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Apr 2, 2012

Philly.com News: Camden County GOP introduces freeholder candidates

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Camden County GOP introduces freeholder candidates
Apr 3rd 2012, 00:13

Democrats have dominated local politics for so long in Camden County that freeholder races have come to be seen as foregone conclusions.

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Philly.com News: Pa. lawmakers begin debate on reducing their own ranks

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Pa. lawmakers begin debate on reducing their own ranks
Apr 3rd 2012, 00:41

HARRISBURG - From the presidential race on down, making government smaller is on the lips of most every candidate for public office.

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U.S. News: Man who held English bulldog for ransom is sentenced

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Man who held English bulldog for ransom is sentenced
Apr 2nd 2012, 23:58

By msnbc.com staff

A man who stole a woman’s bulldog, demanding pills and $1,000 for his return, was sentenced to 3 ½ years in prison, the Longview Daily News reported.

The saga of Jagger the English bulldog began on Oct. 4, when his owner, Jennifer Thomas, of Woodland, Wash., offered to give baby clothes to Johnny Lee Jordan, 39, and his pregnant girlfriend, Ivy Rose Svaleson, 24. Svaleson was days from giving birth.

Thomas, who is wheelchair-bound from an accident and relies on pain medication, last saw her 2-year-old pooch in her driveway, KATU News in Portland, Ore. reported. Three days later, she began receiving threatening photos of Jagger by text message, accompanied by threats.


“If you don’t do exactly as you’re told the next few messages will be of your friend slowly getting tortured to death,” the person wrote, according to KATU. “And do us both a favor, keep this to yourself, no cops.”

But Thomas relied on her medicine, KATU reported, and she did not have money to pay the thieves.

Investigators became involved, but turned up little. Then, on Oct. 24, Jagger the bulldog was found dead on railroad tracks. Officials believe he died before being tied to the tracks. Thomas’s veterinarian concluded that the dog had been tortured, although a Human Society investigator did not find obvious torture wounds, the Daily News reported.

Svaleson has admitted to sending the text messages and tying up the dog by the railroad tracks, the Daily News reported. She and another accomplice will be tried next month.

A witness pointed police to Jordan, who has an extensive record in Washington State.

Thomas, accompanied by her husband and daughter, watched Friday as Jordan was sentenced to 41 months in prison for theft and extortion. Thomas said he showed little remorse for stealing her dog.   

"He supposedly was apologizing but he didn't look at us," she told the Daily News. "He tried to blame it on somebody else. He said, 'I'll admit to my part of it but there was another person.'"

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U.S. News: Gunman kills 7 at small California university

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thumbnail Gunman kills 7 at small California university
Apr 2nd 2012, 20:58

Seven people are dead after a shooter entered the Christian school in Oakland, Calif., and opened fire. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Updated at 7:55 p.m. ET: A gunman who killed seven people and wounded three others at a small Christian college in Oakland, Calif. on Monday first ordered students to line up against a wall and then pulled a handgun, witnesses told the Oakland Tribune.

"The people started running and he started shooting," said Gurpreet Sahota, who relayed an account to the Tribune from his sister-in-law, Dawinder Kaur.

The suspect, identified by the school as an ex-nursing student at Oikos University, had been absent for months before the incident, students in the class told the newspaper.


Kaur, 19, a nursing student was shot in her right arm near her elbow, the report said.

The suspect was arrested at an Alameda shopping center about five miles from the school, police said.

According to the Tribune, Safeway grocery store employees who did not give their names said the suspect had told a store staffer that he had shot people and needed to be arrested.

Customer Lisa Resler, who told the paper that she saw a young Asian man being handcuffed at the store, described him as being "very sedated."

Initial reports of the shooting said five had been killed. The City of Oakland later announced a higher toll.

"Ten people were injured during this morning's shooting, 7 of which are fatalities," Cynthia Perkins, a public safety official, said in a statement.

The Oakland Police Department said a possible suspect was in custody. "No imminent public safety threat appears to exist in immediate area," the department said on its Twitter account.

Some of the wounded at Oikos University were taken away by ambulance, while others were cared for outside the building, the Oakland Tribune reported.

The school's director said the suspect was no longer enrolled at Oikos, but he was unsure if the man had been expelled or dropped out, the Tribune reported.

Police had been looking for a gunman described as a Korean man in his 40s who allegedly carried out the attack on Oikos University, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The man had a heavy build and was wearing khaki clothing, police said.

Angie Johnson told the San Francisco Chronicle that she saw a young woman leave the building with blood coming from her arm and crying: "I've been shot. I've been shot."

The injured woman said the shooter was a man in her nursing class who got up and shot one person at point-blank range in the chest before spraying the room with bullets, Johnson said.

"She said he looked crazy all the time," she said the victim told her, "but they never knew how far he would go."

In its web site, Oikos says it aims to provide "a Christian education based on solid Christian doctrine and ideology."

The institution, established in 2008, does not appear on the U.S. Department of Education list of accredited postsecondary institutions and programs. It has California state accreditation to award degrees in theology, music, Asian medicine and nursing.

Oikos' annual revenue hovers around $1 million a year, according to publicly-available 990 tax forms for non-profit organizations.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Foreclosures give rise to a new industry

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Foreclosures give rise to a new industry
Apr 1st 2012, 03:12

Ken Major climbs the steps of a county courthouse in a San Francisco suburb with $500,000 in cashier's checks in one hand and a list of addresses in the other. Major is a buyer for Waypoint Real Estate, an Oakland-based investment firm that is scooping up foreclosed homes in California.

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Philly.com News: Corbett takes 1st step toward privatizing Pa. Lottery

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Corbett takes 1st step toward privatizing Pa. Lottery
Apr 2nd 2012, 22:53

HARRISBURG - Gov. Corbett on Monday took a first step toward privatizing day-to-day operations of the Pennsylvania Lottery.

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Philly.com News: DIMINISHING RETURNS

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DIMINISHING RETURNS
Apr 2nd 2012, 23:34

Throughout the presidential campaign, each of the candidates has invoked the American Dream. The venerable notion that hard work leads to prosperity - and that every generation does better than the previous one - has long been a rallying cry that tells us who we are and pulls us forward as a nation. But for young people these days, the American Dream is imperiled.

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Your 2 hourly digest for U.S. News

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thumbnail Nurse sentenced to life for killing patients by injecting them with bleach
Apr 2nd 2012, 22:29

Joel Andrews / AP / Lufkin Daily News

Kimberly Saenz was fired from her job at a clinic in Lufkin, Texas, in 2008 after patients started dying and falling increasingly ill.

By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

A Texas jury on Monday sentenced a former nurse to life in prison after finding her guilty of killing five patients by injecting bleach into their kidney dialysis lines, the Lufkin Daily News reported. 

Kimberly Saenz, 38, was found guilty of capital murder in the case last week. Jurors could have recommended that she be sentenced to death.

Saenz was fired from her job at a clinic in Lufkin run by health care giant DaVita Inc. in 2008 after patients started dying and falling increasingly ill.

The Lufkin Daily News reported that at Monday's sentencing, the daughter of victim Thelma Metcalf told Saenz, “You are nothing more than a psychopathic serial killer. I hope you burn in hell."


During closing arguments, the prosecution reminded jurors that other patients feared for their lives after they witnessed some of the injections. Two patients testified that they saw Saenz inject the bleach into the IV lines.

Saenz’s public defender, Ryan Deaton, argued that his client had been poorly trained.

The Associated Press found records that showed Sanez's husband had filed for divorce and obtained an emergency protective order against her in June 2007, a year before the outbreak of death and illnesses at the DaVita clinic.

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thumbnail One of three Huguette Clark apartments, the penthouse, has found a buyer
Apr 2nd 2012, 21:24

Brown Harris Stevens

The view from Huguette Clark's apartment 8W, which still could be yours. The asking price is $19 million.

By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, msnbc.com

NEW YORK — One of the three mysterious apartments of copper heiress Huguette M. Clark has sold for an undisclosed price. Her top-floor apartment, with 5,000 square feet of space overlooking Central Park, was on the market for $24 million, the most expensive of the three.

The signing of a contract for apartment 12W was confirmed Monday by broker Mary Rutherfurd of Brown Harris Stevens, an exclusive affiliate of Christie's International Real Estate. The apartments have been on the market for less than a month.

Still available: apartment 8W, also with a park view, at $19 million, and 8E, listed at $12 million.

You can see the floor plans and descriptions of the apartments in our earlier story.

The three apartments cost the reclusive heiress to a Montana copper fortune $28,500 a month in co-op fees, or $342,000 a year, while she lived for two decades in New York hospital rooms. Huguette Marcelle Clark has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. When she died last May at age 104, she owned three apartments at 907 Fifth Avenue, at 72nd Street, in addition to an oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif., with an estimated value of $100 million, and a country house in New Canaan, Conn., recently put back on the market by the same broker at $19.8 million.

The auction of the Clark jewelry collection, at Christie's New York, is scheduled for April 17. A slideshow of the Clark jewels is available at the home page for our Clark mystery series.

When the apartments and jewelry sell, some of the money will be used to pay estate expenses, with the rest will be held for the eventual winner of the legal battle. On one side are members of the Clark family, grandchildren of her father from his first marriage, whom she included in one will and then cut out of her last. On the other side are her attorney, accountant, nurse and favorite museum, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, which were all named in the second will, which left the largest portion of her estate to create an art museum in her California home, with the next largest piece going to her nurse.

 

thumbnail 3,168 undocumented immigrants held in largest-ever sweep
Apr 2nd 2012, 21:21

Gregory Bull / AP

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents take a suspect into custody as part of a nationwide immigration sweep in Chula Vista, Calif., on Friday.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Federal agents arrested more than 3,100 unauthorized immigrants last week in the country’s biggest-ever operation targeting criminal and fugitive immigrants for deportation, immigration officials said Monday.

From last Saturday to Thursday, agents in all 50 states used intelligence to track down certain immigrants.

The agents started before dawn; a supervisor would brief them about the person they aimed to arrest that day. In Dallas, a video from the raid on the Immigration and Customs Enforcement website shows a supervisor describing a man who had been deported before and who had a drunk-driving conviction.


The agents then headed to the person’s home, hoping to reach them before the person could leave for the day.

The roundup was the third “Cross Check” sweep since May 2011. In last week's raid, 1,900 agents arrested 3,168 immigrants, 90 percent of them men.

"These are people we do not want roaming our streets," John Morton, director of ICE, said at a news conference, according to Reuters. He said those arrested included almost 1,500 people with felony convictions, including murder and kidnapping.

Among those arrested were Carlington David Richards, 34, of Jamaica, who was living in Federal Way, Wash. Richards had recently moved to the U.S. and is wanted in Jamaica for murder, according to ICE.

Jose Angel Duran-Ramos, 66, of Mexico, was living in El Paso, Texas, and was convicted of murder in 1984 and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Veasna Uy, 34, of Cambodia, was living in Long Beach, Calif., and was convicted of manslaughter, attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon in 2000.

Gillian Christensen, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman, told msnbc.com that the agency has focused on deporting known criminals since President Barack Obama took office. Now, 50 percent of deported immigrants have prior criminal records. In 2008, about 30 percent had criminal records.

There were 11.9 million unauthorized immigrants living in the U.S. in 2008, about 4 percent of the nation’s population, according to the Pew Research Center. Last year, the service deported 396,000 people.

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Breaking News: CBS News: Some kids with severe autism may "bloom"

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Some kids with severe autism may "bloom"
Apr 2nd 2012, 07:06

Study found about one in 10 children with severe autism got rid of symptoms by age 8; researchers dubbed them "bloomers"

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Breaking News: CBS News: 7 dead in shooting at CA religious school

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7 dead in shooting at CA religious school
Apr 2nd 2012, 18:43

Suspect detained in shooting attack at Christian university in Oakland that killed at least 7 people, wounded three   Photos

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U.S. News: Nurse sentenced to life for killing patients by injecting them with bleach

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thumbnail Nurse sentenced to life for killing patients by injecting them with bleach
Apr 2nd 2012, 22:29

Joel Andrews / AP / Lufkin Daily News

Kimberly Saenz was fired from her job at a clinic in Lufkin, Texas, in 2008 after patients started dying and falling increasingly ill.

By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

A Texas jury on Monday sentenced a former nurse to life in prison after finding her guilty of killing five patients by injecting bleach into their kidney dialysis lines, the Lufkin Daily News reported. 

Kimberly Saenz, 38, was found guilty of capital murder in the case last week. Jurors could have recommended that she be sentenced to death.

Saenz was fired from her job at a clinic in Lufkin run by health care giant DaVita Inc. in 2008 after patients started dying and falling increasingly ill.

The Lufkin Daily News reported that at Monday's sentencing, the daughter of victim Thelma Metcalf told Saenz, “You are nothing more than a psychopathic serial killer. I hope you burn in hell."


During closing arguments, the prosecution reminded jurors that other patients feared for their lives after they witnessed some of the injections. Two patients testified that they saw Saenz inject the bleach into the IV lines.

Saenz’s public defender, Ryan Deaton, argued that his client had been poorly trained.

The Associated Press found records that showed Sanez's husband had filed for divorce and obtained an emergency protective order against her in June 2007, a year before the outbreak of death and illnesses at the DaVita clinic.

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Reconciliation

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Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Reconciliation
Apr 2nd 2012, 23:00

— "Newt Gingrich does not eat sandwiches; he fundamentally transforms them."

— Ikea is getting into the urban planning business.

— A mall built in Dongguan, China, in 2005 is twice as big as the Mall of America — and totally empty.

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U.S. News: 3,168 undocumented immigrants held in largest-ever sweep

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thumbnail 3,168 undocumented immigrants held in largest-ever sweep
Apr 2nd 2012, 21:21

Gregory Bull / AP

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents take a suspect into custody as part of a nationwide immigration sweep in Chula Vista, Calif., on Friday.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Federal agents arrested more than 3,100 unauthorized immigrants last week in the country’s biggest-ever operation targeting criminal and fugitive immigrants for deportation, immigration officials said Monday.

From last Saturday to Thursday, agents in all 50 states used intelligence to track down certain immigrants.

The agents started before dawn; a supervisor would brief them about the person they aimed to arrest that day. In Dallas, a video from the raid on the Immigration and Customs Enforcement website shows a supervisor describing a man who had been deported before and who had a drunk-driving conviction.


The agents then headed to the person’s home, hoping to reach them before the person could leave for the day.

The roundup was the third “Cross Check” sweep since May 2011. In last week's raid, 1,900 agents arrested 3,168 immigrants, 90 percent of them men.

"These are people we do not want roaming our streets," John Morton, director of ICE, said at a news conference, according to Reuters. He said those arrested included almost 1,500 people with felony convictions, including murder and kidnapping.

Among those arrested were Carlington David Richards, 34, of Jamaica, who was living in Federal Way, Wash. Richards had recently moved to the U.S. and is wanted in Jamaica for murder, according to ICE.

Jose Angel Duran-Ramos, 66, of Mexico, was living in El Paso, Texas, and was convicted of murder in 1984 and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Veasna Uy, 34, of Cambodia, was living in Long Beach, Calif., and was convicted of manslaughter, attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon in 2000.

Gillian Christensen, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman, told msnbc.com that the agency has focused on deporting known criminals since President Barack Obama took office. Now, 50 percent of deported immigrants have prior criminal records. In 2008, about 30 percent had criminal records.

There were 11.9 million unauthorized immigrants living in the U.S. in 2008, about 4 percent of the nation’s population, according to the Pew Research Center. Last year, the service deported 396,000 people.

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U.S. News: Gunman kills 7 at small Calif. university

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thumbnail Gunman kills 7 at small Calif. university
Apr 2nd 2012, 20:58

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Updated at 5:45 p.m. ET: A gunman opened fire Monday morning at a small Christian university in Oakland, Calif., killing seven people and wounding three, according to the City of Oakland. Earlier reports said five had been killed.

"10 people were injured during this morning's shooting, 7 of which are fatalities," Cynthia Perkins, a public safety official, said in a statement.

The Oakland Police Department said a possible suspect was in custody. "No imminent public safety threat appears to exist in immediate area," the department said on its twitter account.


Some of the wounded at Oikos University were taken away by ambulance, while others were cared for outside the building, the Oakland Tribune  reported.

The school's director said the suspect had previously been a nursing student at Oikos but was no longer enrolled, the Tribune reported. He was unsure if the man had been expelled or dropped out.

Police had been looking for a gunman described as a Korean man in his 40s who allegedly carried out the attack on Oikos University, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The man had a heavy build and was wearing khaki clothing, police said.

KNTV

A victim in the shootings at Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., is taken to an ambulance.

Angie Johnson told the San Francisco Chronicle that she saw a young woman leave the building with blood coming from her arm and crying: "I've been shot. I've been shot."

The injured woman said the shooter was a man in her nursing class who got up and shot one person at point-blank range in the chest before spraying the room with bullets, Johnson said.

"She said he looked crazy all the time," she said the victim told her, "but they never knew how far he would go."

Oikos says it aims to educate “emerging Christian leaders” and offers courses in theology, music, Asian medicine and nursing.

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U.S. News: Report on lavish Vegas trip spurs ouster of three top federal employees

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thumbnail Report on lavish Vegas trip spurs ouster of three top federal employees
Apr 2nd 2012, 21:42

Brendan Smialowski / Getty Images file

Martha Johnson was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate as head of the GSA on Feb. 5, 2010.

By msnbc.com staff

The head of the U.S. agency that provides products and services to support the federal government resigned Monday, after the agency’s inspector general reported excessive spending at a training conference in Las Vegas that included line items such as "mind reader," and "clown," according to a story first reported by The Washington Post.

GSA administrator Martha Johnson tendered her letter of resignation to the White House Monday and two of her deputies were forced out — Public Buildings Service chief Robert A. Peck and Johnson's top adviser, Stephen Leeds, White House officials told the Post. Four GSA employees who organized the four-day conference have been placed on administrative leave pending further action.

A soon-to-be-released report by the inspector general details the outlays at a GSA training conference for 300 employees held at a luxury hotel near Las Vegas in October 2010, the Post reported.


The costs included $147,000 in airfare and rooms at the hotel for six planning trips by a team of organizers. They also paid $3,200 for a mind reader and $75,000 on a training exercise to build a bicycle.

In her resignation letter, Johnson said that the agency had made a "significant mis-step," in which "taxpayer dollars were squandered." She said she had launched an internal review, taken disciplinary action and instituted tough new controls to prevent similar problems in the future.

She resigned, "so that the agency can move forward at this time with a fresh leadership team," according to her letter.

Johnson was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate as head of the GSA on Feb. 5, 2010.

The GSA manages contracts for government needs such as transportation, office space and communications. It is also tasked with developing cost-minimizing policies for the federal government.

White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew said in a statement that President Obama learned of the inspector general’s findings prior to his recent trip to South Korea, "and he was outraged by the excessive spending, question questionable dealings with contractors, and disregard for taxpayer dollars."

"He called for all those responsible to be held fully accountable given that these actions were irresponsible and entirely inconsistent with the expectations that he has set as president," the statement said.

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U.S. News: A 'tsunami' swamps Archives and Silicon Valley firm serving up 1940 census

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A 'tsunami' swamps Archives and Silicon Valley firm serving up 1940 census
Apr 2nd 2012, 05:07

By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, msnbc.com

Update, 5:40 p.m. ET: The firm at the center of today's census records meltdown says, "We were expecting a flood, but we got a tsunami."

"We had estimates of how much traffic was going to hit the site, and we did performance testing at several levels above that, but we were surprised by the traffic," Joe Godfrey, senior director of product and general manager for Inflection, a Silicon Valley database company."

Inflection was hired by the Nataional Archives and Records Administration, which provided the 1940 census records. Inflection buiilt the search engine to serve up the records, and relied on Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) as the cloud service provider. Inflection has been adding more of a pipeline to Amazon all day, adding the ability for more simultaneous connections, but so far searches for census records are running slowly or not running at all for many users.

The company is trying to serve up 3.8 million images of census documents, each with multiple views at different zoom levels, with each file being 10 megabytes or larger.

Godfrey said the situation has improved, and engineers are hoping by the end of today to have the situation squared away.

Earlier:

Embarrassed by a computer system that crumbled under public demand, the National Archives and Records Administration said Monday that it's working to add more servers for the release of 1940 Census records. For more users the wait to see records on family members from the Great Depression era will go on for a while longer.

The Archives had hired Inflection, a Silicon Valley database company, to run the computers, but frustrated users lit up Facebook and Twitter with complaints about images that were said to be "loading" but never arrived.

"Our testing indicated NARA and Inflection could handle the load, but 1.9 mil visitors caused issues we're working to resolve," the Archives said via Twitter. Later it added, "We'll let you know as soon as we have another update - thank you for your patience, we know it's incredibly frustrating."

Even agency officials, during the webcast to kick off the day, couldn't get images to load when they tried to look up their own relatives.

In Springfield, Ohio, Facebook user Val Lough commented on our page: "It's very sweet of them to put all of these records on line. It would be even nicer of them to make the records VISIBLE. None of them will download, I have a browser window opening that's 'loading' the documents and has been for about 20 minutes. You might want to find out what their issues are. It would be faster to mail a public records request to the National Archives." Many others are tweeting about delays.

The National Archives says it is putting more servers online to handle the crush.  At one point, the Archives said, its computers were receiving 100,000 hits per second.

Hey, you've waited 72 years to see these records, so what's another day or two.

Earlier:

A time capsule from 1940 was opened on Monday at 9 a.m. ET, and we invite readers to share what they find. If you use the new records to find information about the loved or lost in your family, please post a note in the comments below or on our Open Channel page on Facebook.

U.S. Census records for individuals from April 1, 1940, protected until now by a 72-year privacy law, are now public for the first time, revealing details about millions of Americans from that day, as the country lingered in a Great Depression, still a year away from entry into war in Europe and the Pacific.

"I'm so excited!" Gary Robert Del Carlo of Martinsburg, W.Va., posted on Facebook. "Maybe for the first time ever, I'll be able to find out something about my father. All I have is my birth certificate with his name, date of birth, state born in, and that he was in the Army stationed in Washington State. His military records burned up in St. Louis in a fire in 1973. They would have told me a lot. Wrote for his birth certificate, and there was no records of his birth. I have done nothing but hit brick walls every which way I turn. I'm praying I find something useful tomorrow, anything."


NPR describes the release as the "Super Bowl for Genealogists." Librarians around the country are ready to provide assistance. At the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, the staff will be serving cake and providing help.

 

When the 120,000 census takers counted 132,164,569 people living in the country on that day, the information collected included the address, whether the house was owned or rented, value of the home or monthly rent, is it considered a farm, names of adults and children, familiy relationships, sex, race, age, place of birth, citizenship, residence five years earlier, education. And for a small subset of people, about 5 percent, they were asked about place of birth of mother and father, language spoken in the home as a child, veteran status, wars served in, Social Security status, occupation, employment status, occupation, number of weeks worked in 1939, income and, for women, whether they had been married more than once, age at first marriage, and number of children ever born.

There is a catch. As the records go online, they can't be searched by name. For a city it's helpful to know an exact address, but often you can work with a neighborhood (near the corner of Canal and Varrick streets in New York City). Your public library may have old city directories or telephone directories from that period, allowing you to look up people by name to find an address. For a rural area, you need to know at least the county and the name of the town or township.

Genealogists, librarians and volunteers will begin the work of indexing the records, which eventually will allow searches by name. Two sites, the commercial Ancestry.com and the Mormon Church's FamilySearch.org, have announced plans to provide indexes to their customers as quickly as possible, with some images going online on Monday. FamilySearch and Ancestry.com started putting images from the Census files online early on Monday, but for now without a name index. 

For now, you must know at least an approximate address to get started. You use that address to find an "enumeration district," which in a big city might be only a few blocks, and would be a larger area in a small town.

Another approach, for those interested in a specific place, is to look at all the records for your block or street. If your area was settled in 1940, who lived there then, and what were their lives like?

Your goal: With that district number, you can look on the Census website at the online copy of the form filled out by the census taker in 1940. In 70 years, it has gone from paper to microfilm to computer.

Here are resources to help you with the search (links open in a new window), though as with most things in life, the key is: Ask a librarian.

 

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