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04 Nov 15:28

Star Trek will return to TV in January 2017

by Andrew Cunningham

(credit: startrek.com)

CBS Television Studios has just announced that it will be introducing a "totally new" Star Trek TV series in January of 2017, the first since Star Trek: Enterprise went off the air in 2005. This TV rebirth follows the two latest movies, and though the press release says nothing about when or where the new series will take place, it seems safe to say that the show will exist in the new continuity created by JJ Abrams' 2009 Trek film.

Alex Kurtzman, co-writer and producer of both Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness, will be the executive producer for the new show. He'll team up with Heather Kadin, who Kurtzman collaborated with on shows including Sleepy HollowScorpionLimitless, and others. Kurtzman's resume stretches all the way back to shows like Xena: Warrior Princess and Alias.

This isn't the first time that Trek has used the popularity of its movies to launch a new television series. The original series aired for three seasons from 1966 to 1969, and the cast returned for a run of popular films in the late '70s and '80s. The success of those films led to the launch of the still-popular The Next Generation in 1987, which in turn launched Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Enterprise over the course of the '90s and early 2000s.

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04 Nov 15:24

Activision Blizzard to buy Candy Crush Saga-maker for $5.9 billion

by Cyrus Farivar

(credit: m01229)

Activision Blizzard, the maker of World of Warcraft, announced late Monday that it would spend $5.9 billion to acquire King Digital Entertainment, the British gaming firm behind Candy Crush Saga.

King will now bolster Activision’s mobile offerings significantly. The acquisition give King a chance to develop new titles as interest in its flagship game has waned.

"The combined revenues and profits solidify our position as the largest, most profitable standalone company in interactive entertainment," Bobby Kotick, the CEO of Activision Blizzard, said in a statement. "With a combined global network of more than half a billion monthly active users, our potential to reach audiences around the world on the device of their choosing enables us to deliver great games to even bigger audiences than ever before."

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04 Nov 01:33

Man in Virginia Beach pleads guilty to burning his dog alive

by wtopstaff

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) — A man in Virginia Beach has pleaded guilty to burning his dog while it was still alive.

The Virginian-Pilot (http://bit.ly/1LNAiGC ) reports that 27-year-old Arthur M. Vieira admitted to tying his dog’s legs together, muzzling her snout and setting it on fire while it was still alive. He pleaded guilty Monday to charges including torturing a companion animal.

Vieira faces up to seven years in prison when he’s sentenced on Jan. 13. Prosecutor David Laird says he’ll ask for the maximum sentence.

Defense attorney Moody Stallings Jr. says the incident was out of character for Vieira. He noted that Vieira has no prior convictions and that there’s nothing in his background to explain the incident.

Vieira will remain in jail without bond until his sentencing.

___

Information from: The Virginian-Pilot, http://pilotonline.com

The post Man in Virginia Beach pleads guilty to burning his dog alive appeared first on WTOP.

04 Nov 01:31

'Gay' rape in military underreported by Pentagon - Washington Times


Washington Times

'Gay' rape in military underreported by Pentagon
Washington Times
Far more military men are being raped by other men and experience other sexual traumas than is reported by the Pentagon because of the stigma attached to such assaults, says a new study released Tuesday by the American Psychological Association.
Male-on-male rape in the military is 15 times more prevalent than the Pentagon ...Daily Mail
Study: Far more men are raped in the military than reported by PentagonLGBTQ Nation

all 9 news articles »
04 Nov 00:52

Slow Rollout Of Chip-And-PIN Credit Cards May Keep Lines Moving This Holiday Season

by Chris Morran

(Jeremy P)
October 1 was supposed to be the deadline for U.S. retailers to update their payment systems to accept new chip-enabled credit cards, but a number of stores haven’t finished making this change, and most consumers still have boring ol’ no-chip cards. The good news is that this foot-dragging on everyone’s part may have the effect of not slowing down checkout lines this holiday shopping season.

The Oct. 1 deadline and the prospect of both consumers and retailers being forced to master a new payment method during the busiest shopping weeks of the year initially had some concerned about annoying bottlenecks at the cashier — people not knowing how to use the cards, cards not working, employees not knowing how to handle errors, etc.

Additionally, the new chip readers — which require that cards be inserted and held for a moment — can take a second or two longer than the simple swipe we’ve all gotten used to. For retailers with millions of customers at thousands of stores, that adds up.

At last week’s Money20/20 conference in Las Vegas, a Walmart payment services exec politely acknowledged that, “There could have been a better time” to roll out new cards and payment processes.

But as the Chicago Tribune notes, not even half of U.S. retailers will have chip card readers installed by the end of 2016. As recently as August, a majority of small business owners said they weren’t even aware of the Oct. 1 deadline.

Retailers (with the exception of gas stations) that haven’t updated their payment systems are now liable — as opposed to the bank or card network — for any fraudulent purchases made using chip-enabled cards. But since most consumers still carry older cards, the stores have not yet had the incentive to invest in the new readers.

One of the few major retailers to complete the change to chip-and-PIN is Target, which was the target of a massive data breach during the 2013 holiday shopping season.

Last month, Target began requiring PINs on all chip-enabled cards. Additionally, the retailer has begun issuing store-branded cards with the new technology.

Other retailers will undoubtedly be looking at Target over the next two months to see whether or not its new system bogs down checkout lines.

Expect banks and retailers to step up their rollouts of the chip-and-PIN tech in 2016. Hopefully most of us will be in the habit of dipping our cards by this time next year.

03 Nov 14:37

Lynchburg police officer put on leave following indictment

by wtopstaff

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) — A Lynchburg police officer has charged with obtaining money by false pretenses.

The police department says the Lynchburg Circuit Court grand jury indicted Officer Jon DeBlock on Monday on three counts.

The department says in a news release that the charges stem from information discovered by a supervisor. The department didn’t provide details and said no further information will be released.

DeBlock was placed on administrative leave with pay. It wasn’t clear whether he has an attorney.

The department says it asked the Virginia State Police to conduct an investigation. An internal investigation also was conducted.

DeBlock has been with the police department since January 2000 and is assigned to the Criminal Investigations Division.

The post Lynchburg police officer put on leave following indictment appeared first on WTOP.

03 Nov 14:35

How realtors sell homes saddled with dark secrets

by Mike Murillo

WASHINGTON — How much information do real estate agents need to reveal to interested buyers about a home? Must they disclose any tales of murder or reports of hauntings? The quick answer is no.

“Things like that are not material to the property so there is no obligation to disclose that,” said Eldad Moraru of Long and Foster.

This topic is receiving some attention as a house in Northwest D.C. with a grisly past has been placed on the market.

It was on May 14 that firefighters found smoke billowing from the multimillion-dollar house on the 3200 block of Woodland Drive, in Northwest. Once the smoke cleared, three members of one family and their housekeeper were found dead. They had all been tied up, tortured and then murdered.

With police no longer combing through it for clues, the house has been placed on the market. It has been listed as a site for possible new construction and is priced at $3.2 million. The price is nearly half the asking price for a similar house down the street.

Moraru said the job of a listing agent is to get the best price for the seller, but they also have to abide by a code of ethics.

Agents will most likely avoid volunteering troubling stories that go along with a stigmatized property, but Moraru said that if an individual asks about a house’s past, the agent should answer honestly.

Following the law, agents are only required to tell prospective buyers about material facts. An example of that would be a structural issue with the house.

Moraru said a home with a checkered past may end up on the market for a longer period of time.

“A stigmatized property, depending what the stigma is, definitely works against the seller,” Moraru said.

Ultimately, to find a home’s dark secrets, buyers must do their own research. In some cases, a simple Internet search of the address will reveal a home’s history.

Moraru said many resources online offer information about homes and neighborhoods. D.C. also provides a website where anyone can find out the crime statistics for a specific neighborhood.

The post How realtors sell homes saddled with dark secrets appeared first on WTOP.

03 Nov 14:30

Beamer: ‘The last thing I want is for Hokies to be divided’

by wtopstaff

BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — An emotional Frank Beamer wanted everyone to know that his health wasn’t the reason he has decided to retire.

The longtime Virginia Tech coach said Monday that he didn’t want Virginia Tech’s fan base to be divided. In the midst of his fourth consecutive mediocre season, and with questions swirling about his health and his future, Beamer decided it was time to walk away.

“I’ve always said I think I’ll know when it’s time, and I think it’s time,” Beamer said, wiping away tears numerous times in a football room filled with his team, coaching staff, Virginia Tech administrators and boosters.

“You know, there’s been some difference of opinion out there. Any time you’re in the public life, there’s going to be difference of opinion. I understand that, but the last thing I want is for Hokies to be divided,” the 69-year-old Beamer said. “I want everybody to be in the same direction and I think it’s right in that regard.”

Beamer said while throat surgery last December has cut into his energy level some, his health was no factor in his decision.

“My health is good and thankful for that, and full speed ahead,” he said.

Beamer will coach at least three more games in his 29th season at his alma mater, and if the Hokies (4-5) win at least two of them, he’ll lead them to a postseason game for an NCAA-leading 23rd consecutive season.

Beamer told his wife, Cheryl, and son Shane, a Hokies assistant coach, of his decision on Friday, before Virginia Tech left for Boston. The Hokies beat Boston College 26-10 on Saturday, and Beamer told the team of his plan on Sunday.

“That wasn’t as easy time,” he said, wiping tears away again.

It was one, fullback Sam Rogers said, that added great purpose to the remainder of the season.

“I’m glad if he was going to retire this year he did announce it this week so we could celebrate him the right way and honor him the right way,” the former walk-on said. “The biggest thing is we’ve got to come out and put every ounce of energy and passion we have for him. It’s not about us anymore. It’s definitely about him.”

The Hokies, who have this weekend off, play at Georgia Tech next Thursday night, at home against North Carolina the following Saturday and finish the regular season at Virginia, a team they have beaten 11 straight times.

Twice in the past three seasons, the Hokies have had to win their traditional finale against Virginia to qualify for a bowl game, a stretch that followed eight consecutive years with at least 10 victories.

“I didn’t want to let Hokies down,” Beamer said. “And that’s the hardest part about being average here for the last few years, and that’s another thing I’m proud of: At one time average was not so bad, but now average is unacceptable, really. And that’s a good thing.”

Beamer said he will not be part of the process to choose his successor.

Virginia Tech athletic director Whit Babcock said Sunday he would not comment on the search until after the season.

Beamer heaped praise on the university presidents, athletic directors, coaches and players that have been part of his success, and cited the Hokies’ 28-10 victory against Texas in the Sugar Bowl as a “game-changer.”

“People saw us differently after that game,” he said.

Beamer is the career leader among active major college coaches with 277 victories.

“I’ve always admired him as a coach but also as the kind of professional character he always carries himself with, the way he treats other people,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “… I think he’s definitely one of the great coaches of this era.”

Virginia Tech has played in a total of eight BCS bowl games, including the national championship in 1999 when Michael Vick led the second-ranked Hokies back to the Sugar Bowl. They were beaten 46-29 by top-ranked Florida State.

Beamer also led the Hokies to seven conference titles, and during his tenure, facilities have been vastly upgraded. Lane Stadium was expanded to its current capacity of 65,632, there is a new locker room for the football team and this year the program opened an indoor practice facility.

His wife, Cheryl, said without a football team to coach she isn’t sure what retirement will mean on daily basis.

“He doesn’t do yard work. He doesn’t cook,” she said, laughing, “so not sure how that’s going to go.”

The post Beamer: ‘The last thing I want is for Hokies to be divided’ appeared first on WTOP.

03 Nov 14:29

Pet of the Week: Regina

by Rachel Nania

WASHINGTON — Say hello to Regina, an absolutely adorable hound mix.

She’s got a pretty red-and-white spotted coat and the most expressive ears. And when she tilts her head quizzically and turns those big brown eyes on you, she is impossible to resist.

Regina is sweet, playful and friendly. She loves human attention and enjoys playing with other dogs. At just 1 year old, she has lots of energy and is looking for a home — perhaps with a playful canine companion — where she will get lots of exercise.

In return, she’ll give you a lifetime of love and devotion. Stop by the Washington Animal Rescue League and meet Regina soon.

About WARL: Founded in 1914, the Washington Animal Rescue League is the oldest animal shelter in Washington D.C. Its mission includes rescuing, rehabilitating and finding homes for animals who have no where else to go. The League also supports animals through affordable veterinary care, community outreach and education. Learn more about the Washington Animal Rescue League at www.warl.org.

If you are thinking of adding a furry friend to your family, check out these other great shelters in the area:

Maryland

Humane Society of Charles County
(301) 645-8181
71 Industrial Park Dr. PO Box 1015 Waldorf, Md. 20604
Humane Society of Charles County offers a low cost spay/neuter program to the public. Please call or visit our website for more information. The shelter is also looking for more foster parents to help its animals.

Lab Rescue of L.R.C.P.
(301) 299-6756
4808 Moorland Ln, Rockville, MD 20850
Lab Rescue of the LRCP is a volunteer driven, nonprofit organization that rescues, fosters and places homeless, abused, and/or abandoned Labrador retrievers.

Prince George’s County Humane Society
(301) 262-5625
P.O. Box 925 Bowie, Md. 20718
Prince George’s County Humane Society is also looking for foster parents. For more information, contact the organization.

PAW — Partnership for Animal Welfare
(301) 572-4729
P.O. Box 1074 Greenbelt, Md. 20768

Paws Animal Kingdom
(301) 920-2318
P.O. Box 11531 Takoma Park, Md. 20912

Montgomery County Humane Society
(240) 252-2555
601 South Stonestreet Ave. Rockville, Md. 20850

The Animal Welfare League of Montgomery County
(301) 740-2511
12 Park Ave. Gaithersburg, Md. 20877

D.C.

Washington Humane Society
(202) 576-6664
1201 New York Ave. NE 20002

ASAP — Alliance for Stray Animals and People
(202) 331-1330
P.O. Box 65438 Washington, D.C. 20035-5438

Metropolitan Guinea Pig Rescue
(202) 575-2210
Approved applicants may attend monthly adoption meets that are usually held at the house of a volunteer in either Northern Virginia or Southern Maryland.

Northern Virginia

Lucky Dog Animal Rescue
(202) 741-5428
5159 Lee Highway Arlington, Va. 22207
Lucky Dog is a foster home organization and does not run a dedicated housing facility.

A Forever Home
(703) 961-8690
P.O. Box 222801 Chantilly, VA 20153-2801
A Forever-Home is a nonprofit dog rescue group that operates in the Northern Virginia/Washington Metropolitan area.

FOHA — Friends of Homeless Animals
(703) 385-0224
39710 Goodpuppy Ln, Aldie, Va. 20105
All visitors must speak to a Friends representative before receiving directions to their shelter location.

SPCA of Northern Virginia
703-799-9390
P.O. Box 100220 Arlington, Va. 22210-3220

Animal Welfare League of Alexandria
(703) 746-4774
4101 Eisenhower Ave. Alexandria, Va. 22304

Animal Welfare League of Arlington
(703) 931-9241
2650 S. Arlington Mill Dr. Arlington, Va.

Lost Dog and Cat Rescue Foundation
(703) 295-3647
P.O. Box 223953 Chantilly, Va. 20153

HART — Homeless Animal Rescue Team
(703) 691-HART
P.O. Box 7261 Fairfax Station, Va. 22039-7261

King Street Cats Rescue and Adoption
(703) 231-7199
25 Dove St. Alexandria, Va. 22314

Virginia German Shepherd Rescue
(703) 435-2840
P.O. Box 126 Sterling, Va. 20167

 

The post Pet of the Week: Regina appeared first on WTOP.

03 Nov 14:25

Amazon Opens Actual Real-Life Bookstore Today In Seattle

by Laura Northrup
bookstore

In the last year, there have been rumors that Amazon planned to open a gadget store and package pickup center in Manhattan near the Empire State Building, and that they planned to buy the leases of some RadioShack stores when that retailer declared bankruptcy. Neither of these happened. This morning, Amazon is opening an entirely different sort of real-life store. They’re selling books.

Yes, Amazon is opening a bookstore in the University Village neighborhood of its hometown of Seattle. Even the same-day delivery services that the company is experimenting with can’t compete with the experience of picking up a book, thumbing through it, paying for it, and then walking out the door with it immediately.

Amazon’s plans for this new endeavor include stocking the shelves using data from its e-commerce side to figure out what sort of books people in that area of Seattle want, and stocking the store with them in addition to the standard best-sellers.

The project has been mysterious: official paperwork called it “Ann Bookstore” to keep the actual bookseller’s identity secret for a little longer. The newsletter Shelf Awareness figured it out, though, and outed Amazon as the real company behind the new store.

Shelf Awareness reports that Amazon at least approached and tried to recruit employees from local independent bookstores. In the store, they’ve put their own twist on the “staff picks” cards that you usually see on the shelves at your local independent bookstore: there’s a shelf of favorite books curated by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, and shelf tags also include a book or an item’s average star rating from Amazon.

On the shelves, all books will sit so their covers face out, instead of shelving books with their spines facing out so more of them fit. Their goal isn’t to fit a many titles as possible in a store space: if you have a specific book in mind, there’s a website that store employees can suggest.

The store, located in a former sushi restaurant, has about 5,000 square feet of retail space. The average Barnes & Noble store is five times that size, but it’s a normal size for an independent bookstore. It will be the only single-location, small bookstore in the world whose owner doesn’t loathe Amazon.

Amazon opens its first real bookstore — at U-Village [Seattle Times]
Amazon Opening Bookstore in Seattle? [Shelf Awareness]

03 Nov 14:24

Former Family Dollar Stores Will Become Dollar Express Stores

by Laura Northrup

(Steve Depolo)
You may remember the sordid dollar-store love triangle that played out before our eyes earlier this year, as Dollar Tree and Dollar General battled for the affections and assets of Family Dollar. The eventual winner was Dollar Tree, and now the two companies have become one. However, they still needed to satisfy the Federal Trade Commission’s requirements by selling off more than 300 stores.

Divestiture happens when two companies that compete with each other merge, and the FTC determines that they don’t have enough competition to help keep prices down and service acceptable to customers. Those former Family Dollar stores have now been reborn as Dollar Express.

The new owners are Sycamore Partners, a private equity firm that has bought up some familiar mall brands, including Coldwater Creek, Hot Topic, Nine West, Talbots, and Torrid. Now they’re instantly the owners of 330 discount stores.

Dollar Express will operate on the “discount store” model that Dollar General and Family Dollar use, which is to operate somewhere between a big-box discount store and a traditional dollar store, without being held to a $1 price point. Dollar Tree is a traditional dollar store where all items cost $1 or 50¢.

(via Chain Store Age)

03 Nov 14:22

Company Faces $718K Fine For Blocking WiFi Hotspots At Baltimore Convention Center

by Chris Morran

Operators of the WiFi network at the Baltimore Convention Center face a $718,000 fine for automatically blocking third-party WiFi hotspots while charging upwards of $1,095 for Internet access.
Another company is learning about the fine points of Section 333 of the Communications Act, which prohibits willful interference with any licensed or authorized radio communications. This time, it’s the folks who provided the Baltimore Convention Center’s in-house WiFi service who were caught by the FCC trying to block individual WiFi hotspot users from going online. Meanwhile, Hilton is also being slapped with a proposed fine for its failure to comply with an investigation into its alleged hotspot blocking.

Virginia-based M.C. Dean is a huge contractor for electrical and communications systems, and provides telecom services, including WiFi to the Baltimore Convention Center (BCC), where exhibitors were charged several hundred dollars if they wanted access to the BCC WiFi network.

But some exhibitors get better wireless data pricing through — or have needs that are better met by — the use of WiFi hotspots that connect to cellular data networks.

According to a newly released FCC notice of apparent liability [PDF] the commission received a complaint on Oct. 23, 2014, from a company that offers competing WiFi service, alleging that M.C. Dean’s system was sending out “deauthentication frames” to inhibit hotspot users from maintaining a connection between their hotspots and their other devices, thus preventing them from working properly.

The complainant alleged that M.C. Dean’s actions were identical to those that had earned Marriott a $600,000 fine only weeks earlier.

FCC investigators visited BCC three times in the weeks that followed, first confirming that their independent WiFi hotspots worked outside the convention, but not inside, then confirming M.C. Dean’s use of deauthentication frames to cause these disconnects.

When confronted by inspectors, an M.C. Dean staffer acknowledged the blocking but said that visitors still had access to the BCC’s free WiFi network. But the FCC notes that this access was only available in the public lobbies of the BCC and not on the exhibitor floor, where M.C. Dean charged anywhere from $795 to $1,095 for access.

The company later confirmed that it had, since Oct. 2012, been using deauthentication tech to block non-M.C. Dean WiFi access at the convention center.

While one might shrug off the company’s crass attempt to cash in from convention attendees, the FCC notes that there is evidence that M.C. Dean’s auto-blocking system reached beyond the walls of the BCC, meaning the company was screwing over people — and web-connected buses, cars, and trains — who had nothing to do with the conventions.

M.C. Dean tried to defend the illegal hotspot blocking by saying its intended purpose wasn’t to gouge exhibitors or drive out competition, but to “detect and prevent malicious attacks on the wireless network and improve network security and reliability.” However, the FCC says the company provided no evidence of how blocking WiFi hotspots was going to achieve that desired end.

The company also argued that it didn’t do anything horrible because it had whitelisted a handful of pieces of equipment from the auto-blocking system, but the FCC this is just more proof that the company was deliberately blocking the rest of the users.

Then there’s M.C. Dean’s claim that all was okay because it left unblocked a total of two of the dozens of available WiFi channels. This argument did not win over the FCC, which writes that “M.C. Dean offers no evidence that any device that was blocked by M.C. Dean would be capable of automatically finding the one channel in each band that was left unblocked. Such automatic capability does not appear to be standard among Wi-Fi devices and, if it were, it would still force all such devices to share a single channel that could become highly congested and perhaps unusable.”

Finally, M.C. Dean tried to make the case that its blocking of third-party hotspots constituted allowable “network management,” and was not malicious. Again, the FCC disagreed, saying that the company “sought to cause, and in fact did cause, harmful interference to lawfully operated third-party networks… M.C. Dean knew that its system would cause interference to other Wi-Fi devices – in fact, that was the company’s goal.”

The FCC is now proposing a fine of $718,000 against M.C. Dean.

“Consumers are tired of being taken advantage of by hotels and convention centers that block their personal Wi-Fi connections,” said Travis LeBlanc, Chief of the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau. “This disturbing practice must come to an end. It is patently unlawful for any company to maliciously block FCC-approved Wi-Fi connections.”

In related news, the FCC has slapped Hilton Worldwide with a proposed $25,000 fine for allegedly obstructing the commission’s investigation into claims of WiFi blocking.

Since Nov. 2014, the commission has been trying to investigate complaints that multiple Hilton properties are blocking visitors’ personal WiFi hotspots.

Rather than provide all the information requested by the FCC about all locations involved in the complaints, the hotel company only answered questions about a single Hilton property in Anaheim, CA. Furthermore, notes the FCC [PDF], “Those answers were incomplete and inadequate even for that one property.”

The FCC says it then sent multiple warnings about the inadequacy of Hilton’s response, but has thus far only received “limited information regarding the WiFi blocking systems utilized at a small number of additional Hilton properties and again failed to answer many of the questions.”

Thus, the commission seeks to levy the $25,000 penalty against Hilton for “apparently willfully and repeatedly violating” the FCC order. If the fine isn’t enough to convince Hilton to turn over the requested information, the commission says it is prepared to take further actions against the hotel chain.

“To permit any company to unilaterally redefine the scope of our investigation would undermine the independent search for the truth and the due administration of the law,” explains LeBlanc.

03 Nov 14:21

Provision In Highway Funding Bill Would Require The IRS To Use Private Debt Collectors

by Ashlee Kieler
(Comedian2012)

While federal regulators continually work to crack down on private debt collectors that utilize unsavory, illegal tactics to make consumers pay up, government agencies often contract these entities to collect a variety of debts. That practice could continue if a provision in the Highway Trust Fund Bill receives approval. 

The $325 billion Highway Trust Fund bill [PDF] includes a lengthy provision that would require the Internal Revenue Service to use private debt collectors to collect all inactive tax debts.

The provision states:

“In contracting for the services of any person under this section, the Secretary shall utilize private collection contractors and debt collection centers.”

The provision has raised red flags for several consumer advocacy groups as far back as July, when the Senate highway bill was passed.

At that time The National Consumer Law Center, Consumers Union and other groups sent a letter [PDF] to senators warning about the use of private debt collectors.

“We believe that requiring the use of private debt collectors to collect tax debts will harm taxpayers by exposing them to potential abuses that are unfortunately common with that industry,” the groups said in the letter. “It will also disproportionately impact low-income taxpayers. Finally, the use of private collectors is a waste of taxpayer dollars, lining the pockets of private companies at the expense of the U.S. Treasury.”

The groups contend that the requirement to use private collectors would “needlessly expose taxpayers to abuses by the single most-complained about industry in the financial sector.”

“The use of private collectors has repeatedly been shown to be a waste of taxpayer dollars,” the groups say, citing a 1996-1997 pilot program that resulted in a $17 million net loss to the government. A similar program in the mid-2000s resulted in a net loss of almost $4.5 million.

“Meanwhile, the private collectors earned more than $16 million in commissions during the latter program,” the groups state. “A 2013 study by the National Taxpayer Advocate found that the IRS employees were significantly more effective in collecting taxes than private collectors.”

NCLC once again expressed concern over the provision on Monday, noting that nearly 80% of the cases affected by this provision would likely involve low-income taxpayers who simply don’t have the means to pay right away.

Their concerns were heard by a group of 10 lawmakers who introduced an amendment [PDF] to the bill that would strike the lengthy provision.

The House Rules Committee is scheduled to weigh the nearly 270 amendments to the highway funding measure through Tuesday, with a potential floor vote taking place as early as Wednesday or Thursday, according to The Hill.

Nearly 270 amendments filed for House highway bill [The Hill]

03 Nov 14:20

Amazon Starts Black Friday Today, Really Wants You To Subscribe To Prime

by Laura Northrup

(DJHeini)
This year, Black Friday, the universal holiday honoring unbridled commerce, will happen on Nov. 27. That doesn’t mean that Black Friday is limited to only that day, though: today, megastore Amazon.com kicked off their “Countdown to Black Friday,” which is apparently sort of like an Advent calendar full of external hard drives and sneakers.

Not that we’re complaining. I would buy that if it were an actual Advent calendar. However, it was just a few months ago that Amazon blew out its own sale records with Prime Day, its anniversary celebration and attempt to sell Prime subscriptions to the masses. While customers complained about the deals they saw and the deals they didn’t see, they also bought a lot of stuff: the company reported higher sales than previous actual Black Fridays.

Mashable points out that Amazon usually launches their holiday deals site sometime around the beginning of November,

Amazon’s goal, of course, is to lure you into joining Prime: not only do they get your hundred bucks for a membership fee, but Prime members tend to do more of their shopping through Amazon than non-members.

Our deal-combing colleagues down the hall at Consumer Reports are running their own Countdown to Black Friday, too. The discounts aren’t as deep, but they do include items that are recommended according to their tests.

Amazon will use Black Friday to try lure you into Prime [Washington Post]
Amazon’s Black Friday site is here, almost a month before Black Friday [Mashable]

03 Nov 14:17

Study: Shoppers Still Prefer Paper Coupons Over Digital Discounts

by Mary Beth Quirk

(Kimaroo)
Though we are living in an increasingly digital world with a smartphone app for everything under the sun, when it comes to scoring discounts on everyday products, shoppers would rather stick with what they know best: coupon-clipping the old-fashioned way, with the daily newspaper and a trusty pair of scissors to do the job.

That’s according to a new report from the folks at CreditCards.com, in a recent look into how consumers are using different methods to find discounts and deals.

In an August 2015 survey that CreditCards.com commissioned from GfK Custom Research North America, 63% of U.S. credit/debit cardholders who use coupons say when it comes time to get a deal, they most frequently hand over coupons from newspapers, mailings and other paper products.

Coming in at a distant second is using a discount code online at 17%, followed by presenting a coupon or discount code on one’s phone at just 15% of respondents. As one might expect, older generations are more loyal to paper coupons — which was the only way to use a coupon for a long time — but the survey found that even millennials are using paper coupons twice as much as any other method.

“Dead trees aren’t dead when it comes to coupons,” said Matt Schulz, CreditCards.com’s senior industry analyst. “Plenty of Americans are still opening their snail mail and reading the Sunday paper,” he added, though he expects paper coupons to eventually lose out to digital methods as people get more comfortable with electronic coupons.

Overall, about 85% of Americans use coupons, though most of those shoppers only use them occasionally.

03 Nov 14:12

11 Things We Learned From The New York Times’ Investigative Report On Arbitration

by Laura Northrup

Adam Fagen
Consumerist’s first post on the subject of arbitration, back in 2007, described a dispute that was ultimately resolved in the consumer’s favor. Since then, we’ve been against the practice, pointing out when popular companies change their terms of service to add arbitration clauses. It doesn’t matter, though, because arbitration can save companies so much money that they don’t especially care what we think. Sometimes.

This weekend, the New York Times published a great two-part series based on analysis of real arbitration recods and interviews with plaintiffs, defendants, arbitrators, and attorneys.

  1. Arbitration decisions can’t be appealed. That can simplify things, but becomes a serious issue when a case doesn’t go your way.
  2. The rules of evidence that exist in a court setting don’t apply, and pesky things like rules against conflicts of interest also don’t exist in arbitration.
  3. The Times notes that judges sometimes call arbitration clauses “get out of jail free” cards, since they prevent consumers from fighting companies over relatively small slights that aren’t worth going to arbitration over individually.

    “Ominously, business has a good chance of opting out of the legal system altogether and misbehaving without reproach,” said one federal judge.

  4. Arbitration clauses in contracts in cases grew after two Supreme Court cases, in 2011 and 2013.

  5. It happens that one of the lawyers working for the cause of banning class actions was John G. Roberts, Jr., who is now Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. At the time, he was a corporate lawyer working for Discover Bank.
  6. In theory, class action bans let consumers arbitrate their disputes without the lengthy class-action process that mostly benefits class-action attorneys. However, Times analysis of attempted class actions that stopped because of mandatory arbitration clauses show that most people drop their cases rather than go to arbitration.
  7. A wide variety of businesses now employ arbitration clauses, covering the whole lifespan, from obstetrician to funeral homes.
  8. Consumers suspected that banks were re-ordering debit card transations from the highest to the lowest amounts at the end of each day to rack up extra overdraft fees. Customers sued in class actions, and most of those banks now have arbitration clauses.
  9. Corporate lawyers and executives argue that arbitration and small claims court are both still open to consumers with small disputes, and we aren’t bothering to file complaints because we aren’t familiar with those venues or don’t know how.
  10. Oakland Raiders cheerleaders considered entering arbitration against the team. Then they learned that the abritrator in charge would be… the completely impartial commissioner of the NFL, Roger Goodell.
  11. A private justice system means that religion can also become part of the proceedings: some companies require their customers to go to prayer-filled Christian arbitration.
  12. Companies return to the same arbitrator over and over: how do you know that one won’t decide against you just to court future business?

Arbitration Everywhere, Stacking the Deck of Justice

03 Nov 14:12

Nearly 168,000 Pounds Of Ground Beef Recalled For E. Coli Contamination

by Ashlee Kieler
(Kim Moynes)

Adding a few ingredients to ground beef can make for a delicious meal, but there’s nothing tasty about the addition of E. coli in your meat. For that reason, an Omaha company is recalling nearly 168,000 pounds of beef. 

All American Meats Inc. recalled the 167,427 pounds of ground beef after some products tested positive for traces of E. coli, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service.

So far, there are no reports of customers becoming ill from the products, which were produced on Oct. 16 and sold at retail stores nationwide.

The products include the establishment number “EST. 20420” inside the USDA mark of inspection.

The following ground beef products are covered by the recall:

• 80-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef 80% Lean 20% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 62100.
• 80-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef 73% Lean 27% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 60100.
• 60-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef Round 85% Lean 15% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 68560.
• 60-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef Chuck 81% Lean 19% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 68160.
• 60-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef Chuck 81% Lean 19% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 63130.
• 80-lb. (approximate weight) boxes of “Ground Beef Chuck 81% Lean 19% Fat (Fine Grind)” with Sell By Date 11-03-2015 and case code 63100.

E. coli illness is miserable and inconvenient for most people, featuring abdominal cramps and watery diarrhea. However, people who are sick should be monitored for signs of dehydration, and young children and elderly people are susceptible to kidney failure.

03 Nov 14:07

Attention, Kmart Shoppers: The Bluelight Special Is Back

by Mary Beth Quirk

(Thomas Hawk)
Sirens are sounding and the blue light is flashing once again at Kmart, as the struggling retailer tries to lure shoppers through its doors and revive its sales: after retiring “Bluelight Specials” in the early ’90s, the chain will once again blast sirens and turn on the blue light to alert shoppers to surprise, 15-minute long deals in its 942 stores.

You might’ve already witnessed the return of the blue light, as Kmart turned the sirens back on in all its U.S. stores Friday, reports Reuters.

Nostalgia is a key part of Kmart’s plan here — the Bluelight Special started back in 1965 in a push to get rid of slow-moving merchandise, and continued to be a mainstay at Kmart until 1991. The retailer has revived it here and there for special promotions, but now it’s back for an extended stay, as the chain tries to revive its recently slumping sales.

“This is intended to be an ongoing program of the way we actually will exist,” Kmart President Alasdair James told Reuters, adding that this time it’ll be a sustained campaign with specials happening throughout the day at stores as well as online.

The brass at Kmart decided to turn to the past after customer research showed people remembered Bluelight Specials fondly.

“It’s part of our DNA,” James said. “We think there is a real positive buzz coming out of it and we expect to see an increase in sales.”

Struggling retailer Kmart turns the blue light back on [Reuters]

03 Nov 14:07

Man Accused Of Drunkenly Attacking His Uber Driver Gets A Face Full Of Mace

by Mary Beth Quirk

(via NBC 4)
An Uber driver in California recently had to make a quick decision: continue to let a drunken passenger beat him over the head and pull his hair, or spray mace right in the guy’s face. He chose the latter, and captured the incident on camera.

The 32-year-old customer appeared to be “incredibly intoxicated” when his Uber driver picked him up in Costa Mesa, CA, reports NBC 4. He said the passenger refused to give him an address and instead, would just tell him where to go.

But the driver says the man was having a hard time staying awake, and wouldn’t wear a seat belt. He finally gave up, pulled into a well-lit shopping center and told the passenger to get out of his car or he would call the police.

That didn’t go over well: at this point in the video, the customer started hitting the driver over the head and yanking his hair while swearing profusely.

“He was grabbing my head and was trying to smash it against the window,” the driver told NBC 4.

As seen in the video, this is when the driver grabbed a can of mace and sprayed it into the passenger’s face, which made him stop the attack. Police responded to the scene soon after, and arrested the passenger on public intoxication and assault charges.

“I wanted to make sure he didn’t get away,” the driver said. “I have lost so much money on people like him and I’m done dealing with it. They take the food right out of my mouth.”

Uber said it has banned the rider from using the platform ever again in the future, and offered to reimburse the driver to cover the cost of cleaning the mace from his car. But it seems this was the last straw for the driver — he says he’s done with Uber.

“I don’t feel safe driving for Uber any more,” he said. “The quality of the passengers has gone down over the last couple of weeks and I know a lot of drivers will agree with me.”

Uber Driver Sprays Mace in Customer’s Face After Attack [NBC 4]

03 Nov 13:44

How to Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish

If your goldfish is swimming sideways or upside-down, it may have swim bladder disorder. Goldfish have a swim bladder that helps them stay afloat. Constipation, enlarged organs, or infection can all cause the swim bladder to stop functioning properly. In many cases swim bladder disorder can be remedied by changing the fish's diet or cleaning the tank. Fancy goldfish are more commonly affected than other fish.

Steps

Recognizing the Problem

  1. Look for common symptoms of swim bladder disorder. Swim bladder disorder occurs when a fish's swim bladder, which normally inflates and helps the fish stay properly afloat, becomes compromised. No matter what's causing the problem, the symptoms are usually the same. When you see your fish belly-up, don't assume it's dead; if it's still breathing, it probably has swim bladder disorder. Here are symptoms to look for:[1]
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 1.jpg
    • The fish keeps floating to the top, upside-down
    • The fish keeps sinking to the bottom of the tank
    • The fish swims with its tail higher than its head (note: this is normal for head standing fish species)
    • The fish has a swollen belly
  2. Know which fish are most likely to be affected. Goldfish, especially fancy goldfish, and betta fish are most commonly affected by swim bladder disorder. These types of fish have round, short bodies, which causes their organs to become compressed. The fish's internal organs can press against the swim bladder and make it difficult for it to function properly.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 2.jpg
    • If you have a fancy goldfish or a betta fish, you'll need to monitor it carefully for signs of swim bladder disorder. Left untreated it can lead to death.
    • Natural goldfish varieties with longer bodies are less prone to getting swim bladder disorder, since their organs are not packed tightly together.
  3. Understand what causes swim bladder disorder. When a fish's tiny organs become enlarged, they can press against the swim bladder and cause it to malfunction. The stomach, intestines and liver are especially prone to becoming enlarged due to the fish's eating habits. Any of the following can cause swim bladder disorder:
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 3.jpg
    • Gulping too much air while eating, causing the stomach to become enlarged
    • Eating low quality or air-filled food, causing constipation in the intestine
    • Eating too much, causing fatty deposits to enlarge the liver
    • The development of cysts in the kidney, causing it to become enlarged
    • Deformity of an internal organ
  4. Look for signs of infection. Sometimes swim bladder disorder is a symptom of infection, and you won't be able to solve that by changing your fish's eating habits. If you believe that your fish has an infection, it's important to treat that separately to help your fish get healthy again.[2]
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 4.jpg
    • If your fish has an infection, it will exhibit clamped fins, shaking, and lack of appetite in addition to other symptoms of swim bladder disorder.
    • Start by cleaning the tank to reduce bacteria levels; in many cases, this will kill the bacteria causing the infection.
    • If symptoms persist, consider treating the fish with a broad spectrum antibiotic to cure the infection. Antibiotics are available at your pet store in the form of water treatment drops or medicated fish food flakes. Be sure to follow the instructions so as not to over medicate your fish.[3]

Treating Swim Bladder Disorder

  1. Raise the water temperature in the tank. A cold water temperature can slow digestion and lead to constipation. While you're treating your goldfish's swim bladder disorder, keep the water temperature between 70 and 80 degrees F to help aid in faster digestion.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 5.jpg
  2. Let the fish fast for three days. Since swim bladder disorder is commonly caused by eating problems, start by letting your fish fast for three days. When fish overeat they can end up with enlarged internal organs, causing the swim bladder to be compromised. Give the fish a chance to digest the food that it has already eaten and allow its stomach, intestines and other organs to shrink back to normal size.[4]
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 6.jpg
    • Fasting for three days should not negatively affect your fish. However, do not continue the fast for more than three days.
    • During the fast, observe your fish to see whether the swim bladder disorder seems to have gone away. If the fish is still exhibiting symptoms, move on to the next step.
  3. Prepare cooked peas for the fish. Peas are high in fiber as well as being dense, so they help ease a fish's constipation problems. Buy a package of frozen peas and cook them until soft (either in the microwave or on the stove). Remove the peel from a pea and drop a bit of pea into the water to feed your fish. The fish should eat no more than a pea or two per day.[5]
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 7.jpg
    • Try not to overcook the peas; if they're too mushy, they'll fall apart before the fish can eat them.
    • When fish eat flake food, they often gulp too much air, causing indigestion and organ enlargement. Feeding them dense peas remedies this problem.[6]
    • Goldfish are omnivores in the wild, so feeding them peas is not dangerous. However, since they are carnivores, feeding a betta or other fish peas can lead to indigestion and potentially make the problem worse.
  4. Feed the fish by hand if necessary. When you drop a bit of pea into the water, it will be dense enough to sink to the bottom of the tank. Fish with swim bladder disorder may have trouble swimming to the bottom to reach the food. If necessary, hold the pea near the surface of the water until the fish is able to move close enough to eat it.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 8.jpg
    • You can also skewer a pea on a toothpick and hold it within close range of the fish.
    • Lowering the water level so the fish can reach the peas is also effective.
  5. Monitor the fish's symptoms. After a few days on a peas-only diet, the fish's digestion should begin to get back to normal, and you should see it begin swimming without problems again. At this point you can begin feeding the fish regular fish food again.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 9.jpg
    • If symptoms persist, the fish may have an untreatable problem, such as an organ deformity or internal damage. Give it a few more days to see if the symptoms of swim bladder disorder go away. If your fish never regains the ability to swim and eat properly, euthanasia may be the most humane solution.

Preventing Swim Bladder Disorder

  1. Soak food before feeding. Flaky fish food floats at the top of the water, so when fish take a bite they also gulp down some air. This can cause their organs to become enlarged, leading to swim bladder disorder. Try soaking fish food before adding it to the tank so that it will sink into the water, allowing fish to eat it without taking in air.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 10.jpg
    • You can also buy sinking fish food that automatically sinks to the bottom of the tank without needing to be soaked.
    • If you feed the fish anything besides flakes or pellets, make sure it's nutrient dense and fully thawed before feeding.
  2. Do not over feed. When fish eat too much they can become constipated, leading to intestine or stomach enlargement and swim bladder problems. Fish should only be fed a small amount of food once per day. Even if your fish seems like it's always hungry, it only needs a small amount of food to function healthily.[7]
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 11.jpg
  3. Keep the tank clean. A dirty tank harbors bacteria and parasites, putting strain on a fish's symptom and sometimes leading to infection. Make sure to clean the tank frequently so that your fish is taking in clean water, rather than swimming around in waste.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 12.jpg
    • Use a water test kit to check pH, ammonia, and nitrite levels. Changing the water doesn't guarantee proper levels, especially if you have never tested your water since starting your tank. Goldfish do best with a pH level of 7.2 - 7.6, as little ammonia as possible and a nitrate level of between 0 and .25 ppm.[8]
    • Try adding aquarium salt made for freshwater tanks. Aquarium salt is good for helping to fight disease and boosts the goldfish's immune system.
  4. Keep the water temperature appropriately warm. Check the temperature every so often to make sure it is about 70 degrees F. Goldfish don't function well in colder water; keeping them at a lower temperature can strain their systems and slow digestion.
    Fix Swim Bladder Disease in Goldfish Step 13.jpg


Tips

  • If you are feeding out flakes or pellets on a regular basis, soak them for 5-15 minutes in a cup of tank water. Often there are numerous air pockets created in the food during production. This excess air can become trapped in the digestive system.
  • A goldfish with these symptoms could also be reacting to being picked on by other goldfish in the same tank. You can also try putting the sick fish in a "hospital" tank to see if they recover.

Warnings

  • Never keep goldfish in bowls due to lack of space and filtration.

Related wikiHows




Sources and Citations


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02 Nov 14:07

For The First Time, Santa Is Coming To Walmart

by Laura Northrup

(George Szakall)
You can buy just about anything on Amazon, but do you know what you can’t find on the mega-retailer’s site? Santa. That’s one of the reasons why Walmart is trying something new and bringing Santaland to Wally World. Stores also plan to have more decorations than in the past––no, not just on the shelves for you to buy, but on the walls, decorating the place.

Fortune reports that the company’s chief operating officer explained the Santa plan to reporters last week, framing it as an improvement to stores during the crucial holiday season. Walmart also plans to put up more decorations and play more Christmas music in stores.

Walmart isn’t alone in this: Target also plans to step up their holiday decorations game, though they aren’t going as far as hiring Santas to take pictures with kids. Yet. Maybe if the idea works at Walmart, there will be a Santa boom.

Retailers aim to make their stores more “fun,” and that includes giving shoppers experiences that they can’t get online. You can e-mail Santa, but you can’t take a picture of your child screaming hysterically while sitting on his lap online.

Hey, know what else you can do while you’re at Walmart? You could pick up your online orders so you don’t have to pay shipping. Maybe buy some stuff, too.

Here’s what Walmart is doing to win the holiday season [Fortune]

02 Nov 13:52

Naval Academy reinstates celestial navigation

by wtopstaff

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — The same techniques guided ancient Polynesians in the open Pacific and led Sir Ernest Shackleton to remote Antarctica, then oriented astronauts when the Apollo 12 was disabled by lightning, the techniques of celestial navigation.

A glimmer of the old lore has returned to the Naval Academy.

Officials reinstated brief lessons in celestial navigation this year, nearly two decades after the full class was determined outdated and cut from the curriculum.

That decision, in the late 1990s, made national news and caused a stir among the old guard of navigators.

Maritime nostalgia, however, isn’t behind the return.

Rather, it’s the escalating threat of cyber attacks that has led the Navy to dust off its tools to measure the angles of stars.

After all, you can’t hack a sextant.

“We went away from celestial navigation because computers are great,” said Lt. Cmdr. Ryan Rogers, the deputy chairman of the academy’s Department of Seamanship and Navigation. “The problem is,” he added, “there’s no backup.”

Among the fleet, the Navy ended all training in celestial navigation in 2006, said Lt. Cmdr. Kate Meadows, a Navy spokeswoman. Then officers’ training returned in 2011 for ship navigators, she said. And officials are now rebuilding the program for enlisted ranks; it’s expected to begin next fall.

“There’s about 10 years when the Navy didn’t teach to celestial,” said Rogers, the Naval Academy instructor. “New lieutenants, they don’t have that instruction.”

The Navy also began pilot programs this fall in celestial navigation for ROTC students at colleges in Philadelphia, Rochester and Auburn.

In Annapolis, midshipmen studied celestial navigation more than a century, until 1998. So what happened?

The Air Force.

In the 1990s, airmen launched two dozen satellites nearly 13,000 miles above Earth. By 1995, this network, the Global Positioning System, could pinpoint your location within feet.

Since then, GPS has never been shut off, according to the government’s website gps.gov.

Today, 31 satellites circle the Earth, each twice a day, costing taxpayers about $1 billion a year.

“The perceived need for sextants was taken away,” said Peter Trogdon, president of Weems & Plath in Eastport.

The company has sold sextants, and other nautical instruments, since it was founded in 1928 by Naval Academy navigation instructor Capt. Phillip Van Horn Weems. He taught Charles Lindbergh navigation during the pioneer days of aviation.

The current president, Trogdon, said sales of sextants plunged after GPS.

“There’s only a few thousand sold a year,” he said. A lightning strike to a ships’ mast could disable GPS receivers. “Most of those are sold to yachtsmen that want to have a backup.”

Still, GPS has transformed humanitarian and rescue efforts around the world.

Celestial navigation, by comparison, isn’t exact. A skilled celestial navigator may calculate locations to within 1.5 miles, Rogers said.

Using GPS “you’re within feet. You’re not even in the same ballpark. If you can use GPS, it’s just so much more accurate,” Rogers said, adding, “we know there are cyber vulnerabilities.”

In 2004, he spent two weeks at Naval Station Norfolk studying stars — Betelgeuse, Capella, Pollux — before navigating aboard the cruiser Thomas S. Gates.

He didn’t once need a sextant.

Still, a world without GPS isn’t too remote a possibility for retired Navy Capt. Terry Carraway, of Silver Spring.

He formed the nonprofit Navigation Foundation in the early 1980s to sustain proficiencies in celestial navigation. That organization peaked with more than 500 navigators, he said.

“In the event that we had to go into a national emergency, we would probably have to shut the GPS down because it can be used by potential enemies,” he said. “It would be pretty hard to train a lot of people in celestial navigation, so we wanted to keep contact with all the people who taught it.”

The foundation disbanded in 2002.

“The old celestial navigators all passed away,” said Carraway, 88.

Cadets at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, used to have a course devoted entirely to celestial navigation. It ended about 10 years ago, said David Santos, the academy spokesman.

Some classroom instruction remains in theories of celestial navigation, Santos said. Also, cadets use a sextant aboard the tall ship Eagle.

Instructors at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, in Kings Point, New York, have continuously taught celestial navigation, said Benjamin Benson, the academy spokesman. In fact, instructor Capt. Timothy Tisch shared materials to help the Naval Academy rebuild its program.

Benson provided a statement from Tisch:

“Knowledge of celestial navigation in the GPS era provides a solid back-up form of navigation in the event GPS becomes unreliable for whatever reason,” Tisch said in the statement. “It is also good professional practice to use one navigational system to verify the accuracy of another.”

In Annapolis, celestial navigation instruction ended loudly.

The Capital reported in June 1998:

“First came the old salts, who fear the military school will no longer produce ‘real’ sailors. Knowing how to navigate by the stars, they say, is the mark of a mariner. Then came the profit-seekers, who asked if they could inherit the academy’s $1,500 sextants. Such devices, inquirers said, would be a nice addition to their museum, a nice mantle piece, or of some use out on the yacht.” (The academy still has its sextants, Rogers said.)

The decision to cut the academy’s long-standing class on celestial navigation was even raised in a New York Times editorial calling the move “a melancholy surprise.”

Still, that decision came after months of discussion that began with a 1996 curriculum review. That review came partly in response to a cheating scandal in the early 1990s that ended with 24 midshipmen expelled.

The review committee decided the required sophomore course on navigating by stars was outdated. Then-Superintendent Adm. Charles Larson, after consulting with commanders of Navy ships, cut the course and added extra lessons on computer navigation.

Midshipmen were relieved. Celestial calculations were painfully difficult, requiring a nautical almanac and volumes of tables. Still, the news caused more than a dozen letters to the editor in Proceedings, the magazine devoted to naval service.

“It fired people up,” Fred Rainbow, the magazine’s editor then, told The Capital.

Some lessons continued, but instruction in celestial navigation ended entirely within years. The 2010 curriculum manual didn’t even mention celestial navigation.

Five years later, the Navy reinstated the subject in the manual issued two months ago.

The first midshipmen to receive training were juniors during this past summer school. Future classes will learn theories of celestial navigation during an advanced navigation course. And the Class of 2017 will be the first to graduate with the reinstated instruction.

But it’s only three hours of celestial navigation — so students won’t be skilled with sextants.

“This is the first semester we added it in, so we’re just baby-stepping it,” said Lt. Christine Hirsch, who teaches navigation at the academy. “We just added the theory, but we really do have the capabilities to expand.”

Still, it’s welcome news to maritime enthusiasts.

“Fantastic,” said Trogdon, the president of Weems & Plath. “How cool is it to go back to the ancestral technique?”

Rogers at the Naval Academy said, “That’s a victory. I agree with them. I think, if you’re out at sea, you should be able to navigate without GPS — things happen.”

In the 1990s, midshipmen were tested on the sextant. They took celestial measurements, then entered data, sometimes 20 figures, for each star, time, distance, angle.

This year, Midshipman Phillip Lowry, of North Ogden City, Utah, learned the general theory of celestial navigation. He considered those past mids.

“I don’t envy them.”

___

Information from: The Capital, http://www.capitalgazette.com/

The post Naval Academy reinstates celestial navigation appeared first on WTOP.

02 Nov 13:40

Prince William County community calendar - Washington Post


Prince William County community calendar
Washington Post
Dale City Farmers Market 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Dale City Commuter Lot, (behind Center Plaza Shopping Center), Dale Boulevard, Dale City. 703-670-7112, Ext. 227. www.pwcparks.org. Free. Bingo Proceeds support local veterans. Doors open at noon Sundays with ...

and more »
02 Nov 13:39

Fire truck responding to blaze involved in crash in SE Washington - Washington Post


WJLA

Fire truck responding to blaze involved in crash in SE Washington
Washington Post
Four firefighters and four others were injured Saturday night when a D.C. fire engine was involved in a crash with a passenger vehicle in Southeast Washington while responding to a fire, officials said Sunday. The crash occurred just after 11 p.m. at ...
Fire Engine in Crash on Way to House FireNBC4 Washington
1 injured in overnight apartment fire in Southwest DCWJLA
DC fire truck hits car on the way to apartment fireW*USA 9
WTOP
all 12 news articles »
31 Oct 22:13

Easily Upgrade Leftovers With a Simple Pan Sauce Recipe

by Kristin Wong

A little reimagining can make leftovers pretty tasty. Here’s a simple recipe for easily upgrading leftovers after you’ve heated them up.

Read more...











31 Oct 13:43

Man pleads guilty to manslaughter after argument over dog

by wtopstaff

WASHINGTON — A D.C. man plead guilty to charges stemming from a 2014 shooting death in Southeast following an argument over a dog, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Rickey Jones, 22, is facing up to 10 years in prison for voluntary manslaughter after he shot Kirk Perry, 50, 13 times.

Jones and Perry had gotten into an argument over Perry’s dog in the 2400 block of Elvans Road in Southeast. During the argument, Jones said, “I got a 4-5 with an extended clip for your dog.” Perry then went to a laundromat.

When Perry returned, Jones was standing outside Perry’s apartment. Perry went to the parking lot to try to resolve the issue with Jones, where Jones ended up shooting him with his pistol. Both men were armed at the time. Two of the gunshot wounds were in Perry’s back.

Jones is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 22.

The post Man pleads guilty to manslaughter after argument over dog appeared first on WTOP.

31 Oct 01:31

A T-Shirt Connoisseur Reviews the Renowned Three Wolf Moon Shirt

by Whitson Gordon

I’m something of a T-shirt aficionado. I never turned into an adult so I wear them almost every day. And because you asked for it, I bought The Mountain’s Three Wolf Moon shirt to review. It’s just okay.

Read more...











30 Oct 20:24

How to Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head

The key to dog training is repetition and clarity. If you train your dog daily and stick to a single command, he will have a much easier time learning. If your dog is having trouble with the basic training approach, a pair of sticky notes can help him understand what you want him to do. Keep reading to find out how.

Steps

Basic Head Shake Training

  1. Follow these instructions if you are new to dog training. This method demonstrates the fundamentals of dog training, and how to use them to teach this trick. If you already know how to train your dog but your dog is having trouble with this specific trick, check out the sticky notes method below.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 1 Version 2.jpg
  2. Get the dog's attention with a reward. Choose a specific reward that the dog enjoys, such as a ball, a plastic bone, or a smelly treat. Show the dog the reward at a time when the dog is attentive, but not overly excited. Command the dog to sit.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 2 Version 2.jpg
    • If the dog is too energetic, it won't focus on the lesson. Tire it out a little before training, or choose a slightly less exciting reward.
    • If your dog doesn't respond to "Sit," teach your dog that command before you teach it this one.
  3. Wave the reward slowly back and forth. Start waving the reward very slowly on a horizontal line in length (about the length of a ruler). This shouldn't look like you're saying no or scolding the dog; it should look as if you're trying to hypnotize your dog. As soon as the dog follows the treat back and forth with its whole head (not just its eyes), reward and praise him. If the dog doesn't follow the movement, let him sniff the object, then try again.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 3 Version 2.jpg
    • Clicker training makes it much easier for the dog to understand your behavior. The basic idea is to use a "clicker" (or any short, sharp noise) immediately when the dog displays the correct behavior. Do this in addition to giving praise and treats.
  4. Move your own head, if necessary. If your dog doesn't respond to the moving treat, try snapping your own head to one side. If the dog mimics you, say "good head shake!" and give it the reward. This may take several tries or even several training sessions.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 4 Version 2.jpg
    • If the dog still doesn't understand what you want, you may have to wait for the dog to shake its head naturally. Immediately reward the dog for this behavior.
  5. Add the verbal command. Choose "Head shake!" or any other verbal command, but stick to one exact choice of words. Give this command at the same time you wave the treat or move your own head. As before, reward the dog and praise it as soon as it responds correctly.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 5 Version 2.jpg
  6. Train in short sessions. Keep the first session to ten or fewer repetitions, to avoid making the dog tired or bored. Repeat the training daily, but stop each session as soon as the dog starts to tire, looks distracted, or resists your commands (typically within a few minutes). As you continue the daily training sessions, your dog should respond more consistently. Give him time and patience. Some dogs learn much faster than others.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 6 Version 2.jpg
    • End sessions on a positive note whenever possible. Praise the dog for its efforts.
  7. Train the dog to respond to the command alone. As your dog learns the command, repeat it with just a hand motion and a verbal command, without holding a treat. When your dog successfully responds, reward it and praise it as usual. When the dog consistently responds to this, start giving it just the verbal command. Continue the training until it responds to the command alone.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 7 Version 2.jpg

Training with Sticky Notes

  1. Teach the dog to touch a sticky note with his nose. As with most tricks, clicker training and some treats is the easiest way to accomplish this. Bring the sticky note near the dog's face, give a verbal cue, then "click" and reward the dog immediately if he sniffs or investigates it. Train in short sessions once or twice a day.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 8.jpg
  2. Move the sticky note to different locations. Once your dog understands and can fluently touch his nose to the sticky note, start to stick the sticky note in different places. Repeat the training until the dog will respond to the command and touch it in any location.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 9.jpg
    • You can stick it to your trouser leg, the wall or a chair.
  3. Stick two sticky notes at your dog's head height. Next, stick one sticky note to the wall at your dog’s head height. Stick a second to the back of a chair opposite, so the two sticky notes face each other. Get your dog to sit in the gap between the chair and the wall. Command the dog to touch one of the sticky notes, then click and deliver your reward at the other sticky note. After enough repetitions, the dog will touch one and then the other. You now have a complete head shake.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 10.jpg
  4. Raise your standards gradually. As you continue this training, start insisting that the dog make complete contact with both sticky notes before you give the reward. Once your dog understand this, start requiring the dog to move from side to side repeatedly, touching each sticky note multiple times.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 11.jpg
  5. Phase out the sticky note. Once your dog has a good head shake going, have the dog sit further forward before you begin. The sticky notes will now be behind the dog, so the dog will not touch them when he turns side to side. Your dog may try to get up and turn around to actually touch the sticky notes, so you must be careful to click and reward right as they turn their head, not once they have turned around and actually touched the sticky notes. Gradually move your dog further and further away from the sticky notes, until it's learned to make the head shake motion with no props.
    Train Your Dog to Shake Its Head Step 12.jpg

Tips

  • Smelly treats are great for getting the dog's attention.
  • Take your time. Only work for a short time each day.
  • Lots of patience is required.
  • Always use positive reinforcement and never punish a dog for not getting it or making a mistake. Always make training fun.
  • If the dog is too excited or energetic to focus on the less, tire them out by playing with them.

Warnings

  • Not every training method works with every dog. Just like people, not all dogs learn the same way.

Related wikiHows


30 Oct 20:08

Walmart Doesn’t Need Free Shipping: They Want Everyone To Use In-Store Pickup

by Laura Northrup

(Will)
Competing big-box stores like Target and Best Buy are trying to attract shoppers this holiday season by offering free shipping on all online purchases, no matter how small. This strategy doesn’t interest Walmart, because their plans this year for holiday domination don’t include free online shipping: they include using in-store pickup to get shoppers into their stores.

Walmart is keeping their threshold for free shipping on most online orders at $50, which was also their online strategy last year. They’ve probably stuck with it because it works. Online customers either build carts worth $50 or more “The vast majority of our orders today are free shipping or free pickup,” the head of Walmart.com explained to reporters.

As long as customers don’t go elsewhere, not offering free shipping makes sense. Walmart is also growing its own subscription-based free shipping program for customers, but they have to pay a subscription fee to join it, making up for their savings later and giving Walmart another reason not to budge from its $50 cart minimum.

Wal-Mart Won’t Promote Free-Shipping Deals Over Holidays [Wall Street Journal]
(via ECommerceBytes)

30 Oct 20:08

Target Confirms Free Shipping For All Online Orders During The Holiday Season

by Mary Beth Quirk

(Schumin Web)
As predicted, Target has gone ahead and confirmed an that it retailer would offer free shipping for all online orders during the holiday season, announcing on Thursday that it’d drop all shipping fees for the second year in a row.

Along with free holiday shipping, Target said it’s partnered with a company called Borderfree to ship products to 200 countries and territories outside the United States during the holiday season (for a fee), reports Reuters.

“Traffic is very important for us during the holidays and … free shipping was very well received last year,” Chief Executive Officer Brian Cornell said.

Online orders placed between Nov. 1 and Dec. 25 will include free shipping, instead of Target’s current policy of only offering free shipping for a minimum online order of $25.

Rival Walmart has said it’s keeping a minimum online order size for free shipping at $50 for the holiday season, but Best Buy will also send online orders on their way fee-free through early January.

Target to offer free U.S. shipping, strikes global shipping deal [Reuters]