by Darrel Parker seeking damages for the nearly 14 years he spent in prison. The award is the maximum amount allowed under a 2009 state law that entitles wrongfully convicted people to compensation from the state.

Parker filed a wrongful conviction lawsuit against the state after lawmakers approved the 2009 law. Parker, who now lives in Moline, Ill., broke down while speaking at a news conference.

"It can't possibly make up for all these years," he said through tears. "I'm not here to rub somebody's face in this terrible thing. I'm not bitter. I'm not built that way."

Parker was convicted in 1956 of first-degree murder in the death of his wife, Nancy, who was found raped, bound and strangled in their Lincoln home. Parker spent nearly 14 years in prison.

Another man confessed to the crime while sitting on Nebraska's death row, and Parker was paroled in 1970. He received a full pardon in 1991.

Bruning said his office, which was defending the state against Parker's lawsuit, decided to "do the right thing" after reviewing the case. He said the decision was based on a review of case records, including a confession from convicted murder Wesley Peery, who was on death row for the murder of another Lincoln woman. Peery's confessions were initially protected by attorney/client privilege, but were made public by his attorneys after he died of a heart attack in 1988.

Peery had worked around the Parker's home in 1955, and was questioned during the initial murder investigation but released. Earlier this year, state officials discovered 14 witness reports of a vehicle near the murder site that matched the description of a vehicle Peery owned at the time.

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FOXNews.com: Domain Name Fight of Biblical Proportions

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Domain Name Fight of Biblical Proportions
Sep 1st 2012, 00:47

How will faith be presented on the Internet?

Recent moves by the ruling body that oversees the Internet have allowed for the most dramatic expansion in the Internet since it was created: an almost limitless number of top-level domains are now possible, to join the classics such as .com, .edu and .net.

"I respectfully ask you not to award .bible to a bunch of hardcore Bible-thumpers.'

-

But that expansion has led to feuding over certain loaded religious words and terminology. Should the Catholic Church automatically control the .catholic domain? What if the church hasn't applied, perhaps balking at the whopping $185,000 submission fee?

Apparently, the geeks at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) won't be consulting the Gospels to decide who can have such domains.

"We don't look into whether the Vatican has the right to the .catholic name," Akram Atallah, interim head of ICANN, told Reuters. "Hopefully, the process will get to a conclusion that is satisfying to the majority."

According to the news agency, as soon as ICANN began accepting applications for such domains in June, bids came in for extensions such as .catholic, .islam and .bible. Not far behind were critics who challenged whether any one applicant can own such a loaded domain -- and potentially monopolize its usage.

"I respectfully ask you not to award .bible to a bunch of hardcore Bible-thumpers," wrote one critic of an application by the American Bible Society to manage that extension, Reuters said.

How New Domains Will Work

APPLICATIONS: Applicants had to answer 50 questions by May 30. 

COST: Each application cost $185,000. If approved, fees run to $25,000 a year.

CHALLENGES: The public had 60 days to comment on trademark violations or offensive items.

REVIEW: ICANN will review each application to make sure its financial plan is sound, which could take up to 20 months.

LAUNCH: Once approved, the applicant must set up procedures for registering names and computers to keep track of them.

Questioning a Turkish IT company's bid for the .islam domain, Fahd Batayneh of Jordan's National Information Technology Center asked how it could ensure no pornographers or Muslim extremists would use names with this ending?

Not all religions or religious groups have gotten involved just yet. For example, no group has thrown a hat (or yarmulke) in the ring to claim the .jewish domain. Likewise, .buddhist and .hindu are at present unclaimed.

First results in this 21st century land grab are due next summer.

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FOXNews.com: Obama Signature Claims Denied, Vets Try to Verify

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Obama Signature Claims Denied, Vets Try to Verify
Aug 31st 2012, 21:57

A veterans group is vowing to get a handwriting expert to determine if the letters sent to parents of Navy SEALs killed in Afghanistan were signed by President Obama himself or an electronic autopen that can replicate his signature. 

Karen and Billy Vaughn, whose son Aaron Vaughn was one of 17 SEALs and 13 other Americans killed in a helicopter crash Aug. 6, 2011, raised the issue at a Tea Party rally in Tampa during the Republican National Convention. Karen Vaughn said she compared the signature on her letter, dated Sept. 23, 2011, with those received by other families of SEALs and determined the signature was mechanical.

"We are going to have nationally recognized handwriting experts review the letters given the strong circumstantial evidence which exists in this case."

- Joel Arends, Veterans for a Strong America

But the White House insists every letter sent out to the families of fallen service members is signed by the hand of the Commander-in-Chief.

"The President signs every such letter personally," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said Friday.

An autopen is a machine that can be programmed to duplicate an individual's John Hancock. Seen as more personal than a stamp but less than a hand-signature, the device was first used in the White House by President Harry Truman. President Obama made history when he became the first chief executive to use the device to sign a bill, authorizing its use to extend key provisions of the Patriot Act last year while he was in France.

Aaron Vaughn was part of a rescue team that was sent to a mountainous area in the Wardak Providence in August of last year to assist an Army Ranger unit that was under heavy fire. The team had completed their mission but their Chinook helicopter was shot down as they were departing. Nearly 40 people perished, marking it one of the deadliest single incident losses in the decade-long war in Afghanistan.

Veterans for a Strong America, a nonpartisan military watchdog group pledged to get to the bottom of the matter.

"After reviewing letters from several families of fallen Navy SEALs it appears that the letters may have been auto-penned, so we are going to have nationally recognized handwriting experts review the letters given the strong circumstantial evidence which exists in this case," Joel Arends, chairman of Veterans for a Strong America said in a statement to FoxNews.com. 

Arends also complained that the mailings are form letters, with only the names of the recipients changed. The White House conceded that point, but noted sending form letters has long been common practice for presidents, especially when war casualties mount.

In 2003, Newsweek reported that condolence letters from President George W. Bush were also form letters, "With the exception of the salutation and a reference to the fallen soldier in the text."

However, four years later, the Washington Times ran a story claiming that Bush had sent personal letters to more than 4,000 families of soldiers killed in action and 9/11 victims during his presidency which was largely unnoticed by the public.

Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was embroiled in an auto-pen controversy of his own when criticism was made against him for not personally signing each letter.

He was forced to release a statement admitting that he used the auto-pen on some letters, but only, "in the interest of ensuring expeditious contact with grieving family members," before vowing that from that point forward he would personally sign each one."

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FOXNews.com: Town Defends Decision Not to Fly Flags on 9/11

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Town Defends Decision Not to Fly Flags on 9/11
Aug 31st 2012, 21:57

A Massachusetts resident is protesting his town's decision not to fly American flags from utility poles on Sept. 11 this year, part of a policy to recognize the anniversary of the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people with the flags only every five years.

MassLive.com reports that the flags in Amherst were flown last year to mark the 10th anniversary of the attack and will be flown again in 2016.

The board had voted to fly small flags on the light posts downtown on only six holidays every year. Resident Larry Kelley thinks 9/11 should become the seventh.

Tony Maroulis, executive director of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce, supports Kelley's suggestion.

"I understand how polarizing the flag can be in this community. Some might look at the flags as a brazen symbol of might and oppression," Maroulis said. "Others look at it as a source of pride in who we are, and what we can be. Whatever the complicated or simplistic responses to the flags, flying them on 9/11 would allow us to reflect and meditate upon them."

Cinda Jones, president of Cowls Companies, wrote that the current configuration seems like "wishy-washy Amherst compromise at best."

"That timing says to me that Amherst believes 9/11 is occasionally worthy of remembrance and respect, but 4/5 of the time it's not," Jones wrote. "Well, it either is, or it isn't. You don't celebrate or commemorate something worthwhile every five years."

Town Manager John Musante said the board represents the "entire community, and there's a difference of opinions within the community."

Musante said flags at municipal sites are flown at half-staff and the fire department holds its annual commemoration at 9:55 a.m. on Sept. 11 at the station to mark the date.

Click for more from MassLive.com.

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FOXNews.com: GOP Leaders Probe for Stimulus Ads on MSNBC

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GOP Leaders Probe for Stimulus Ads on MSNBC
Aug 31st 2012, 20:36

Republican leaders on a House panel are requesting that the U.S. Department of Labor turn over all records involving a $495,000 contract funded through President Obama's stimulus program that paid for a barrage of ads on White House-friendly cable programs touting its "green jobs" initiative.

The 2009 contract with McNeely Pigott & Fox Public Relations led to more than 100 commercials on cable news programs on MSNBC hosted by Rachel Maddow and Keith Olbermann to increase awareness about the Job Corps program's training in environmentally friendly industries.

In an Aug. 24 letter to Department of Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, House Committee on Education and the Workforce Chairman John Kline, R-Minn., and Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training Chairwoman Virginia Fox, R-N.C., requested documents, communications and information on the taxpayer-funded ad campaign.

"Despite the fact that these funds were made available as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act – legislation President Obama said was critical for immediate job creation – an examination of public records show that the contract that resulted in the advertisements on MSNBC created no jobs," the letter reads. "Upon further review of public records, we have found that DOL, since 2009, spent almost $2 million on public relations services from MP&F, resulting in the creation of one job in the last reported quarter."

A call seeking comment from Labor Department officials was not immediately returned Friday.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, who sits on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told FoxNews.com last week that the contract didn't "pass the basic sniff test."

Chaffetz said the targeting of these ads also raises questions about "political motivations."

Labor Department officials defended the expense last week, suggesting in a brief statement that the decisions on placement were largely made by the contractor.

"Job Corps has used media buys over the decades to inform potential participants and referral sources as well as employers about the Job Corps program. In this case, the Department of Labor relied on an outside contractor and media buying expert to perform research, conduct cost comparisons of media outlets, determine the most cost-effective way to reach the target audience, and create and place the ads," the department said.

FoxNews.com's Judson Berger contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: Ohio Told It Can't Limit Early Voting to Military

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Ohio Told It Can't Limit Early Voting to Military
Aug 31st 2012, 18:56

Published August 31, 2012

Associated Press

  • Ohio_Early_Voting_100411

    Nancy Suhadolnik of Strongsville, Ohio, votes in early voting Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011, in Cleveland.AP2011

COLUMBUS, Ohio –  A federal judge in Ohio is giving all voters in the swing state the option of casting their ballot in person during the three days before Election Day.

A judge on Friday issued a preliminary injunction granting the request from President Barack Obama's campaign that targets a state law that cuts off early voting for most residents on the Friday evening before a Tuesday election.

The law exempts military personnel and Ohioans living overseas.

Obama's campaign and Democrats are suing the state's elections chief over the legality of the law. They argue that everyone should have a chance to vote on those three days.

Attorneys for the state contend that many laws grant special voting accommodations for military members, and local boards need time to prepare for elections.

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FOXNews.com: Old Friend's Romney Story Backs Up Personal Pitch

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Old Friend's Romney Story Backs Up Personal Pitch
Aug 31st 2012, 18:56

Her story got tears flowing at the Republican National Convention, and may well have gone a long way toward showing Mitt Romney didn't simply start doing good deeds when cameras were clicking and a political career was in the works.

Pam Finlayson addressed the Tampa crown late Thursday to tell how the Republican presidential nominee welcomed her family to his Mormon church when she moved to Massachusetts in the early 1980s, and became a lifelong friend in times of joy and tragedy.

"When I see Mitt, I know him to be a loving father, man of faith and caring and compassionate friend."

- Pam Finlayson, Romney family friend

"I knew Mitt was special from the start," Finlayson told the crowd, first recounting how the then-thirty-something Romney called on her after her family moved in from California, helping her fold laundry as he welcomed her to the Boston area.

Later, when Finlayson and her husband Grant had a baby girl born dangerously premature, the man who decades later would stand at the threshold of the presidency was a steady and supportive presence at the hospital.

"Kate was so tiny and very sick," Finlayson recalled. "Her lungs not yet ready to breathe, her heart unstable, and after suffering a severe brain hemorrhage at three days old, she was teetering on the very edge of life.

"As I sat with her in intensive care, consumed with a mother's worry and fear, dear Mitt came to visit and pray with me," she continued, as the partisan crowd listened in rapt silence. "I will never forget that when he looked down tenderly at my daughter, his eyes filled with tears, and he reached out gently and stroked her tiny back.

"I could tell immediately that he didn't just see a tangle of plastic and tubes; he saw our beautiful little girl, and he was clearly overcome with compassion for her."

The little girl was slated for surgery around Thanksgiving, and Finlayson recalled Romney and his sons showing up with a Thanksgiving feast for the preoccupied parents. Finlayson said she later learned from Ann Romney that the food had been prepared by her husband.

Kate Finlayson survived, and the two families remained close, said Finlayson, who even babysat for the five "rambunctious" Romney sons before the family moved from Boston.

Last year, Kate Finlayson died at age 26 from complications she'd battled from birth, her mom said. And although Romney was in the midst of preparing his bid for the presidency, they remembered their old friends in yet another hour of anguish.

"When they heard of Kate's passing, both Mitt and Ann paused, to personally reach out to extend us sympathy, and express their love," Finlayson said.

"When the world looks at Mitt Romney, they see him as the founder of a successful business, the leader of the Olympics, or a governor," she said. "When I see Mitt, I know him to be a loving father, man of faith and caring and compassionate friend."

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FOXNews.com: Conservatives Coming Out Of the Hollywood Closet?

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Conservatives Coming Out Of the Hollywood Closet?
Aug 31st 2012, 18:56

Hollywood has long been considered an overwhelmingly liberal community, but given Clint Eastwood's "surprise" blockbuster appearance in support of GOP Presidential nominee Mitt Romney this week – are the tables starting to turn?

"God bless Clint Eastwood for coming and supporting Romney. It shows that he is interested in the outcome of America," Oscar-winning producer Gerald Molen, who's latest project is the controversial documentary "2016: Obama's America," told FOX411's Pop Tarts column. "There are those of us who are trying to educate our Democratic friends in Hollywood as fast as we can."

Eastwood, arguably one of the biggest actor/directors of our time, addressed the Republican National Convention (RNC) on Thursday evening to great anticipation, applause and laughter given the surprisingly bizarre nature of his speech - talking to an empty chair. Other big names that performed and/or attended the RNC this week included Journey, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Taylor Hicks, Kid Rock, Dave Navarro, 3 Doors Down, Zac Brown, and Sara Evans.

And while social networks were ablaze with reactions to Eastwood's unusual speech, the Oscar-winner undoubtedly brought an A-list name to Romney's lineup.

In contrast, the upcoming Democratic National Convention is looking notably scarce in terms of confirmed celebrity guests compared to the star-studded turnout of 2008, which further begs the question: are the days of a Democratic entertainment industry diminishing?

"It's no wonder Obama has a fewer celebrities this time around, he treats the rich like one big punching bag. And after a while even the rich in Hollywood are going to take a pause,   being beat up because of their wealth on a daily basis they might say:   Enough is Enough," quipped New York-based political and entertainment publicist, Adam Weiss,

Jeff Roe, political consultant and founder of Axiom Strategies, added that "this shows is that even Hollywood is tired of President Obama's failed leadership and understand how badly his policies are damaging the united states economy."

But don't count Hollywood out of Obama's corner just yet. VP of Business and Culture at the Media Research Center, Dan Gainor, argues that Tinseltown is still very much an Obama-chanting crowd.

"It's great that Eastwood is bringing some magnum force to the GOP campaign. But he remains the exception who proves the rule. As 'Full Metal Jacket' star R. Lee Ermey pointed out recently about Hollywood, 'if you're a conservative in this town, you better watch out,'" he said. "Hollywood is still largely behind Obama.

"Actor George Clooney helped Obama raise $15 million at just one May event. And Clooney just helped with an event in Switzerland that might mean another $500,000. Hollywood, like the news media, is upset with Obama because he's not even more radically left."

And while social networks were ablaze with reactions to Eastwood's unusual speech, which included a long-winded conversation with an imaginary Obama, publicist and political expert Angie Meyer, says the GOP's newfound Tinseltown touch may help the party's push for Presidency come November, so long as star power doesn't overwhelm the important issues at hand.

"A celebrity with the magnitude and star-power of Clint Eastwood opens the door wide for closeted Republican celebrities to feel more comfortable expressing their shared conservative beliefs. For years, Hollywood has bullied conservative actors and actresses into a corner. This is the year, we'll finally see them speak up," she added.

"The fundamental differences between the two candidates (Romney and Obama) are so vast, it's more important than ever for big Hollywood names to step up and get involved in the cause. But leave the award shows for the celebrities, political conventions should be about the people," she added.

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FOXNews.com: Off and Running: Romney Hits Trail With Message of 'Jobs... Lots of Jobs'

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Off and Running: Romney Hits Trail With Message of 'Jobs... Lots of Jobs'
Aug 31st 2012, 15:58

Fresh off capping the Republican Convention with a rallying call for a "better future" for America, Mitt Romney hit the campaign trail Friday on his first official day as the Republican nominee for president, flying to Louisiana to tour damage from Hurricane Isaac.

Romney, who scrapped an appearance in Virginia to visit Louisiana instead, scheduled a last-minute visit Friday to Lafitte, La., where he will tour damage with Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal. Isaac canceled the first day of Romney's Republican convention and campaign officials had been considering the visit for several days.

Romney is expected to thank emergency first responders for their work. Heavy rains and flooding have contributed to at least five deaths in Louisiana and Mississippi this week after the slow-moving storm knocked out power in whole neighborhoods.

Romney reintroduced himself to the country Thursday night in Tampa, where he delivered a personal nomination acceptance address in which he pledged to fix the economy and critiqued President Obama.

The former Massachusetts governor made a clear effort on the closing night of the GOP convention to let voters know a little more about Romney the man -- not just Romney the businessman. He flashed his humorous side, at one moment an emotional side, as he told the story of his parents, his children, his wife and his early days in business.

And before the balloons and confetti rained down, he drew the address back to the message that has driven his campaign: Obama has not lived up to the lofty promise of his successful 2008 run, he said, and does not have what it takes to fix the economy.

"What is needed in our country today is not complicated or profound. It doesn't take a special government commission to tell us what America needs," Romney said. "What America needs is jobs. Lots of jobs."

Romney called on voters to put the "disappointment" and the "divisiveness" of the last four years behind them, and "turn the page" with him.

"This president can ask us to be patient. This president can tell us it was someone else's fault. … But this president cannot tell us that you're better off today than when he took office," Romney said. "Now is the time to restore the promise of America."

Romney tried to cast himself as the more level-headed, and less lofty, choice.

"President Obama promised to begin to slow the rise of the oceans and to heal the planet," Romney said. "My promise is to help you and your family."

Before he dove into the critiques against the current Oval Office occupant, Romney appeared to answer calls from some in the GOP that he tell America more about his personal story. He said he understands people "need to know more about me" to make a choice in November.

The nominee appeared to get emotional when he told a story about how his dad used to give his mother a rose every day – and that she knew something was wrong on the day he died because there was no rose. 

Going off script, Romney said: "Don't you wish she could have been here at this convention?"

The nominee showed a light-hearted side, at one point ribbing running mate Paul Ryan for teasing him over his musical preferences a night earlier.

"Paul," he said, "I still like the playlist on my iPod better than yours."

Romney touched on his Mormon faith, as other speakers have this week. And he spoke directly to women in the audience, and watching on TV, highlighting the female officials who were speaking at the convention and who had served in his administration in Massachusetts. It was not lost on the crowd. Kansas delegate Chad Bettes said the importance of women, particularly in the workforce, "was a huge theme." Bettes said Romney's record "has proven that he values women."

Romney, though, returned to the dominant message that the "excitement" of Obama's election has subsided, replaced by doubt and uncertainty about the economy and the federal budget.

"If you felt that excitement when you voted for Barack Obama, you should feel that way now that he's President Obama," Romney said. "You know, there's something wrong with the kind of job he's done as president when the best feeling you've had was the day you voted for him."

Romney pointed to the president's resume as the problem. "He had almost no experience working in a business," he said. "Jobs to him are about government."

Romney said he wished Obama had succeeded, "because I want America to succeed."

"But his promises gave way to disappointment and division.  This isn't something we have to accept. Now is the moment when we can do something. And with your help we will do something," Romney said.

The delegates pouring out into the halls after the speech reacted with satisfaction. Mary Ann Riley, an alternate delegate from South Carolina, used a term not often applied to the reserved candidate: "He had fire in the belly," she said.

The address was to serve as Republicans' closing argument before Democrats fire back with their rebuttal at the convention next week in Charlotte, N.C.

One senior Obama campaign official told Fox News, in response to the Romney speech: "There was no big idea here," adding that Romney "recycled widely debunked attacks."

The Romney campaign's attention will immediately pivot to countering the message out of North Carolina, as the Obama campaign has tried to draw attention away from Republicans' gala this week in Tampa.

The lead-up to Romney's speech Thursday was made up of speeches, videos and tributes aimed at filling out the Mitt Romney story, and personalizing the candidate. One couple, in a touching story, told of how Romney helped draft a will for their terminally ill son so he could pass down his treasured belongings to his friends and brother. Olympians from the 2002 Salt Lake City games which Romney led later took the stage to vouch for the nominee.

Other segments of the program highlighted his record at Bain Capital, stressing the jobs created via the private equity firm in a bid to counter Democratic ads that highlight Bain-tied businesses that failed.

The one deviation from the theme came toward the end, when Clint Eastwood strolled on stage – proving true the rumors he was the convention's "surprise" speaker – and engaged in a wicked debate with an empty chair that was supposed to represent Obama.

He concluded: "When somebody does not do the job, we gotta let 'em go."

Romney, like many speakers at the convention, was interrupted by cheers of "USA." The biggest breakout came when he criticized Obama's foreign policy.

"I will begin my presidency with a jobs tour. President Obama began his presidency with an apology tour. America, he said, had dictated to other nations. No, Mr. President, America has freed other nations from dictators," he said, before having to pause for the chant. Romney went on to give Obama credit for the raid that killed Usama bin Laden, but he said the country is "less secure" because the administration has "failed to slow Iran's nuclear threat."

The speech capped with confidence an unusual convention that got off to a rocky and uncertain start, as Tropical Storm Isaac barreled toward the Gulf coast and not only delayed the start by a day but kept several high-profile southern speakers in their home states dealing with the storm.

But after the bad weather largely skirted Tampa, Republicans kicked off the convention with a taut succession of hard-hitting speeches. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivered a fiery keynote Tuesday, with other speakers ranging from Ann Romney to Paul Ryan to Marco Rubio trumpeting Romney's leadership and challenging Obama's – all the while warming up the stage for Romney's nomination acceptance.

The Democratic National Convention will get under way next week, with a Labor Day event set for Monday and the formal program starting Tuesday.

The Associated Press, FoxNews.com's Cristina Corbin and Fox News' James Rosen contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: Off-Hours Shooting Kills 3 at New Jersey Supermarket

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Off-Hours Shooting Kills 3 at New Jersey Supermarket
Aug 31st 2012, 14:57

OLD BRIDGE, N.J. –  A shooting at a New Jersey supermarket early Friday killed three people, and the gunman is believed to be among the dead, a law enforcement official said.

The law enforcement official had been briefed on the shooting and spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because the shooting took place in a different jurisdiction.

The shooting happened around 4 a.m. inside a Pathmark grocery store in Old Bridge, about 25 miles from Manhattan, Mayor Owen Henry told nj.com. The store was closed and had been scheduled to open at 6 a.m.

Two front windows were broken out early Friday, and two police cars were pulled up near the entrance. It wasn't immediately clear what broke the windows, nor was it clear whether any store workers were still inside the store.

Employees in the store at the time of the shooting congregated later in the morning outside a TGI Friday's restaurant in the same shopping plaza.

Police at the scene were keeping onlookers well away from the store. A number of vehicles were in the parking lot outside the supermarket, along with police vehicles.

The store and its parking lot were closed Friday. Pathmark officials had no immediate comment on the shooting.

Old Bridge is a bedroom suburb of about 65,000 just across the Raritan Bay from New York City's Staten Island borough.

New Jersey Transit closed its nearby park-and-ride lot and told riders that they could park in other park-and-ride lots or could ride a different rail line.

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FOXNews.com: La. faces days of misery after Isaac leaves homes underwater and residents without water, power- VIDEO: Isaac hits town worse than Katrina -MYFOXHURRICANE

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La. faces days of misery after Isaac leaves homes underwater and residents without water, power- VIDEO: Isaac hits town worse than Katrina -MYFOXHURRICANE
Aug 31st 2012, 11:55

NEW ORLEANS –  Isaac crawled into the nation's midsection early Friday, leaving a soggy mess in Louisiana. Neighborhoods were underwater, and many homes that stayed dry didn't have lights, air conditioning or clean water.

It will be a few days before the soupy brown water recedes and people forced out of flooded neighborhoods can return home.

And the damage may not be done. Officials were pumping water from a reservoir to ease the pressure behind an Isaac-stressed dam in Mississippi on the Louisiana border. In Arkansas, power lines were downed and trees knocked over as Isaac moved north into the state.

The earthen dam on Lake Tangipahoa could unleash a 17-foot flood crest downstream in Louisiana if it were to give way, which prompted evacuations in small towns and rural areas Thursday. Officials plan to punch a hole in the dam to release excess water in a controlled fashion but were waiting for daylight Friday to decide exactly where and when, said Donnie Hodges with the Pike County, Miss., Office of Civil Defense.

New Orleans, spared any major damage, lifted its curfew and returned to its usual liveliness, although it was dampened by heavy humidity.

"I have a battery-operated fan. This is the only thing keeping me going," said Rhyn Pate, a food services worker who sat under the eaves of a porch with other renters, making the best of the circumstances. "And a fly swatter to keep the bugs off me -- and the most important thing, insect repellent."

The heat was getting to Marguerite Boudreaux, 85, in Gretna, a suburb of New Orleans.

"I have a daughter who is an invalid and then my husband is 90 years old, so he's slowing down a lot," she said, red in the face as she stood in the doorway of her house, damp and musky from the lack of air conditioning.

Isaac dumped as much as 16 inches of rain in some areas, and about 500 people had to be rescued by boat or high-water vehicles.

At least four deaths were reported in Louisiana and Mississippi.

The latest two victims, a man and a woman, were discovered late Thursday in a home in the hard-hit town of Braithwaite, south of New Orleans. Authorities said deputies went to search for the couple after someone reported they had apparently not escaped the flooding. Their names were not immediately released.

On Grand Isle, a barrier island on the Gulf, the town pumped away water. Sections of the only road to town had washed out.

On a street turned river in Reserve, on the east bank of the Mississippi River, two young men ferried their neighbors to the highway in a johnboat, using boards as paddles.

Lucien Chopin, 29, was last to leave his house, waiting until his wife and three kids, ages 7, 5 and 1 were safely away.

He was finally joining them late Thursday, hoping they would find a shelter.

His van was underwater and water flowed waist-high in the house he'd rented for eight months.

"It's like, everything is down the drain. I lost everything. I've gotta start all over."

Chopin was upset that pumps meant to keep the area dry either failed or were shut off.

"We knew it was coming, but they didn't tell us we had to evacuate. We had no idea it was gonna be like this," he said, a refrain echoed by many.

Cisco Gonzales, a heating and air conditioning business owner, said he got his boat and truck and headed for higher ground when he heard the water was rising quickly, from 0 to 6 feet of water in five minutes.

"I've never seen so much water in my life," said Gonzales, who built a home in Braithwaite, southeast of the city, after his previous home was damaged by Katrina in 2005.

He rode out the storm at a ferry landing and when the weather calmed, he went out and rescued about a dozen people.

"I got back to my house to assess the situation, and it's a mess," he said. "That's all I can say."

Isaac hit on the seventh anniversary of Katrina, a hurricane that devastated New Orleans.

The two storms had little in common. Katrina came ashore as a Category 3 storm, while Isaac was a Category 1 at its peak. Katrina barreled into the state and quickly moved through. Isaac lingered across the landscape at less than 10 mph and wobbled constantly. Because of its sluggishness, Isaac dumped copious amounts of rain. Many people said more water inundated their homes during this storm than during Katrina.

Both storms, however, caused the Mississippi River to flow backward. And both prompted criticism of government officials.

In the case of Isaac, officials' calls for evacuations so long after the storm made landfall caused some consternation.

Jefferson Parish Council President Chris Roberts said forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami needed a new way of measuring the danger that goes beyond wind speed.

"The risk that a public official has is, people say, `Aw, it's a Category 1 storm, and you guys are out there calling for mandatory evacuations,"' Roberts said.

Eric Blake, a specialist at the hurricane center, said that although Isaac's cone shifted west as it zigzagged toward the Gulf Coast, forecasters accurately predicted its path, intensity and rainfall. He did say the storm came ashore somewhat slower than anticipated.

Blake cautioned against using Katrina as a benchmark for flooding during other storms.

"Every hurricane is different," Blake said. "If you're trying to use the last hurricane to gauge your storm surge risk, it's very dangerous."

Crews intentionally breached a levee that was strained by Isaac's floodwaters in southeast Louisiana's Plaquemines Parish, which is outside the federal levee system. Aerial images showed the water gushing out.

In Louisiana alone, the storm cut power to 901,000 homes and businesses, or about 47 percent of the state. That was down to 39 percent, or about 821,000, by Thursday evening, the Public Service Commission said.

Entergy Corp., Louisiana's largest power company, said Isaac knocked out power to nearly 770,000 of its customers in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas. Only three storms have left more customers without power: Hurricanes Katrina (1.1 million), Gustav (964,000) and Rita (800,000), the company said in a news release.

More than 15,000 utility workers began restoring power to customers in Louisiana and Mississippi, but officials said it would be at least two days before power was fully restored.

In Mississippi, several coastal communities struggled with all the extra water, including Pascagoula, where a large portion of the city flooded and water blocked downtown intersections.

High water also prevented more than 800 people from returning to their homes in Bay St. Louis, a small town that lost most of its business district to Katrina's storm surge.

Robbie Daniel, 55, an industrial engineer, and his wife, Kathi, a retired school teacher, live in a house on the Tchoutacabouffa River in Biloxi, and hadn't left home since Tuesday. Their house is on stilts and was surrounded by chest deep water.

Kathi saw online Thursday that casinos could be opening so they hopped in a kayak, paddled to their car on higher ground and drove to Island View Casino Resort in Gulfport.

"Tired of sitting there watching rain," Kathi said.

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FOXNews.com: Couple Finds Medieval Well Under Living Room Floor

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Couple Finds Medieval Well Under Living Room Floor
Aug 31st 2012, 10:54

A British couple finally figured out why their living room floor wasn't level when they took up the floorboards and discovered a 33-foot deep well that historians say dates back to Shakespeare's day.

Colin Steer had long puzzled over why a section of the floor near his couch seemed to give when someone stepped on it, according to the Telegraph. Several years ago, he did some investigating and found the brick shaft filled in with loose dirt.

"I always wanted to dig it out to see if I could find a pot of gold at the bottom."

- Colin Steer

"I was replacing the joists in the floor when I noticed a slight depression – it appeared to be filled in with the foundations of the house," Steer, of Plymouth, Devon, told the paper.

But Steer initially only dug about a foot deep into the shaft.

"I dug down about one foot but my wife just wanted to me to cover it back up because we had three children running around at the time," he said. "I always wanted to dig it out to see if I could find a pot of gold at the bottom, so when I retired at the end of last year that's what I started to do."

Once he retired from his civil service job, he finished the dig and uncovered the ancient well. He also made an exciting discovery – an old rusted sword.

"It was hidden at a 45-degree angle and sort of just fell out. It looks like an old peasant's fighting weapon because it appears to be made up of bits of metal all knocked together," he told the Telegraph.

Steer has since researched the well and discovered it was part of an aqueduct built in the 16th century by Sir Francis Drake to carry water from Dartmoor to Plymouth.

Steer has covered the well with a trapdoor and installed lights in it. He admits he enjoys showing it off.

"I love the well and think it's fascinating," he said. "I've got a piece of Plymouth's history in my front room."

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FOXNews.com: Suspect Allegedly Called School Right Before Attack

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Suspect Allegedly Called School Right Before Attack
Aug 31st 2012, 08:55

DENVER –  Colorado massacre suspect James Holmes called the university hospital, where his psychiatrist can be reached, nine minutes before the shooting at a nearby movie theater, defense attorneys said Thursday at a hearing.

Psychiatrist Dr. Lynn Fenton, who met with Holmes once previously, testified she could be reached at the number that Holmes dialed but said she was not aware Holmes had called the number before the attack.

Defense attorney Tamara Brady said that Holmes placed the call to the after-hours number at a hospital at the University of Colorado, Anschutz campus.

Fenton did not speak to Holmes on the phone. She says her doctor-patient relationship with the shooter is limited to their one meeting.

Fenton testified Thursday in a hearing on whether investigators can have access to a notebook sent to her by James Holmes.

A federal agent testified that the notebook was mailed sometime after last pick up on July 19. The envelope that the notebook was mailed in was purchased at a post office nearby the university campus.

Holmes is accused in the July 20 shooting that left 12 people dead and 58 wounded.

Prosecutors believe the notebook contains descriptions of a violent attack, and argue they should be allowed to review it as part of their investigation.

Defense attorneys say the journal is inadmissible because it's protected by doctor-patient privacy laws.

Judge William B. Sylvester has called a recess to consider a defense request to close the remainder of the hearing.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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