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The 2007 documentary "The King of Kong" famously depicts the struggles faced by Washington resident Steve Wiebe to overcome swaggering classic-gaming legend Billy Mitchell for the all-time highest score on the 1981 Nintendo fave Donkey Kong.But recently, Hank Chien, an unheralded newcomer to the classic-gaming community, snuck up on both of them and set a new Donkey Kong world-record, according to noted video-game record-keeping authority Twin Galaxies.
Chien's score of 1,061,700 points, accumulated in just two-and-a-half hours, puts him a mere 11,500 points ahead of Mitchell's best recorded score, and 12,600 points ahead of Wiebe's -- essentially a difference of one successful barrel or fireball jump per screen.
Asylum caught up to Chien, a 35-year-old plastic surgeon from Flushing, New York, on what he describes as a "slow day" at the office to talk about the record -- and what's next.
"I probably would have never done this if it weren't for the movie," says Chien, referring to the popular (and controversial) "The King of Kong."
In fact, Chien says that he first began playing with abandon only about 8 or 9 months ago. "I was actually pretty bad when I first started out," he says. "I wasn't even close to a million, so I just never thought about [the record]."
As anyone with a day job and an interest for breaking video-game records knows all too well, time is the biggest factor in trying to accomplish a goal of this kind. With his demanding plastic-surgery business, Chien could never afford the time to attend the two or three events each year at which a Twin Galaxies referee would be present to verify the score.
Because of that, chasing the high-profile Donkey Kong record, previously held by Mitchell (pictured below), was nearly impossible for him to attempt.
"I never really considered the record until November of 2009," says Chien. That month, Twin Galaxies altered its rules regarding video-taped entries. "When they changed the rules," he explains, "I started thinking I might be able to do it."
Appeals for calm after Nigerian sectarian slaughter

A woman wipes a tear as dead bodies, mostly women and children, are arranged in a mass grave for burial at Dogo Nahawa village in south of Jos, Plateau State. UN chief Ban Ki-moon and Washington led calls for restraint on Monday after the slaughter of more than 500 Christians in Nigeria, as survivors told how the killers chopped down their victims.(AFP)
by Aminu Abubakar Aminu Abubakar
JOS, Nigeria (AFP) – UN chief Ban Ki-moon and Washington led calls for restraint on Monday after the slaughter of more than 500 Christians in Nigeria, as survivors told how the killers chopped down their victims.
Funerals took place for victims of the three-hour orgy of violence on Sunday in three Christian villages close to the northern city of Jos, blamed on members of the mainly Muslim Fulani ethnic group.
While troops were deployed to the villages to prevent new attacks, security forces detained 95 suspects but faced bitter criticism over how the killers were able to go on the rampage at a time when a curfew was meant to be in force.
Media reported that Muslim residents of the villages in Plateau state had been warned by phone text message, two days prior to the attack, so they could make good their escape before the exit points were sealed off.
Survivors said the attackers were able to separate the Fulanis from members of the rival Berom group by chanting 'nagge', the Fulani word for cattle. Those who failed to respond in the same language were hacked to death.
One local paper said the gangs shouted Allah Akhbar (God is Great) before breaking into homes and setting them alight in the early hours of Sunday. Churches were among the buildings that were burned down.
The Vatican led a wave of outrage with spokesman Federico Lombardi expressing the Roman Catholic Church's "sadness" at the "horrible acts of violence".
The UN chief told reporters he was "deeply concerned".
"I appeal to all concerned to exercise maximum restraint," he said.
"Nigeria's political and religious leaders should work together to address the underlying causes and to achieve a permanent solution to the crisis in Jos."
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged "all parties to exercise restraint", but also called on the Nigerian government to "make sure the perpetrators are brought to justice."
"The Nigerian government should ensure that the perpetrators of acts of violence are brought to justice under the rule of law and that human rights are respected as order is restored," the chief US diplomat said.
The death toll was initially put at a little over 100 but then shot up. The information ministry said pregnant women were among those killed and around 200 people were being treated in hospital.
"We have over 500 killed in three villages and the survivors are busy burying their dead," said state information commissioner Gregory Yenlong.
"People were attacked with axes, daggers and cutlasses -- many of them children, the aged and pregnant women."
Survivors wail as children, women buried in Nigeria
Much of the violence was centred around the village of Dogo Nahawa, where gangs set fire to straw-thatched mud huts as they went on their rampage.
The explosion of violence is the latest between rival ethnic and religious groups. In January 326 people died in clashes in and around Jos, according to police although rights activists put the overall toll at more than 550.
"The attack is yet another jihad and provocation," the Plateau State Christian Elders Consulatative Forum (PSCEF) said.
However the archbishop of the capital Abuja, John Onaiyekan, told Vatican Radio that the violence was rooted not in religion but in social, economic and tribal differences.
"It is a classic conflict between pastoralists and farmers, except that all the Fulani are Muslims and all the Berom are Christians," he said.
Fulani are mainly nomadic cattle rearers while Beroms are traditionally farmers.
A curfew imposed after January's unrest is supposed to be still in place but Christian leaders said the authorities did nothing to prevent the bloodshed.
The PSCEF said it took the army two hours to react from the time a distress call was put through and "the attackers had finished their job and left".
Witnesses said armed gangs had scared people out of their homes by firing into the air but most of the killings were the result of machete attacks.
"We were caught unawares ... and as we tried to escape, the Fulani who were already waiting, slaughtered many of us," said Dayop Gyang, of Dogo Nahawa.
Gbong Gwon Jos, a Muslim resident of Dogo Nahawa, told The Nation daily he received advanced warnings of the attacks.
"I got a text message about movement of the people."
Rights activists said the slaughter appeared to be revenge for the January attacks in which mainly Muslims were killed.
Locals said that the attacks on Sunday were the result of a feud which had been first ignited by a theft of cattle and then fuelled by deadly reprisals.
Acting President Goodluck Jonathan placed security services in Plateau and nearby states on red alert to contain the violence before he sacked his chief security advisor
ESCONDIDO, Calif. – A registered sex offender charged with murdering a teen girl last month is a focus of the investigation into the death of a 14-year-old girl whose remains were found more than a year after she disappeared near her school, police said Monday.
Police said they are eyeing John Albert Gardner III in the death of Amber Dubois, whose bones were found Saturday in a remote area of the Pala Indian Reservation.
A police statement did not elaborate on the investigation and only said the scene was still being processed. Police Lt. Craig Carter did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking further details.
FBI teams worked under rainy skies during their search of the mountainous area of dense shrubs and rocks.
Gardner, 30, pleaded not guilty last week to murdering and raping or attempting to rape 17-year-old Chelsea King of Poway and attempting to rape another woman in December in the same park where King disappeared.
His public defender, Michael Popkins, did not respond to a phone message.
Gardner was expected to make his second court appearance Tuesday in the potential death penalty case.
Police have not revealed how they learned the location of Amber's remains, saying it was part of the ongoing investigation. Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, also declined to say what led authorities to the remains.
However, she said she was grateful for the sense of closure after the long hunt for her daughter.
"I'm managing," McGonigle said in a brief interview. "It was a roller coaster the last year and now we have closure, which is more than a lot of parents have."
Amber disappeared Feb. 13, 2009 near Escondido High School, about 10 miles north of the site where King vanished Feb. 25. A body presumed to be Chelsea was found March 2 in a shallow, lakeside grave, but authorities have said they would not make an official identification until Gardner's preliminary hearing.
Like Chelsea's parents, McGonigle said she planned to become active in efforts to prevent attacks on other children. She said she was busy preparing for a candlelight vigil for her daughter Monday night.DALLAS – A gunman apparently angry over business dealings wounded a father and son at their financial services company inside an office building Monday, then shot himself as police closed in, authorities said.
The gunfire at about 10:30 a.m. created a frightening, grisly scene at the 15-story building, with one of the injured men making his way down an escalator with blood gushing from his neck and scared bank employees and customers locking themselves in vaults.
After the two men were shot, the suspect apparently turned the gun on himself as three officers were coming down the hall toward the third-floor suite, said Dallas police spokesman Sr. Cpl. Kevin Janse. The suspect was in critical condition Monday.
"He's in the doorway of the suite, they hear a gunshot literally a few feet in front of them, and they're afraid he's going to step into the hallway and pop off another round, so one officer shoots into the doorway," Janse said. The officer's bullet did not hit the gunman, Janse said.
The gunman and the victims, 66-year-old Richard Smith and 39-year-old R. Chris Smith, apparently had an ongoing dispute, Janse said. But it was not clear exactly why the suspect opened fire inside the offices of Smith Financial in northern Dallas.
"The suspect is believed to be a past client that was unhappy over some business dealings," Janse said.
Richard Smith was shot in the legs, and his son was shot in the neck. Both were in stable condition.
Witnesses who saw the younger Smith coming down the escalator into the building lobby said blood was gushing from both sides of his neck as he and pleaded for help.
"He was screaming and crying," said Abraham Achar, who was visiting his friend at the United Texas Bank on the first floor. "He said, 'He shot my dad.'"
Becky Hayes, who works in a first-floor office near the security desk, said she recognized the younger Smith because he sometimes ate lunch in the building cafeteria. She said she persuaded him to sit in a chair until help arrived.
A sex tape of screen goddess Marilyn Monroe has sold for a whopping 1.5 million dollars - but the new owner is adamant that people will not get to see it. The 15-minute black and white video was said to have been shot in the 1950s, before the sultry star became famous the world over.
The tape, which was found by memorabilia collector Keya Morgan as he researched a documentary on the star, shows Monroe performing a sex act on an unidentified man.He said that there was no doubt about the actress' identity."You see instantly it's Marilyn Monroe - she has the famous mole.
She's radiant," The Sun quoted him, as saying. Morgan came to know about the tape from an ex-FBI agent who told him about an informant who tipped off the spy agency about its existence in the 1960s, a time when then FBI chief J Edgar Hoover was trying to prove that the sultry star was involved with President John F Kennedy or his brother Bobby.
Edited declassified FBI documents state the informant "exhibited to agents a motion picture which depicted Marilyn Monroe committing a perverted act." Morgan revealed that this informant made a copy of the porn tape, which went to his son after his death. Morgan traced the son and acted as broker in the sale of the video to a New York businessman, who plans to lock it away to protect Monroe's reputation.
"I'm just going to lock it up. I'm not going to sell it out of respect," Morgan quoted the businessman as telling him. According to declassified documents, Marilyn's ex husband, baseball hero Joe DiMaggio, also tried to buy the film for 12,000 pounds but failed in his attempts.

Witter ... We have grave misgivings that forensic evidence could vanish.
PRIME MINISTER Bruce Golding last night demanded that prison officials explain to him by mid-morning today why investigators from the Office of the Public Defender's office were barred from entering the Horizon Remand Centre yesterday.
"Unless it can be shown without any question of a doubt that there was any form of justification (for denying the investigators access), then I am quite certain the prime minister is going to take the appropriate action," warned Industry and Commerce Minister Karl Samuda in a late-night statement on Golding's behalf.
Samuda told The Gleaner/Power106 News that the report should be on the prime minister's desk by 10 o'clock.
He said Golding was taking the matter very seriously because "he will not, under any account, tolerate the obstruction of the Office of the Public Defender in the discharge of his duty in respect of the protection of the public of this country".
Two of the eight aircraft operated by Air Jamaica are to be sold to settle outstanding debts with the United States Government.
Prime Minister Bruce Golding made the announcement in a statement to Parliament this afternoon.
The two aircraft for sale are owned by the national carrier.
The Prime Minister told members of the House that the aircraft are to be disposed of to settle a debt with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States.
He did not say how much is owed to the IRS but divulged that the airline was indebted to the US Department of Agriculture.
The six remaining aircraft are on lease and one is to be returned shortly.
Mr Golding says the lease arrangements for the other five aircraft may continue beyond privatisation.
Prime Minister Bruce Golding has demanded a report from the authorities at the Horizon Adult Remand Centre following complaints from the Public Defender that his investigating officer was barred from entering the facility yesterday.
In a letter to the national security minister, Dwight Nelson and copied to the prime minister and the media, the public defender, Earl Witter said he was told that his director of investigations could not be accommodated as the centre was being treated as a crime scene.
The public defender is also taking issue with what he says is the scant respect being accorded to his office by the permanent secretary in the national security ministry, Major Richard Reese.
According to Mr. Witter, Major Reese has ignored for more than a week, persistent requests for him to return telephone calls or to respond to text messages sent to him.
NEW YORK – A construction crane owner got a bargain-basement repair job on a giant rig, which fell apart and killed two workers when the fix failed, prosecutors said Monday in announcing manslaughter charges against the owner and a former mechanic.
The owner, James Lomma, and mechanic Tibor Varganyi hired a little-known Chinese company over the Internet to weld a critical component, the Manhattan District Attorney's office said. Lomma and Varganyi didn't follow rules intended to ensure the repair was solid — even after the company they hired warned that it wasn't confident about the weld, prosecutors said.
The weld failed after a month of use, sending pieces of the 200-foot-tall crane crashing onto an apartment building in May 2008. Crane operator Donald C. Leo, 30, and fellow worker Ramadan Kurtaj, 27, were killed; a third construction worker, Simeon Alexis, was seriously hurt.
"This tragedy is particularly devastating because it could have been prevented," District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. said in announcing the charges against Lomma, Varganyi and Lomma's companies, New York Crane & Equipment Corp. and J.F. Lomma Inc.
All pleaded not guilty. Lomma was given a week to pay $100,000 cash bail; he was released in the meantime. Varganyi was released without bail.
"What occurred here was an accident — a tragedy and not a crime," Paul Shechtman, attorney for the companies, said outside court. Lomma, Varganyi and their lawyers declined to comment.
The accident, on Manhattan's Upper East Side, came a little more than two months after another crane — also owned by a Lomma company — collapsed elsewhere in Manhattan and killed seven people.GM Jan. sales rise 14 pct; Toyota sales drop

DETROIT – Toyota Motor Corp.'s car and truck sales fell 16 percent in January, a month when the automaker recalled millions of vehicles and halted sales of several models. Most other automakers reported higher sales, a sign they may be benefiting from Toyota's woes.
January is typically a weak month for U.S. auto sales, but automakers were expecting sales to improve over last January, when they dipped to a 26-year low because of the tough economy. Sales never really recovered last year, totaling 10.4 million cars and light trucks, the lowest since 1982.
General Motors Co. said its January sales rose 14 percent due to higher fleet and crossover vehicle sales. Crossovers are SUV-like in size but sit on a car instead of a truck frame.
Crosstown rival Ford Motor Co., meanwhile, was up 25 percent while Japan's Nissan Motor Co.'s rose 16 percent.
Chrysler was down 8 percent while Honda Motor Co. sales fell 5 percent. Korean automaker Kia said its January U.S. sales were essentially flat.
George Pipas, Ford's top sales analyst, said he did not see evidence that Ford was taking buyers from Toyota Motor Corp., which halted U.S. sales of eight popular models due to faulty gas pedals in the final week of the month.
Ken Czubay, Ford's vice president of sales, said Toyota's actions may have hurt sales for the industry as a whole toward the end of last month.
Toyota said it would suspend sales of the Camry sedan, its top-selling vehicle, and seven other cars and trucks on Jan. 26 following a recall over sticky accelerator pedals. Toyota has said dealers will get the parts to fix the problem by the end of this week.
In the meantime, Toyota could lose thousands of sales in January and February. The car-buying site Edmunds.com predicted Toyota's U.S. market share would drop to 14.7 percent in January, its lowest level since March 2006. The recall affects 2.3 million cars and trucks in the U.S.
Ford and General Motors Corp., meanwhile, have been offering incentives to Toyota drivers who trade in vehicles.

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The 33 infants and children that an American Christian group tried to smuggle out of quake-hit Haiti are being reunited with their families, the US-based aid group now caring for them said Tuesday.
The children were picked up last week by members of an Idaho-based Baptist group called New Life Children's Refuge who tried to take them across the border to the Dominican Republic where they planned to establish an orphanage.
But some of the children are not orphans at all.
"The parents now are coming to the village to reclaim their children," Heather Paul, the CEO of SOS Children's Villages USA, told NBC's "Today Show". "We already hear that many are saying that we have parents."
Police seized five men and five women with US passports, as well as two Haitians, as they tried late Friday to cross into the neighboring Dominican Republic with the children aged between two months and 14 years.
The case came to light as authorities in the capital Port-au-Prince expressed concern that some Haitian children may have fallen prey to human traffickers or been misidentified as orphans.
Paul said the children had been in poor condition when her group first received them but that they appeared to be on the mend.
"They came quite traumatized, as you can imagine, for a number of reasons. First, the devastation of the earthquake and then the mystery or confusion of their family's disappearance."
"They're getting better," she said.
Paul added that while in the care of the US Baptist group, the children, "weren't well dressed, they were dehydrated. They needed medical assistance."
She said the case underscored the need for stricter rules and greater vigilance in dealing with children in Haiti.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Although President Barack Obama's push for a health care overhaul has stalled, conservative lawmakers in about half the states are forging ahead with constitutional amendments to ban government health insurance mandates.
The proposals would assert a state-based right for people to pay medical bills from their own pocketbooks and prohibit penalties against those who refuse to carry health insurance.
In many states, the proposals began as a backlash to Democratic health care plans pending in Congress. But instead of backing away after a Massachusetts election gave Senate Republicans the filibuster power to halt the health care legislation, many state lawmakers are ramping up their efforts with new enthusiasm.
The moves reflect the continued political potency of the issue for conservatives, who have used it extensively for fundraising and attracting new supporters. The legal impact of any state measures may be questionable because courts generally have held that federal laws trump those in states.
Lawmakers in 34 states have filed or proposed amendments to their state constitutions or statutes rejecting health insurance mandates, according to the American Legislative Exchange Council, a nonprofit group that promotes limited government that is helping coordinate the efforts. Many of those proposals are targeted for the November ballot, assuring that health care remains a hot topic as hundreds of federal and state lawmakers face re-election.
Legislative committees in Idaho and Virginia endorsed their measures this past week. Supporters held a rally at the Pennsylvania Capitol. And hearings on the proposed constitutional amendments were held in Georgia and Missouri. The Missouri hearing drew overflow crowds the day after Obama urged federal lawmakers during his State of the Union address to keep pressing to pass a health care bill. The Nebraska Legislature plans a hearing on a measure this coming week.
Supporters of the state measures portray them as a way of defending individual rights and state sovereignty, asserting that the federal government has no authority to tell states and their citizens to buy health insurance.
