Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

World's largest Ferris wheel to go forward in Superstorm Sandy devestated SI

While New York City grapples with rebuilding after Superstorm Sandy, developers are pressing ahead with plans to build the world's largest Ferris wheel on the shoreline of storm-torn Staten Island.

Sandy's flooding spurred some changes to the nearly $500 million project, which includes an outlet mall and hotel. But developers haven't slowed it or scaled it back.

Supporters say Staten Island needs the boost now more than ever.

Some residents have asked whether it makes sense to push ahead with a tourist attraction, set partly in a flood zone, before officials take a comprehensive look at how to build smarter after Sandy.




REUTERS



An artist rendering of the giant ferris wheel planned for Staten Island.



Wheel developer Richard Marin says the project stands to provide a one-of-a-kind boon that Staten Island "would have no other way of getting right now."

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NYC counts record 52 million visitors in 2012








The Big Apple is a bigger-than-ever tourist draw, welcoming a record 52 million visitors this year, Mayor Bloomberg announced Monday.

The estimate, up more than 1 million from last year, caps several years of effort to make the tourist trade into an economic development engine for the nation's largest city. After reaching a goal of attracting 50 million annual visitors in 2011, Bloomberg has now set sights on 55 million by 2015.

The 2012 statistic "keeps us on course to meet our goal," the mayor said in announcing the number at a news conference animated by some New York razzle-dazzle: It was held at the popular American Museum of Natural History, and Bloomberg was flanked by a half-dozen of Radio City Music Hall's Rockettes.




An estimated 41 million of this year's visitors came from elsewhere in the United States, but the city says its international tourist base is growing notably. The numbers of Brazilian and Chinese visitors have nearly quintupled since 2006, the city says.

The tourism numbers are based on a model that includes surveys, hotel data, airport traffic and other information and includes business travelers and vacationers.

Hotels, for instance, hit a new high of 29 million bookings for some 91,500 rooms citywide this year, up nearly 7 percent from 2011, Bloomberg said.

While New York has always been a magnet for visitors, the city has amped up efforts to market itself to tourists during Bloomberg's 11 years in office. The city's tourism arm, NYC & Co., has opened 18 offices in countries ranging from Australia to China to Sweden in roughly the past decade.

City officials say the efforts have paid off for both businesses and residents here.

This year's visitors generated an estimate of nearly $37 billion in direct spending, and more than $55 billion when such indirect benefits as orders to hospitality-industry suppliers are counted, the city says. Meanwhile, hotel room taxes alone topped $500 million this year; about $15 million went to NYC & Co. and the rest to fund general city operations, NYC & CO. CEO George Fertitta said.

New York's tourism claims have sometimes raised eyebrows in its chief domestic rival for visitors — Orlando, Fla. Orlando officials last year forecast they'd hit more than 53 million visitors from 50 miles away or farther this year. New York officials have rebuffed the comparison, saying Orlando includes surrounding areas in its count.

But, Bloomberg said Monday, there are plenty of tourists to go around.

"Go to Orlando. It's a wonderful place," he said, but "I think New York has a very different experience than Orlando."










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MetroNorth train hits car, halting Connecticut service








REDDING, Conn. — Metro North train service has been suspended on the Danbury line following a train accident involving a car.

A Metro North spokesman said the train struck a car in Redding on Sunday afternoon. The train had no passengers and there was no information about whether there were injuries involving the car.

Bus service will ferry passengers between Danbury and South Norwalk.











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Viacom channels could go dark on Cablevision

More than three million Cablevision customers could wake up New Year’s Day without shows such as “SpongeBob Squarepants” and “The Daily Show.”

The Long Island cable operator is set to drop 17 channels, including MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, in a dispute with Viacom over programming fees. Their current contract expires on Jan. 1.

It marks the second time in the past year that Viacom has faced off against a major pay-TV distributor. Viacom-owned channels went dark for DirecTV’s 20 million customers for more than a week in July in a similar dispute over fees.




REUTERS



SpongeBob Squarepants might be a thing of the past for Cablevision customers come January 1st.



While Cablevision has just 3.5 million households, its influential coverage area includes New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, where many network and advertising execs reside.

Reps for Viacom and Cablevision weren’t able to immediately comment.

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Feds arrest NYC woman in fake Newtown charity scheme








This Nov. 13, 2012 photo provided by the family via The Washington Post shows Noah Pozner. The six-year-old was one of the victims in the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

AP

This Nov. 13, 2012 photo provided by the family via The Washington Post shows Noah Pozner. The six-year-old was one of the victims in the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in Newtown, Conn.



HARTFORD, Conn. — A New York City woman has been arrested by federal authorities who say she tried to scam donors by posing as a relative of one of the children killed at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn.

Thirty-seven-year-old Nouel Alba of the Bronx was arrested Thursday and charged with lying to FBI agents.

Federal prosecutors say Alba used her Facebook account, telephone calls and text messages to seek donations for what she called a "funeral fund" for 6-year-old Newtown victim Noah Pozner. Alba posed as Pozner's aunt and allegedly solicited donations in his memory, according to NBC.




"I never sent any message on Facebook," Alba told NBC before claiming that she refunded all the donation money she recieved.

When contacted by FBI agents investigating charity schemes related to the shooting at Sandy Hook Elemenatry School, Alba denied seeking donations.

Alba appeared Thursday in federal court in Hartford and was released on $50,000 bond. If she is convicted of lying to federal agents she faces a maximum term of five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

Pozner scam charity complaint

Information from the Associated Press contributed to this report










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Russian parliament endorses anti-US adoption bill








MOSCOW — Defying a storm of domestic and international criticism, Russia moved toward finalizing a ban on Americans adopting Russian children, as Parliament's upper house voted unanimously Wednesday in favor of a measure that President Vladimir Putin has indicated he will sign into law.

The bill is widely seen as the Kremlin's retaliation against an American law that calls for sanctions against Russians deemed to be human rights violators. It comes as Putin takes an increasingly confrontational attitude toward the West, brushing aside concerns about a crackdown on dissent and democratic freedoms.




Dozens of Russian children close to being adopted by American families now will almost certainly be blocked from leaving the country. The law also cuts off the main international adoption route for Russian children stuck in often dismal orphanages: Tens of thousands of Russian youngsters have been adopted in the U.S. in the past 20 years. There are about 740,000 children without parental care in Russia, according to UNICEF.

All 143 members of the Federation Council present voted to support the bill, which has sparked criticism from both the U.S. and Russian officials, activists and artists, who say it victimizes children by depriving them of the chance to escape the squalor of orphanage life. The vote comes days after Parliament's lower house overwhelmingly approved the ban.

The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it regretted the Russian parliament's decision.

"Since 1992, American families have welcomed more than 60,000 Russian children into their homes, providing them with an opportunity to grow up in a family environment," spokesman Patrick Ventrell said in a statement from Washington. "The bill passed by Russia's parliament would prevent many children from enjoying this opportunity ...

"It is misguided to link the fate of children to unrelated political considerations," he said.

Seven people with posters protesting the bill were detained outside the Council before Wednesday's vote. "Children get frozen in the Cold War," one poster read. Some 60 people rallied in St. Petersburg, Russia's second largest city.

The bill is part of larger legislation by Putin-allied lawmakers retaliating against a recently signed U.S. law that calls for sanctions against Russians deemed to be human rights violators. Although Putin has not explicitly committed to signing the bill, he strongly defended it in a press conference last week as "a sufficient response" to the new U.S. law.

Originally Russia's lawmakers cobbled together a more or less a tit-for-tat response to the U.S. law, providing for travel sanctions and the seizure of financial assets in Russia of Americans determined to have violated the rights of Russians.










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Upstate NY madman left chilling suicide note before luring firefighters to death; cops say another body found








William H. Spengler Jr.A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.

William H. Spengler Jr.



A homicidal maniac -- bent to “do what I like doing best: killing people" -- left a chilling suicide note before torching his neighborhood and murdering two firefighters, police revealed this morning.

Cops also today said they’ve found a third victim of ex-con William Spengler Jr.’s murderous rampage, discovering a body, probably of his 67-year-old sister Cheryl, in the charred rubble of their home.

The Spengler siblings hated each other and lived on opposite ends of the house, neighbors said, and when she couldn’t be found yesterday, police feared the worst.




"We did locate apparent human remains in the ruins of the house at 191 Lake Road. The medical examiner has removed those remains,” Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said this afternoon.

UPSTATE MADMAN SETS BLAZE TO LURE FIREFIGHTERS TO DEATH

"The medical examiner will be working on the identification and I'm assuming that's going to take quite a period of time. The assumption is that is the shooter's sister."

Earlier today, cops disclosed that William Spengler -- a loser mama’s boy who once spent 17 years in prison for beating his grandmother to death -- penned a murderous three-page missive, telling the world why he turned a quiet lakeside neighborhood into hell on earth.

“I still have to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down and do what I like doing best: killing people,” Spengler wrote his suicide note, made public by police.

William H. Spengler Jr.A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.

REUTERS

A house burns after Spengler set fire to it.



Spengler, 62, set his home -- in the tight-knit, upstate town of Webster, just outside Rochester -- ablaze early yesterday morning to lure volunteer firefighters to the scene. The gutless killer then methodically shot four of those fireman, two fatally, before blowing his brains out.

"There was no motive in the note...there were some ramblings in there,” Pickering said. “There was intelligence information that we obtained that our investigators need to follow up on. It spoke mainly that he intended to burn his neighborhood down and kill as many people as possible."

Four whiskey bottles, filled with gasoline, were found unspent against his house, law enforcement sources told WHEC-TV.

Spengler ignited his deadly blaze with a flare gun that was recovered at the scene, the local NBC affiliate reported.

The sadistic killer was found with a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver, Mossman 12-gauge shotgun and a Bushman semi-automatic AR-15 rifle with 30-shot magazine, police said. Crazed gunman Adam Lanza used the same make of Bushman rifle in the tragic Newtown, CT shooting earlier this month.

As a convicted felon, Spengler had no legal right to possess guns so cops want to trace those weapons.

Police are exploring connections Spengler and his late mom, Arline, had to the West Webster Fire Department, officials said.

Spengler first torched his family’s home on Lake Road, where Irondequoit Bay meets Lake Ontario, at around 5:45 a.m. — then lay in wait for his unsuspecting prey.

Crouched like a sniper and armed with a rifle and a handgun, Spengler targeted responding firefighters from behind an earthen berm that gave him a clear shot, said Pickering.

“He took a position of cover to be a sniper to shoot the first responders . . . It does appear it was a trap that was set,’’ a grim-faced Pickering said.

It’s unclear why Spengler targeted the men, although he was having personal problems.

He lived with a sister he hated, neighbors said, in the same house where he had fatally bludgeoned his 92-year-old grandmother with a hammer in 1980.

Spengler’s beloved mother, Arline died in October. In her obituary, donations were directed to the “West Webster Firemen’s Association (Ambulance Fund).’’ It wasn’t immediately clear why.

"As far as motive, all kinds of speculation, and truthfully, we do not know. They're trying to draw a nexus, I know, between the donations of the mother to the fire department. There could be a nexus to 33 years ago when Webster police arrested him for murdering his grandmother,” Pickering said.

“We are aware of it and trying to figure out the connection,” said a source with the sheriff’s office.

One of Spengler’s victims yesterday, 43-year-old Michael Chiapperini, was a volunteer with the West Webster Fire District and a lieutenant in the town’s police department, where he also served as a media liaison.

The selfless Chiapperini, who spent 20 years as cop, had spent time in Suffolk County last month, volunteering for Hurricane Sandy cleanup duty, officials said.

He had just been named a local “Firefighter of the Year.”

He is survived by his wife, two daughters and a son who also worked with the volunteer fire department.

The other man killed was volunteer Tomasz Kaczowka, a 19-year-old 911 dispatcher and a community-college student with dreams of becoming a full-time firefighter.

“These people get up in the middle of the night to fight fires,” said Pickering, choking back tears. “They don’t expect to be shot and killed.”

Two more volunteer firefighters, Joseph Hofstetter and Theodore Scardino, were wounded by bullets. A cop suffered injuries from shrapnel. All three were expected to survive.

Hofstetter, who also works full time for the Rochester Fire Department, was hit in the pelvis and the bullet lodged in his spine. Scardino was hit in the chest and knee.

The firefighters had to fall back after shots were first fired, allowing flames from Spengler’s home to spread to neighboring houses.

Spengler then traded shots with officers who arrived with an armored truck they used to remove the injured, as well as people living nearby.

He was chased on foot from his perch, then killed himself before he could be subdued, cops said.

Four houses burned to the ground and four more were damaged by the time the blaze was brought under control.

Dozens of people had to be evacuated from the smoldering area on Christmas Eve.

During the gunfight, emergency radio communications captured someone frantically saying he “could see the muzzle flash coming at [him],” as Spengler fired.

The audio, posted on the Web site RadioReference.com, also had someone reporting, “Firefighters are down!” and saying, “Got to be rifle or shotgun — high-powered . . . semi or fully auto.”

It would have been illegal for Spengler, as a convicted felon, to possess any firearm at all.

Sheriff Patrick O’Flynn said he couldn’t help thinking about the school massacre in Newtown, Conn., and other mass shootings in recent years.

“It’s sad to see this is becoming more commonplace . . . across the nation,” O’Flynn said.

At West Webster Fire Station 1, there were 20 bouquets on a bench in front. Another bouquet had roses with three gold-and-white ribbons saying, “May they rest in peace,” “In the line of duty,” and, “In memory of our fallen brothers.”

Gov. Cuomo asked New Yorkers to pray for the firefighters’ families, victimized by this “senseless act of violence.”

Last December, a 15-year-old boy doused his home in Webster with gasoline and set it ablaze, killing his father and two brothers, ages 12 and 16.










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2 B'klyn women, dog escape raging Christmas Eve fire








Wayne Carrington


Firefighters rescued two women and a Shih-Tzu this morning.



Two Brooklyn women and their dog narrowly escaped from a raging Christmas Eve fire, authorities said today.

The fire began at about 6:50 a.m. and quickly engulfed the Prospect Lefferts Garden building. Firefighters rescued the women by extending a ladder to lead them to safety.

The two women were treated for smoke inhalation at Kings County Hospital.

Emergency workers fitted an oxygen mask to the face of the women’s tiny dog to save it outside the Rogers Avenue blaze.



Two other dogs belonging to the women likely died in the fire.

Wayne Carrington


One of the rescued women with the lucky pooch.












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NYC starts new program for mentally ill defendants








New York City is making a new effort to channel mentally ill people who get arrested into treatment instead of jail, if they don't need to be there.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the initiative on his weekly radio show Sunday.

Bloomberg says the effort will start next year and set out to work with 3,000 people annually.

Expert teams will assess the defendants' mental health needs, likelihood of showing up in court and potential for re-offending. The teams will make recommendations to judges about what psychological services and supervision are appropriate.



Some special mental-health-focused courts around the city have similar aims.

City officials say the mentally ill often can't post bail and so generally end up in jail twice as long as other inmates facing similar charges.










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Staten Island man killed in early-morning house fire

A Staten Island man was killed when an early-morning fire swept through his home, police and relatives said.

Jameek Champagne, 23, died in the third-floor attic of the home on Osgood Avenue in Clifton. His brother and grandfather escaped the blaze uninjured.

A neighbor reported the blaze after seeing flames erupt from the house at about 5:40 a.m. He banged on the door in a frantic effort to awaken its residents.

The fire was extinguished about an hour after it started, according to an FDNY spokesman. Fire marshals are investigating what caused it.

About ten cars full of grief-stricken relatives and friends came to the scene to mourn Champagne. His devastated girlfriend said that the two had a newborn girl and a 1-year-old boy.




G.N.Miller/New York Post



The Staten Island house after it was damaged by the fire



“We’re just trying to find out how this happened,” Champagne's uncle said, weeping.

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WATCH: Celebs 'demand' plan to end gun violence in YouTube vid








While the NRA takes aim at Hollywood for promoting violence, more than two-dozen A-list celebs fired back today with a new YouTube video demanding a plan to reign in gun crime.

Actors and musicians from Beyonce to John Hamm and Jennifer Anniston star in the 80-second black and white clip titled “Demand A Plan,” that is sure to go viral.

Stars list the scenes of some of the worst shootings in US history including at Colorado’s Columbine High School in Colorado, the cinema shooting in Aurora CO and finishing at Newtown.




The celebs say Americans need to come together “as a mum,” “as a dad, “as human beings” to stop gun violence.

The Demand a Plan campaign is run by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, co-chaired by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Bloomberg has vowed to use his considerable wealth and star pulling power to change gun laws.

Other celebs featured include Jamie Foxx, Paul Rudd, Michelle Williams, Amy Poehler, Julianne Moore, Chris Rock, Reese Witherspoon, Kate Hudson, Gwyneth Paltrow, Will Ferrell and Steve Carell.










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Bernie Madoff's brother Peter to face Ponzi scheme victims in Manhattan court








The suspense surrounding the sentencing of the brother of Ponzi king Bernard Madoff will largely be absent because a plea agreement makes a 10-year prison term all but certain.

But drama will likely fill the courtroom Thursday in US District Court in Manhattan anyway as 67-year-old Peter Madoff faces some of the heartbroken investors who lost their savings when the unprecedented fraud was revealed four years ago this month.

When he pleaded guilty to conspiracy and falsifying books and records of an investment adviser, the former senior compliance officer at the Madoff private investment business said he was "shocked and devastated" when his brother revealed several days before he surrendered that thousands of accounts supposedly worth $65 billion were worthless. Investigators say Bernard Madoff had distributed most of the $20 billion he took in over several decades to other investors while investing none of it in the markets as he had promised to do.





Reuters



Bernie Madoff's brother Peter arrives at court today.





A court-appointed monitor has so far recovered nearly $9.3 billion that was lost, mostly by clawing back money from investors who received large payouts along the way. Most of the money has not yet been distributed. A small part of the recovery has resulted from the sale of numerous Madoff family assets, including the toys of the wealthy — multi-million dollar homes, fancy cars, yachts and art.

In a pre-sentence brief, attorney John Wing said his client was subject to a "draconian forfeiture order that in one stroke stripped him of all existing assets, his home, his pension, his savings, his personal property, etc. and of all future assets and income should he even have the opportunity to earn any income after serving his prison sentence." He said Peter Madoff will be left a "jobless pariah" when he gets out of prison.

Yet, one couple who submitted a victim impact statement to federal prosecutors said Peter Madoff did not seem destitute when he was spotted "enjoying a leisurely lunch in an expensive Upper East Side restaurant where many of his victims would like to eat but can't afford to."

In the letter filed publically Wednesday with others, Jill and Nancy Miller said they saw him there after he had pleaded guilty in June.

Michael De Vita, an investor who has asked to speak, said in a letter to the court that the judge should set aside the plea agreement and impose the maximum sentence.

"I ask that you show the same degree of compassion for Peter Madoff that he showed for us — none!" he wrote.

Another victim, Gail Oren, said she had to come out of retirement and can only afford rare public outings with friends.

"It is embarrassing," she said. "My social life is almost non-existent now. As a result, I am often alone and often feel depressed. My life has become a life of loneliness quite often."

Karl and Wanda Eisenhauer wrote that they were forced to sell their family farm because of their losses.

"It is difficult to describe the heartache. We can only beg for your help," they said.

Morton J. Chalek recalled standing in line when Pearl Harbor was bombed to enlist in the Air Force. He flew 23 combat missions and later built a successful business before his attorney introduced him to his golf partner, Bernard Madoff.

"I am now 90 years old and bankrupt. I have been waiting hopelessly to recover the money Madoff stole from me," he said.

Not everyone sounded angry at their loss.

Robert Roman, Peter Madoff's brother-in-law, said he and his wife, Joan, had lost their life savings, along with the life savings of their three daughters and their families and yet did not wish prison on Peter Madoff.

"Our family is supposed to hate him. But — we do not. Why? Because prison is where Charles Manson belongs. That is a solution to his situation. Peter in prison is an answer only to those who seek revenge. It is not a solution," he wrote.

Roman said he met the brothers in February 1954 and witnessed firsthand the "domination and back-yard bullying" that Peter Madoff endured at the hands of his brother.

He called Peter Madoff a victim and said the tens of millions of dollars in riches given to Peter by his brother likely corrupted him to give in to his brother's demands.

"Bernard Madoff had control of the greatest weapon of mass destruction ever created. It was his checkbook. To be seduced by that weapon is the ultimate temptation," Roman wrote.










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Obama on fiscal cliff: He and Boehner 'pretty close' to a deal








WASHINGTON — Optimistic despite a tightening deadline, President Obama says he and Speaker John Boehner are "pretty close" to a grand fiscal deal that would avoid a first-of-the-year shock to the economy, but says congressional Republicans "keep on finding ways to say no as opposed to finding ways to say yes."

Obama cast a resolution to the "fiscal cliff" as a matter of political will. He said in the aftermath of the massacre of school children in Connecticut, the nation deserves a compromise by its political leaders.

"Goodness, if this past week has done anything, it should just give us some perspective," he said. And he urged lawmakers to "peel off the partisan war paint" and strike a deal.





Getty Images



President Obama today





Obama spoke to reporters at the White House after announcing an administration-wide response to Friday's shooting at an elementary school in Newtown that killed 26 people including 20 first graders.

His comments came shortly after the White House threatened to veto Boehner's backup plan for averting the "fiscal cliff." Boehner's measure, a so-called Plan B, would block tax increases from being triggered Jan. 1 on everyone but those whose incomes exceed $1 million.

Boehner is planning a House vote on his proposal on Thursday, hoping it would raise pressure on President Barack Obama to make concessions as both sides continue reaching for a bipartisan deal on averting the "fiscal cliff." Without an agreement among lawmakers, broad tax increases on nearly all taxpayers and budget-wide spending cuts will be triggered in early January.

Obama, however, dismissed Boehner's proposal, saying it would not provide unemployment insurance for 2 million jobless Americans and would result in higher taxes for families that benefit from various tax credits.

"That violates the core principles that were debated during the course of this election and that the American people determined was the wrong way to go," Obama said. Instead, Obama said, he and Boehner in their own talks had moved significantly toward each other before talks reached a lull on Tuesday.

"What separates us is probably a few hundred billion dollars," Obama said. "The idea that we would put our economy at risk because you can't bridge that gap doesn't make a lot of sense."

Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said White House opposition to the GOP backup plan "is growing more bizarre and irrational by the day." He said Republicans prefer a deficit-cutting plan that is balanced between tax increases and spending cuts, but Obama has yet to offer such a proposal.










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School gunman spent hours in windowless basement playing violent video games: report








Crime scene tape surrounds the home of Nancy Lanza, where school gunman Adam Lanza lived.

AP

Crime scene tape surrounds the home of Nancy Lanza, where school gunman Adam Lanza lived.



Before crazed gunman Adam Lanza slaughtered two dozen young kids and educators, he lived out bloodthirsty fantasies in his windowless bunker dedicated violent video games and gun worship, according to published reports.

Lanza killed countless hours playing “Call Of Duty” in the basement of his slain mother’s home and decorated the underground hangout with posters of guns and military hardware, plumber Peter Wlasuk told The Sun.

Over the years, Wlasuk did several jobs at the Lanza home and noticed how much Adam and his brother Ryan both adored the military.





AP



Adam Lanza





“It was a huge poster with every tank ever made,” he said. “The kids could tell you about guns they had never seen from the 40s, 50s and 60s “

The handyman stopped short of linking violent video games to Friday’s carnage -- when Adam Lanza blew away his mom before going to Sandy Hook Elementary School and killing 20 little kids and six educators.

The bloodshed only ended after Adam Lanza blew his brains out before cops could stop him.

“I’m not blaming the games for what happened,” Wlasuk said. “But they see a picture of a historical gun and say ‘I’ve used that on Call Of Duty’.”

Aside from the basement’s gun-and-war theme, Wlasuk said he admired the setup.

“It was a beautiful house but he lived in the basement. I always thought that was strange,” he said.

“But he had a proper set up down there — computers, a bathroom, bed and desk and a TV. There were no windows.”

Most of the “Call of Duty” versions are rated “M’ for mature because of their over-the-top violence. “M” is recommended for players 17 and older.

Even more damaging than any blood and guts spilled in “Call of Duty” could have been all the hours Lanza spent playing -- instead of talking to other people.

“All the time he spent locked away playing the game would have been isolating,” child psychologist Teresa Blitz told the paper.

.”When children are on their own they can’t develop social skills. Without alternative viewpoints, his perspective will have been skewed.”

Considering mom Nancy Lanza, a well-known gun enthusiastic in the neighborhood, probably didn’t do much to help socialize her painfully shy kid.

“Friends and family portrayed Adam Lanza’s mother Nancy as a paranoid person who stockpiled guns,” Bliss said. “It is unlikely that she would have been able to give him the influence he needed.”










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Diet Pepsi adds new fake sweetener to formula








Diet Pepsi secretly added a new artificial sweetener to its formula, in a desperate flavor-saving move to can declining sales.

The Purchase, NY, beverage maker quietly added acesulfame potassium to Diet Pepsi, to boost its base sweetener aspartame -- which is sensitive to heat and is susceptible to breaking down.

Cans of the newly formulated Diet Pepsi were found this weekend in New York, Omaha, Neb., and the San Francisco Bay Area.

PepsiCo officials said the new Diet Pepsi will be gradually rolled out, as retailers move their current inventory.

"It's not like a light switch. It'll start appearing as shelf space clears," company spokeswoman Andrea Canabal said yesterday.




The actual taste of Diet Pepsi shouldn’t be any different, but the sweetness could have longer shelf life with acesulfame potassium. The ingredient boost was meant "to ensure consistency with every sip,” according to the company.

"A change in sweetener does not change the flavor," said John Sicher, editor and publisher of the industry trade mag Beverage Digest.

Diet Pepsi is now the nation’s seventh most popular carbonated drink, with 4.9 percent of the market -- down from 5.3 percent in 2000, according to Beverage Digest.

.In that same time frame, rival Diet Coke -- which uses just aspartame -- has surged from 8.7 percent to 9.6 percent.

Diet Coke has climbed to No. 2 among all soda pop in 2010, second only to regular Coke and pushing regular Pepsi down to No. 3.










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Another sorrowful trip for Obama to grieving town








WASHINGTON — For President Barack Obama, it was another sorrowful visit to another grieving community full of broken hearts from unimaginable violence.

The spot, this time, was Newtown, Conn., where on Friday a man opened fire inside Sandy Hook Elementary School. The toll: 26 dead, including 20 boys and girls just 6- or 7-years-old.

The president planned a private meeting Sunday afternoon with families of the victims and with emergency personnel who responded to the shootings. In the evening, he was to speak at an interfaith vigil at Newtown High School.





REUTERS



President Barack Obama departs the White House today to travel to Newtown, Conn., the scene of Friday's senseless rampage that left 20 elementary schoolchildren dead.





"As a nation, we have endured far too many of these tragedies in the last few years," he said in his weekly radio address Saturday. "An elementary school in Newtown. A shopping mall in Oregon. A house of worship in Wisconsin. A movie theater in Colorado. Countless street corners in places like Chicago and Philadelphia."

Just last summer, Obama went to Aurora, Colo., to visit victims and families after a shooting spree at a movie theater in the Denver suburb left 12 dead. He went to Tucson, Ariz., in January of last year after six people were killed and 13 were wounded, including then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, outside a grocery store.

In November 2009, Obama traveled to Fort Hood, Texas, to speak at the memorial service for 13 service members who were killed on the post by another soldier.

"We have to come together and take meaningful action to prevent more tragedies like this. Regardless of the politics," Obama said in his broadcast remarks.

After the Colorado shooting in July, the White House made clear that Obama would not propose new gun restrictions in an election year and said he favored better enforcement of existing laws.

The Connecticut shootings may have changed the political dynamic in Washington, although public opinion in favor of gun control has declined over the years. While the White House has said Obama stands by his desire to reinstate a ban on military-style assault weapons, he has not pushed Congress to act.

Several Democratic lawmakers, during appearances on the Sunday talk shows, said the gruesome killings at the school were the final straw in a debate on gun laws that has fallen to the wayside in recent years.

"This conversation has been dominated in Washington by — you know and I know — gun lobbies that have an agenda" said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Democrat in the Senate. "We need people, just ordinary Americans, to come together, and speak out, and to sit down and calmly reflect on how far we go."

Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who is retiring, suggested a national commission on mass violence that would examine gun laws and what critics see as loopholes, as well as the mental health system and violence in movies and video games. Durbin said he supports the idea, and would add school safety to the list of topics to examine.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said she would push legislation next year to ban future sales of military-assault weapons like those used in the elementary school shooting. The bill will ban big clips, drums and strips of more than 10 bullets.

The proposals were among the first to come from Congress in the wake of Friday's shooting. Gun rights activists remained largely quiet on the issue, all but one declining to appear on the talk shows.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas defended the sale of assault weapons and said that the principal at Sandy Hook Elementary School, who authorities say died trying to overtake the shooter, should herself have been armed.

Authorities identified the shooter as Adam Lanza, a 20-year-old who police say first killed his mother before driving to the school, opening fire in two classrooms and then taking his own life.

Before leaving for Connecticut, the president went to watch a dance rehearsal for one of his daughters in suburban Maryland.

As he said in his radio address, "this weekend, Michelle and I are doing what I know every parent is doing — holding our children as close as we can and reminding them how much we love them. "










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Domino's founder sues federal government over mandatory contraception coverage in Obamacare

DETROIT — The founder of Domino's Pizza is suing the federal government over mandatory contraception coverage in the health care law.

Tom Monaghan, a devout Roman Catholic, says contraception isn't health care but a "gravely immoral" practice.

He filed a lawsuit Friday in federal court. It also lists as a plaintiff Domino's Farms, a Michigan office park complex that Monaghan owns.

Monaghan offers health insurance that excludes contraception and abortion for employees. The new federal law requires employers to offer insurance including contraception coverage or risk fines.




AP



Domino's pizza founder Tom Monaghan in 1996



Monaghan says the law violates his rights, and is asking a judge to strike down the mandate. There are similar lawsuits pending nationwide.

A message left Saturday for Monaghan's attorney, Richard Thompson, was not immediately returned.

The government says the contraception mandate benefits women.

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Emotional Obama on school shooting: Child victims 'had their entire lives ahead of them'








REUTERS


President Obama speaks about the shooting.



WASHINGTON – President Obama today wiped away tears and got a lump in his throat as he gave voice to America’s pain and anguish in the wake of a horrific shooting rampage in a Connecticut elementary school.

"The majority of those who died today were children, beautiful little kids between the ages of five and ten years old," said Obama, wiping a tear from the corner of his eye.

The choked-up president took a long pause to regain his composure before he continued his address from the White House.




"They had their entire lives ahead of them, birthdays, graduations, weddings, kids of their own,” said Obama.

In response to the unthinkable tragedy that left 20 children and six adults dead, Obama promised “meaningful” action to combat gun violence.

“Our hearts are broken for the parents of the survivors as well, for as blessed as they are to have their children home tonight, they know that their children's innocence has been torn away from them,” said the president.

He added a person note.

“This evening, Michelle and I will do what I know every parent in America will do, which is hug our children a little tighter,” he said. “And we’ll tell them that we love them and we’ll remind each other of how deeply we love we another.”

“But there are families in Connecticut that cannot do that. And they need us now,” he said.

smiller@nypost.com










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Man dies after falling onto LIRR tracks








An elderly man was killed this morning after he tumbled into the railroad tracks in Little Neck this morning, and was hit by an LIRR train, authorities said.

He fell about 10:20 a.m. at a railroad crossing near 39th Road and Little Neck Parkway, and was struck by a Port Washington train.

He went into cardiac arrest, and was pronounced dead at the scene, according to an FDNY spokesman.

Service was suspended on the Port Washington line for 90 minutes after he fell, said a MTA police spokesman.

He has not been identified yet, but is believed to be in his seventies, authorities added.











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Manhattan couple has baby at 12:12 on 12/12








What a lucky baby!

This little girl doesn’t even have a name yet, but she does have a great birth date.

She was born today exactly at 12:12 p.m. by cesarean section at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.

Although the date was chosen for the delivery, the time of birth was just accidental.

“When the doctor looked at the clock he said, ‘Oh my God, it’s 12:12’,” said happy dad, Michael Patterson, 37.

He said doctors had wanted to deliver their third child a few days early to avoid any complications and friends suggested this auspicious day. The Upper east side couple already have 20 month old twins, Henry and Eleanor.




Patterson, who works in finance, said his wife, Olivia, 35, who is a Frick Museum employee, had no idea if they were going to have a boy or girl so they still don’t have a name for their new wailing six-pounder.

“It’s the best Christmas present we can possibly imagine,” said Patterson, adding December is a big month for birthdays in the family.

He was born on the 21st, his dad on the 2nd and his mom on the 14th.

“I feel like 12 is a special number. It obviously happens once a century and there are 12 months in the year and 12 signs of the zodiac and 12 inches in a foot,” said Patterson.

“She is a special baby and selfishly it’s an easy birthday to remember,” he added.










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