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Obama to deliver budget on February 13, delayed one week (Reuters) —

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama will release his 2013 budget proposal on February 13, the White House said on Monday, delaying by a week the outline of his spending priorities as he gears up for an election-year campaign dominated by taxes, jobs and the U.S. deficit.

Congress is free to ignore Democrat Obama’s suggestions and Republicans, who control the U.S. House of Representatives, are likely to declare it dead on arrival.

The budget is supposed to be released on the first Monday in February, which this year would have been February 6. Republicans complained that delaying it by a week showed an “abdication of leadership” by the president.

The budget for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2013, will include the latest forecasts for U.S. growth and debt — both topics that Republicans are using to attack Obama as they try to deny him a second White House term.

U.S. growth has been too tepid to quickly reduce the jobless rate, although unemployment has declined to 8.5 percent from a 10 percent peak in 2009, and anxiety over the country’s economy will be a key issue in the November election.

“Having buried Americans under trillions of dollars of debt, the president and his party’s leaders remain unwilling to account for their spending spree,” said Republican Representative Paul Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee.

In September Obama laid out what amounted to a mini-budget in recommendations to cut the deficit by $3.6 trillion, based a mixture of spending controls and tax increases.

He is expected to repeat many of those recommendations, which include allowing tax breaks for wealthier Americans to expire at the end of this year, alongside measures to control the growth in healthcare costs focused mainly on providers.

Obama also is likely to preview some of these suggestions in his State of the Union address to Congress on Tuesday, which is expected to include recommendations for tax breaks to encourage firms to bring jobs back to the United States.

Obama will propose lifting a federal pay freeze to give government employees a 0.5 percent wage increase. The move, ending a two-year pay freeze imposed in 2010 on 2 million civilian workers, compared to a 1.7 percent increase for fiscal 2013 mandated under law, and would save $26 billion over 10 years.

(Reporting By Alister Bull; Editing by Jackie Frank and Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120123/pl_nm/us_usa_obama_budget

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Razzies worst-movie awards shift to April Fool’s (AP) —

LOS ANGELES ? Hollywood’s award season is going to linger on through April Fool’s Day this year.

Organizers of the Razzies have changed the schedule for their nominations and prize ceremony. The spoof on the Academy Awards picks the year’s worst films.

The Razzies used to announce contenders the night before the Oscar nominations, which are coming Tuesday.

Razzies founder John Wilson announced Sunday that nominations this season will be released Feb. 25, the eve of the Oscar ceremony. Winners of the Razzies will be announced on April 1.

Wilson says Razzies organizers have long wanted to have their awards coincide with April Fool’s Day.

A news release announcing the change also notes that it will give the 600 Razzies voters “additional time to see the dreck they will eventually nominate.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120122/ap_en_mo/us_oscars_razzies

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22 show horses killed in fast-moving NJ barn fire —

Authorities say a fast-moving fire destroyed a barn, killing 22 show horses owned by a noted New Jersey equestrian family and worth tens of thousands of dollars each.

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State Police Sgt. Brian Polite says the barn was engulfed in flames when troopers arrived around 2 a.m. Saturday in Lafayette. The blaze was soon extinguished, but all the horses inside were killed.

Polite says the animals were valued at $10,000 to $60,000 apiece.

Betty Hahn, whose family owns the horses, tells The Star-Ledger (http://bit.ly/xKriZi) that no hay or fuel was stored in the barn, so she’s baffled about how the blaze began. Hahn says her family has competed and won awards in equestrian competitions along the East Coast.

___

Information from: The Star-Ledger, http://www.nj.com/starledger

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46082978/ns/us_news/

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Posthumous US asylum bid highlights gang debate —

Josue Rafael Orellana Garcia fled his impoverished neighborhood in Honduras for the United States as a teenager, to escape what began as teasing over his disabilities and escalated into what his mother said were threats to kill him if he did not join a gang.

Making his way illegally to New Jersey to be with his mother, he applied for asylum in 2008, claiming he’d be killed by gangs if forced to return to the small but violence-plagued nation. He lost his case, was deported in 2010, and last year was found dead, his body riddled with bullets. He was 20.

Now his family has taken the unusual step of trying to win him asylum posthumously. His attorney, Joshua Bardavid, said it’s an effort to get the U.S. government to acknowledge the “entire system let him down” and to call attention to the plight of thousands of Central American teenagers.

But the case also highlights a growing debate among immigration experts over whether the grounds for asylum in the United States should be expanded to include more modern forms of conflict, such as gang violence.

To be granted asylum in the U.S., applicants must prove a well-founded and documented fear of persecution because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group. They must also show that the government or ruling authority in their home country is unwilling or incapable of adequately protecting them.

U.S. Immigration Judge Frederic Leeds in Newark found Orellana’s claims credible but said the young man had not sufficiently documented that he and his family had been targeted by gangs. Even if he had, there is no legal precedent for extending “the concept of family group to the concept of joining gangs,” wrote the judge, while expressing appreciation for what he said were creative arguments on the young man’s behalf.

Though the law does not consider the threat of gang recruitment as meeting the definition of a protected social group, some believe it should, said Dana Leigh Marks, the president of the National Association of Immigration Judges.

“There are those who would argue the asylum law is old-fashioned and needs to be modernized, while others would argue it is a limited remedy that is not supposed to resolve all problems and allow everyone to qualify,” Marks said.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the international body responsible for the protection of refugees and asylum seekers worldwide, issued a memo in 2010 urging courts to expand existing asylum law interpretations to consider victims of organized gangs as warranting protection, if their cases satisfy all other legal requirements.

But those who oppose expanding the class of potential asylum seekers say it could undermine an already overburdened U.S. immigration system with a flood of new applicants.

“There’s no limit to the categories you could add by our (U.S.) standards. There is a lot of oppression in the world,” said Steven Camarota, director of research at the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Immigration Studies, an organization which advocates stricter immigration rules and believes asylum and all other aspects of immigration law should be decided by the U.S. Congress, not the courts.

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“We may find the treatment of women in some countries poor, compared to our standards, but would you say if they’re treated poorly, they’re a member of a particular social group?” Camarota said.

Ricardo Estrada, a minister of migratory affairs with the Honduran embassy in Washington, said he was not familiar with Orellana’s case but that “it’s likely that his story could be true, because conditions point to it.”

“Lamentably, our country is going through a crisis of violence,” Estrada told The Associated Press, in an interview conducted in Spanish. “The problem is enormous, and security is an issue the government is really trying to tackle, but it’s very challenging with a government that has little resources in comparison to the narco-cartels, who often have better arms than the police.”

Investigators face a huge backlog of homicide investigations, but have few resources, he said.

Honduras has the highest homicide rate in the world, according to a 2011 United Nations report which cited 6,200 killings, or 82.1 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, in 2010. Earlier this month, the Peace Corps withdrew all volunteers from the country, citing safety and security concerns. The U.S. agreed this past week to send a team of experts to help the Honduras government with “citizen security issues.”

In a motion filed in December with the Board of Immigration Appeals, Bardavid argued that Orellana, as a result of being shot dead after being deported, now meets the burden of proof required of asylum applicants to show they would suffer irreparable harm if sent back to their country.

“I think it’s something that needs to be acknowledged: that we failed him; that he came here seeking safety, and the entire system let him down,” Bardavid said.

Spokeswoman Kathryn Mattingly of The Executive Office for Immigration Review, which oversees the BIA, said the agency does not comment on pending cases or prior decisions.

Orellana’s mother, Josefa Rafaela Garcia Mejia, lives legally in the United States under a program that allows immigrants from qualifying countries to live and work in the U.S. on a restricted visa. She said gangs killed her son, the youngest of her four children.

Orellana had been picked on from a young age after losing one eye and much of his hearing from being struck by a tree during Hurricane Mitch, which devastated much of Honduras in 1998, Garcia said. She sent money home, working as a home health aide in New Jersey, to support Orellana and his three siblings, and to buy him a glass eye.

As he got older, his mother said, Orellana told her in frequent phone calls that he was being pursued and threatened by gangs that controlled their San Pedro Sula neighborhood, trying to recruit young people. The threats got so bad, she said, her son fled, against her advice. He was alone at the age of 17 when he crossed illegally into the U.S. to join her in New Jersey.

In a court hearing in July 2009, the judge asked Orellana why, if he had been attacked several times by notorious Central American gangs, he had never gone to the police to file a report.

“Like I mentioned, we would call the police but the police were afraid to come where we lived,” Orellana replied.

After Leeds’ decision was upheld on appeal, the young man was deported to Honduras in March 2010. He disappeared on July 23, 2011, after telling his grandmother he was running to the store, his mother said. His body was discovered three days later in a nearby wooded area, according to a story in the Honduran newspaper La Tribuna.

“I say as a mother, as a Christian woman, my son was not involved with gangs; he never carried so much as a nail clipper,” Garcia said, crying as she clutched a photograph of him. “If they had not deported my boy, he would not be dead.”

___

Follow Samantha Henry at http://www.twitter.com/SamanthaHenry

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46092033/ns/us_news/

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German court shoots down Samsung’s 3G patent lawsuit against Apple —

Germany’s Mannheim Regional Court has just issued a decision on one front of the ongoing dispute between Apple and Samsung, ruling against one of the Korean manufacturer’s several patent infringement claims. At issue is a Samsung patent pertaining to the 3G / UMTS standard — one of seven that Apple has been accused of infringing. Today, Judge Andreas Voss rejected Samsung’s claim, though the reasoning behind this decision remains somewhat murky. According to FOSS Patents, however, the validity of the patent itself probably wasn’t the driver behind Voss’ ruling, since any doubts would have resulted in a stay, rather than an outright rejection. FOSS speculates that the court determined either that Apple wasn’t infringing upon Samsung’s patent, or that Samsung has simply exhausted its IP rights.

In a statement, Samsung said it has yet to decide whether it will appeal today’s ruling. “We are disappointed that the court did not share our views regarding the infringement by Apple of this specific patent in Germany,” spokesman Nam Ki-yung said. “It should be noted that today’s ruling relates to only one of several patents asserted by Samsung in the Mannheim court.” We’re still awaiting official documentation, and will update this post as soon as we hear more.

German court shoots down Samsung’s 3G patent lawsuit against Apple originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Jan 2012 04:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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6 killed in Afghanistan were Hawaii-based Marines —

(AP) ? All six Marines killed in the crash of a U.S. helicopter in Afghanistan were based in Hawaii, a Hawaii congresswoman said Friday.

The CH-53D helicopter crashed Thursday in Afghanistan’s southern province of Helmand.

U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, said Friday she’s saddened to hear of the deaths. Her spokeswoman, Ashley Nagaoka Boylan, said the congresswoman was notified Thursday evening that all six Marines were Hawaii-based.

“All who have called Hawaii home are part of our island ohana, and every loss like this touches us deeply,” Hanabusa said in a statement, using the Hawaiian word for family.

The military hasn’t identified those killed. But John Riddick, of Mount Pleasant, Iowa, said his son was among them.

Master Sgt. Travis Riddick, 40, grew up in Iowa and joined the Marines after graduating from Centerville High School in 1990. John Riddick said his son served three tours in Iraq and two in Afghanistan. This was to be his last tour.

The Vietnam War-era CH-53D is the same model as a helicopter that crashed and killed a Marine in a bay off Hawaii on March 29. An investigation later revealed mechanical failure caused that accident.

Thursday’s crash was the deadliest in Afghanistan since August, when 30 American troops died after a Chinook helicopter was apparently shot down in Wardak province in the center of the country.

The cause of the latest crash is still being investigated, but a statement issued by the NATO international military coalition said there was no enemy activity in the area when it happened.

German Brig. Gen. Carsten Jacobson, a spokesman for the NATO coalition in Kabul, said officials were looking at a “technical fault” as the possible culprit.

“The helicopter is one of the safest forms of transport,” Jacobson said. He said not only does it protect troops the danger of roadside bombs on the ground, but it is well-tested, well-proven way to travel.

“The loss of the six U.S. Marines in yesterday’s helicopter crash in Afghanistan comes as tragic news for our island community and our nation,” U.S. Rep. Mazie K. Hirono, of Hawaii, said in a statement. “We owe them and all of our brave servicemen and women a debt of gratitude for their dedication to our country.”

In 2005, the same base lost 27 Marines when a CH-53E Super Stallion deployed to Iraq crashed during a desert sandstorm. Altogether, 30 Marines and a Navy medic were killed in that crash.

CH-53D Sea Stallion helicopters were first used in the 1960s, and the Marine Corps flew them in the Vietnam War.

All Sea Stallions still used operationally are stationed at Marine Corps Base Hawaii in Kaneohe Bay. The military plans to replace them with the MV-22 Osprey.

___

AP National Security Writer Robert Burns in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-20-US-Afghanistan-Helicopter%20Crash/id-962ff1f0ae564228a8fc6a8895d6ce6b

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Novartis drug investigated after 11 deaths —

(AP) ? A European agency is investigating a multiple sclerosis drug made by industry giant Novartis to determine whether the medicine played any role in the deaths at least 11 patients.

The drug, Gilenya, was licensed last year in the European Union to treat a severe type of multiple sclerosis. It can cause a slow heart rate when first taken and doctors closely monitor patients after the first dose.

The European Medicines Agency, which is now investigating the drug, said it isn’t clear if it caused the deaths. One of the fatalities occurred in the United States, where a patient died within 24 hours of taking the first dose.

The European agency said it didn’t know where the other 10 deaths occurred, but that they were reported to its drug database, which monitors side effects from medicines in the European Union.

Novartis said not all the deaths were heart related.

A spokeswoman at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it also is conducting a data analysis but has not made any definitive conclusions and does not know when its review will be complete.

More than 30,000 patients have taken Gilenya worldwide.

The European Medicines Agency advised doctors to increase their monitoring of patients after the first dose of the medicine. The agency said the risk of a slow heart rate after the first dose of Gilenya was known when it was approved.

Novartis AG said it was advising doctors of new recommendations on using Gilenya. They had previously said all patients should be monitored for six hours after their first dose, but are now tightening that to include continuous heart monitoring using electrocardiograms and measuring blood pressure and heart rate every hour. In certain patients, that monitoring should be extended, the drug maker said in a statement.

This new guidance applies only to patients taking their first dose, Novartis said in a statement.

The EU drug regulator hopes to finish its review of the drug by March.

___

Online:

www.ema.europa.eu

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-20-EU-Novartis-Drug-Review/id-efd7d38405854011a79b4c17a8ddaf4f

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Delay for space station’s 1st private cargo run —

(AP) ? The first commercial cargo run to the International Space Station has been put off until spring.

SpaceX planned to launch its unmanned supply ship from Cape Canaveral in Florida on Feb. 7. But the company said more testing was needed with the spacecraft, named Dragon. On Friday, officials confirmed the launch would not occur until late March.

NASA closed out its 30-year shuttle program last July.

Space station commander Daniel Burbank said as much as he’d like to take part in the historic event, it’s important that SpaceX fly when it’s ready. Burbank will return to Earth in mid-March.

“If that’s not to be during our mission, then that’s OK,” Burbank said in an interview Friday with The Associated Press. “We’ve got plenty of other things to occupy us.”

Just over a year ago, the California-based Space Exploration Technologies Corp. launched a test version of the capsule, becoming the first private business to send a spacecraft into orbit and return it safely. NASA is counting on companies like SpaceX to keep the station stocked, now that the shuttles are retired.

Until then, the Russian, European and Japanese space agencies ? all government entities ? have been sending up regular shipments to the orbiting outpost.

SpaceX ? run by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk ? is one of several companies vying for space station visiting privileges. Its long-term goal is to modify its Falcon rocket and Dragon capsule to ferry astronauts to the station.

In the meantime, Americans are buying seats on Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

SpaceX spokeswoman Kirstin Grantham pointed out that this is a developmental program for her company, and everyone wants it to be a complete success.

“It may take a little more time, but when it happens, it’s going to be amazing,” she said.

This first Dragon capsule to visit the space station will carry several hundred pounds of astronaut provisions ? nothing crucial, in case of a failure.

Astronauts aboard the space station will use a huge robot arm to grab and berth the Dragon.

“This will be one step in the long road to human expansion off of the planet into low-Earth orbit and beyond,” space station astronaut Donald Pettit said Friday.

The beauty of the Dragon is that it will be able to return scientific samples to Earth, Burbank noted. None of the other countries’ supply ships can do that; they burn up on re-entry.

Americans Burbank and Pettit, three Russians and a Dutchman make up the six-man crew.

“I think we’re getting by OK,” Burbank said, “but we need to have as much up-mass and down-mass capability as we can to support space station operations at the level we need it.”

___

Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html

SpaceX: http://www.spacex.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-01-20-Test%20Rocket/id-eb802c72174d498a97ac34280b558b7a

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