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'The Exorcist' author dead aged 89 Contact WND

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NewsHub(The Sun) The legendary horror writer who penned The Exorcist has passed away at the age of 89.
William Peter Blatty’s death was confirmed on social media by the film’s director William Friedkin this afternoon.
The writer won the Oscar in 1973 for his screenplay, based on his own book that was published in 1971 which told the story of a child possessed by a demon.
And thanks to the film’s success, the possessed child’s image has become iconic among horror fans

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© Source: http://www.wnd.com/2017/01/the-exorcist-author-dead-aged-89/
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Katie Couric Explores ‘Gender Revolution’ in New Nat Geo Trailer (Video)

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NewsHubKatie Couric explores our society’s changing understanding of gender in the new trailer for the upcoming National Geographic documentary “Gender Revolution.”
“It used to be so simple: You were a boy or a girl,” Couric says in the trailer, released on Friday. “But that was then, and this is now. As we find ourselves in the midst of a gender revolution.”
In the documentary, Couric talks with scientists, psychologists, activists, authors and families to learn more about the role of genetics, brain chemistry and modern culture on gender fluidity.
Also Read: ‚Puppies vs Gravity‘ Is Cutest Thing You’ll See Today (Exclusive Video)
Executive produced by Couric, “Gender Revolution” aims to explore how the unique and diverse perspectives on traditional notions of gender are changing rapidly, and why labels are no longer so clear cut. It will be followed by a two-hour Facebook town hall moderated by Couric.
The special is produced by Katie Couric Media, World of Wonder Productions and National Geographic Studios for National Geographic.
Couric and Mitch Semel serve as executive producers for Katie Couric Media; Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato and Jeremy Simmons serve as executive producers for World of Wonder; and Jeff Hasler and Brian Lovett serve as executive producers for National Geographic Studios. Tim Pastore, president of original programming and production, and Michael J. Miller also executive produce for National Geographic.
“Gender Revolution” premieres Monday, Feb. 6, at 9/8c on Nat Geo.
Watch the video.
Read original story Katie Couric Explores ‘Gender Revolution’ in New Nat Geo Trailer (Video) At TheWrap

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‘The Trend’ With Rebecca Granet: Corbin Bleu

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NewsHubNEW YORK (1010 WINS) — In this episode of “The Trend,” Rebecca Granet chats with actor, singer and dancer Corbin Bleu.
Blue, best known for his roles in the “High School Musical” film series, is currently starring on Broadway in the new Irving Berlin musical “Holiday Inn.”
“The beautiful thing about doing Broadway is as soon as you finish the show, there’s an area for people who just came to see the show to go outside and meet some of the performers. The majority of the time they loved the show and they’re having a blast,” said Bleu.
“Holiday Inn” is currently playing at Studio 54 at 254 West 54th Street.
If you can’t make it to the theater, you can watch a live stream of “Holiday Inn” Saturday, Jan 14, on BroadwayHD at 8 p.m.

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© Source: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/01/13/the-trend-rebecca-granet-corbin-bleu/
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Film Review: ‘Worlds Apart’

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NewsHubIt’s been shown, on occasion, that audiences will turn out to see a movie about the post-9/11 world: a serious and inquiring drama of war, terrorism, and global culture clash. But even in an era as fraught with instability as this one, will people show up to see a movie that mirrors their economic anxieties? With rare exceptions (like “Up in the Air,” an early Hollywood responder to the 2008 meltdown that was followed by…not very much), the answer is no. That nerve is simply too raw.
Yet I can’t help but believe that a great wrenching drama that brilliantly channeled the collapse of the middle class would have the potential to strike a powerful chord with a mass audience. “ Worlds Apart ,” a small-scale drama from Greece, is like the baby-steps version of that movie. It interweaves three stories (sort of like “Babel,” though all set in one place — in this case, Athens), and it takes in the crisis of Middle Eastern refugees, but the film is most telling when it uses the disaster of Greece’s economic collapse to show us what’s really happening to people’s lives in one particularly messed-up region of the world — a region that may offer a glimpse of what’s going to start happening elsewhere.
The Greek crisis, as portrayed in “Worlds Apart,” is a perfect storm of angst and turmoil: an explosion of immigration issues like the ones bedeviling Germany, laid on top of financial meltdown, all feeding the fever of civil war. At first, the film seems like the mildest sort of message-movie fairy tale, as it zeroes in on the East-meets-West, Romeo-and-Juliet love story of Daphne (Niki Vakali), a young Greek woman, and Farris (Tawfeek Barhom), the Syrian refugee who rescues her from an assault, then notices her on a bus and rushes to befriend her. Before long, they’re flirting and holding hands and enjoying secret meetings in an abandoned airport, where Farris (along with other Syrians) has found a makeshift home.
It’s a puppy-love romance, and therefore, though sweet and convincing, it doesn’t transcend the didactic element that always creeps into these movies — that feeling of “Look! Doesn’t love make our prejudices seem petty!” What grounds the segment is the rage of Daphne’s father, Antonis (Minas Chatzisavvas), a shopkeeper who has lost his business and blames what he sees as a tidal wave of crime caused by impoverished refugees. With nothing else to do, and no outlet for his resentment, he becomes the underground bully for a violent anti-immigrant group, smashing limbs to teach lessons. And then, during a raid at the airport, he sees Daphne and her boyfriend…
At that point, the writer-director, Christopher Papakaliatis, cuts away. He has planted a seed, however, and will circle back to it. “Worlds Apart” comes on like a trio of discrete stories, but as the connections among them are revealed, each one grows a little richer. The most resonant is the second segment, which stars Papakaliatis himself as a beleaguered husband and father named Giorgos who pops anti-depressants to cope with a fraying marriage and with a corporate-management job that involves standing by as the jobs around him get axed. Watching the tears and desperation of his laid-off co-workers, which veer at one point into suicide, it’s clear that their devastation derives from their fear that they’ve slipped through the cracks — that there’s no more employment out there, just oblivion.
Giorgos, on the other hand, is hanging on. But then he falls into a coldly erotic affair with Elise (Andrea Osvart), the laser-like, amoral Swedish consultant who’s in charge of the downsizing. It’s like “Up in the Air: The Dark Side,” and Papakaliatis, as an actor, puts us in touch with the tug-of-war that’s going on inside Giorgos. Can he save his own hide and liberate himself too?
“Worlds Apart” lands in an episode that feels like dessert. It stars J. K. Simmons , who plays Sebastian, a German lonelyheart with a twinkle in his eye. Surprisingly, Simmons’ attempt at a German accent is not very good, but he looks cuddlier in a beard, and he gives an expert, soft-shoe performance that rescues what might have been a cloying encounter. Sebastian meets Maria (Maria Kavoyianni), an unhappy housewife whose family has run out of money; their courtship consists of meeting, every Friday afternoon, at the supermarket, where Sebastian buys her fruits and vegetables — a romantic gesture that might seem preposterous if it weren’t so infectiously…dystopian. These two lost souls find a communion, in an episode that suggests “Marty” as staged by late-period Fellini. And then we learn who Maria really is.
As a cinematic import, it’s doubtful that “Worlds Apart” will gain much traction. It isn’t bad, but it’s kind of a trifle. Though it treats its themes with reasonable honesty, it can’t help but come off as a bit diagrammed. Yet the movie is onto something: what happens to a society when “ordinary” life begins to get stripped away. It’s a theme you can bet we’ll be seeing a lot more of.

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© Source: http://variety.com/2017/film/reviews/worlds-apart-review-jk-simmons-1201960391/
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The Trump-ification of the media

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NewsHubBefore we even had a chance to miss him, Corey Lewandowski is returning to television as an analyst on the One America News Network, bringing his fact-starved brand of pro-Trump commentary to a new audience.
Apparently the folks at OANN were salivating at the opportunity to bring in President-elect Donald Trump’s former campaign manager, so that he can answer important questions with semi-related talking points, just like he used to do at CNN.
“We saw a chance when he quit CNN, and we just grabbed it,” OANN chief executive Robert Herring told the Daily Beast .
Lewandowski’s hiring represents a broader media trend ahead of Trump’s inauguration: An ability to convey the billionaire’s perspective, or at least relate to his tens of millions of supporters, is now a sought-after quality.
After Megyn Kelly announced her move to NBC News, Fox News replaced the journalist whom Trump considered a nemesis with Tucker Carlson, who as a weekend host had encouraged conservative viewers to rally around the polarizing Republican nominee. The Hill recently added Trump defender Kayleigh McEnany to its lineup of contributors. McEnany remains a CNN commentator.
[ At Fox News, Megyn Kelly is out, Tucker Carlson is in, and Donald Trump is on top ]
CNN also is keeping Trump evangelist Jeffrey Lord, signing him to a contract extension after Election Day.
MSNBC last week debuted a new show hosted by former Fox News star Greta Van Susteren, who could not be described as a Trump cheerleader but who is far more likely to deliver positive commentary about the incoming administration than previous occupants of the network’s 6 p.m. time slot (Al Sharpton, Ed Schultz) or the other members of its prime-time roster (Chris Matthews, Chris Hayes, Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell).
In a similar move, the Daily Beast on Thursday hired conservative writer Matt Lewis away from the Daily Caller. Lewis is no Trump fanboy , but he will be much more sympathetic than most of the liberal Daily Beast’s other journalists.
“President Trump could morph from playing a fictional campaign character into being a very good president,” Lewis wrote after the election. “Just by observing his body language since his big win, I believe he might be a much more responsible executive than he was a candidate.”
Adding Lewis is consistent with what Daily Beast Editor-in-Chief John Avlon wrote last month about covering the Trump presidency: “We’ll need to offer a roster of reporters and columnists with credibility on both sides of the aisle, instead of predictable partisanship.”
Meanwhile, Trump-adoring Breitbart News suddenly seems to some journalists like the place to be. Breitbart this week hired the Wall Street Journal’s John Carney to lead a new section devoted to economics and finance.
“Breitbart was way ahead of the curve on politics and the rise of Trump,” Carney told Bloomberg News. “I think there’s an opportunity to do that for business, finance and economic news.”
Even more surprisingly, left-leaning writer Gregory Ferenstein announced three weeks after Election Day that he had agreed to become a Breitbart contributor.
“Breitbart is now a major player in our democracy,” Ferenstein wrote. “So, that’s where I and others are going.”
Trump supporters often complained during the election that they felt marginalized by the media. But now that the former reality TV star is about to enter the White House, some in the media appear to be taking steps to understand him and his backers.

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© Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/01/13/the-trump-ification-of-the-media/
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Chronicle Season of Sharing fund daily donor list

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NewsHubFund total as of Jan. 5: $7,758,661
Chris Apostolakos; Robert Beebe ; Richard Bohannon , in memory of Elizabeth Bohannon ; John DeLara , $500; Dillingham; Jill & Bruce Dresser; Laura Ducoff, in memory of Rose Ducoff; Donald & Libby Erickson , $100; Linda & Tim Farrell; Ron Felzer, $25; David G. Fink , $50, in honor of journalists in dangerous places; David G. Fink, $50, in memory of Christopher “Drew” Leinonen and Juan Guerrero ; Adeline Forrest , $500, in memory of Harriet Ainsworth ; Charles Fritz , $100; Giovacchini Family , in memory of the Giovacchini and Ramirez families; Will Haible, $250; John & Wonpil Hong , $340; Franchelle Howes , $150, in honor of Linda Hwang & Ted Howes; Kurt & Deborah Huysentruyt , $250; James Kason, $500, in honor of Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Kason; Kevin & Kristine Kelleher , $200; Kathy Kerridge , $300; Marla Bastien Knight , $100; Bernice Lindstrom; Mary McLoughlin ; Mike & Kathy Montague , $50, in memory of Frank Grech ; Tove Nybo , $40, in memory of my mother; Tom & Bonnie O’Grady, $1,500, in memory of Susie Henry ; Vickie Rath , $1,000; Janet & Jim Richman, $1,000, in memory of our parents; Edward M. Rodriguez , in memory of Rose Rodriguez and Family; Rose Gold Fund , $500; Thomas B. Sellers , $55; The Sherfey Group/Decker Bullock Sotheby’s International Realty, $75; Martha Siegel , $25; Linda & Ron Simi, in memory of Horace Simi ; Whitney Simonds , $500; Michael Small & Monika Zchaebitz, in memory of Josh’s dad Glenn Smith ; Joan Brinkely Smith , $50, in memory of Wykeham Scott Smith ; Faye Thibault , $50; Ellen Webster , $1,023, in memory of my daughter Elizabeth Shillington.
Anonymous donations in honor of: Michael Peterson .
Anonymous donations in memory of: Timmy Banks; Thomas J. Bertoldi ; Mary Edna Butler and Sam King Wong ; Penney Farmer, $200; Joe Lewbin; Betty Limberg ; Joseph McGeever ; my parents and Rebecca, $175; Poncia and Davis Families; Lou Sauson and Gastone Costantini ; Donald Spagel, $300; Eric H. Vieler ; Capt. Konrad Wedekind ; Jack & Pi-lien Yeh.

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South Korea official says 'comfort woman' statue 'not desirable'

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NewsHubSEOUL, Jan. 13 (UPI) — South Korea’s foreign minister broke his silence on Friday and expressed his reservations about a new „comfort woman“ statue in the country’s second-largest city.
The bronze statue outside the Japanese consulate in Busan, dedicated to young women and girls forced to serve in wartime Japanese brothels, has prompted a fresh feud between Seoul and Tokyo.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has recently asked that the statue be removed, and Japan recalled its top two diplomats in protest.
On Friday, Seoul’s Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se told a parliamentary committee on foreign affairs and unification the installation of the statue is „not desirable, from the perspective of international relations,“ local news service No Cut News reported.
Yun also described trust between the two countries as „weak,“ and to strengthen ties the two sides had „reached a consensus on the comfort women,“ a reference to a 2015 deal between the two governments that included financial compensation for the survivors.
The United States had supported the agreement when the deal was reached.
„As you all know well, it is not desirable to place sculptures or other objects in front of a consulate in terms of international relations,“ the South Korean official said. „There are many other ways to honor“ the victims.
Yun’s statement, however, is being met with some criticism in Korea.
Kim Chang -soo, director of the private Korea National Strategy Institute, said Yun was making a claim that the Japanese government should be making and Seoul could order for the statue to be dismantled.
Historians say at least tens of thousands of women across Asia were trafficked from their homes and villages to forcibly serve in brothels during World War II. Many women have testified about rape, physical and mental abuse they endured under the Japanese military.

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Trump nominees agree North Korea poses serious threat

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NewsHubWASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (UPI) — A series of confirmation hearings for U. S. President-elect Donald Trump ’s nominees are indicating the next administration is likely to pursue a hardline policy toward North Korea as Kim Jong Un refuses to give up his nuclear weapons.
Trump’s picks for secretary of state, secretary of defense and CIA director mentioned North Korea during their interviews with U. S. senators.
The candidates all labeled North Korea a threat, including nominee for CIA director, Mike Pompeo.
„In the near-term threat to life and limb of Americans, yes. I put North Korea, China and Russia right up there alongside“ terrorists, Pompeo said.
The U. S. representative for Kansas‘ Fourth congressional district also said „nuclear powers,“ like North Korea, pose the „biggest threat to do catastrophic harm to the United States. “
During his hearing on Thursday, Trump’s pick for defense secretary, Ret. Gen. James Mattis , stressed the importance of „treaty obligations“ and the need to „stand by our allies and partners. “
But Mattis also said he expects the United States‘ „allies and partners to uphold their obligations as well“ while defending troop presence in countries like South Korea and Japan.
„We must embrace our international alliances and security partnerships. History is clear: Nations with strong allies thrive and those without them wither,“ Mattis said, adding North Korea’s nuclear weapons program is contributing to volatility on the Korean peninsula.
Mattis gained broad support after his confirmation hearing, according to CNN .
Rex Tillerson , Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, said during his hearing that inadequate enforcement is responsible for North Korea’s nuclear weapons proliferation, while criticizing China for being lax in sanctions enforcement.
„That’s why ultimately it’s going to require a new approach with China in order for China to understand our expectations of them, going beyond certainly what they have in the past, which has fallen short,“ Tillerson said.

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100 Women: How South Korea stopped its parents aborting girls

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NewsHubFor every 100 baby girls born in India, there are 111 baby boys. In China, the ratio is 100 to 115. One other country saw similar rates in 1990, but has since brought its population back into balance. How did South Korea do it? Yvette Tan reports.
„One daughter is equal to 10 sons,“ was the message desperately being promoted by the South Korean government.
It was some two decades ago and gender imbalance was at a high, reaching 116.5 boys for every 100 girls at its peak. The preference for sons goes back centuries in Korean tradition. They were seen to carry on the family line, provide financial support and take care of their parents in old age.
„There was the idea that daughters were not regarded as part of their own family after marriage,“ says Ms Park-Cha Okkyung, the executive director of the Korean Women’s Associations United.
The government was looking for a solution – and fast.
In an effort to reduce the incidence of selective abortions, South Korea enacted a law in 1988 making it illegal for a doctor to reveal the gender of a foetus to expectant parents.
At the same time women were also becoming more educated, with many more starting to join the workforce, challenging the convention that it was the job of a man to provide for his family.
It worked, but it was not for one reason alone. Rather, a combination of these factors led to the eventual gender rebalancing.
South Korea was acknowledged as the „first Asian country to reverse the trend in rising sex ratios at birth“, in a report by the World Bank.
In 2013, the ratio was down to 105.3, a number comparable to major Western nations such as Canada.
Monica Das Gupta, research professor in sociology at the University of Maryland who has studied gender disparity across Asia, says factors other than legislation are likely to be the most significant in accounting for this change.
A legal ban can „dampen things a bit“, but she points out that „seven years after the law [was instituted] sex-selective abortions continued“.
Rather she attributes the change to the „blistering pace“ of urbanisation and industrialisation in South Korea.
While the country was predominantly a rural society there was great emphasis on male lineage and boys staying at home to inherit their fathers‘ land.
But in just a few decades a large part of the population has moved to living in apartment blocks with people they don’t know and working in factories with people they don’t know, and the system has become much more impersonal, Dr Das Gupta says.
China and India, though, still have a stark gender imbalance, despite India outlawing, and China regulating against, sex-selective testing and abortions. So why is that?
Dr Das Gupta believes that in China this may be because until last year, the rule that your household registration – known as the hukou system – remained in the village where you were from, regardless of the fact that you might work in the city, meant that there was still an emphasis on male lineage and land ownership, but that this should now start to shift.
But she also stressed that the change is not always linear. As people gain economic advantage they have better access to sex-selective testing and have fewer children, which actually then puts greater emphasis on their gender.
In India in 1961, there were 976 girls for every 1,000 boys under the age of seven. According to the latest census figures released in 2011, that figure had dropped to a dismal 914 and campaigners say the decline is largely due to the increased availability of antenatal sex screening, despite the fact that both the tests and sex-selective abortion have been outlawed since 1994. They say that in the past decade alone, 8 million female foetuses may have been aborted in the country.
But she argues that several factors in India are slowly having a trickle-down effect on attitudes to women including media representation of women functioning in the outside world, and legislative changes enforcing equal inheritance rules and requiring one-third of elected positions be reserved for women.
BBC 100 Women names 100 influential and inspirational women around the world every year. We create documentaries, features and interviews about their lives, giving more space for stories that put women at the centre.
Other stories you might like:
The English girls‘ school reborn in a Nairobi slum
Parents who regret having children
Who is on the BBC’s 100 Women 2016 list?
While South Korea may have rebalanced its population, this does not necessarily equate gender equality, Ms Okkyung argues.
„Even though Korea has a normal gender ratio balance, discrimination against women still continues,“ the 47-year-old says. „We need to pay more attention to the real situations that women face rather than just looking at the numbers. “
Women in South Korea face one of the largest gender wage gaps amongst developed countries – at 36% in 2013. By comparison, New Zealand has a gap of some 5%.
„Nowadays women go to university at a higher rate than men in South Korea. However, the problem starts when women enter into the labour market,“ Ms Okkyung explains.
„The glass ceiling is very solid and there is a low percentage of women at higher positions in offices. “
One of the reasons it is harder for women to compete in the workplace is because they are expected to devote their time to both work and family.
„One example is that working mothers have a dilemma, as children in elementary schools come home early after lunch. Therefore, mothers who cannot see a sustainable future in the workplace tend to quit their jobs,“ says Ms Okkyung.
Dr Hyekung Lee was one of the few Korean women in her generation that did find workplace success.
„I have been very lucky that I was brought up in a very enlightened family. My family had three girls and two boys, and all were given the same support for education,“ says 68-year-old Dr Lee, who is the chairperson of the Korea Foundation for Women, the country’s only non-profit organisation for women.
„But when I became a full-time faculty member in my university, I had to be the only woman professor in my department throughout my 30 years there. “
Generally, attitudes towards women have improved as today’s Korean men become more educated and exposed to global norms.
They also inevitably mix with women across all spheres of life, in workplaces, schools or social circles, something that perhaps was not so common decades ago.
It is amongst the older generation that many still cling on to the preference for sons.
Emily [not her real name], 26, recalls that growing up as an only child, she was always treated equally by her grandparents – until her step-brothers were born.
„I only noticed the difference when my brothers came,“ she said. „Then I realised that they would never do stuff like the housework. “
„My birthday is also one day before my father’s so my grandparents didn’t allow me to celebrate it because as they said: ‚How dare a girl celebrate a birthday before her father?'“
„I think Korea is at that transitional phase that people are more aware now than previous generations, but it’s still not quite equal compared to Western countries,“ she says.
„I’ve had friends tell me I can only keep my career if I stay single, and others tell me I’ve chased away men because I was too bossy on the dates and took the initiative. “
She also notes that there is also a substantial difference in attitudes towards women in bigger cities and smaller towns.
„Cities like Busan are more traditional. I’ve had friends from Busan get a culture shock when they come to Seoul,“ she says. „In the capital, things are more progressive. “
Yet she believes change will come.
„Women in Korea need to be aware that there is gender discrimination,“ says Emily, who is now studying in the Netherlands. „I didn’t know until I left – I thought the way things were was just how they were. “
„It’s not until you expose yourself to other cultures that you start to question your own. I think things will change, but it will take a lot of time. “
Additional reporting by the BBC’s Geeta Pandey and Yuwen Wu.

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© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-38362474
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US Marine F-35s to be 'cornerstone' in Japan, Pacific defense

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NewsHub(CNN) The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the most expensive and one of the most controversial weapons systems in US history, is on its way to Japan to be „the cornerstone“ of US defense in the Pacific.
CNN’s Zachary Cohen and Yoko Wakatsuki contributed to this report.

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© Source: http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/12/politics/marines-f-35-stealth-jets-deploy-to-japan/index.html
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