Tag Archives: Last August

Arrests made in Philadelphia crash that killed mother, 3 boys crossing highway

Two men face third-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and other charges in a crash that killed a mother and three young sons crossing a 12-lane highway plagued by pedestrian deaths, police said. A fourth son was injured.

Khusen Akhmedov, 23, of Lancaster, and Ahmen Holloman, 30, of Philadelphia, were arrested Wednesday night. Investigators believe they may have been drag racing. The pair also faces charges of homicide by vehicle, recklessly endangering another person, aggravated assault, simple assault and aggravated assault by vehicle stemming from the crash Tuesday night.

Listed telephone numbers for the suspects couldn’t immediately be located, and it wasn’t clear if they had attorneys.

Samara Banks, 28, and her three youngest sons were killed as they crossed Roosevelt Boulevard at a point with grassy medians dividing the traffic lanes, but no crosswalk or traffic light. Her oldest, a 5-year-old, survived with bumps and bruises.

Banks often called a cab to take her and her four little boys home from family visits on the other side of the boulevard, relatives said. But on Tuesday night, she thought temperatures had cooled down enough to walk the mile back home from her aunt’s house.

“The cab service knows her well,” said LaTanya Byrd, an aunt who described Banks as a devoted mother who had helped raise siblings after her own mother died. “Last night, it got a little cooler and she felt she could walk.”

Roosevelt Boulevard had the nation’s 2nd and 3rd most dangerous intersections in a 2001 insurance company study, which tallied 618 crashes at those two intersections alone in a two-year period.

The speed limit is 40 mph where Banks and her boys were killed, but drivers frequently go 10 or 20 mph above that to make — or run — a light, neighbors said Wednesday. Many residents of the lower-income area don’t have cars and are left to traverse the boulevard on foot to get to schools, parks and stores.

Just hours after Banks and her boys died, Iris Rolon chose the same mid-block route to cross with her 10-year-old daughter and 8-year-old niece. They were walking to a city pool on the 95-degree day.

“It ain’t safe, but I like to wait until I see that the light changes,” said Rolon, adding she once had a close call crossing the boulevard in her youth.

Police could not immediately provide more recent data on fatal or non-fatal accidents on the road, but news reports detail a few of them.

Last August, 43-year-old Michael Romano died after pushing his 5-year-old son out of danger just before he was struck by a hit-and-run driver at 11 p.m. His death came just days after another man was killed in a 2 a.m. hit and run nearby.

And 36-year-old pedestrian Brenda Rodriguez was struck and killed in June 2009 after she and a friend picked up Chinese food. Witnesses said she was struck as two drivers were racing each other; both of them fled.

The deaths continued even after the city started installing red-light cameras to try to calm traffic.

“Every time I cross the boulevard, …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Ford's Focus Not the Top Seller, Says Toyota

By John Rosevear, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Ford Focus. Photo source: Ford Motor Company

Ford on Tuesday trumpeted the sales success of its popular Focus compact, citing just-released totals from analytics firm R. L. Polk that showed the Focus was the best-selling car in the world in 2012.

Not so fast, said archrival Toyota .

The Japanese automaker claims that its Corolla compact outsold the Focus last year, 1.16 million to 1.02 million. Toyota insists that Polk’s figures, which count new-car registrations in every country in the world, have undercounted the Corolla by nearly 300,000 units.

So who’s right? I have no idea. But it will probably depend on how you look at it.

For starters, it depends on the meaning of “Corolla”
This isn’t the first time the two giant automakers have had a spat over this issue. Last August, Toyota howled after Ford claimed that the Focus had been the sales leader in the first half of 2012, based on data from another analytics firm, IHS Automotive.

Polk hasn’t (yet) released details of its tallies, so it’s hard to say exactly where and why its numbers don’t line up with Toyota’s.

But it’s a safe bet that it will all come down to quibbles over how you define “Focus” and “Corolla”.

See, the problem is, Toyota sells several variants of the Corolla in different parts of the world. Some of those variants are called “Corolla”, some aren’t, and some are called one thing in some markets and something else in other markets.

Specifically, in some places Toyota sells a hatchback version of the Corolla. That car is called the Toyota Auris, except in a few places, where it’s called a — you guessed it — Corolla. There are also other variations, like the Toyota Verso, which is sort of a Corolla station wagon (and which used to be called “Corolla Verso” in some places).

And then there’s the Toyota Matrix and the Scion xB, both of which are – mechanically speaking – also Corollas, more or less.

Toyota has offered up a few different sales totals for its compact standard-bearer(s). But it insists that just by counting vehicles called “Corolla”, it squeaks out a lead over the totals Ford and Polk are citing for the Focus.

Confused yet? Think of how the analysts at Polk feel.

Ford’s totals are simpler, but not simple
Ford’s case is somewhat simpler, but that doesn’t mean it’s simple. Ford’s Focus is pretty much the same all over the world… except in China, where there are two separate cars called “Focus”. One is the familiar model as sold here in the U.S. today (called “New Focus”), and the other is the last-generation European version of the Focus, called “Classic Focus” and sold with an entry-level price.

That’s common practice in ChinaGeneral Motors and Volkswagen , among others, do the same things with old and new versions of some of their global

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Report: Ford Focus was best-selling nameplate in 2012

By Jeffrey N. Ross

Filed under:

Last August, Ford made a few waves by claiming that the Ford Focus was, at that point, the top-selling car in the world. The automaker failed to account for variations of the Toyota Corolla wearing a different name (such as the Auris and Matrix), however. With official data from Polk coming in now, Ford is able to say that the Focus was, in fact, the best-selling nameplate in the world last year.

Using new-car registrations (which doesn’t factor in fleet sales), the Polk data shows that a total of more than one million Focus models around the world. Strong sales in the US and China have led to a 16 percent increase in year-over-year Focus sales from 2011 that helped to create even more of a gap between it and the second-best global seller, the Corolla.

Ford also had the Fiesta and F-Series listed in the top 10 for worldwide nameplates, but what’s even more impressive is the fact that the F-Series is only sold in North America. Scroll down to see the list (compiled by Ford using Polk data) of the top global sellers last year and a press release from Ford.

Continue reading Ford Focus was best-selling nameplate in 2012

Ford Focus was best-selling nameplate in 2012 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Apr 2013 15:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Alpha Centauri Bb Needs A Better Name; Uwingu Offers Prizes In Planet-Naming Contest

By The Huffington Post News Editors

This is a mighty large universe. Somebody has got to name all the far-flung planets in it. Maybe that should be you.

It’ll cost you almost five bucks to do it, but, hey, it’s all in the name of science and, oh yeah, there will be prizes for the best new planetary names.

Last August, a group of astronomers, planetary scientists, former space program executives and educators came together to form a space-themed company called Uwingu (which means “sky” in Swahili). Their purpose is to generate projects to raise money for space exploration research and education.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

HP eyeing $4 billion damages claim in Itanium case against Oracle

Hewlett-Packard may seek damages of US$4 billion to $4.2 billion from Oracle in its lawsuit over support for Itanium server architecture.

An economist that HP plans to call in the case made the estimate at an evidentiary hearing on Monday in Santa Clara County Superior Court in San Jose, California. The economist, Jonathan Orszag of the consulting firm Compass Lexecon, estimated the difference between HP’s Itanium-related revenue with and without Oracle’s March 2011 announcement that it would stop porting software to Itanium.

“The Oracle conduct at question in this case had a very significant and negative effect on the HP Itanium business,” Orszag said during questioning by HP’s legal team.

HP sued Oracle in June 2011, saying the company had breached a contract when it stopped porting software to the Itanium platform, which powers HP’s so-called mission-critical servers for large enterprises. Last August, Oracle was ordered to resume Itanium support, a decision the company is appealing. The case is now being prepared for a jury trial to determine what damages, if any, HP is entitled to. On Monday, the two sides began presenting the testimony of their planned expert witnesses for approval by the judge in the case, James Kleinberg.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Rick Springfield Arrested: ‘Jessie’s Girl’ Singer Locked Up For Missing DUI Court Date

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Rick Springfield might have been asking himself “What Kind of Fool Am I?” on Friday after he was arrested for failing to appear in court.

Springfield was taken into custody at his Los Angeles home on Friday after the court issued a warrant for his arrest on Wednesday following his missing a scheduled court date for a previous DUI charge, according to E! News.

Back in May 2011, Springfield was arrested for DUI after police pulled him over for speeding down the Pacific Coast Highway, according to Rolling Stone. Last August, he pleaded no contest to a reckless driving with “DUI conditions” charge and was ordered to attend a three-month alcohol education program.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Alleged Syria Tank Footage Offers Glimpse Into Devastation In Darayya (VIDEO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

A recent video (above) posted on YouTube by the Abkhazian Network News Agency (ANNA) appearing to show the Syrian army engaged in battle with rebels in a Damascus suburb has offered a glimpse into the violence and destruction that continues to ravage Syria.

ANNA also posted a brief description to accompany the clip: “Syrian army’s determined attack on the position of terrorists in Darayya. 02/27/2013.”

Darayya, a rebel stronghold located near the capital, has been engulfed in fighting for several months. Last August, Reuters reported that Syrian opposition leaders and activists were accusing President Assad‘s army of “massacring scores of people” — including women and children — in Darayya. In mid-February, the Los Angeles Times reported that Assad’s army had made continued attempts to capture the town but was being repelled by rebel fighters.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Family Sues Disneyland, Calls 'White Rabbit' Racist

By Evann Gastaldo According to a lawsuit, the Black family went to Disneyland and got shunned by the White Rabbit—seriously. The San Diego family is suing the amusement park because, they say, the employee playing the Alice in Wonderland character was racist. Last August, 6-year-old Jason Black tried to hug the “rabbit”… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Working Toward a Tech Sector that Reflects America

By Valerie Jarrett

Yesterday, I had the pleasure of speaking at the Technology Inclusion Summit, hosted by Chief Technology Officer Todd Park, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and the Level Playing Field Institute. It was an amazing gathering of private and public partners who are united in their efforts to expand opportunities for training, education and jobs in technology.

President Obama has always believed that technology is an essential part of growing our economy, creating jobs and remaining globally competitive. The President continues to be committed to encouraging the entrepreneurial spirit in our country, starting with setting a goal of 1 million Science Technology Engineering Math (STEM) graduates over the next decade. This effort also means that we need to collectively act to knock down any barriers that stand in the way.

Last August, during the Tech Inclusion Roundtable, participants came up with some great private-sector initiatives to help drive innovation across every community. Whether it was pioneering new educational tools for students of all ages, bringing technical training to underrepresented communities, or mobilizing tech company CEOs to establish mentoring programs for young people, every one of these initiatives and ideas has the potential to shape America’s future.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House