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Box office: 'No Good Deed' tops 'Dolphin Tale 2′ with $24.5 million

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 September 2014 | 00.52

"No Good Deed" topped the box office this weekend and helped reinvigorate a domestic movie business that was flickering at low ebb.

The Sony/Screen Gems thriller took in $24.5 million from 2,175 theaters, easily beating expectations. Going into the weekend, analysts expected the home invasion thriller to hover around $20 million. Females made up the bulk of the audience, taking up 60% of the seats in theaters.

The film's success is a feather in the cap of stars Idris Elba and Taraji P. Henson, both of whom actively hawked the film on social media.

"They absolutely elevated it," said Rory Bruer, Sony Pictures' president of worldwide distribution. "They're so hard-working. It was a great collaboration."

It also helps that "No Good Deed" cost a mere $13 million to produce.

"It's going to be hugely successful for the studio," said Bruer.

Although pitched at a different demographic, its success may have suppressed business for the weekend's other wide-release, "Dolphin Tale 2." The Warner Bros./Alcon Entertainment sequel put up $16.5 million across 3,656 theaters. The picture cost a modest $36 million to produce, making it a low-risk venture for its backers. However, box office prognosticators had expected the film to do $20 million of business.

"Dolphin Tale 2" could not match the $19.2 million debut of its 2011 predecessor. That film went on to make $72.3 million domestically. Harry Connick Jr., Ashley Judd, Morgan Freeman, and Kris Kristofferson return, with Charles Martin Smith back at the helm.

Females made up 63% of the film's opening audience, with 44% of the initial audience clocking in at under the age of 25.

And "The Drop," a Fox Searchlight thriller starring Tom Hardy and the late James Gandolfini, managed to muscle its way into sixth place despite debuting on a limited number of screens. Chernin Entertainment produced "The Drop," which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival last weekend.

The adaptation of a Dennis Lehane short story racked up $4.2 million across 809 theaters. Analysts had pegged the film for a $2 million bow.

Sliding in at third position, "Guardians of the Galaxy" became the first film this year to pass $300 million domestically. The Marvel film added another $8 million to its haul. Globally, its total stands at $612 million. With a debut in China still to come, that figure should continue to rise.

In its sixth week, Paramount's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" secured fourth place, picking up $4.8 million and driving its total to $181 million stateside.

In limited release, "The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby" debuted to $77,181 in four locations. The Weinstein Company reconfigured the marital drama starring Jessica Chastain substantially. When it debuted on the festival circuit, it was two films, one depicting the disintegration of a relationship from a woman's perspective, the other from the man's, but the studio is releasing a spliced together single version.

The overall box office was improved over what shaped up to be an anemic weekend after Labor Day, but it could not match the year-ago period when "Insidious Chapter 2" bowed to north of $40 million.

© 2014 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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Hard to get over this Range Rover

As it turns out, perfection does have its price.

And at $121,390, the 2014 Range Rover Supercharged LWB comes close enough to achieving it. This car is a beauty with classic looks and impeccable road manners. It's a luxury SUV that drives like a sedan while making you feel like you're in your living room. It has style, speed and splendor.

This thoroughly refined SUV starts with comfortable, soft, supple leather seats. In summer, the Range Rover will keep you cool with ventilation emanating from perforated leather. In winter, heat greets you from the seat, the steering wheel as well as the dual zone climate control system. The front seat of the Range Rover even has a built-in massaging feature for recuperating from those long days at work.

Rear passengers will also experience the luxury. The 122.8-inch wheelbase increases the legroom to 47.5 inches so there's plenty of room to stretch your legs. The plush seats also recline up to 17 degrees. Rear passengers can also operate the panoramic sunroof while watching a video on screens mounted to the headrest.

Sporting the same engine as the Jaguar F-Type, the 5.0-liter supercharged 510 horsepower V8 gets you places fast. Going 0 to 60 miles per hour in 5.5 seconds, it smoothly accelerates thanks to a well-engineered 8-speed automatic transmission.

Snazzy 21-inch alloy wheels complement the Range Rover's distinctive front grille and sleek all-aluminum exterior.

The Rover has great safety features like side view mirrors with blind spot monitors and adaptive cruise control to keep the car collision free. The cruise control slows the vehicle down automatically to keep it from gaining on the car in front of you. Radar built-in to the rear bumper saves you from hitting objects and people in reverse.

The automatic terrain response system adjusts the suspension to match the speed and terrain. It handles so well in turns that you may forget you are in a top-heavy SUV that can roll over if you are careless. Speaking of things that can go wrong in a SUV, Land Rover even boasts that this vehicle can wade in 35.4 inches of water should it get caught in a flood.

The automatic parallel parking feature will blow your socks off. Push to activate the parking mode and it instructs you to drive until it sees an opening it can fit in. Once it sees a worthy spot, it instructs you to stop and put the car in reverse – then keep your hands off the wheel and watch as the car parks itself with finesse. Your only job, other than changing gears and touching the gas pedal, is to make sure the spot is legal.

This car is packed with features including a built-in 8-inch touchscreen GPS and a Meridian sound system which pumps out 825 watts.

The only caveat besides the massive price tag is the need for premium unleaded and lots of it. At 14 mpg in the city, you will be making plenty of fuel stops. But if you can afford a $121,390 car, you can probably afford to pay for the fuel.


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Patrick jetting off to Denmark on trade mission

BOSTON — Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick is jetting off to Denmark on his latest trade mission.

Patrick is departing Massachusetts for Copenhagen on Saturday. On Sunday he plans to tour the Lilligrund Wind Farm off the Denmark coast with business leaders in the offshore wind industry.

On Monday Patrick meets with leaders in the biotech, life sciences offshore wind energy industries before heading off to London.

After visiting London, Patrick's European tour continues in France with stops in Paris and Lyon.

Patrick is being joined by cabinet secretaries, academic officials and business leaders.

Patrick said his goal is to expand opportunities between Massachusetts and European countries in the innovation economy, clean tech, digital gambling, financial services, and education sectors.

It's his fourth major trade mission this year.

The trip wraps up on Friday.


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Sun-exposure tracking device to help users see the light

A MassChallenge finalist says it's developed the first solar-powered, wearable sun-exposure tracker to improve energy, mood and focus, regulate sleep cycle, and monitor ultraviolet light exposure.

Founded by two Harvard Medical School psychiatry professors, GoodLux Technology developed SunSprite, a thumb-sized device with 10 LEDs that light up, based on a person's percentage of light exposure.

On a sunny day, most people need about 30 minutes of bright light within two hours of waking up to improve energy, mood and focus, said CEO Edward Likovich.

On an overcast day, people may need 45 minutes to an hour. And at night, they should avoid the kind of bright light that comes from a computer to fall asleep because it interferes with their circadian rhythms, Likovich said.

"It's exactly the right time for this as the days are getting shorter," he said. "It really makes an impact on people's lives."

Research dating back to 1984 found that bright light could be helpful in treating people with seasonal affective disorder. But it wasn't until 2005 that the American Psychiatric Association recommended that bright light be used before medication to treat the disorder.

"We had written about social isolation and were interested in how you could gratify someone's natural needs before you started tweaking their brain chemistry," said Jacqueline Olds, who founded GoodLux in 2012 with her husband, Richard Schwartz. "Research also shows that bright light in the morning boosts cognitive functioning in older people."

The two teamed up with Harvard engineers Tom Hayes and Kasey Russell, who developed the first prototype for SunSprite in 2012 and the second early this year.

In March, they raised money for the project on the crowdfunding website Indiegogo, where 700 people signed up to buy the device for $99. After tomorrow, the price will be $149.

The device also syncs with your iPhone, allowing you to track your progress in real time and get personalized goals and tips. GoodLux plans to have an Android app available in the coming months.

"My husband and I sit at a computer during the day, so this is a good reminder to get outside," said Jana Eggers, 45, a customer who lived in Boston for 17 years before moving to Charleston, S.C. "They made the device very simple. You can just wear it and see whether you've gotten enough light for the day. And it's solar-powered, so I don't have to worry about batteries."


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Will Apple's digital wallet kill the card swipe?

NEW YORK — Apple wants the plastic credit card to become as rare as the paper check.

On Tuesday, the company announced Apple Pay, a digital payment system that lets people pay for retail store purchases using their phones rather than cash or credit cards. The service, which will work both with iPhones and Apple's new Watch, is backed by a host of big retailers, along with most major banks and credit card issuers, including Visa, MasterCard and American Express.

So-called contactless payment isn't new. Starbucks, McDonald's, PayPal, Google and Square offer their own services, but only a small portion of customers use them. Some experts believe Apple Pay —with its presence on millions of iPhones and its advanced security features— could be the service that leads to widespread adoption of the digital wallet.

Citi Investment Research analyst Mark May believes the sum total of mobile payments could grow from $1 billion in 2013 to $58.4 billion by 2017.

Payment digitization paints an enticing vision of shopping's future: simply tap your device against a checkout screen and walk away with your new shoes.

But despite the flashy Apple Pay launch, Apple faces challenges making that vision a reality. The company and other digital wallet providers must convince shoppers that the transactions are safe —especially in the wake of recent high-profile data breaches at Home Depot and Target. Meanwhile, the company must also make a case to retailers that it's worth it for them to invest in new point-of-sale systems.

Many U.S. merchants still aren't sold on the idea. About 220,000 stores are set up to accept Apple Pay. That's only 5.5 percent of the 3.6 million retail locations in the U.S., according to the National Retail Federation. The biggest U.S. retailers, including Wal-Mart and Best Buy, are not participating in Apple Pay.

The main reason is cost. Each point-of-sale device, which uses something called near-field communication technology, costs hundreds of dollars, plus hours of worker training. And there's been little customer demand for the systems.

That may change now that Apple has entered the arena, says Gartner analyst Avivah Litan.

"There's no doubt young people want to use phones to make payments, but they have to have a place to pay," says Litan. She predicts bigger retailers will see how well Apple partners like McDonald's do before they move into mobile payments.

"If it goes well at other retailers, Wal-Mart and other companies may break down and start taking it," Litan says.

In countries such as Canada and the U.K., contactless point-of-sale systems are widespread, and as a result, such payments are far more common. In Canada, for instance, about 20 percent of transactions at registers processed by MasterCard are completed by contactless payment, according to MasterCard.

"What you learn from that is when consumers start 'tapping' two or three times, they never go back to their old behavior at that merchant. ... It's just a much better experience," says Ed McLaughlin, chief emerging payments officer at MasterCard.

One of the strengths of Apple Pay is its security. Its system uses the company's Touch ID fingerprint technology, a secure chip, and payments that require a one-time security code.

That kind of security — similar to the chip-and-pin credit card system used in Europe — would prevent the type of breaches that happened at Target and Home Depot. And it could be a compelling reason for retailers to adopt Apple Pay, Litan says.

"If you get enough people using the service, it would cut down on retailers' security costs, and that's why over time it may really take off," she says.

Still, not everyone is convinced that swiping a credit or debit card is that much of an inconvenience in the first place. Bill Ready, head of next generation commerce at PayPal, points out that near-field communication has been around for 10 years without catching on. His vision of the mobile payment future is more akin to an "e-commerce style transaction happening in the physical world," he says, citing the example of car-sharing service Uber, which works with PayPal to processes riders' payments by way of a mobile phone app.

"Uber addressed a real pain point, in that hailing a taxi and payment for a taxi is cumbersome," he says. "We're focused on those types of things more than killing the card swipe."

Even amid the differing visions, most experts agree that the march toward the digitization of payment will continue.

"Someone is going to figure out how to make mobile payments easy and cheap and then we're talking a real shift in consumer behavior," says Gartner's Litan.


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For some cars, tire dimensions are crucial

I just read your article "Wrong tire size is not a solution," where you advised that tires should all be the same size on a Jeep Liberty. I recently blew a tire on my 2011 VW Touareg and had to purchase four new tires because tire stores said they couldn't sell me just one tire due to the vehicle having all-wheel drive. My VW dealer confirmed this. Why wouldn't this apply to the Jeep Liberty as well?

With any AWD or 4WD vehicle where power can be applied to all four tires at the same time, the critical issue is tire diameter. All four tires must have the same rolling circumference, meaning each tire rolls the same distance in one complete revolution.

Why? As I explained in the earlier column, any significant differences in tire diameters can generate significant mechanical stress on driveline components. Think of it this way; if you had a solid axle with a different size tire/wheel welded on each end, what would happen when you tried to roll the axle straight forward? Either the larger tire would skid, or the smaller tire would skip. Can you see how this would stress the shaft or axle?

So why do carmakers recommend replacement of all four tires at the same time? Tires are still manufactured one at a time in a mold, so even the same make, model and size tire can vary tire to tire, particularly when manufactured at a different time.

Carmakers are concerned that a single replacement tire may vary enough in diameter to stress the driveline. They're also concerned that traction due to increased tread depth on the new tire could affect handling and braking. I also suspect that part of the four-tire replacement recommendation has something to do with concerns over potential liabilities.

Would the car know that one tire was newer than the others as long as it's the same exact diameter? I don't think so. It may sense a difference in traction due to tread depth difference, particularly in wet/slippery conditions, but not simply that one tire was newer than the others.

One important point to remember is that tire diameter shrinks over tread life. Thus, replacing just one worn/flat tire with a new tire of the same make, model and size could create stress on the driveline due to the larger diameter of the new tire. But as long as all four tires are the same rolling diameter, no damage to the driveline will occur.

Last week I stopped at a gas station to put gas in my 2001 Kawasaki 1200 motorcycle. After choosing how I was going to pay, I grabbed the diesel hose without thinking. I pushed the button for the highest octane gas, not the one for diesel, but diesel fuel came out anyway and I filled the tank. I went about half a mile before the engine began to balk and I realized what I had done. A repair shop is estimating a cost of up to a thousand dollars. Does this seem reasonable? Can't they just drain the tank and carburetors and refill it with gas?

Considering the age and value of the bike, I'd sure try that first. In addition, I'd open the draincocks on the carbs, route drain hoses safely into a container and completely flush the fuel system from the tank through gascock/filter and carbs with gasoline. It may take several flushes to clear the system, but I would think this would get you back on the road. Change the engine oil, as well.

It might be a good idea to keep the first few outings close to home and carry your cellphone.

Paul Brand, author of "How to Repair Your Car," is an automotive troubleshooter, driving instructor and former race car driver. Readers may write to him at: Star Tribune, 425 Portland Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn., 55488 or via email at paul brand@startribune.com. Please explain the problem in detail and include a daytime phone number.


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MassChallenge’s global scale

MassChallenge, already the world's largest startup accelerator and competition — with programs in Boston, Israel and, in the coming months, the U.K. — continues to push the envelope of international expansion, exploring the possibility of similar programs in Russia, Germany, Switzerland, France, Mexico and Colombia.

"Part of the vision is that we can demonstrate Boston is the global leader in innovation and entrepreneurship," John Harthorne, MassChallenge's founder and CEO, told the Herald from Berlin, one of his stops on a three-week business trip to Russia and Europe. "In most places around the world, resources like mentors, lawyers and investors for startups are missing or poorly coordinated. We have a good system in the U.S. I think we can help create huge growth, as well as open up new avenues for investment and trade between Massachusetts and these countries."

MassChallenge announced earlier this year that it had secured initial funding to launch its first London program. Harthorne said he hopes to announce new partnerships and sponsorships Wednesday for the program, which could begin accepting applications next spring or early summer. Within 18 months to two years, MassChallenge also may open an office in Russia, where Harthorne and MassChallenge mentors were on hand to offer training to 12 IT startups that recently won a competition in Skolkovo, home to Russia's largest accelerator. That training will continue for five weeks via Skype before the entrepreneurs pitch their ideas in late October in Boston, he said.

In Berlin, Harthorne met with partners who are trying to market the program, with a tentative launch in 2016. He also has planned stops in Switzerland and France.

"Right now, we're focused mostly on Europe, but there's also interest in Mexico and Colombia, both of which have been paying us for mentorship and training," Harthorne said. "When we started MassChallenge, we did plan for expansion. But we didn't expect this much excitement and interest. The challenge is keeping up with the demand."


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Bottle bill foes pour cash into campaign

Well-funded opponents of a ballot question to expand Massachusetts' bottle bill to include 5-cent deposits on bottled water, juice and sports drinks will begin a TV advertising campaign tomorrow to push their cause before the November election.

But Janet Domenitz, executive director of MassPIRG — part of a coalition of environmental groups supporting the bottle bill expansion — hopes that after an unsuccessful 10-year legislative push, voters will see through the "misleading TV ads" and pass the binding measure.

"You can certainly buy a lot of television with that kind of money, but this is a law that's been widely and broadly supported for years, so we're hoping the corrupting influence of big special interest money doesn't change the support for this bill," Domenitz said. "If the vote was taken before a bunch of misleading TV ads, we would win hands-down."

The American Beverage Association, a Washington, D.C.-based trade group for the non-alcoholic beverage industry, already has contributed $5 million to the "No on Question 2: Stop Forced Deposits" campaign, which has raised $5.4 million in total, according to the most recent campaign finance reports. Supermarkets including Stop & Shop, Big Y and Donelan's also have made large contributions.

The proposed law, which would take effect in April, also would require the state to adjust the deposit every five years to reflect consumer price index changes. And it would increase minimum handling fees paid by beverage distributors and bottlers.

"Question 2 costs a lot and doesn't do much of anything for recycling," said Nicole Giambusso, spokeswoman for the No on Question 2 group.

Passage would increase costs to grocers required to redeem the containers in their stores, according to Giambusso. "Those costs will trickle down to consumers and add nearly $60 million in grocery costs," she said. "And ... we'd only be getting an eighth of a percent of a recycling increase. The other alternative would be to expand curbside recycling, which a lot of communities have. (It) is three times cheaper."

Supporters of the bottle bill expansion have raised just $292,988, according to campaign finance reports. But Domenitz said the grass-roots coalition — which includes the League of Women Voters, Sierra Club, Massachusetts Audubon Society and Emerald Necklace Conservancy — is setting up a "town captain" structure where volunteers will work locally to get out the message in their own communities.

There's one data point that voters need to understand, she said: Carbonated beverage containers with the 5-cent deposit get recycled 80 percent of the time, while only 23 percent of non-deposit beverages are recycled.

"Curbside (recycling) is great, but it's not capturing these beverages," she said.

And anybody who leaves the house "doesn't need a study to back that up," according to Domenitz. "If your kid plays ball at a park or you walk your dog, or you go to the beach, or you live in the city, or you hike a trail, you've had the experience of seeing littered bottle water containers, sports drinks — the things that don't have a deposit."


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Skin shocks used at Mass. school draw FDA look

CANTON, Mass. — Some cut themselves. Others slam their heads against walls or desks — so hard that one girl detached both retinas and a young man triggered a stroke. Another pulled out all his teeth.

Self-injury is one of the most difficult behaviors associated with autism and other developmental or intellectual disabilities, and a private facility outside Boston that takes on some of the hardest-to-treat cases is embroiled in a major debate: Should it use electrical skin shocks to try to keep patients from harming themselves or others?

The Food and Drug Administration is considering whether to ban devices used by the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center in Canton, Massachusetts, the only place in the country known to use skin shocks as aversive conditioning for aggressive patients.

It's a rare move by the FDA, following years of complaints from disability rights' groups and even a U.N. report that the shocks are tantamount to torture.

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg says the shock therapy has raised a lot of questions.

"We really wanted to take a much more focused and rigorous look at it," Hamburg said in an interview with The Associated Press. "There's a lot of concern about the downside of this approach and the harm and the risk to the patients receiving it."

Rotenberg must get a court's approval to begin administering skin shocks to a student. The center uses a graduated electronic decelerator, or GED, that is attached to the arms or legs. If the student acts aggressively — head-banging, throwing furniture, attacking someone — then a center worker can press a button to activate the electrode, delivering a two-second shock to the skin.

Some patients compared the shocks to a hard pinch or bee sting. Others say it's far more painful; one said it was like being stung by a thousand bees.

At an FDA advisory committee hearing this year, most of the neurology and ethics experts concluded the device poses an unreasonable and substantial risk, while acknowledging that other therapies don't work for everyone.

"I think that what has happened is that this has gone on for this long because this is a population who cannot adequately speak for themselves," Dr. Karen Weigle, a clinical psychologist affiliated with the University of New Hampshire's Institute on Disability, told fellow committee members.

Dr. Steven Miles, a bioethicist at the University of Minnesota, was one of several advisers concerned about the lack of scientific studies showing the shock therapy works. That only one treatment facility uses them, he said, makes it "unreasonable to conclude that these devices are part of the standard of care for this class of patients."

But Louisa Goldberg of Newton, Massachusetts, says the skin shocks are the only treatment that has worked for her son, Andrew, who suffered brain damage at birth and became dangerously aggressive as he got older.

Andrew Goldberg spent years at a New Hampshire facility, where his mother says he bit, hit and kicked staff members. When restraints did not work, workers tried medications to calm him. "He was a zombie," Louisa Goldberg said.

He was kicked out at age 19 and taken to Rotenberg, which weaned him from some medications and began the skin shocks. Now, at 33, Goldberg still gets a shock or two every month, but his mom says his life is better.

"Andrew is awake. He's alert. He's happy and he's functioning to the best of his abilities," Louisa Goldberg said in an interview. "We have our son back."

Rotenberg's executive director, Glenda Crookes, calls the shocks a last resort coupled with positive behavior programs, such as rewarding students with time at JRC's Internet cafe or the teen lounge with its arcade games. The idea is that the two-second shock is quick but painful enough to jar the patient out of the harmful episode.

Of the 235 patients at the center, 55 are being treated with skin shocks. Most are in their 30s; five are between age 17 and 21.

The FDA first cleared the GED device for use in 1994. But Rotenberg started using a more powerful version, about 2.5 times stronger, that was developed after one student built up a tolerance to the shocks. In 2000, the FDA said the newer device didn't need approval, but the agency changed its position in 2011 and said approval was required, eventually leading to April's hearing on whether to ban it altogether.

The center insists it is safe.

Some former students say otherwise.

"It's not safe. It doesn't feel safe. I ended up having nightmares," Jennifer Msumba testified via video at the FDA's hearing. The 38-year-old said the GED left burn marks and was prone to misfires, unintended shocks.

Msumba's mother is suing JRC. Her attorney says Jennifer Msumba, who has autism, was given more than 230 electrical shock treatments since 2002 and not permitted to take psychiatric medications. Msumba said she is less anxious at a new treatment facility in Florida.

"They help figure out what makes me want to do things that could be harmful so I can learn how I feel before it happens," Msumba told the AP.

Rotenberg representatives says the suit has no merit and that "Jennifer made incredible progress" at the center.

About 10 percent of people with intellectual disabilities or autism display self-injurious behavior. Severity varies widely and treatment should be individualized, said Dr. Louis Hagopian, program director of the neurobehavioral unit at Baltimore's Kennedy Krieger Institute. Hagopian was not part of the FDA panel reviewing skin shocks.

The most studied approach — behavioral treatment — involves identifying what social or environmental factors trigger a patient's behavior, and then teaching the person coping skills plus altering their environment to decrease those problematic situations. Hagopian said medications that address mood, impulsiveness and other conditions also frequently are used.

Jennifer Msumba's suit is not the first.

Cheryl McCollins sued the center for malpractice after her autistic son, Andre, was shocked more than 30 times over approximately seven hours in 2002. In a surveillance video played in court, Andre is seen lying face down with his arms and legs tied to a restraining board. He can be heard screaming, "Help me. No." The center settled the suit.

The center says that "is not the same treatment approach JRC would take today." Crookes, the center's executive director, said skin shocks would be suspended earlier and the center would take a closer look at potential triggers of aggression.

Sharon Wood of Charlottesville, Virginia, fears a ban on skin shocks would return her 21-year-old son, Joshua, to the violent behavior that used to force her to lock herself in a room with her young daughter. Joshua Wood is profoundly autistic. His parents say they tried everything but the only thing that worked was the shocks.

"Do not take away what is saving his life," Sharon Wood said in an interview as the FDA considers the ban. "Don't take this away until you are convinced there are better alternatives."

____

Neergaard reported from Washington.


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Samsung accuses LG execs of damaging its products

SEOUL, South Korea — Samsung Electronics Co. has accused senior executives of domestic rival LG Electronics Inc. of intentionally vandalizing its washing machines at retail stores in Germany and has asked for an official investigation.

In a statement Sunday, Samsung said it had asked the Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office to investigate executives from a Korean company who were seen as damaging its washing machines displayed at shopping malls in Berlin. A Samsung spokesman confirmed that the Korean company referred to was LG.

"The people in question have been implicated in deliberately destroying Samsung washing machines displayed at retail stores in Berlin, Germany, where, at the time, the annual IFA electronics trade show was underway," Samsung's statement said. "It is very unfortunate that Samsung had to request that a high-ranking executive be investigated by the nation's legal authorities, but this was inevitable ... the truth must be revealed for the sake of fostering fair competition."

LG Electronics denied Samsung's claim. It said in a statement that while it is true that some of its executives and staff, including a president, had visited a Berlin store and looked at various products, it is common for its employees to examine rival company's products abroad.

"If our company had an intention to destroy products of a certain company to tarnish the image of the product, it would be commonsensical to not have our executives to directly carry out such acts," LG's statement said. "We hope that this incident is not an effort to tarnish our company, which is the global No. 1 maker of washing machines."

LG said the model in question had weak hinges, but it did not say whether its executives had damaged the products.

Samsung said LG tarnished both its brand image and the reputation of its employees with claims that its washing machines were defective.


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