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7 Obama Jokes That Stood Out From The White House Correspondents Dinner

It's a long-time ritual — American presidents going before the Washington journalists who cover them to recognize some of the best work of the prior year from the assembled crowd.

Of course, there are also jokes. Here are five Obama jokes that stood out from the 2015 White House Correspondents Dinner:

1. The 'Bucket' List: Obama said he's asked, " 'Do you have a bucket list?' I say, well I have something that rhymes with bucket."

Immigration executive action? Stricter climate rules. "Bucket!" Obama deadpanned.

2. Those Grey Hairs: "I look so old John Boehner's already invited Netanyahu to speak at my funeral."

Meanwhile, First Lady Michelle Obama looks great, he said. "I ask her her secret. She says, [Obama employing a nasally voice] 'Fresh fruits and vegetables.' It's aggravating."

He also lamented that he has so much to do, like negotiate with Iran "all while finding time to pray five times a day."

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President Barack Obama brings out actor Keegan-Michael Key from Key & Peele to play Luther, Obama's "Anger Translator" during the White House Correspondents dinner. Evan Vucci/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Evan Vucci/AP

President Barack Obama brings out actor Keegan-Michael Key from Key & Peele to play Luther, Obama's "Anger Translator" during the White House Correspondents dinner.

Evan Vucci/AP

3. 'Arrogant And Aloof': "People say I'm arrogant and aloof," the president said. "Some people are so dumb."

4. End of Times: "Michele Bachmann predicted I would bring about the Biblical end of days. Now that's big. ... Lincoln Washington — they didn't do that."

5. Hillary Clinton: The economy's gotten so bad for some people, Obama said, "I had a friend, just a few weeks ago, she was making millions of dollars a year, and now she's living out of a van in Iowa."

6. The 2016 GOP Field: "The Koch brothers think they need to spend a billion dollars to get folks to like one of these people," Obama said of the potential 2016 Republican presidential candidates. "I raised a lot ... but my middle name is Hussein."

7. Reach Out And Touch A Veep: Talking about how close he and Vice President Biden have gotten, especially in stressful times, Obama joked that he loves Biden's back massages. "Those Joe Biden shoulder massages are like magic. You should try one." [Pause.] "Oh, you have?"

He added, "We've gotten so close, in some places in Indiana, they won't serve us pizza anymore."

Obama also brought out "Luther," his "anger translator" from Comedy Central's Key & Peele. Here's some of Luther's past work:

2016 Presidential Race

jokes

White House Correspondents' Association Dinner

Hillary Clinton

Barack Obama

пятница

Fake Medicines Do Real Damage: Thousands Die, Superbugs Get Stronger

The global battle against malaria, tuberculosis and other deadly diseases faces plenty of obstacles. Among them: a pandemic of fake and poor-quality medicines.

The extent of the bad drug problem is laid out in 17 papers in a special supplement of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. In 16,800 samples of anti-malarials, anti-tuberculosis medicines, antibiotics and anti-leishmaniasis drugs, testing showed that between 9 and 41 percent of the medications failed to meet quality standards.

When patients unknowingly take bad drugs, they don't just fail to get better. If a drug contains just a little but not enough of the active ingredient, it can also help breed superbugs that become more resistant to the real stuff.

To find out about the scope of the problem, we talked with Joel Berman, an expert in infectious diseases, tropical medicine and epidemiology at the National Institutes of Health, and a coeditor of the supplement, timed to bring attention to World Malaria Day on April 25.

What led to the publication of this special issue?

For our group, this began with the alarming find of resistance of the malaria parasite to the new artemisinin compounds, the wonder drugs that came into use in the early 2000s. We at NIH had been following a pattern that started showing itself around 2006, with resistance of parasites to use of these drugs. We called a meeting to look into this, and we saw that, particularly in Southeast Asia, a lot of the drugs being used were of poor quality. There had been reports a few years earlier that poor drugs were around, but the extent wasn't known. In 2012, we published a paper showing that a third of all antimalarial drugs taken off the shelf in non-random surveys in Africa and Asia were absolutely fake. In about 4,000 samples, there was not a drop of active ingredient there. With the new wonder drug, up to 42 percent were fake.

What kind of harm is done when falsified or low-quality medicines make it to the marketplace?

For malaria, one of the studies reports that 122,000 children under the age of 5 are dying in 39 sub-Saharan African countries due to the use of fake [that is, no active-ingredient] anti-malarials. That would be up to 20 percent of all the deaths reported due to malaria. That, to me, is about as scary as it gets.

How do falsified drugs make diseases more powerful?

If you are giving substandard doses with just a little bit of the active pharmaceutical ingredient, then the disease-resistant organisms] will [survive].

Who's responsible for fake medicines? Are they bad-guy scamsters out to make it rich?

You are being gentle in your description. These are criminals. These are murderers. Interpol is involved in [investigating] this activity, but because of the great deal of difficulty to track these fly-by-night operations, I can't answer who they are. India and China seem to be the countries where most fake medicines are being produced. And paradoxically, these countries also produce very good medical products, particularly antimicrobial agents. Let me add that the United States imports up to 80 percent of the ingredients that go into our medicines from abroad. So we're concerned about that, as well. There's an estimate that there is $75 billion a year of revenue for criminals in the fake drug industry. Where that comes from is — some economists have done back-of-the-envelope [calculations]. I wouldn't be surprised if it was much more.

How can we stop them?

The leadership is absolutely crucial — to have an international organization to decide which approaches for detecting [fake medicines] are the best, the lowest cost and the easiest to maintain, and then sharing this with countries around the world and training people. We don't have that.

The second thing is to have some agreed upon treaty or covenant. Since 1929, all countries in the world agree that the counterfeiter will be slammed in jail if he's [caught] passing a counterfeit dollar anywhere. Many countries don't even have FDA-type regulatory agencies to deal with [counterfeit medicines]. We need to help those countries assess their pharmacies and their drug supply chains to be able to track and find the sources. Now there is just a hodgepodge of approaches. In many countries, there is just a pat on the wrist or a small fine if they find a criminal.

Do we have the science to detect fake drugs?

The technologies we're using have to be improved. Many of them are high-powered chemical analytical tests that require central laboratories. It takes a while for the results to come back. We need simple, cheap tests that can be used in the field to diagnose these problems. There's a simple device coming out of the CDC that uses light to show if a pill is fake. There's a handheld device that was tested in Laos recently that worked beautifully to detect fake packages but the cost was over $1,000. That's too expensive.

Have any countries made progress in stemming the flow of falsified medicines?

One of the papers shows that, in Laos in 2003, upward of 80 percent of antimalarials were fake. Now, it's less than 10 percent. They have taken action and collaborated with scientists and public health people at institutions like the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Oxford University. Their public health and infrastructure there has been sensitized to training the pharmacists and having a judicial approach: If they find people, they prosecute. The main thing that has helped in Laos and Cambodia has been [widespread] testing and taking the bad drugs off the market.

Does that make Laos a success story?

They're still having trouble with substandard medicines that are not falsified or produced by criminals but decay or degrade due to heat, transport or poor preservatives.

Was there a time in American history when fake meds were rampant?

There were a lot of products, like fake snake oils and traditional remedies, that were used commonly in the 1800s and early 1900s.

So how did the U.S. take control?

That was the origin of the FDA. And look, we still have a lot of — what shall we say — natural products being sold, and those active ingredients and efficacies have to be confirmed.

As a matter of fact, quinine was the first compound found to be effective against malaria. That was found in Peru by some Catholic monks, who saw that the bark of the cinchona tree was effective against fevers. They started grinding up the bark, and very soon after that, the people who were filling the vials started grinding up something else.

So fake drugs were a problem hundreds of years ago?

I wouldn't be surprised if [it started] even before that. Maybe snake oil was replaced with, say, crocodile oil.

tuberculosis

Malaria

Slow Fashion Shows Consumers What It's Made Of

If you're into "slow food" — the ethical response to "fast food" — you probably want to know how the animals were treated or whether pesticides were used on your vegetables. Now, the "slow fashion" movement is in the same spirit.

"It's about understanding the process or the origins of how things are made," says Soraya Darabi, co-founder of the clothing line Zady. "Where our products come from, how they're constructed and by whom. Slow fashion is really indicative of a movement of people who want to literally slow down."

Read About The Rana Plaza Disaster

Planet Money

The Tragic Number That Got Us All Talking About Our Clothing

Asia

After Bangladesh Factory Disaster, Efforts Show Mixed Progress

This idea of slow fashion has been around for a long time. But over the last two years it has surged into a small-but-dedicated movement, partly inspired by the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh. In 2013 some 2,000 people were making clothes — mostly for large, western brands — when the building they were working in collapsed. More than 1,100 people were killed.

Pietra Rivoli, a professor at Georgetown University, says tragedies like the one in Bangladesh are a result of fast fashion: Consumers in the West buying lots of cheap clothes that are made in countries with little or no oversight of fire safety and fair labor.

"We talk about a race to the bottom in apparel production with production chasing the lowest costs," Rivoli says. "I think the bottom right now is in Bangladesh."

Rivoli is the author of The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy. She traced the origins of a T-shirt from Walgreens that cost $5.99.

PLANET MONEY MAKES A T-SHIRT: The world behind a simple shirt, in five chapters NPR hide caption

itoggle caption NPR

"A lot of times there are demand surges from the West," Rivoli explains. "You know, 'We need more of those pink T-shirts by next week,' and these brands had never really thought about the fact that they might need to be monitoring for actual structural integrity of the buildings. That wasn't something that was really on their radar screen."

Supply chain integrity is important to Soraya Darabi and Maxine Bdat, the co-founders of Zady. They've come out with a new T-shirt that's an example of "slow fashion." It was made entirely in the U.S. by companies that Bdat says try to be eco- and labor-friendly. The cotton is grown by the Texas Organic Cotton Marketing Cooperative.

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Worker-owner Alfonso Gonzalez pieces together Zady's T-shirts at the Opportunity Threads cooperative in Morganton, N.C. Zady hide caption

itoggle caption Zady

Worker-owner Alfonso Gonzalez pieces together Zady's T-shirts at the Opportunity Threads cooperative in Morganton, N.C.

Zady

"The fact that it's USDA. Organic is very meaningful to us because what that means is there is a government representative that's actually visiting these farms on an annual basis and they're checking to make sure these organic standards are being met," Bdat says.

Then the cotton goes to North Carolina where it's spun by a multi-generational family cooperative. "The actual sewers own part of the company," Bdat explains.

The T-shirts are also dyed in North Carolina by TS Designs.

"What we're doing is piecing together what is left of an industry that has totally been decimated," Bdat says.

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Zady's "slow fashion" T-shirt costs $36. Zady hide caption

itoggle caption Zady

Zady's "slow fashion" T-shirt costs $36.

Zady

Zady's T-shirt costs $36.

"It is a little bit of an upfront investment, but it's also, we believe, the way of the future — to own fewer but better things," says Darabi.

Like the Zady founders, Linda Greer likes the idea of slow fashion, but her definition is different. Greer is a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council. "It's intentional manufacturing with 'mindfulness' — to use current terms," she says.

Greer thinks the slow fashion movement should hold large retailers accountable for its manufacturing abroad. The NRDC. has a program called Clean by Design which works with retailers and designers to "green the fashion supply chain."

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For some shoppers, like Angelique Noire (left) and Jenny Rieu, "ethical fashion" means lining up for a massive vintage clothing sale. Nina Gregory/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Nina Gregory/NPR

For some shoppers, like Angelique Noire (left) and Jenny Rieu, "ethical fashion" means lining up for a massive vintage clothing sale.

Nina Gregory/NPR

Greer says 33 textile mills in China have adopted efficiency standards that have reduced pollution. These are mills that make clothes for Target, H&M and The Gap among others. But she says the apparel industry still has a very long way to go.

"The conundrum consumers face into trying to know where their clothing comes from is that even companies don't know where that clothing has come from," Greer says.

On a recent weekend, a huge line snaked around the Goodwill in Los Angeles for a massive vintage clothing sale. For these consumers slow fashion is recycling hats, dresses and purses that have some history.

"It was owned by someone living somewhere at some point and it already had a life and I'm here to give it maybe a second or third life," says shopper Jenny Rieu. Her Goodwill finds are unique and cheaper — not to mention friendlier to the environment.

Read an excerpt of The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy

четверг

SkyWest Now Says Several Passengers Were Ill On Diverted Flight

Officials at SkyWest Airlines and federal authorities say they still don't know what caused three passengers to lose consciousness on a flight that then made an emergency landing in Buffalo Wednesday. Earlier, the airline said one passenger was affected.

The SkyWest plane, operating as United Express flight #5622, was flying from Chicago's O'Hare airport to Hartford, Connecticut with 75 passengers on board.

Some passengers say part way into the flight, they started having trouble breathing, and felt dizzy and nauseous.

Mary Cunningham, a nurse who happened to be on the flight, told WFSB TV that she was asked to help one sick passenger.

"By the time I saw her, she was pretty lethargic, her color looked awful, so I asked for some oxygen for her and once she had oxygen, she was looking a lot better, responsive, and then all of a sudden, the woman behind her passed out," said Cunningham.

The crew then decided to divert the plane to Buffalo in a rapid descent from its cruising altitude of 37,000 feet. Once on the ground, emergency medical personnel treated 14 passengers and one crew member who reported symptoms, including the three who lost consciousness.

None was hospitalized and all eventually went on their way to Hartford.

A spokesman for SkyWest says maintenance crews and mechanics checked out the plane and found no evidence of any problems with the air pressurization, ventilation or other systems.

Spokesman Wes Horrocks told NPR's David Schaper the cause of the illnesses remains a mystery.

The aircraft, an Embraer E170 jet, remains in Buffalo as of late Thursday but Horrocks says it has been cleared by mechanics to return to service. A crew will fly the plane back to Chicago before any passengers board it again.

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the incident but has offered no new information about what may have caused the inflight illnesses.

The National Transportation Safety Board is aware of the incident but has not opened an investigation into it. "We're trying to understand the circumstances before we decide what if any action we would take," NTSB spokesman Eric Weiss told the AP.

Warren Weinstein, American Killed In U.S. Operation, Was Veteran Aid Worker

Warren Weinstein, the American al-Qaida hostage killed in a U.S. counterterrorism operation in January, was a veteran aid worker who spent much of his life in some of the world's toughest places. It was in one such place, Pakistan, that Weinstein was kidnapped in 2011 just days before he was scheduled to leave the country.

Weinstein, 73, of Rockville, Md., was a former Peace Corps worker who, President Obama said, "devoted his life" to helping people. He had lived in Pakistan for at least six years working with J.E. Austin, an international development consulting firm in Arlington, Va., that contracts with the U.S. Agency for International Development. His family called that job in Pakistan a dream come true for Weinstein.

The Washington Post, in a 2013 article, reported:

"Soon after getting a doctorate degree from Columbia University in 1970, Warren Weinstein got his first job as a development consultant overseas and fell in love with expatriate life in challenging places.

"While his daughters were growing up, he took only short-term assignments that would not take him away from his family for long, or postings on which they could join him.

"Weinstein turned postcard writing into an art, sending his wife and daughters carefully written dispatches from every new place he visited."

A profile of Weinstein on bringwarrenhome.com, a website maintained by his family, says the "father, husband, and grandfather ... loved his family and communicated with them every day — sometimes more than once a day — prior to capture."

It says he had a heart condition and severe asthma, and was in extremely poor health.

In a 2013 video, Weinstein appealed to President Obama to "instruct your appropriate officials to negotiate my release." He also said he felt "totally abandoned and forgotten." A year later, al-Qaida, in a letter to the Weinstein family, urged them to "pressure your government" to negotiate for the aid worker's release.

"We are plain, ordinary people, we have no influence with our government – we hope that everyone is doing everything possible to bring Warren home," his wife, Elaine, told ABC News at the time. "We are totally powerless. What they are asking for in this message is something that a private family cannot deliver."

On Thursday, the White House announced that Weinstein and Italian hostage Giovanni Lo Porto were killed in January in a U.S. counterterrorism operation on an al-Qaida facility in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region.

Warren Weinstein

Pakistan

Al-Qaida

Afghanistan

Germany's Largest Bank Fined $2.5 Billion In Rate-Fixing Scandal

Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest bank, has been fined $2.5 billion dollars by U.S. and U.K. regulators for trying to manipulate the so-called Libor rate, a benchmark for inter-bank loans which in turn is used to set interest rates on everything from credit card debt to mortgages.

The German bank is one of eight financial institutions, including Swiss-based UBS and the Royal Bank of Scotland, that were caught up in the scandal, which involved dozens of traders and managers and spanned a four-year period from 2005-2009.

As the BBC writes: "traders colluded to set these benchmark rates, hoping to improve their trading positions. The regulators released email exchanges between traders and submitters - the people who provide the information on which rate Libor and Euribor is set each day."

At least 29 Deutsche Bank employees were involved in manipulating the Libor, which stands for London Inter-Bank Offer Rate.

As part of the settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice, the German bank agreed to plead guilty to one count of wire fraud "for engaging in a scheme to defraud so-called counterparties — its trading partners — while the parent company agreed to a deferred prosecution agreement which requires the bank to continue cooperating with federal prosecutors in a continuing investigation and to retain a corporate monitor for three years," according to The Los Angeles Times.

The Guardian notes that Deutsche Bank's management, led by Anshu Jain and Jurgen Fitschen "will be hoping the avoid the fate of Bob Diamond, who was forced out of Barclays in July 2012 following its Libor rigging fine. When Royal Bank of Scotland was fined in February 2013, John Hourican, the head of the investment bank, left "in recognition of the management issues" and the impact on the bank's reputation. Piet Moerland, chairman of Rabobank, quit when the Dutch bank was fined 660m in October 2013."

The Guardian adds: "Lloyds Banking Group has also been fined for rigging Libor, along with brokers Icap and RP Martin."

LIBOR

Germany

Ingrid Michaelson: Girl Chases Quiz Chases Girl

AMA Champion Aaron Benor with Ingrid Michaelson, 2015. Josh Rogosin hide caption

itoggle caption Josh Rogosin

One of the differences between your high school garage band and Ingrid Michaelson is that, although both got their starts on MySpace, Michalson's music has been heard by more than thirty people. In fact, her songs have been heard by millions of people, thanks to a licensing representative who immediately offered her a TV spot on Grey's Anatomy after finding her on the website. Michaelson accepted. She says, "I had never seen [the show] but my mother told me that my song should be on it." According to Michaelson, her parents' support factored heavily in her career success. "My mom always thought that I could be whatever, 'You could be an astronaut!' She believed in me so much."

Michaelson's distinct style is evident in her work. From deeply personal ballads about heartbreak to upbeat pop songs, her music is both evocative and entrancing. For this episode, Michaelson graces our stage with her ukulele and ethereal voice, and she joins Jonathan Coulton in a musical trivia game sung to the tune of Gotye's "Somebody That I Used to Know.

Interview Highlight

On the intimacy of her music

Mountain Stage

Ingrid Michaelson On Mountain Stage

One of the wonderful things about music is that it can mean different things for different people. It heals people. It excites people. It saddens people. But a song that maybe dredges up sad memories for me, that I play over and over again, can maybe make somebody feel really joyful in the audience. I'm just really amazed by it.

Ingrid Michaelson's "Time Machine", 2015

Heard in Quiz Me The Way I Am

Ingrid Michaelson

NPR

More Whistleblowers Say Health Plans Are Gouging Medicare

Privately run Medicare plans, fresh off a lobbying victory that reversed proposed budget cuts, face new scrutiny from government investigators and whistleblowers who allege that plans have overcharged the government for years.

Federal court records show at least a half dozen whistleblower lawsuits alleging billing abuses in these Medicare Advantage plans have been filed under the False Claims Act since 2010, including two that just recently surfaced. The suits have named insurers from Columbia, S.C., to Salt Lake City to Seattle, and plans which have together enrolled millions of seniors. Lawyers predict more whistleblower cases will surface. The Justice Department also is investigating Medicare risk scores.

Though specific allegations vary, the whistleblower suits all take aim at these risk scores. Medicare uses the scores to pay higher rates for sicker patients and less for people in good health. But officials were warned as early as 2009 that some plans claim patients are sicker than they actually are to boost their payments.

Privately run Medicare Advantage plans have signed up more than 17 million members, about a third of the people eligible for Medicare, and are poised to get bigger. Earlier this month, the industry overturned proposed cuts sought by the Obama administration for a third straight year, instead winning a modest raise in payment rates for the programs.

Medicare Advantage resonates with many seniors for its low out-of-pocket costs. It's also winning favor with some health policy experts who argue these managed care plans can offer higher quality care than standard Medicare, which pays doctors and hospitals on a fee-for-service basis.

Karen Ignagni, the chief executive officer of America's Health Insurance Plans, the industry's trade group, called the government's change of heart "a notable step to provide stable funding."

"It shows the incentives provided for whistleblowers are working well, and all the other controls and detection systems are failing miserably."

- Malcolm Sparrow

But the whistleblower suits argue that it's too easy for health plans to gouge the government.

Malcolm Sparrow, a health care fraud expert at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, said the number of these cases suggests government oversight is too lax.

"It shows the incentives provided for whistleblowers are working well, and all the other controls and detection systems are failing miserably," Sparrow wrote in an email.

Ray Thorn, a spokesman for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, disagreed. He said CMS "is taking steps to protect taxpayers, Medicare beneficiaries and the Medicare program." Thorn cited an increase in CMS audits and said health plans have identified overpayments and given back about $1.1 billion to the government.

Still, critics want to step up accountability as the health plans bite off bigger chunks of Medicare business. Annual taxpayer costs for Medicare Advantage exceed $150 billion

"CMS could save billions of dollars by improving the accuracy of its payments to Medicare Advantage programs."

- Government Accountability Office report

"CMS could save billions of dollars by improving the accuracy of its payments to Medicare Advantage programs," the Government Accountability Office wrote in its just-released 2015 annual report.

On another front, the Justice Department is widening the scope of an investigation into whether exaggerated risk scores are jacking up costs improperly.

Humana Inc., based in Louisville, Ky., which counts more than 3 million seniors in its plans, wrote in a March Securities and Exchange Commission filing that the investigation "includes a number of Medicare Advantage plans, providers and vendors."

On April 14, DaVita Healthcare Partners Inc., headquartered In Denver, disclosed that it had received a Justice Department subpoena. Investigators sought Medicare Advantage billing data and other records.

Shots - Health News

Humana Discloses Widening Justice Dept. Probe Of Medicare Advantage Plans

In the latest lawsuit to surface, a pair of whistleblowers allege that Blue Cross of South Carolina submitted inflated claims between 2006 and 2010, then "acted to cover up and hide the false submissions so that they would be able to retain the wrongly paid reimbursements," according to an April 3 filing.

The South Carolina suit also names the Deseret Mutual Insurance Company, a Utah plan formed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which contracted with Blue Cross to process Medicare Advantage billings.

"We deny the allegations and are vigorously defending the case," responded Blue Cross of South Carolina spokeswoman Patti Embry-Tautenhan.

Deseret Mutual could not be reached despite repeated calls and emails to the health plan's Utah office and its South Carolina attorney.

The suit was filed by Catherine Brtva, a former Blue Cross computer billing specialist, and Jerald R. Conte, a former contractor.

The case targets flaws in computer programs that Blue Cross says were used to submit to Medicare millions of health insurance claims by hundreds of thousands of members.

Shots - Health News

Fraud Case Casts Spotlight On Medicare Advantage Plans

In court filings, Blue Cross does not deny that some overcharges occurred. But it says underpayments also happened and that it worked with CMS to correct the problems.

The whistleblowers argue that the plans set out to repay only about $2 million in overpayments — just 10 percent of what they actually owed. CMS officials declined to discuss the matter.

Several attorneys said in interviews they expect more cases to surface, particularly as Medicare Advantage grows. Risk scoring fraud "has popped up on our radar," said Joseph E.B. White, a Philadelphia lawyer specializing in whistleblower cases.

One suit, which the Center for Public Integrity only recently discovered, was filed in 2012 by Lisa Parker, a former clinic supervisor at The Polyclinic in Seattle, who sued the clinic and Essence Healthcare, a Medicare Advantage plan.

Parker cited a 2010 memo that asked doctors' staff to talk hundreds of elderly people into coming in for a medical visit. The clinic was to receive about $250,000 to $500,000 in 2011 from increased risk scores from the visits.

Shots - Health News

Feds Knew About Medicare Advantage Overcharges Years Ago

The lawsuit alleges the visits "were not dictated by patient concern, nor for the treatment or diagnosis of specific illnesses, symptoms, complaints or injuries, but were designed and performed to maximize the opportunity to bill Medicare."

Joel Andersen, vice president of marketing for Essence Healthcare, said in an email statement: "The government did not find any wrongdoing or any cause to intervene and thus the case was quickly dismissed. We consider the matter closed and have no additional commentary to add. We strongly advise that this matter not be characterized in any other fashion than a frivolous lawsuit based on unfounded claims."

Tracy Corgiat, vice president of marketing and development at The Polyclinic, said that CMS requires that a patient's "clinical history and medical diagnoses be newly documented each year during an in-person visit." The Polyclinic has a "rigorous process for validating the diagnoses of our patients and we are fully confident in that process," she said.

At least one doctor was taken aback.

"Let me see if I've got this right. In order to get more $$$ for the Polyclinic, we have to bring patients in for a visit they didn't need or initiate?" the doctor, Scott Stevens, wrote in an email that's part of the court file.

"They would get more from a movie and popcorn!" Stevens wrote.

This piece comes from the Center for Public Integrity, a nonpartisan, nonprofit investigative news organization. To follow CPI's investigations into Medicare and Medicare Advantage waste, fraud and abuse, go here. Or follow the organization on Twitter.

health care costs

Health Care

Medicare

A Black Eye, Flipping The Bird, And Other Tales From A White House Press Secretary

Being a White House press secretary sometimes requires taking a black eye or two for your boss, in this case, the president of the United States. Dana Perino learned that lesson the hard way. She was White House press secretary at the end of President George W. Bush's second term, and she's out with a new book And The Good News Is... about her life and her time at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

She spoke with Morning Edition host David Greene about that black eye, tense moments in the press briefing room, which sometimes led to her flipping off reporters from behind the podium, and how her dad developed her confidence.

And the Good News Is...

Lessons and Advice from the Bright Side

by Dana Perino

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Interview Highlights

On the (literal) black eye

I'm sure people will kind of laugh at the irony that I finished the last six weeks of the Bush administration with a big black eye, but it's true. I was in Baghdad with President Bush on the last trip. We went to the press conference. Everything was going well. I had just said to my colleague Ed Gillespie, 'look at all these [Iraqi] reporters. This is amazing. They never thought when they were little kids that they would grow up to be journalists and have the chance to ask their leader a question, let alone the leader of the free world.'

As the president started speaking, one of the so-called journalists threw two shoes at his head. And in the middle of that, the lead Secret Service agent, who was standing behind me and behind the interpreter, who was using a microphone that was on the steel arm of a boom mic, lunged forward to protect the president, and when he did that, the steel arm swung around and popped me right in the eye socket.

And it was obviously extremely painful. I ended up being able to get out of the room because the president was determined to finish that press conference. He wasn't going to let the shoe-thrower change that, so I make it out of the room, and he had told the doctor who had checked on him quickly, "go find Dana. She's crying but I don't know what happened." So he came to find me later, and he put his arm around me. There's a photograph in the book that shows us standing there and he said "what happened? I saw you crying, but I thought it was just because the guy threw a shoe at me." And I said "well, sir I adore you, but I grew up in Wyoming and I'm a little tougher than that."

On President Bush tearing up after a memorable hospital visit

President Bush would visit wounded warriors ... most every family was just delighted that the president was there, and so honored that the commander-in-chief would stop by. And I wasn't sure what it would be like, and on my first trip there, I witnessed that for about the first 25 people he visited, and then we went in to this room, and the mom and dad were there, and the mother was distraught.

Her son was on life support and from what I gathered and could tell, that his prognosis, that it was unlikely he would survive, and the mother was very distraught and she's crying and the husband was trying to calm her, and the president was there, and he also tried to calm her, and then she yelled: "Why are your children O.K., but my son is here?" And the president stopped trying to comfort her because she was inconsolable.

But he didn't leave. He stood there, almost as if he needed to absorb it and to understand it. Commanders-in-chief make really tough decisions, and we went on to the next rooms, and I remember those being experiences where the families were very happy to see him, but when we got on Marine One to fly back to the white house, the president was looking out the window, and then he looked at me and he said "that mama sure was mad at me," and then he looked out the window and he said, "and I don't blame her a bit." And a tear rolled down his cheek, but he didn't wipe it away, and then we flew back to the White House.

On getting a young start in news

Well, my dad was a voracious news consumer. I remember just sitting with my family all the time. I would sit on his lap and read the paper with him. He would read it to me. I loved the Sunday funnies, and then as I got a little bit older, I think my dad recognized that it was important for children, and especially girls, to have that time with their dad so that they could help develop their confidence and their critical thinking skills, so my dad chose to have me read the Rocky Mountain News and Denver Post every day before he got home from work, and I had to choose two articles to discuss before dinner.

And I look back on that time, I remember being on Marine One once, and the president had asked me my opinion about something, and it was an unpopular opinion, but I expressed it well, and I think I was persuasive at the time, and I thought back to that time with my dad, and I realized that you know — one of the things I write about in the book is that parents and dads, if they can, should spend some of that time with their daughters because at some point in their lives, they will be working with, or for, possibly a male-dominant figure. And to be able to express yourself well and feel confident in your opinions, and not feel like you are needing to be shy about them is very powerful, and I think that planted the seed for me to be able to be more successful.

On flipping off reporters from behind the podium

I do admit that the tension sometimes in the briefing room could get really tough, and I've been asked "how did you stay so calm, and gracious and dignified?" And the truth was 99.9 percent of the time it was because I would imagine if President Bush were watching the briefing, if he was not going to be proud of something I was saying, then I didn't say it. But there were times, and you were there, where some reporters, one in particular, would be peacocking around and be showing off for the cameras.

And sometimes just under the podium holding my glass of water, I would flip him the bird.

Nobody could see me, and I had never told anybody that. I couldn't believe when I was writing the book, I'm like "you know what, if you're just going to be honest and candid, you might as well just be 100 percent going for it," and so I apologized to the reporters, I apologized to President Bush, and I also say that, who knows? Maybe the reporters were flipping me off too.

On whether she ever flipped off NPR's David Greene in the briefing room

Not you. David Greene of NPR? Absolutely not. Guaranteed.

Oklahomans Feel Way More Earthquakes Than Californians; Now They Know Why

A magnitude-3.0 earthquake is small, but most people can feel it. Historically, Oklahoma got less than two of those a year, but in 2013 it became two a week.

It's only gotten more active since then — last year, the state had three times as many earthquakes as in the entire seismically active state of California.

This morning, the U.S. Geological Survey will issue its first comprehensive assessment of the hazard posed by earthquakes linked to oil and gas drilling. In the preliminary report, the survey details oil and gas-related quakes in eight states.

The earthquake surge is strongest in Oklahoma, where the state government has formally acknowledged the link for the first time earlier this week.

Dea Mandeville, city manager of Medford, Okla., says she has been feeling those quakes more than twice a day.

"Yeah, we're used to two or three earthquakes a week, but to get one — two or three every day now, this past week, is really strange," she says.

Mandeville organized a town hall meeting in late March to discuss the earthquakes in the small community of about 1,000, which is about 100 miles north of Oklahoma City, near the Kansas border. Mandeville says people in her town are worried — and annoyed by all the shaking.

i

Chad Devereaux examines bricks in November 2011 that fell from three sides of his in-laws home in Sparks, Okla., following two earthquakes that hit the area in less than 24 hours. The state earlier this week acknowledged that many recent earthquakes in the state were the result of underground disposal of wastewater from oil and gas drilling. Sue Ogrocki/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Sue Ogrocki/AP

Chad Devereaux examines bricks in November 2011 that fell from three sides of his in-laws home in Sparks, Okla., following two earthquakes that hit the area in less than 24 hours. The state earlier this week acknowledged that many recent earthquakes in the state were the result of underground disposal of wastewater from oil and gas drilling.

Sue Ogrocki/AP

"I haven't had any damage on my personal things, but we've had things fall off the walls," she says. "Luckily it didn't break."

Mandeville invited representatives from Oklahoma's oil and gas regulator and its state seismologists to speak at the meeting, which drew hundreds of attendees, including anti-fracking protesters. It was lively and testy, especially when people like Tulsa-based independent geologist Bob Jackman — an outspoken critic of state regulators' efforts — asked questions.

"I would like to say with a little more clarity — it is the disposal wells that's causing this problem, period. Do you agree with that?" Jackman asked.

The entire panel did — and now the state officially agrees too.

"We are attributing most of the earthquakes we experience in Oklahoma to produced water that is disposed of into older formations," says Rick Andrews of the Oklahoma Geological Survey.

Simply put, oil and gas production generates a lot of toxic waste fluid. Energy companies have to pump it back into the ground in wastewater disposal wells, and that is what is triggering the majority of these earthquakes.

Other states are experiencing oil-and-gas-related earthquakes too: Research published this week links a swarm of earthquakes to disposal wells in Texas.

Oklahoma has more than 3,200 of these wells, and last year the state had three times as many quakes as California did. So far this year, the Geological Survey's ShakeMap tool lists more than twice as many 3.0-plus earthquakes in Oklahoma as in California.

The Two-Way

USGS: Okla. At Increased Risk Of 'Damaging Quake'

The Two-Way

Interior Department Issues New Fracking Rules For Federal Lands

Citing Health, Environment Concerns, New York Moves To Ban Fracking

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State officials have been slow to formally link the industry to the earthquakes. The oil and gas industry is one of the largest economic drivers in Oklahoma — sales tax revenues from drilling and associated business allowed Medford to build a new community pool, among other projects.

But state authorities have stepped up oversight of disposal wells and operators in quake-prone regions, which the industry disagrees with.

"We don't know enough about what's really going on in the subsurface to know how to mitigate some of this risk," says Chad Warmington, president of the Oklahoma Oil & Gas Association.

Warmington is worried Oklahoma's new position might fuel well moratoriums, which one state lawmaker is already calling for.

"Just to say we're just going to blanketly shut 'em down, it doesn't make logical sense, because it may have no impact whatsoever on the seismic activity," he says.

Scientists don't know if these earthquakes can be stopped now that they've started — even if these disposal wells are banned. But now that they've confirmed the cause, finding a solution is one of the next things they plan to research.

Joe Wertz reported this story for NPR's StateImpact Oklahoma.

U.S. Geological Survey

Oklahoma

earthquakes

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среда

The Nearly Lost Story Of Cambodian Rock 'N' Roll

The tragic story of Cambodia in the 1960s and '70s is well-known: It became engulfed in the Vietnam War, then more than a million Cambodians died under the Khmer Rouge regime. Doctors, lawyers, teachers — educated people — were targeted in the communist takeover. So were artists and singers.

A new film documents the vibrant pop music scene that existed before the Khmer Rogue. It's called Don't Think I've Forgotten: Cambodia's Lost Rock and Roll and it opens this week in New York. The documentary took director John Pirozzi 10 years to make.

i

"I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," documentarian John Pirozzi says of Cambodian pop star Sinn Sisamouth. DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures hide caption

itoggle caption DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

"I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," documentarian John Pirozzi says of Cambodian pop star Sinn Sisamouth.

DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

One of the artists included in the film, Sinn Sisamouth, is still considered to be the greatest Cambodian singer of all time, an artist who embraced and adapted Western styles for Cambodian audiences. "I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," Pirozzi tells NPR's Robert Siegel.

During the 20 years when pop music exploded in Cambodia, the musicians incorporated influences from around the world. They would imitate what we would call surf rock. There's also a very surprising Afro-Cuban music trend that started to blend in, and even covers of Western artists like Santana. The sounds from other countries were constantly changing Cambodian music.

One of the most fascinating things Pirozzi discovered while making the film was the very little lag time between music coming out of the West and the Cambodian musicians' ability to pick up on it.

"I think," Pirozzi says, "Western music for Cambodians was something that goes back to pre-rock 'n' roll. Dance halls and big band music and crooners were very popular in the '50s. People like Perry Como, Pat Boone, Frank Sinatra were getting into Cambodia through the wealthy Cambodians who were being educated in France and coming back with records."

Initially urban elites only had access to the '60s discotheque scenes shown in the film. But as American GIs began broadcasting close to Cambodia, Western music opened up to more and more people. By the time the '70s came around, right before the Khmer Rouge came into power, it was more accessible for Cambodians.

The rise of the Khmer Rouge spelled the end of the booming pop scene. Foreign sounds were banned and only traditional music was allowed. The capital city of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, was emptied out.

"I think most of the famous singers like Sinn Sisamouth, Ros Serey Sothea were so high profile, it was impossible for them to hide their identities," Pirozzi says. "But the backing musicians, the drummers, the guitar players, the bass players, they weren't as well known, so they could pretty much see what was happening and were able to hide their identities.

"You had to really pick up on the situation quickly and understand you had to hide your identity, or else you could potentially be a target."

Sieng Vannthy is one of the few famous musicians who managed to survive. "I told them I was a banana seller," she says in the film. "If I told them I was a singer, I would have been killed."

"When we interviewed her," Pirozzi says, "no one had really asked her about this time in her life for a long time, and you have to remember these people had their identities stripped from them. They had to start whole new lives, even after the Khmer Rouge, coming back to a country that was completely destroyed, so conducting the interviews and asking people to access this time was a very intense process."

i

His Royal Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, an avid musician, and Her Royal Highness Norodom Monineath. DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures hide caption

itoggle caption DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

His Royal Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, an avid musician, and Her Royal Highness Norodom Monineath.

DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

When Pirozzi started the film, he was told by many people that he wouldn't find anything in terms of photographs and archival footage — but a lot of the music was still out there.

"There are so many people," he says, "that came to me when they found out about the film who had little pieces to the puzzle, who had songs, who had photos, who had maybe a little bit of footage, and so the film sort of came together in a very communal way with people who really cared about the music and cared about the country."

The Nearly Lost Story Of Cambodian Rock 'N' Roll

The tragic story of Cambodia in the 1960s and '70s is well-known: It became engulfed in the Vietnam War, then more than a million Cambodians died under the Khmer Rouge regime. Doctors, lawyers, teachers — educated people — were targeted in the communist takeover. So were artists and singers.

A new film documents the vibrant pop music scene that existed before the Khmer Rogue. It's called Don't Think I've Forgotten: Cambodia's Lost Rock and Roll and it opens this week in New York. The documentary took director John Pirozzi 10 years to make.

i

"I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," documentarian John Pirozzi says of Cambodian pop star Sinn Sisamouth. DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures hide caption

itoggle caption DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

"I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," documentarian John Pirozzi says of Cambodian pop star Sinn Sisamouth.

DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

One of the artists included in the film, Sinn Sisamouth, is still considered to be the greatest Cambodian singer of all time, an artist who embraced and adapted Western styles for Cambodian audiences. "I think he was actually both Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra," Pirozzi tells NPR's Robert Siegel.

During the 20 years when pop music exploded in Cambodia, the musicians incorporated influences from around the world. They would imitate what we would call surf rock. There's also a very surprising Afro-Cuban music trend that started to blend in, and even covers of Western artists like Santana. The sounds from other countries were constantly changing Cambodian music.

One of the most fascinating things Pirozzi discovered while making the film was the very little lag time between music coming out of the West and the Cambodian musicians' ability to pick up on it.

"I think," Pirozzi says, "Western music for Cambodians was something that goes back to pre-rock 'n' roll. Dance halls and big band music and crooners were very popular in the '50s. People like Perry Como, Pat Boone, Frank Sinatra were getting into Cambodia through the wealthy Cambodians who were being educated in France and coming back with records."

Initially urban elites only had access to the '60s discotheque scenes shown in the film. But as American GIs began broadcasting close to Cambodia, Western music opened up to more and more people. By the time the '70s came around, right before the Khmer Rouge came into power, it was more accessible for Cambodians.

The rise of the Khmer Rouge spelled the end of the booming pop scene. Foreign sounds were banned and only traditional music was allowed. The capital city of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, was emptied out.

"I think most of the famous singers like Sinn Sisamouth, Ros Serey Sothea were so high profile, it was impossible for them to hide their identities," Pirozzi says. "But the backing musicians, the drummers, the guitar players, the bass players, they weren't as well known, so they could pretty much see what was happening and were able to hide their identities.

"You had to really pick up on the situation quickly and understand you had to hide your identity, or else you could potentially be a target."

Sieng Vannthy is one of the few famous musicians who managed to survive. "I told them I was a banana seller," she says in the film. "If I told them I was a singer, I would have been killed."

"When we interviewed her," Pirozzi says, "no one had really asked her about this time in her life for a long time, and you have to remember these people had their identities stripped from them. They had to start whole new lives, even after the Khmer Rouge, coming back to a country that was completely destroyed, so conducting the interviews and asking people to access this time was a very intense process."

i

His Royal Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, an avid musician, and Her Royal Highness Norodom Monineath. DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures hide caption

itoggle caption DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

His Royal Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, an avid musician, and Her Royal Highness Norodom Monineath.

DTIF CAMBODIA LLC/Courtesy of Argot Pictures

When Pirozzi started the film, he was told by many people that he wouldn't find anything in terms of photographs and archival footage — but a lot of the music was still out there.

"There are so many people," he says, "that came to me when they found out about the film who had little pieces to the puzzle, who had songs, who had photos, who had maybe a little bit of footage, and so the film sort of came together in a very communal way with people who really cared about the music and cared about the country."

New Orleans Bans Smoking In Bars, Restaurants

You can bring your drinks outside on Bourbon Street, but you can no longer bring your smokes indoors.

New Orleans banned smoking in bars, restaurants, and casinos just after midnight Wednesday morning.

The New York Times published an intriguing look at the city's nightlife spots as the ban went into effect.

Here's an excerpt:

Just after midnight, it became illegal to smoke in bars in New Orleans. Last call for cigarettes went out across the city: at the hazy Bud Rip's bar in the Bywater; among the cigar-smoking crowd in the leopard print chairs at the French 75 bar in the French Quarter; at the Kingpin, where the bartenders handed out Nicorette gum; and at 45 Tchoup, where smoke had settled in so heavily that it began to form something like an Alpine cloud bank.

"This is one of the smokiest bars in town," said Steve Zweibaum, 57, the owner of a jazz venue nearby who, while smoking a cigarette, spoke of how he had quit smoking long ago. "I know a bunch of people who don't come in here because of the smoke," he said, listing names. "Maybe they'll come back."

WDSU News posted a handy list of quick facts about the ban, here are a few:

Smoking is no longer allowed at any bars, restaurants, casinos, or the fairgrounds.

Smoking is now prohibited in outdoor sporting arenas and stadiums, except during concerts, festivals and parades.

There is no smoking allowed within five feet of Lafayette Square.

Harrah's Casino offered pity to those smokers affected as midnight struck on Wednesday, by offering them Tootsie Pops, The New Orleans Advocate reported.

You can find the full text of the law here.

cigarettes

smoking

New Orleans

Turks And Armenians Prepare For Dueling Anniversaries On Friday

Armenians are preparing to mark on Friday the 100th anniversary of the killing of as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors by the Ottoman Empire. And Turks are getting ready to celebrate the centennial of a major military victory by the Ottoman forces over the Allied powers at Gallipoli in World War I.

Turkey traditionally holds the Gallipoli ceremonies on April 25, which falls on Saturday this year. But it is moving up the events by one day to Friday in what critics call a clumsy attempt to overshadow Armenian Remembrance Day.

Author Interviews

Author Explores Armenian Genocide 'Obsession' And Turkish Denial

The Two-Way

Pope's Remarks On Armenian 'Genocide' Spark Row With Turkey

Parallels

Last Armenian Village In Turkey Keeps Silent About 1915 Slaughter

All this historic symbolism is tied to a terrible period in the early 20th century that is still playing itself out today.

In the courtyard of the St. Giragos Armenian Church in Diyarbakir, in southeastern Turkey, Armenian Turk Remzi Demir is asked whether he thinks Turkey is trying to draw attention away from the 100th anniversary of the killings that swept away much of his family. He puffs on his cigarette, and then bursts out laughing.

"It's so obvious, we don't even need to hear the explanation," he says. "It's plain what they intended to do by moving the date."

Growing Agreement Among Historians

Turkish schoolkids photograph one another next to soldiers dressed as World War I Ottoman troops at the Canakkale Martyrs' Memorial. The memorial, near Sedd el-Bahr, Turkey, is a tribute to the Ottoman victory at Gallilpoli in 1915 over British, French, Australian and New Zealand soldiers. Sean Gallup/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Sean Gallup/Getty Images

For the better part of a century, Turkey has suppressed accounts of the Armenian killings beneath a wave of national pride at the establishment of an independent Turkish republic on the ashes of the Ottoman Empire.

Turkish officials have denied and defied growing agreement among historians that the Armenian killings and expulsions fit the modern definition of genocide. Many European states call it a genocide, though the United States does not. Pope Francis set off a diplomatic dispute between Turkey and the Holy See last Sunday when he referred to the killings as genocide.

At Istanbul's military museum, a colorful and energetic Janissary band recreates the martial music that accompanied Ottoman conquests. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's triumph at Gallipoli, where forces from Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand were defeated, has multiple exhibits.

There is also one room, not easy to find, devoted to "Turkish-Armenian relations." A plaque at the entrance makes its point of view clear. It says "the aim of these unfounded genocide claims is to decrease the power of Turkey in the region."

The walls are lined with historical photographs, not one of which shows a slain Armenian – only the bodies of Turks said to have been tortured and killed by "Armenian gangs."

i

A man walks by photographs at the Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan, Armenia, on Tuesday. Armenians will mark the 100th anniversary of the killings on Friday. Karen Minasyan/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Karen Minasyan/AFP/Getty Images

A man walks by photographs at the Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan, Armenia, on Tuesday. Armenians will mark the 100th anniversary of the killings on Friday.

Karen Minasyan/AFP/Getty Images

Turkey argues that it was the move by some Armenians to fight with Russia against the Ottomans that made the deportations necessary. Armenians say that could never justify a collective punishment with such a massive death toll.

Political scientist Cengiz Aktar says Turkey's government does seem to recognize that it has a problem. After years of seeing Turks prosecuted for mentioning the Armenian genocide, he now feels free to talk about it. And in 2014, then prime minister, now President Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered condolences to Armenia in terms that were, by Turkish standards, ground-breaking.

The problem, says Aktar, is that while the government is creating a better climate for open discussion at the street level, it's stuck at the official level. It can't reconcile the need to acknowledge past atrocities with the creation myth of modern Turkey, which turns on the notion of transforming an ethnically diverse empire into a more homogeneous nation-state.

"But the bottom line," he says, "is that Turkey, in order to become, you know, a healthy and genuine democracy, needs definitely to heal itself from this major sin."

Armenia

Turkey

Of Fruit Hats And 'Happy Tropics,' A Renaissance For Carmen Miranda

Known for her outrageous costumes and beautiful voice, Brazilian performer Carmen Miranda was the highest-earning woman in Hollywood in the 1940s.

In the signature number in the 1943 extravaganza The Gang's All Here, Miranda — a massive turban festooned with fake fruit atop her head — sings "The Lady In The Tutti Frutti Hat" as a huge cast of scantily clad women waves around giant bananas.

It's completely over the top, and makes you feel like you've been immersed in a massive, warbling fruit salad.

But her success in the U.S. didn't translate back home, where she was rejected for being a sellout.

Now, her supporters hope that she will be given much greater recognition in Brazil, starting with a permanent exhibition at a lavish new museum in her home city of Rio de Janeiro, which is set to open later this year.

Success In U.S. Eclipsed Success At Home

There was a lot more to "The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat" than papier-mch produce.

"The Brazilians don't know Carmen Miranda as they should," says Helosa Seixas, who with her daughter, Julia Romeu, wrote a children's biography of Miranda.

Named Maria do Carmo Miranda da Cunha when she was born in Portugal, she immigrated to Brazil with her family when she was a child.

Before she became a star on Broadway and Hollywood, Miranda was big in Brazil. Her rise coincided with the beginning of the country's music industry.

"She was the most successful Brazilian singer in Brazil for 10 years before she ever went to America ... and so she was very important to Brazilian music, to Brazilian radio," says Romeu. In fact, during that period, Miranda cut more records than anyone else.

She was singing at the casino in the neighborhood of Urca when an American producer saw her and whisked her to Broadway and then Hollywood.

In Brazil, instead of celebrating her success, the exact opposite happened: People jeered at her, and said she was a sellout.

"When she came back (to Brazil) the next year, she had a very bad experience at the Casino da Urca. She really was very upset and she cried. She stopped the show," recounts Seixas.

Putting Brazil On The Map

After that experience, Miranda didn't come back to Brazil for 14 years. But she got the last word: She recorded a song about the incident, "They Say I Came Back Americanized."

One of Miranda's costumes, photographed in the now-closed Carmen Miranda Museum in Rio. Erik Ogan/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons hide caption

itoggle caption Erik Ogan/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons

The lyrics are both arch and sweet: "How could I have come back Americanized?" she asks. "I always say 'te amo' and never 'I love you.'"

It was a huge hit at the time.

Miranda always argued that she was Brazilian at heart. In an interview in London in 1948 she talked about the cultural roots of all that fruit.

"In Brazil in Bahia, the girls carry the basket with the fruits on her head, and they have big bracelets and big necklaces and they sell fruits in the streets and I take it from the girls," Miranda explained.

And she used that image to make herself into a big business, constantly touring and putting on shows in casinos and clubs.

For the American audience of the day, she put Brazil on the map.

"It was through her music and her person that Americans discovered what Rio de Janeiro was, what Brazil was, how Brazilians behaved," says Csar Balbi, the director of the now-closed Carmen Miranda Museum in Rio.

Celebrated In A New Museum Exhibit

Balbi is speaking in the building that housed Miranda's collection after her death in 1955. It's a small, ugly concrete bunker next to an expressway. It's not easily visible — the antithesis of the woman herself.

Balbi takes me into the back room where her things are kept in storage.

And lined up on a shelf are the famous turbans, some with cherries, some with pineapples, some with small umbrellas. Miranda actually made some of them herself: She had learned millinery working in a hatmakers' shop in her youth.

Now her belongings are in the process of being packed up and shipped to their new location – the Museum of Image and Sound smack dab on the main drag in Copacabana.

"This museum was the wrong place for her," Balbi says. "Now we are going to a bigger space."

It will be at the heart of a large museum that will highlight Brazil's various musical traditions. The emphasis will be on Miranda's music, housed in a part of the museum that focuses on a genre called "Happy Tropics."

Seixas, the author, predicts that the new permanent exhibition will be a huge success.

"Carmen Miranda will be the anchor of the new museum," Seixas says. "She will finally have the important space that she always deserved in Rio and in Brazil."

Brazil

A Young Mother's Death Raises Questions Without Answers

On April 20, 2015, the body of a 27-year-old mother of two was laid to rest in a village in India. She had been admitted to the hospital ten days earlier, with bleeding in the head and a spinal injury that left her paralyzed. She told authorities she had slipped and fallen. Journalist Wilbur Sargunaraj had the opportunity to speak with three of her close friends, who said her husband caused her death. Family members would not comment. He will likely not face charges because in India, many people view domestic violence as a family matter and not a crime. Even the wife did not accuse him. So the truth may never be known. But her friends did share some things about this young woman. Here is her story. [Note: We are not using her name to protect her family.]

She was born in a small village in Tamil Nadu. Her father struggled to find work as he was disabled, so she was forced to look for work to provide for their family. She was very independent. She spent most of her teenage years working as household help for a middle class family in a large city. She would cook, clean, make afternoon tea and wash clothes. Sometimes she would get into trouble for bluntly speaking her mind. Yet the family that she served loved her as she loved them. She enjoyed nice clothes and a variety of dishes. Chicken curry with the fermented rice-lentil cake called idly was great, but even better for her was fish head curry. Nothing went to waste. She even loved those tasty eyes!

In her early 20s she fell in love with a boy from her village. But her family quickly arranged a marriage for her instead since they wanted her husband to have a higher social status. She pleaded with her father not to give her away, but he would not change his mind. Being married is of utmost importance for the status of women in the village world. Caste, education, wealth and skin shade are typically what matters in a spouse. Love and respect within the marriage are often secondary.

The marriage was rocky from the start. One of her friends asserted that she was verbally and physically abusive to her husband and eventually was hit in return. She ran back to her family one night, pleading outside the gate to be let back in and to escape this marriage. But since her family believed that she had not behaved as she should toward her husband, they weren't about to let her walk — especially after having paid a large dowry in the form of gold and furniture.

Village burials happen quickly as bodies are not embalmed or kept in a funeral home. The funeral took place beside the gravesite on the day she died. She passed away early in the morning; the body did not arrive for burial until nightfall, when the cemetery was shrouded in darkness.

A gang of young men had asked her family if they should beat the husband at the funeral, but the family declined. A shouting match started right in the middle of the funeral about why she died. But like so many other things in this case, the shouters were hushed.

domestic violence

India

Debate: Is It Time To Abolish The Death Penalty?

The death penalty is legal in more than 30 states, but the long-controversial practice has come under renewed scrutiny after a series of botched executions in several states last year.

Opponents of capital punishment argue that the death penalty undermines the fair administration of justice, as wealth, geography, race and quality of legal representation all come into play, with uneven results.

But proponents of the death penalty believe capital punishment serves a moral and social purpose in American society. They argue that while the administration of the penalty is not perfect, improvements can be made in the justice system to address some opponents' concerns without doing away with the punishment altogether. Some people deserve to die, they say, for committing certain types of crime.

Two teams faced off over these questions in the latest event from Intelligence Squared U.S., debating the motion, "Abolish The Death Penalty." In these Oxford-style debates, the team that sways the most people to its side by the end is the winner.

Before the debate, 49 percent of the audience at the Kaufman Music Center in New York voted in favor of the motion, while 17 percent were opposed and 34 percent were undecided. After the event, 54 percent agreed with the motion and 40 percent disagreed, making the team arguing against abolishing the death penalty the winners of the debate.

i

Diann Rust-Tierney, executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, with teammate Barry Scheck, co-director of the Innocence Project. Samuel LaHoz/Intelligence Squared U.S. hide caption

itoggle caption Samuel LaHoz/Intelligence Squared U.S.

Diann Rust-Tierney, executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, with teammate Barry Scheck, co-director of the Innocence Project.

Samuel LaHoz/Intelligence Squared U.S.

THOSE DEBATING

For The Motion

Diann Rust-Tierney became the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in 2004. With 30 years of experience in public policy and litigation advocacy, she manages the operations of NCADP and directs programs for the organization and its 100 affiliate organizations. Previously, Rust-Tierney served as the director of the Capital Punishment Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, where she had also served as chief legislative counsel and associate director of the Washington office. During her tenure at the ACLU, she was the lead advocate on capital punishment on Capitol Hill, coordinating a coalition of national organizations on the issue, and the lead lobbyist on a broad portfolio of issues ranging from criminal justice policy to women's rights. Prior to joining the staff at the ACLU, she engaged in litigation and public policy advocacy at the National Women's Law Center.

Barry Scheck is the co-founder and co-director, with Peter Neufeld, of the Innocence Project and a professor at the Cardozo School of Law. Known for landmark litigation that has set standards for forensic applications of DNA technology, he and Neufeld have shaped the course of case law nationwide, leading to an influential study by the National Academy of Sciences, as well as important state and federal legislation. They coauthored Actual Innocence: Five Days to Execution and Other Dispatches from the Wrongly Convicted with Jim Dwyer. Scheck is a commissioner on New York's Forensic Science Review Board, the first vice president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and a board member of the National Institute of Justice's Commission on the Future of DNA Evidence. In addition to the dozens of men exonerated through the Innocence Project, Scheck has represented such notable clients as Hedda Nussbaum, O. J. Simpson, Louise Woodward and Abner Louima.

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Robert Blecker is a professor at New York Law School, a nationally known expert on the death penalty and the subject of the documentary Robert Blecker Wants Me Dead. After a brief stint prosecuting corruption as a New York special assistant attorney general, he joined New York Law School, where he teaches constitutional history and criminal law, and co-teaches death penalty jurisprudence with leading opponents. The sole keynote speaker supporting the death penalty at major conferences and at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, he was also the lone American advocate at an international conference in Geneva on the death penalty sponsored by Duke University Law School. Frequently appearing in The New York Times, on PBS, CourtTV, CNN, BBC World News and other major media outlets, and with privileged access to death rows across the country, Blecker is making a documentary chronicling life on death rows and contrasting them with maximum security general population.

Kent Scheidegger has been the legal director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation since 1986. A nonprofit, public interest law organization, CJLF's purpose is to assure that people who are guilty of committing crimes receive swift and certain punishment in an orderly and constitutional manner. Scheidegger has written over 150 briefs in U.S. Supreme Court cases. His articles on criminal and constitutional law have been published in law reviews, national legal publications, and congressional reports, and his legal arguments have been cited in the Congressional Record and incorporated in several precedent-setting Supreme Court decisions. He is the past chairman of the Criminal Law and Procedure Practice Group of the Federalist Society and continues to serve on the group's executive committee. After serving six years in the U.S. Air Force as a nuclear research officer, he took his law degree with distinction from the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law.

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Why Somali Grandmas And Aid Workers Might Be Short On Cash

A Somali who's living and working abroad wants to send money to his grandmother in a remote village. A money transfer company gets the cash delivered in a flash.

An aid organization wants to pay its Somali staff. Again, money transfer companies do the job in a country where the banking system shut down in 1991 when the government collapsed.

But now the transfer businesses are under siege. After the April 2 massacre of at least 148 university students and staff in Garissa, Kenya, attributed to the terrorist group Al-Shabab, the Kenyan government has revoke the licenses of the 13 Somali money transfer companies that handled almost all funds flowing into Somalia from family members and aid organizations based in East Africa. The government's concern was that these transfer agents could be used to fund Al-Shabab.

Emma Naylor-Ngugi, the regional director for CARE International, says payments that were pending from her offices in Nairobi to staff, contractors and aid recipients in Somalia were suspended without warning.

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A Somali woman counts the cash she collected from a money transfer service in Mogadishu, the capital city. Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP

A Somali woman counts the cash she collected from a money transfer service in Mogadishu, the capital city.

Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP

"We're talking about people who already live on the edge," says Naylor-Ngugi. "We really feel very worried that in the next few weeks we're going to see more and more distress."

Money transfer companies play an important role in Somalia. "They do money transfers like Western Union does," says John Kisimir, "That is the driving force of the economy."

The aid organizations that use Somali transfer agents marvel at their efficiency. "You can buy a sort of money order in Nairobi, and that money will reappear instantly in Somalia," says Naylor-Ngugi. "It's very, very impressive, compared to even what you might find in developed countries."

The role of the transfer companies is all the more important in Somalia because millions depend on money sent from relatives abroad.

"If you're sitting around the table in Somalia with four people, chances are two of them rely on remittances from relatives overseas," says Anne-Marie Schryer-Roy, communications and advocacy manager at Adeso, a Kenya-based humanitarian organization. "Most people literally rely on [remittances] to put food on the table or to pay school fees or medical bills."

These person-to-person transfers are estimated to account for 40 percent of Somalia's gross domestic product, more than all international aid and foreign investment combined.

Remittances were under threat long before the Kenyan government's clampdown. Since 2011, banks in Britain and the United States have been closing the accounts of Somali money transfer businesses. The banks are wary that they could be charged with money laundering and the funding of terrorist groups.

Ed Pomfret, acting country director for Oxfam in Somalia, believes that U.S. banks could adhere to regulations and still allow the best of the Somali money transfer companies to operate. "It's because of a perception that Somalia from a distance looks like a dangerous and chaotic place," says Pomfret. "What we know working on the ground in Somalia is that there's actually an awful lot of transparency in a lot of these financial transactions, and there's a lot of oversight."

The creative Somalis in this business have tried to adapt to the clampdown, sometimes by using cash couriers.

"They are literally putting money into suitcases and flying it from the U.S. to Dubai, which is where the clearinghouses are for the money transfer companies," says Schryer-Roy. "It's fairly obvious that if objective of the regulations is to increase transparency and reduce the risk of money laundering and terrorism financing, putting money into suitcases is defeating the purpose of the law."

Like the Somali transfer operators, aid organizations are looking for workarounds. Most humanitarian groups are considering more costly options like routing funds via Djibouti or Dubai.

Any delays could have serious consequences in Somalia. "There are over 30,000 children in Somalia who are severely malnourished; essentially they are at death's door," says Pomfret. "So even if one week the money doesn't come though to Somalia, it could in some cases be a matter of life and death."

The uncertainty is also hampering rapid response to a new crisis: Yemeni refugees entering Somalia to flee war at home.

Aid organizations are trying to persuade the Kenyan government to allow some of the Somali money transfer companies to trade again. "We're not going to say they are all innocent, we're just saying vet them, so you know whether they are doing anything fishy," says Kimisir at World Vision, "and then let those who are clean continue doing business so that people do not suffer in the process."

Money transfer

somalia

Kenya

Is It Time To Make Medical And Family Leave Paid?

It's been more than 20 years since passage of the landmark Family and Medical Leave Act, which allows workers to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid time off for medical or family reasons without losing their jobs.

Some workers' advocates and politicians say it's time to plug a big hole in the law by requiring that workers get paid while they're on leave. But the change faces stiff opposition from some small business and other groups that argue that it would be too expensive and an unnecessary government intrusion.

Saying the reality for many families is that both parents must work, President Obama has pushed for paid family leave, calling it an "economic necessity" in his State of the Union address. He proposed $2.2 billion in next year's federal budget to help five states get paid leave programs up and running, and an additional $35 million for states to conduct planning and startup activities.

The Two-Way

Obama Shifts Federal Sick-Leave Rules, Urges Congress To Follow

Meanwhile, Democrats have reintroduced the Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act that would create a national paid leave program to cover two-thirds of people's wages for up to 60 days a year. With Republicans in control of Congress, however, there's little chance it will pass.

Supporters say that many workers can't afford to take unpaid leave and others aren't eligible for leaves because they work for small employers. The law allows workers to take time off to care for a newborn or adopted child, or if they or family members have a serious health condition. But it doesn't apply to companies with fewer than 50 workers, and workers have to have worked for at least a year and logged at least 1,250 hours in the previous year to qualify for the benefit.

Only 13 percent of workers had access to paid family leave in 2013, according to the Department of Labor's 2014 national compensation survey. Meanwhile, 59 percent of workers were eligible for unpaid leave under the FMLA in 2012.

Four states have implemented paid family leave programs, and their experience may provide guidance for a national paid family leave law.

Three of them — California, New Jersey and Rhode Island — fund the programs entirely by withholding employee wages. The programs are administered by states' unemployment insurance agencies in conjunction with temporary disability insurance programs, according to human resources consultant Mercer. (Washington state has a paid leave program on the books, but it has never been implemented because legislators haven't approved funding.)

The Baby Project

Parental Leave: The Swedes Are The Most Generous

California's program is well established after more than a decade. It allows workers up to six weeks of leave annually at 55 percent of their weekly pay, up to a cap of $1,104 weekly in 2015.

When Allison Guevara's children, now aged 5 and 2, were born, she twice took paid time off from her half-time job as a field representative for the American Federation of Teachers-affiliated union that represents librarians and lecturers at the University of California.

Guevara, 36, says that getting just 55 percent of her salary might have been problematic, but she was able to negotiate with her employer to use accrued vacation and sick time to make up the other 45 percent of her pay.

Altogether, she took off at least three months with pay for each baby. Her husband, who works for the city of Santa Cruz, was not so lucky. The law typically doesn't apply to public sector employees.

"The time off was very necessary," says Guevara. In addition to bonding with her kids, "breastfeeding was very difficult with my first one, it took eight weeks to get that going."

Guevara stumbled upon the information about her paid leave options by accident. That's not surprising. A survey conducted last fall for the California Center for Research on Women and Families found that just 36 percent of Californians knew about the state's paid leave program, a decline from three years earlier when 43 percent said they knew about the law.

Goats and Soda

New Dads In Togo Are Guaranteed Something That U.S. Dads Aren't

"Those who know about it are those who disproportionately work for employers who already do it," says Vicki Shabo, a vice president at the National Partnership for Women and Families. "That leaves out many lower-paid workers."

California employers are generally positive about the paid family leave law, according to a study prepared for the U.S. Department of Labor last year. Ninety percent of employers in a 2010 survey said the law had either a positive effect on productivity, profit and morale, or it had no effect.

California, New Jersey and Rhode Island have built their programs around existing short-term paid disability program infrastructures; only five states have such disability programs in place, says Catherine Stamm, a senior consultant at Mercer.

"It's not as difficult or momentous for these employers," Stamm says.

Under the Democrats' bill, workers and employers would split the cost of the program, which would be administered by the Social Security administration.

But that's a problem for small business owners, says Jack Mozloom, national media director for the National Federation of Independent Business, a trade group. Many of their members have fewer than 10 employees, Mozloom says, and if someone's out on leave, it's likely that they have to hire a temporary worker or pay someone overtime to do the job.

Financing a paid leave program would "represent a real expense that some of them cannot absorb," he says. "When it's mandated, it puts them in a hole."

family leave

CAlifornia

Health Insurance

Toni Morrison's New Novel Is Best Read With Her Backlist In Mind

Author Interviews

Toni Morrison Finds 'A Mercy' In Servitude

Book Reviews

'Home': Toni Morrison's Taut, Triumphant New Novel

Paying Homage To Black History Heroes

Author Toni Morrison Enhances The American Story

When we talk about Toni Morrison, we are also talking about what it means to thrive in the midst of well-manicured and eloquent hostility. With God Help The Child, Morrison — America's only living Nobel Prize-winning novelist — has offered us not only her 11th novel, but an opportunity to meditate on the tension between the idea of the artist and the reality of the artist herself. Her name becomes shorthand for a republic of women and black artists with "no home in this place" to borrow a phrase from Morrison's Nobel lecture, people who create, reclaim and celebrate art that is intent on offering something of use back to the people whom it illuminates. Both because of her tremendous success and the publishing industry's tendency to proudly point to individual writers of color as proof of diversity rather than actually enacting diversity of substance in their book lists and editorial staffs, Morrison remains American literature's singular and singled out mother.

For her readers, especially the most faithful acolytes among them, an attempt to see the artist herself is likely a fool's errand. The idea of Toni Morrison has been too important to too many of us for too long. Even when she is sitting right in front of us, we can't see her in the midst of her own blazing light. This phenomenon makes reading God Help The Child joyfully rigorous.

When a black mother named Sweetness steps forward to speak first in the novel's opening pages, you'd be forgiven for hearing a kind of doublespeak almost immediately. "It's not my fault. So you can't blame me. I didn't do it and have no idea how it happened." Sweetness tries to justify why, upon discovering her newborn daughter had a blue-black complexion in contrast to her own lighter skin tone, she decided to raise her daughter with a brutal coldness. (She did consider, briefly, smothering the child but quickly set that thought aside, she assures us.) "Her color is a cross she will always carry," says the mother who we learn insisted on her daughter calling her "Sweetness" instead of "Mama."

Sweetness's gentle brutality forces the young Bride to falsely accuse an innocent woman of child molestation. (Pedophiles and the bodies of broken children dot the landscape of God Help The Child. Mangled mother love is just the first of the many perils Morrison's characters will encounter.) Bride's action — intended to garner even just a brief moment of affection from her mother — shadows herself and the reader. What are we willing to do for the love we cannot live without?

It's a crucial question conveyed in an at-times withholding tale. The music of Toni Morrison's writing has been turned down so low, one is tempted to put their ear against the novel's pages. After Bride grows up into a gorgeous and successful cosmetics executive, living in California, the book reads like a modern-day fable about a woman who thinks she has survived her past simply because of the gift of time's passage and her life's glamorous new trappings. The contemporary setting of God Help The Child seems to cut off opportunities for the author's lauded lyricism. Although much of it takes place in California, the description of the various settings was so sparse, I had to remind myself it wasn't set in Brooklyn. In fact, I'm still not sure why the book needed to be set in California as the setting doesn't seem to be in conversation with the internal lives of the characters as is the case in Morrison novels like Sula or Song of Solomon. In short, this book stands on its own, but can only stand with confidence when it has the idea of Toni Morrison as its spine.

For not only is God Help The Child about its own characters, it is about the conversation Morrison has been having with her readers for decades. In A Mercy, set in the 1690s, a slave begs a traveling Anglo-Dutch trader to take her daughter with him, hoping that the child will be relatively safer under his ownership. Beloved, set almost two centuries later, examines the exacting and haunting cost of an escaped slave, Sethe, slitting her young daughter's throat rather than letting her child be captured by slave hunters. And, of course, the entire reading of God Help The Child is colored by its relationship to Morrison's debut novel The Bluest Eye. In that book, Pecola, a black and unloved child who prays for blue eyes, is raped and impregnated by her father while her mother is away cleaning a white family's home.

With these daughters in mind, Bride exists as a kind of avatar: What would it look like for any of these black girls to have survived their childhoods? Who would they become if given a chance and just how far would they be forced to drag the body of their pasts into their hard-won futures? Later in God Help The Child, Bride is spurred by an unexpectedly painful breakup to journey into the long ignored reaches of herself. And she better do it in a hurry. In the novel's only shade of magical realism, the character discovers that her body is regressing back to its girl-aged form. The lobes of her pierced ears close, her breasts shrink and flatten. The woman she has worked so hard to fashion is literally disappearing.

This is where the idea of Toni Morrison begins to blaze again. Sweetness is yet another one of Morrison's impossible mothers, women who take unthinkable actions in the midst of brutal circumstances. Though God Help The Child is set in the present-day (a first for Morrison), the mother-daughter relationship at the novel's center takes on a deeper resonance when the reader considers the author's collective body of work. By itself, God Help The Child is simply a good book. In the company of its sister-novels though, it transcends the limits of its own pages and becomes another act in a painfully exquisite drama that spans centuries.

By the end of the novel, I began to wonder if Morrison herself — America's storyteller, literature's matriarch — is a kind of impossible mother herself. Have we hungered for her for too long? Have we asked her to save us from ourselves one time too many? The idea of Toni Morrison will survive Morrison herself. And with both gratitude and a bit of dread, God Help The Child reads like Morrison is weaning us.

Saeed Jones is the literary editor for Buzfeed. His most recent book of poetry is Prelude to Bruise.

Merchant Ships Called On To Aid Migrants In Mediterranean Feel The Strain

Italian prosecutors say the ship carrying hundreds of migrants that sank over the weekend most likely crashed against a cargo ship that had come to its rescue.

Merchant ships are often called on to help rescue migrants on vessels attempting to cross the Mediterranean. So when a distress call went out late Saturday evening from the overloaded migrant vessel, commercial vessels in the region responded.

The first to reach it was the Portuguese-flagged King Jacob, which collided with the overloaded migrant vessel. The Maersk shipping line had two container ships nearby; they also headed to the site.

Steffen Conradsen, head of Maersk Line's incident and crisis management unit, says responding to distress calls in the Mediterranean has become a regular activity.

"This year we have taken on board 750 refugees in three different operations where we, together with the Italian coast guard and other merchant vessels in the area, have collected refugees," he says.

Conradsen says he expects there will be more rescues in the near future.

"The level of activity we see in the southern part of the Mediterranean and just north of Libya, I think it can continue for a while," he says.

Last year alone, some 800 cargo and merchant ships rescued more than 40,000 migrants attempting to cross to Europe from Africa and the Middle East. Italy's coast guard and navy are overloaded with rescue missions, and the European Union has only a limited maritime patrol program.

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Parallels

Smuggler To Desperate Migrants: 'Now I Am Sending You To Your Death'

The Two-Way

Captain In Deadly Migrant Boat Sinking Charged With Manslaughter

But mounting rescue operations can create huge logistical hurdles for the shipping companies, because neither the vessels nor the crew are equipped to handle such missions, says Dimitri Banas with the European Community Shipowners' Association. He says modern commercial ships operate with tiny crews.

"When you have a crew of 10 people that has to manage and rescue and feed and basically cater to the needs of 500, 600 people ... it's very difficult to ensure the safety and security of the ship while at the same time having to perform all these other duties," he says.

Under maritime law, a ship is required to come to the aid of another vessel. But there's an emotional toll for the crew not trained in rescue, says Craig Eason, the deputy editor of Lloyd's List, a leading shipping publication.

"They can see people in the water, women, children, adults, potentially drowning in front of them, and they can't get them out of the water in time," he says. "It's got to be a hugely traumatic experience for them."

There are other concerns. Merchant ships sometimes carry dangerous, flammable cargo, and there are fears some of the people they pick up, including smugglers, might be armed. Then there's the cost, which analysts say can run well over $100,000 for one rescue effort.

But Maersk Line's Conradsen says the biggest burden is still on the crews handling the rescue operations.

"There's no doubt that every time we're involved in one of the operations, we're delayed somewhere between three and five days, because it takes time to get to the position and pick up the refugees, get to Italy, disembark then clean the ship the get back in to the schedule," he says.

Conradsen says it may take a tragedy of the size seen over the weekend to finally force the European Union to build up its search-and-rescue capabilities in the Mediterranean.

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Africa

Bruce Jenner's Long History Of Clearing Hurdles

In an interview airing Friday on ABC, Bruce Jenner is expected to announce that he is transgender, though he has made no such acknowledgment.

As the public awaits his presumed revelations, Jenner is still invariably and glibly identified by his paternal connection to the Kardashian clan. It's presented almost anecdotally that he won the gold medal for the Olympic decathlon — the 10-event classic of track-and-field athleticism — in 1976. But back then, he was a glorified champion and called "the world's greatest athlete."

Today, few people even know what the decathlon is, but I was with Jenner in Montreal that summer, writing about him when his new life began as the champion. It's interesting to revisit that moment just as another new life may very well be beginning for him.

Jenner knew that Olympic gold medalists had one brief chance at cashing in. So he carefully plotted his path as if he were to win the gold. That context can help us to understand how savvy he is in approaching what appears to be a second great upheaval in his life: his alleged transition to a woman.

Winning the decathlon meant everything to Jenner. He had signed up for a manager, but he made me keep the information in confidence. He told me, bluntly: "If I handle myself well, I can work off it for years."

And he did just that: It was he, of all the U.S. Olympians, who was chosen for both the cover of Sports Illustrated and the Wheaties box. Then came some acting, game shows and reality shows. Without any particular talent, Jenner became what we call a "personality," just as he calculated he might. That's not cynical — it's just the image business.

My, how handsome he was. He was essentially broke financially, but he was confident, buoyant and saw perfectly how his life could be completely changed forever if we won. Jenner succeeded after winning precisely because he did not seem contrived. In fact, he told me that, above all, what was most important was: "I'm going to stay myself."

Now, of course, I cannot help but wonder if Bruce Jenner, world's greatest athlete, had any idea then who exactly "myself" was or what he would become.

Bruce Jenner

Olympics

Frank DeFord

National Guard Members Struggle To Keep Civilian Careers

Because Mansour served as a full-time recruiter for two years, as well as being deployed, he qualified for the GI Bill and is finishing a degree in security management. But that has not been enough to get is foot on the career ladder.

"I've applied everywhere, and I've got a pretty good resume," he says. "I've even applied to a couple of security companies and I've seen them hire the guy next to me who didn't even know how to fill out an application. They didn't hire me. And I'm going for a bachelor's degree within that field."

When asked if he thinks his commitment to the Guard is what's making it so difficult to build a career, he says: "I didn't at first, but I'm positive it does right now."

Mansour earns a little money — about $100 a day — serving on the honor guard at military funerals. He says he enjoys the days when he can put on the uniform and serve.

"I love it," he says. "I'm very proud of being part of that team. It's a really beautiful ceremony, and we train to be perfect at it."

Mansour will soon have a degree in security management, and his deployment history qualifies him as a vet. He bought a condo — taking advantage of a VA loan — but now he has a mortgage to pay, so he still needs to find a career with an employer who is willing to let him go on frequent trainings and be ready to serve if there's a state-level crisis, or a federal deployment.

Mansour plans to stay in the Guard for 20 years, earning retirement benefits. At least that's something, he says, even if the civilian world doesn't offer him any security.

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5 Million Chickens To Be Killed As Bird Flu Outbreak Puzzles Industry

Bird flu has been striking chicken and turkey farms in parts of the West and Midwest. This past week, it hit a flock of 5 million egg-laying chickens in northeastern Iowa.

The disease has a devastating impact. Entire flocks have been destroyed in an effort to keep the virus from spreading. To make matters even more frustrating, farmers aren't really sure what they can do to protect their flocks.

Some strains of bird flu have been known to infect humans, but this one apparently does not. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, it poses little threat to humans.

It's carried by wild birds, especially ducks and geese. They spread virus on the ground in their droppings.

Last fall, for the first time in years, this strain of flu — formally known as highly pathogenic avian influenza type H5 — was detected among ducks in the Pacific Northwest. For Kim Halvorson, who raises turkeys on a farm in southeastern Minnesota, the news was like an alarm. "It's similar to that tornado siren going off, and you try to prepare yourself for that tornado, for the worst," she says.

She, along with other poultry farmers across the country, took extra precautions to keep the virus out of the houses where their birds live. They made sure everyone stepped through disinfectant before entering.

Trucks that deliver feed don't just drive up to those turkey houses anymore. "The truck will now stop just outside the site, disinfect itself, and drive onto the site," she explains.

And despite all that, the virus has managed to infect flock after flock, more than 40 in all, mostly in Minnesota. Wherever the virus is detected, those flocks are killed with a suffocating foam. The carcasses usually are composted in the barns where the birds had been living. It can be months before the farms are back in operation.

The biggest infected flock, by far, was identified this week in Iowa. That operation's 5 million chickens represent almost 2 percent of the country's total population of egg-laying chickens. A spokesman for the Iowa Department of Agriculture tells The Salt that the birds will be euthanized later this week. In this case, the birds may not all be composted. Some could also be buried, or sent to rendering plants.

Robert O'Connell, senior vice president of Foster Farms, a large producer of chickens and turkeys on the West Coast, says no one is quite sure how the virus is evading the industry's careful biosecurity efforts. "We're all trying to answer that. There's a lot of speculation about how it might be getting into enclosed houses," he says.

John Clifford, chief veterinary officer for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, ticked off several theories. Perhaps wild ducks are getting into stored poultry feed. Or maybe strong winds are blowing dirt and debris into the houses. "We've had some strong winds in Minnesota, 20 mile-an-hour winds to 40 mile-an-hour winds," he says.

The weather soon may come to the industry's aid: Hot summer temperatures usually kill off this virus.

It probably will resurface in the fall, though. By that time, Clifford says, he wants to have a better idea how this virus is spreading — and how to stop it.

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