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Sunday
Nov062011

Second Earthquake Hits Oklahoma

Getty Images(SPARKS, Okla.) -- A second earthquake shook Oklahoma on Saturday night, nearly a day after a 4.7 magnitude quake struck the state.

The U.S. Geological Survey says the Saturday earthquake occurred at 10:53 p.m. with its epicenter close to Sparks, a small town 44 miles from Oklahoma City. Shakes were reportedly felt in several states including Illinois, Texas and Arkansas.

The 5.6 magnitude quake, which is the largest to ever hit the state, shook buildings but evidence of major structural damage may not be known until officials complete assessing affected areas. Inital damage reports include the buckling of at least two sections of a highway.

The quake, with a shallow depth of 3.1 miles, produced several afteshocks on Sunday.

No injuries were reported from both earthquakes and aftershocks.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Sunday
Nov062011

45,000 Run in 2011 ING NYC Marathon 

John Foxx/Thinkstock(NEW YORK) -- Update: Geoffrey Mutai from Kenya  is the new NYC Marathon Champion with a new course record time of 2 hours, 05 minutes and 06 seconds. He was followed by fellow Kenyan Emmanuel Mutai and Tsegaye Kebede of Ethiopia.

Firehiwot Dado of Ethiopia won the women's race in a time of 2 hours, 23 minutes and 15 seconds, beating fellow Ethiopian Buzunesh Deba.

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On Sunday more than 45,000 people will run the 2011 ING New York City Marathon.

The marathon, whose course starts on Staten Island at 9 a.m., goes through all five boroughs and ends in Manhattan, will raise an estimated $35 million for the city.

Faces to watch in the women's race are 2011 Boston Marathon Champion Caroline Kilel from Kenya,  Inga Abitova of Russia and Werknesh Kidane of Ethiopia, wife of defending 2010 NYC marathon champion Gebre Gebremariam.  

In the men's race 2009 champion Meb Keflezighi from the United States will compete against a strong field of Ethiopians Gebremariam and Tsegaye Kebede  as well as Kenyan Matthew Kisorio.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Sunday
Nov062011

Ex-Penn State Coach Accused of Child Sex Abuse

Thomas Northcut/Thinkstock)(HARRISBURG, Pa.) -- An ex-Penn State University football coach was arrested on Saturday for charges of sexually abusing children he worked with in an at-risk youth program, and the school's athletic director and another administrator were accused of lying about the abuse case.

Jerry Sandusky, who was the Nittany Lions' defensive coordinator before he retired in 1999, was arraigned on 40 criminal counts connected to the alleged sexual abuse of eight boys and released on $100,000 bail, according to the state attorney general’s office.

The two other university officials — athletic director Tim Curley, 57, and vice president for finance and business Gary Schultz, 62, — are charged with perjury and failure to report Sandusky's behavior. Prosecutors said the two men were expected to turn themselves in Monday in Harrisburg.

"Mr. Sandusky was taken into custody this morning by agents from the attorney general's office and Pennsylvania State Police," Pennsylvania state attorney general spokesman Mils Frederiksen said. "Mr. Curley and Mr. Shultz are scheduled to surrender in Harrisburg on Monday."

Frederiksen said there was compelling evidence against the coach.

“A graduate student at Penn State University who discovered or allegedly discovered Sandusky assaulting a young boy in the showers in the football building in the locker room of the Penn State University Campus,” he said.

In addition to coaching at Penn State, Sandusky worked with at risk children through his Second Mile foundation, the prosecutors’ spokesman said.

"We believe that all eight of the victims he's accused of sexually assaulting were identified and were part of the Second Mile program," Frederiksen said.

Penn State legend Joe Paterno, the team's longtime head coach, was not charged, authorities said.

Penn State President Graham Spanier said it was "appropriate" that the "troubling" allegations about Sandusky be investigated. But he said Curley and Schultz have his "unconditional support."

"I have known and worked daily with Tim and Gary for more than 16 years.  I have complete confidence in how they have handled the allegations about a former University employee," he said. "Tim Curley and Gary Schultz operate at the highest levels of honesty, integrity and compassion.  I am confident the record will show that these charges are groundless and that they conducted themselves professionally and appropriately."

Schultz' attorney Tom Farrell and Curley's lawyer Caroline Roberto said their clients were not guilty and the charges would be proven to be false.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Saturday
Nov052011

Journalist Andy Rooney Dies at 92

Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images(NEW YORK) -- Andy Rooney, the rumpled writer whose weekly riffs about the absurdities of everyday life made him one of television's longest-running commentators, died Friday night, just weeks after his farewell broadcast on "60 Minutes." He was 92.

He died from complications from a recent surgery.

Rooney presented his first commentary on "60 Minutes" in 1978 and he became a weekly fixture the following year when he assumed his perch at the end of the broadcast.

It would be a remarkable run. By the end of Rooney's final appearance Sunday, Oct. 2, he had presented 1,097 original essays and had worked for CBS for 62 years.

"One day about 10 years ago the door to my office opened and who walked in but Bill Gates. … Seemed like a nice guy and has done more with his money than most billionaires. But that's as far as I want to go being kind to Bill Gates," Rooney said in one of his classic essays.

"I had one typewriter for 50 years, but I have bought seven computers in six years. I suppose that's why Bill Gates is rich, and Underwood is out of business."

In a 2008 commentary, Rooney marveled at the flood of Christmas catalogues stuffing his mailbox. "This is a Sears catalogue. Sears, whatever happened to Roebuck? You never hear Sears, Roebuck anymore. Call if you're out there, Roebuck," he deadpanned.

In one of his final appearances, Rooney kvetched about changes in pop music. "If I am so 'average American,' how come that I have never heard of most of the musical groups that millions of others Americans apparently are listening to," he said.

"The singers I know have been replaced by singers like Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga and Usher. I mean, who?"

Andrew Aitken "Andy" Rooney was born in Albany, N.Y. in 1919. In 1941, while attending Colgate University, he was drafted into the Army, leading to one of Rooney's formative experiences, covering World War II for the "Stars and Stripes" newspaper, what he called "the single luckiest thing that ever happened to me."

"I hate to say it, but I had a great time in World War II," he once said.

While in London, he met two men who would go on to iconic success at CBS, Walter Cronkite and Don Hewitt. Rooney followed them to CBS in 1949 as a writer for "Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts" and then "The Garry Moore Show." He also began writing for CBS News, for such programs as "The Twentieth Century" and "The Morning Show with Will Rogers, Jr."

In 1962, Rooney began a long collaboration with the correspondent Harry Reasoner, writing and producing a series of Reasoner's CBS News specials.

Rooney won the first of his four Emmy Awards in 1968, for writing an installment of the CBS News series, "Of Black America." That same year, he also joined the staff of a new program helmed by his old friend Hewitt: "60 Minutes."

At first, Rooney worked as a producer on the broadcast with no thought, he would later claim, of appearing on the air himself. But in that initial season, he appeared in silhouette with a "60 Minutes" senior producer for an end-of-the broadcast segment called "Ipso and Facto."

"It was one of many experiments … Hewitt tried as an end for the program," according to Rooney's official CBS News biography.

Hewitt eventually settled on a point-counterpoint segment that featured the liberal Shana Alexander and the conservative James J. Kilpatrick presenting dueling opinions. After having Rooney deliver some commentaries in 1978, Hewitt gave him the end-of-the-show slot full time beginning in the fall of 1979.

Through the years, television changed, but Rooney did not. He was the crusty uncle, and then the cranky grandfather, serving up wry slices of life. Week after week, year after year, Rooney taped his appearances while sitting behind his desk in his book-lined office. Visually appealing, it was not. For Rooney, the words were what mattered.

But those words sometimes got him in trouble.

In 1990, Rooney was given a three-month suspension by CBS for remarks that many considered offensive. They included a commentary in 1989, when the AIDS epidemic raged, in which Rooney lumped in "homosexual unions" with smoking and drinking as "self induced" ills that "lead quite often to pre-mature death."

So many viewers objected to the suspension -- CBS was flooded with thousands of letters and telephone calls -- the network reinstated Rooney after just one month.

Rooney authored 16 books, including Air Gunner; the Story of the Stars and Stripes, The Fortunes of War, A Few Minutes with Andy Rooney, and most recently, in 2009, Andy Rooney: 60 Years of Wisdom and Wit.

A weekly newspaper column, which he wrote beginning in 1979, was recognized in 2003 by the National Society of Newspaper Columnists with its Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award.

Rooney and his wife, Marguerite, were married for 62 years before her death, in 2009. They had four children, including Emily Rooney, a former executive producer of ABC's World News Tonight, and Brian Rooney, a former ABC correspondent.

In his final broadcast earlier this month, Rooney spoke -- in his typically prickly style -- of his relationship with his audience. "I spent my first 50 years trying to become known as a writer and the next 30 trying to avoid being famous," he said. "I walk down the street or go to a football game and people shout, 'Hey Andy." I hate that."

Still, he allowed a moment of warmth and gratitude. "All this time I've been paid to say what is on my mind in television," he said. "You don't get any luckier than that."

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Saturday
Nov052011

Remember to set your Clocks Back

Medioimages/Photodisc/Thinkstock(NEW YORK) -- Yes it's that time again. Remember to set your clocks back one hour when you go to bed Saturday night because Daylight Saving Time ends at 2 a.m. on Sunday.

The seven-month period of daylight saving time is mandated by governments which began implementing the time switch during World Wars I and II to save energy and resources for the war effort. From World War II until recently, daylight saving in the U.S. ran from April until mid-October.

But in 2007, Congress adjusted saving time to begin three weeks earlier and end one week later, a move they hoped would help save energy. At the time, they pointed to the fact that longer daylight in the evening hours reduced people's need to turn on lights in their homes at night.

Critics of the policy questioned the government's decision, wondering whether people would simply turn on as many lights in the morning hours instead. In response, the Department of Energy studied the energy savings in 2008. They found that during that period, U.S. electricity use decreased by 0.5 percent per day, which added up to 1.3 billion kilowatt-hours, enough to power about 122,000 average U.S. homes for a year.

Now, as daylight saving time comes to its November close, energy use will rise again as the sun sets earlier in the evening.

In the early morning hours of Sunday, Nov. 6, the clocks will be set back an hour, from 2 a.m. to 1 a.m. For an individual who goes to bed at 10 p.m. on Saturday night and awakens eight hours later, they will wake up at 5 a.m. on Sunday morning. It will still be dark, of course, but the sun will come earlier than normal, at 6:30 a.m.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Saturday
Nov052011

4.7 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Oklahoma

Getty Images(OKLAHOMA CITY) -- The U.S. Geological Survey reported a 4.7 magnitude earthquake in Oklahoma on Saturday morning.

The earthquake occurred at 2:12 a.m. CST and its epicenter was six miles north of Prague in Lincoln County.  The quake shook buildings for about 30 seconds with no injuries or major damage reported. The quake was felt as far as Arkansas, Kansas and Missouri.

An aftershock of 3.4 at 2:27 a.m. and two aftershocks of magnitude 2.7 were recorded shortly before 3 a.m.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Saturday
Nov052011

22 Hospitalized after Falling Ill at High School Football Game

Getty Images(HOUSTON) -- Nearly 20 people were hospitalized on Friday night after falling sick during a high school football game at Barnett Stadium in Houston.

The 22 students fell ill during the second half of the game between Yates and Austin High in which Yates won 47 - 14. The students, mostly members of Austin's marching band, had symptoms of nausea and vomiting after being exposed to an unknown substance. All were transported to five local hospitals for treatment.

The Houston Fire Department was at the scene and say hazmat teams found no chemical substances that would account for the illness.

Officials are investigating and interviewing the patients.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Saturday
Nov052011

One Killed, 15 Injured in Abilene University Bus Crash

John Foxx/Thinkstock(ABILENE, Texas) -- One person died and several passengers were injured when a bus carrying students and faculty from Abilene Christian University crashed on Friday.

The university confirmed that 16 people from the Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences were travelling along U.S. 83 on their way to a children's home in Medina, Texas for weekend mission work when the accident occurred at County Road 234 at about 3:20 p.m.

The bus hit a concrete culvert and rolled over killing a 19-year-old student and injuring 15 people, some who were ejected from the vehicle. The student was pronounced dead at the scene while the injured were transported to a local hospital for treatment.

Members of the university community attended a prayer service on Friday evening at the university's Beauchamp Amphitheater.

"This is not a night for explaining things, but it is a night to remember things," said Dr. Mark Hamilton, associate dean of the Graduate School of Theology.  "God weeps with us more than we know, and God will have to straighten this out."

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Friday
Nov042011

Is Michigan Giving 'License to Bully'?

Jupiterimages/liquidlibrary/Thinkstock(LANSING, Mich.) -- LGBT advocates and the father of the boy for whom a Michigan anti-bullying law is named are slamming the state senate, claiming a last-minute First Amendment tweak gives "a major green light" to school bullies.

The Michigan Senate this week passed a bill to authorize the law, Matt's Safe School Law, which is named after Matt Epling, a freshman from East Lansing, Mich., who killed himself after being bullied by upperclassmen in 2002.

But in a change before Wednesday's vote, Republican lawmakers added a clause ensuring that the bill "does not prohibit a statement of a sincerely held belief or moral conviction" of a student or school worker.

"They kind of snuck in this extra paragraph, really kind of setting apart kids that feel their religious beliefs, their moral convictions, basically, can allow them to bully," said Matt Epling's father, Kevin Epling. "That one paragraph, though, negates most of the things that we tried to put in."

Michigan is one of three U.S. states without an anti-bullying law.

Kevin Epling told ABC News Friday that the change was made after he'd spent more than six years pushing for the legislation.

Friday, he called the law as it stands "a time bomb," adding that the change created a loophole that allowed students to use their religion to justify bullying another.

"I think it fails the memory of Matt," he said. "We cannot go backward and say, in any way, shape or form, in a piece of legislation that it is OK under religious grounds to harass or harm your fellow student. And that's what they've done."

Republican state Sen. Rick Jones, the bill's sponsor, told ABC News Friday that the GOP wanted to make sure students' First Amendment rights were protected.

The state lawmaker said the bill was personal to him because his son, now 31, had been a victim of bullying, and because a friend's granddaughter had fatally shot herself after being bullied.

Dan Savage, a sex columnist who launched the It Gets Better Project to encourage gay youth, however, called the bill in its current form "a license to bully."

"I was appalled when I read that it had passed. ... It really is a God-hates-fags-special-rights-for-Christians-to-abuse-LBGT-kids-in-the-school law," he told ABC News Friday.

"It's a law that specifically empowers students, teachers, administrators [and] principals to bully LGBT kids if they can point to a moral justification," he said. "You have a right to your own religious beliefs. You don't have a right to inflict your private moral judgments on those people in a place where you are a public servant and an employee of the state. ... Michigan should be ashamed of itself."

Kevin Epling said that the anti-bullying proposal had dashed the hopes of many students who'd believed the measure would effect change in schools and protect victims.

"We need to get students to tolerate each other," he said. "We need to have more acceptance in our schools. This legislation is actually going to put another problem in the schools that does not need to be there."

The bill is headed to the state House.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Friday
Nov042011

Killer Taunted Mom of Slain Teen, Cops Say

Comstock/Thinkstock(CHICAGO) -- At nearly the same hour Kelli O’Laughlin’s parents buried their 14-year-old daughter Friday morning, police in Illinois announced an arrest in the teen’s brutal killing.

They also revealed that they believe the suspect had sent “taunting and disturbing” text messages to the girl’s mother, using her dead daughter’s cell phone.

John L. Wilson, Jr., whose last known address was in Chicago, was charged with first degree murder and residential burglary.  He is being held without bond.

According to prosecutors, Wilson, 38, attacked Kelli with a knife from the O’Laughlin’s kitchen butcher block after the high school freshman came home from school and walked in on a burglary.  She was stabbed repeatedly in the back, neck and chest.

“It was obviously a very horrific crime that was committed, and then to have the mother of the victim to be subjected to taunts from someone who did this … words can’t describe this,” said Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart.

“There are no words to really describe how horrific this is,” said Cook County Prosecutor Anita Alvarez, who said this case brought veteran investigators and prosecutors to tears.  “All of us who have teenagers are haunted by the sickness of this crime and the total disregard for life displayed by this defendant.”

Kelli O’Laughlin got off her school bus at 3:40 p.m. last Thursday, and walked in on Wilson, who had broken into her family’s home, Alvarez said. Wilson allegedly stabbed the teen, and fled with a bowl of foreign coins, the girl’s iPod Touch and her cell phone. Investigators say three witnesses saw Wilson leave the house, and were able to later identify him in a police line-up.

Detectives had tracked Wilson down using a key piece of evidence left at the scene.  A wool cap with a rock inside had reportedly been used to break a window in the home. DNA tests conducted on the hat led investigators to Wilson, who has a long criminal history, including a conviction for armed robbery.   

Then, investigators zeroed in on Wilson using Kelli’s stolen phone, authorities said. ”Using cell phone technology, law enforcement agents were able to track victim’s cell phone and the accused’s cell phone,” Alvarez said. “They were tracking in tandem together.” Police, the F.B.I and Secret Service all took part in the search.

If convicted, Wilson cannot face the death penalty. Illinois abolished the state’s most serious punishment earlier this year.

“This is a case that definitely would have qualified for the seeking of the death penalty,” said Alvarez. “It’s felony murder. It’s a case that would have qualified and we would have sought it.”

Kelli O’Laughlin’s murder was the first ever in the bedroom community of Indian Head Park, a quiet suburb of about 3,700 people. The violent and seemingly random act rattled neighbors and shattered the comfort of many who regarded their town as safe. Friday, hundreds of those neighbors lined the route of Kelli’s funeral procession, releasing white and purple balloons in her memory.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio