ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Karachi, women on streets in support of the blasphemy law

Amplify’d from www.asianews.it
Karachi, women on streets in support of the blasphemy law
by Jibran Khan
The women's wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) marched through the streets, shouting slogans against those who want to change the "black law". The fundamentalist leaders call for the expulsion of Vatican representatives for "meddling" of Benedict XVI. On January 30, Christians pray for in Asia Bibi and peace in the country.

Karachi (AsiaNews) - The women's wing of the Islamic movement Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) has demonstrated on the streets of Karachi against possible amendments to the blasphemy law. The protest took place yesterday after Friday prayers: the crowd gathered in Mazar-e-Quaid - the National Mausoleum, better known as the tomb that houses the remains of the founder Ali Jinnah - and marched to the area of Numaish Chowrangi. The young women students - from different schools and institutions of the city - shouted slogans and brandished placards against those who want to change the "black law".

Addressing the crowd, Ghafoor Ahmed - a member of JI - confirmed that "no attempt to touch the law will be allowed", the spirit of the Pakistani students, he added, shows that the country "will soon become a true Islamic nation." The vice-president Ashraf Jalali, who led the protest, made it clear that any condemnation of Mumtaz Qadri - the murderess of the Punjab Governor Salman Taseer - will lead to further demonstrations and protests, because he is "a hero of the Muslim ummah".

Members of the fundamentalist movement also demanded the expulsion of all Vatican officials in Pakistan, for what they call "interference" in internal affairs by Benedict XVI. On 10 January, the Pope, during his meeting with the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, had claimed the right to religious freedom and called for the repeal of the blasphemy law.

On January 30, Islamic fundamentalists have launched a national demonstration in support of the "black law" and promised a "long march" to Islamabad if Asia Bibi, the 45 year old Christian sentenced to death for blasphemy and pending appeal, is not executed. Also on January 30, however, the bishop of Islamabad / Rawalpini, Mgr. Anthony Rufin, proclaimed a day of fasting and prayer for Asia and for peace and harmony all over Pakistan.

VATICAN
Pope: Religious freedom attacked by terrorism and marginalisation In his speech to the diplomatic corp, Benedict XVI denounces injustice and violence against Christians in Iraq, Egypt, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, India and the Middle East. In the West there is a process that tends to treat faith as a personal and irrelevant matter. "You can not create a sort of scale for the severity of intolerance toward religion" and "religious freedom is not only freedom of worship."
VATICAN-ISLAM - EGYPT
Al Azhar also expected in Assisi
by Bernardo CervelleraSuspension of dialogue with the Vatican concerns Egyptian Church. For days, Patriarch Naguib, spokesman for the bishops and Catholic communities has submitted to the Egyptian government and the imam of Al Azhar, the Arabic translation of the Pope's speech that led to the apparent freeze. Accusations against Al Jazeera, of intentionally misrepresenting the papal message. In both east and west growing need for real religious freedom against terrorism and secularism.
ISLAM - EGYPT
Egyptian Imams and intellectuals: Renewing Islam towards modernity
by Samir Khalil SamirThe program - truly revolutionary - wants to rethink the value of women, fraternisation between the sexes, the relationship of equality with Christians. And it also desires to clarify interpretations on the sayings of Mohammed and the myths of fundamentalist Salafism, rejecting the influences that come from Saudi Arabia.
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Vatican Cardinal's thumbs-up for Indianisation of Catholic church

Amplify’d from www.dnaindia.com
Vatican Cardinal�s thumbs-up for Indianisation of Catholic church
Rahul Chandawarkar

Cardinal William Joseph Levada, prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican, gave the thumbs-up for the Indianisation of the Roman Catholic Church in India.

Speaking to media persons in Pune on Friday, Levada said that it was natural for the Roman Catholic church in India to imbibe Indian culture in this era of globalisation.

“Indians follow their faith in temples and mosques with a lot of fervour. It is very important for the Roman Catholic church in India to adjust and imbibe local culture and traditions,” he said.

The Cardinal’s thoughts have given a massive fillip to the Movement of Inculturation (imbibing local cultures) started in India by Roman Catholic priest Richard Desmat and nun Sara Grant in the early 1970s.

Levada, who is considered one of the most powerful of Cardinals in the Vatican, having taken over administration of the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith from none other than Pope Benedict XVI, expressed regret at the attacks on Roman Catholic clergy in India in recent years.

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The Big Picture: Protest spreads in the Middle East

Amplify’d from www.boston.com
The issues in Tunisia, Lebanon, and Egypt differ, but yesterday anger boiled over in all three countries as grievances were brought to the streets. In Tunisia, where protests have already overthrown President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, continued demonstrations sought to depose his allies still in their positions. Meanwhile Tunisia's interim government has issued an international arrest warrant for the former president and members of his family. In Lebanon, Sunni supporters of ousted Prime Minister Saad Hariri took to the streets in a "day of rage", burning tires and blockading roads in Tripoli and Sidon. It was in Egypt where the most dramatic events unfolded as the largest protests in a generation rocked Cairo. Demonstrators, many inspired by events in Tunisia, called for an end to nearly 30 years of rule by President Hosni Mubarak. Collected here are photographs from all three countries. -- Lane Turner (34 photos total)

A protester carrying an Egyptian flag runs through clouds of tear gas at a demonstration in Cairo January 25, 2011. Thousands of anti-government protesters, some hurling rocks and climbing atop an armored police truck, clashed with riot police in the center of Cairo in a Tunisia-inspired demonstration to demand the end of Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30 years in power. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)



Demonstrators surround a water-canon truck used by police to disperse a protest in central Cairo to demand the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak and call for reforms January 25, 2011. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images) #


Demonstrators clash with police in central Cairo during a protest January 25, 2011. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images) #


Smoke from tear gas canisters fired by police drifts over central Cairo during protests January 25, 2011. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images) #


Protesters are confronted by riot police as they demonstrate in downtown Cairo, chanting against President Hosni Mubarak and calling for an end to poverty. (AP Photo/Mohammed Abu Zaid) #


A protester scuffles with a riot policeman during demonstrations in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Mohammed Abu Zaid) #


An anti-government protester waves Egyptian flags during clashes with police in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh) #


An injured demonstrator is helped in Cairo January 25, 2011. (AP Photo) #


Demonstrators move away from a cloud of teargas in Cairo January 25, 2011. (AP Photo) #


Anti-government protesters clash with police in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany) #


Anti-government protesters clash with police in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany) #


A boy runs from a column of riot policeman during anti-government protests in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. Egyptian police fired tear gas at protesters gathered in the city center, and earlier used a water cannon in the same location. (REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh) #


A man runs from a police water cannon in Cairo January 25, 2011. (AP Photo) #


Men throw tear gas canisters back towards a police vehicle in Cairo January 25, 2011. (AP Photo) #


Egyptian demonstrators pray in central Cairo during a protest to demand the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak and call for reforms January 25, 2011. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images) #


Egyptian demonstrators protest in central Cairo January 25, 2011. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty Images) #


Anti-government protesters gather at Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany) #


Lebanese soldiers fall back as protesters wield sticks and pursue them during a protest in the northern port city of Tripoli, Lebanon January 25, 2011. Sunnis protested the rising power of the Shiite militant group Hezbollah as Lebanese lawmakers gave the militant group's pick for prime minister enough support to form the next government. (AP Photo/Ahmad Omar) #


Supporters of the Future Movement rip a poster of Najib Miqati during a demonstration in support of the caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri in Tripoli January 25, 2011, as hundreds of people took part in a 'day of rage' over the likely appointment as prime minister of Hezbollah-backed tycoon Najib Miqati. (JOSEPH EID/AFP/Getty Images) #


Lebanese soldiers patrol a street in Tripoli after protests by Lebanese Sunni Muslim supporters of Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri January 25, 2011. Telecoms tycoon Najib Miqati, who is backed by Hezbollah and its allies, was appointed as prime minister-designate. (REUTERS/ Mohamed Azakir) #


Supporters of the Future Movement torch a vehicle belonging to the Arabic language al-Jazeera satellite television station during a demonstration in support of caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri in Tripoli January 25, 2011. (JOSEPH EID/AFP/Getty Images) #


A Lebanese soldier bandages the head of an injured colleague during a protest in the northern port city of Tripoli January 25, 2011. (AP Photo) #


A Lebanese soldier runs past burning tires lit by Sunni Muslim supporters of Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri at the main road connecting Beirut to southern Lebanon in Sidon January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/ Ali Hashisho) #


A protester carries a picture of outgoing Prime Minister Saad Hariri and a Lebanese flag in Sidon January 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari) #


Soldiers advance towards stone-throwing Sunni Muslim supporters of outgoing Prime Minister Saad Hariri near Tariq al-Jadidah in Beirut January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/Hasan Shaaban) #


A masked protester poses in front of burning garbage containers in Beirut January 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Grace Kassab) #


Tunisians continue their demonstrations outside Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's offices in Government Square in Tunis January 25, 2011. The government square has become a makeshift camp as protestors defy the emergency curfew and sleep on the ground. Many vow to continue until the interim cabinet resigns. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) #


Protestors restrain and eject a man (center) with opposing political views from outside Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's offices in Government Square in Tunis January 25, 2011. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) #


Tunisians climb government buildings outside Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's offices in Government Square in Tunis January 25, 2011. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) #


A resident of Kasserine, Tunisia cries as he holds a portrait of his brother Mohamed Mbarki, who was killed during clashes with Tunisian security forces in December, as he demonstrates in front of the government palace in Tunis January 25, 2011. (FETHI BELAID/AFP/Getty Images) #


Tunisian pro-government demonstrators hold a national flag during a protest on Habib Bourguiba Avenue in Tunis January 25, 2011. Hundreds of people taking part in the first rally backing Tunisia's new interim government were chased away by protesters calling for the leadership to resign. (FETHI BELAID/AFP/Getty Images) #


Protesters from Tunisia's poor rural heartlands chant slogans outside the prime minister's office in Tunis January 25, 2011. Protesters demonstrated in the capital to demand that the revolution they started should now sweep the remnants of the fallen president's old guard from power. (REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra) #


A protester from a rural area camps out overnight with others outside the prime minister's office in Tunis January 25, 2011. (REUTERS/ Finbarr O'Reilly) #


A Tunisian man pauses as protestors continue their demonstrations outside Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's offices in Government Square in Tunis January 25, 2011. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) #


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Loughner’s Jewish mother? Not so much

By Ron Kampeas · January 12, 2011
I noted the other day that an acquaintance of Jared Lee Loughner, the accused gunman in Gabrielle Giffords shooting in Tucson, believed his mother was Jewish.



Bryce Tierney told Mother Jones that Loughner listed Mein Kampf as a favorite book in part to provoke his Jewish mother.



Nate Bloom, the noted Jewish roots columnist and researcher, has done the legwork -- and pretty much buries this notion.



I'll hand it over to him:

It is appalling how one comment---a friend of Jared Loughner telling a Mother Jones’ reporter that Jared Loughner’s mother is “Jewish”---goes viral in an instant. 


In hours, "this fact" was all over on anti-Semitic sites.  And, of course, there are the “commentators” who love to ‘blame the victim’ via some pop psychology theory that Jared acted out of “Jewish self-hatred.”


I figured that this was the moment to try and get “truth” dressed, and into the public arena a lot faster than usual.  In other words, to use the tools of the internet to determine the veracity of what this friend told Mother Jones.


I cover Jews in popular culture for Jewish newspapers and I know how often famous people are mis-identified as Jewish or mis-identified as not Jewish. I also know that a lot of people are not outright lying about claiming someone is Jewish---they just get it wrong.


So, with my friend Michael, we ran down everything we could from public records on Jared Loughner’s mother’s family background.  It took a lot of “search terms” and databases to find what we did.


Here’s what we found:


Jared Lee Loughner’s mother is Amy Totman Loughner;

Amy Loughner---Known Parentage from Public Records:

Her [Amy’s] parents were Lois May Totman and Laurence Edward Totman.

----Lois M. Totman died in 1999 and Laurence E. Totman died in 2005. Both were registered nurses. Laurence worked at a VA facility in Tucson. We both found this info via google news archives, social security death index.


From 1930 census records

Laurence E. Totman was born in Illinois in 1925.

His (Laurence’s) parents were Laurence A. Totman and his wife, Mary.

Laurence Totman pere (the elder) was born in Kansas to a Pennsylvania father and an Illinois mother. Mary was from Illinois, as were both of her parents.

A sister-in-law named Myrtle M. Brennan is listed as living with them also.

1920/1910 census records---Totman Family:


In 1920, Lawrence Totman, (Jared’s) great-grandfather, is living with his aunt, Rosa Clarke, who was born in illinois to two Irish-born parents.


Rosa is his mother's sister. On the 1910 census, his (Laurence, the elder) maternal grandparents are listed as Irish-born.


Father, Orvie Totman was born in Ohio to Ohio-born parents.

Amy Loughner’s Mother’s Line:


See obit, below, from Arlington (Illinois) Daily Record, June 24, 1999---Obituary of Helen Medernach of Virgil, Illinois. Helen was the sister of Lois M. Totman (the mother of Amy Totman Loughner). Helen was the great aunt of Jared Loughner.


As you can see, Helen’s funeral (mass) was held at a Catholic church. Helen (and Lois) were the children of Anton Bleifuss and Jessie Bleifuss (nee Anderson).  Lois M. Totman died just days after her sister, Helen.


According to the census records, Anton Bleifuss was born in Bremen, Germany, to German parents. Jessie Anderson Bleifuss was born in Illinois to a father born in Denmark and a mother born in Illinois.


Conclusion---It is exceedingly unlikely that Amy Loughner has any Jewish ancestry. The only “line” not traced his Amy’s father’s mother’s family. The other three lines (Amy’s father’s father, Amy’s mother’s father, and Amy’s mother mother)---show, to all but the most obtuse, that these were/are not Jewish families. Moreover, it is quite clear that Amy’s mother, Lois Bleifuss Trotman, came from a Catholic family.
At OpEd News, Rob Kall interviews Rabbi Stephanie Aaron of Giffords' shul, Congregation Chaverim, she dispenses with any notion that the Loughner's were in any way associated with the community:

 "We had a meeting of the Tucson Board of Rabbis. We all looked at our rosters from many years back. No one has ever heard of the family -- him, his parents, any of them. I can say with absolute certainty that we do not know him in pretty much the entire affiliated community." 
I would add this: Bleifuss may be a Jewish name. (The noted investigative journalist, Joel Bleifuss, is Jewish.) Anton Bleifuss, Jared Lee Loughner's great-grandfather, might then have been Jewish -- but not so committed that he didn't defer to his wife when it came to raising the children as Roman Catholics.



As I noted in my earlier posting, Jared Loughner is not the most reliable of reporters, and Tierney's recollection was added as an aside. Mix into this the fact that Amy Loughner's brother is Anton Totman -- apparently named for his mother's father.



Loughner's family was in no way Jewish, nor was his mother -- but she might have mentioned her Jewish grandfather, beloved enough to live on in her brother's name, with pride or interest. Under those circumstances Loughner, who sought "chaos" according to Tierney, might have sought to provoke his mother and his uncle by pretending to admire (or actually admiring) Adolph Hitler. He might have told Tierney that his mother was Jewish as a shorthand, or might have seen her as Jewish -- like I said, not the most reliable reporter. Or he might have explained the lineage, and Tierney might understandably have conflated it as "mother Jewish."



It sets up a fascinating contrast: Gabrielle Giffords, who plunges into public service when she is 30, just the same age she delves into her father's Judaism and chooses to embrace it; and Jared Loughner, who learns of a distant Jewish connection deep in his family's past -- and reviles it as he retreats into madness.

An obituary for Loughman's great aunt, Helen Medernach, is after the jump.





Date: June 24, 1999

Section: Business

Edition: Cook

Page: 10

Column: Obituaries

Helen Medernach of Virgil

A funeral Mass for Helen Medernach, 77, will be held at 10:30 a.m. Friday, at S.S. Peter & Paul Church. Fr. Aloysius Neumann will officiate.



Born Sept. 21, 1921, in Sycamore, the daughter of Anton and Jessie (nee Anderson) Bleifuss, she passed away peacefully Sunday, June 20, 1999, at Bethany Care Center in Sycamore, where she had made her home since May. Interment will be in S.S. Peter and Paul Cemetery, Virgil.



Helen grew up in Sycamore and graduated from Sycamore High School, class of 1939. She went on to take business courses which shortly landed her a job at Anaconda Wire Company in Sycamore. She went to California with her sister, Lois, and was employed in a business office for a few years before returning to work in Chicago. The last 20 years of her working career were spent in the business office at the Duplex Company in Sycamore.



She was united in marriage to William H. `Willie' Medernach on May 16, 1959.



They made their home in Sycamore for a short time before moving to Virgil where they lived across the street from the church for many years.



Survivors include her sisters, Virginia Stran of DeKalb, Irene Luty of Covina, Calif., Lois (Lawrence) Totman of Tucson, Ariz. and Dorothy (`Trig') Troeger of Sycamore; several nieces and nephews; and a family of dear friends. In addition, she leaves the quiet, simple legacy of one who cared. Her many thoughtful words of thanks, encouragement and friendship were patiently penned into countless cards that found their way into the hearts of many friends and neighbors through the years.



She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband in 1997; and brothers, Albert, Lyle, Leslie and Donald Bleifuss.



Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. today, at Conley Funeral Home, 116 W. Pierce St., Elburn, and from 9:30 a.m. until the time of the Mass Friday, at the church.



Memorials in her name may be made to Masses in her memory.
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Former Army Intelligence officer fatally shoots two teen children she said were 'mouthy'

(Watch the extremely sad video of Julie Schenecker being taken away by police here. Caution: very disturbing)



Julie Powers Schenecker kills her own two teen age children. Had been struggling with depression.  Schenecker's husband, Parker Schenecker, is an Army colonel stationed at the headquarters of U.S. Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base and is an NSA officer. "I'm COL Schenecker, the Deputy NSA rep to CENTCOM in Tampa..." Source
"Parker Schenecker met Julie Powers in Munich, Germany, where they were both stationed in the late '80s and early '90s.



She worked as a Russian linguist for the Army, collecting intelligence for European agencies by interviewing refugees coming from the Eastern Bloc, said Tim Fredrikson, who served with her.



He was a rising intelligence officer who had graduated cum laude with a French degree from Washington and Lee University in Virginia, where the school yearbook is named the "Calyx."



In Munich, Julie organized and coached a volleyball team of officers, said K.C. Dreller, another intelligence officer who worked with her.



"She was super good at it," said Dreller, 49. "I imagine she was super good at everything she did. Anybody that was in that field was a Type A personality."



The couple married and had two children, Calyx in Germany and Powers, who went by "Beau," in Honolulu.



The military family moved a lot, and Parker Schenecker studied at several military schools, including the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and the U.S. Army War College, according to a 2010 bulletin on distinguished alumni, published on his high school's website.



The newsletter also said he became a colonel in 2006 and was mainly responsible for the National Security Agency's support to military operations.



About three years ago the family landed in Tampa.



Parker is assigned to U.S. Central Command's intelligence directorate and has worked for CentCom for more than two years, said Lt. Col. Mike Lawhorn, a spokesman. He was on a temporary duty assignment overseas the past few days.



Julie Schenecker, no longer in the Army, stayed home with their children. She took shifts driving in the neighborhood's King High School car pool and often referred to the struggles of parenting in seemingly light-hearted Facebook posts.



On May 7, a friend wrote, "Happy Mother's/Hallmark day to all the mothers. You are more brave than I. Not sure how you do it, but glad you do."



Julie responded: "some days, not sure how we do it, either!! :-)"



On Sept. 23, a friend posted on his profile: "Hold yourself to a higher standard than anybody else expects of you."



Julie commented: "i needed that advice today — have a 16 yr old daughter!"  Source



The following are comments I have found on the Internet in regards to the possible anti-depressant medications she may have been taking.
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Jesuit Trained man honored by Archbishop of Denver accused of Raping adult woman gets off

"The District Court for the City and County of Denver twice reviewed the complaint against the Archdiocese of Denver regarding Ms. Birge and Mr. Hernandez. The judge dismissed the case against the Archdiocese, indicating that there are no facts in the complaint that show negligence on the part of the Archdiocese. The court awarded the Archdiocese tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees and costs against Ms. Birge. The Archdiocese chose not to collect the awarded fees."








 Archbishop of Denver Charles J. Chaput (L) with GW Bush
 Article Detailing the case



Second Article



Article of Archdiocese honoring the accused



Possibly accused being arrested for kidnapping



Accused Name: Juan Carlos Hernandez



Victim's Name: Katia Birge



Name of Organization where the alleged rape took place: Christo Y Yo



Details: "Birge's case involves a lay minister named Juan Carlos Hernandez, who ran a Hispanic young adult church group called Christo Y Yo. According to Joyce's story, Birge became close to Hernandez, who was ten years older. One night, he drove her to a dark part of town, where she says he raped her in the front seat. He then told her she was a whore.

Birge eventually told her family. They informed the parish priest, who directed them to speak with the archdiocese. Birge says church leaders weren't very responsive, telling her they might have done something if she'd been a child.




Photo taken from a Jesuit School of Theology

at Berkeley periodical
Birge brought a lawsuit against Hernandez and the archdiocese, which was dismissed late last year. In her story, Joyce says the church implied in court that what happened between Birge and Hernandez was "just a date gone wrong." Read More





Additional Info: "Hernandez, who was trained at the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, California, and the Mexican-American Catholic College in San Antonio, was also the 2006 recipient of the Archbishop Gomez Pastoral Leadership Award, as a Church leader “whose actions embody Catholic teaching.” At a $100-plate dinner to benefit Centro San Juan, Hernandez was feted by the award’s namesake, Archbishop José H. Gomez of the Los Angeles Archdiocese, as well as Archbishop Chaput. In the Archdiocesan newspaper, Denver Catholic Register, Liliana Flores, the Archdiocese’s Hispanic Youth Coordinator breathlessly declared of Hernandez, “I think he could die for Jesus.” Read More
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Bacteria's defenses against vaccine found

Amplify’d from www.upi.com

Bacteria's defenses against vaccine found

LONDON, Jan. 28 (UPI) -- British scientists say they've found genetic clues to an evolutionary war between Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteria and vaccines and antibiotics that combat it.

The study has identified the genetic events by which bacteria such as S. pneumoniae -- responsible for a number of human diseases including pneumonia, ear infection and bacterial meningitis -- respond rapidly to evolve resistance to new antibiotics and vaccines, ScienceDaily.com reported Friday.

"Drug resistant forms of S. pneumoniae first came onto the radar in the 1970s," Stephen Bentley of the U.K. Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute says. "We sequenced 240 samples collected over the course of 24 years from the PMEN1 lineage of S. pneumoniae. By comparing the sequences, we can begin to understand how this bacterium evolves and reinvents itself genetically in response to human interventions."

The study shows S. pneumoniae is a pathogen that evolves and reinvents itself with remarkable speed, the researchers say.

The scientists say the bacteria's genes for antigens -- the molecules that trigger human immune response -- can change those antigens in response to vaccines meant to deal with them.

"If the immune system targets these antigens, then the bacteria can simply change them, like a criminal changing their appearance to evade detection," researcher William Hanage at the Harvard School of Public Health says.

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Burglary nets computer belonging to the Harrisburg Senate

Amplify’d from www.ydr.com

Burglary nets computer belonging to the Harrisburg Senate

Daily Record/Sunday News
York, PA -
State police are investigating a burglary in which electronics were stolen, including a computer belonging to the Harrisburg Senate, according to a news release.


Police said the home of a 58-year-old man, whose name was withheld, was broken into Jan. 18 on East Springfield Road in Springfield Township. Unknown suspects kicked down a side door and left with a 46-inch Samsung TV, a Canon digital camera and a Garmin Nuvi GPS, police said.


A computer, used by the victim's girlfriend and belonging to her employer, the Harrisburg Senate, also was stolen, police said.


It appeared that the suspects tried to break in through a kitchen window. Two sets of prints were found, police said.


Anyone with information is asked to call state police at 428-1011.







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York County government makes changes to guard against postage thefts

A former county employee has been charged with stealing nearly $350,000.

Amplify’d from www.ydr.com

York County government makes changes to guard against postage thefts

A former county employee has been charged with stealing nearly $350,000.
York, PA -
Earlier this month, a former York County assistant chief clerk was charged with stealing nearly $350,000 from the county through fraudulent postage refunds. The technique by which county officials are trying to prevent similar thefts is as old as accounting itself -- a second set of eyes.


"As soon as we heard about the issue, we started working on a new process," county Treasurer Barbara Bair said.


Vickie Glatfelter, who served with the county for 27 years, was dismissed in October over the allegations. Among her responsibilities, according to Bair, was collecting refunds for overpayments that the county made to the U.S. Postal Service.


Now, York County Administrator/Chief Clerk Chuck Noll compiles the information for any refunds that the Postal Service owes the county. He turns that information over to Bair's office, which actually handles the collections. Then Bair's office returns a receipt to Noll, verifying that the proper amount has been refunded.


As an added backup, County Controller Robb Green will periodically review the records to make sure that everything is being processed properly.


Noll said the need for going through that procedure should be infrequent under ordinary circumstances. He waits until a number of such errors pile up before putting in for the refund, because they tend to be for small amounts of money.


About two weeks ago, he put in the first refund request since Glatfelter's dismissal. It came to a little more than $400.


The fact that such small amounts of money are involved is precisely why it took so long for county officials to pick up on what was happening, Noll said.


The county marks the postage on its mail with 25 machines at district magistrate offices and every major facility throughout the county.


The county will pay the U.S. Postal Service for maybe $5,000 worth of postage on a machine. The machine then stamps the outgoing postage, deducting from that $5,000 the cost of each individual piece of mail. When the amount on the machine starts getting near the end, the county will renew it.


Occasionally, employees will make mistakes. They'll run an empty envelope through the machine. Or they'll process an envelope without resetting the machine after someone else set it to a higher rate for a package.


In those cases, the county would get the money refunded from the Postal Service, minus a 10 percent processing fee.


During a news conference earlier this month, county detectives said Glatfelter admitted to the thefts and provided a written statement about her actions. Glatfelter allegedly would intentionally run "bad" envelopes through the machines to make refunds necessary, according to charging documents. Then she would collect the refunds and deposit them in her personal account.


According to the district attorney's office, Glatfelter committed 808 such thefts between June 2003 and Sept. 28, 2010. Noll said dollar amounts were small enough and spread over enough departments that no department head noticed a spike in postal costs.


"There were no red flags," Noll said.


THE CASE


Name: Vickie Glatfelter, 49, of Dover Township


Former job: York County assistant chief clerk for 27 years


Charges: dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities, theft by unlawful taking or disposition, receiving stolen property and theft by failure to make required disposition of funds received, according to York County District Attorney Tom Kearney


Amount: Glatfelter is accused of stealing $347,477.23 over seven years.


What's next: Glatfelter waived her preliminary hearing, so her next court date, for formal arraignment, is set for Feb. 11.

Read more at www.ydr.com
 

DePasquale targets child predators in new bill

Amplify’d from www.ydr.com

DePasquale targets child predators in new bill

JOHN WALK The York Dispatch

The development of social networking sites such as Facebook has opened up another avenue for child predators to contact children, according to Rep. Eugene DePasquale, D-York City.

As a result, state law needs to be updated "to structure the laws with the current times," he said.

That's why DePasquale on Tuesday announced legislation that would ban convicted sex offenders from using online social networking sites.

"We need to do the best we can to protect our kids," he said. "And cutting off access to social networking sites for convicted sex offenders will help in that goal."

In addition, DePasquale also introduced new legislation that would prohibit convicted sex offenders from using "computer scrub" software that would remove Internet activity history.

"Not allowing them to scrub the Internet usage makes it easier for law enforcement to track what they're doing," DePasquale said.

Victims of Crime: DePasquale also announced that he intends to reintroduce legislation that would help protect victims of crime.

The legislation would allow a judge to order that a GPS unit be worn by a person against whom a protection from abuse order has been placed.

A protection from abuse order is a civil order that provides a victim of crime the opportunity to seek protection if the alleged assailant is a family member, lives in the same household, or was an intimate partner of the individual seeking protection.

"I want to give judges the ability to require these GPS devices be worn so law enforcement can track if someone gets too close to their victim of crime. It helps law enforcement, and it further protects victims of crime," he said.

What's next: DePasquale said he intends to introduce the convicted sex offender legislation and reintroduce the victims of crime legislation in mid-February through the House of Representatives' Judiciary Committee.

-- Reach John Walk at 505-5439 or jwalk@yorkdispatch.com or follow on Twitter @ydcity.

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