Friday, May 30, 2014

Canadavisa Social – Help Us Hit 75k!

Canadavisa Social – Help Us Hit 75k!

Canadavisa Social – Help Us Hit 75k!


Did you know that you can connect with Canadavisa on different social media websites? We have overhauled the look and feel of our many pages to give you the best online experience possible! Make sure to check us out, and as always feel free to connect with us and share with your friends. Remember, if you are looking for “Your Clear Path to Canada”, you know where to go!
Facebook
The Canadavisa Facebook page has grown to almost 75,000 members. Make sure to tell your friends and family about our page, the best place on Facebook to get news and information about Canadian immigration!
We have recently updated our Facebook page, and all of our social media outlets, with a lovely new winter theme. Visit and let us know what you think!
What can you do on our Facebook page?
  • Read exciting daily posts on Canadian immigration
  • Watch exclusive videos
  • Get answers to your general immigration questions
  • Connect with others interested in Canadian immigration
  • And more! Twitter
  • Canadavisa Social – Help Us Hit 75k!
    Canadavisa’s Twitter page is the place to go to find out the latest Canadian immigration news. Whether it is breaking news, an interesting story, or a cool fact about
    Canada,you will find it here first!
    LinkedIn
    If you are a user of this popular professional networking site, make sure to connect with Canadavisa on our profile page. If you would like to connect with Attorney David Cohen professionally, you may also find him on LinkedIn. On the site, you will encounter hundreds of Canadian and international professionals interested in immigration to Canada.

    Canadavisa Social – Help Us Hit 75k!Google+Our Google+ page is the newest addition to Canada Visa’s social hubs. Check us out, and add Canadavisa to your circle today

Breaking News: Re-Opening of Federal Skilled Worker Program

Breaking News: Re-Opening of Federal Skilled Worker Program

Breaking News: Re-Opening of Federal Skilled Worker Program


On Wednesday, April 23, 2014, the Government of Canada announced new occupations and caps for the popular Federal Skilled Worker (FSW) program. Additional important information has been announced for the Federal Skilled Trades (FST) and Canadian Experience Class (CEC) programs.

The new changes go into effect for all three programs on May 1, 2014.

“This is a long-awaited and exciting announcement for applicants all over the world,” said Attorney David Cohen. “I am certain that in the coming days we will see an incredible amount of excitement generated for the FSW program in particular, which has historically been the most popular path to Canadian Permanent Residency.”

Federal Skilled Worker Announcements

Effective May 1, 2014, the FSW will be accepting an overall total of 25,000 new applications. Applicants must have at least one year of work experience in one of 50 eligible occupations. A maximum of 1,000 applications will be accepted per eligible occupation.

The eligible occupations include many widely practiced professions. They are as follows:

1. Senior managers – financial, communications and other business services (NOC 0013) 2. Senior managers – trade, broadcasting and other services, n.e.c. (0015) 3. Financial managers (0111) 4. Human resources managers (0112) 5. Purchasing managers (0113) 6. Insurance, real estate and financial brokerage managers (0121) 7. Managers in health care (0311) 8. Construction managers (0711) 9. Home building and renovation managers (0712) 10. Managers in natural resources production and fishing (0811) 11. Manufacturing managers (0911) 12. Financial auditors and accountants (1111) 13. Financial and investment analysts (1112) 14. Securities agents, investment dealers and brokers (1113) 15. Other financial officers (1114) 16. Professional occupations in advertising, marketing and public relations (1123) 17. Supervisors, finance and insurance office workers (1212) 18. Property administrators (1224) 19. Geoscientists and oceanographers (2113) 20. Civil engineers (2131) 21. Mechanical engineers (2132) 22. Electrical and electronics engineers (2133) 23. Petroleum engineers (2145) 24. Information systems analysts and consultants (2171) 25. Database analysts and data administrators (2172) 26. Software engineers and designers (2173) 27. Computer programmers and interactive media developers (2174) 28. Mechanical engineering technologists and technicians (2232) 29. Construction estimators (2234) 30. Electrical and electronics engineering technologists and technicians (2241) 31. Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics (2243) 32. Inspectors in public and environmental health and occupational health and safety (2263) 33. Computer network technicians (2281) 34. Nursing co-ordinators and supervisors (3011) 35. Registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses (3012) 36. Specialist physicians (3111) 37. General practitioners and family physicians (3112) 38. Dietitians and nutritionists (3132) 39. Audiologists and speech-language pathologists (3141) 40. Physiotherapists (3142) 41. Occupational therapists (3143) 42. Respiratory therapists, clinical perfusionists and cardiopulmonary technologists (3214) 43. Medical radiation technologists (3215) 44. Medical sonographers (3216) 45. Licensed practical nurses (3233) 46. Paramedical occupations (3234) 47. University professors and lecturers (4011) 48. Psychologists (4151) 49. Early childhood educators and assistants (4214) 50. Translators, terminologists and interpreters (5125)

Applicants under the FSW program will be assessed according to the same criteria as 2013. Applicants are assessed on a points grid that takes into account important factors such as education, language skills, work experience, age, and adaptability to Canada. All applicants must meet minimum language requirements in either English or French.

In addition to skilled workers, the FSW program includes streams for PhD holders and individuals who have received eligible job offers from Canadian employers. A maximum of 500 PhD applicants will be accepted under the upcoming program. Applicants who hold valid job offers are not subject to any intake caps.

“While it is exciting to see so many occupations on this list, the most popular are likely to fill very quickly,” said Attorney David Cohen. “I strongly encourage anybody interested in this program to seize the moment and prepare to submit their application much sooner rather than later.”

Federal Skilled Trades Announcements

The FST program is for applicants with experience in a skilled trade. As of May 1, the FST program will be accepting a maximum of 5,000 applications for review. All NOC B level trades will be eligible for this program. This amounts to a total of 90 different occupations.

A maximum of 100 applications will be accepted under any single occupation. The 90 eligible occupations fall into the following general categories:

Major Group 72: Industrial, electrical and construction trades; Major Group 73: Maintenance and equipment operation trades; Major Group 82: Supervisors and technical occupations in national resources, agriculture and related production; Major Group 92: Processing, manufacturing and utilities supervisors and central control operators; Minor Group 632: chefs and cooks; Minor Group 633: butchers and bakers

Canadian Experience Class Announcements

The CEC program was created for individuals who have already gained skilled work experience in Canada. As of May 1, the program will accept a maximum of 8,000 new applications. Any skilled occupation is eligible*, however for NOC B level occupations a maximum of 100 applications will be accepted per occupation.

*The following six occupations are not eligible to apply under the CEC:

Administrative officers (NOC 1221) Administrative assistants (1241) Accounting technicians/bookkeepers (1311) Cooks (6322) Food service supervisors (6311) Retail sales supervisors (6211)

What This Means for Applicants

Many prospective immigrants have been eagerly waiting for these changes to be announced. This new information confirms that all three programs are open for business once again.

The FSW program is more open to applicants than it has been in the past few years. The cap has increased more than five times over, from just 5,000 last year to 25,000 this year. In addition, the number of eligible occupations has more than doubled, from just 24 last year to 50 as of May 1. This means that skilled workers who were not eligible for the program in previous years because of their professional experience may now be eligible to apply.

“I am excited to hear that Canada is opening up its doors to so many talented professionals,” said Attorney David Cohen. “This is the last time applicants can apply under the FSW program in its current format. Starting in 2015, the Government of Canada has announced that it will be transitioning to a new immigration selection system known as ‘Express Entry’. This is just one more reason for interested applicants to act now, and take steps toward achieving their immigration goals.”

To find out if you are eligible for the FS

Knowlton Nash, longtime anchor of CBC's The National, dead at 86.

Knowlton Nash, longtime anchor of CBC's The National, dead at 86

Toronto-born Nash was one of Canada's top journalists

  Knowlton Nash, longtime anchor of CBC's The National, has died. He was 86.

Knowlton Nash, a decorated Canadian journalist who went from selling newspapers as a boy in Toronto to serving a decade as anchor of CBC's The National, has died at age 86.
Born Cyril Knowlton Nash in Toronto in 1927, it didn't take him long to find his calling. At eight years old, he put together his own newspaper. At 10, he operated his own newsstand. Later, during his first big journalism job as night editor with the British United Press, a Toronto-based wire service, he wrote an estimated 4,000 articles.
"Journalism has been the love of my life," Nash told The Canadian Press in 2006.
Journalism loved him back.
Shortly after taking a job in Washington with the International Federation of Agricultural Producers — during which he moonlighted as a freelance writer filing stories for a range of Canadian publications — Nash landed a job as Washington correspondent for CBC's Newsmagazine. The high-profile role and his legendary work ethic thrust him into the spotlight.
During the post, he tracked down Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara for an exclusive interview. He was one of the last reporters to interview Robert F. Kennedy before the New York senator's assassination in 1968. Nash also dodged gunfire in the Dominican Republic as U.S. forces fought with rebels, something he later had some fun with on the program Front Page Challenge.  
"I don't put myself first. I put work first," Nash said, during a CBC Life and Times documentary released in 2001.

Move to management

In Washington, Nash went on to cover the Cuban missile crisis, space launches at Cape Canaveral and the riots surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. But in 1969, he took a management role at the CBC, a career move that surprised many of his colleagues. 
It didn't go well. In 1970, just one year after Nash had begun his new role, then Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau blasted the CBC for its coverage of the October Crisis, calling it a propaganda vehicle for the FLQ. Nash reacted by sending a directive to limit coverage of the crisis.
Nash later owned up to the error, saying: "It was my fault. We went too far — farther than we should have."
Nash's management work did, however, give him a rare understanding of the CBC's history and culture, something he would write about in several well-received books, including The Microphone Wars: A History of Triumph and Betrayal at the CBC and Cue The Elephant!  Backstage Tales at the CBC.

Birth of an anchor

In 1978, Nash returned to the screen as chief correspondent and anchor at The National.
His return upset some, but Nash's steady presence won over. While critics said he had an unemotional delivery, he was beloved by Canadian audiences.
QUEEN VISIT
Queen Elizabeth smiles as Knowlton Nash looks on from right at the CBC in Toronto in 2002. (Aaron Harris/Canadian Press)
As the face of The National, Nash covered all the major stories, from the collapse of Joe Clark's government to the 1980 Quebec referendum on the sovereignty question, and Trudeau's 1984 "walk in the snow" resignation.
Nash's look also left an impression on TV viewers — wearing thick-rimmed glasses and in bold attire such as a pink shirt under a suit jacket — although management eventually forced him to give up the colour, according to CBC archives.
On screen, Nash's voice was engaging and amiable, but he believed in a straight-faced style of news presentation so as to not distort a story.
"It's inconceivable to him to actually contaminate a report with his own view. I think he'd probably blow up if he tried," said longtime CBC producer Mark Starowicz.
Nash officially retired from CBC News after hosting The National on Nov. 28, 1992, handing over the reins to Peter Mansbridge, with whom he had been sharing hosting duties since 1988.

Defender of the CBC

Nash hosted several more programs at the CBC after his retirement, and continued to have a close connection to the public broadcaster.
After dramatic cuts to the CBC's budget in 1996, Nash spoke out in an interview with TVO.

"These cuts are really into the bone … it's fundamentally hurting the whole concept of public broadcasting," he told host Steve Paikin.
"People are thinking about money and jobs and the future rather than what they should be doing: thinking creatively about how we can create a better program."
In 2006, Nash criticized the CBC for choosing to push back The National so it could air a popular ABC reality show in the 10 p.m. ET slot.

Awards and accolades

Nash was named an officer of the Order of Canada in 1989, became a member of the Order of Ontario in 1998, and was given honorary degrees from several Canadian universities, including the University of Toronto.
He is a member of the Canadian News Hall of Fame, and was given the President's Award of the Radio and Television News Directors' Association in 1990.
Along with his books on the CBC, Nash also wrote his memoir, History on the Run, about his time as a foreign correspondent, as well as history books like Kennedy and Diefenbaker: The Feud that Helped Topple a Government.
In 2002, Nash was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. "There are a lot worse things that could be happening to you … with Parkinson's, you just have to cope with it and get on with it," Nash told the Hill Times in 2010.
Nash spent his final years in Florida, alongside his wife of four decades, Lorraine Thomson, who also worked as a host with the CBC.

 

Why Tom Cruise will always be a movie star.

Why Tom Cruise will always be a movie star.

Why Tom Cruise will always be a movie star.

I have interviewed everyone from Brad Pitt to George Clooney, (Lucky me!) and I have observed that what makes them stars. It’s not what's on the big screen but how they treat their fans.
Case in point, of the biggest stars in my time: Tom Cruise.
Currently on a relentless media tour for his sci-fi thriller, “Edge of Tomorrow,” Cruise was scheduled to make a quick stop at Toronto's Scotiabank Theatre Wednesday night. Few details prior to the event were released to either the public or the small number of invited media. To me, between the police presence and the private security detail, it looked like this stop had greater security than a visit by the prime minister.
Warner Bros., the studio behind the reportedly $178-million picture was stingy with details of this red carpet event, not even confirming which star would be attending. They claimed it was meant to be a surprise for fans at the screening, but EVERYONE knew we were under their “Cruise Control.” We were told “whoever” was attending would arrive at 6:58 p.m.
At precisely 6:58, the de rigueur SUVs drove with purpose into the underground parking garage, and minutes later. Tom Cruise stepped out flashing his famous megawatt smile. He didn't walk to the waiting media, focusing instead on the throngs of fans just hoping for a glimpse.
Turns out they got much more than that.
Handshakes turned to photo ops and a willing ear to listen to whatever they had to say. One fan even shared his love of fishing (apparently something Cruise enjoys), showing the star a picture of the 51-pound lake trout caught in the Northwest Territories’ Great West Lake back in 1998.
They say it’s the little things that count and for these fans, a little went a long way.

Shelly Sterling agrees to sell Clippers for $2 billion

Shelly Sterling agrees to sell Clippers for $2 billion

Shelly Sterling agrees to sell Clippers for $2 billion
Shelly Sterling
Shelly Sterling said in a statement issued late Thursday that she'd signed a binding contract for a sale of the Clippers by The Sterling Family Trust to Ballmer in what would be a record deal if approved by the NBA.
Ballmer "will be a terrific owner," Sterling said, "We have worked for 33 years to build the Clippers into a premier NBA franchise. I am confident that Steve will take the team to new levels of success."
Sterling negotiated the sale after her husband, Donald Sterling, made racist remarks that were made public. The remarks included Sterling telling girlfriend V. Stiviano not to bring blacks to Clippers games, specifically mentioning Hall of Famer Magic Johnson.
Shelly Sterling's statement noted that she made the deal "under her authority as the sole trustee of The Sterling Family Trust, which owns the Clippers." Donald Sterling's attorneys contend that he is a co-owner and therefore must give his assent for the deal to go through. They also say he won't be giving it.
"Sterling is not selling the team," said his attorney, Bobby Samini. "That's his position. He's not going to sell."
Ballmer beat out bids by Guggenheim Partners and a group including former NBA All-Star Grant Hill after presenting an "all-around superior bid," according to an individual with knowledge of the negotiations. The individual, who wasn't authorized to speak publicly, said Ballmer made more than an hour-long personal visit to Shelly Sterling's Malibu home Sunday and laid out his plan.
"He knocked their socks off, they bonded, had a good connection," the individual said. The amount was also the largest of the offers, and Ballmer was one potential buyer to deal with rather than numerous members of a group.
Ballmer said in a statement that he is honoured to have his name submitted to the NBA for approval and thanked the league for working collaboratively with him throughout the process.
"I love basketball. And I intend to do everything in my power to ensure that the Clippers continue to win -- and win big -- in Los Angeles," Ballmer said. "LA is one of the world's great cities -- a city that embraces inclusiveness, in exactly the same way that the NBA and I embrace inclusiveness."
On Thursday, Magic Johnson lauded the deal on his Twitter account: "Steve Ballmer owning the Clippers is a big win for the City of LA and all the people who live in the City of Angels!"
Though Donald Sterling's attorneys now say he won't agree to sell the team, a May 22 letter obtained by The Associated Press and written by another of Sterling's attorneys that says that "Donald T. Sterling authorizes Rochelle Sterling to negotiate with the National Basketball Association regarding all issues in connection with a sale of the Los Angeles Clippers team." It includes the line "read and approved" and Donald Sterling's signature.
Samini said Sterling has had a change of heart primarily because of "the conduct of the NBA." He said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver's decision to ban Sterling for life and fine him $2.5 million as well as to try to oust him as an owner was him acting as "judge, jury and executioner."
"They're telling me he should stand back and let them take his team because his opinion on that particular day was not good, was not popular?" Samini said. "It doesn't make sense. He's going to fight."
It's unclear how the agreement will affect a special hearing of NBA owners planned for Tuesday in New York to consider the charge against Donald Sterling for damaging the league with his comments. A three-quarters vote of the 30 owners to support the charge would have resulted in the termination of both Sterlings' ownership of the franchise. The deal is expected to be presented to the league before Tuesday, according to the individual.
Silver has said his preference would be for the franchise to be sold rather than seized -- and that means sold in its entirety, with neither Sterling retaining a stake. Though according to the deal's terms Ballmer will own 100 per cent of the team, Shelly Sterling may continue to be involved under conditions worked out privately with Ballmer, the individual said.
Franchise sale prices have soared since the current collective bargaining agreement was ratified in 2011. The Milwaukee Bucks were just sold to New York investment firm executives Marc Lasry and Wesley Edens for about $550 million, an NBA record.
Last year, Vivek Ranadive's group acquired a 65 per cent controlling interest in the Sacramento Kings at a total franchise valuation of more than $534 million.
This is not Ballmer's first foray into potential NBA ownership. Ballmer and investor Chris Hansen headed a group that agreed to a deal to buy the Kings from the Maloof family in January 2013 with the intention of moving the team to Seattle, where the SuperSonics played until 2008.
But Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson lobbied the NBA for time to put together a bid to keep the team in California, and though the Ballmer-Hansen group later increased its offer, owners voted to deny the bid for relocation and the Kings were sold to Ranadive.
The former Microsoft CEO helped Bill Gates transform the company from a startup with fewer than 40 employees and $12 million in annual revenue into the world's most valuable business. The pair met in 1973 while living down the hall from each other in a Harvard dorm.
During his tenure at Microsoft, Ballmer was known for his competitive drive and wild displays of emotion and hand-waving.
At his farewell address to Microsoft employees, he high-fived and hugged audience members, pumped his fists in the air, and even shed tears as the popular 1987 song "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" played on the sound system. In a video of the event widely viewed on YouTube, he screams: "You work for the greatest company in the world!"

Monday, May 26, 2014

Justin Trudeau says Liberal culture has changed

 Justin Trudeau says Liberal culture has changed

Party more concerned with own fate rather than that of Canadians in the last decade, Trudeau says

 

 Justin Trudeau says Liberal culture has changed

 

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says the party's drop in support in the last 10 years or so can be put down to too much navel-gazing.
Trudeau said Saturday the Liberals were more concerned during that time with their own fate rather than that of Canadians.
He said that attitude illustrates why the party went from 172 seats in 2000 to its current 35-member caucus.
"The biggest problem was that we...started thinking more about ourselves than we did about Canadians," Trudeau said at a meeting of the party's Quebec wing in Victoria ville, Que.
He told reporters he believes he has changed that culture since becoming leader in April 2013.
"Despite all the media, the social media, the advertising, it's the work on the ground and the human contact that count," he said.
Trudeau refused to criticize his predecessors' policies over the last decade.
The Liberals have only eight of the 75 seats in Quebec and Trudeau acknowledged they have bridges to rebuild in the province.
"Not only will Quebecers be present in my government, they will be listened to.
"It won't just be a prime minister from Quebec but there will be ministers from Quebec in strong positions."

 

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Police investigating sexting complaints at high school

Police investigating sexting complaints at high school



Police investigating sexting complaints at high school


CARMEL, Ind. -- Police are investigating complaints that students at an Indiana high school are in possession of "inappropriate digital images" after widespread reports on social media that freshmen were being disciplined for having sexually explicit photos on their phones.
Police and officials at Carmel High School would not say whether the images were sexual in nature or what laws may have been broken. But students reported Thursday on Twitter that school administrators were conducting a "nude raid" and suspending those who had "sexts" saved on their cellphones.
Lt. Joe Bickel, Carmel Police Department spokesman, issued a statement Friday with few specifics, saying only that an investigation is ongoing into a complaint the department received Tuesday regarding the images.
"The Carmel-Clay Schools and the Carmel Police Department are currently working together in this investigation," the statement reads.
It would be the second sexting investigation in suburban Indianapolis schools in the past six months. Sexting is the exchange of nude photos through messaging programs such as Snapchat.
Under Indiana law on child pornography and exploitation, it is a felony offense to "present" or "exhibit" digital images of sexual conduct by someone younger than 18 — even when the messenger also is underage. A separate provision, applying only to phone images, lowers the minimum age to 16.
In December, more than a dozen cellphones were seized at Avon High School from students who were allegedly sharing nude images of their classmates. In that case, police discovered the images hidden in a cellphone app that was disguised as a calculator.
Authorities, however, declined to press charges.
In Carmel, officials were tight-lipped Friday about the allegations, which came to light during final exams. School officials did not return calls seeking comment.
Bickel would not elaborate on the images.
"There's a wide range of different types of images, so at this time (Chief Tim Green) doesn't want me to get into any specifics on what the images are," Bickel said. "We have talked to the prosecutor's office, and once the investigation's complete ... we'll determine at that point whether any law has been broken."

The Musical Performances from the DWTS 2014 Finale

The Musical Performances from the DWTS 2014 Finale

Watch the video


In addition to all the fantastic dances we saw last night, the Dancing with the Stars season 18 finale alsofeatured a bunch of great musical performances from chart-topping artists. Iggy Azalea and Charli XCX kicked off the live performances with their smash hit "Fancy," which you can watch above.

   
Christina Perri performed her song "Human," which you might remember from Amy Purdy and Derek Hough's Week 3 Contemporary dance. It was a fitting tune for Amy's moving routine she dedicated to her father, and it was moving again when Ms. Perri performed it live:

   
Ariana Grande also made an appearance in the ballroom last night, and played her hit "Problem," which you've likely heard if you own a radio or a television. Watch her perform it live right here:


   
Last but certainly not least, we had our very own DWTS 2014 contestant Cody Simpson, who performed his song "Surfboard" with a little dance assist from his partner Witney Carson. Watch Cody and Witney below:


   

Donald Sterling agrees to allow wife to sell Clippers

Donald Sterling agrees to allow wife to sell Clippers

Donald Sterling agrees to allow wife to sell Clippers

Donald Sterling has authorized his wife Shelly to sell the Los Angeles Clippers, and she will try to sell the team voluntarily, according to a person familiar with the negotiations.
The person spoke to USA TODAY Sports Friday on condition of anonymity because of the private nature of the talks.
The person declined to say why Shelly Sterling decided to change her mind after previously saying she would fight to keep her 50% ownership share of the team.
There are contingencies in the agreement, a second person with direct knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports. Shelly Sterling has agreed to sell the team as long as she retains a minority interest in the Clippers, according to the second person, who also requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the negotiations.
It was not immediately clear whether the NBA will agree to Shelly Sterling's terms. The NBA, which banned Sterling for life on April 29, has said its move to terminate Donald Sterling's ownership would also terminate any other ownership interest in the team.
A person with knowledge of her interest told USA TODAY Sports that Oprah Winfrey is still interested in putting together a bid with David Geffen and Larry Ellison. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because no other announcement was being made.
VIDEO: FIVE BEST CANDIDATES TO BUY CLIPPERS
For The Win's Nate Scott has a list that includes Oprah and Floyd Mayweather.
On Tuesday at a press conference before the draft lottery, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said he was open to the idea of the Sterlings selling the team without conducting the special hearing on June 3 to terminate their ownership.
"I'll only say that Mr. Sterling still owns the Los Angeles Clippers. Mrs. Sterling as I understand it through a trust owns 50% of the team, as well," Silver said. "It is their team to sell, and so he knows what the league's point of view is, and so I'm sure if he wanted to sell the team on some reasonable timetable, I'd prefer he sell it than we go through this process. … I'm open to that."
The Clippers are owned by the Sterling Family Trust, in the names of Donald and Shelly Sterling. The trust will be bequeathed to their children upon death.
Shelly Sterling's attorney, Pierce O'Donnell, has been in ongoing talks with the NBA as she tried to keep her stake in the team.
The NBA charged Sterling with damaging the league and its teams with his racist comments and said he engaged in other conduct that hurt its relationship with fans and merchandising partners.
Sterling was banned for life and fined $2.5 million by Commissioner Adam Silver after the release of a recording in which he made racist remarks. His attorney had said last week that Sterling would not pay the fine and did not warrant any punishment.
PHOTOS: DONALD STERLING THROUGH THE YEARS

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Kevin Johnson and Donna Leinwand Leger, USA TODAY

Kevin Johnson and Donna Leinwand Leger, USA TODAY

Kevin Johnson and Donna Leinwand Leger, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — The U.S. accused Chinese military officials of hacking into several U.S. enterprises, including Westinghouse and U.S. Steel, to steal "significant" amounts of trade secrets and intellectual property in an indictment made public Monday.
It is the first time the U.S. has charged a state actor in a criminal cyber espionage case.
The Chinese hackers, using military and intelligence resources, downloaded massive amounts of industrial information, including strategic plans, from U.S. businesses, the indictment said. In addition to Westinghouse Electric and U.S. Steel, victims included Solar World, United Steel Workers Union, Allegheny Technologies Inc.and Alcoa.
The indictment, out of western Pennsylvania, charges five military "hackers," officers in the Chinese People's Liberation Army, with directing a conspiracy to steal information from six American companies in critical industries, including nuclear power, solar power and metals.
Federal authorities allegedly traced hackers to a single building in Shanghai. The hacking began in 2006 and continued until last month, federal authorities said. Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin identified the hackers as unit 61398 of the Chinese military.
Attorney General Eric Holder called it a case of "economic espionage."
The case "represents the first ever charges against a state actor for this type of hacking," Holder said. "The range of trade secrets and other sensitive business information stolen in this case is significant and demands an aggressive response."
Holder said the Chinese hackers stole information that would give insight into "the strategy and vulnerabilities" of the American companies and give Chinese companies a competitive advantage.
In one instance, Carlin said hackers stole cost, pricing and strategy information from Solar World's computers, allowing Chinese competitors to price exports well below cost and take market share from Solar World. In another instance, hackers stole design plans from Westinghouse computers as the company was negotiating with a Chinese state-owned company to construct a nuclear power plant, he said.
"In the past, when we brought concerns such as these to Chinese government officials, they responded by publicly challenging us to provide hard evidence of their hacking that could stand up in court," Carlin said. "Well today, we are. For the first time, we are exposing the faces and names behind the keyboards in Shanghai used to steal from American businesses."

Monday, May 19, 2014

Romney: N.H. police official should resign for 'vile' Obama remark

Romney: N.H. police official should resign for 'vile' Obama remark

Romney: N.H. police official should resign for 'vile' Obama remark

Mitt Romney is calling on a New Hampshire police commissioner  to apologize and resign for using a racial epithet in reference to President Obama.
“The vile epithet used and confirmed by the commissioner has no place in our community: He should apologize and resign,” Romney said in a statement first reported by The Boston Herald.
Robert Copeland, the police commissioner of Wolfeboro, N.H., refused to apologize and sent a statement to his fellow commissioners after a resident complained to the town manager that she overheard the slur used by Copeland.
“I believe I did use the ‘N’ word in reference to the current occupant of the White House,” Copeland, 82, wrote to his fellow commissioners last week. “For this, I do not apologize — he meets and exceeds my criteria for such.”
Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee, owns a vacation home in Wolfeboro and spends every summer with his family at the New Hampshire house.
About 20 black people live in Wolfeboro, according to the Associated Press.
Copeland won a new three-year term on the Wolfeboro police commission in March. None of the town’s police officers is black or a member of an another minority group,according to CBS News. Town Manager David Owen has said he and the town’s board of selectmen cannot remove an elected official from office.

Justices split in 'Raging Bull' decision

Justices split in 'Raging Bull' decision

Justices split in 'Raging Bull' decision

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled Monday that MGM can be sued for copyright infringement more than three decades after releasing the popular boxing film Raging Bull.
The justices crossed ideological lines in their 6-3 ruling for the daughter of a man who collaborated with boxer Jake LaMotta on two screenplays and a book in the 1960s, which led to the 1980 flick starring Robert DeNiro.
The decision, written by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, gives Paula Petrella the right to proceed with her copyright infringement claim even though it was filed in 2009, long after most of the participants and witnesses died.
"MGM released Raging Bull more than three decades ago and has marketed it continuously since then," Ginsburg said. "Allowing Petrella's suit to go forward will put at risk only a fraction of the income MGM has earned during that period."
Ginsburg was joined by a mix of the court's most liberal and most conservative members. Dissenting were those closest to the middle – Justices Stephen Breyer, Anthony Kennedy and John Roberts.
"In those few and unusual cases where a plaintiff unreasonably delays in bringing suit and consequently causes inequitable harm to the defendant, the doctrine permits a court to bring about a fair result," Breyer said.
Petrella, whose father, Frank, died in 1981, sought what the statute of limitations in copyright cases offers — damages for three years from 2006-09 and an injunction against future use of his work. MGM Holdings and 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, which distributes the film on DVD, argued that she waited too long to bring the case.
Two lower courts had ruled against Petrella, and several justices noted during oral arguments earlier this year that by waiting to file her case, Petrella — and others who might follow in similar copyright cases — could be trying to maximize profits.

Sunday, May 18, 2014

How'd that get here? 10 surprising historical artifacts in the U.S.


How'd that get here? 10 surprising historical artifacts in the U.S.

According to the Bessemer Hall of History Museum in Alabama, this typewriter came from Adolf Hitler's "Eagle's Nest" near Salzburg, Austria. It was brought to the United States by a soldier assigned to the mountain retreat after the war.



(CNN) -- Wherever you go in the United States, you'll find monuments and reminders of America's history.
Whether it's the Statue of Liberty, Wright Flyer or early drawings of Mickey Mouse, there are objects that speak directly to the American experience.
But alongside all this Americana are items that made history elsewhere -- historical anomalies from around the world that have been captured, purchased, even nabbed along with lunch, with one thing in common -- they all found their way to the United States.
German submarine (Chicago)
When you think about naval warfare in World War II, you typically don't associate it with the City of Big Shoulders.
But a 1944 operation that led to the capture of the German submarine U-505 -- the first open sea capture by the U.S. Navy of an enemy warship since the War of 1812 -- was led by Chicago native Capt. Daniel Gallery.
Years after the war, when the sub was going to be scrapped, Gallery stepped forward and helped facilitate a move to the Museum of Science and Industry in his hometown.
Since Chicago is absolutely devoid of oceanside property, it took five months for the U-505 to be towed from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1954.
The sub is now exhibited in an underground hall and also serves as a war memorial.
Museum of Science and Industry, 5700 S. Lakeshore Drive, Chicago; 773-684-1414
Viking coin (Maine)
In 1957, an unusual coin was found by amateur archaeologist Guy Mellgren during a dig of a Native American village site in Maine.
Two decades later, a coin dealer identified the small silver coin not as Native American, but as Norse.
Did the subjects of Norwegian King Olaf Kyrre visit Maine during the 11th century?
Probably not, but there may have been trade between eastern native tribes that brought the coin south.
Some consider the discovery a hoax, but at the Maine State Museum in Augusta, where the "Maine Penny" is in the collection, chief archaeologist Bruce Bourque says, "Several reliable lines of evidence suggest that it is an authentic find."
Maine State Museum, 230 State St., Augusta, Maine; 207-287-2301
Adolf Hitler's telephone, typewriter, more
Closing in on Nazi Germany in 1944-45, American and allied forces came away with a number of personal items belonging to the German high command.
Taken from Adolf Hitler's personal library, the German leader's phone can now be found at the Army Signal Corps Museum at Fort Gordon, Georgia.
The phone isn't the only Hitler possession to have shown up in the United States.
The Bessemer Hall of History Museum in Alabama claims to have Hitler's typewriter (or, at least, a typewriter taken from Hitler's mountain Eagle's Nest) in its collection.
Eighty miles away, the Berman Museum of World History in Anniston, Alabama, features Hitler's silver tea service.
Danish windmill (Elk Horn, Iowa)
What goes around, comes around ... to the USA.
What goes around, comes around ... to the USA.
What once was rotten, or at least rotting, in Denmark, is now the pride of Elk Horn, Iowa.
In 1976, the town with strong Danish roots was looking for a way to celebrate America's bicentennial.
Funds were raised to acquire a disused windmill in Norre Snede, Denmark.
A carpenter disassembled the 60-foot windmill and built a matching 6-foot scale model.
The model was used as a guide for the 300 volunteers who helped reconstruct the full-size mill on American soil.
While it was a delight to many Iowans, the moving of the mill wasn't as popular in Denmark, where a law was passed to prevent the exportation of its windmills shortly afterward.
Danish Windmill, 4038 Main St., Elk Horn, Iowa; 712-764-7472
Mechanical monk (Washington)
You don't find many mechanical wonders that are nearly five centuries old, but one found its way to the Smithsonian Institution.
Back in 1562, Don Carlos, the crown prince of Spain and son of King Philip II, suffered severe head trauma after falling down some stairs.
With the prince's survival in question, the king prayed for a miracle with the promise that he'd repay it with a wonder of his own.
When the prince recovered, the miracle was attributed to San Diego de Alcalá, a monk who'd died 99 years earlier.
The king employed a clock maker to fashion a 15-inch-tall mechanical version of the monk that moved, nodded its head, genuflected and more.
To put that in perspective, the 452-year-old automaton monk was created two years before the invention of the pencil.
Smithsonian Institution, 1000 Jefferson Drive SW, Washington; 202-633-1000
Vladimir Lenin statue (Seattle)
How did a near eight-ton symbol of Vladimir Lenin make it to Seattle?
Originally erected in Poprad, Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia), the statue had a short pedestal life.
It stood for only a year, before being taken down in 1989.
An American named Lewis Carpenter saw the bronze statue in a scrapyard and figured he could make money on it.
After Carpenter mortgaged his house to pay for it, the statue was cut into three pieces to facilitate travel.
Carpenter never profited -- he died soon afterward.
His family agreed to move the statue to Seattle's quirky Fremont neighborhood, where the former revolutionary now joins a troll sculpture, a chocolate factory and, during the Solstice Parade, naked bicyclists.
The statue is for sale.
As of 2006, the asking price was $250,000.
Lenin statue, 3526 Fremont Place N., Seattle
More: Seattle beyond the Space Needle
Queen Mary (Long Beach, California)
What was once the fastest passenger ship on one ocean is now a unique attraction on another.
From her maiden voyage in the 1930s, the RMS Queen Mary was one of the fastest ocean liners of the era, being the 14-year holder of the Blue Riband for the fastest liner on the Atlantic.
It was this speed, some 30-plus knots, that best served the ship during her time as a troop carrier in World War II.
The "Grey Ghost," as she was known, was too fast for German U-boats to catch.
At the conclusion of the Queen Mary's 1,000th Atlantic crossing, the ship was retired from service and moved to Long Beach, California, where she now houses a hotel, restaurants and an amateur radio station.
The Queen Mary, 1126 Queens Highway, Long Beach, California; 877-342-0738
London Bridge (Lake Havasu City, Arizona)
England over Arizona: London Bridge in Lake Havasu City.
England over Arizona: London Bridge in Lake Havasu City.
Despite the warning implied by the nursery rhyme, London Bridge never fell down.
There's still a London Bridge over the River Thames.
But that bridge's predecessor, originally constructed in the 1820s and 1830s, moved to the United States.
Its stone exterior was disassembled piece by piece in 1967 and sold to Robert McCulloch, an Arizona developer.
McCulloch was trying to interest people in property he owned in Lake Havasu City, and when the London landmark was put up for sale, he found his attraction.
Reconstructed on a concrete skeleton over dry land, a canal was dug underneath it and flooded with water after completion.
London Bridge, London Bridge Road, Lake Havasu City, Arizona; 928-855-4115
More: 10 easy ways to experience Navajo America
Santa Anna's wooden leg (Springfield, Illinois)
Two years after leading the assault at the Battle of the Alamo, Mexican president and Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna lost his leg fighting against France in the Pastry War (started over unpaid reparations to a French baker in Mexico City).
Eight years later, during the Mexican-American War, Santa Anna lost his leg's replacement to the 4th Illinois Infantry.
As the story goes, during the Battle of Cerro Gordo in 1847, the general stopped for lunch when he was surprised by advancing American troops.
He got away, but he left a cooking chicken and his artificial leg behind.
The chicken was consumed, and the wood and cork leg can now be found at the Illinois State Military Museum.