সোমবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Turkish workers clear debris in quake zone (AP)

ERCIS, Turkey ? Turkish workers on Sunday started razing damaged buildings and clearing the debris of collapsed ones a week after a massive earthquake killed at least 596 people.

A 5.3-magnitude aftershock early Sunday caused panic in the quake zone in eastern Van province, where thousands of survivors spent the night in tents. An Associated Press photographer witnessed people screaming in panic as the aftershock jolted apartment buildings in the city of Van.

Authorities on Sunday urged survivors not to enter damaged buildings. About 1,400 aftershocks have been recorded since last Sunday's 7.2-magnitude killer quake, they said. At least 2,000 buildings have been destroyed and authorities declared another 3,700 buildings unfit for habitation.

An AP television crew, in the worst-hit town of Ercis, says workers using excavators started clearing the rubble of collapsed buildings as hopes dimmed for survivors.

However, not all the missing have been recovered yet. Some families are still waiting for news about the fate of their loved ones.

The temblor has killed at least 596 people and injured 4,152 others, the country's disaster management agency said in an update Sunday morning. Thousands of homeless people were struggling in tents in the bitter cold as rain and snow brought more hardship.

Israel, which has a troubled political relationship with Turkey, sent more emergency housing units and warm clothing on two planes Saturday night, an Israeli defense military official said. Britain, Ireland, Iran, Germany, Russia and Japan were among other contributors.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111030/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_quake

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Magnitude-6.9 quake shakes Peru's coast (AP)

LIMA, Peru ? A magnitude-6.9 earthquake centered off Peru's central coast sent people running panicked into the streets Friday in cities badly damaged by a killer quake four years earlier. There were no reports of damage though hospital directors reported at least 20 injuries.

People who had lost loved ones and homes in the earlier quake were badly shaken and some broke into tears.

"It felt like the one in 2007 because it was very strong," Felix Sihuas told RPP radio. He said he was buried under rubble for six hours in the Aug. 15, 2007, quake, which killed 596 people and largely destroyed the town of Pisco.

Friday's quake was considerably less violent in Lima, a city of 8.5 million people. The capital shook for about 30 seconds in a series of moderate, swaying movements.

Several aftershocks followed with magnitudes up to 5.5, said the U.S. Geological Survey.

It said Friday's quake was centered 31 miles (51 kilometers) south-southwest of Ica, a provincial capital of about 200,000 people which suffered widespread damage in the 2007 quake. It was at a depth of 21.7 miles (35 kilometers).

The directors of two hospitals in Ica told RPP that 20 people were treated for non life-threatening injuries including two for broken bones.

Peru's government-run Institute of Geophysics put the quake's magnitude at 6.7 and put its depth at 19 miles (30 kilometers). The USGS said the killer 2007 quake was centered 24 miles (39 kilometers) deep.

A seismologist at the institute, Hernan Tavera, told RPP the 2007 quake released 33 times more energy than Friday's temblor but this time " the radius of action was far wider."

"There was panic, a lot of panic," said Ruben Vargas, a police official in Ica, which is flanked by asparagus fields and vineyards that produce wine and the liquor pisco.

Vargas said that many people were still in the streets nearly a half hour after the 1:54 p.m. (18:54 GMT) quake. "Little by little people are calming down but they're still outside their homes," he added.

In Pisco, police officer Julio Lopez said people were spooked though the quake wasn't nearly as bad as the 2007 temblor.

"It wasn't like the last time. It was shorter," said Jorge Luis Yupanqui, 30, from Pisco. "Some people started to cry."

He said there was a big traffic jam in Pisco because he, like many others, went home to make sure his family and home were safe.

About 40,000 homes were destroyed in the 2007 quake and the previous government of President Alan Garcia was widely criticized for the slow pace of reconstruction.

___

Associated Press writers Martin Villena and Carla Salazar contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_peru_earthquake

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Swap Scary Stories in This Week's Open Thread [Open Thread]

Swap Scary Stories in This Week's Open ThreadGot a weekend of haunted houses and trick or treating ahead? Polish your scary skills in this week's open thread.

Same drill as always, open-threaders: You can chat and ask questions with your fellow readers all week long at the #openthread hashtag page, but our weekly open thread post is your opportunity to reach the most people. Ask questions, offer advice, discuss productivity tips, or just chat about whatever's on your mind. You'll need a commenter account to participate, then you're ready to roll.

An extra reminder: If you're not quite satisfied with the interaction in the weekly open thread or in #tips, remember that you can also share your expertise every day on our Expert Pages. Photo by Ralph Daily.

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রবিবার, ৩০ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Google Issues Update to Google TV (NewsFactor)

Google is taking another shot at reinventing television. On Friday, the software giant said it is rolling out an updated Android Honeycomb 3.1 version of its TV service to users.

Google TV integrates Web content with TV programming. The update features a simpler interface, easier access to the company's YouTube site and other online streaming video content, and the availability of selected apps by Android developers.

'Bringing Millions of New Channels'

In a Friday posting on the official Google TV blog, two Google executives outlined the new update. Vice President for Product Management Mario Queiroz and Director of Engineering Vincent Dureau wrote that the new, post-Internet chapter of television is not about replacing cable TV, broadcast TV, or "replicating what's on TV to the Web."

Instead, they wrote, it's about "bringing millions of new channels to your TV from the next generation of creators, application developers, and networks," such as the Google-owned YouTube.

Queiroz and Dureau say that "the initial version of Google TV wasn't perfect," but the new software update is trying to move the effort forward by keeping it simple, making it easy to find something worth watching, making the YouTube experience better on TV, and bringing more apps to TV.

Google TV, announced in spring of last year, combines access to Web sites, a search engine and streaming video with a high-definition TV. Sony sells HD sets and Blu-ray players with Google TV capability, and Logitech offers a box that can enable existing hardware.

For instance, if a viewer wanted to watch Modern Family, and had seen all of the episodes available at coming airtimes or recorded to a DVR, the viewer could watch streaming versions from Web sources on the TV set -- if they're available. Other features include the ability for a user to employ an Android smartphone as a voice-recognizing remote control for the TV.

Intel and Smart TV

The software upgrade will roll out next week to Sony products that support the technology, and shortly thereafter to Logitech.

Google also has a partnership for the system with Dish Network, but so far, there are no partnerships with the major broadcast networks. Google has had difficulties with the major networks, but the company is trying to position its TV service as an added value.

Last year, several networks blocked versions of their most popular TV shows when accessed over the Web via Google TV. The shows included The Office, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, and Modern Family. Additionally, the popular Hulu site, which is owned by NBC, Disney and News Corp., also blocked its availability on the service.

The equipment manufactured by Sony and Logitech for Google TV are built around a version of Intel's Atom processor. But, according to a new report released Friday by market researcher iSuppli, Intel is now placing less emphasis on the development of chips for smart TVs such as Google TV.

The research firm says that market is a tough one for the chipmaker, which prefers to look to smartphones and tablets as possible growth areas.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/software/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111028/tc_nf/80800

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Game 7: Carpenter starts, can Rangers recover? (AP)

Game 7 of the World Series. The most exciting night in baseball.

Except for last night, that is. What could possibly top that?

Following one of the most thrilling finishes in postseason history, the Rangers and Cardinals are back at it tonight, less than 20 hours after David Freese's 11th-inning homer for St. Louis pushed the Series to the limit.

Truly, a Fall Classic.

Winner takes all tonight. First pitch is 8:05 p.m. EDT at Busch Stadium.

The Cardinals seem to have everything on their side ? momentum, history and their No. 1 pitcher on the mound. After much debate about what manager Tony La Russa would do, Chris Carpenter is set to start on three days' rest for the second time in his career.

The first time was Game 2 of the NL division series in Philadelphia, and that one didn't go very well. But the 36-year-old right-hander says he learned a few things about how to handle pitching on short rest.

The home team has won eight straight Game 7s in the World Series, a streak started by the Cardinals in 1982 against Milwaukee. This is the first time the Series has gone the distance since 2002, when the Angels beat San Francisco.

Matt Harrison gets the ball for Texas. Let down by his defense, he was pulled in the fourth inning of a Game 3 defeat.

Twice, the Rangers were one strike away from their first World Series championship Thursday night. They couldn't nail it down.

Now, after such a painful defeat, can they possibly recover? The last team to win Game 7 of the World Series on the road was the Pittsburgh Pirates at Baltimore in 1979.

Almost lost in all the back-and-forth excitement Thursday night were injuries to several key players. Nelson Cruz strained his right groin and Mike Napoli twisted his left ankle, but both Rangers sluggers are in the Game 7 lineup.

Matt Holliday, however, was removed from the St. Louis roster with a bruised right wrist. Allen Craig starts in left field in place of Holliday.

La Russa also dropped slumping leadoff man Rafael Furcal to seventh in the lineup and Skip Schumaker to eighth. Second baseman Ryan Theriot is at the top of the order and Craig bats second in front of Albert Pujols.

Holliday's absence might not be such a terrible thing for the Cardinals.

Sure, it shortens their lineup. He's a dangerous hitter and a legitimate All-Star. But he really struggled with his swing during the World Series (.158), and he hurt the Cardinals with his glove and on the bases in Game 6, too.

With Holliday out, Freese moves up to fifth in the lineup, perhaps providing better protection for Pujols and Lance Berkman. Freese has been a clutch hitter throughout the postseason, never more so than Thursday night.

Speedy outfielder Adron Chambers, a rookie, replaced Holliday on the active roster.

Clear skies at Busch Stadium. The temperature is 51 degrees, with a little light wind.

All set to play ball.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbo_world_series_online

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Video: Extreme weather impacting pumpkin prices

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45077490#45077490

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A look at action in hurricane headquarters

There's only one building in Florida that can withstand the biggest and baddest of all hurricanes ? the Category 5, with winds of at least 165 mph (266 kph) ? and it's a concrete bunker along an unglamorous stretch of road in South Florida called the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

The NHC never closes. Here, weather forecasters work around the clock, 365 days a year, tracking threatening storms in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. They watch radars, issue storm warnings and command their airplane? named Miss Piggy ? on airborne hurricane hunter missions.

OurAmazingPlanet recently toured the NHC just as forecasters here were becoming concerned about the storm that would become Hurricane Rina (which has since weakened into a tropical storm). In the center's main forecast room, seen on TV during press briefings, one forecaster was just about to issue the latest tropical warning as reporters walked in.

"Done!" he shouted, as if on cue.

Forecasters sit in front of banks of computer monitors, poring over the latest storm data, doing their best to predict where the storm will go, and how strong it will be when it gets there. But as seen with Rina, which was predicted to become a major hurricane ( Category 3 or higher ) only to quickly fizzle, forecasters are constantly struggling to make accurate forecasts.

"It's not unusual for our intensity and wind speed forecast to be off," said Chris Landsea, science and operations officer for the NHC's Tropical Analysis and Forecast Branch. "Sometimes we're too high, sometimes we're too low."

Into the heart of the storm
One way that the forecasters get information to plug into the forecast models is from ocean buoys ? as long as the hurricanes don't destroy them.

"The storms have been buoy hunting this year, which doesn't happen very often," said Daniel Brown, the NHC's warning coordination meteorologist.

The 2011 hurricane season has seen six hurricanes and 17 named storms. ( Storm names are given when a system becomes a tropical storm.)

Another way to observe hurricanes is by flying airplanes and drones over, in front of and into the storms. This brand of hurricane hunting began decades ago with a few brave military pilots.

"A couple of Army pilots decided to see if they could go fly that thing," said John Papone, who flew missions in the Pacific years ago, and has been working in the "war room" since it opened in 1968.

Today's pilots fly out of MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla., where they patrol the tropics, except for a rectangular "no fly zone" extending from Venezuela into the Caribbean.

They fly an airplane affectionately named Miss Piggy, or P3, (they also have planes named Kermit and Gonzo) at about 10,000 feet (3,000 meters) in a full-blown storm. Once over a storm, the planes deploy instruments called dropsondes, which are biodegradable slender tubes that float into the storm while hanging from a tiny parachute. The dropsondes, at $700 each, collect reconnaissance on the storm, including wind speed, temperature and precipitation. The information is sent back to the NHC in real-time.

"It's on Google within minutes of the time we get it," Papone said.

The P3 flies in a figure-four pattern over a storm and the pilots "pepper the storm" with dropsondes, said Shirley Murillo, the hurricane field program director for the 2011 season. Missions can be up to 8 hours long.

The NHC also relies on a Gulf Stream jet, the G4, which flies in front of storms to see what the conditions are like in the storm's path. The Gulf Stream looks for things such as dry air, which can break up a storm. Another plane, the unmanned Global Hawk, can fly directly into a storm and loiter there for a full day.

Best laid plans
Once the storm data is gathered, staffers in the Hurricane Liaison team work with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to brief communities and states on the latest threat. The NHC director, Bill Read, will teleconference the White House from the NHC's TV studio.

Inside the NHC's Storm Surge Unit, forecasters try to gauge how waters will rise along the coasts and where the most serious flooding could develop.

  1. More science news from MSNBC Tech & Science

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      Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: DARPA's latest tech challenge is offering $50,000 for a task worthy of secret agents ? piecing together messages that have been shredded into thousands of bits.

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"Essentially we are the first step in setting evacuation zones," said Jamie Rhome, the unit's leader.

The Storm Surge unit does not order evacuations; they only say what areas may need to flee. Still, as seen during Hurricane Irene, the unit often faces serious scrutiny when their worst-case scenario predictions don't materialize. But Rhome said he believes the Hurricane Irene evacuations were done "about as good as you can do it," pointing out that no deaths were caused by storm surge, which he called "an amazing feat."

"There's no such thing as a perfect evacuation," Rhome said. "You have to overreact so that you don't lose a life."

But even if the NHC nails their forecast, a major landfalling hurricane will still cause severe devastation to the overdeveloped U.S. coastline.

"Maybe we should change what we allow to be done and built," said NHC director Read. "This is risk, folks."

You can follow OurAmazingPlanet staff writer Brett Israel on Twitter: @btisrael. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @ OAPlanet and on Facebook.

? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45079854/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card

Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold CardThis review is for the Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card. The card is one of five different credit cards issued by the Justice Federal Credit Union. In addition to the Visa Gold Card, Justice FCU also makes available the Visa Platinum, Visa Classis, Visa Secured and Student Visa cards.

The credit card chaser can help pinpoint which card is best for you by showing you online credit cards!

Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card Details

The Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card does not charge an annual fee, and has a special introductory offer available with an annual percentage rate of just 6.9% for the first 180 days that you have the card.

After the first 6 month, the APR increases to 13.9%, but this is a fixed rate and will not increase as long as you make your payments on time.

The credit limits for a Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card range from $500 up to $40,000.

Of the five cards offered by the Justice Federal Credit Union, the Visa Gold card?s annual percentage rate is the second lowest, as the Visa Platinum card has an APR of 11.9% once the promotional period ends.

The Visa Classic offers an APR of 16.9%.

Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card Benefits

The Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card allows you to take cash advances from almost any ATM in the world, and is accepted anywhere the Visa logo is displayed.

Cardholders can get overnight emergency card replacement, and are entitled to a zero liability policy where they are not responsible for any purchases made that were unauthorized and after the card was reported lost or stolen.

Since the card is offered by Visa, you can make purchases online safely and easily using the verified by Visa program.

Justice Federal Credit Union Visa Gold Card Bottom Line

With five different choices of cards, choosing one from the Justice Federal Credit Union can be confusing. However, the best approach is to look at the card benefits and determine which one is best for you.

For example, both the Visa Platinum and Visa Goal have credit limits of to $40,000, while the maximum credit available for the Visa Classic is $5,000. In addition, the Visa Secured is a good choice for someone with poor or no credit that is looking to rebuild.

The student card has a very low credit limit and is best for a college student. A good site for students to learn how to use credit wisely is http://www.collegeboard.com/.

Need to find the right card? Use our credit card chaser to compare credit cards right now!

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Source: http://www.creditcardchaser.com/justice-federal-credit-union-visa-gold-card/

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শনিবার, ২৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Dwarf planet Eris surprises astronomers

Eris, the dwarf planet whose 2005 discovery led to Pluto losing its status as a planet, has passed in front of a star, providing astronomers with the clearest view of it since it was identified.

It is about the same size as Pluto and is one of the brightest objects in the solar system, according to the new analysis, released Wednesday by the journal Nature.

Scientists' picture of Eris had remained fuzzy because its distance from Earth is so vast: It is about three times farther out from the sun than Pluto. Some estimates pegged Eris as about 25% larger than Pluto, but it was too far away to tell for sure.

"It's very difficult, because it's so small in the sky," said lead author Bruno Sicardy, a planetary scientist at Pierre and Marie Curie University and Observatory in Paris.

With such small, far-off objects, astronomers wait for what's known as a stellar occultation, in which the object will cross over a star, essentially casting a shadow over the Earth. The amount of starlight blocked by the object allows scientists to calculate the object's size.

Witnessing this stellar occultation last year required being in the right place at exactly the right moment during the brief time window that Eris was scheduled to block the star.

To spot the star-crossing, Sicardy's team asked telescope operators at 26 different sites around the world to make observations. Just three telescopes at two of those sites, both in Chile, managed to catch the event.

From the data, the researchers were able to calculate that the dwarf planet's diameter is about 1,445 miles ? on a par with Pluto, which is somewhere between 1,429 and 1,491 miles across.

The fact that Eris is smaller than previously estimated means that the amount of light scientists had detected coming from it originated from a smaller-than-anticipated surface area ? and therefore its surface is brighter than anyone had thought.

In fact, the new calculations make Eris one of the brightest objects in the solar system, even though its surface should have been darkened from bombardment by cosmic rays and micrometeorites.

The authors think its shininess is due to a millimeter-thick layer of methane-and-nitrogen frost coating the dwarf planet's surface. This frost, they say, was probably once an atmosphere 10,000 times thinner than Pluto's that froze onto the surface in the frigid temperatures as Eris traveled away from the sun on its 557-year orbit.

Though they have Eris' size narrowed down, scientists still don't know whether it's smaller or larger than Pluto ? because Pluto's size is not known precisely.

But even if Eris ends up being the smaller, "Pluto is never going to go back to being a planet," said Amanda Gulbis, a planetary scientist at the South African Astronomical Observatory who was not involved in the study. "The definition has been set."

Regardless of the question of size, Eris is about 27% heavier than Pluto. This means it must contain relatively more rock and less ice, said Caltech astronomer Mike Brown, whose team discovered Eris in 2005.

This could be because Eris was once a much larger planet whose less dense outer layers were blown off by an impact ? much as is thought to have happened with the small but uncommonly heavy Mercury, the sun's closest planet.

"We really think [Eris and Pluto] should have been made at the same time out of the same materials ? so really, it's bizarre that they're so different," Brown said.

amina.khan@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/eI7p5l-9Zjs/la-sci-eris-20111027,0,6101561.story

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Perry, Romney contrast in style, substance (tbo)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

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HBT: Carpenter to start for Cards in Game 7

Tony La Russa might wait until the last possible moment to officially announce tonight?s Game 7 starter, but Matthew Leach of MLB.com reports that the Cardinals will turn to Chris Carpenter on short rest.

Leach tweeted the following shortly after emerging from the Cardinals? clubhouse last night:

Was told by someone who would most definitely know: ?You know who?s starting tomorrow.?

Kyle Lohse has been the scheduled Game 7 starter and Jake Westbrook or Edwin Jackson are other options, but Wednesday night?s rainout pushed everything back by one day and allows La Russa to turn to Carpenter on three days? rest.

Carpenter had never started on short rest during his entire career until Game 1 of the NLDS versus the Phillies. And he struggled, allowing four runs in three innings while walking three and striking out two. Since then he?s 3-0 with a 2.33 ERA in four starts, including a complete-game shutout against Philadelphia in his follow-up to the short-rest outing.

Generally speaking pitchers starting on short rest have a pretty terrible playoff track record during the past decade or so and Carpenter making just one (poor) short-rest start in 14 seasons as a big leaguer makes him a big question mark, but if he wants the ball and the alternatives are Lohse, Jackson, or Westbrook it?s not hard to see why La Russa would put the entire season in the hands of his ace.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/28/nothing-official-yet-but-cardinals-will-start-chris-carpenter/related

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Nokia's kinetic future: flexible screens and a twisted interface (video)

Hidden within Nokia's Future Lounge, this very flexible display offers up a glimpse of what sort of thing we could possibly be dealing with when we roll up to Nokia World in 2021. The prototype Nokia Kinetic Device, including its display, can be flexed across both the vertical and horizontal planes -- with bending and twisting motions controlling the interface. If you bend the screen towards yourself, it acts as a selection function, or zooms in on any pictures you're viewing. In music mode, you can navigate, play and pause with the tactile interface. It's still a way off from arriving on phones, though Nokia is aiming to whet developers' appetites with this prototype. We may have seen some twisty interfaces already, but nothing packing a four-inch screen and built-in functionality like this. Nokia couldn't confirm the screen technology being used. Could that be a flexible AMOLED display? See those impressive viewing angles and contortions after the break and judge for yourself.

Continue reading Nokia's kinetic future: flexible screens and a twisted interface (video)

Nokia's kinetic future: flexible screens and a twisted interface (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 12:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/26/nokias-kinetic-future-flexible-screens-and-a-twisted-interface/

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Samsung Galaxy Nexus hands-on [updated with video]

Samsung Galaxy Nexus

Much hay has been made about the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, the device which just a few weeks ago we were calling the Nexus Prime. If you're new around these parts, this is the big new Android phone for 2011 and at least most of 2012, thanks to it being the first with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, and few Android smartphones have had such an insane level of hype to live up to. The Galaxy Nexus is supposed to be the phone that has everything -- a shiny new version of Android, combined with the best internals and display tech Samsung has to offer.

Already Internet discussion abounds, splitting hairs over this spec or that, but how does the phone look and feel in person? Is this really a perfect storm of next-generation Android and top-class hardware? Check out our full write-up and video walkthrough after the jump.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/a717PSLRbH4/samsung-galaxy-nexus-hands

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Insight: China premier-in-waiting schooled in era of dissent (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? Li Keqiang, China's likely next premier, once huddled beside Yang Baikui in a Beijing university dorm, translating a book by an English judge, little separating the future Communist Party leader from his classmate who would be jailed as a subversive.

Over three decades ago, Vice Premier Li and Yang entered prestigious Peking University, both members of the storied "class of '77" who passed the first higher education entrance exams held after Mao Zedong's convulsive Cultural Revolution.

More than any other Chinese party leader until now, Li was immersed in the intellectual and political ferment of the following decade of reform under Deng Xiaoping, which ended in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests that were crushed by troops.

As a law student at Peking University, Li befriended ardent pro-democracy advocates, some of whom later became outright challengers to party control. His friends included activists who went into exile after the June 1989 crackdown.

Now Li, 56, is preparing to take the reins of government, and Yang and other sometime friends wonder how those heady times will shape his role running a one-party state that has increasingly bristled at calls for political relaxation.

"When we were working on translating the book and exchanging ideas, I thought his views were very liberal," Yang recalled of Li, who as an English speaker is a rarity among senior Chinese leaders.

"His leanings were clearly pro-Western ideas. He certainly wasn't conservative," said Yang, now a bald 61-year-old translator in Beijing, in a recent interview. "When he opened his mouth, it wasn't Mao slogans."

"I personally think his past certainly left an impact, but he's also been an official for over two decades, and so that's also a factor," said Yang, who was jailed for nearly a year on "counter-revolutionary" charges after helping write petitions and offer advice in the 1989 demonstrations.

Li has visited North and South Korea this week in Beijing's latest effort to lift his profile. The secretive Communist Party will wait until a congress in late 2012 to confirm who will succeed President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, and the new premier will then be formally anointed by parliament in early 2013.

The Chinese translation that Li, Yang and a fellow student, Liu Yongan, labored over -- "The Due Process Law" by Lord Alfred Denning -- was recently reissued, a perhaps inadvertent reminder of the past of the man likely to succeed Premier Wen.

Li himself has been nearly silent about his university years. But his experiences could mark him out as more politically pragmatic than present leaders, including his patron, President Hu, said classmates and acquaintances of Li.

"Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao were members of a red generation that had no opportunity to learn English or immerse themselves in new ideas or Western thought," said Chen Ziming, back then a student-activist at another school who campaigned with Li's classmates and got to know him.

"But the generation of Li Keqiang is different, and because of his law specialty and the length of his education, he was much more exposed to the new influences than, say, Xi Jinping," said Chen, referring to President Hu's likely successor.

"We don't know for sure what this difference means, but it's there, waiting to manifest itself in the future, if the opportunity arises," said Chen, who was jailed after the 1989 crackdown and lives in Beijing, writing on politics.

Xi spent years in countryside during the Cultural Revolution, but got into university earlier than Li. Despite that, Xi too has attracted talk that he could be more pragmatic.

ENGLISH

The man nearly certain to be China's next premier once spent hours every day muttering the unfamiliar English words that promised to unlock a world of previously forbidden knowledge.

Li was among the 273,000 examinees to win university and college places in the intensely competitive entrance test of 1977, when reformers began to revive conventional schooling upended by Mao's upheavals.

Li arrived at Peking University in early 1978 from Anhui province in eastern China, dirt-poor farming country where his father was an official. He chose law, a discipline silenced for years as a reactionary pursuit and in the late 1970s still steeped in Soviet-inspired doctrines.

"Keqiang was tireless in studying English to the point that young people nowadays would find hard to imagine," He Qinhua, one of Li's 82 law classmates in the same year wrote in a memoir. "He recited it while walking, while queued up at the canteen, while on the bus and waiting for the bus."

Li's thirst for foreign ideas brought him close to Gong Xiangrui, one of the few Chinese law professors schooled in the West to survive Mao's purges. Gong studied at the London School of Economics and Political Science in the 1930s, and was a living bridge to long-dormant liberal ideas that spread through student circles in the early 1980s.

The old professor took a shining to the skinny, earnest Li, who become one of several disciples who helped prepare a textbook and translate books, including Lord Denning's, according to mentions in Gong's recently published posthumous memoirs and in his 1985 textbook on Western constitutional law.

In a brief memoir of his time at Peking University, Li paid tribute to Gong and recalled the heady atmosphere of the time.

"I was a student at Peking University for close to a decade, while a so-called 'knowledge explosion' was rapidly expanding," Li wrote in an essay published in a 2008 book.

"I was searching for not just knowledge, but also to mold a temperament, to cultivate a scholarly outlook."

At the time, Deng Xiaoping was shepherding China toward market reforms, but many students and a few officials hankered for bolder political changes that alarmed party conservatives.

The ideas about rights, rule of law and popular representation that Li's cohort encountered in books, lectures and study groups percolated into those broader debates.

"Gong Xiangrui advocated a separation of powers and a multi-party system, and some of his ideas remain taboo even today," said Jiang Ming'an, a classmate of Li's, in a report published by China's Southern Weekend newspaper in 2007.

"Constitutional government is the road to rule of law, and rule of law is the first step toward democracy," Gong said in a lecture in San Francisco in 1996, shortly before his death.

"The Chinese people should fully achieve constitutional democracy in the coming century," he said.

Some of Li's classmates remember that he too was also carried along by that idealism of the time.

"The Li Keqiang that I knew in the past was quite bold. He was high-minded, bold and idealistic," said Wang Juntao, who has been in exile since 1994 and is now co-chairman of the China Democratic Party, which campaigns for change in his homeland.

Wang was a physics student at Peking University who ran a study group with Li. He was jailed as a "black hand" for his prominence in supporting the 1989 student protests.

"Among all the younger leaders, Li Keqiang is the only one who's lived and debated alongside these liberals," Wang said by telephone from New Jersey.

"He understands us, he's argued with us."

ELECTION TIME

In late 1980, those debates spilled out of crowded classrooms and dormitory rooms, when officials allowed students at Peking University and other schools to compete in competitive elections for places on local assemblies.

Months earlier Deng Xiaoping had signaled he might tolerate experiments in political reform. Peking University drew national attention as it tested how far those experiments might go.

More than two dozen students put themselves forward, including Wang Juntao, Yang Baikui and other friends of Li, promoting bold calls for democratic reform at meetings attracting hundreds of students, witnesses have said in memoirs.

Back then, the distinction between political "insiders" and "outsiders" -- those who acted under party patronage and those who acted on their own accord -- was more fluid and blurred.

Wang Juntao nominated Li to seek election as head of a student committee to oversee the larger student council, a position he won, Wang recalled.

But Li was away studying off-campus during the 1980 elections or kept aloof from them, according to varied memories of his friends. Yang Baikui -- the fellow translator -- and the student-activist Chen Ziming both said Li backed a more moderate candidate, Zhang Wei, who said economic reform was the priority.

"Their view wasn't against political reform, but it was that economic reform was more urgent," said Chen. "Li Keqiang was a bit more conservative in that way, but he also wanted reform."

Alarmed by the passions of the student elections, Deng drew back from political relaxation. As the 1980s progressed, Deng curbed demands for dramatic political reform, bringing the more ardent members of Li's cohort into growing conflict with party conservatives, a confrontation that culminated in 1989.

But while classmates headed off to policy research, independent activism and even outright dissent, Li struck a more cautious course, abandoning ideas of study abroad and climbing the ladder of the Communist Party's Youth League, then a reformist-tinged ladder to higher office.

He rose in the Youth League while completing a master's degree in law at Peking University and then an economics doctorate there under Professor Li Yining, a well-known advocate of market reforms.

In 1998, he was sent to Henan province, a poor and restless belt of rural central China, rising to become Party secretary for two years. In late 2004, he was made party chief of Liaoning, a rustbelt province striving to attract investment and reinvent itself as a modern industrial heartland.

Rumors have occasionally spread that Li's past contacts with now-exiled dissidents, including Wang Juntao, derailed his prospects for becoming China's president and party chief, a more powerful post than premier, said Wang.

But Li's prospects of becoming next premier appear increasingly assured, a point bolstered by recent high-profile trips abroad and major policy speeches. His diplomatic forays also show he has kept his English.

"The fact that Li Keqiang has been able to constantly rise in the official ranks, and to win the liking of key people, shows that he's undergone big changes," said Wang.

Li's patron, President Hu, began his tenure as leader with promises of respecting the law and constitution. But latterly his government has overseen a crackdown on dissent that resorted to widespread extra-judicial detentions.

Yang, the former classmate, said he had not had any contact with Li since the 1980s, and could only speculate at how deep a mark Li's university years had left.

"I think it could make him more open and inclusive, more democratic, if the conditions allow. His ideas of rule of law might go deeper," said Yang. "But he couldn't show any of that now. That would be too dangerous."

(Editing by Brian Rhoads and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/wl_nm/us_china_politcs_li

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Did you know that hard candy is actually a glass?


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As Halloween is right around the corner, here?s a video from ByteSizeScience on how hard candy is made:

Making hard candy. Credit: Flickr user taygete05.

Some things of note:
(1) Hard candy is technically a glass made of sugar!
(2) There are three stages of sugar boiling, and the maximum temperature that it reaches determines the physical properties of the resulting candy (I think this is primarily a function of how much water is remaining in the sugar mixture).
(3) If you watch the video, you?ll figure out why hard candy always has a ring around the edge. This was something I didn?t know.

Enjoy. Perhaps I?ll write a post later about what your body does with all that sugar after you eat it. :)Site Meter

Michelle ClementAbout the Author: Michelle Clement has a B.Sc. in zoology and a M.Sc. in organismal biology, both from The Ohio State University. Her thesis research was on the ecophysiology of epidermal lipids and water homeostasis in house sparrows. She now works as a technical editor for The American Chemical Society. In addition to Crude Matter, she also has a personal blog at C6-H12-O6. Friend her on Facebook. Follow on Twitter @physilology.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=02c8b7b298bbaacea06b98e11e6d88fe

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Snuffing Out Snakehead By Putting It On The Plate

A snakehead is filleted for a dinner this week hosted by the Oyster Recovery Partnership. Enlarge John Rorapaugh

A snakehead is filleted for a dinner this week hosted by the Oyster Recovery Partnership.

John Rorapaugh

A snakehead is filleted for a dinner this week hosted by the Oyster Recovery Partnership.

If you can't beat 'em, eat 'em.

That's the rallying cry for conservationists who are recruiting cooks ? and their filet knives and frying pans ? to the fight against invasive fish species.

The latest target is the snakehead fish, an aggressive animal native to Asia and Africa that has been populating the waterways of Maryland and Florida with frightening speed over the past decade. A predator capable of eating fish as large as perch and bass, the snakehead dominates rivers and lakes once it enters them.

But this week, the snakehead went from aquatic pest to delicacy at a fundraiser for an Annapolis-based environmental organization, the Oyster Recovery Partnership. Nine prominent chefs ? including National Geographic Fellow Barton Seaver ? grilled, seared, and broiled the pale filets, and then served them to a curious audience.

?

The dressed-up dinner plate strategy has been tried before to eradicate invasive species, or at least contain them. And it's had varying degrees of success.

With some problematic fish, like the Asian carp that has taken over the Mississippi River, it's been difficult to get people to adjust their palates for the environment's sake. And coral reef defenders are still hoping an appetite for lionfish will take hold.

But that may not be a problem with the snakehead. Snakehead is a traditional food in Vietnam and Thailand, among other places. And John Rorapaugh, the vice president for sustainable initiatives at ProFish, a seafood supplier based in Washington, D.C., describes the fish as "very clean tasting, mild, and just a great, great delicacy."

In the past, Maryland's Department of Natural Resources, or MDNR, has tried to drain and poison ponds to stop the snakehead from spreading.

But Rorapaugh hopes that convincing commercial fishermen to pursue and market the fish at fish markets will be more effective. The biggest challenge is catching it since it typically doesn't congregate in large schools.

Promoting this particular fish as a food source is an ironic choice of eradication strategies because, "unfortunately, that's probably how they got here to begin with," Donald Cosden of MDNR tells The Salt. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service concurs, listing the probable cause of the snakehead's establishment in the U.S. as "individuals releasing these fish to establish a local food source."

While Rorapaugh hopes to see snakehead filets for sale in local grocery stores, he says there are no plans to set up a real fishery. "I would be very happy to sell, sell, sell, sell, and then have no more to sell," he says. In the meantime, he says, recreational anglers can help out by seeking out the fish in rivers like the Potomac, where the snakehead has set up shop.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2011/10/26/141724162/snuffing-out-snakehead-by-putting-it-on-the-plate?ft=1&f=1007

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GOP seeking waiver of environmental laws at border (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Federal agents trying to patrol the U.S.-Mexico border say they're hampered by laws that keep them from driving vehicles on huge swaths of land because it falls under U.S. environmental protection, leaving it to wildlife ? and illegal immigrants and smugglers who can walk through the territory undisturbed.

A growing number of lawmakers are saying such restrictions have turned wilderness areas into highways for criminals. In recent weeks, three congressional panels, including two in the GOP-controlled House and one in the Democratic-controlled Senate, have moved to give the Border Patrol unfettered access to all federally managed lands within 100 miles of the border with Mexico.

Two of the panels expanded the legislation's reach to include the border with Canada.

The votes signal a brewing battle in Congress that will determine whether border agents can disregard environmental protections as they do their job.

Dozens of environmental laws were waived for the building of the border fence, and activists say this is just another conservative attempt to find an excuse to do away with environmental protections.

But agents who have worked along the border say the laws crimp their power to secure the border.

Zack Taylor, a retired Border Patrol agent who lives about nine miles from the Arizona-Mexico border, said smugglers soon learn the areas that agents are least likely to frequent.

"The (smuggling) route stays on public lands from the border to Maricopa County," Taylor said, referring to the state's most populous county. "The smugglers have free rein. It has become a lawless area."

Environmental groups said lawmakers lining up to support the legislation have routinely opposed the Endangered Species Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act and dozens of other laws, and they accused the lawmakers of using illegal immigration as the latest excuse to gut protections.

"For every problem that's out there in society, there's some extremists in Congress who say the solution is, `Well, let's roll back the environmental laws, let's open up the public lands,'" said Paul Spitler, spokesman for the Wilderness Society. "It doesn't comport to reality, but it fits their mindset that it's simply the environmental regulations that are holding back America."

Nearly 40 percent of the land on the U.S.-Mexico border and about a quarter of the land on the U.S.-Canadian border is public land, including Big Bend National Park in Texas and Glacier National Park in Montana. Driving is prohibited on those parts of the land that are designated wilderness areas.

Wildlife officials say vehicle use can be particularly hazardous in the desert. Water gathers in the tire tracks instead of in natural pools and evaporates more quickly, leading to less vegetation and less available food. Some areas, such as Big Bend and the desert farther west, are deadly to traverse in certain months and immigrants and smugglers avoid them.

The wilderness areas also have other restrictions on development. Border patrol agents, for example, must get permission from other federal agencies before maintaining roads and installing surveillance equipment. Federal auditors found it can take months to get that permission.

"What the Border Patrol says they really need down there is not necessarily more manpower or money," said Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, whose bill easing the restrictions passed the House Natural Resources Committee along party lines. "They need more east-west access on those public lands."

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., sponsored an amendment that requires the Agriculture and Interior departments to give Border Patrol personnel immediate access to federal lands on the southern border for security activities, including for routine motorized patrols. The amendment passed a Senate committee with the support of five Democrats and eight Republicans.

McCain told colleagues that up to 100 people sit on mountaintops near the border serving as lookouts for smugglers, suggesting that improved law enforcement access on those mountains would deter the lookouts.

"What he says is absolutely true," said Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, who visited Arizona with McCain. "For the life of me, I can't understand the hesitancy on the part of Interior or Agriculture to provide access to border security guards."

Rep. Ben Quayle, R-Ariz., sponsored a similar amendment that extends the law to the Canadian border as well, and it passed by a voice vote, which is usually reserved for noncontroversial legislation.

During a House subcommittee hearing in April, Ron Vitiello, deputy chief of the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, said he had "no complaints" about environmental laws.

But George McCubbin, president of the union that represents about 17,000 Border Patrol agents and support staff, likened current policy to telling city police officers they can't patrol a particular neighborhood.

"If they want to get serious about this problem on the border, they can't be restricting areas we go in," said McCubbin, who works in Casa Grande, Ariz. "Don't let us there and you have nothing but the bad element going through that area."

The Government Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm, reported that supervisors at 17 of 26 Border Patrol stations along the Mexican border said access to federal lands had been limited because of environmental restrictions. Yet, the vast majority of the agents in charge also said that they were generally able to adjust their patrols without sacrificing effectiveness.

Democratic lawmakers and environmental groups cite the GAO's findings in arguing against giving the Border Patrol authority to operate as it sees fit on federal lands.

"The record is clear. The problem this bill claims to be solving does not exist," said Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz. "So, if this is not about border security, what is it about? It's about undermining fundamental environmental protections for millions of Americans."

Bishop said federal agents would be better stewards of sensitive lands than illegal immigrants and smugglers.

"What is so ironic is that the environmental degradation is not being done by the Border Patrol," Bishop said. "It's being done by the illegals who are coming across."

___

Associated Press writer Jacques Billeaud contributed to this report from Phoenix.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_go_co/us_border_wilderness

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SKorea, China agree to expand currency swap deal (AP)

SEOUL, South Korea ? South Korea's central bank says it has agreed with its Chinese counterpart to expand their currency swap deal as a backstop against global economic turmoil.

The Bank of Korea said Wednesday that its won-yuan swap agreements with the People's Bank of China will double from 180 billion yuan to 360 billion yuan for the next three years.

The South Korean central bank's announcement came as Chinese Vice Premier Le Keqiang met with South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak during a two-day trip to Seoul.

South Korea and Japan agreed last week to expand the size of their countries' currency swap deal from $13 billion to $70 billion.

Swaps allow one central bank to borrow a currency from another, offering an equivalent amount of its own as collateral.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_as/as_skorea_china_currency_swap

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Egypt swaps arrested US-Israeli for 25 prisoners (AP)

JERUSALEM ? A U.S.-Israeli citizen arrested in Egypt as a suspected spy was freed on Thursday after more than four months in jail, under a prisoner swap deal that has eased friction between the two countries.

Israel Hasson, an Israeli lawmaker who has been involved in the negotiations, told The Associated Press from Cairo that 27-year-old Ilan Grapel looked "fine" and was "smiling." Hasson and another Israeli official were dispatched to Egypt to escort Grapel on the one-hour flight to Tel Aviv.

Egypt traded the U.S.-born Grapel for 25 Egyptians, most of them smugglers, held in Israeli jails. The Egyptian prisoners passed through a land crossing from Israel as Grapel prepared to take off for Israel. TV footage showed some of the Egyptian men kneeling to kiss the asphalt after crossing through a blue metal gate at the border crossing.

Israel denied the allegations against Grapel, as did his family and friends, and his release helped to ease fears that relations would sour after Egypt's longtime president, Hosni Mubarak, was ousted in February.

Hours before the release, his father, Daniel Grapel, told The Associated Press that his son had been held in isolation in an unknown location and that when they last spoke two weeks ago, he seemed to be in "OK" condition and "getting fed."

"I am happy that this thing will be done and over with and that he will be able to resume his normal life away from Egypt," Daniel Grapel said in a telephone interview from his home in Queens, N.Y.

His wife, Irene, flew to Tel Aviv to meet their son, and they will remain in Israel for at least two days to meet with Israeli and American officials before returning to the U.S., he added.

The deal went ahead after the Israeli Supreme Court rejected petitions trying to stop the deal. Immediately after landing in Israel, Grapel was set to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Grapel was volunteering at a legal aid group in Cairo that resettles refugees when he was arrested and accused of spying for Israel during the grass roots revolt that overthrew Mubarak.

He made no secret of his Israeli background, entered Egypt under his real name and his Facebook page had photos of him in an Israeli military uniform. Such openness about his identity suggested he was not a spy, and even in Egypt, where hostility toward Israel runs high, the arrest was widely ridiculed.

Grapel was born in the U.S. but moved to Israel, where his grandparents live, as a young man. He did his compulsory military service in Israel during its 2006 war with Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas and was wounded in the fighting. He later returned to the U.S. to study, and after his legal internship in Cairo, had planned to return to Emory University in Atlanta for his final year of law school.

Some Israelis have criticized their government for making a deal to free a citizen arrested in a friendly nation on what they think were trumped-up allegations.

Hasson said the Israeli government was willing to free prisoners to defuse the situation. "This event could have developed into a crisis and we don't think either countries need that," he told Israel Radio.

Since Mubarak was toppled, Egypt's military rulers have often warned against what they call "foreign" attempts to destabilize the country. And like other Arab states, Egypt has a long history of blaming internal problems on Israel.

Israel and Egypt signed their peace treaty ? the first between an Arab state and the Jewish one ? in 1979. Relations have been cool since, but Mubarak carefully upheld the pact.

While the military leaders that now rule Egypt have vowed to follow suit, they have unnerved Israel with overtures to Israel's enemy, the Hamas militant group that rules Gaza, a tiny patch of Palestinian territory that borders both countries.

Those improved ties appear to have helped Egypt finally broker a long-elusive prisoner swap between Israel and Hamas last week, in which Israel traded hundreds of Palestinian prisoners for Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit, who had been held by Hamas in Gaza for more than five years.

Initially, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo had taken the lead in Grapel's case because he had entered Egypt with his U.S. passport. A former Israeli ambassador to Egypt, Eli Shaked, told Israel Radio that the U.S. was a main player in clinching the swap deal.

The U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv had no comment on the affair.

_____

AP correspondent Tia Goldenberg contributed to this report from Jerusalem.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_egypt

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London cathedral official quits over protest camp (AP)

LONDON ? The senior St. Paul's Cathedral priest who welcomed anti-capitalist demonstrators to camp outside the London landmark resigned Thursday, saying he feared moves to evict the protesters could end in violence.

Canon Chancellor Giles Fraser said on Twitter that "it is with great regret and sadness that I have handed in my notice at St. Paul's Cathedral."

He told The Guardian newspaper that he had resigned because he believed cathedral officials had "set on a course of action that could mean there will be violence in the name of the church."

Dean of St. Paul's Graeme Knowles confirmed Fraser had stepped down, saying officials were disappointed that he "is not able to continue to his work ... during these challenging days."

Protesters have been camped outside the building since Oct. 15. When police tried to move them the next day, Fraser said the demonstrators were welcome to stay and asked police officers to move instead.

Days later, cathedral officials shut the building to the public, saying the campsite was a health and safety hazard. It was the first time the 300-year-old church, one of London's best-known buildings, had closed since World War II.

Cathedral officials, and the bishop of London, have since asked the demonstrators to leave, but they are refusing to go.

Knowles said Wednesday the cathedral was considering all its options in response to the protest ? including legal action.

But in a victory for the protesters, he said the cathedral hoped to reopen Friday following changes to the layout of tents.

In a statement, the Occupy London protesters called Fraser a "man of great personal integrity."

The protesters said Fraser had "ensured that St. Paul's could be a sanctuary for us and that no violence could take place against peaceful protesters with a legitimate cause challenging and tackling social and economic injustice in London, the U.K. and beyond."

Fraser, 46, a high-profile and liberal Anglican clergyman, was appointed chancellor of the cathedral in 2009.

The role involves overseeing the work of the St. Paul's Institute, which "seeks to bring Christian ethics to bear on our understanding of finance and economics."

The cathedral and the protest tent city lie within London's traditional financial center, which is called the City.

Fraser, whose father came from a prominent London Jewish family, is well known through his newspaper and magazine columns and frequent appearances on BBC radio.

He has criticized the effects of the government's austerity measures.

"Should the church get stuck into the mucky world of politics? How ridiculous, of course it should," he wrote in the Guardian in June, going on to quote the late Brazilian bishop Helder Camara: "When I give to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why they are poor, they call me a communist."

____

Associated Press writer Robert Barr contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_wall_street_protests

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ABC's "Once Upon a Time" starts strong, Fox wins night (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? ABC's new fairytale drama "Once Upon a Time" got off to a strong start Sunday night, scoring the top ratings of any drama debut this fall, while Fox won the night overall thanks to the NFL and the World Series, according to preliminary numbers.

Competing against both the World Series and "Sunday Night Football," "Once Upon a Time" on ABC at 8 p.m. posted a 3.9 rating/10 share in the adults 18-49 demographic, with 12.8 million total viewers. "Desperate Housewives" the following hour climbed 11 percent, scoring a 3.0/7 in the demographic with 9.2 million total viewers. "Pan Am" at 10 remained flat and tied with last week's series low, getting a 1.8/5 and 5.7 million total viewers. The network started the night with "America's Funniest Home Videos" at 7, which drew a 1.5/4 in the demo and 6.6 million total viewers.

While final numbers for Game 4 of the World Series are still inconclusive, Fox took an overall win for the night, along with the evening's top rating slot with overrun from the NFL at 7, which drew a 7.4/21 and 21.8 million total viewers. Combined with "The OT" at 7:30, which received a 4.3/12 and 13.4 million total viewers, and Game 4 of the World Series from 8 to 11, which registered a 4.0/10 and 13.6 million total viewers in preliminary numbers, Fox averaged a 4.4/11 and 14.6 million total viewers.

NBC's "Sunday Night Football" from 8:30 to 11 slipped 19 percent from last week to a 4.6/11 and 11.2 million total viewers. Those numbers are preliminary and are likely to change significantly due to the nature of live sports. The game was preceded by "Football Night in America" at 7, which drew a 1.5/4 and 4.2 million total viewers, followed by another episode at 7:30 which received a 2.5/7 and 6.3 million total viewers, and a final episode at 8, which received a 3.7/9 and 9.7 million total viewers.

Meanwhile, CBS started its night with a huge boost for "60 Minutes" at 7, which surged 47 percent from last week to a 2.7 and 12.6 million total viewers, thanks to an interview with Walter Isaacson, the biographer of recently deceased Apple co-founder Steve Jobs. That was the end of the good news for the network, however. "The Amazing Race" ran flat with last week, taking a 2.7/7 and 9.9 million total viewers, while "The Good Wife" dipped 5 percent for a 2.0/5 and 9.6 million total viewers. "CSI: Miami" ended the night at 10, dropping 13 percent for a 2.1/5 and 9.7 million total viewers.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/tv_nm/us_ratings

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Cards in need of another World Series comeback

By STEPHEN HAWKINS

updated 4:08 a.m. ET Oct. 25, 2011

ARLINGTON, Texas - The St. Louis Cardinals are going to need a comeback in this World Series.

They've done it before.

After a 4-2 loss in Game 5 on Monday night against the Texas Rangers, St. Louis is going home in a 3-2 hole. The Cardinals have faced that deficit five other times, and won the championship four of them.

"We'd rather be up 3-2, but we feel good," outfielder Lance Berkman said. "Realistically, coming into this park, we won one and now we're going back to St. Louis."

Game 6 is Wednesday night at Busch Stadium.

"It's tough. You don't want to be in that situation," slugger Albert Pujols said. "There's a Game 6 and hopefully we can push it to a Game 7."

The last time the Cardinals won Games 6 and 7 of a World Series was in 1982 against Milwaukee. They also accomplished that feat in 1946 against Boston, 1934 against Detroit and 1926 against the New York Yankees. The one time St. Louis didn't pull it off was 1930 after a Game 6 loss to the Philadelphia A's.

___

HARRY'S GAME: If the World Series extends to seven games, Rangers manager Ron Washington has no plans to alter his pitching rotation.

"It's Harry's game," Washington said Monday, referring to Matt Harrison.

Even if potential weather issues in St. Louis were to push the series back an extra day, Washington said he wouldn't change his pitching plans.

The question came up after left-hander Derek Holland threw 8 1-3 scoreless innings in Game 4 against the Cardinals. Harrison, who made it through only 3 2-3 innings in Game 3 on Saturday, would get his next turn in the rotation in Game 7.

"Matt Harrison earned it," Washington said. "You think Derek Holland earned his start (Sunday) night if you want to talk about struggles. That's the way we roll."

In his previous start, Holland gave up four runs in 4 2-3 innings and got a no-decision in the Rangers' AL championship series-clinching win over Detroit.

___

RUNNING OUT OF A RALLY: With Allen Craig on first base and nowhere for Texas to put Albert Pujols, the Cardinals appeared to be in position to set up a tiebreaking rally in Game 5 of the World Series.

Craig saw a hit-and-run sign, and then took off on the next pitch. Pujols never swung at the high and outside ball and Craig was thrown out on what would be ruled a caught stealing for the second out of the seventh inning.

"It was a hit-and-run and (Alexi) Ogando threw an unhittable pitch. It was a perfect play for them," Craig said. "Those are the breaks."

Explained Pujols, "He's throwing 99 miles per hour away. It was tough to get that pitch."

With two outs, the Rangers then granted Pujols his third consecutive intentional walk and St. Louis failed to score in the inning, even after a single by Matt Holliday and another intentional pass to Lance Berkman before David Freese's inning-ending flyball.

Texas went on to a 4-2 victory Monday night, taking a 3-2 series lead.

What went unexplained was who called the hit-and-run play in a 2-all game. Did the signal come from the bench, or was it something Pujols decided on his own?

"It was just a mix-up," manager Tony La Russa said. "On our team nobody gets thrown under the bus, so it was a mix-up."

Pujols wasn't saying.

"That's something that I don't know, (I've done) maybe 200 times. I play my game," he said. "That's secret. I can't tell you how I play my game."

___

AARON AWARDS: Blue Jays slugger Jose Bautista joined Alex Rodriguez and Barry Bonds as the only players to repeat as recipient of the Hank Aaron Award that goes to each league's top offensive players.

Bautista, who also won the AL award last year with 54 homers, had 43 homers this season and batted a career-best .302 with 103 RBIs and a majors-best .608 slugging percentage.

Matt Kemp of the Dodgers was the NL winner after leading his league in homers (39), RBIs (126), runs scored (115) and total bases (353). His .324 batting average was third in the league.

The award were established in 1999 to honor the 25th anniversary of Aaron breaking Babe Ruth's home run record.

Commissioner Bud Selig presented the awards because Aaron was absent, unable to travel while recovering from knee replacement surgery.

"The surgery went well. He's recovering comfortably, but he can't travel, and he's not going to be able to travel for a while," Selig said of Aaron. "He said it's the first time he's ever missed a game due to an injury. He wanted me to say that."

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LOT OF RELIEF: The St. Louis Cardinals are getting a lot of use out of their bullpen against Texas.

With four pitching changes in Game 5 of the World Series on Monday night, Cardinals relievers have made 65 appearances ? the most ever by a team in a single postseason.

St. Louis surpassed the previous record of 62 set by the 2002 San Francisco Giants.

As for the Rangers this postseason, they've used 58 relievers, fourth-most on the all-time list.

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MO' WORK: The St. Louis Cardinals will play their last game within a matter of days. Then the work really begins for general manager John Mozeliak, who will have little time to relish the success of a World Series season.

"It doesn't seem fair, does it?" Mozeliak said Monday before Game 5. "When you look at this job, it's sort of getting here and just trying to enjoy this moment as best you can. ... Special as this is, it's going to be a fleeting moment. And in time it's going to be right back to it."

Among the first things on the offseason agenda for Mozeliak will be deciding on the mutual contract option for manager Tony La Russa for 2012, an item that should determined by both parties within two weeks after the end of the World Series.

"At this point, hopeful that we can wrap that up rather quickly," Mozeliak said. "And right now as far as what's going to happen, every time he and I start to sit down and talk about it, we always realize and we sort of pinch ourselves that here we are in the World Series or having success in the postseason. So we just really haven't stopped to focus on it at this time."

There's also the pending free agency for Albert Pujols.

"Our offseason strategy, it hasn't changed dramatically just due to the postseason success," Mozeliak said. "There's certainly some things that when you look at putting this club together, the big question marks are going to be, will we get Albert Pujols re-signed or not? ... There's no doubt, he's been the identity of this organization for the past decade."

The Cardinals have already signed former Cy Young Award winner Chris Carpenter to a $21 million, two-year contract through 2013, and Lance Berkman to a $12 million dollar deal next year.

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WALK AWAY: Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols was intentionally walked three times Monday night, the first time that has happened in a World Series since Barry Bonds got three intentional passes in Game 4 in 2002.

After Pujols had a flyball to center to end the first, he was intentionally walked in the third and fifth innings by Texas starter C.J. Wilson. Then in the seventh, when Allen Craig was caught stealing on a 1-1 pitch with Pujols standing at the plate, catcher Mike Napoli stood up and Alexi Ogando threw three wide pitches.

Wilson, finished with five walks, including the two intentional passes to Pujols. The 19 walks by Wilson, including five intentional, match Jaret Wright for the most ever in a single postseason.

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NINE-HOLE HOMERS: With his homer nearly halfway up the second deck of seats in right field Monday night, Rangers first baseman Mitch Moreland accomplished a World Series first.

Moreland is the first person with two World Series homers hitting from the No. 9 spot in the order.

Before Moreland homered in Game 3 of last year's World Series to become the eighth player to go deep from No. 9 spot, there hadn't been a player to do it since Mark Bellhorn for Boston in 2004.

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BIRTHDAY BOYS: Cardinals pitcher Arthur Rhodes and shortstop Rafael Furcal both celebrated birthdays Monday.

It was the second time in this World Series that two players had birthdays. Texas' Michael Young and St. Louis infielder Daniel Descalso both marked their birthdays last Wednesday during Game 1.

Rhodes, who started this season with Texas, turned 42. He is the oldest player to celebrate a birthday while in the World Series, surpassing Jim Palmer turning 38 while playing for Baltimore in 1983.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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