Monday, April 30, 2012

Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: President Obama is getting desperate -- and it shows

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President Obama is getting desperate -- and it shows
Apr 30th 2012, 12:35

It is fashionable to be jaded about a presidential campaign, to complain there's nothing new and tune it out. Not this one. Watch it, or you'll miss the antics of an incumbent who has no scruples and no regard for the majesty of his office.

President Obama's team put out an ad praising him for sending in Navy SEALs to kill Usama bin Laden and doubting whether Mitt Romney would have done it. To further exploit the one-year anniversary of Bin Laden's death, he gave an interview to NBC in the Situation Room, from where he observed the raid. And The Wall Street Journal revealed that the Obama campaign has an enemies list, a group of Romney donors it singles out by name on a Web site while declaring some got rich "at the expense of so many Americans."

As outrageous as those breaches of decency are, they are merely the latest extension of Obama's polarizing presidency. His tenure threatened, he is growing desperate, almost pathologically so. And it's only April.

Where once it was rare for a politician or a commentator to accuse a president of lying, it happens routinely now. Obama's speeches are filled with distortions and fabrications. Even members of his own party don't trust him, regarding him as ruthlessly selfish. "An uncurious man," said one.

House Speaker John Boehner called the president's use of Air Force One for campaign events disguised as official business "pathetic" and added: "This is the biggest job in the world, and I've never seen a president make it smaller."

It is a train wreck for America, unfolding before our eyes. Sad to say, but it makes me nostalgic for the days of Bill Clinton, when it was only sex that shamed the Oval Office.

Michael Goodwin is a Fox News contributor and New York Post columnist. To continue reading his column on other topics, including John Edwards, click here

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: White House official confirms US carries out drone strikes

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White House official confirms US carries out drone strikes
Apr 30th 2012, 17:33

White House counterterrorism official John Brennan publicly described how Al Qaeda targets are chosen for drone strikes, the first time the Obama administration has described the widely known practice so openly and in such detail. 

Brennan, speaking in Washington on Monday, says President Obama wants to be more transparent with the American public a year after a raid by Navy commandos killed Usama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan. 

"Yes, in order to prevent terrorist attacks on the United States and to save American lives, the United States government conducts targeted strikes against specific Al Qaeda terrorists, sometimes using remotely piloted aircraft, often referred to publicly as drones," Brennan said. 

Brennan's remarks amounted to both a defense and a public embrace of drone technology as the leading edge of the White House's clandestine war on terrorists from Yemen to Somalia. 

Brennan says targets are chosen by weighing whether there is a way to capture the person against how much of a threat the person presents to Americans. 

Targeting Al Qaeda members with lethal force by drones is legal, Brennan said, comparing it to targeting Japanese and German commanders in World War II. 

He said use of drones was ethical because "only military objectives may be intentionally targeted and that civilians are protected from being intentionally targeted." 

Brennan also called targeted strikes "wise," saying they kept both U.S. personnel out of harm's way, and that their precision munitions helped avoid civilian casualties caused by the kind of weapons dropped by jets. 

He acknowledged, however, that civilian targets had been hit. 

Brennan said in most cases, drone strikes are carried out with the cooperation of a host government. 

Brennan's comments did not directly acknowledge the CIA's covert campaign in Pakistan, which has caused friction with the Pakistani government. Pakistan on Monday condemned a U.S. drone strike that killed three suspected Islamist militants in the northwest, the first since the country's parliament demanded that Washington end the attacks two weeks ago. In the past, Pakistan had publicly condemned strikes, but privately allowed them in specific geographic "boxes," namely in the tribal areas. 

"We continue to believe, based on the information available, that the program itself is not just unlawful but dangerous," said Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's National Security Project. "It is dangerous to characterize the entire planet as a battlefield," Shamsi said. 

A protester interrupted Brennan's remarks, shouting criticisms of the drone program. Her last words as she was dragged from the conference room by a security guard were "shame on you."

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Wife of ex-aide says Edwards' love-child paternity scheme made her 'mad'

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Wife of ex-aide says Edwards' love-child paternity scheme made her 'mad'
Apr 30th 2012, 20:04

GREENSBORO, N.C. –  In an emotional day of testimony, the wife of John Edwards' former aide said Monday that the politician's plan to have her husband claim paternity of Edwards' love child made her "upset" to the point of screaming -- but that Edwards stepped in to personally convince her to go along. 

Cheri Young, who took the witness stand as the Edwards trial enters its second week, described how her husband, Andrew Young, initially claimed paternity of Edwards' love child, which she said was the candidate's idea. She occasionally broke down in tears as she testified in the criminal trial of her husband's former boss. 

Young said she was in a McDonald's drive-through when her husband told her about the paternity plan. 

"The first thought in my mind was, how in the world could Mr. Edwards ask one more thing of me, of us?" she recalled. "I was mad. I was upset. Of course I said, 'Absolutely Not!' I screamed at him. I cursed at him." 

But Young said she eventually agreed to go along with the plan after a telephone conference call with her husband, Edwards and the candidate's mistress, Rielle Hunter. 

During that call, Cheri Young said Edwards went into a stump speech, explaining why his presidency would be good for the country. 

In court Monday, she described a conversation she had with her husband after the call. 

"I told him that I feel like everything had been dumped in my lap, that everyone else was on board but me," Young said. "I didn't want the responsibility of knowing that because I wasn't on board, because I didn't want to try it, the campaign would explode and I'd have to live with that." 

She said Edwards assured her that using donations to hide his pregnant mistress during the 2008 presidential campaign was legal. Young said Edwards seemed very angry during the conversation and explained he had cleared the arrangement with campaign lawyers. 

"Get the money in," she recalled Edwards saying. 

Cheri Young's testimony is important to federal prosecutors, who are trying to prove that nearly $1 million that two wealthy donors provided to hide Hunter during Edwards' run for president was intended to influence the outcome of the election. They argue the funds were "campaign contributions" and, therefore, subject to the individual donor cap of $2,300 under federal campaign finance law. 

The defense insists the gifts were private money from friends who were simply trying to spare Edwards' cancer-stricken wife from finding out about the affair. Edwards' lawyers tried to paint Young's husband as an opportunist who profited from the controversy surrounding the affair. 

But on Monday, Cheri Young spoke of the sacrifices her family made to house Hunter and shield her from an aggressive and invasive tabloid press. 

According to Young, Hunter was a high-maintenance guest. 

After living with the Youngs, Hunter moved to her own house nearby. Young said she handed Hunter a list of utility companies to call to set up new service. 

According to Young, Hunter handled the list back to her and said, "Set it up." 

She also recalled eating with Hunter at a diner in Aspen, Colo. Young said Hunter complained that her Reuben sandwich had the wrong sauce and then called her spiritual adviser and healer for help. 

Young said she and her husband wrote several checks, including one for $8,000, to help Hunter pay for her spiritual adviser's services.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Pregnant mothers, newborns addicted to opiates increases dramatically over past decade

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Pregnant mothers, newborns addicted to opiates increases dramatically over past decade
Apr 30th 2012, 20:15

The rate of mothers abusing opiates during pregnancy—including heroin, methadone and certain painkillers—has increased nearly fivefold in the past decade, according to a new study.  The study also found a threefold increase in the number of newborns with drug withdrawal symptoms, a condition known clinically as neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS).

The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, used a national database to examine rates of maternal opiate use and NAS, as well as the associated hospital costs, between 2000 and 2009.  

According to the study, the number of pregnant mothers using opiates increased from 1.19 to 5.63 for every 1,000 births per year.  The number of infants with born with NAS increased from 1.20 to 3.39 for every 1,000 births per year.

Meanwhile, the total hospital costs for NAS jumped from $190 million to $720 million per year from 2000 to 2009.  This amount was adjusted for inflation, the researchers said.

Lead researcher Dr. Stephen Patrick, a neonatal-perinatal fellow of the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor, Mich., and Robert Wood Johnson clinical scholar, said he had been motivated to look at national rates of maternal opiate abuse due to his own experiences

"I take care of babies in the intensive care unit, and it felt like we were seeing an increase of babies with NAS in our ICU," Patrick explained to FoxNews.com.  "I see these babies on a regular basis.  You hear them crying down the hall – it's easy to identify them.  

"Other states were describing increases as well," Patrick added.  "We primarily sought out to see if this increase was nationwide."

According to Patrick, while a recent report from the CDC found that sales of opiates have quadrupled in the general population, the dramatic rise of opiate use in pregnant mothers specifically was surprising, nevertheless.

"It was a very high rate of increase; we were not expecting it," Patrick said.  "It seems there's a general trend in the U.S. toward more opiate use and we're also seeing that reflected in mothers and babies."

Mothers of all income levels were affected by the increase, though the babies who suffered from NAS were more likely to come from lower income families and covered by Medicaid, according to Patrick.  The researchers looked at the entire class of drugs, meaning they did not differentiate between the use of drugs such as heroine, methadone and pain relievers such as Vicodin and Percocet.  

"It's important to know these families come from all different walks of life," Patrick said.  "This problem doesn't discriminate.  There should be more attention brought to this—researchers need to find ways to treat opiate addiction, and on a state and federal level, we need to think of ways of reducing opiate use."

Dr. Manny Alvarez, senior managing health editor of FoxNews.com, said he wasn't surprised by the findings.

"Folks need to realize that the availability of narcotics is out of control, and in my personal experience, I have seen a significant increase of drug abuse during pregnancy—even the demographics have changed," Alvarez said.  "Many of these mothers are individuals you would not think would fall prey to drug abuse."

Newborns with NAS are more likely to have respiratory problems, low birth weight, feeding difficulties and seizures.  Using opiates during pregnancy can also increase the risk of stillbirths, according to prior studies.  Depending on how severe the baby's withdrawal is, doctors treat NAS by slowly weaning the infant off opiates over a period of days or weeks.

For a mother who is abusing opiates during the beginning of her pregnancy, it is not necessarily safe to quit cold turkey.

"Coming off opiates during pregnancy can be harmful," Patrick said.  "The treatment mainstay is to enroll these mothers into methadone treatment programs to reduce harm to the baby.  Studies show in terms of fetal loss and other outcomes—the result is usually better in these programs."

Alvarez added, however, there are certain challenges to getting mothers-to-be into these treatment programs.  

"There is no mandatory drug screening in pregnancy," Alvarez said.  "Perhaps with this new finding, it could encourage screening to become standard practice in pregnancy." 

Patrick said the study should be considered as an incentive for states to implement opiate monitoring programs and keep an eye on the prescriptions being written, as well as more studies tracking infants born with NAS to see how the condition affected them through childhood and beyond.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Kidney donor wants organ back from boss who fired her

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Kidney donor wants organ back from boss who fired her
Apr 24th 2012, 13:25

The New York mother who was fired after she donated her kidney to save her boss's life demanded that the woman return the organ.

"You hate me so much, and I'm so despicable -- give me my kidney back!" wailed 47-year-old Debbie Stevens, of Long Island.

Her employer at Atlantic Automotive Group, Jackie Brucia, also 47, thanked Stevens for the gift Monday -- and then "wished her the best."

"I will always be grateful that she gave me a kidney," Brucia told 1010 WINS-AM radio. "I have nothing bad to say about her. I will always be grateful to her -- she did a wonderful thing for me."

For Stevens to get her organ back would not be easy -- and would involve at least four surgeries.

Stevens donated her kidney to the national pool because she and Brucia were not a perfect match. That gave Brucia a better shot at getting a speedy transplant.

Stevens' kidney actually was transplanted into a patient in St. Louis, and Brucia's came from San Francisco.

The scorned Stevens also insisted that the only reason Brucia rehired her in the first place is because she was a "Plan B" in case another organ donor fell through, she said.

"She used her power to manipulate me," Stevens claimed.

According to a state Human Rights Commission complaint that Stevens filed Friday, Brucia began to harass her shortly after she donated her left kidney in the fall of 2010 -- and eventually helped fire her in April 2011.

The two previously worked together at the dealership and forged a friendship in 2009. Stevens returned from Florida in 2010, and Brucia rehired her.

Now, Stevens says that her health insurance coverage will soon run out -- leaving her unable to pay future medical and psychiatric bills related to the transplant.

"I don't know what I'm going to do," she said. "I can't afford it -- it's a lot of money. I may have a hard time getting insurance because I donated a kidney. I thought I would be at that job until I retired."

The car dealership called Stevens' claims "groundless."

"Atlantic Auto treated her appropriately and acted honorably and fairly at every turn," lawyer Robert Milman said. "We expect to have this resolved favorably in the legal system."

Click here to read more from The New York Post.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: KFC ordered to pay $8 million to girl left brain damaged after eating meal

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KFC ordered to pay $8 million to girl left brain damaged after eating meal
Apr 27th 2012, 12:28

An Australian court Friday ordered fast food giant KFC to pay $8.3 million to the family of a young girl who suffered brain damage after eating one of its meals.

Monika Samaan's family say she contracted salmonella poisoning when she ate a Chicken Twister at a KFC outlet in western Sydney in 2005, national broadcaster the ABC reported.

Samaan, then seven, was in a coma for six months and was left with spastic quadriplegia with severe brain damage.

During the trial her father told the court that he and his wife and son also required hospitalization after sharing her Twister.

Last week, New South Wales Supreme Court Justice Stephen Rothman ruled KFC has breached its duty of care to the young girl. On Friday, the judge ordered the fast food giant to pay AU$8 million plus the family's legal costs, Australian Associated Press reported.

The Samaan's lawyer, George Vlahakis, said the family was relieved the court battle was over and was happy with the figure.

"Monika's severe brain damage and severe disability has already exhausted the very limited resources of the family," Vlahakis said.

"Monika is now a big girl and they are finding it increasingly difficult to lift her and to look after her basic needs as well as look after Monika's younger siblings.

"The compensation ordered is very much needed. KFC have to date been determined that Monika does not receive a cent."

KFC indicated that it will appeal the court's ruling.

"We believe the evidence showed KFC did not cause this tragedy and, after reviewing the judgment and seeking further advice from our lawyers, we have decided to appeal Justice Rothman's decision," the firm said in a statement, according to the Herald Sun.

The Herald Sun contributed to this report.

Click here to read more.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Spirit Airlines' final answer to dying Vietnam vet seeking ticket refund: No!

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Spirit Airlines' final answer to dying Vietnam vet seeking ticket refund: No!
Apr 30th 2012, 16:26

After a weekend of brutal publicity over its refusal to grant a dying Vietnam vet a $197 ticket refund because his doctor forbids him to fly, Spirit Airlines issued has a simple response:

"No."

The terse, one-word retort from company spokeswoman Natalie Pinson appears to have grounded any hope that Jerry Meekins, 76, of Clearwater, Fla., might get his money back. Meekins bought the ticket to Atlantic City last month so he could see his daughter before she had surgery of her own. But when his esophageal cancer left his immune system too ravaged for travel, all the airline offered him was another ticket.

"What are they going to do?" Meekins asked the Tampa Bay Times. "Fly my casket up to Atlantic City?"

"Spirit airlines is the most ruthless, uncaring airline that shows callous disregard for its customers and, frankly, [CEO] Ben Baldanza would agree with this statement about his own airline," Kate Hanni, executive director of airline watchdog group FlyersRights.org told FoxNews.com. "They are a low-cost air carrier and all they want to do is grab those revenues at all costs. But when passengers need one ounce of customer service, forget about it!"

The airline, which has angered consumer groups with its pioneering charges for carry-on baggage and $5 fee for having a boarding pass printed at the airport, claim the no-refunds approach allows the airline to pass savings on to customers.

"At Spirit, we treat all of our customers equally and with respect," the Fort Lauderdale-based carrier said in a statement Friday. "That means our non-refundable fares are non-refundable – for everyone. 

"We are very saddened to hear about Mr. Meekins' diagnosis and sincerely hope his health improves and that we have the opportunity to serve him again on his current ticket and many more flights."

Other airlines have application procedures in which customers may be able to get their money back if they can show a reasonable cause. Hanni recommended Meekins file a complaint with the Depatment of Transportation.

"If someone is ill and they have a doctor's note, airlines must refund their money," Hanni said. "That's in every airline's contract of carriage.  Interestingly enough, remember swine flu?  They don't want sick people flying due to spread of disease. And if someone is dying, they also must refund their money."

For now, there appears to be only one way for Meekins to get his refund, and it is simply too grim to contemplate. Death before or during a scheduled flight may qualify someone for a partial refund, according to Spirit's website. A death certificate is required as proof, although the carrier presumably relaxes the requirement for an in-flight death.

Meekins, a Vietnam veteran and former police officer, told the Tampa Bay Times that he couldn't understand the airline's lack of compassion.

"If they call it 'Spirit Airlines,' where is their spirit?" he asked.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Top EPA official resigns after 'crucify' comment

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Top EPA official resigns after 'crucify' comment
Apr 30th 2012, 16:22

A top EPA official has resigned after coming under scrutiny for 2010 remarks in which he compared the agency's enforcement strategy to Roman crucifixion. 

Al Armendariz, the top environmental official in the oil-rich South and Southwest region, resigned in a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson on Sunday, saying he did not want to be a distraction for the agency. The resignation is effective Monday. 

"As I have expressed publicly, and to you directly, I regret comments I made several years ago that do not in any way reflect my work as regional administrator. As importantly, they do not represent the work you have overseen as EPA administrator," he wrote. "I take great pride in having built a career based on integrity and hard work. These are the principles that guide me personally as well. While I feel there is much work that remains to be done for the people of this country in the region that I serve, after a  great deal of thought and careful consideration, I have come to the conclusion that my continued service will distract you and the agency from its important work."

Armendariz made the original remarks at a local Texas government meeting in 2010. He relayed to the audience what he described as a "crude" analogy he once told his staff about his "philosophy of enforcement." 

"It was kind of like how the Romans used to, you know, conquer villages in the Mediterranean," he said. "They'd go in to a little Turkish town somewhere, they'd find the first five guys they saw, and they'd crucify them. 

"And then, you know, that town was really easy to manage for the next few years," he said. 

Armendariz went on to say that "you make examples out of people who are, in this case, not complying with the law ... and you hit them as hard as you can" -- to act as a "deterrent" to others.

Republican lawmakers blasted him for the comments as Obama administration officials made clear the remarks did not represent the views of the EPA as a whole. Jackson said in a statement Monday that she accepted the resignation. 

"I respect the difficult decision he made and his wish to avoid distracting from the important work of the agency," she said, thanking him for his service. 

Republicans in Congress had called for Armendariz' firing, after Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofe highlighted the May 2010 speech last week as proof of what he refers to as EPA's assault on energy, particularly the technique of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. 

Several disputed contamination cases in Texas have helped stoke environmental concerns over fracking.

Inhofe said Monday that the resignation would not stop the ongoing investigation into EPA policies. 

"We will continue our investigation into the situations surrounding EPA's apparent crucifixion victims: the American people deserve to know why, in at least three separate cases, EPA tarnished the reputation of companies by accusing them of water contamination; then when the results of their study did not turn out the way they hoped, and they had no definitive evidence to make that link, they quietly walked back their accusations. We will get to the bottom of this -- and we will continue looking into EPA's actions on hydraulic fracturing beyond these three cases as well," he said in a statement. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: REVIEW: Game-changing 'The Avengers' is super-hero movie to end all super hero-movies

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REVIEW: Game-changing 'The Avengers' is super-hero movie to end all super hero-movies
Apr 30th 2012, 16:12

NEW YORK –  Marvel's "The Avengers" is the super-hero movie to end all super-hero movies.

Why? Joss Whedon.

The writer-director treats this super-hero ensemble as the end-all-be-all of comic book movies. He has intelligently and deftly vacuum compressed a library of comic culture into a two and a half hour movie brimming with adventure and humor. Iron Man, The Hulk, Thor, Captain America and more assemble here versed in Whedon's crackling wit, with action scenes that lay waste to all action sequences in the previous Marvel films combined. 

Furthermore, there's nearly a baker's dozen of A-list actors kicking some serious butt: Robert Downey, Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo (nicely replacing Edward Norton as The Hulk), Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Tom Hiddleston, Gwyneth Paltrow and more.

"There's nearly a baker's dozen of A-list actors kicking some serious butt"

-

VIDEO: Watch three trailers for 'The Avengers.'

After "The Avengers, there's really no need to ever see another super hero movie again (okay, except Christopher Nolan's upcoming "Batman" finale). But because of it, we'll likely see plenty more super hero ensembles and crossovers from here on out.

"Justice League," anyone?

If you have somehow missed the past four years of Marvel movies you have some homework to do. The prerequisites "The Incredible Hulk," "Iron Man," "Thor" and "Captain America" have all culminated in this mighty production. While "The Avengers" takes key plot moments from each of those films, it most heavily relies on elements from "Thor" and "Cap."

Thor's malevolent brother, Loki comes to Earth to steal a device that will help aliens from another dimension enslave the human race. Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury assembles his Shield team to stop the hell bent villain. Tension among the team is high and nobody gets along at first. Once tragedy strikes, the focus is set and the Avengers truly assemble.

While Whedon has given us a detailed and entertaining plot, character is king. Iron Man, Thor, Cap, Black Widow, The Hulk and Hawkeye are all given equal amounts of time to shine. Whedon humanizes each character through his signature banter – and what great banter it is. Whedon's dialogue is razor sharp, layered and hysterical. He is smart to let us get comfortable with each member apart from the collective, making it so much more enjoyable when they do assemble side-by-side.

This cast works really well together. Each actor brings out the human side of their super hero persona. From Downey to Ruffalo, you'll leave the theater remembering the performances more than the spectacle.

Although "The Avengers" has some of the best special effects we've seen yet in a summer blockbuster, they are never overwhelming. Marvel is wise to not take a "Transformers" route and have the film just be about the glitzy SFX. There's a nice balance between the drama and the action; every set piece outdoes the previous one, leading up to a spectacular nail-biting final act.

If you aren't one already, "The Avengers" just might make a comic book geek out of you. "The Avengers" is a game changer, setting the summer blockbuster bar to new heights. Now the question is how to further impress a genre culture that has just been given their coup de grâce.

Your move, Bruce Wayne.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Less than 100 days before Curiosity touches down on Mars, NASA says

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Less than 100 days before Curiosity touches down on Mars, NASA says
Apr 30th 2012, 15:30

After more than a decade of planning, NASA's Curiosity rover is only 97 days from touching down on Mars -- where it will search for evidence that the red planet might once have been someone's home.

It's been a long journey for the  world's largest extraterrestrial explorer. By the time it lands, the 1-ton Curiosity will have traveled 354 million miles over the course of 8 1/2 months.

"Every day is one day closer to the most challenging part of this mission," said Pete Theisinger, Mars Science Laboratory project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.  "Landing an SUV-sized vehicle next to the side of a mountain 85 million miles from home is always stimulating."

"It's the death planet, and the United States of America is the only nation in the world that has ever landed and driven robotic explorers on the surface of Mars, and now we're set to do it again."

- NASA's Colleen Hartman, assistant associate administrator for science

Last week, the team went through final rounds of testing and simulations as they prepare for the big moment.

"Our test rover has a central computer identical to Curiosity's currently on its way to Mars," said Eric Aguilar, the mission's engineering test lead at JPL. "We ran all our commands through it and watched to make sure it drove, took pictures and collected samples as expected by the mission planners. It was a great test and gave us a lot of confidence moving forward."

As large as a car, the mobile, nuclear-powered Curiosity, equipped with 10 science instruments for analyzing the Martian surface, is NASA's most ambitious rover yet.

It's "really a rover on steroids," NASA's Colleen Hartman, assistant associate administrator for science, told the Associated Press. "It's an order of magnitude more capable than anything we have ever launched to any planet in the solar system."

Launched from Cape Canaveral on Nov. 26, 2011, NASA expects Curiosity's delivery on the evening of Aug. 5, 2012, to begin a two-year mission. The landing site is near the base of a mountain inside Gale Crater, which researchers believe may hold evidence of water and wet environments of early Mars.

That Curiosity is so close to its final destination is in itself a small miracle.

"Mars really is the Bermuda Triangle of the solar system," Hartman said.

"It's the death planet, and the United States of America is the only nation in the world that has ever landed and driven robotic explorers on the surface of Mars. And now we're set to do it again."

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Wind farms are warming the earth, researchers say

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Wind farms are warming the earth, researchers say
Apr 30th 2012, 15:07

New research finds that wind farms actually warm up the surface of the land underneath them during the night, a phenomena that could put a damper on efforts to expand wind energy as a green energy solution.

Researchers used satellite data from 2003 to 2011 to examine surface temperatures across as wide swath of west Texas, which has built four of the world's largest wind farms. The data showed a direct correlation between night-time temperatures increases of 0.72 degrees C (1.3 degrees F) and the placement of the farms.

"Given the present installed capacity and the projected growth in installation of wind farms across the world, I feel that wind farms, if spatially large enough, might have noticeable impacts on local to regional meteorology," Liming Zhou, associate professor at the State University of New York, Albany and author of the paper published April 29 in Nature Climate Change said in an e-mail to Discovery News.

PHOTOS: Wind Power Without the Blades

'Wind farms ... might have noticeable impacts on local to regional meteorology.'

- Liming Zhou, study author

Analysts say wind power is a good complement to solar power, because winds often blow more strongly at night while solar power is only available during daytime hours. But Zhou and his colleagues found that turbulence behind the wind turbine blades stirs up a layer of cooler air that usually settles on the ground at night, and mixes in warm air that is on top.

That layering effect is usually reversed during the daytime, with warm air on the surface and cooler air higher up."The year-to-year land surface temperature over wind farms shows a persistent upward trend from 2003 to 2011, consistent with the increasing number of operational wind turbines with time," Zhou said.

FAA data shows that the number of wind turbines over the study region has risen from 111 in 2003 to 2358 in 2011, according to the study.The warming could hurt local farmers, who have already suffered through a killer drought over the past few years. Texas agriculture contributes $80 billion to the state's economy, second only to petrochemicals, according to the Texas Department of Agriculture.

West Texas is a dry area that uses irrigation to grow wheat, cotton and other crops, as well as raise cattle. But increased warming can play havoc with plant growth, as well as change local rainfall patterns.

Texas wind farms produce more than 10,000 megawatts of electricity, more than double the capacity of the nearest state, Iowa, and enough to power three million average American homes, according to the American Wine Energy Association.

NEWS: Wind Farms Float Among the Clouds

One solution could be to change the shape of the turbine blades, according to John Dabiri, director of the Center for Bioinspired Wind Energy at the California Institute of Technology who is an expert on wind power design.

"Smaller turbines can avoid this problem," Dabiri said. "However, this presents a tradeoff, because wind speed decreases as you move closer to the ground; so the smaller turbines would experience lower incoming wind speeds on average."

That means a smaller turbine makes less power.

Dabiri said Zhou's findings may mean taking a second look at the trade-offs with renewable energy. "It shows that we need to think carefully about the unintended environmental consequences of any large-scale energy development," Dabiri said, "including green technologies."

Zhou cautioned that his study used satellite data, which can have errors from clouds, for example, rather than temperature readings taken at the surface. He said he hopes to improve his dataset, and look at wind farms in other parts of the world.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Secretive spaceflight company Blue Origin shoots for reusable rockets

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Secretive spaceflight company Blue Origin shoots for reusable rockets
Apr 30th 2012, 12:30

Blue Origin wants to fly under the radar -- all the way into space.

The secretive private spaceflight firm, which was established in 2000 by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, is developing systems to launch astronauts to both suborbital and orbital space. While Blue Origin releases details about its plans and progress sparingly, the company's basic business model has come out.

It all revolves around reusable rockets and spacecraft, developed in incremental steps.

"It's really about developing and using vertical powered landing to drive reusable systems that can increase reliability and lower cost," Rob Meyerson, the company's president and program manager, said in a rare public presentation last September at a conference in Long Beach, Calif.

"We believe our incremental, long-term approach is going to develop the systems and technologies and vehicles that'll result in safe and affordable human spaceflight," added Meyerson, who spoke at Space 2011, a meeting organized by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. [Photos: Blue Origin's Secretive Spaceship]

Working with NASA

Blue Origin is one of four companies that have received funding through NASA's Commercial Crew Development (CCDev) program, which seeks to spur the advancement of American private spaceflight capabilities. The other three firms are Boeing, SpaceX and Sierra Nevada Corp.

'Our approach is going to develop the vehicles that'll result in safe and affordable human spaceflight.'

- Rob Meyerson, Blue Origin president

CCDev's goal is to help get a handful of companies up and running as soon as safely possible, so the United States has its own way to send astronauts to the International Space Station and other destinations in low-Earth orbit. Since NASA's space shuttle fleet was grounded in 2011, the nation has relied on Russia's Soyuz vehicles to perform this taxi service.

Blue Origin got $3.7 million in 2010 in the first round of grants, called CCDev-1, and another $22 million last year under CCDev-2. The company is  designing, developing and testing systems for both suborbital and orbital human spaceflight. [Blue Origin's Secretive Space Vehicle Explained (Infographic)]

Suborbital comes first.

"We're beginning with suborbital as a means to gain that experience, gain that practice that'll lead on to orbital human spaceflight," Meyerson said.

Suborbital: New Shepard

Blue Origin's suborbital vehicle is called New Shepard. The name is a nod to NASA astronaut Alan Shepard, who became the first American in space when he launched on a brief suborbital flight on May 5, 1961.

New Shepard consists of two reusable parts: a crew capsule and a propulsion module. A few minutes after liftoff, the propulsion module separates and heads back to Earth, eventually making a vertical, rocket-powered landing near the launch site (Blue Origin's private spaceport about 25 miles north of tiny Van Horn, Texas).

The crew module, which is designed to carry three or more people, coasts on to the edge of space before returning to Earth as well, its descent slowed by parachutes.

Blue Origin envisions multiple uses for New Shepard. It could carry tourists interested in experiencing microgravity and seeing the curvature of Earth against the blackness of space. The company also hopes scientists will book flights on the vehicle to take experiments up to space.

When it's fully developed, New Shepard should allow people to get to space relatively quickly and efficiently, according to company officials.

"The system design is optimized for rapid turnaround with a very small ground crew," Meyerson said. "We're talking tens of people, as opposed to thousands in previous reusable vehicles."

Blue Origin has conducted a handful of flights with suborbital test vehicles since 2006, including two in 2011. The second of last year's flights, which took place on Aug. 24, resulted in failure; the "PM2" vehicle crashed after reaching an altitude of about 45,000 feet (14,000 meters).

Orbital: The Space Vehicle

Blue Origin is also working on a manned vessel for orbital flight, a biconic craft called the Space Vehicle (SV).

"This development builds on our suborbital New Shepard crew capsule development," Meyerson said. "The lessons we learn in that program roll directly into the SV, the orbital system development."

The Space Vehicle is designed to transport up to seven astronauts to low-Earth orbit, though it can also carry a mix of cargo and crew, Meyerson said. When the spaceship comes back to Earth, Blue Origin wants it to touch down on land, with water landings as a backup.

Blue Origin is designing a reusable first-stage booster to help get the Space Vehicle to orbit. Like New Shepard's Propulsion Module, this rocket will return to Earth and make a vertical, powered landing.

"Then the orbital booster can be refueled and launched again, allowing improved reliability and lowering the cost of human access to space," Blue Origin officials write on the company's website.

Blue Origin doesn't release schedules or timelines of its projected progress. But Meyerson said the Space Vehicle might be ferrying astronauts to and from the space station in less than five years if all goes well.

"In our proposal with the government funding that we laid out, we believe [operations could begin] between 2016 and 2018," he said.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Sun's twin has a nine-planet solar system -- and it's just 127 light years away

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Sun's twin has a nine-planet solar system -- and it's just 127 light years away
Apr 27th 2012, 12:00

A star already known to host five alien planets may actually be home to a whopping nine full-fledged worlds - a planetary arrangement that, if confirmed, would outnumber our own solar system and set a new record for the most populated system of extrasolar planets yet found.

The sun-like star, called HD 10180, is located approximately 127 light-years away from Earth. In a previous study that was published in August 2010, astronomers identified five confirmed alien worlds and two planetary candidates.

Now a new study confirms both previous candidates in the HD 10180 system, and also suggests that two more planets could be orbiting the star. This could bring the tally up to nine planets, said lead author Mikko Tuomi, an astronomer at the University of Hertfordshire in the U.K. Our solar system, by comparison, has eight official planets (with Mercury closest to the sun and Neptune at the farthest end). Pluto and several other smaller objects are considered dwarf planets, not full-blown worlds.

"The data indicates that there are not only seven but likely as many as nine planets in the system," Tuomi told SPACE.com in an email interview. "The two new planets appear to have orbital periods of roughly 10 and 68 days and masses of 1.9 and 5.1 times that of Earth, which enables the classification of them as hot super-Earths, i.e. planets with likely scorchingly hot rocky surfaces."

Tuomi re-analyzed observations collected between November 2003 and June 2010 by the planet-hunting HARPS spectrograph instrument, which is mounted on a 3.6-meter telescope at the European Southern Observatory in La Silla, Chile. [Infographic: Planets Large and Small Populate Our Galaxy]

'There are not only seven but likely as many as nine planets in the system.'

- Mikko Tuomi, University of Hertfordshire astronomer

Since the newly detected candidates are still unconfirmed, more research is needed to determine if they are bona fide planets, and not erroneous signals.

"While the existence of the larger of these two is well supported by the data, the signal corresponding to the smaller one exceeds the detection threshold only barely, which gives it a very small but non-eligible probability of being a false positive," Tuomi said.

Since the planets in the HD 10180 system are too distant to be directly observed, astronomers use HARPS to monitor the gravitational pulls that the planets exert on their host star.

The five previously confirmed planets are relatively large and orbit the parent star at intervals that range from just six days to 600 days. The two newly confirmed planets are also super-Earths, with one that orbits tightly around HD 10180, while the other has an orbit that swings beyond the others.

Observations of the masses of the new planetary candidates and their distances from the star indicate that they likely have orbital periods of approximately 10 and 68 days. They are likely both rocky planets with surfaces hotter than that of Mercury, Tuomi added.

But even if they are confirmed as actual planets, neither are located in a circumstellar region known as the habitable zone, where conditions could be suitable for liquid water to exist on a planet's surface.

"They are certainly not in the habitable zone and likely have no prospects for hosting life," Tuomi said. "However, one of the Neptune-sized planets in the system with an orbital period of 600 days is actually in the middle of the habitable zone, which makes it an interesting target when the better detection methods enable us to observe moons orbiting exoplanets in the future."

As instruments and observatories become more sophisticated, and as astronomers hone planet-hunting techniques, densely populated systems similar to HD 10180 and our own solar system could be discovered in greater numbers.

"This certainly tells our methods are sufficient for detecting richly populated planetary systems," Tuomi said. "Just how common they are, we do not know based on only two examples. My guess would be that they are very common, though, because they are very hard to detect and we already have one when the precision of our instruments enables the detection of these systems only barely."

The finding also suggests that similar planetary systems could be more common throughout the universe than was previously thought.

"Scientifically this would not be of much significance because it has been suspected for a long time that such populous planetary systems exist in the universe," Tuomi said. "Philosophically, though, it shows that our very own solar system is not special in this respect either — systems with great numbers of planets are very likely common throughout the universe and it is only a matter of time when we find even richer systems."

The study has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Is strange organism new branch on tree of life?

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Is strange organism new branch on tree of life?
Apr 30th 2012, 13:00

Talk about the extended family!

A single-celled organism in Norway has been called "mankind's furthest relative." It is so far removed from the organisms we know that researchers claim it belongs to a new base group, called a kingdom, on the tree of life.

"We have found an unknown branch of the tree of life that lives in this lake. It is unique! So far we know of no other group of organisms that descend from closer to the roots of the tree of life than this species," study researcher Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi, of the University of Oslo, in Norway, said in a statement.

SUMMARY

IN THE KINGDOM: Scientists lump life as we know it on Earth into five base groups, called kingdoms, on the tree of life: animal, plant, fungi, algae or protist (little understood single-celled organisms). 

A protozoan found in a lake near Oslo is similar to protists mostly based on observations of size and shape. 

But it's genetically different enough that researchers argue it should be a sixth group.

The organism, a type of protozoan, was found by researchers in a lake near Oslo. Protozoans have been known to science since 1865, but because they are difficult to culture in the lab, researchers haven't been able to get a grip on their genetic makeup. They were placed in the protist kingdom on the tree of life mostly based on observations of their size and shape.

In this study, published March 21 in the journal Molecular Biology Evolution, the researchers were able to grow enough of the protozoans, called Collodictyon, in the lab to analyze its genome. They found it doesn't genetically fit into any of the previously discovered kingdoms of life. It's an organism with membrane-bound internal structures, called a eukaryote, but genetically it isn't an animal, plant, fungi, algae or protist (the five main groups of eukayotes). [Extreme Life on Earth: 8 Bizarre Creatures]

"The microorganism is among the oldest currently living eukaryote organism we know of. It evolved around one billion years ago, plus or minus a few hundred million years. It gives us a better understanding of what early life on Earth looked like," Shalchian-Tabrizi said.

Mix of features

What it looked like was small. The organism the researchers found is about 30 to 50 micrometers (about the width of a human hair) long. It eats algae and doesn't like to live in groups. It is also unique because instead of one or two flagella (cellular tails that help organisms move) it has four.

'We have found an unknown branch of the tree of life. It is unique! '

- Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi, researcher

The organism also has unique characteristics usually associated with protists and amoebas, two different branches. This left researchers wondering where the microorganism fits into the tree of life. They analyzed its genetic code to see how similar it is to organisms that have already been genetically catalogued.

"We are surprised," said study researcher Dag Klaveness, also of the University of Oslo, because the species is unique. They compared its genome with those in hundreds of databases around the world, with little luck. In all that looking they "have only found a partial match with a gene sequence in Tibet."

New life

The researchers think this organism belongs in a new group on the tree of life. Researchers can't say for certain if other organisms previously classified as protozoans are in this same branch without their genetic information. Its closest known genetic relative is the protist Diphylleia, though other organisms that haven't been analyzed genetically may be closer relatives.

"It is conceivable that only a few other species exist in this family branch of the tree of life, which has survived all the many hundreds of millions of years since the eukaryote species appeared on Earth for the first time," Klaveness said.

Because it has features of two separate kingdoms of life, the researchers think that the ancestors of this group might be the organisms that gave rise to these other kingdoms, the amoeba and the protist, as well. If that's true, they would be some of the oldest eukaryotes, giving rise to all other eukaryotes, including humans.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Most Popular Content - www.foxnews.com: Australian billionaire announces construction of Titanic II, a high-tech replica

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Australian billionaire announces construction of Titanic II, a high-tech replica
Apr 30th 2012, 04:40

An Australian billionaire has announced the construction of the Titanic II: a replica of the iconic ship with the same dimensions, rooms and smokestacks, but with a 21st-century interior makeover.

Weeks after the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the original Titanic, Clive Palmer said Monday he has signed a memorandum of understanding with state-owned Chinese company CSC Jinling Shipyard to build the Titanic II. Construction of the ship will begin in late 2013, the Australian reports, with its maiden voyage from England to New York set for 2016.

"It will be every bit as luxurious as the original Titanic, but ... will have state-of-the-art 21st-century technology and the latest navigation and safety systems," Palmer said in a statement. He called the project "a tribute to the spirit of the men and women who worked on the original Titanic."

The Titanic II will have 840 rooms on nine decks, like the original, along with gymnasiums and swimming pools, Palmer said, according to Bloomberg.

Libraries, high-end restaurants and luxury cabins will  round out the ship's interior, Palmer told the Sydney Morning Herald.

The diesel-powered ship will have four smokestacks like the coal-powered original, but they will be purely decorative.

The space of the old coal boilers will be used as an exhibition room to promote tourism for Queensland, Australia, where Palmer is from, the Herald reports.

Some of the most obvious changes from the original Titanic would be below the water line, including welding rather than rivets, a bulbous bow for greater fuel efficiency and enlarged rudder and bow thrusters for increased maneuverability, Palmer said.

But Palmer wouldn't rule out the possibility of the ship sinking.

"Of course it will sink if you put a hole in it," he told The Australian. "It will be designed as a modern ship with all the technology to ensure that doesn't happen. But of course if you are superstitious like you are, you never know what could happen."

More than 1,500 people died after the Titanic hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic on its first voyage. It was the world's largest and most luxurious ocean liner at the time.

Palmer built a fortune on real estate on Australia's Gold Coast tourist strip before becoming a coal mining magnate. BRW magazine reported he was Australia's fifth-richest person last year with wealth in excess of  $5.2 billion ($5 billion Australian dollars).

Palmer said at a news conference that previous attempts to build a Titanic replica failed because proponents did not raise enough money or commission a shipyard. The Titanic II is the first of four luxury cruise ships Palmer has commissioned CSC Jinling Shipyard to build.

The Chinese Navy will escort the ship to London after its completion, Bloomberg reports.

Palmer did not provide a cost estimate. He said he had established a new shipping company, Blue Star Line Pty. Ltd., and that design work for the Titanic II has begun with assistance from a historical research team.

Brett Jardine, general manager for Australia and New Zealand in the industry group International Cruise Council, said Titanic II would be small by modern standards, but could prove viable at the top end of the luxury market.

"From a marketing point of view, many will embrace it and perhaps there'll be some that wouldn't," Jardine said.

"If you've got a niche, it's going to work. Why go out there and try to compete with the mass market products that are out there now?" he added.

While the Titanic II would carry around 1,680 passengers, most modern cruise ships create economies of scale by catering to more than 2,000 passengers, he said.

Allure of the Seas, one of the world's largest passenger ships,  is 295 feet (90 meters) longer than the 886-foot (270-meter) Titanic and has 2,700 cabins.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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