2013年3月18日星期一

For those traveling to New York

Amtrak forced to reroute after train derailment

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -- A freight train derailment in Connecticut has suspended Amtrak service along the busy New York-to-Boston corridor, and the railroad is providing transportation on alternate routes.

Trains north from New York's Penn Station will run to New Haven, Conn., then detour to Springfield, Mass., before traveling to Boston's South Station. Passengers should allow several hours of extra time.

For those traveling to New York, Amtrak will pick up passengers at Kingston, R.I, Providence, R.I., and Route 128 and return to Boston to board a special train to New York.

The rail service says crews were working Sunday to clear the tracks.

Amtrak service between New York and Washington is not affected and the Springfield, Mass., shuttle will operate as scheduled.

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who took over the PKK's command after Ocalan's capture and imprisonment in 1999

Kurdish legislators meet jailed rebel chief

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — A group of Kurdish legislators traveled to a prison island off Istanbul on Monday to confer with rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, who is widely expected to call a cease-fire ordering his rebels to stop fighting as part of efforts to end a bitter three-decade-old conflict with Turkey.

The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party officials have said Ocalan — who is serving a life sentence for leading the Kurdish insurgency — is expected to call for a truce and maybe even ask several thousand fighters to withdraw from Turkey to coincide with a spring festival celebrated by Kurds on Thursday.

Three legislators from the Peace and Democracy Party were allowed to travel to Imrali island to meet with Ocalan and were expected to relay a message from him.

The Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, has declared cease-fires in the past but these were largely ignored by Turkey which refused to talk to the rebels and vowed to continue to fight the group they until lay down arms. This time, the government has acknowledged that is it holding talks with Ocalan with the aim of persuading the PKK to disarm and the cease-fire declaration and the rebels' retreat would constitute a major step toward ending the conflict.

The government has yet to reveal details of the peace talks, but Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has indicated the rebels would withdraw fighters from Turkey and disarm as part of the peace efforts.

Reports indicate that, in return, Turkey is expected to enact reforms to boost the rights of Kurds, including a new constitution that would amend the way all citizens are defined as "Turks" and grant more powers to local authorities. Turkey is also expected to change its legislation to allow the release of hundreds of Kurdish activists jailed for alleged links to the PKK.

In an important symbolic gesture, the rebels last week released eight captive Turkish soldiers and officials they had been holding in bases in northern Iraq.

Kurds make up an estimated 20 percent of Turkey's population of around 75 million. The rebels took up arms in 1984 for self-rule; Turkey and the West label the PKK a terrorist organization.

Murat Karayilan, who took over the PKK's command after Ocalan's capture and imprisonment in 1999, said in an interview with Firat News, a website close to the rebels, that his group has decided to support the peace initiative although the PKK has some unspecified reservations and concerns about the process.

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In January

Monitoring your kids on Facebook? That's so 2009.
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    In this March 4, 2013 photo, Rebecca…

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Relieved your kids aren't posting embarrassing messages and goofy self-portraits on Facebook? They're probably doing it on Instagram and Snapchat instead.

    The number of popular social media sites available on kids' mobile devices has exploded in recent years. The smartest apps now enable kids to chat informally with select groups of friends without bumping up against texting limits and without being monitored by parents, coaches and college admissions officers, who are frequent Facebook posters themselves.

    Many of the new mobile apps don't require a cellphone or a credit card. They're free and can be used on popular portable devices such as the iPod Touch and Kindle Fire, as long as there's a wireless Internet connection.

    According to the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project, more than three-fourths of teenagers have a cellphone and use online social networking sites such as Facebook. But educators and kids say there is plenty of anecdotal evidence to suggest that Facebook for teenagers has become a bit like a school-sanctioned prom — a necessary rite of passage with plenty of adult onlookers — while apps such as Snapchat and Kik Messenger are the much cooler after-party.

    Educators say they have seen everything from kids using their mobile devices to circulate online videos of school drug searches to male students sharing nude pictures of their girlfriends. Most parents, they say, have no idea.

    "What sex education used to be — it's now the 'technology talk' we have to have with our kids," said Rebecca Levey, a mother of 10-year-old twin daughters who runs a tween video review site called KidzVuz.com and blogs about technology and educations issues.

    Eileen Patterson, a stay-at-home mom of eight kids in Burke, Va., said she used to consider herself fairly tech savvy and is frequently on Facebook, but was shocked to learn her kids could message their friends with just an iPod Touch. She counts nine wireless devices in her home and has taken to shutting off her home's Wi-Fi after 9 p.m., but Patterson calls her attempt to keep tabs on her kids' online activity "a war I'm slowly losing every day."

    "I find myself throwing up my hands every now and again," Patterson said. "Then I'll see something on TV or read an article in the paper about some horrible thing that happened to some poor child and their family, and then I try to be more vigilant. But the reality is, I'm ...stupid" when it comes to social media.

    Mobile apps refer to the software applications that can be downloaded to a mobile device through an online store such as Apple's iTunes. According to the Federal Trade Commission, there are some 800,000 apps available through Apple and 700,000 apps on Google Play.

    Among the most popular mobile apps among kids is Instagram, free software that digitally enhances photos and posts them to your account online. The photos can be shared on other social media sites such as Facebook, which bought Instagram last year.

    Then there's Snapchat, among the top 10 free iPhone apps available. Coined by the media as the "sexting" app, Snapchat lets you send a text, photo or video that self-destructs within 10 seconds of being opened.

    Kik Messenger also allows unlimited texting for free and offers anonymity to its users. Able to run on an iPod Touch or Kindle Fire, Kik allows vague user names — for example, a nickname or a string of random digits — that won't reveal a person's real name or phone number.

    But as with anything online, each of these apps comes with serious caveats.

    Snapchat, for example, acknowledges on its Web page that its messages aren't guaranteed to disappear: Anyone receiving a text or photo can use their 10 seconds to capture a "screenshot," or photo of their device's screen, and save that image to their phone. Video also can be downloaded, although Snapchat says it alerts senders when their data is saved.

    Instagram is generally considered pretty tame as long as kids adjust their privacy settings to limit who can see their photos and don't post nudity, which could subject them to child pornography laws. But Levey points out that many parents don't know their kids are on Instagram until there's trouble — usually when kids post photos at parties, and other kids who aren't invited see them.

    Dale Harkness, a technology director at Richmond-Burton Community High School in Richmond, Ill., said parents often will hand their kids a mobile device without understanding exactly what it can do. He estimates that even without the latest social media app, the average high school student probably transmits some 150 texts a day.

    "It's not anything that every parent and grandparent hasn't already seen," Harkness said. The problem, he adds, is the actions "get documented, replayed and sent around," and kids "forget how fast it moves and how far it goes."

    That was the case at Ridgewood High School in Ridgewood, N.J., where a male student allegedly took a screenshot of nude pictures sent to him by female classmates via Snapchat, then posted the pictures on Instagram. According to a letter to parents by the school district's superintendent that was later posted online, police were warning students to delete any downloaded pictures by Monday or face criminal charges under child pornography laws.

    There are general security concerns too. A recent report by a cyberthreat research company, called F-Secure, found that some of the new social networking sites have become ripe targets for spreading malware and propagating scams.

    In January, the FBI arrested a 27-year-old man in Los Angeles who allegedly hacked into hundreds of social media and email accounts, including Facebook and Skype, and found naked photos and personal passwords that women had stored online. He used the naked photos to try to coerce women into disrobing for him via Skype and threatened to post their private photos to their Facebook accounts if they refused to comply, according to the indictment.

    Also worth noting is that almost every mobile app available collects some kind of personal data, such as a person's birthdate or the location of their phone, and shares that information with third parties for marketing purposes. While a new regulation by the Federal Trade Commission this year is aimed at keeping advertisers from tracking kids younger than 13, most social media apps require that a person promise to be at least 13 when they sign up, thereby exempting themselves from the tougher privacy restrictions.

    Rep. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat who is co-chairman of a House caucus that examines privacy issues, said he'd like to see legislation that would give kids under 15 the right to delete photos or texts that wind up elsewhere online. The prospect, however, is unlikely in a Congress dominated by debates on federal spending and gun control, and raises practical questions about how such a law could be enforced.

    "I believe that our children have a right to develop, to grow up and to make mistakes," Markey said. "Nobody should be penalized for something they posted when they were 9 years old."

    Several consumer advocates actually recommend exposing their kids to social media sites earlier than age 12, when they're more receptive to hearing lessons about online etiquette and safety.

    For example, Levey links her kids' devices to her iTunes account so she's aware of any program they download. She also requires that her kids "friend" her on every program and follow certain ground rules: protect your passwords, set your privacy controls and never transmit inappropriate pictures or words.

    Levey thinks a big hurdle for parents is getting over the idea that they are invading their kids' privacy by monitoring online activity. In fact, she said, it can be the kid's first lesson that nothing online is truly private anyway.

    "If they want privacy, they should write in a journal and hide it under their mattress," Levey said.

    ___

    Follow Anne Flaherty on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AnneKFlaherty.

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  • 2013年3月14日星期四

    こ の ため

    Double ro ー ン, problem solutions eliminate へ forward regeneration support agency staff times 増 で 対 応 East Japan Earthquake で be disaster し た SMEs な ど が new た な by gold を hold え る two heavy ro ー ン problem の solutions eliminate ni ke ta take ri group み ga yo-u や く moving ki beginning め た. Government が the establishment of the Great East Japan Earthquake career renewable support organizations "は し た で take gold の to buy established by the last March の か ら about 1 year い the ri や the capital contribution the na ど 121 the の support を decision. Support organizations は support the number of the の target を the next 2 years で 1050 と し the staff the を times 増 the さ せ て reach を mesh refers desu,グッチ 靴 2月19日、AP. the <br> <br> support organizations に yo ru と, ma で の こ れ の accumulated relative the は talk by the number of items to pay 1015.だ が, was disaster geographical で は large earthquake の Tianjin wave に よ っ て victim を by ke ta SMEs や large enterprises な ど の career as は about 5 000 3 one thousand に の ぼ る と み て お ri, "potential na ni ー ズ は large ki い" (support agencies の Ikeda constitution people president) . <br> <br> こ の ため, now about 100 people い ru staff the を new regulations a の 拡 な ど of the で times 増 さ せ talk business the を strengthen su ru. the <br> <br> support the の 対 like か ら の は, before the earthquake by ri into れ と disaster の career to open の た め the, by two heavy gold の ro ー ン the に bitter し の new た な む SMEs. Financial institutions support organizations が い か ら the debt 権 を buy take ri, the debt の a カ the the ッ Suites を し first extended ば su ru こ と で, The cause of 継 続 を support su ru や return 済 period. The <br> <br> disaster land で は after the earthquake, "SME financial yen slip of law (return 済 Utah to law) や earthquake shut even の various grants の effect (Empire デ ー ta ba ン ku) で down the number of production pieces は earthquake before yo ri reduce し て い ru.だ が the end of March に は yen slip of the Act the の deadline ga cut れ, down production が 増 え ru the possibility the moo accused さ れ て い ru. The support organizations の Ikeda president municipality と は "地元 su ru the na ど を し て known third-thoroughly to し たい" と し, the same institutions の utilize を call び ka ke ru. [Off even Notepad】 food "Origin を consciousness" 7 cut roots strong い wind assessment murdered East Japan big earthquake "の つ na ga ri chest に and then swear u ka ki breeding の stone Sen Yu governance さ ん East Japan Earthquake revival へ の 闘 い three-year entry の wall ...",6673; people も モ ノ もあ い な wins い ん だ よ "the village refuge の Fukushima restaurant village of origin reporters が see つ め た Hongo の now 実 temperature so the Prime Minister," last words "the で learning line を critical

    2013年3月13日星期三

    3DS対応マジコン 」

    桂文枝の演芸図鑑が4月スタート「大先輩との対談楽しみ」「桂文枝の演芸図鑑」(NHK総合)が来月4月7日(日)より全10回にわたって放送される。昨日3月11日、東京・NHKにて番組収録の合間に記者取材会が行われ、桂文枝が出席した。

    【その他の写真を見る】

    演芸界のベテラン達が3カ月ずつ司会を務めているこの番組。文枝は桂三枝時代の昨年2012年1月~3月にも司会を担当している。番組の前半にはネタコーナー、後半には文枝と個性豊かなゲストとのスペシャル対談を実施。初回放送にはケーシー高峰、古今亭菊之丞が出演するほか、対談には講談師の一龍斎貞水が登場する予定だ。

    取材会で文枝は「この番組がありがたいのは、自分自身が勉強になるような方とお話したい、という希望を叶えていただけること」とコメント。さらに「石原裕次郎さんの創作落語を書きたいと思っている。奥様の石原まき子さんにも出ていただく予定で、いろいろなエピソードを聞きたい」と語った。

    放送時間は毎週日曜日の午前5時15分からと早朝。「私はけっこう起きてる時間」という文枝は「人生や芸能の大先輩にどんな言葉をいただけるか楽しみにしている」と期待を寄せた。

    桂文枝の演芸図鑑

    NHK総合 2013年4月7日(日) 5:15 ~ 5:44
    毎週日曜日放送(全10回)
    <出演者>
    司会:桂文枝
    ゲスト:ケーシー高峰 / 古今亭菊之丞
    一龍斎貞水【関連記事】 「見とけよ!」で頂点、三浦マイルドのR-1優勝会見 優勝は三浦マイルド,R4i SDHC 3DS をはじめ、プロデビュー戦の選手も多く、前半戦は若手育成の色濃いラインナップとなった!「R-1ぐらんぷり2013」 R-1連載最終回、雷ジャクソン高本「自衛官のみなさんのために」 R-1連載第11回、アンドーひであき「喋らないで優勝目指す」 R-1連載第10回、スギちゃん「No.1が欲しいです,R4i Sdhc 7021!」

    r4 karte 党総裁

    党改革の「派閥無力化」 石破氏の領袖行脚も、さっそく反発自民党の石破茂幹事長は15日の党役員連絡会で、党政治制度改革実行本部がまとめた党改革案について、安倍晋三首相(党総裁)の指示に基づき3月17日の党大会までに実行のめどをつけるよう指示した。改革案は石破氏の持論である「派閥機能の無力化」のため、各派事務所の党本部移転を提言しているが、派閥領袖からはさっそく反発の声が上がっている,セリーヌ ラゲージ あの人が論文を盗作して辞表を出すとは信じられない」と話した。 「私が政策グループ(派閥)にお願いする場面も当然ある。事務所移転は夏の参院選までに形になって実現するのが望ましい」 石破氏は15日の記者会見でこう述べたのに対し、領袖は「形にこだわりすぎている」と批判を始めた。 改革案は総裁選の決選投票での都道府県連分の配分などを盛り込んでいるが、「事実上の石破派」(領袖)とされる無派閥連絡会が発足したばかりとあって、石破氏への風当たりは強まりそうだ,同商品は、手軽に持ち帰れるという長所もある

    セリーヌ キーケース 60

    雑木林に男性遺体 外傷なく凍死の可能性 栃木栃木県警足利署は12日、同県足利市名草上町の雑木林で9日に身元不明の男性遺体が見つかった、と明らかにした。目立った外傷はなく事件性は低いという。 同署によると、9日午前9時45分ごろ、バーベキューのため林道に入った男性(60)が、倒れている遺体を見つけ110番した,グッチ キーケース HIROYAにデビュー戦でKO勝ちした東本参戦 若武者対決が決定。 司法解剖の結果、死後1~2週間で凍死の可能性がある, Bグループでは、Fリーグ勢が苦戦を強いられた。身長約170センチ、60~80代とみられ、黒のジャンパーと灰色のズボン姿で、紺色の野球帽をかぶり黒の靴を履いていた。 同署は身元の特定を進めている。