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Miley Tops Maxim but Cyrus spoiled secret magazine list to 12 million Twitter followers

Miley Cyrus spoiled Maxim magazine's top 100 list reveal on Twitter. On May 4, Access Hollywood via Yahoo! TV reported that the former Disney princess hit up social media to brag that she took the top spot on Maxim's Hot 100 list. Miley tweeted, "Didn't know this was coming out yet! I'm so happy to be #1 on Maxims HOT 100!" With that Twitter announcement came an image of a very slinky and extremely sexy Cyrus who had donned a golden bathing suit that matched her hair and her many bracelets. The legs of the bathing suit were cut up to navel level and the photo included some hashtag remarks, including "myfanskicka**" and "dreamsdocometrue." The latter comment from the woman who may or may not still be engaged to actor Liam Hemsworth must have been thinking about her stint on the small screen, courtesy of Disney, when she played Hannah Montana. Meanwhile, Miley tops the Maxim Hot 100 in 2013 after Bar Refaeli, Leonardo DiCaprio's former

God Gesture Disqualifies Team from Texas State Championship

God gesture disqualified a team after a track meet, preventing them from moving on to the state championship. The incident happened to the Columbus, Texas track team, and this one definitely has people up in arms. The Inquisitr shared the details on May 4. The incident in question happened Friday when Derrick Hayes of the Mighty Cardinals track team from Columbus High School crossed the finish line. His team had just won the 4 x 100m relay in a decisive victory. Hayes then reportedly raised his hand and pointed to the sky. That gesture resulted in the team's disqualification. The issue in this instance is that there is a rule that there can be no celebratory gestures, including a raising of the arms, done within the competition area. My Fox Houston notes that the rule is in place to restrict taunting of opponents, and there is no rule against religious expression. The governing University Interscholastic League rules that the Columbus team had to be disqualified for “unsporting con

"Justin Bieber is gay": Message about singer's sexuality posted after E! Online Hacked

Justin Bieber recently snuggled up to his ex-girlfriend Selena Gomez for a picture prompting speculation the pair were back together. So it may have come as a surprise to some fans on Saturday when they read online that Justin is in fact gay after a message was posted on E! Online's Twitter account. The tweet read: "Exclusive: Justin Bieber to E!Online: I'm a gay." The rather strangely written post was soon followed up by what seemed like a supportive message from Selena, which read: "Exclusive: Selena Gomez tells E! she will fully supporting Justin in his coming out." Well it's nice that Selena apparently would "fully supporting" Justin if he decided he fancied the males but worry not you female Bieber lovers - you may still be in with a chance with the star (if you get to know him by following him around the world on what seems to be an endless tour) as the E! Online Twitter account was hacked and the messages posted were untrue. The tweets w

9/11 Museum Will Have A Mandatory Entrance Fee

Nonstop flow of people coming and going, the National September 11th Memorial and Museum has become one of New York's most popular attractions. "We all feel the loss as well as the family members," one man said. "So the donations that they are receiving, I'm sure, with the thousands and thousands of people visiting, I'm sure they should be making enough." But museum officials say they need more money to cover operating costs. That's why the board has voted to impose a $20 to $25 fee when the underground museum opens next year. Jim Riches, who lost a son during the attacks, said he's outraged. Ny1 reports "It's become a real commercial enterprise and it looks like that," Riches said. "We think it's disgusting and revolting. If they had a suggested donation I think all Americans would be very patriotic." Visitors who spoke to NY1 not only bristled at the idea of a mandatory fee, but at the proposed price. "I don'

Idea that American held by Venezuela is a spy 'ridiculous:' Obama

Venezuelan government's suggestion that an American citizen it has detained is a spy is "ridiculous," U.S. President Barack Obama said in a television interview recorded on Saturday during a visit to Costa Rica. Venezuela said late last month it had detained an American called Timothy Hallet Tracy, accusing him of financing opposition student demonstrations after April's disputed presidential election and saying he had clearly been trained as an intelligence agent. Venezuela said Tracy, 35, from Michigan, had received money from a foreign non-profit organization and had redirected those funds toward student organizations, seeking to provoke "civil war" reports Reuter Relatives and friends of Tracy have described him to U.S. media as a documentary maker who was in Venezuela to make a film about the presidential election. "This U.S. citizen who apparently has been detained, we will handle (it) like ... every situation where we get a U.S. citizen who gets

South Korean President to Visit United States

South Korean President Park Geun-hye has left Seoul for a five-day trip to the United States that will include a White House summit. The meeting Tuesday with President Barack Obama is expected to focus on coordinating their ideas on how to deal with North Korea, and other bilateral issues. Voanews The South Korean leader is also scheduled to address a joint meeting of Congress on Wednesday. President Park will first stop in New York to meet Monday with South Korean-born U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. President Park, who is also heading a delegation of more than 50 South Korean business leaders, will stop in Los Angeles Thursday to meet with Korean entrepreneurs.

Don't let my kids die in Saudi: father

The father of an Australian man being held in a Saudi Arabian prison on terror charges has spoken of his fear that his son might die in jail. Graham Thorne gathered with his extended Noongar family in Perth to send a message of support to his son Shayden Jamil Thorne, who has spent nearly 18 months in prison on suspicion of terrorism offences. His younger brother Junaid is also in Saudi Arabia and is wanted for questioning by local officials. Mr Thorne, who has not seen his sons since they moved to the Middle East as primary schoolboys in 1996, said he feared for his sons' life. Advertisement "My main concern is that they are going to kill my kids over there," he said. "Dad loves them and there's a big family over here that all love them and we just want them to come home." Shayden, 25, has been in custody since November 2011. Junaid, 23, is in hiding in Saudi Arabia, apparently wanted by authorities for questioning after having previously been detained for

Charlie Sheen's twin boys taken from home of mom

Brooke Mueller pictured here with the twins in 2011. Charlie Sheen's twin boys were taken out of custody of their mother, Brooke Mueller late Thursday night. Officials have reportedly deemed Mueller's home an "unsafe environment" for children, according to TMZ . Charlie Sheen, Brooke Mueller, sons Max and Bob celebrate Charlie Sheen's birthday in 2011. Sources tell the gossip site that the L.A. County Department of Children and Family Services arrived at Mueller's home with a warrant and removed 4-year-old twin boys Bob and Max from the home. A source close to Denise Richards confirmed to the New York Daily News that the two boys are currently residing with Sheen's ex-wife and mother of his two daughters.  "It just wasn't a stable environment with different nannies coming in and out, and child protective services came in and did their thing, and this is the outcome," a source close to Mueller told the Daily News. "Brooke didn’t have

Nigeria: 39 Killed, 30 Injured, 30 Houses Burnt in Fresh Wukari Crisis in Taraba, Said Police

Police in Taraba State on Saturday said 39 people were killed and 30 injured in a fresh crisis that rocked Wukari on Friday. The Police Public Relations Officer, Joseph Kwaji, confirmed the casualty figures to the News Agency of Nigeria in Jalingo. Mr. Kwaji, an Assistant Superintendent of Police, added that the injured persons were receiving treatment in various hospitals in the town. "Thirty nine corpses have been seen so far and 30 persons injured," he said. Allafrica The police spokesman added that about 30 houses were burnt by hoodlums. He said 30 persons had been arrested in connection with the crisis. "The situation is relatively calm at the moment as officers have been deployed to the area," he said. Crisis broke out in Wukari on Friday during a funeral procession for a third class chief of the Jukun traditional council. A resident of the town had told PREMIUM TIMES on Friday that the crisis occurred between the Jukuns and non-Jukuns in the town. "The J

Car bomber kills 5 in Somali capital

Five people were killed Sunday morning when a suicide bomber attempted to ram a car laden with explosives into a military convoy escorting a four-member Qatari delegation, an official said. Gen. Garad Nor Abdulle, a senior police official said the members of the Qatari delegation were unharmed and safely reached their hotel. Mohamed Abdi, an officer at the scene of the blast, said four civilians and a soldier died in the attack. Soldiers fired in the air to disperse crowds that had gathered at the blast site at the busy KM4 junction. The Somali government reopened key roads in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, four days ago which had been closed for security reasons. The road was closed after the government received intelligence that militants were planning attacks, officials said. Businessweek reports KM4 is among the busiest roads in Mogadishu, largely used by government officials and African Union forces. It connects the presidential compound and other government offices to the airport

Utah soccer referee punched by player dies, says police

46-year-old soccer referee who was punched by a teenage player during a game and later slipped into a coma has died, police said. Ricardo Portillo of Salt Lake City passed away at the hospital, where he was being treated following the assault last weekend, Unified police spokesman Justin Hoyal said Saturday night. Police have accused a 17-year-old player in a recreational soccer league of punching Portillo after the man called a foul on him and issued him a yellow card. "The suspect was close to Portillo and punched him once in the face as a result of the call," Hoyal said in a press release. The teen, whose name hasn't been released because of his age, has been booked into juvenile detention on suspicion of aggravated assault. Hoyal said authorities will consider additional charges since Portillo has died. He said an autopsy is planned. No cause of death was released. Portillo suffered swelling in his brain and had been listed in critical condition, Dr. Shawn Smith said

Patrol: 5 Die in Limousine Fire on Calif. Bridge

A limousine traveling on a major bridge in the San Francisco area burst into flames, killing five female passengers who were trapped inside and injuring four others who escaped, authorities said. The limo was carrying nine women passengers and a male driver when it caught fire late Saturday night on the San Mateo bridge, California Highway Patrol officer Art Montiel told The Associated Press. Five occupants became trapped, while the four others suffered injuries but managed to get out after the vehicle came to a stop on the bridge, the patrol said. The driver escaped uninjured. Montiel said that the victims were all in their 30s. Authorities said the names of the dead would be released once families have been notified. The blaze occurred around 10 p.m. PDT on westbound lanes of the bridge, which connects San Mateo and Alemada counties, about 20 miles southeast of San Francisco. The patrol said that smoke started coming out of the rear of the limo, and the driver pulled over as th

Chris Kelly funeral: Scheduled for next Thursday in his hometown of Atlanta

The funeral service for Chris "Mac Daddy" Kelly of Nineties rap duo Kris Kross is scheduled for next Thursday in his hometown of Atlanta, the Associated Press reports. It will be preceded by a public viewing on Wednesday afternoon and evening at Murray Brothers Funeral Home. Kelly was pronounced dead at Atlanta Medical Center on May 1st from a suspected overdose at age 34. Kelly and the other half of Kris Kross, Chris "Daddy Mac" Smith, were disovered in an Atlanta shopping mall by Jermaine Dupri when they were just 12 and 13 years old. Dupri has said of his loss that Kelly was "a son I never had." Kris Kross – also known for their fun-loving and trendsetting style of wearing their clothes backwards – landed the hit "Jump" and a Number One album, Totally Krossed Out, in 1992. They continued to record and perform to lesser success through the mid-Nineties and reunited last February to perform for the 20th anniversary celebration of Dupri'

God gesture disqualifies team: Gesture to God ends leads team's disqualification

Individuals are outraged after a young man’s “God gesture” caused his high school track team to be disqualified from competing in state finals. The Inquisitr reported May 4 that Texas high school student Derrick Hayes’ apparent religious gesture to God was viewed as “excessive celebration," which State scholastic rules prohibit. Even raising one’s hands, incredulously, are prohibited, according to runnersworld.com. In just a few seconds Hayes’ God gesture saw the boys Columbus High School 4 X 100 relay team go from winning the regional meet and heading to state championships, to having it all stripped away. How did the win so quickly turn to a disqualification? When Hayes, who was anchoring the relay team, crossed the finish line, he raised his finger to the sky. That gesture alone caused the winning regional's relay team to be disqualified. "It's a sad deal. I think it's a travesty. Those kids work hard," says father K.C. Hayes. Hayes' son Derrick had

Chris Kelly funeral: Kriss Kross rapper’s funeral to be Held in Atlanta

Chris Kelly funeral will be in Atlanta, Georgia, according to the Associated Press. The Rolling Stone Magazine reports on May 4 that the Kriss Kross rapper’s family has also planned a public viewing for Wednesday, May 8. Chris Kelly died from a suspected overdose after taking a mix of heroin and cocaine. Chris Kelly’s funeral will be in Atlanta at the Jackson Memorial Baptist Church and is scheduled for Thursday, May 9. A public viewing at the Murray Brothers Funeral Home will be on May 8. The 34-year-old was part of the Kriss Kross duo and was discovered by Jermaine Dupri at a mall. He found fame with his hit “Jump” in 1992. Reports Examiner Chris Kelly’s mother has indicated that the rapper had a history of drug issues. She has stated that he took a mix of heroin and cocaine the day before he died. Although an overdose is the suspected cause of death, the official toxicology reports are not available because the results can take several weeks. The other half of the Kriss Kross duo,

God gesture disqualifies team: Derrick Hayes gesture costs trip to state championship

 The God gesture disqualifies team after a track meet, preventing them from moving on to the state championship. The incident happened to the Columbus, Texas track team, and this one definitely has people up in arms. The Inquisitr shared the details on May 4. The incident in question happened Friday when Derrick Hayes of the Mighty Cardinals track team from Columbus High School crossed the finish line. His team had just won the 4 x 100m relay in a decisive victory. Hayes then reportedly raised his hand and pointed to the sky. That gesture resulted in the team's disqualification. The issue in this instance is that there is a rule that there can be no celebratory gestures, including a raising of the arms, done within the competition area. My Fox Houston notes that the rule is in place to restrict taunting of opponents, and there is no rule against religious expression. The governing University Interscholastic League rules that the Columbus team had to be disqualified for “unsportin

Israeli Warplanes Strike Syria in Escalation

Israeli warplanes struck areas in and around the Syrian capital Sunday, setting off a series of explosions as they targeted a shipment of highly accurate, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be on their way to Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, officials and activists said. The attack, the second in three days, signaled a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syria's state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near the Syrian capital and caused casualties. An intelligence official in the Middle East, who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to disclose information about a secret military operation to the media, confirmed that Israel launched an airstrike in Damascus early Sunday but did not give more precise details about the location. The target was Fateh-110 missiles, which have very precise guidance systems with better aim than anything Hezbollah has in its ar

Mayweather vs Guerrero: Results Prove Mayweather's Pound for Pound Status Still Unquestionable

The Floyd Mayweather vs. Robert Guerrero results are in, and they proved that "Money" Mayweather's status as the pound for pound king in boxing remains unchanged and unquestionable. One year away from the ring, several months in prison and innumerable distractions have seemingly done nothing to detract from his craft within the squared circle. Mayweather was in control from the start of his fight against Guerrero, and he never relinquished it. He actually continued to improve throughout the duration of the bout, demonstrating a level of control which was bordering on the absurd. Guerrero was a game and active opponent, aggressively coming forward, staying focused and intent, and changing up his tactics throughout, always looking for an edge. Yet, Mayweather was able to remain calm, hands down by his waist, firing off counter shots and landing with his trademark precision. He invited Guerrero to trap him in the corner, only to blast his way out.

Syria: Israeli rockets pummel Damascus area

A series of massive explosions illuminated the predawn sky in Damascus, prompting more claims that Israel has launched attacks into the war-torn country. Syria accused Israel of firing rockets into the Damascus suburb of Jamraya early Sunday, striking a scientific research center, Syrian state-run TV reported. The report claimed the rocket attack on the research center aided rebels, who have been battling government forces in the region. reports CNN The Israeli military would not confirm or deny the Syrian TV claim that Israel had launched rockets. "We do not comment on these reports at all," an Israeli military spokesperson said The report comes shortly after U.S. officials first told CNN that the United States believes Israel carried out an airstrike against Syria. Two U.S. officials told CNN on Friday that Israel apparently conducted an airstrike into Syria on Thursday or Friday. Based on initial indications, the United States does not believe Israeli warplanes entered Syr

Pit bull saves woman then woman saves pit bull in Long Island home fire (Video) - National Global News

A pit bull saved a New York woman's life as her Long Island home caught fire. According to US News on May 4, the alert dog started barking as flames spread, preventing Jackie Bonasera from dying in the roaring blaze. The incident, which happened on Friday, had this loyal pit bull on the lookout as Bonasera was blow drying her hair in a second story bathroom. Once she heard her pet's warning, she rushed to find out what was happened and saw that her garage was on fire. Jackie said, "I ran out of the house and my neighbors came running over." At that point, Bonasera considered her dog, realizing that " 'He saved my life, I have to save his.'" And so the pit bull's owner turned the tables by going back inside the inferno to get her dog, who is called Cain, out. And so, while pit bull terriers often get a bad rap, many of them are very brave as seen in the video above when one of these dogs saved another owner. That said, apparently, Cain was able t

Person Accused of Lying After Bombings...

Lawyers for a man charged with lying to investigators after the Boston Marathon bombings are asking a federal judge to release him from jail, saying he had nothing to do with the deadly bombings and isn't a flight risk. Robel Phillipos, 19, of Cambridge, faces a detention hearing Monday in U.S. District Court. Defense attorneys said in court documents filed Saturday that authorities' claim that Phillipos gave them conflicting accounts is "refutable."  Abcnews.go.com "This case is about a frightened and confused 19 year old who was subjected to intense questioning and interrogation, without the benefit of counsel, and in the context of one of the worst attacks against the nation," lawyers Derege Demissie and Susan Church wrote. "The weight of the federal government under such circumstances can have a devastatingly crushing effect on the ability of an adolescent to withstand the enormous pressure and respond rationally." Phillipos was charged las

A calming trend on the Springs fire

Aided by calmer winds and cooler temperatures, fire crews began gaining control Saturday of a fast-moving blaze that scorched large swaths of rugged mountain terrain and forced mass evacuations in Ventura County. By late afternoon the so-called Springs fire, having engulfed about 28,000 acres since its Thursday start, was 56% percent contained and all mandatory evacuation orders were lifted. Though the blaze has damaged 15 homes and five commercial buildings, no residences have been destroyed and no injuries have been reported, officials said. Latimes.com Compared to Thursday and Friday — when fire raced through Ventura County hillsides, causing officials to call for the evacuation of about 5,000 residents — Saturday was relatively calm for firefighters and residents in the most heavily threatened areas, neighborhoods full of multimillion-dollar ranch homes near Thousand Oaks and Camarillo. By late afternoon, as the air kept cooling, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protectio

'Israel overnight strike targeted Iranian missile shipment meant for Hezbollah'

Only a few days after an alleged Israeli strike, Syrian media reports Israeli rocket fire targeted a military research center; Western intel sources confirm Syrian reports, say targets were Iranian Fateh-110 surface-to-surface missiles. Haaretz.com Western intelligence sources confirmed on Sunday morning that both the overnight strike and Friday's alleged attack on Syria targeted an Iranian missile shipment intended for Hezbollah. The sources said the target was a shipment of Fateh-110 missiles. The Fateh-110 is a medium-range advanced guided missile capable of hitting targets at a range of up to 300 kilometers. Israel did not officially respond to the reports. Large explosions rocked Damascus early Sunday morning, only a few days after an Israeli strike allegedly hit the country, Syrian state TV reported. The Assad regime's news service blamed Israel for the rocket strike, which targeted a military research center on Mount Qassioun, north of Damascus. On Saturday morning, ano

2 bodies at crash site of U.S. military plane in Afghanistan - National Top News

Two bodies at crash site where a U.S. plane went down Friday in Afghanistan were discovered, Reuters reports May 4. The exact location of the wreckage was in Kyrgyzstan where a cargo plane exploded while in mid-air. The fuel it was carrying ignited the explosion, investigators said. Remains of two people on-board the flight were found Saturday, but there were three known to be on the plane. An investigation will be conducted to learn why the plane crashed, but Kuyan Mamakeev -- state prosecutor of Kyrgyz -- said the explosion could have been related to a number of factors with the fuel, engine, and weather conditions. Kuvan Mamakeev, the Kyrgyz state prosecutor responsible for investigating transport crimes and accidents. 70 tons of fuel were aboard the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker that left a U.S. military transit center from Kyrgyzstan Manas airport. via www.Examiner.com

Guantánamo hunger strike: prisoners being force fed

When the military doctors force-feed Guantánamo Bay detainee Fayiz al-Kandari with a tube shoved into his stomach there are three stages to the pain. First, there is the sensation of the tube passing near his sinuses as it is pushed through his nose and into his throat, which causes his eyes to water. Then there is an intense burning and gagging sensation as it goes down the throat. Finally, when the tube enters the stomach there is a strong urge to vomit. The experience, described by al-Kandari to his lawyer Carlos Warner, has one final grim humiliation. Once the tube has delivered food inside him, it triggers the most painful moment of all: the return of feeling hungry. "He says that can be the worst thing," Warner said. Al-Kandari is one of at least 100 men on hunger strike at America's controversial terrorist prison camp, isolated on the island of Cuba. Of that number, whose two-month starvation protest has created headlines around the world, 21 are being force-fed t

Saudi Arabia Sars-like virus kills five

Five people in Saudi Arabia have died from a Sars-like virus and two more are seriously ill, officials say. The seven cases were all from al-Ahsa governorate in the east of the country, the Saudi news agency SPA said citing health officials. The novel coronavirus (NCoV) causes pneumonia and sometimes kidney failure. It is from the same family of viruses as the one that caused an outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) that emerged in Asia in 2003. WHO notification In the statement released by SPA, the Saudi health ministry said it was taking "all precautionary measures for persons who have been in contact with the infected people... and has taken samples from them to examine if they are infected". However, the ministry gave no details on how many people had been tested for the disease. In a statement, the World Health Organization said the cases were not from the same family and preliminary inquiries showed "no indication of recent travel or animal contact&q

'Nazi Bride' murder trial set to start over racist killing spree - Minneapolis Top News

The so-called “Nazi Bride” goes on trial Monday over her alleged role in the killings of nearly a dozen people as well as bombings and numerous bank robberies in Germany, NBC News reported May 4. Beate Zschaepe is dubbed the “Nazi Bride” because she is apparently the sole surviving member of the National Socialist Underground, a neo-Nazi terror cell accused of a seven-year racist killing spree. Zschaepe is accused of complicity in the murder of eight ethnic Turks, a Greek and a policewoman, two bombings and 15 bank robberies. But a German federal prosecutor argues that the “Nazi Bride” actually had a much more active role in the killings and crime spree — that she wasn’t merely a sidekick. Two other alleged accomplices have taken their own lives. They and Zschaepe have been described as a “unified killing commando” that was responsible for a series of execution-style murders. Women have been playing a more prominent role in Germany’s neo-Nazi scene and have gained influen

Drug to Cut Cholesterol Is Approved by the F.D.A.

The Food and Drug Administration approved on Friday a combination drug developed by Merck that lowers a patient’s cholesterol but has not been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease or death, the company said. The drug pairs Merck’s Zetia, which lowers low-density lipoprotein (LDL or “bad cholesterol”) with the generic version of Lipitor, the best-selling statin made by Pfizer that lost its patent protection in 2011. Although the combination drug, to be called Liptruzet, was shown in a clinical trial to reduce LDL cholesterol more than patients who took Lipitor alone, the company said Liptruzet did not reduce patients’ chances of developing heart disease. That fact troubled some cardiologists, who questioned why it was approved. “This is extremely surprising and disturbing,” said Dr. Steven E. Nissen, chairman of the department of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic. Cardiologists have long questioned the value of Zetia and Vytorin, which combined Zetia wit

Karzai Says C.I.A. Cash Will Keep Coming

The C.I.A.’s station chief here met with President Hamid Karzai on Saturday, and the Afghan leader said he had been assured that the agency would continue dropping off stacks of cash at his office despite a storm of criticism that has erupted since the payments were disclosed. The C.I.A. money, Mr. Karzai told reporters, was “an easy source of petty cash,” and some of it was used to pay off members of the political elite, a group dominated by warlords. The use of the C.I.A. cash for payoffs has prompted criticism from many Afghans and some American and European officials, who complain that the agency, in its quest to maintain access and influence at the presidential palace, financed what is essentially a presidential slush fund. The practice, the officials say, effectively undercut a pillar of the American war strategy: the building of a clean and credible Afghan government to wean popular support from the Taliban. Nytimes reports Instead, corruption at the highest levels seems to h

Tech Firms Take Lead in Lobbying on Immigration

The television advertisement that hit the airwaves in Florida last month featured the Republican Party’s rising star, Senator Marco Rubio, boasting about his get-tough plan for border security. But most who watched the commercial, sponsored by a new group that calls itself Americans for a Conservative Direction, may be surprised to learn who bankrolled it: senior executives from Silicon Valley, like Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook and Reid Hoffman of LinkedIn, who run companies where the top employees donate mostly to Democrats. The advertising blitz reflects the sophisticated lobbying campaign being waged by technology companies and their executives. They have managed to secure much of what they want in the landmark immigration bill now pending in Congress, provisions that would allow them to fill thousands of vacant jobs with foreign engineers. At the same time, they have openly encouraged lawmakers to make it harder for consulting companies in India and elsewhere to provide foreign

God gesture disqualifies team: God Gesture Made by Track team gets Disqualification

So Many people are outraged after an act of faith cost a local track team a win and a chance to advance to the state championships. The God gesture disqualified the boys Columbus High School 4 X 100 relay team after they won the regional meet and were on their way to the Texas state championships. As WFAA explained on May. 2, the team was disqualified after one of the runners, Derrick Hayes, pointed up to the sky. "It's a sad deal. I think it's a travesty. Those kids work hard," says K.C. Hayes, the boy's father. "As a team they reached their goal and in an instant it was just gone, over something we think is a non-issue. I guess someone else thinks it is an issue. He just said dad I was pointing at the heavens" K.C. Hayes said. The call to disqualify the team was made by a judge with the University Interscholastic League or UIL, which enforces the rules for high school athletics. "For those kids the work they put in, what are we teaching them? Ok y