By Elaine Donnelly
Extending sexual misconduct to combat units

The presidential candidates searched for the right moment to get back to politicking after Superstorm Sandy's destructive interruption, with President Obama monitoring relief efforts and Republican Mitt Romney struggling to strike the right tone.
Members of the renowned country music group Alabama took it personally when dozens of twisters roared across their home state in April, leaving hundreds of deaths and miles of destruction. Before long they were on the phone, talking about ways to help.
Opening with chilling video of a killer tornado and a prayer, country superstars Alabama headlined a sold-old concert Tuesday night to raise money for storm relief and remind people that thousands across their home state are still hurting from the physical and emotional damage left by the nation's worst tornado outbreak in decades.
A federal gambling corruption trial at the Alabama Statehouse could look like a country music concert or a political convention rather than a court case.
A federal gambling corruption trial at the Alabama Statehouse could look like a country music concert or a political convention rather than a court case.
Help is on the way.
`We've got to do something. It was just a consensus," Owen said in an interview with The Associated Press before the concert.
"We could have had two or three days of entertainment. A lot of people called and wanted to come," he said