Herman Cain Says He Might Run For President Again In 2016

Herman Cain, don’t tease us so.

The pizza magnate, who at one point topped all Republican challengers during the 2012 Republican presidential primary before dropping out amidst allegations of multiple affairs, suggested on Saturday that he would return to the campaign trail in 2016 if called upon God to do so.

“I do not know what the future holds, but I know who holds the future. And I trust in God,” the Georgia restauranteur said at the annual Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans, as quoted by the Washington Post.

Before dismissing Cain’s suggestion as nothing more than his run of the mill antics, it’s worth noting that he also hinted at a presidential run before the same crowd in 2010.

If he does decide to run again, Cain would likely face fresh scrutiny over multiple allegations of sexual harassment at the National Restaurant Association, not to mention his infamous “9-9-9” plan that one study found would have raised taxes on 84 percent of Americans.

Vintage Photos Of Apollo Astronauts Training In Hawaii Unearthed

HONOLULU (AP) — Before Apollo astronauts went to the moon, they went to Hawaii to train on the Big Island’s lunar landscapes.

Now, decades-old photos are surfacing of astronauts scooping up Hawaii’s soil and riding across volcanic fields in a “moon buggy” vehicle. The Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems, a Hawaii state agency, is displaying the photos at its Hilo headquarters. Rob Kelso, the agency’s executive director, found the images at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Astronauts from Apollo missions 13 through 17 trained in Hawaii as did some back up crews, Kelso said.

Some training was on Mauna Kea volcano, where glacial runoff crushed and refined rock into powder. Astronauts also trained on recent lava flows.

Today, robots are tested on the Big Island for moon and Mars missions.

In recent years, engineers have tested technology to pull oxygen out of the island’s dirt, which is volcanic basalt like the Martian and lunar soil. Future missions could use this technology to extract oxygen from the land instead of taking it along. The oxygen could be used for breathing, to make fuel or for other purposes.

Kelso said scientists are also interested in testing robots at the Big Island’s lava tubes and lava tube skylight holes, which resemble similar formations recently spotted in high-definition images taken by satellites orbiting the moon, Mercury, Venus and Mars.

Lava tubes are tunnels made when lava forms a solid roof after flowing steadily in a confined area for hours. Skylight holes are formed when part of the tube breaks.

Moving the Conversation to Where You Want to Have It

At The Huffington Post, we are always thinking of ways to better engage our worldwide audience and create a meaningful community for our readership.

The growth and evolution of the site has gone hand-in-hand with changes in how the internet operates. And one of the most significant changes we’ve seen to date is the increasing volume of conversations about our articles happening not only on HuffPost, but all over the web on a range of platforms and social networks.

In light of this important trend, we want to make you aware of a change that will take place on the site on Monday, June 2, at noon EST.

As many of you have noticed, we’ve been experimenting with the Facebook comments platform on many of our verticals over the past few weeks. On Monday, our entire U.S. site, including our mobile web and our mobile apps, will move exclusively to Facebook comments, allowing our readers to engage with content on the site and connect with other users outside of the native Huffington Post platform. This is far from an an end to conversation; it’s the start of conversation where you want to have it — and where you’ve been having it already. It’s bringing the discussions and debates to the places where you engage with them the most and introducing so much of what makes the HuffPost community great to the broader Facebook audience.

The community has been a vital part of The Huffington Post since the beginning, and it will continue to play an important role. You can still comment on our posts using the the comment module. You can provide us with news tips, firsthand accounts, information or photos about a news story by sending them to us. If you have an idea for a blog post, please send it to us here (long-time community members interested in blogging under their established HuffPost handles are also invited to send in post ideas).

We hope that you are as excited as we are for these changes to the commenting platform and to the new era of conversation on The Huffington Post!

The Hidden Cash Millionaire Is Causing 'Pandemonium' In Los Angeles

The mysterious millionaire who hid cash in random places in San Francisco is now causing chaos at a Los Angeles area beach after surreptitiously “donating” his money there, too.

On Saturday, the purported middle-aged real-estate developer announced on his Twitter account, @HiddenCash, that he stashed 36 “Angry Bird” toys filled with cash around Hermosa Beach, Calif., an oceanfront city just south of Los Angeles, for anyone to find.

The anonymous benefactor, who gained notoriety earlier this month after hiding money throughout the Bay Area, moved on to Burbank, Calif. on Friday and egged people on to go on a scavenger hunt for money there.

The frenzy continues into the weekend. This was the scene at Hermosa Beach a little over a half an hour after Saturday’s clue was tweeted.

One person on Twitter described the scene as “pandemonium.”

Some of the toy birds reportedly contained as much as $180.

Los Angelenos who struck out on Saturday shouldn’t lose hope. The person behind @HiddenCash hasn’t run out of cash yet.

Phil Mickelson Says He's Cooperating With FBI In Insider Trading Investigation

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Hall of Fame golfer Phil Mickelson confirmed that FBI agents investigating insider trading approached him this week at the Memorial Tournament. The five-time major champion said Saturday he has done “absolutely nothing wrong.”

A federal official briefed on the investigation told The Associated Press the FBI and Securities and Exchange Commission are analyzing trades Mickelson and Las Vegas gambler Billy Walters made involving Clorox at the same time activist investor Carl Icahn was attempting to take over the company. The official was unauthorized to speak about the ongoing investigation and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity. Reports of the investigation appeared in several newspapers, including the Wall Street Journal.

Smiling as he stood before a room packed with reporters and cameras, Mickelson said the investigation had not been a distraction until FBI agents approached him after his opening round Thursday. He did not offer any other details, including his relationship with Walters or any stock advice he might have received.

He said it would not affect his preparations for the U.S. Open in two weeks, the only major he lacks for the career Grand Slam.

“It’s not going to change the way I carry myself,” Mickelson said after an even-par 72 at Muirfield Village left him far behind the leaders. “Honestly, I’ve done nothing wrong. I’m not going to walk around any other way.”

The federal official told the AP that Mickelson and Walters placed their trades about the same time in 2011. Federal investigators are looking into whether Icahn shared information of his takeover attempt of Clorox with Walters, and whether Walters passed that information to Mickelson.

The New York offices of the U.S. Attorney and the FBI declined to comment.

The newspaper reports said federal officials also were examining trades by Mickelson and Walters involving Dean Foods Co. in 2012.

After a brief interview, Mickelson stepped outside and signed autographs for about 20 minutes, like it was any other day at a tournament. Fans were supportive as ever on the golf course, and Mickelson gave away so many golf balls to children and his caddie asked a tour official to retrieve more balls from his locker when they reached the turn.

He had released a statement early Saturday, and said that he wouldn’t release details.

“I can’t really go into much right now, but as I said in my statement, I have done absolutely nothing wrong,” Mickelson said. “And that’s why I’ve been fully cooperating with the FBI agents, and I’m happy to do in the future, too, until this gets resolved.”

He declined to answer questions about his relationship with Walters, who owns several golf courses. And when asked whether Walters advised him to invest in Clorox or Dean Foods, Mickelson matter-of-factly replied to a Wall Street Journal reporter, “You should know. You wrote the article.”

Icahn, 78, is one of Wall Street’s most successful corporate raiders, famous for buying stock in underperforming companies, pressuring them to reform and selling out for a fat profit. In recent years, his targets have included Apple Inc., eBay and Dell Inc. His efforts have made him one of America’s richest people: Forbes magazine puts his net worth at more than $20 billion, making him the 18th-wealthiest American.

In the 1980s, he pioneered so-called greenmail raids in which financiers threatened companies with hostile takeovers unless they were paid a premium to go away.

Walters is a legendary figure in sports betting circles, widely feared by sports book operators as one of the few people who can consistently win. He’s bet millions on Super Bowls alone, and told “60 Minutes” in a 2011 profile that he has never had a losing year. An early user of computer data, Walters was one of the few bettors whose opinion was so respected that he could move point spreads if it was known what side he was betting on.

Walters and a group of bettors dubbed The Computer Group were indicted in the mid-1980s for running what prosecutors said was a bookmaking operation, but were acquitted at trial. Walters was also indicted on money laundering charges in 1998 and had $2.8 million in cash confiscated from a safe deposit box, but the charges were later dismissed and the money returned.

Walters was also a high stakes gambler on the golf course, regularly playing celebrities or PGA Tour pros for cash. He told Golf Digest that he once lost a $2 million bet and once made a 40-foot putt worth $400,000. Walters teamed up with touring pro partner Fredrik Jacobson to win the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am by 10 strokes in 2008 while playing as an 11 handicap.

Walters also owns golf courses and auto dealerships. Politically connected in Las Vegas, Walters is also known for his philanthropy, particularly toward Opportunity Village, which trains developmentally disabled adults.

Mickelson, 43, was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2011. He goes to the U.S. Open next month in North Carolina with a chance to become only the sixth golfer to capture all four major championships. He has not won since the British Open last summer in Scotland.

Mickelson has long had a reputation to gamble, though he has said he scaled back his habit after his son, Evan, was born in 2003 following a troublesome pregnancy. The most publicized payoff was when Mickelson and friends won $560,000 on a preseason bet (28-1 odds) that the Baltimore Ravens would win the 2001 Super Bowl.

On the golf course, he has a long history of playing money games during the practice rounds. He occasionally gets a group of players and caddies together for dinner and small wagering during the NBA and NHL playoffs, and prominent fights.

A year ago, Mickelson was criticized for public comments that tax increases in California kept him from being part of the San Diego Padres’ new ownership group and might cause him to leave his native state. He said his federal and state taxes amount to over 60 percent.

___

Associated Press writer Tom Hays in New York, Associated Press writers Paul Wiseman and Eric Tucker in Washington, AP Sports Writer Tim Dahlberg in Las Vegas and AP Sports Writer Rusty Miller in Columbus, Ohio, contributed to this report.

Joe Biden Delivers Delaware Commencement Speech

NEWARK, Del. (AP) — Today’s college graduates are stepping into a rapidly changing world that presents profound dangers and challenges as well as incredible opportunities, Vice President Joe Biden said Saturday in a commencement speech at his alma mater, the University of Delaware.

A sense of confidence and an optimistic attitude will enable the newest class of graduates not only to confront those challenges and make the most of them, just as previous generations of Americans have done, but “to bend history a little bit,” the vice president said. “Once every couple of generations, a class enters a point in our history where they actually have a chance to change the trajectory of the country, an inflection point, where change is taking place,” Biden said.

Biden’s speech was his fourth commencement address at the university, from which he graduated in 1965 with a double major in history and political science. Today, just as when he graduated from the university, America is again at such a point of change, Biden asserted.

Whereas the nation in the 1960s was roiled by the nuclear arms race, the civil rights movement, political assassinations and the Vietnam War, the challenges today are different, but no less daunting, said Biden, ticking off a list that includes international terrorism, pandemic disease, climate change and global inequity.

“Today, stateless actors not only create a threat, but an opportunity. They’re bringing together civilized nations in a common cause to wipe them out,” he explained. “The effects of climate change are real and must be acted on. They’re generating phenomenal breakthroughs and rapid growth of renewable energy.”

Similarly, the fear of pandemic disease has led a generation of scientists and doctors to find new tools not just to prevent disease, but to cure illnesses once thought incurable, and medical and scientific advances continue at a breakneck pace, he said.

Meanwhile, America remains the world’s economic leader and a nation that embraces “equity, fairness and justice,” Biden noted.

“Consider the progress we’ve made just since you’ve been here in civil rights,” he said to the applause of graduates. “The right to marry the person you love. The right of a woman to make her own health care decisions. The right of millions of people living in the shadows to earn a pathway to citizenship.”

Biden urged graduates to embrace the future with a sense of confidence.

“You are citizens of the nation that is better positioned than any country in the world to lead the 21st century, economically, politically, socially,” he said. “…. Neither optimism nor pessimism enables you to predict your future, but I am absolutely confident that only confidence and an optimistic attitude will enable you to take a hand in shaping your future.”

Biden’s speech was his fourth commencement address at the university, from which he graduated in 1965 with a double major in history and political science. In 2011, he donated his senatorial papers to the school.

Say Hello To Jimmy, Intel's Fully-Customizable, 3D-Printed Robot

Intel’s got big plans for the world of consumer robotics. They plan to bring Jimmy – a fully customizable, 3D-printed robot – to market by the end of the year, with designs freely available online. So, how do YOU feel about owning your very own robot?

This week in tech reads: What really happens when you shock a dead brain with electricity, the real

This week in tech reads: What really happens when you shock a dead brain with electricity, the real science behind the summeriest sci-fi movies, ex-Lulzsec hacker walks free, and more!

Read more…



The Real Springfield Is Getting A 'Simpsons' Mural

SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (AP) — The city of Springfield, Oregon, says a mural featuring “The Simpsons” will be painted on the side of the Emerald Art Center.

Series creator Matt Groening grew up in Portland and told Smithsonian magazine two years ago that he named Springfield after the one in Oregon. City spokesman Niel Laudati told The Register-Guard (http://is.gd/7C3m5L ) that Groening will have input on the mural, and the project resulted from discussions between the city and “The Simpsons” producers on commemorating the link between the real and fictitious Springfields.

The mural is expected to be completed by the end of the summer.

Laudati said the artwork will depict Homer lounging in a hammock, Bart climbing a tree, Marge painting, and Lisa and Maggie riding a bike.

___

Information from: The Register-Guard, http://www.registerguard.com

Florida Gators Pull Off Hidden Ball Trick (VIDEO)

The Florida Gators perfectly executed a hidden ball trick against the College Of Charleston on Friday to record an out at second base. It almost as good as the trick play the Minnesota Twins pulled off in “The Little Big League.

(H/T to The Big Lead)