truesee's Blog

Man hit by bus after stealing tip jar from restaurant

Man reportedly steals restaurant tips, then is hit by bus as he flees

Man hit by bus after allegedly stealing a tip jar from a restaurant.

 

Seattle Times staff

Friday, May 13, 2011 at 7:54 AM

 

A man who had allegedly stolen a tip jar from a restaurant in downtown Seattle on Thursday was hit by a Metro bus as he was fleeing, according to Seattle Police.

The man was taken to Harborview Medical Center with life-threatening injuries after the noontime incident.

According to Seattle Police, the man stole the donation jar from a business on Third Avenue and Columbia Street about noon on Thursday. He ran with the jar across Third Avenue and was struck by a northbound Metro bus.

At the time, no one was chasing the suspect, police said.

The bus driver attempted to stop, said police, but could not avoid hitting the suspect.

Police are continuing to investigate the accident and the driver has been relieved of duty during the investigation, said Metro spokeswoman Linda Thielke.

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Triple Double Chocolate and Vanilla Filling Oreo Cookies

Triple Double Oreos to hit shelves; Oreo cookie has double chocolate and vanilla filling

Lindsay Goldwert
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Friday, May 13th 2011, 3:24 PM

The triple decker chocolate cookie contains three wafers with two layers of filling, both chocolate and vanilla.
Nabisco
The triple decker chocolate cookie contains three wafers with two layers of filling, both chocolate and vanilla.

Not enough "stuff" in your Double Stuf Oreos?  There's an even fattier version – The Triple Double Oreo.

This stunning, triple decker chocolate cookie contains three wafers with two layers of filling, both chocolate and vanilla.

Food blogs like Food Beast have been chomping at the bit to get Nabisco to admit that the brand was testing out the cookie.

Nabisco confirmed to the 'Today' show that the hefty treats, essentially 1.5 Double Stuf Oreos in one,  would indeed be hitting shelves.

"This summer, Oreo will introduce a new 'twist' on the iconic cookie: the Triple Double Oreo. Three chocolate Oreo wafers with two layers of creme -- one classic vanilla, and one chocolate," Nabisco’s official statement.  "While we tried our best to safeguard this news, we couldn't hold back the buzz."

Photographs of the packaging had been leaked to blogs, causing excitement over whether or not the cookie would actually make it to the supermarket.

This isn't the fattiest Oreo cookie Nabisco has ever introduced.

The Big Stuff Oreo was sold individually – it contained 316 calories and 13 grams of fat.  The pudgy pastry was discontinued in 1991.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/lifestyle/food/2011/05/13/2011-05-13_triple_double_oreos_to_hit_shelves_oreo_cookie_has_double_chocolate_and_vanilla_.html#ixzz1MIJmhuei
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Nick Cannon and Mariah Carey investigated by Child Protective Services

Nick Cannon, Mariah Carey investigated by Child Protective Services after alcohol rumor spreads

Shari Weiss
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Friday, May 13th 2011, 12:42 PM

Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon have been targeted in several schemes designed to capitalize on their newfound parenthood.
 
Ethan Miller, Getty
 
Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon have been targeted in several schemes designed to capitalize on their newfound parenthood.

New parents Nick Cannon and Mariah Carey should still be blissed out on baby joy with less than two weeks passing since their twins' birth, but the couple is reeling from a shocking accusation.

"The Child Protective Services were called with allegations that there was some drinking and drugs and all that going on while in the hospital," Cannon revealed during a pretaped appearance on Thursday's "Piers Morgan Tonight."

The babies, daughter Monroe and son Moroccan, were born April 30 and remain hospitalized with Carey, 42.

Cannon, 30, said the false rumor began when "a nurse suggested to my wife that if you drink Guinness … the yeast improves breast-feeding."

"I don't know if someone overheard that," he explained, "but then they were saying that my wife was drinking beer and all this stuff."

And it culminated with a visit from a CPS worker, who approached Cannon in one of the hospital's hallways on Tuesday.

"When I spoke to the person from the Child Protective Services, I was like, 'This is ridiculous,'" Cannon recalled.

The 92.3 NOW morning show host said the incident proves that "people will do anything to try to conjure up a story."

"Even to have to deal with that, even my wife in the state she's in, and we're in the hospital, and to even have to think of someone possibly wanting to investigate your children," he said.

Cannon said the hospital stay has also been plagued by intrusive photographers "actually in the hospital posing as different people, or real employees trying to get pictures of our kids."

It's "really sad when you think about people trying to make a buck off of newborn babies," he said.

And while the new dad realizes that some believe he should "deal" with these kinds of incidents because he's famous, he only accepts that line of thinking to an extent.

"I'm more disappointed in society … than having to be it's because we're famous," he explained. "It's just that people would even go to those lengths to even kind of do something to a family at such a beautiful time in their life."



LINK TO VIDEO:

http://cnn.com/video/?/video/bestoftv/2011/05/12/exp.piers.morgan.nick.cannon.cnn

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Students get sandwiches as punishment

Students in Harrisburg's Camp Curtin School get sandwiches as punishment

Published: Thursday, May 12, 2011, 3:33 PM   

Updated: Thursday, May 12, 2011, 5:44 PM

KOURTNEY GEERS, The Patriot-News 
 
KOURTNEY GEERS
The Patriot-News

Camp Curtin School students are getting cold sandwiches for the week as punishment for acting up and being unappreciative of the hot meals being offered in the school’s cafeteria, an administrator said Wednesday.

“We created the opportunity where we could show them what the bare minimum would be,” the administrator said, adding that the bare minimum remained a balanced meal including fruit and vegetables.

The administrator, who did not want his name used, said that some parents and students did not understand the measures taken to correct behavior issues, such as students not cleaning up their eating area.

Since the corrective action was taken, the administrator said, student behavior has improved.

Normal hot meals will be served starting Monday at the Harrisburg School District school.

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Bedtime story: Go the "bleep" to sleep

Bedtime story: Go the bleep to sleep
 
Katia Hetter
Special to CNN
May 13, 2011 3:12 p.m. EDT
 
Ricardo Cortés illustrates "Go the F**k to Sleep," and each of its 32 pages is written in the style of a children's picture book.
 
Ricardo Cortés illustrates "Go the F**k to Sleep," and each of its 32 pages is written in the style of a children's picture book.
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Adam Mansbach turned his frustration with an unsleepy toddler into a funny book
  • Written like a children's book, the verses have an adult twist to them
  • Title is "Go the F**k to Sleep," and the book is soaring on Amazon before publication
  • It's described as a book for inconsolable, tired parents of toddlers who won't sleep
(CNN)-- Adam Mansbach's toddler wasn't thirsty. She wasn't hungry. And she definitely didn't need Dad to make up another story about farm animals having a picnic and dozing off. The possibility that he would never get to leave her room for dinner or a glass of wine or the world outside became a distinct possibility.

The noted author didn't keep his feelings to himself. Instead, he turned his frustration into writing "Go the F**k to Sleep," a tongue-in-cheek adult bedtime book that has swept the Internet and has already hit No.1 on the Amazon bestseller list a month before its June 14 publication date. Illustrator Ricardo Cortés captures the colorful mood of Mansbach's poetry.

The cubs and the lions are snoring,
Wrapped in a big snuggly heap.
How come you can do all this other great sh*t
But you can't lie the f**k down and sleep?

"I laughed and laughed and laughed," said Colleen Oppenzato, a Brooklyn mother of a 3-year-old boy who fights sleep every night and a 1-year-old girl who doesn't. "I thought it was my life. Every single page, you're like 'yes, yes.' You don't need water, you don't need to go to the bathroom. You just don't want to sleep."

"Go the F**k to Sleep" hits a nerve with parents who hope for a life after their kids' bedtime. Independent publisher Akashic Books has responded to preorders and overwhelming Internet interest by increasing its first printing to at least 150,000 copies and moving up the publication date from October to June.

The nightly exhaustion is "a frustrating part about something we love very much," said Mansbach, a visiting professor at Rutgers University. "A lot of these frustrations are not permissible to talk about. We're not completely honest because we don't want to be bad parents."

"Looking at parenting books, there are more and more books that are less earnest about raising your child. They help parents step back and laugh at themselves a bit," said Mark Rotella, senior editor at Publishers Weekly and father of a 5- and 2 -year-old.

"It's more like a parenting book for when the parent is inconsolable in the middle of night and frustrated."
--Mark Rotella, senior editor at Publishers Weekly

"It's more like a parenting book for when the parent is inconsolable in the middle of night and frustrated." (Rotella warns parents not to leave the book lying around for children to see, noting that the illustrations are captivating.)

Mansbach, whose novels include "The End of the Jews" and the best-selling "Angry Black White Boy," started out as a poet before writing full-length novels.

Each of his new book's 32 pages is written in the style of a classic children's picture book, but there are two conversations going on: The first two lines are what the parent is saying to the kid; the second half is the internal monologue that is never said.

The eagles whosoar through the sky are at rest
And the creatures who crawl, run and creep.
I know you're not thirsty. That's bullsh*t. Stop lying.
Lie the f**k down, my darling, and sleep.

At the end of the day, the child never hears the worst of the parent's frustration.

"The book is all about the obligation of a good parent to internalize the frustration and take the irrational behavior of a child and absorb it oneself," said Akashic Publisher Johnny Temple.

"The book is an outlet for that frustration, but it completely reinforces parents sucking it up and dealing with it. There's never a moment where the kid suffers because of the parent. It's actually pretty idealistic."

A G-rated version appropriate for young children is in the works, inspired by Temple's censored reading of the book to his 3- and 5-year-old children.

"They're aware we struggle every night to get them to sleep, and they get a big kick out of the fact that the book addresses their stall tactics," Temple said.

Has his reading of the book taught his children any empathy for their parents' nightly struggle?

Not at all. The 3-year-old's current tactic is to demand Mom or Dad snuggle to get him to sleep. "And this is after the juice and too many books," Temple said. Even then, it's a gamble to get up. "When you hear his breathing change, can you get out of the bed too early and burn yourself for another 15 minutes?"

The movie rights have been sold to Fox 2000.

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Man stabbed over spilled milk

Daytona Beach stabbing tied to milk argument

LYDA LONGA
STAFF WRITER
May 12, 2011 9:26 AM
 
Pacheco

DAYTONA BEACH -- A 68-year-old resident of a Beville Road mobile home park stabbed his live-in girlfriend repeatedly when she returned from the grocery store with a different type of milk than he had just purchased, investigators said today.

A short time after the Wednesday morning stabbing of his high school sweetheart, Betty Galas, Daniel Pacheco turned the knife on himself, then took multiple Tylenol pills, investigators said.  The couple live in the Colonial Colony South mobile home park.

Investigators disclosed today that Pacheco bought milk, which for some reason Galas, also 68, didn't approve of so she went to the store and returned with a different type.   The couple argued, then the stabbing occurred about 11:35 a.m. Wednesday.

Galas remains in stable condition today at Halifax Health Medical Center. She suffered multiple stab wounds. Pacheco is scheduled to go before a judge today at the hospital, where he is being treated for his injures, for a first appearance hearing on a charge of aggravated battery.

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4 arrested for selling drugs and raccoon meat at car wash

4 arrested, accused of selling drugs, raccoon meat at Houston car wash 

 

Jeff McShan / KHOU 11 News

Posted on May 11, 2011 at 7:16 PM

Updated today at 10:12 AM

 

HOUSTON—Four people were arrested at a North Houston car wash where, in addition to washes and waxes, illegal drugs and raccoon meat were sold, Houston police said Wednesday.

Undercover officers said they went inside the full-service car wash located in the 4300 block of Yale and were able to purchase marijuana, prescription drugs and liquor.

HPD's deferential response team raided the business after receiving complaints from neighbors.
 
Police said they found two weapons and more than 1,000 prescription pills. Police checked the serial numbers of the two guns, and a 12-gauge came back reported stolen.

In addition to that, investigators said illegal gambling was taking place. There were two dominoes tables set up. Undercover officers who went into the business earlier in the day said there was high-stakes gambling going on inside a shed in the back.

The owner Michael Maxwell said it’s all lies.

“I don't know why they are here. They don't have a warrant. They come storming into my place,” Maxwell said. “I got all my permits that go with this place. I am licensed with the city. I pay my taxes. This is my property and it is private.”

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.khou.com/news/4-arrested-accused-of-illegal-activities-at-Houston-car-wash--121673409.html

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President Obama's step-grandmother Sarah Obama threatened by Al Qaeda

President Obama's step-grandmother, Sarah Obama, threatened by Al Qaeda in Kenya: report

Larry Mcshane
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Thursday, May 12th 2011, 9:49 AM

 
Ben Curtis/AP
 
Sarah Obama was the second wife of the president's late grandfather, and not a biological relative of Obama.
 
Security was increased for President Obama's step-grandmother since the US killed Osama Bin Laden.
 
AFP/Getty
 
Security was increased for President Obama's step-grandmother since the US killed Osama Bin Laden.
 
The Kenyan home of President Obama's step-grandmother was under round-the-clock security after her life was threatened by an African Al Qaeda group, ABC News reported.

The threat from Al Shabaab, a Somalia-based branch of the terrorist organization, specifically targeted Sarah Obama in the wake of the U.S. killing of Osama Bin Laden, ABC reported Thursday.

"We received reports of plans to attack the home of Mama Sarah Obama, and we immediately put in place adequate security measures," local police chief Stephen Cheteka told the African Review, a Kenyan paper.

While security was immediately increased after U.S. Seals killed Bin Laden, it was further racheted up following the threat from Al Shabaab.

The African outlet of Al Qaeda has battled against the Western-backed government of Somalia for years.

The threat was one of many issued by Bin Laden loyalists after the decade-long hunt for the World Trade Center mastermind ended with his death.

Sarah Obama was the second wife of the president's late grandfather, and not a biological relative of Obama.

The president has visited her in the rural Kenyan village of Kogelo, and she traveled to the United States twice to visit him before his election to the White House.

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Facebook hires PR Firm to attack Google

Google deflects PR firm's attack of Gmail privacy

Byron Acohido and Jon Swartz

USA TODAY

Updated1d 21h ago |

It's not as if Google lacks privacy controversies to quell.
 

Yet Burson-Marsteller, a top-five public relations firm, is attempting to pile more on.

Burson last week stepped up a whisper campaign to get top-tier media outlets, including USA TODAY, to run news stories and editorials about how an obscure Google Gmail feature —Social Circle— ostensibly tramples the privacy of millions of Americans and violates federal fair trade rules.

Google said that Social Circle in fact allows Gmail users to make social connections based on public information and private connections across its products in ways that don't skirt privacy.

Yet the PR stunt played out during a week in which Google was responding to a raid of its Seoul office by South Korean privacy regulators and was preparing for a U.S. Senate hearing today over the location-tracking feature in Android smartphones.

Pushed by two high-profile media figures — former CNBC news anchor Jim Goldman and former political columnist John Mercurio, both of whom recently joined Burson — the whisper campaign illustrates how privacy has become a lightning-rod issue. Goldman pitched the Social Circle issue as a huge privacy breach to Google users and an important story for consumers.

"Privacy issues are certainly complex," says Maneesha Mithal, associate director of the Federal Trade Commission's Division of Privacy and Identity Protection.

Burson's efforts, on behalf of an unnamed client, also highlight the delicate balancing act Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Apple face as they rush to profit from cutting-edge Internet services that tap into consumer data. Several pioneering privacy rights bills are gaining steam in Congress and in California. And Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., chairs today's hearing, where he is expected to grill executives from Apple and Google about how iPhones and Android smartphones keep precise track of each user's whereabouts every day.

The tech giants "need to ensure that consumers understand their data is being accessed and used with proper controls to ensure its protection," says Dan Hoffman, a mobile security expert at networking company Juniper.

Google, however, often pushes out new consumer services that affect privacy without clearly conveying what the technology does.

Earlier this year, it reached a settlement with the FTC for exposing Gmail users' contacts as part of an ill-fated launch of its Buzz social network in February 2010.

And it faces probes in several nations and U.S. states for dispatching fleets of specially equipped cars through city streets to harvest data from wireless networks in homes and businesses.

"Much of Google's privacy problems stem from the company's culture," says John Simpson, spokesman for the non-profit Consumer Watchdog. "They hire like-minded engineers who push the creepy line, then apologize when they get caught with their fingers in the cookie jar."

Against this backdrop, Goldman and Mercurio began engaging reporters and technologists about Social Circle, casting it as a stealthy feature circulating potentially embarrassing information among Gmail users in ways that violate FTC rules.

In a May 3 e-mail to former FTC researcher and blogger Christopher Soghoian, Burson's Mercurio offered to ghost write an op-ed column to that effect for Soghoian. Mercurio even offered in a widely circulated e-mail to help Soghoian get it published in The Washington Post, Politico, The Hill, Roll Call and The Huffington Post.

Meanwhile, Goldman connected with USA TODAY and outlined a news story critical of Social Circle.

However, Soghoian derailed Burson's efforts by posting the full e-mail text of Mercurio's pitch — along with his rejection — on the Internet. After Goldman's pitch proved largely untrue, he subsequently declined USA TODAY's requests for comment.

Meanwhile, Google began fielding media calls about the heretofore obscure Social Circle. The company acknowledges reviewing Mercurio's pitch.

"We have seen this e-mail reportedly sent by a representative of the PR firm Burson-Marsteller," says Chris Gaither, Google's senior manager of global communications and public affairs, who assumes the e-mail exchange in fact took place. "We're not going to comment further. Our focus is on delighting people with great products," he said.

Social Circle's intent

Gaither points out that Google's Social Search, of which Social Circle is now part of, was launched in October 2009 as a tool to help remind Gmail users of the people they regularly e-mail or chat with, so-called direct connections.

The service also privately sends each Gmail user the names of "secondary connections," a listing of the people each direct connection happens to be following publicly on the Web.

Google prompts Gmail users to voluntarily connect any accounts they have on Facebook, Yahoo, Flickr, LinkedIn, Quora, Twitter or Yelp to their Google profile.

Google then mines those connected accounts for individuals who become secondary connections.

"Social connections are based on publicly available information and private connections you have on Google products and services," explains Gaither.

USA TODAY asked 26 avid Gmail users about Social Circle and found only two were vaguely aware of the service, while 14 said they would disable the service, if they could, citing privacy concerns.

Gaither attributes low awareness to the fact that Google purposely designs new features "to blend seamlessly … because that's what our users prefer."

That explanation works for Elizabeth Holst, 26, a grad student in Chicago, who acknowledges how difficult it has become to remain anonymous online.

"Why fight it?" Holst says. "And there is value in hearing about things from your friends."

By contrast, Jason Gerdon, 29, a public relations professional in Costa Mesa, Calif., says he'd like to opt out of the service.

"I like having control over my connections," Gerdon says. "Although this might be similar to Facebook or Twitter recommendations, this just feels more intrusive."

Dion Moses, 25, a computer engineer in Ridgecrest, Calif., also wants out of Social Circle. "This is shocking," Moses says. "I had no idea that Google was doing this, and I pay close attention to most technology news sites."

The only way to disable Social Circle, Gaither says, is to stop using Gmail.

Chasing Facebook

Google's push to proactively expand Gmail users' connections, in fact, derives from Facebook's stunning success at enticing its 500 million-plus users to voluntarily reveal their closest acquaintances, along with rich information about their preferences and online behaviors, says Kevin Lee, CEO of search consultancy Didit.

Google, by comparison, can really only profile Internet users based on their search queries and who they e-mail and chat with, Lee says.

The search giant generated $29.3 billion in revenue in 2010, mainly by selling sponsored ads to appear alongside specific search query results.

Facebook, a private company, is believed to generate about $2 billion in annual revenue by selling ads targeted to specific groups of friends, such as expectant mothers, recent retirees or frequent fliers, Lee says.

Social-networking sites — Facebook, in particular — are not without privacy problems. They face heightened scrutiny over their evolving privacy policies from consumers, privacy advocates and legislators.

While most Facebook users "freely provide information about themselves, it's far less clear that they understand how that information is being used by Facebook or third parties to profile them," says Opus Research analyst Greg Sterling.

Even so, Google has set out to emulate Facebook by using tracking programs and algorithms to connect more members from the top social networks to Gmail users.

"Google wants access to the dollars that Facebook is getting," Lee says. "They're trying to create a product that comes closer to mirroring Facebook's ability to target specific groups of people for advertisers."

As Google extends connections between Gmail and the top social networks, it risks upsetting at least some Gmailers.

"Users have a very high expectation of privacy in their e-mails," says Kimberly Nguyen, consumer privacy counsel for EPIC.

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