Friday, September 4, 2015

News Values

1) This article was created around human interest, because the shooting is very emotional for everyone.
SOUTH CAROLINA CHURCH SHOOTINGS 
Shooting suspect to face death penalty 
Killing of 9 people in a church called ‘the ultimate crime.’ 
By Meg Kinnard andJeffrey Collins Associated Press 
   CHARLESTON, S.C. — The white man accused of killing nine black churchgoers in what authorities said was a racially motivated crime during Bible study will face a death penalty trial, even though not all the victims’ families agree with capital punishment, a prosecutor said Thursday. 
   Solicitor Scarlett Wilson said Thursday that some crimes are so heinous they require the most serious punishment the state can give. 
   “This was the ultimate crime, and justice from our state calls for the ultimate punishment,” Wilson said, reading a three-minute statement outside her Charleston office. She took no questions. 
   Wilson filed paperwork saying she would seek the death penalty against 21-year-old Dylann Roof a few hours before her statement. Her reasons: More than two people were killed and others’ lives were put at risk. 
   Roof is charged under U.S. hate crime laws as well, and federal prosecutors haven’t decided if they will also seek the death penalty. Federal authorities have said Roof wrote online of fomenting racial violence and used racial slurs in a personal manuscript in which he decried integration. 
   Survivors also told police he used racial insults during the attack. 
   Wilson said she understands the desire of some victims’ families to forgive Roof and that some do not believe in the death penalty, but she said forgiveness doesn’t eliminate the consequences of Roof’s actions. 
   “Making such a weighty decision is an awesome responsibility,” Wilson said. “People who have already been victimized should not bear the burden of making the decisions on behalf of an entire community. They shouldn’t have to weigh the concerns of other people. They shouldn’t have to consider the facts of the case.” 
   Roof’s lawyers did not respond to Wilson’s decision. 
   Thursday’s motion doesn’t guarantee the case goes to trial. In a number of other murder cases in South Carolina, solicitors have filed notices to seek the death penalty and used them as bargaining chips to get a defendant to plead guilty in exchange for life in prison. Roof’s lawyers said in federal court July 31 that he would have been willing to plead guilty to the hate crimes charges, but he wanted to wait to see if prosecutors would want to put him to death. 
   In her filing, Wilson said she intends to present evidence on Roof’s mental state, adult and juvenile criminal record and other conduct, as well as his apparent lack of remorse for the killings. 
   Roof faces state charges including nine murder counts in the June 17 slayings at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. He is expected in court again on those charges in October. 
   Public pressure and media attention on the case likely made it impossible for Wilson not to seek the death penalty, said Colin Miller, an expert on criminal law at the University of South Carolina School of Law. 
   “This has to be understood as part of a continuum,” he said. “In this case, likely this was viewed as the only acceptable path that was to be taken by the solicitor.” 
   Relatives of shooting victims spoke out at Roof’s first court appearance, saying they forgave him for his actions and prayed God would have mercy on him. 
   Wilson said she has met many times with survivors and families of shooting victims. She said their desires played into her ultimate decision, but that she appreciated that they all respected her decision to seek the death penalty. 
   “It’s definitely something a solicitor will take into account — the wishes of the family and what they desire in terms of how the case is going to proceed,” Miller said. 
   Andy Savage, a Charleston attorney who represents some of the survivors and victims’ families, commended Wilson for considering his clients’ thoughts on whether Roof should face death. Some of his clients may oppose the death penalty for religious reasons but also understood the decision was up to the state, Savage said.

FOUND AT THE AUSTIN AMERICAN STAESMAN

2)This story is written based on novelty, because this is a very sad and different event that draws peoples' attention.
ISTANBUL — The smugglers had promised Abdullah Kurdi a motorboat for the trip from Turkey to Greece, a step on the way to a new life in Canada. Instead, they showed up with a 15-foot rubber raft that flipped in high waves, dumping Mr. Kurdi, his wife and their two small sons into the sea.
Mr. Kurdi tried to keep the boys, Aylan and Ghalib, afloat, but one died as he pushed the other to his wife, Rehan, pleading, “Just keep his head above the water!”
Only Mr. Kurdi, 40, survived.
“Now I don’t want anything,” he said a day later, on Thursday, from Mugla, Turkey, after filling out forms at a morgue to claim the bodies of his family. “Even if you give me all the countries in the world, I don’t want them. What was precious is gone.”Rocketing across the world on social media, the photograph has forced Western nations to confront the consequence of a collective failure to help migrants fleeing the Middle East and Africa to Europe in search of hope, opportunity and safety. Aylan, perhaps more even than the anonymous, decomposing corpses found in the back of a truck in Austria that shocked Europe last week, has personalized the tragedy facing the 11 million Syrians displaced by more than four years of war.
The case of this young boy’s doomed journey has landed as a political bombshell across the Middle East and Europe, and even countries as far away as Canada, which has up to now not been a prominent player in the Syria crisis. Canadian officials were under intense pressure to explain why the Kurdi family was unable to get permission to immigrate legally, despite having relatives there who were willing to support and employ them. So far, the government has only cited incomplete documents, an explanation that has done little to quiet the outrage at home and abroad.
Mr. Kurdi, a Syrian Kurdish barber, and his brother Mohammad wanted to immigrate under the sponsorship of their sister, Tima Kurdi, 43, who lives in a suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia. She had invited Mr. Kurdi to live in her basement with his family and work in her hair salon.
“They can work with me, doing hair, I can find them a job, and then when they are financially O.K., they can move out and be their own,” she said by phone on Thursday.
Mr. Kurdi, too, said his sister had told Canadian authorities that she would be “responsible for our expenses,” but that “they didn’t agree.”
In fact, Ms. Kurdi said, she had applied at first only for Mohammad’s family, teaming up with friends and relatives to make bank deposits to prove she could support the familyBut in June, she said, Mohammad’s application was rejected for lack of a required document proving he had refugee status. But under Turkish refugee policies, such documents are nearly impossible for Syrians to come by. In any case, the experience persuaded the family that neither brother would ever get a Canadian visa.
That, Ms. Kurdi said, was when she offered to help her brothers finance the boat trip — something, she said through tears, “I really regret.”
Now, she said, “All what I really need is to stop the war. That’s all. I think the whole world has to step in and help those Syrian people. They are human beings.”
Aylan was named after a cousin, Ms. Kurdi’s son Alan, she said. She had never met Aylan or his brother Ghalib, 5, but saw and talked to them often on video chat. Aylan’s father grew up in Damascus, the Syrian capital, in the neighborhood of Rukineddine, but was originally from the Kurdish city of Kobani near the Turkish border. A year or so ago, he said in a telephone interview, he moved his family to Kobani because of increasing strains in Damascus. But he said it was not safe there either, with the Islamic State increasingly attacking the area.
The family eventually moved to Istanbul, but it was difficult for Mr. Kurdi to support himself, and he had to borrow money from his sister for rent.
Ms. Kurdi turned to her local member of Parliament, Fin Donnelly, who hand-delivered a letter appealing for help to Chris Alexander, the citizenship and immigration minister“We waited and waited, and we didn’t have any action,” he said.
In Canada, a country that has long prided itself on openness to refugees but has shifted that policy under a conservative government, this amounts to a campaign issue; Mr. Alexander had promised to admit 10,000 refugees from Syria, just over 1,000 had arrived by late August, and opposition parties like Mr. Donnelly’s say more should be welcomed. On Thursday, Mr. Alexander rushed back from the campaign trail to Ottawa, the capital, to deal with the family’s case, declaring that it “broke hearts around the world.”
Mr. Kurdi said he tried several times to cross to Europe on his own. He almost drowned trying to cross the river at Edirne, in Turkey, he said, “and once from the borders with Bulgaria and I got caught and sent back.”
Then he paid 4,000 euros, about $4,450, for the sea crossing — paying extra supposedly to avoid using a rubber raft.
“Of course we were afraid of drowning,” he said, “but the Turkish smuggler said it was going to be a yacht.”
Mr. Kurdi said the family had life jackets that were lost in the accident, but a senior Turkish security official said they were unavailable.
Continue reading the main story
“Instead of focusing on the real issues, people blame the father for not putting a life jacket on his children,” the official said, noting that Turkish patrols have seen countless similar tragedies pass unnoticed. “Well, I’ll tell you this: Life jackets in sizes that small simply aren’t available here.” Indeed, many refugees buy plastic beach toys for flotation.
The voyage started in the middle of the night, around 3 a.m. in five-foot seas, he said. It is the season of the relentless Meltemi winds, when the waves can be 15 feet high.
Choking back emotion as he spoke, Mr. Kurdi described how he had flailed about while trying to find his children as his wife held on to the capsized boat.
“I started pushing them up to the surface so they could breathe,” he said. “I had to shift from one to another. I think we were in the water for three hours trying to survive.”
He watched helplessly as one exhausted child drowned, spitting up a white liquid, he said, then pushed the other toward the mother, “so he could at least keep his head up.”
Mr. Kurdi then apologized, saying he could no longer speak, and ended the conversation with one parting message.
“What I really want now is for the smuggling to stop, and to find a solution for those people who are paying the blood of their hearts just to leave,” he said.
“Yesterday I went to one of the smuggling points and told people trying to get smuggled at least not to take their kids on these boats. I told them my story, and some of them changed their minds.”

Obama re-assures Saudi Arabia over Iran

"This is obviously a challenging time in world affairs, particularly in the Middle East," Obama said of his meeting with King Salman bin Abd al Aziz of Saudi Arabia.
In addition to Iran and its "de-stabilizing activities in the region," Obama said he and the king would discuss ongoing conflicts in Yemen and Syria, and the battle against the Islamic State. Obama said they would also talk about the global economy, climate change and clean energy production.
Speaking with an interpreter, King Salman said the U.S.-Saudi relationship "is beneficial not only to our two countries, but to the entire world and to our region."
Before the Oval Office session, Obama administration aides said U.S. and Saudi officials would cover a variety of joint security and counter-terrorism efforts with Iran topping the list"We understand that Saudi Arabia has concerns about Iran's behavior in the region," said White House spokesman Ben Rhodes.
In an unusual move, Obama personally greeted the king at the door of the West Wing after the Saudi motorcade rolled up.
The meeting came as the Obama administration lines up support for the agreement in which the United States and its allies end economic sanctions on Iran as it gives up the means to make nuclear weapons.
Saudi Arabia and some of its neighbors are skeptical that Iran will live up to its end of the bargain. They also say Iran will use the non-sanctioned flow of money to finance terrorism in other countries, such as Yemen and Syria.
Rhodes said the Obama administration will "continue to be focused on discussing with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf partners how we can build more effective capabilities and cooperation to counter that Iranian activity.Obama and aides say the agreement will block Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. In selling the deal to skeptical Arab countries, they are also pledging stepped-up defense assistance against Iranian aggression.
Members of the Republican congressional majority, also critical of the Iran deal, are pushing for a resolution of disapproval. Obama has said he would veto such a resolution, and the administration expects to have enough lawmakers to sustain a veto.
King Salman was making first visit to Washington since ascending to the throne in January.
Outside the White House, demonstrators gathered to protest Saudi Arabia's human rights recordThe organization Human Rights Watch said Saudi Arabia executes people in record numbers, including non-violent drug offenders, represses and jails dissidents, and discriminates against women and religious minorities.
"We've seen little sign in his first seven months that King Salman is prepared to end longstanding abuses at home," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.
Whitson also criticized Saudi Arabia's own military activity in Yemen, saying its U.S.-backed air campaign against Houthi forces "has included indiscriminate attacks and the use of cluster munitions that may be war crimes."
Obama and King Salman held a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office, followed by a working lunch.
Also on the president's schedule Friday: A late afternoon meeting with Defense Secretary Ashton Carter.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/09/04/obama-king-salman-bin-abd-al-aziz-saudi-arabia-iran-nuclear-deal/71697468/
6) This story was written based on proximity, because it is about the main football team in Austin, TX, where we live.
Moving in right direction 
Horns aren’t ready to be a national power again, but signs of progress are obvious. 
   Call it the Season of Redemption. 
   Lord knows the Longhorns need to redeem themselves. 
   You have to admit that after a highly disappointing 6-7 season in Charlie Strong’s first year, that sounds a lot better than the Year After Bad Coin Tosses, Costly Turnovers and a Horrendous Bowl Game. 
   Strong openly conceded in August he fully expected to hop off the plane from Louisville, “push a button” and be off and running at Texas. Uh, not so fast. Now push may come to shove. 
   As he heads into his second season in the Big Time, he has an unproven but experienced quarterback, a questionable but improving offensive line, a defense missing six key play-makers from 2014, a wealth of freshman talent and an anxious fan base. 
   Strong has yet to push the button to return Texas to the elite for the first time since 
2009 as he tries to keep his program afloat and turn the corner in 2016. He’s clearly a year away. No one expects a double-win season, especially when Texas’ five toughest games all come on the road. 
   But there are promising signs. 
   The mentality of the team appears strong. Practices were spirited, intense. Guard Kent Perkins went so far as to predict a national championship for the Longhorns. Slow down, Perk. 
   The talent level, too, is on the uptick as Strong promises to start as many as seven true or redshirt freshmen in the opener against Notre Dame. Here’s betting about 15 play. 
   Based on those workouts and interviews with the coaches, players and sources, here are my Texas predictions for 2015, many of which probably will be crazy: 
   • Tyrone Swoopes will start every game. Strong and play-caller Shawn Watson have so much invested in the junior quarterback and have totally bought in to his advanced maturity and ability to rally the team around him. That faith may not be shared yet by fans or media until it’s justified by results. It’s time. 
   • Swoopes will improve his touchdown/interception ratio and throw for 20 TDs with 10 picks. 
   • He will complete 61 percent of his passes, throw for 2,183 yards and run for 312 yards and five touchdowns. 
   • His backup, Jerrod Heard, will get a few series at Notre Dame — Strong should play him some in the second quarter — play sporadically this season and finish with 254 yards rushing and seven scores. 
   • Heard will be intercepted four times and throw for 483 yards and two touchdowns. 
   • Two of Texas’ picks will be returned for touchdowns. 
   • Johnathan Gray, lighter on his feet this season at 211 pounds and highly motivated, won’t have to share top billing with anyone. But the backfield is well-set with competent, physical power runners in D’Onta Foreman and freshman Chris Warren III. Gray will not top 1,000 yards but will rush for 932 yards and seven touchdowns. Foreman will add 385 yards and three scores, and Warren will manage 272 yards and one score. Texas will try to pound the ball late in games behind an upgraded offensive line. 
   • On that line, left tackle Connor Williams will be named to the freshman All-America team. With Williams and rookie guard Patrick Vahe already in the starting lineup, players have been put on notice that no one’s position is secure. The two novices will be on NFL rosters someday. Jake Raulerson will press Taylor Doyle for minutes at center. The line will be 
the most improved part of the team. 
   • Expect a revolving door at wide receiver. I love long-limbed freshman John Burt, who will start, and I’m real high on Dorian Leonard, who had a strong fall camp and will have 23 grabs for 267 yards and a score. Burt will catch 32 passes for 415 yards and three scores. Marcus Johnson morphs into John Harris and makes 65 catches for 787 yards and finds the end zone eight times. 
   • Daje Johnson will still drop as many balls as he catches, but also will jet-sweep his way to at least one long TD run and catch 29 passes for 232 yards and three scores. He’ll also be the punt returner — at least until his first two fumbles. Armanti Foreman has 24 receptions for 438 yards and two scores. Freakish DeAndre McNeal, who has a nasty mindset, will block his butt off and also catch 17 balls for 212 yards and a score. 
   • Strong and defensive coordinator Vance Bedford have touted a stacked defensive line as the team’s No. 1 strength, but there isn’t a Malcom Brown in the bunch. Let’s hope the dozen or so linemen provide enough muscle up front that the back seven aren’t exposed. Shiro Davis will lead the team with six sacks and 10 pressures, and Tank Jackson will be the most disruptive force inside with 75 tackles and eight for losses.
   • Middle linebacker Malik Jefferson is the real deal. He’ll be the Big 12’s freshman of the year and record 89 tackles. Peter Jinkens will be solid. Texas’ linebackers will be fast, but there’s little depth. Always been big on Naashon Hughes. Anthony Wheeler, yet another freshman, will pleasantly surprise. 
   • The secondary will have its shares of successes and failures. Texas will play as many as eight players there, including rising stars Kris Boyd and Holton Hill. John Bonney grabbed the second cornerback spot. Duke Thomas will have flashes of excellence at nickel, but also will get burned occasionally. Safety Jason Hall will develop into a more consistent tackler instead of just trying to blow up running backs. The team will have nine interceptions. 
   • The defense will have some growing pains before developing into a good unit by November or “at some point in the season,” Bedford said. 
   • Michael Dickson and Mitchell Becker will both get chances to punt. 
   • Nick Rose will kick a 50-yard-plus field goal and will miss one in the 30s. He’ll finish with 13 field goals in 18 attempts. 
   • Texas will beat a team it shouldn’t (Oklahoma), lose to a team it shouldn’t (Kansas State) and flirt with one of the biggest national upsets before falling short (TCU). The Longhorns will finish 7-5 and play Texas A&M in the Liberty Bowl on Jan. 2. 
   The 2016 season can’t get here soon enough.
FOUND ON AUSTIN AMERICAN STATESMAN
7)This article was written based on timeliness. I is talking about games just last week to update us.
Bobcats endure ‘growing pains’ 
Volleyball team seeks fixes amid challenging start. 
By Steve Habel American-Statesman Correspondent 
   SAN MARCOS — Texas State’s volleyball team opens its home schedule this weekend with matches against UTSA, Indiana, Prairie View A&M and Lamar after starting 0-3 last week against No. 17 Arizona, the Big 12’s TCU and SMU, which is picked to finish second in the American Athletic Conference. 
   The Bobcats (0-3) failed to win a set at last week’s SMU/TCU Classic and continue to search for a reliable and cohesive rotation. Fourteen players have already been used as Texas State has alternated between 5-1 and 6-2 offensive sets. 
   “We knew going into the season that we would have some growing pains and have to find out where all our pieces fit,” coach Karen Chisum said. 
   Setters Erin Hoppe and Emily Shelton have split time. Hoppe also has logged some time as a hitter. Jaliyah Bolden (19 kills) and Kelsey Weynand 
   (17) have led the offense so far. Alex Silva has spent most of the time at libero. 
   Bobcats will play Baylor: Texas State and Baylor agreed to a three-year football series this week, sending the Bobcats to Waco in 2021 and 2023 and hosting Baylor in 2022. 
   New radio home for Bobcats: KVET (1300 AM) will be Texas State’s flagship station for football and men’s basketball 
the next two years. That includes pregame and post-game shows, Dennis Franchione’s weekly radio show and “Bobcat Minute” updates throughout the week. 
   Soccer falls to UTEP: Lynsey Curry’s second goal of the season gave the Bobcats an early lead, but UTEP scored at the 78th minute mark to win 2-1 on Sunday. The Bobcats, who dropped to 1-2, play at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi on Friday and return home Sunday against Prairie View. 
   “We came out really purposeful and driven, but then we relaxed and we never really found ourselves again,” Bobcats coach Kat Conner said. “We can’t get caught playing the other team’s style.” 
   Sun Belt adds Coastal Carolina: Coastal Carolina has accepted the Sun Belt’s invitation to join and will begin competing in all sports except football in the fall of 2016. 
   The Chanticleers’ football program will transition from FCS into FBS; its first year with FBS status will be 2018. 
   That means Coastal Carolina will compete as a Sun Belt member in 2017 and be eligible to win the conference championship, but can’t play in a bowl until 2018. 
   Ten of CCU’s 18 athletic programs qualified for NCAA postseason championships in 2014-15.
FOUND ON AUSTIN AMERICAN STATESMAN

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