Bangladesh garment factory fire kills six workers






DHAKA: At least female six workers were killed Saturday after a blaze swept through a small garment factory in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, police and fire officials said.

The latest fire comes two months after the country's deadliest garment factory blaze that killed 111 workers and put the spotlight on the industry's appalling safety and labour issues.

Fire officials on Saturday said the workers, who were paid as little as $37 a month at the plant in Dhaka's Mohammadpur suburb, which employed some 300 people, died during a stampede and from suffocation after the fire broke out during a lunch break.

"We have the dead bodies of six workers in two hospitals. Most died in a stampede as they rushed to escape the fire," Bangladesh fire brigade operations director Mahbubur Rahman told AFP.

Firefighters brought the inferno under control in about two hours and found no bodies on the charred factory floor, he said, adding that an investigation was underway to determine the cause of the fire.

Rahman also said the casualty toll was less than if the fire occurred at a busier time of day because many workers had left the plant for lunch.

Local police chief Azizul Haq told AFP the fatalities were all female workers and some had been overcome by suffocation as smoke engulfed the plant, triggering panic among the employees.

At least five other workers were critically injured, he added.

Fire is a common problem in the 4,500 garment factories in Bangladesh, the world's second largest apparel maker, with many operations based in badly constructed buildings with substandard electric wiring.

Around 700 people have been killed in garment factory fires in the country since 2006.

The Tazreen Fashion plant where 111 people died in the fire in November was making clothes for a variety of international brands including US giant Walmart, Dutch retailer C&A and ENYCE, a label owned by US rapper Sean "Diddy" Combs.

An official investigation blamed sabotage as the cause of the disaster.

The garment industry is the mainstay of the impoverished country's economy, accounting for up to 80 per cent of Bangladesh's $24.3 billion annual export last year.

Retailers have openly criticised the Bangladeshi factories for not ensuring worker safety, but major brands continue to place orders, with some reportedly raising purchases since the Tazreen fire due to cheap manufacturing costs.

- AFP/ck



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Square COO Rabois steps down; CFO becomes acting replacement



Square chief operating officer Keith Rabois has stepped down from his post.


Rabois issued a statement yesterday that was obtained by All Things Digital, saying that "it is better at this point for me to be doing something different every day," adding that he "will have more to share" about his future plans "soon."


Square has announced that CFO Sarah Friar will temporarily replace Rabois until a final replacement is hired.



Rabois joined Square in August 2010. At that time, the mobile-payment-processing company had less than 30 employees and fewer than 1,000 participating merchants. During his tenure, Rabois helped Square grow into the surprisingly large company it is today, processing over $10 billion in annualized transactions.


Square CEO Jack Dorsey told All Things Digital in a statement that while he "accepted Keith's resignation from Square," his company couldn't have achieved its growth without his help.


Although Rabois says he wants to try out new things in his career, All Things Digital is reporting, citing a person who claims to have knowledge of the situation, that he and Dorsey might have had disagreements that led to the resignation.


CNET has contacted Square for comment on the resignation. We will update this story when we have more information.


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Court: Obama appointments are unconstitutional

President Barack Obama violated the Constitution when he bypassed the Senate to fill vacancies on a labor relations panel, a federal appeals court panel ruled Friday.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said that Obama did not have the power to make three recess appointments last year to the National Labor Relations Board.

The unanimous decision is an embarrassing setback for the president, who made the appointments after Senate Republicans spent months blocking his choices for an agency they contended was biased in favor of unions.

The ruling also throws into question Obama's recess appointment of Richard Cordray to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Cordray's appointment, also made under the recess circumstance, has been challenged in a separate case.

Obama claims he acted properly in the case of the NLRB appointments because the Senate was away for the holidays on a 20-day recess. But the three-judge panel ruled that the Senate technically stayed in session when it was gaveled in and out every few days for so-called "pro forma" sessions.

GOP lawmakers used the tactic - as Democrats have in the past as well - to specifically to prevent the president from using his recess power. GOP lawmakers contend the labor board has been too pro-union in its decisions. They had also vigorously opposed the nomination of Cordray.

The Obama administration is expected to appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, but if it stands, it means hundreds of decisions issued by the board over more than a year are invalid. It also would leave the five-member labor board with just one validly appointed member, effectively shutting it down. The board is allowed to issue decisions only when it has at least three sitting members.

On Jan. 4, 2012, Obama appointed Deputy Labor Secretary Sharon Block, union lawyer Richard Griffin and NLRB counsel Terence Flynn to fill vacancies on the NLRB, giving it a full contingent for the first time in more than a year. Block and Griffin are Democrats, while Flynn is a Republican. Flynn stepped down from the board last year.

Obama also appointed Cordray on the same day.

The court's decision is a victory for Republicans and business groups that have been attacking the labor board for issuing a series of decisions and rules that make it easier for the nation's labor unions to organize new members.

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Unplanned Pregnancies Hurt Military Women













Women in the military have access to some of the nation's best health care, which includes free birth control. But a new study shows that many women are not using it and the rate of unintended pregnancy is double that of the general population.


And today, with the Department of Defense having just ended its longtime ban on women serving in combat roles, an unplanned pregnancy could have wider ramifications not only for a woman's health, but for her opportunities for advancement.


An estimated 10.5 percent of active duty women, ages 18 to 44, reported an unplanned pregnancy in the prior 12 months in 2008, the last year for which there are statistics, according to researchers at Ibis Reproductive Health, a nonprofit organization that supports women's sexual and reproductive rights.


That number was higher than in 2005, when the rate was 9.7 percent.


In the non-military population, about 5.2 percent of women of reproductive age report an unintended pregnancy each year, according to the study, published this week in the February issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology.


The Ibis study was based on surveys of more than 7,000 active-duty women; the statistics were obtained from the Department of Defense under the Freedom of Information Act. Rates were equal among those women who were deployed and those serving stateside.


Women make up 202,400 of the U.S. military's 1.4 million active duty personnel; more than 280,000 women have deployed over the last decade to Iraq and Afghanistan.








'Invisible War': Military Rape Victims Go to Congress Watch Video









"It's terrific that women are getting recognition for their role in combat missions and are being considered for all types of promotions in the armed services," said lead author Kate Grindlay, senior project manager at Ibis. "But for women to reach their potential, they must be able to access birth control for their personal health and well-being."


Military warned to maintain readiness as women move toward combat.


About 900 women had been unable to deploy in the past year due to a pregnancy, either planned or unplanned, according to the study. The highest rates were among younger women with less education who were either married or cohabitating, researchers said.


The authors of the study say that an unwanted pregnancy not only disrupts a woman's military career, but takes a toll on military readiness because pregnant women cannot be deployed or must be evacuated from war zones. They say the military needs to take a more "comprehensive approach" to address the problem.


A July 2012 Ibis study, based on women deployed over the last decade, revealed they face a variety of barriers to accessing contraception.
Women said they did not speak with a military medical provider about birth control before they deployed overseas -- either it was never offered or the woman never asked.


Military policies that forbid sexual activity between fellow service members "led some women to think contraception was not available or not needed," said the report.


Others said they had trouble getting preferred types of birth control -- the IUD, for example -- or adequate supplies before deployment.


"In addition to these access barriers, the high rate of sexual assault in the military also puts women at risk of unintended pregnancy," said the July study.


New documentary explores rape in the military.


Abortions are only provided at military hospitals in cases of rape, incest or life endangerment. A woman must either risk an abortion at a local hospital during deployment or be sent home. Tricare, the military insurance plan, does not cover an abortion.


"Women who are deployed in Iraq wouldn't have any abortion options and must be evacuated and it could compromise confidentiality and access to care," said Grindlay.






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North Korea threatens war with South over U.N. sanctions


SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea threatened to attack rival South Korea if Seoul joined a new round of tightened U.N. sanctions, as Washington unveiled more of its own economic restrictions following Pyongyang's rocket launch last month.


In a third straight day of fiery rhetoric, the North directed its verbal onslaught at its neighbor on Friday, saying: "'Sanctions' mean a war and a declaration of war against us."


The reclusive North has this week declared a boycott of all dialogue aimed at ending its nuclear program and vowed to conduct more rocket and nuclear tests after the U.N. Security Council censured it for a December long-range missile launch.


"If the puppet group of traitors takes a direct part in the U.N. 'sanctions,' the DPRK will take strong physical counter-measures against it," the North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said, referring to the South.


The committee is the North's front for dealings with the South. DPRK is short for the North's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.


The U.N. Security Council unanimously condemned North Korea's December rocket launch on Tuesday and expanded existing U.N. sanctions.


On Thursday, the United States slapped economic sanctions on two North Korean bank officials and a Hong Kong trading company that it accused of supporting Pyongyang's proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.


The company, Leader (Hong Kong) International Trading Ltd, was separately blacklisted by the United Nations on Wednesday.


Seoul has said it will look at whether there are any further sanctions that it can implement alongside the United States, but said the focus for now is to follow Security Council resolutions.


The resolution said the council "deplores the violations" by North Korea of its previous resolutions, which banned Pyongyang from conducting further ballistic missile and nuclear tests and from importing materials and technology for those programs. It does not impose new sanctions on Pyongyang.


The United States had wanted to punish North Korea for the rocket launch with a Security Council resolution that imposed entirely new sanctions against Pyongyang, but Beijing rejected that option. China agreed to U.N. sanctions against Pyongyang after North Korea's 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests.


NUCLEAR TEST WORRY


North Korea's rhetoric this week amounted to some of the angriest outbursts against the outside world coming under the leadership of Kim Jong-un, who took over after the death of his father Kim Jong-il in late 2011.


On Thursday, the North said it would carry out further rocket launches and a nuclear test, directing its ire at the United States, a country it called its "sworn enemy".


U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the comments were worrying.


"We are very concerned with North Korea's continuing provocative behavior," he said at a Pentagon news conference.


"We are fully prepared ... to deal with any kind of provocation from the North Koreans. But I hope in the end that they determine that it is better to make a choice to become part of the international family."


North Korea is not believed to have the technology to deliver a nuclear warhead capable of hitting the continental United States, although its December launch showed it had the capacity to deliver a rocket that could travel 10,000 km (6,200 miles), potentially putting San Francisco in range, according to an intelligence assessment by South Korea.


South Korea and others who have been closely observing activities at the North's known nuclear test grounds believe Pyongyang is technically ready to go ahead with its third atomic test and awaiting the political decision of its leader.


The North's committee also declared on Friday that a landmark agreement it signed with the South in 1992 on eliminating nuclear weapons from the Korean peninsula was invalid, repeating its long-standing accusation that Seoul was colluding with Washington.


The foreign ministry of China, the North's sole remaining major diplomatic and economic benefactor, repeated its call for calm on the Korean peninsula at its daily briefing on Friday.


"The current situation on the Korea peninsula is complicated and sensitive," spokesman Hong Lei said.


"We hope all relevant parties can see the big picture, maintain calm and restraint, further maintain contact and dialogue, and improve relations, while not taking actions to further complicate and escalate the situation," Hong said.


But unusually prickly comments in Chinese state media on Friday hinted at Beijing's exasperation.


"It seems that North Korea does not appreciate China's efforts," said the Global Times in an editorial, a sister publication of the official People's Daily.


"Just let North Korea be 'angry' ... China hopes for a stable peninsula, but it's not the end of the world if there's trouble there. This should be the baseline of China's position."


(Additional reporting by Michael Martina in Beijing; editing by Jeremy Laurence and Raju Gopalakrishnan)



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A*STAR scientist wins Singapore Challenge at Global Young Scientists Summit






SINGAPORE: A research scientist at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) has won the Singapore Challenge medallion at the inaugural Global Young Scientists Summit@one-north (GYSS).

Dr Lynette Cheah was presented with a medallion by President Tony Tan and awarded a prize of US$100,000 to pursue her research interests.

She submitted a proposal on building a transportation network that helps smoothen traffic flow.

Part of her proposal involves taxi and car commuters sharing rides, and bus and train frequencies would be automatically adjusted.

The theme of the Singapore Challenge is "Innovations for Future Cities" - where scientists presented ground-breaking ideas to address sustainability challenges.

More than 70 proposals were received.

President Tony Tan said: "The Singapore Challenge exemplifies how scientific communities can partner governments and industries across countries to make societal impact. It is good for science and good for society when researchers build networks and collaborate openly to translate research outcomes for a better world."

- CNA/de



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The strange resurrection of Net neutrality



WASHINGTON, D.C.--At this week's State of the Net conference, an annual event of the bipartisan Congressional Internet Caucus, members of Congress, staffers, and technology policy junkies gathered once again to explore the government's Internet-related priorities for the new year.


A few themes emerged, including possible legislation over cybersecurity, a rewrite of the 1996 Communications Act, reforming federal electronic-surveillance laws, and the continuing threat of both national governments and the United Nations trying to wrest control of Internet governance from engineering-driven groups.


The general consensus, however, was that for at least the next several months, the fiscal cliff, debt ceilings, and budget sequestrations were likely to keep Washington fully occupied, leaving little time for legislators to tinker, for better or worse, with the Internet.


One topic that could get renewed Congressional attention, however, is Net neutrality. In a case pending for nearly two years at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, Verizon and MetroPCS are challenging the legality of the Federal Communications Commission's 2010 "Open Internet" order, more commonly known as the Net neutrality rules, which prohibits ISPs from blocking lawful Web content. Should the FCC lose its case, the fight could return to Congress.


So far, Congress has resisted a decade's worth of calls to pass legislation establishing a role for the FCC in governing Internet access or content. But in a keynote address on Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) argued that a key House subcommittee should focus on user protections.


"First and foremost," Eshoo said, "this means preserving the basic 'rules of the road' that the FCC adopted to ensure a free and open Internet. Should the court overturn the FCC's rules, I will be prepared to introduce legislation clarifying the Commission's authority to ensure a free and open Internet, while preventing the use of Internet 'fast lanes' or other discriminatory tools."


Eshoo, whose district includes Silicon Valley, also said she hoped the subcommittee would take up issues related to Internet video, including the impact on companies like Netflix of tiered pricing arrangements that could "deny consumers the freedom and flexibility to stream video content whenever and wherever they want."



Netflix's "jujitsu"
Eshoo's comments may prove unintentionally ironic. Just a few weeks ago, at the Consumer Electronics Show, Netflix announced that Cablevision Systems had agreed to join Open Connect, a proprietary content delivery network (CDN) that Netflix has been deploying largely in Europe for the last year.


CDNs place cached servers at strategic locations along an ISP's network, speeding up the delivery of high-bandwidth content, such as high-definition video, which requires minimal latency to maintain its quality. Given that Netflix traffic now accounts for as much as 30 percent of total downstream Internet activity at peak times, the company has been understandably focused on ensuring it can serve more customers with higher quality.


But at the most basic level, CDNs are nothing if not "fast lanes" on the Internet, delivering information from content providers who pay a premium price to use them.


And at the same time, Netflix also announced that exclusive new "Super HD" and 3D content would only be available to Netflix customers whose ISPs signed on to Open Connect.



Time Warner Cable quickly complained that by withholding these new services from its customers until the company qualified for Open Connect, Netflix was using its "fast lane" to discriminate against some Internet users -- indeed, against some of Netflix's own customers.


"We believe it is wrong for Netflix to withhold any content formats from our subscribers and the subscribers of many other ISPs," the company said in a statement to Multichannel News. "Time Warner Cable's network is more than capable of delivering this content to Netflix subscribers today."


Other critics pounced on Netflix as having committed "Net neutrality jujitsu." Using a loophole in the FCC's rules -- which restrict only the business practices of ISPs, not content providers -- Netflix was perpetuating precisely the kind of consumer harm the rules were intended to prohibit.


To paraphrase Eshoo, it appeared the company was itself denying customers "the freedom and flexibility to stream video content whenever and wherever they want."


A genuine Net neutrality problem had at last emerged, or so it seemed. And Netflix wasn't the company needing the FCC's protection after all. It was the company committing the violation.



Whatever is happening, it's not a violation
The flood of commentary already generated by Time Warner Cable's objections, if nothing else, highlights once again how unhelpful the squishy term "Net neutrality" really is in discussions of Internet policy.


Does it refer to a largely theoretical view of network architecture, in which every packet is treated identically regardless of its origin or the nature of its content -- data, voice, or video? Is it a set of guarantees for consumers that they will not be constrained in any way from accessing the lawful content of their choice?


Or, as implemented in the FCC's rules (which never actually use the term "Net neutrality") is it a set of protections for content providers to ensure they are not unfairly disadvantaged by ISPs that may also offer competing content, including television programming and on-demand movies?


Let's clear away some of the debris. For one thing, it's clear that however Netflix is deploying its Open Connect network, the company is not committing any actual violation of the FCC's rules. For one thing, the rules apply only to ISPs. Even if, as it now appears, some content providers are creating their own networks and have become powerful enough to dictate terms to ISPs rather than the other way around, the FCC does not prohibit discrimination by content providers and likely lacks the authority to do so even if the agency wanted to.


More to the point, even though CDNs create "fast lanes" that speed the delivery of content for those providers who pay premium prices, they are not prohibited no matter who offers them. In its final order (PDF), the FCC explicitly exempted CDNs from the Open Internet rules, noting that, "the record does not demonstrate that the use of CDNs has any material adverse effect on broadband end users' experience of traffic that is not delivered via a CDN."


Indeed, CDNs, along with paid peering arrangements, VPNs, mobile traffic backhaul, and nearly a dozen other forms of non-neutral traffic management were all excluded from the final rules (PDF), leading many Net neutrality advocates to complain that the Open Internet order had failed to deliver on the promise of a truly neutral Internet.


But network management techniques that prioritize some packets over others have been part of the Internet for over a decade. Like the Netflix Open Connect network, many of these techniques have been driven by innovations in engineering aimed at making the network more efficient in delivering the most requested content or content, such as voice and video, which has lower tolerance for latency.


The FCC was right to exempt these practices from its rules. Except to some legal academics and self-styled consumer advocates, they are uncontroversial features of the network that enhance the consumer experience.


Bigger concerns and the bigger picture
But even if Netflix isn't violating the FCC's rules, there are worrisome signs that the Open Connect content delivery network isn't quite as open as its name implies. For one thing, the network is open only to Netflix-hosted content. It therefore excludes competing video services from companies including Amazon, Hulu, and YouTube, as well as programming offered by the ISPs themselves.


And while the company describes the network as being "free" to participating ISPs, the company's "guidelines" include requirements that ISPs connect to the same peering locations used by the Netflix network and invest in connections of at least 10Gbps.


Though the specific details of TWC's dispute with Netflix aren't public, the objections seem to be focused on the fact that CDNs ordinarily pay the ISPs to co-locate servers that cache the content of their customers. While Netflix is offering its Open Connect network for "free," other CDNs pay for access to the ISP's facilities, operation of co-located equipment, and for the unbalanced peered traffic flow.


As attorney Jonathan E. Nuechterlein of Wilmer Hale pointed out last week at an American Enterprise Institute conference on Internet competition, in principle there's nothing unusual about such arrangements. Indeed, "paid peering" is the norm for connections between backbone providers when traffic flow is significantly imbalanced. In effect, CDNs represent a kind of paid peering for content that is either frequently used or which requires minimal latency -- or, in the case of video, both.


Settlement-free peering, paid peering, and co-location are all common and uncontroversial arrangements made between major Internet backbones and large content providers around the world. (Most peering agreements are done on a handshake basis.) The "open" Internet works well because of, not despite, arrangements and engineering that optimize network management.


Aside from Net neutrality, potential legal problems could arise, however, if Netflix uses its competitive leverage to demand participating ISPs house and operate its equipment without charge.


Beside other video providers that cannot host their content on the Netflix Open Connect network, for example, traditional CDNs without Netflix's growing market power could also be disadvantaged. These include general purpose CDNs such as Akami and Limelight, as well as start-ups including CloudFlare, which bundles advanced malware protection into hosting and caching services. It also includes Level 3, which was, prior to the launch of Open Connect, the company that Netflix paid for CDN services.


In addition to the leverage Netflix now has from its 30 million customers, the company has improved its market position by signing exclusive content deals, most recently with Disney and its affiliates, including Pixar and Marvel.


But is that kind of market power a problem, and, in particular, a problem for the FCC? Netflix, at least, seemed to think so in 2010, when it filed its comments in the Open Internet proceeding.


The company wrote:

[T]he Commission should not take too narrow a view of the type of discrimination by network operators that should be cognizable under the new rules. There is substantial discrimination and consumer harm if a network operator uses its ownership affiliation with a program content provider, or even its bulk buying leverage with a video content provider, to deny attractive programming to a competing online video service.



That, of course, is precisely what Netflix is now doing with its exclusive licensing and "bulk buying leverage." The Open Connect network not only denies programming to customers of ISPs that don't agree to the company's "guidelines." Moreover, it denies "attractive programming" to "competing online video services," including those of other over-the-top video providers.


The choice for lawmakers
Fortunately for Internet users and, it now seems, Netflix itself, the FCC wisely rejected the company's calls for broader and more detailed rules. Such regulations could have foreclosed the company's own future innovations, including the Open Connect content delivery network.


This is precisely why many argued during the FCC's Open Internet proceeding that the growing complexity of the Internet ecosystem, coupled with rapid changes in technology, made it unlikely the FCC could ever craft rules that wouldn't become quickly obsolete if not counterproductive -- and, given a dynamic competitive landscape in which content providers were gaining market power, unnecessary.



The bottom line is clear. People consume more high definition video all the time. We already need all the content delivery networks, IP networking technologies, and fiber optic cabling we can get to meet exploding demand for better quality, faster speeds, and more choices. For the Internet to continue expanding in both scope and quality, we'll need a wide variety of innovation -- from ISPs, content providers, and regulators.


But let's not kid ourselves. These are already fast lanes on the Internet, and Netflix its right to be deploying technologies to expand them as fast as possible. Critics who reflexively point to such developments as violating the spirit if not the letter of the FCC's Open Internet rules dangerously oversimplify a complex technical and business architecture. They aren't helping anyone, and certainly not consumers.


As U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) said in the closing keynote at State of the Net, "Our response to this newly converged marketplace should not be to level the playing field by extending legacy regulations to new entrants and technologies, but rather to let the Internet work and repeal the archaic and obsolete rules now on the books."


Scalise was talking about regulations that are unintentionally constraining the ability of legacy phone companies to replace their switched networks with new IP-based technologies. But, it seems, the FCC's more recent efforts to "preserve" the open Internet may have aged even more quickly.


Even if the FCC's Net neutrality rules survive the impending court challenge, they may prove to have little to offer Internet users -- little, that is, except for unfortunate and unintended consequences.


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Polar air mass keeps icy grip on Northeast

PORTLAND, Maine Polar air settled in earnest over the Northeast after trekking through the Midwest, grinding trains to a halt, bursting pipes and bringing further misery to folks still trying to recover from superstorm Sandy.

The coldest temperatures were expected to continue Thursday, after which conditions should slowly moderate before returning to normal, said John Koch, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service regional headquarters in Bohemia, N.Y. For the most part, temperatures have been around 10 to 15 degrees below normal, with windy conditions making it feel colder, he said.

The Canadian air mass that arrived in the Upper Midwest over the weekend prompted the National Weather Service to issue wind chill warnings across upstate New York and northern New England.

In a storm-damaged neighborhood near the beach on New York City's Staten Island, people who haven't had heat in their homes since the late October storm took refuge in tents set up by aid workers. The tents were equipped with propane heaters, which were barely keeping up with the cold, and workers were providing sleeping bags and blankets for warmth.

The temperature was expected to dip to around 11 degrees before dawn Thursday.




Play Video


Sandy victims left in the cold



Anthony Gambino has been sleeping in one of the tents off and on since Sandy severely damaged his home, CBS News correspondent Elaine Quijano reports. The former mechanic lives on disability.

"Next week they're talking about getting warmer, but let's face it, we're going into February," said Gambino. "February is unpredictable. March is unpredictable. We may get worse. We may get better. Who knows? Right now, we gotta deal with the moment, and the moment is bad."

The University of South Dakota in Vermillion offered a third consecutive night of free hotel rooms to 500 students who had to leave when a water pipe froze over an electrical room and damaged components. The cold also caused circuit problems on the Metro-North railroad serving areas north of New York City, creating rush-hour delays that were resolved by late Wednesday morning.

In northern New Hampshire, a man who crashed his snowmobile while going over a hill on Tuesday and spent a "bitterly cold night" injured and alone on a trail died on Wednesday, the state's Fish and Game Department said. Friends who went looking for John Arsenault, of Shelburne, when he didn't show up for work found him unconscious Wednesday morning, and he died later at a hospital, authorities said.

In Pennsylvania, officials at a park on Lake Erie warned visitors to stay off hollow "ice dunes" forming along the shore because of the danger of frigid water underneath. A ski resort in New Hampshire shut down Wednesday because of unsafe ski conditions: a predicted wind chill of 48 degrees below zero.

In northern Maine, the temperature dipped to as low as 36 below zero Wednesday morning. The weather service was calling for wind chills as low as minus 45.

Keith Pelletier, the owner of Dolly's Restaurant in Frenchville, said his customers were dressed in multiple layers of clothing and keeping their cars running in the parking lot while eating lunch. It was so cold that even the snowmobilers were staying home, he said.

"You take the wind chill at 39 below and take a snowmobile going 50 mph, and you're about double that," he said. "That's pretty cold."

For Anthony Cavallo, the cold was just another in a litany of big and small aggravations that began when superstorm Sandy swept through his Union Beach, N.J., neighborhood and flooded his one-story house with 4 1/2 feet of water.

Still waiting for the go-ahead to rebuild, Cavallo and his family have been living in a trailer they purchased once it became clear they couldn't afford to rent.

Wednesday's frigid temperatures temporarily froze the trailer's pipes, which Cavallo's 14-year-old daughter discovered when she tried to take a shower at 4:30 a.m. Cavallo spent the morning thawing out the pipes and stuffing hay under the trailer to help insulate them.

"Every day it's something, whether it's frozen pipes or getting jerked around for two months by insurance companies," the 48-year-old security system installer said. "I just kind of want to wake up one day and have no surprises."

In New York City, food vendor Bashir Babury contended with bone-numbing cold when he set up his cart selling coffee, bagels and pastries at 3 a.m. Wednesday. On the coldest of days, he wears layers of clothing and cranks up a small propane heater inside his cart.

"I put on two, three socks, I have good boots and two, three jackets," he said. "A hat, gloves, but when I'm working I can't wear gloves."

A little cold air couldn't keep Jo Goodwin, of Bridgewater, N.H., off the slopes at Sugarloaf ski resort in Carrabassett Valley, Maine, where she was skiing Wednesday with her husband and her sister. The snow conditions were great, and there were no lift lines.

To keep warm, she uses a toe warmer, a hand warmer, a face mask, extra underwear and an extra wool sweater. She was told the wind chill was minus 30 midway up the mountain and 50 below zero near the top.

"Sometimes," she said, "it's better not to know."

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Exterminator Charged in Pa. Doctor's Murder













Philadelphia-area exterminator Joseph Smith was arrested and charged today in the strangling and burning death of pediatrician Melissa Ketunuti.


Smith, 36, had been sent to Ketunuti's home on a service call, where the two got into "some kind of argument" in Ketunuti's basement on Monday, Capt. James Clark of the Philadelphia police department said this morning.


"At her home they go into argument. It went terribly wrong. He struck her, and knocked her down," Clark said. "Immediately he jumped on top of her, started strangling her. She passed out, and then he set her body on fire."


Police received a call from Ketunuti's dog-walker about the house fire around 12:30 p.m. Monday, and once inside found Ketunut with her hands and feet bound. They believe Smith hit her and strangled her with a rope, causing her to pass out, and then bound her body and set fire to it in order to destroy evidence, including DNA evidence.










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Ketunuti, 35, was fully clothed and police do not believeshe was sexually assaulted.


She was a doctor at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and had lived alone in the Graduate Hospital neighborhood of the city for about three years.


Clark noted that homicide detecitves immediately scoured the neighborhod for surveillance videos from nearby stores and businesses, and through the video identified the suspect.


Smith was spotted on video getting out of the vehicle and following Ketunuti to her home. The man left her home after an hour and was seen on video circling her home, sources told ABC News affiliate WPVI.


They drove to his home in Levittown, Pa., outside of Philadelphia, on Wednesday night and brough him back to the Philadelphia police station.


A silver Ford truck was towed from Smith's Levittown home, which was the same truck spotted on surveillance video Monday in Ketunuti's neighborhood, sources told WPVI.


There, he gave statements that led police to charge him with the murders, Clark said.


Smith will face charges of murder, arson, and abuse of a corpse.


Ketunuti's hospital issued a statement Tuesday that she was "a warm, caring, earnest, bright young woman with her whole future ahead of her," adding that she will be deeply missed.


"[She was] super pleasant, really nice," one neighbor said. "Just super friendly."



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North Korea to target U.S. with nuclear, rocket tests


SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea said on Thursday it would carry out further rocket launches and a nuclear test that would target the United States, dramatically stepping up its threats against a country it called its "sworn enemy".


The announcement by the country's top military body came a day after the U.N. Security Council agreed to a U.S.-backed resolution to censure and sanction North Korea for a rocket launch in December that breached U.N. rules.


North Korea is not believed to have the technology to deliver a nuclear warhead capable of hitting the continental United States, although its December launch showed it had the capacity to deliver a rocket that could travel 10,000 km (6,200 miles), potentially putting San Francisco in range, according to an intelligence assessment by South Korea.


"We are not disguising the fact that the various satellites and long-range rockets that we will fire and the high-level nuclear test we will carry out are targeted at the United States," North Korea's National Defence Commission said, according to state news agency KCNA.


North Korea is believed by South Korea and other observers to be "technically ready" for a third nuclear test, and the decision to go ahead rests with leader Kim Jong-un, who pressed ahead with the December rocket launch in defiance of the U.N. sanctions.


China, the one major diplomatic ally of the isolated and impoverished North, agreed to the U.S.-backed resolution and it also supported resolutions in 2006 and 2009 after Pyongyang's two earlier nuclear tests.


Thursday's statement by North Korea represents a huge challenge to Beijing as it undergoes a leadership transition, with Xi Jinping due to take office in March.


China's Foreign Ministry called for calm and restraint and a return to six-party talks, but effectively singled out North Korea, urging the "relevant party" not to take any steps that would raise tensions.


"We hope the relevant party can remain calm and act and speak in a cautious and prudent way and not take any steps which may further worsen the situation," ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters at a regular press briefing.


North Korea has rejected proposals to restart the talks aimed at reining in its nuclear capacity. The United States, China, Russia, Japan and the two Koreas are the six parties involved.


"After all these years and numerous rounds of six-party talks we can see that China's influence over North Korea is actually very limited. All China can do is try to persuade them not to carry out their threats," said Cai Jian, an expert on Korea at Fudan University in Shanghai.


Analysts said the North could test as early as February as South Korea prepares to install a new, untested president or that it could choose to stage a nuclear explosion to coincide with former ruler Kim Jong-il's Feb 16 birthday.


"North Korea will have felt betrayed by China for agreeing to the latest U.N. resolution and they might be targeting (China) as well (with this statement)," said Lee Seung-yeol, senior research fellow at Ewha Institute of Unification Studies in Seoul.


U.S. URGES NO TEST


Washington urged North Korea not to proceed with a third test just as the North's statement was published on Thursday.


"Whether North Korea tests or not is up to North Korea," Glyn Davies, the top U.S. envoy for North Korean diplomacy, said in the South Korean capital of Seoul.


"We hope they don't do it. We call on them not to do it," Davies said after a meeting with South Korean officials. "This is not a moment to increase tensions on the Korean peninsula."


The North was banned from developing missile and nuclear technology under sanctions dating from its 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests.


A South Korean military official said the concern now is that Pyongyang could undertake a third nuclear test using highly enriched uranium for the first time, opening a second path to a bomb.


North Korea's 2006 nuclear test using plutonium produced a puny yield equivalent to one kiloton of TNT - compared with 13-18 kilotons for the Hiroshima bomb - and U.S. intelligence estimates put the 2009 test's yield at roughly two kilotons


North Korea is estimated to have enough fissile material for about a dozen plutonium warheads, although estimates vary, and intelligence reports suggest that it has been enriching uranium to supplement that stock and give it a second path to the bomb.


According to estimates from the Institute for Science and International Security from late 2012, North Korea could have enough weapons grade uranium for 21-32 nuclear weapons by 2016 if it used one centrifuge at its Yongbyon nuclear plant to enrich uranium to weapons grade.


North Korea has not yet mastered the technology needed to make a nuclear warhead small enough for an intercontinental missile, most observers say, and needs to develop the capacity to shield any warhead from re-entry into the earth's atmosphere.


North Korea gave no time-frame for the coming test and often employs harsh rhetoric in response to U.N. and U.S. actions that it sees as hostile.


The bellicose statement on Thursday appeared to dent any remaining hopes that Kim Jong-un, believed to be 30 years old, would pursue a different path from his father, Kim Jong-il, who oversaw the country's military and nuclear programs.


The older Kim died in December 2011.


"The UNSC (Security Council) resolution masterminded by the U.S. has brought its hostile policy towards the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (North Korea) to its most dangerous stage," the commission was quoted as saying.


(Additional reporting by Christine Kim in SEOUL, Ben Blanchard and Sui-Lee Wee in Beijing; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Ron Popeski)



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