Monday, September 23, 2013

Kenya mall crisis: Fate of hostages not clear

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? A Kenyan military spokesman Monday said that the fate of hostages inside a mall besieged by al-Qaida-linked terrorists was not clear despite earlier statements that "most" hostages had been rescued.

Military helicopters circled over the mall at daybreak, when about five minutes of sustained gunfire broke out at the mall, a clear indication that at least one of the estimated 10 to 15 gunmen who attacked the mall when it was filled with shoppers Saturday was still on the loose.

A large military assault began on the mall shortly before sundown on Sunday, with one helicopter skimming very close to the roof of the shopping complex as a loud explosion rang out, far larger than any previous grenade blast or gunfire volley. Officials said the siege would soon end and said "most" hostages had been rescued and that officials controlled "most" of the mall.

But officials never said how many hostages had been rescued, and Kenya's military spokesman on Monday was still not able to provide clear details.

"We are yet to get confirmation from what's happening in the building," Col. Cyrus Oguna, a Kenyan military spokesman, told The Associated Press.

Late on Sunday, Kenya's National Disaster Operation Centre said on Twitter that "this will end tonight. Our forces will prevail."

Late on Sunday, Oguna said that many of the rescued hostages ? whom he said were mostly adults ? were suffering from dehydration. An Associated Press reporter at a triage center next to the mall said no hostages ever showed up there.

As the crisis neared the 48-hour mark, video taken by someone inside the mall's main department store when the assault began emerged. The video showed frightened and unsure shoppers crouching as long and loud volleys of gunfire could be heard.

The assault came about 30 hours after 10 to 15 al-Shabab extremists stormed the mall Saturday from two sides, throwing grenades and firing on civilians.

Loud exchanges of gunfire rang out from inside the four-story mall throughout Sunday. Kenyan troops were seen carrying in at least two rocket-propelled grenades. Al-Shabab militants reacted angrily to the helicopters on Twitter and warned that the Kenyan military action was endangering hostages.

Kenyan authorities said they would do their utmost to save hostages' lives, but no officials could say precisely how many people were being held captive. Kenya's Red Cross said in a statement, citing police, that 49 people had been reported missing. Officials did not make an explicit link but that number could give an indication of the number of people held captive.

Kenya's Red Cross said the death toll rose to 68 after nine bodies were recovered Sunday. More than 175 people were injured, including many children, Kenyan officials said.

Somalia's al-Qaida-linked rebel group, al-Shabab, claimed responsibility for the attack that specifically targeted non-Muslims, saying it was in retribution for Kenyan forces' 2011 push into neighboring Somalia.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry condemned what he called "an enormous offense against everybody's sense of right and wrong," and called the attackers "ruthless and completely reckless terrorists."

Kerry, who was in New York for meetings at the United Nations, spoke Sunday with Somalia's foreign minister and U.N. ambassador.

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said U.S. law enforcement, military and civilian personnel in Nairobi were providing advice and assistance to the Kenyan authorities. She said five Americans were among the scores of people injured in the attack, but the U.S. had no reports of any American deaths.

Earlier in the day, al-Shabab said on its new Twitter feed ? after its previous one was shut down Saturday ? that Kenyan officials were asking the hostage-takers to negotiate and offering incentives.

"We'll not negotiate with the Kenyan govt as long as its forces are invading our country, so reap the bitter fruits of your harvest," al-Shabab said in a tweet.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who lost a nephew and the nephew's fiancee in the attack, reiterated his government's determination to continue fighting al-Shabab.

"We went as a nation into Somalia to help stabilize the country and most importantly to fight terror that had been unleashed on Kenya and the world," said Kenyatta. "We shall not relent on the war on terror."

Although this violent attack had succeeded, the Kenyan leader said, the country's security forces had "neutralized" many others.

Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga told reporters that "quite a number" of people were being held hostage in two areas of the sprawling complex, which includes stores for such retail giants as Nike, Adidas and Bose. Many hostages were believed to be in a grocery and general department store called Nakumatt.

Kenyan security officials sought to reassure the families of hostages but implied that some of those being held could be killed.

"The priority is to save as many lives as possible," said Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Lenku, adding that more than 1,000 people escaped the attack inside the mall on Saturday.

"We have received a lot of messages from friendly countries, but for now it remains our operation," Lenku said, adding that Kenyan forces controlled the mall's security cameras.

Westgate Mall is at least partially owned by Israelis, and reports circulated that Israeli commandos were on the ground to assist in the response. Four restaurants inside the mall are Israeli-run or owned.

In Israel, a senior defense official said there were no Israeli forces participating in an assault, but said it was possible that Israeli advisers were providing assistance. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a classified military issue, would not elaborate.

Israel has close ties to Kenya going back many years. In recent years, Israel has identified East Africa as an area of strategic interest and stepped up ties with Kenya and other neighboring countries, due to shared threats posed by al-Qaida and other extremist elements. In 2002, militants bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people, and tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time.

Kenyans and foreigners were among those confirmed dead, including British, French, Canadians, Indians, a Ghanaian, a South African and a Chinese woman.

Britain's prime minister, in confirming the deaths of three British nationals, told the country to "prepare ourselves for further bad news."

Kofi Awoonor, a Ghanaian poet, professor and former ambassador to Brazil, Cuba and the United Nations, died after being wounded in the attack, Ghana's presidential office confirmed. Ghana's ministry of information said Awoonor's son was injured and is responding to treatment.

Kenya's presidential office said that one of the attackers was arrested on Saturday and died after suffering from bullet wounds.

Britain's Foreign Office said that Foreign Secretary William Hague chaired a meeting of Britain's crisis committee and sent a rapid deployment team from London to Nairobi to provide extra consular support.

The United Nations Security Council condemned the attacks and "expressed their solidarity with the people and government of Kenya" in a statement.

There was some good news on Sunday, as Kenyan media reported that several people in hiding in the mall escaped to safety in the morning, suggesting that not everyone who was inside overnight was being held by al-Shabab.

Police lobbed multiple rounds of tear gas throughout the day to disperse hundreds of curious Kenyans who gathered near the mall.

___

Associated Press reporters Jacob Kushner in Nairobi, Kenya; Josef Federman in Jerusalem; Louise Watt in Beijing; and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenya-mall-crisis-fate-hostages-not-clear-054915936.html

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Ceriatone - Business Circle

By Alvin Ung

Perched above a motorcycle shop ? flanked by a massage parlor and tuition center ? is a company that sells globally acclaimed products made in Klang Valley and Kelantan. In just one year, a thousand of these heavy boxes have been couriered to seventy-plus countries, and counting.

The buyers ? predominantly Americans ? are obsessed by it. ?I don?t need another one. But I?ve just ordered one. My wife is going to hang me,? wrote Cobra8272 in an online forum.

The people who buy these things do it by faith. They don?t get to touch it though they can listen to it on thousands of Youtube clips. ?Please do not call or sms for sales inquiry, we won?t entertain you. We do not accept walk-ins,? warned the website.

Idris Jalas amp

Dato? Sri Idris Jalas amp

To no one?s surprise, when I arrived at the address in Bandar Sri Damansara, there was no sign of the shop. Two grease-stained men were dismembering a motorbike on the ground floor. Finally I saw a small sign in a stairwell: ?Ceriatone.? I pressed the buzzer. The metal grille inched open. No one greeted me. So I walked in.

At the top of the staircase, I walked into a corridor strewn with heads. Inside two rooms, laid out neatly on metal racks, were the body parts. The whine of an electric saw sliced through the air.

Idris Jala testing out his amp with a short performance

Dato? Sri Idris Jala testing out his amp with a short performance

?When Senator Dato? Sri Idris Jala said he wanted to visit our shop, I told him not to come,? Nik said, clad in t-shirt and jeans. Azlin, Nik?s wife, who stood next to him, rolled her eyes: Nik was about to deliver a lame joke. ?We were afraid he?d arrive flanked by police outriders, and we?d get arrested, ha ha ha!? Nik said.

Welcome to the world of Shazwan Nik Azam, 37, the managing director of Ceriatone Amplification Sdn Bhd, the purveyor of high-end, hand-wired boutique guitar amplifiers that are prized around the world for their tone, reliability and affordable prices. New York session guitarist Nicky Moroch, and Broadway producer-cum-vocal coach James Lugo have bought Ceriatone amps.

Now I?m aware that this might mean nothing to you. Chances are you?ve never owned a guitar tube-amp. Neither have I. So we need to understand this: the people who buy guitar tube amps are among the most finicky, tetchy and techie customers in the world.

Nik checking the voltage on the circuit board

Nik checking the voltage on the circuit board

They form forums to discuss Ceriatone?s amps. They rip apart the amps, study the boards, compare circuit designs and scrutinize the soldering. They create countless Youtube clips to compare Ceriatone?s one-thousand-dollar amp with a rare classic amp made by Howard Dumble that costs US$60,000. The forum members enjoy the painstaking, detail-oriented detective work that goes into identifying and authenticating the make and model of transformers and components. They scrutinize the idiosyncrasies of how the ?amp head? is constructed.

They talk about tone the way a sommelier talks about wine. ?The Ceriatone sounds more Marshall vintage than my Marshall JCM 900 at similar crunch levels and is much more responsive. At low volume it is very pearly and jangly with a very long sustain,? wrote Brett Blackmore in marshallforum.com.

There was one thing consistent as I read through hundreds of Internet comments spanning many years: the Ceriatone is often compared to the Ferraris and Bentleys of the guitar amp world.

I told Nik what I discovered, and how impressed I was with the rave reviews. He shrugged. ?Everything on the Internet gets amplified, especially in this part of the world. We always battle the perception that we are Asians. Americans think we are part of China. They think we do the same thing as China,? Nik said.

Idris Jala and Nik posing with Idris new amp from Cheriatone

Dato? Sri Idris Jala and Nik posing with DS Idris? new amp from Ceriatone

Born in Kelantan, Nik double-majored in ECE (electrical and computer engineering) and psychology, at Carnegie Mellon University in the US, where he picked up the guitar and fell in love with vintage guitars and vintage tube amps. He joined forums for vintage amp hobbyists. After graduation, he returned to Malaysia in 1999 to work for Telekom Malaysia. He quit after ten months, joined a few friends to start an IT company, and sold vintage amp components on Internet forums and eBay.

?I didn?t have a business plan to start my company. It just happened there were lots of people who were rebuilding vintage amps in the US. And they were looking for parts,? Nik said. The hobby was all-consuming. He scoured the whole of Malaysia for amp boards, resistors and capacitors. Meanwhile, thanks to the forum, he obtained the schematics that spurred him to start building amps. In 2002 he married Azlin Ariff. Their version of a weekend date was to hunt for old amp parts on Jalan Pasar.

The occational debate between Nik and Azlin

The occational debate between Nik and Azlin

?Why are you so obsessed with vintage stuff?? I asked Nik, as we sat on a couch while Azlin, 36, perched on a computer workstation one foot away. We were surrounded on three sides by circuit boards. Azlin fielded the question before Nik. ?Nik has an old soul stuck in a twenty year old body,? she said.

In 2003, Nik started Ceriatone full-time and built his first commercial model, the Ceriatone 18W, based on a famous Marshall amp. ?Everyone on the forum was crazy about the amp,? Nik said. The Americans snapped it up. He sold an amp a week. He added staff. By 2006, the amps were selling to UK, Sweden and France. Azlin quit her job and join him as general manager.

Today, she handles the stuff that Nik can?t do or won?t do well: orders, procurement, inventory, accounts, supervision of staff, shipments and liaising with local vendors. Azlin?s job is to free Nik to develop new designs, email customers from midnight till dawn, and test all the amps.

?Each amp is going out to make music. It?s going to bring happiness to someone,? said Nik, who has tested thousands of amps. ?The rave reviews from customers make my day.?

Azlin taking the orders from their website

Azlin taking the orders from their website

On a whim, Azlin swiveled around, fired up the PC, and clicked on the Ceriatone Facebook page set up by a fan. Together we read the most recent posting which went up minutes earlier.? ?I love the tones I?m getting out of this baaaaby,? someone wrote.

?The feedback is immediate,? Nik said, as he beamed at his wife.

?We haven?t spent a single cent marketing our products,? Azlin said.

?It?s hard to go global. But once we have a product that?s good, it?s easy. Our amps are not mass-produced or rebranded stuff. If you have a good product, you have a niche. Here in Malaysia there are maybe 20 people buying the amps. But in the world, with 100 countries, your product becomes so much more,? Nik said.

Workers working on different parts of the amp

Workers working on different parts of the amp

Today Ceriatone remains the sole manufacturer of hand-wired guitar amps in Malaysia, maybe in Southeast Asia. They?ve sold about 10,000 amps and kits since 2007.

?What?s so significant about what Nik?s doing?? I asked Dato? Sri Idris Jala. Besides being CEO of PEMANDU, Idris made a resonator from an acoustic guitar, complete with aluminium cone, which he converted from a kitchen pot. He fitted it with piezo pickups and F holes to emit clear sounds. He learnt to do this from Julian Mokhtar of the Blues Gang.?

?I refer to Nik in the same breath as Sime Darby and Petronas,? said Idris. ?You need success stories of companies and people in Malaysia who can look at the market abroad and create products that beat the competition. Nik shows us that you don?t have to be big. You can be small and win it out there.?

I asked Nik: How can you be small and win big?

?You?ve got to compete based on global standards. If you?ve to be supported by the government, it?s a sign of weakness. What I can?t stand is how mediocrity seems to permeate everything in Malaysia now. We see this in our education, business and politics. Serious work is being given to non-capable people, so everybody will stoop down to minimum acceptable standards,? Nik said.

A worker putting together the parts on the amp

A worker putting together the parts on the amp

We paused. A few feet away, a young man from Kelantan was soldering capacitors to a board. At Ceriatone, new workers practice soldering for three months before they are allowed to work on an actual amp. Nik?s most experienced staff take years to master ?lead dress,? an intricate technique for running wires in the amp to minimize noise and enhance tone.

?You?ve got to maintain the quality. You?ve got to think, I want to be the best, or at least, be similar to what other people deem to be the best,? Nik said.

?And you have to sustain that quality,? Azlin added.

?Yes, it?s going to consume your life. I?ve no time for such things as a normal social life. The last long vacation I had was?? Nik said, his voice trailing off.

??three years ago,? Azlin said.

?Your life is defined by what you do. So you might as well do your best,? Nik said. He explained that he was influenced by the culture of ultra-hard work at his alma mater, Carnegie Mellon University, and its philanthropist founder, Andrew Carnegie, who once said: ?my heart is in the work.? At the same time, Nik reminded me of the quintessential craftsman from Kelantan who will do whatever it takes to produce a wau or a wood carving ? except Nik was doing it with tubes and transformers.

Days later, I asked Idris, who has ripped apart German and US-made guitar amplifiers, what he thought of people like Nik who?ve gone global with their products.

Nick checking the curcuit board for and defects

Nick checking the curcuit board for and defects

?Nik is a world champion in what he does. Nik has studied all his competitors. And he has produced amps that are similar ? which are anytime cheaper and better. Malaysians must stop arguing about the small pond. We must excel in products and services in the big ocean,? said Idris. ?The amp is so good, and so loud, it could bring my house down.?

?

Alvin Ung is a facilitator, executive coach and author of the bestselling book Barefoot Leadership. To view more videos, photos and insights on Nik and Ceriatone, please visit www.businesscircle.com.my. The column and multimedia content are a collaborative effort between the columnist and the Economic Transformation Programme (ETP).

Source: http://www.businesscircle.com.my/ceriatone-2/

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Saint Joseph's University Field Hockey vs. Quinnipiac - 1:00 PM ET

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Source: http://www.sju.edu/calendar/?trumbaEmbed=view=event&eventid=106652869

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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Georgia pulls away from North Texas; Ohio State, Louisville win big

ATHENS, Ga. -- Aaron Murray threw for 408 yards and three touchdowns, ran for another score, and led No. 9 Georgia to a 45-21 victory over pesky North Texas on Saturday.

Murray overcame an early interception in the end zone, hooking up with freshman Reggie Davis on a 98-yard TD ? the longest pass play in school history. Arthur Lynch and Chris Conley also had touchdown catches for the Bulldogs (2-1).

The Mean Green (2-2) came in as a 33-point underdog, but big plays on special teams helped make a game of it. Brelan Chancellor returned a kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown, and Zac Whitfield fell on a blocked punt in the end zone early in the second half to stunningly tie the game at 21.

Murray made sure the Bulldogs avoided the upset. He scored on a 1-yard sneak and went to Conley on a 4-yard TD.

No. 4 Ohio State 76, Florida A&M 0

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Kenny Guiton again starred in place of the injured Braxton Miller, setting a school record with six touchdown passes ? all in the first half ? to lead No. 4 Ohio State to a 76-0 victory against Florida A&M.

It was the most lopsided Ohio State win since 1935.

The Buckeyes (4-0) needed a total of four offensive plays and 46 seconds to go up 21-0 in the opening 6 minutes and never looked back. It was an epic mismatch between a team with national-title aspirations and a Football Championship Subdivision member getting a $900,000 guarantee.

FAMU (1-3), which suffered its worst loss ever, trailed 48-0 before picking up its initial first down in the second quarter.

Guiton completed 24 of 34 passes for 215 yards.

No. 7 Louisville 72, Florida International 0

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Teddy Bridgewater threw four touchdown passes and Louisville's defense allowed a school-record 30 yards, helping the seventh-ranked Cardinals blow out Florida International, 72-0.

It was the highest scoring game for the Cardinals (4-0) since a 73-10 victory over Murray State in 2007. It also matched the school's fourth-largest margin of victory.

Bridgewater hit DeVante Parker for two TD passes and Gerald Christian and Eli Rogers for one each before Will Gardner came in to throw another touchdown to Michaelee Harris in the fourth quarter. Dominique Brown, Senorise Perry, Michael Dyer and Brandon Radcliff rushed for scores.

Charles Gaines returned the second-half kickoff 93 yards for a TD and recovered a muffed punt to set up Bridgewater's second TD pass in the second quarter. Louisville's defense meanwhile didn't allow FIU (0-4) a first down until early in the second quarter and just two overall.

No. 17 Washington 56, Idaho State 0

SEATTLE -- Keith Price threw for 213 yards and three touchdowns in less than a half, Deontae Cooper scored his first career touchdown after three major knee surgeries, and No. 17 Washington routed Idaho State, 56-0, in the Huskies' final tuneup before the start of Pac-12 Conference play.

Bishop Sankey, the national leader in yards rushing per game, barely broke a sweat against the Bengals (2-1) of the FCS. Sankey saw action on the Huskies' (3-0) first three series and scored on a 3-yard TD run in the first quarter. Sankey finished with 77 yards on four carries.

Price played a little more than 1 1/2? quarters, throwing TD passes of 1, 6 and 5 yards and adding a 1-yard TD run as the Huskies led 42-0 at halftime. It was the second straight season the Huskies overwhelmed a lower division opponent in the first half. Last year, Washington led Portland State 45-0 at halftime.

Wake Forest 25, Army 11

WEST POINT, N.Y. -- Josh Harris rushed for 96 yards and two second-half touchdowns, Michael Campanaro had a 66-yard scoring catch, and Wake Forest rallied past Army, 25-11.

It was the seventh straight victory in the series for Wake Forest (2-2), which overcame three costly errors to hold off the Black Knights (1-3).

Trailing 11-10 late in the third quarter, Wake Forest slowly assumed control as Harris came alive after a lackluster first half. He scored on a 15-yard run up the middle late in the third and gained 58 yards on seven carries on a decisive 62-yard drive midway through the fourth, scoring on a 6-yard run.

Terry Baggett led Army with a career-high 125 yards rushing on 16 carries and quarterback Angel Santiago added 60 yards rushing as the Black Knights finished with 271 yards on 55 rushes. Daniel Grochowski kicked a career-high three field goals for Army.

Georgia Tech 28, North Carolina 20

ATLANTA -- David Sims ran for 99 yards and two touchdowns and Georgia Tech recovered after North Carolina scored the first two touchdowns to beat the Tar Heels, 28-20.

Georgia Tech (3-0, 2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) earned its eighth straight home win in the series. North Carolina (1-2, 0-1) has not won at Bobby Dodd Stadium since 1997. Overall, Georgia Tech has won eight of the last nine in the series.

Vad Lee's 1-yard run gave Georgia Tech its first lead at 21-20 in the third quarter. Sims' 6-yard scoring run added to the lead early in the fourth quarter.

Robert Godhigh ran for 100 yards as Georgia Tech had 324 yards rushing.

North Carolina led 13-0 and 20-7 in the first half. Bryn Renner threw touchdown passes of 19 yards to tight end Eric Ebron and 24 yards to Sean Tapley after a 4-yard scoring run by Romar Morris.

Kansas 13, Louisiana Tech 10

LAWRENCE, Kan. -- Walk-on kicker Matt Wyman hit a 52-yard field goal with no time left, sending Kansas to a 13-10 victory over Louisiana Tech on Saturday and ending a 22-game losing streak against teams from the Football Bowl Subdivision.

Jake Heaps threw for 279 yards and a touchdown for the Jayhawks (2-1), who hadn't defeated another FBS team since beating Northern Illinois on Sept. 10, 2011. James Sims added 78 yards rushing, while Tony Pierson had nine catches for 82 yards.

Louisiana Tech (1-3) was poised to score the go-ahead touchdown with when it marched to the Kansas 18 with 1:33 left. Kenneth Dixon got the carry and was fighting for extra yardage when the ball popped loose inside the 5-yard line, and the Jayhawks' Keon Stowers recovered it.

That gave Kansas the ball with just enough time for Heaps to get the Jayhawks in position for Wyman's game-winning field goal.

Minnesota 43, San Jose State 24

MINNEAPOLIS -- Quarterback Mitch Leidner rushed for 151 yards and four touchdowns to lift Minnesota to a 43-24 victory over San Jose State on Saturday.

Leidner was filling in for injured starter Philip Nelson, who was out with a bad hamstring. He also passed for 71 yards as the Golden Gophers improved to 4-0. Gophers coach Jerry Kill returned to the sideline a week after missing the second half because of an epileptic seizure and made it through the game without incident.

David Fales threw for 439 yards with three touchdowns and two interceptions for San Jose State (1-2). Chandler Jones had seven catches for 197 yards and three touchdowns for the Spartans, who were missing top receiver Noah Grigsby with a knee injury.

David Cobb rushed for 125 yards and two touchdowns and the Gophers dominated the time of possession 40:38-18:58 to grind Fales and the high-flying Spartans into submission.

Pittsburgh 58, Duke 55

DURHAM, N.C. -- Tom Savage tied an Atlantic Coast Conference record with six touchdown passes and Pittsburgh held on for a wild 58-55 win over Duke.

Savage threw for a career-high 424 yards on 23-of-33 passing with three scoring passes to freshman Tyler Boyd.

The Panthers (2-1, 1-1) never trailed and claimed their first ACC victory despite receiving plenty of scares down the stretch from a persistent Duke team.

Brandon Connette had four touchdown passes and four interceptions, and he rushed for 101 yards and two touchdowns for Duke (2-2, 0-2).

Connette's 4-yard touchdown run with 3:17 left pulled the Blue Devils within three. Pitt recovered the onside kick, and Savage's 15-yard pass to Kevin Weatherspoon on third-and-7 helped the Panthers run out the clock.

The teams combined for 1,130 total yards.

Virginia Tech 29, Marshall 21

BLACKSBURG, Va. -- Logan Thomas ran 2 yards for a touchdown and then ran for the 2-point conversion in the third overtime, as Virginia Tech overcame a sloppy performance and beat Marshall, 29-21.

The Hokies (3-1), who tied the game with 3:09 left in regulation, got the ball first in the third overtime, after neither team had scored in the first two,.

Thomas put some plays together. He ran for 2 yards, hit Chris Mangus for 10, ran for 2, and hit Josh Stanford. After a pass interference call on the Herd, Thomas bolted through the line for the touchdown, and then the PAT.

Marshall (2-2) got to the Hokies' 14, but then Rakeem Cato couldn't find a receiver, and when Davonte Allen couldn't come up with his fourth-down pass in the end zone, the marathon game was finally over.

The game was played in driving rain.

Harvard 42, San Diego 20

SAN DIEGO -- Conner Hempel threw for 345 yards and four touchdowns as Harvard turned a close game into a runaway, defeating San Diego 42-20 on Saturday.

Defensive end Zach Hodges picked up a Mason Mills fumble and rumbled 53 yards for a touchdown to open the scoring. Paul Stanton Jr. rushed 11 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter and Harvard (1-0) held a one-point lead at half, 14-13.

Hempel took over in the second half, tossing four touchdown passes to three receivers to lead the onslaught.

Mills went 27 of 46 for 293 yards and hooked up with Reggie Bell (7 catches, 101 yards) for a 12-yard fourth quarter touchdown. Mills was intercepted on the next possession leading to Harvard's final touchdown, a 30-yard toss from Hempel to Andrew Fischer - his second score of the day. Harvard defeated San Diego (1-2) in its opener for the second consecutive season.

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/sports/~3/svhszo8_0bc/la-sp-college-football-roundup-20130921,0,2028274.story

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U.S. will support Kenya to bring attackers to justice: Obama

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama called Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on Sunday to offer condolences over what the White House called a "terrorist attack" by the al Shabaab group at a Nairobi shopping mall that has killed almost 70 people.

Islamist militants still held hostages on Sunday at the shopping mall, where brief volleys of gunfire interrupted hours of stalemate.

"President Obama called President Kenyatta of Kenya this morning to express condolences to the government and people of Kenya for the terrorist attack carried out by al-Shabaab yesterday on the Westgate Shopping Mall in Nairobi," the White House said in a statement. "President Obama reiterated U.S. support for Kenya's efforts to bring the perpetrators of the attack to justice."

Five American citizens were among those injured in the shootings at the mall, said State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf.

There were no reports of any Americans among the dead, said Harf.

Republican Representative Peter King of New York, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said the attack showed the growing influence of al Qaeda linked groups in Africa.

"This shows the really growing influence of al Qaeda in Africa. You have al Shabaab now in Somalia going off into Kenya, carrying out an attack outside its own country," King said on ABC's "This Week."

The attack showed that "al Qaeda and its affiliates are still extremely powerful and still able to really strike terror into the hearts of people, attacking a shopping mall, it has no military significance at all," King said.

(Reporting by Roberta Rampton, Thomas Ferraro, Lesley Wroughton, Diane Bartz and Tabassum Zakaria; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-support-kenya-bring-attackers-justice-obama-183143498.html

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'Prisoners' wins box office with $21.4 million

Movies

4 hours ago

Fueled by older adults and strong reviews, Denis Villeneuve's dark crime thriller "Prisoners" ? starring Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhaal ? topped the North American box office with a solid $21.4 million opening.

The R-rated drama marks another win for Broderick Johnson and Andrew Kosove's Alcon Entertainment, which fully financed and produced the $46 million film. Warner Bros. is distributing the movie, which opens in roughly the same corridor that the studio used to launch Ben Affleck's "Argo" last year (that film opened to $19.5 million).

STORY: 'Prisoners' director not shying way from dark, violent nature of thriller?

"Prisoners" skewed slightly female (52 percent), while 72 percent of the audience was over the age of 25 and 26 percent over the age of 50. The movie received an official B+ CinemaScore, although Warners said a Saturday survey showed the grade rising to an A-.

Also starring Viola Davis, Maria Bello, Terrence Howard and Paul Dano, "Prisoners" tells the story of two families whose daughters are kidnapped. Jackman's character, the father of one of the girls, begins to clash with the police detective in charge of the investigation (Gyllenhaal) and takes matters into his own hands.

"Prisoners" made its world premiere at the Telluride Film Festival this month before heading to the Toronto Film Festival.

"Insidious 2," which opened to a rousing $40.3 million last weekend, fell 64 percent in its second weekend (not unusual for a genre film). The movie, released by FilmDistrict, placed No. 2 in grossing $14.5 million for a stellar 10-day domestic total of $60.9 million.

Sony/Screen Gems' Chris Brown 3D dance movie "Battle of the Year" opened to a soft $5 million to come in No. 5. Costing $20 million to produce and directed byBenson Lee, the 3D movie stars Brown opposite Josh Holloway, Laz Alonso, Josh Peckand Caity Lotz. The film is based on Lee's documentary about break dancing.

Imax's exclusive 3D re-release of "The Wizard of Oz"?paid off, grossing north of $3 million from 318 theaters, second only to the re-release of "Jurassic Park." The iconic film ? now 75 years old ? was converted to 3D under the supervision of Warners.

The film marked the re-opening of the TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood, which is now a IMAX location.

Elsewhere at the box office, Relativity and Luc Besson's dark mob comedy "The Family" fell 50 percent in its second weekend, grossing $7 million to place No. 3 and pushing its domestic total of $25.6 million. Coming in No. 4 was Lionsgate and Pantelion Films' Spanish-language hit "Instructions Not Included," which took in $5.7 million for U.S. total of $34.7 million.

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At the specialty box office, Nicole Holofcener's romantic comedy "Enough Said," starring the late James Gandolfini opposite Julia Louis-Dreyfus, opened to strong results, grossing $240,000 from five theaters for a location average of $60,000, the best of the weekend.

Ron Howard's well-reviewed Formula One drama "Rush," starring Chris Hemsworth andDaniel Bruhl, opened in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles, earning $200,000 for a solid theater average of $39,991. Universal is using the limited launch to build word-of-mouth before "Rush" expands nationwide on Sept. 27. Formula One movies face a major challenge in the U.S., where the sport has never been popular.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/entertainment/hugh-jackman-jake-gyllenhaals-prisoners-wins-box-office-21-4-4B11227106

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Saturday, September 21, 2013

Bad news from BlackBerry: 4,500 jobs to be cut, expected Q2 net operating loss of over $950 million

Things haven't been going well at BlackBerry for awhile, what with lackluster adoption of BB10 and the hardware running it, and rumors that massive layoffs are coming before the end of the year. Today, the company confirmed the latter rumor, announcing that it will lay off around 4,500 employees as a part of a plan to reduce its operating expenditures by half over the next year. The plan's necessitated by an expected Q2 2014 net operating loss of almost one billion (955-995 million) dollars, driven primarily by the lackluster sale of its BB10 phones -- the company will take a pre-tax charge of $930-960 million which can be attributed mostly to the failure of the Z10 to sell. BlackBerry expects revenue for Q2 to be $1.6 billion, which is roughly half of the $3.1 billion it pulled in last quarter.

Needless to say, the financial outlook for the company isn't good, and some changes are in order. In the near term, the Z10 will be priced " to make it available to a broader, entry-level audience," leaving the Z30 as BlackBerry's all-touch flagship. To try to turn things around in the long term, the company's going to refocus on its enterprise offerings and will reduce its device portfolio from six devices to four, with two high end and two entry level phones. And, don't get it twisted, the days of BlackBerry courting mainstream consumers is all but over -- its future phones will be aimed at the "enterprise and prosumers."

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