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Friday 22 April 2011

Sergio Ramos dropped Copa del Rey trophy under moving bus

Sergio Ramos' Copa del Rey celebration started off graceful enough with a short routine he performed on the pitch using a matador's cape after Real Madrid's 1-0 win over Barcelona at the Mestalla. But once he did a bit more celebrating, things took a turn for the worse.
When Real arrived back in a rain-soaked Madrid and boarded an open-top bus that would take them to the center of the late-night celebrations at the Plaza de Cibeles, Sergio Ramos took hold of the Copa del Rey trophy and held it high above his head at the front of the bus as it moved slowly through the streets filled with 60,000 fans. Maybe it was the rain, maybe it was all the jubilant jostling on the bus or maybe it was just Sergio Ramos being Sergio Ramos, but at approximately 4:15 a.m., the trophy slipped out of his hands and fell under the bus. Seriously. This is something that happened. Less than 24 hours after winning the thing for the first time since 1993, and Sergio Ramos broke it.
So with the cup lodged under the bus' front bumper, the driver had to stop and get out as a group of cops came over to pry it out. The celebration continued on and everyone seemed far too happy to be upset about the accident. Somewhere, Pep Guardiola watched and chuckled, knowing that his telekinesis worked.

UPDATE: Sergio Ramos joked on his Twitter account that the whole thing was a misunderstanding and that the trophy didn't fall -- it jumped to meet all the Madrid fans at Cibeles.
Well, it didn't quite jump far enough and instead, it met the front wheel of the bus.
According to a Real Madrid spokeswoman, the trophy "is not in good shape" and now the jeweler who made the cup will have some work to do. From the AP:
"I thought it was a joke," [Federico] Alegre told the Spanish newspaper El Mundo. "But later I saw that it was true. Now I will have to try and repair the damaged cup."
No, it was no joke, Mr. Alegre. It was The Ramos.


 This article was copied from sports.yahoo.com

Calico cat does the dog paddle

By Mike Krumboltz
Popular lore has it that few things can be angrier than a wet cat—but perhaps wet cats should be given at least as much credit for their resourcefulness and pluck as for their hissiness.
That would seem to be the moral of a shaggy-cat tale from last weekend, when a soaking wet feline showed up on the shores of Governors Island in New York. Many believe the feline swam all the way from New Jersey a mile away. In other words: Never underestimate a cat who wants to get out of Jersey.
cat
Nobody is sure what happened exactly. However, we do know that security guards on Governors Island found the cat looking a bit worse for the wear last weekend near the island's shore.
According to the AP, the cat's "fur was salty, matted, and caked with seaweed." Some of the workers on the island think the cat was swept up in a New Jersey rainstorm, and somehow managed to swim to safety. The cat didn't have a collar.
The story was originally covered by the New York Daily News. Workers on the island have apparently taken quite a shine to the mysterious cat. Elizabeth Rapuano, the park's director of marketing and communications, remarked that staff members have taken to feeding the cat cans of tuna. And while the brave calico appears to be in fine shape, she will be taken to a vet just to be sure.
A message on the island's website reads that "any information that leads her back to her family is appreciated." In the meantime, the staff of Governors Island is taking suggestions for a name for the cat. May we suggest Meowchal Phelps?
(Photo courtesy of govislandblog.com)


This article was copied from news.yahoo.com

Thursday 21 April 2011

Seven free online games worth playing

by: Ben Silverman
Bumper Jack
Between affordable apps, discounted older titles and must-play downloads, there are more ways to play games on the cheap than ever before.
But what if you don't want to drop a dime? No worries. Free-to-play games have flooded gaming over the past year or two, making it possible to enjoy hours and hours of legit online gaming without forking over those annoying subscription fees. Sure, they'll noodge you to drop coin on microtransactions or pony up for 'premium' content, but such nuisances are a small price to pay for essentially free gaming.
Unfortunately, "free" doesn't necessarily mean "good" -- and in many cases, it means a lot less than that. Luckily, there are more than a few worthwhile options out there in the free-to-play space. Just remember: you get what you pay for.


Spiral Knights
Spiral Knights Sega This newcomer has already garnered praise for being cute, addictive and flat-out fun to play. And it makes sense once you realize it's made by Three Rings, the same folks behind the wildly popular Puzzle Pirates. Spiral Knights trades swashbuckers for robots, letting you blast through a colorful Clockwork world as a pint-sized bucket of junk armed to the teeth with cool weapons and gear. Emphasizing co-operative play over aggressive tactics, it's that rare gem that appeals equally to both adults and kids.
Visit Official Site


The Lord of the Rings Online
Lord of the Rings Online Turbine You shall not pay! At least initially, and that's a big step for this online game set in Middle-Earth. Once a full-fledged subscription deal like World of Warcraft, LOTRO was freed of its payment shackles last September. The result is one of the most slickly-produced free games on the market. Create a character, duke it out with Sauron's minions and explore the famous locations of Tolkien's world without losing all your gold.
Visit Official Site


World of Tanks
World of Tanks Wargaming.net What it lacks in a creative title this tank combat game makes up for with its surprising depth and awesome price tag of zilch. The premise? Man a giant tank, outfit it with giant tank weapons, and drive around blasting the sheet metal off other giant tanks. But forget Atari Combat -- this is as much a simulation as an action game, so it requires some patience as you learn the ins and outs of maneuvering the treaded warhorses.
Visit Official Site


Battlestar Galactica Online
BSG Online Bigpoint The show might be over, but the merchandising is doing just fine. And in this case, that might actually be a good thing. Taking place during the show's second (and some would argue best) season, this browser-based online game lets you relive the Cylon/Human struggle through fierce space dogfights. It's not exactly the deepest game around -- the action gets a little repetitive after a while -- but it's a must-try for fans of the series. And we certainly hope you're one of us, er, them.
Visit Official Site


Free Realms (PS3)
Free Realms Sony Sony Online knocked it out of the park when they released Free Realms on the PC back in 2009. Some 17 million registered players later, they've taken their free-to-play baby to the PS3, making it the very first free massively-multiplayer online role-playing game for the consoles. While some concessions were made for the new crowd (chatting isn't so easy with a gamepad), it's mostly the same game. Expect loads of kid-friendly mini-games wrapped in a very pretty package.
Visit Official Site


Vindictus
Vindictus NEXON Find Free Realms too...fuzzy? Then consider this decidedly tougher online fantasy brawler. Steeped in Celtic mythology, it's a no-holds-barred action game emphasizing combat over pretty much everything else. Stylish and brutal, it's certainly not one for the wee ones, but if you're of age and want to hack, slash and dungeon dive with others, this freebie is one to die for.
Visit Official Site



Pocket Legends (iOS)
Pocket Legends Spacetime Don't let the diminutive size of your iOS device fool you -- it can handle big games, and it doesn't come much bigger than Pocket Legends. The leading massively-multiplayer online role-playing game for your iWhatever provides a good five or six hours of fantasy fun before you need to start handing over cash, and even that comes in pretty painless 99-cent chunks to unlock new areas. It's no Warcraft, but it's a portable -- and affordable -- way to scratch that online itch.
Visit Official Site



This article was copied from blog.games.yahoo.com 

Wednesday 20 April 2011

Photojournalist killed, others gravely wounded in Libya

By Joe Pompeo Vanity Fair confirmed a little after 1:30 p.m. on Twitter Wednesday that one of its contributing photographers, Tim Hetherington (pictured right), has died while covering the conflict in Libya. Hetherington was a renowned British-American photojournalist and the Oscar-nominated director, with Sebastian Junger, of "Restrepo," a 2010 documentary about a year spent on assignment for Vanity Fair in Afghanistan.
The New York Times' C.J. Chivers, who is stationed in Libya, reported the news shortly thereafter, confirming that three other photographers were wounded: "The wounds to two of the photographers -- Chris Hondros and Guy Martin -- were grave, according to a colleague at the triage center where they were being treated Wednesday night. Their prospects for survival were not immediately clear." Hondros was on assignment for Getty. The fourth photographer, Michael Christopher Brown, reportedly suffered shrapnel injuries.
In the breathless rush to break the news, bloggers and tweeters reported without confirmation that both Hetherington and Hondros had been killed. The early reports originated from the Facebook page of a fellow photographer in Libya, Andre Liohn. Major news organizations held off reporting names until details could be confirmed and families notified.
"BBC can confirm one western journalist has been killed and three injured in a mortar attack in city of #Benghazi #libya," the British news agency tweeted.
"The Associated Press is investigating reports that four foreign photojournalists have been wounded in fighting in Misrata, Libya, and at least one is believed to have died," read an advisory sent to the wire's member editors. "The AP will expedite a story as soon as we obtain confirmation from credible sources, pending notification of family."
A call to the Middle East and North Africa program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists, which has been tracking violence against reporters in Libya and elsewhere in the region, was not returned.
There are currently dozens of journalists covering the escalating conflict in Libya. Many are reporting on the fighting from a distance in the nation's capital city, Tripoli, where their movements and access are closely controlled by state handlers. Others have been covering the war from the frontlines, where the situation is far more dangerous.
Previously, there had been one confirmed death of a journalist in Libya, a cameraman for Al Jazeera, since the eruption of the tumult several months ago. But a number of Western journalists have been swept up and detained by forces loyal to dictator Muammar Gadhafi. Several remain in custody.
[Ed. Note: This post has been modified from its original version to account for breaking news updates.]
(Carlo Allegri/AP)


This article was copied from news.yahoo.com

Tuesday 19 April 2011

Frey, Glass, and Blair: Where are they now?

By Mike Krumboltz The recent "60 Minutes" story on Three Cups of Tea co-author Greg Mortenson sparked an avalanche of online interest. The segment, which aired on Sunday, raised questions as to whether Mortenson fabricated or exaggerated significant portions of his best-selling memoir about building schools in the Middle East.
Mortenson says he stands by the book. However, many Web searchers are already lumping him in with three infamous writers who took liberties with the truth. Following the expose, online lookups for James Frey (author of A Million Little Pieces), Stephen Glass (former writer for The New Republic and Rolling Stone), and Jayson Blair (former writer for the New York Times) all surged. Here's a look what those writers are up to now.
James Frey
In 2003, James Frey (pictured above) released A Million Little Pieces, his memoir of drug addiction and recovery. It sold millions of copies, earned inclusion into Oprah's book club, and helped turn Frey into one of the hottest young writers in America. But then it was revealed that a significant amount of the book was fabricated, and Frey's life quickly took a turn for the worse.
Frey has (wisely) moved on from the pseudo-memoir genre into pure fiction. In 2009, he formed Full Fathom Five, a publishing company specializing in young adult novels. The company had a big win with the "I Am Number Four" series (one of which was turned into a poorly received film). Frey co-authored those books with Jobie Hughes.
On his own, he wrote Bright Shiny Morning, a novel. Publisher's Weekly said it's "a train wreck of a novel, but it's un-put-downable, a real page-turner--in what may come to be known as the Frey tradition." Long story short, Frey landed on his feet after finding his true home in straight-up fiction.
Stephen Glass
Cast your gaze back to the early age of the Internet, when fact checking involved more than a few web searches. Journalist Stephen Glass worked for the highly respected magazine The New Republic. He wrote fabulous and hilarious reports on everything from Young Republicans gone wild to an incredible tale of a teenage hacker hired by the United States government.
Amazing stories, but they weren't true. And when they were discovered, the bottom quickly fell out for Glass. Disgrace and depression quickly took hold. A film, Shattered Glass, starring Hayden Christensen, was released in 2003 to strong reviews. Glass described watching the film as very difficult.
Glass has largely stayed out of the public eye. He wrote a novel called The Fabulist, but it failed to garner much attention (or sales). According to various sources on the Web, Glass went to law school at Georgetown following the scandal and applied to join the bar in California and New York. According to Vanity Fair, Glass also did some "first-person storytelling sketches with the L.A.-based comedy troupe Un-Cabaret."
Jayson Blair
The one-time reporter for the New York Times was in a heap of trouble after he was found to have fabricated quotes and plagiarized from other sources.
Blair was dismissed by the Times, and the paper called the scandal "a low point in the 152-year history of the newspaper." Not surprisingly, Blair left the journalism field, and tried other ventures.
A few years ago, Blair became a "certified life coach" in Northern Virginia. According to his official site, he specializes in "career assessment, attention deficit disorder, pervasive developmental disorders, mood disorders and substance abuse disorders."
(Author James Frey listens during an interview before a book signing in New York, Tuesday May 14, 2008.: Bebeto Matthews/AP)


This article was copied from news.yahoo.com

Pulses and sea urchin on menu at world's top eatery

File photo of Chef Rene Redzepi in Copenhagen Reuters – Chef Rene Redzepi poses in his restaurant Noma in Copenhagen in this December 12, 2009 file photograph. …
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) – Denmark's Noma won one of the restaurant world's highest accolades for the second consecutive year on Monday with a menu that remains deeply committed to an innovative Nordic cuisine.
Noma's 33-year-old chef Rene Redzepi, whose restaurant topped the S. Pellegrino World's 50 Best Restaurants list released late on Monday, has created a menu that includes sea urchin and dill, potatoes and milk skin, beef cheek and pear.
Redzepi, an ambassador for the New Nordic Food program set up by the Nordic Council of Ministers, has headed the restaurant since its 2003 opening.
The Noma approach to cooking is concentrated on obtaining the best raw materials from the Nordic region such as Icelandic skyr curd, halibut, Greenland musk ox and berries.
"Noma is not about olive oil, foie gras, sun-dried tomatoes and black olives. On the contrary, we've been busy exploring the Nordic regions discovering outstanding foods and bringing them back to Denmark," Noma said on its website.
"This goes for very costly ingredients but also for more disregarded, modest ingredients such as grains and pulses, which you'll taste here in new and unexpected contexts," it said.
"VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY"
The two Michelin star restaurant does its own smoking, salting, pickling, drying, grilling, and baking, prepares its own vinegars and concocts its own distilled spirits such as its own eaux de vies.
Noma makes systematic use of beers and ales, fruit juices and fruit-based vinegars for its sauces and soups rather than wine, and allows vegetables, herbs, spices and wild plants in season to play a prominent role in its cooking.
"We feel that the cooking at Noma is fairly ambitious but then again, Nordic cuisine must possess a certain purity," Noma said.
Located on the ground floor of a renovated listed 18th Century warehouse in the old Christianshavn district of Copenhagen, the restaurant's fittings and furnishings also embrace the Nordic spirit and atmosphere with smoked oak, stone, leather, water, glass and light.
Its menu also offers the "Noma nassaaq," whose dishes are described only as "Noma's classics and new inventions."
The 12 courses Noma nassaaq "experience" lasts more than four hours, is served to all guests at a table and has to be ordered before eight in the evening. Nassaaq is Greenlandic and means "voyage of discovery."
The S. Pellegrino World's 50 Best Restaurants list, produced by Britain's Restaurant Magazine, was unveiled in London after voting by a panel of more than 800 chefs, restaurateurs, journalists and food experts who rated innovative gastronomy over haute cuisine.
Failing to receive its third Michelin star in March this year though widely expected, Redzepi said he dreamed of receiving a third star in the future.
Noma beat other European favorites such as British chef Heston Blumenthal's Fat Duck this year and last year pushed Spain's elBulli restaurant -- where Redzepi once worked -- off the top perch after four consecutive years.
(Writing by Mette Fraende, Editing by Paul Casciato)


This article was copied from news.yahoo.com

FAA suspends controller for watching movie on duty

Randy Babbitt AP – FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt meets with Atlanta-based air traffic controllers to discuss new rules …
WASHINGTON – An air traffic controller has been suspended for watching a movie when he was supposed to be monitoring aircraft, deepening the Federal Aviation Administration's embarrassment following at least five cases of controllers sleeping on the job.
In the latest incident, the controller was watching a movie on a DVD player early Sunday morning while on duty at a regional radar center in Oberlin, Ohio, near Cleveland that handles high-altitude air traffic, the FAA said in a statement Monday.
The controller's microphone was inadvertently activated, transmitting the audio of the movie — the 2007 crime thriller "Cleaner," starring Samuel L. Jackson — for more than three minutes to all the planes in the airspace that the controller was supposed to be monitoring, the agency said.
The controller's microphone became stuck in the transmit position, preventing him from hearing incoming radio calls or issuing instructions to planes during the incident, the agency said.
The controller was alerted to the mishap when he was contacted by a military pilot.
Besides the controller, the FAA also has suspended a manager at the Oberlin center.
In all, the FAA has suspended nine controllers and supervisors since late March.
In five of the cases the controllers allegedly fell asleep. In another case, the FAA is investigating why two controllers in Lubbock, Texas, were unresponsive to radio calls.
Nearly all the incidents occurred during overnight shifts when traffic is light and people naturally have trouble staying awake.
The incidents have shaken FAA officials, made air traffic controllers the butt of late-night comedians and raised public jitters about the safety of air travel.
FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt said early Monday, before the agency had disclosed the incident near Cleveland, that he was "infuriated" that air traffic controllers have been caught snoozing on the job.
"None of us in this business can ... tolerate any of this," Babbitt said. "It absolutely has to stop."
Babbitt was at a regional radar center near Atlanta with Paul Rinaldi, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, the union that represents controllers. The pair met with about 50 controllers and other FAA employees as they kicked off a nationwide tour of air traffic facilities aimed at sending a message as much to the public as to controllers that unprofessional behavior won't be tolerated.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood underscored the same message in a series of television interviews over the past several days. Even President Barack Obama joined the chorus, telling ABC News last week, "We've got it under control."
But every time administration officials say they've moved decisively to contain the problem, another controller steps over the line.
The day before the Cleveland incident a controller fell asleep while working an overnight shift at busy regional radar facility in Miami that handles high-altitude traffic for Florida, parts of the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean.
The incidents have raised concerns about work schedules that don't allow controllers realistic opportunities for sleep.
The FAA forbids controllers from sleeping on the job, even during the 20-minute to 30-minute breaks they receive every few hours. Babbitt stood by that position Monday.
Instead, the agency said it will require controllers to have an extra hour off between shifts — a minimum of nine hours instead of eight — to get more sleep.
Babbitt said at the meeting that the scandal caused by sleeping controllers has harmed the agency's credibility. He said passengers should never have to worry about whether a flight crew is rested, a plane is properly maintained or air traffic controllers are on the job.
"That should never be a thought for anybody getting in an airplane in this country," he said. "And it hasn't been a thought. But unfortunately, we have raised that concern."
___
Henry reported from Peachtree City, Ga.



This article was copied from news.yahoo.com
The prospect of getting educated, getting a decent job and having a feel of city life seemed only a mile away when Vincent Chenjela got a part-time job at a Chinese-run coal mine in Sinazeze, southern Zambia. But getting shot by his own foreign employers without any compensation has left him and his family crying for justice.
Zambia:  Judiciary digitalised
Poverty forced Chenjela, a grade eight pupil at Nkandabwe basic school, to get job to pay his way through secondary school but little did he know that his job, with all its promises of a better future, could turn up to be a curse in his life.

With a part time job as an underground miner, Chenjela was sure of a good life, away from the village where even safe drinking water is a luxury. It was not until October last year, when Chenjela´s seemingly ´decent´ future became blurred when his employers shot him twice in the stomach.

On the fateful day, the mine workers at the site downed tools and protested over poor working conditions.

Chenjela was not part of the protest and had not reported for work but passed through the mines to confirm his working shifts when he met his fate.

He found the miners protesting and it was at the time of his arrival that the two Chinese bosses allegedly fired live bullets at the workers wounding him and 10 of his colleagues.

Chenjela has no kind words for the investors.

“I don’t know what I will become,” Chenjela says with a cloud of tears forming in his eyes as he quickly looks away to control his emotions. Chenjela describes the working conditions at the mine as pathetic.

“I don’t know how I can describe that place, it’s horrible, working there is like committing suicide, the money is little and the working conditions are bad, but what can you do when you are desperate,” he bitterly says.

Chenjela, the youngest victim among the 11, was shot twice in the stomach with a third bullet piercing his chest.

He says after been shot, his employers never gave him any financial support for treatment and he was left stranded at the University Teaching Hospital in the capital, Lusaka, hundreds of miles from his hometown.

“Even when I was taken to the hospital there was no word from them (employers), they kept quiet, we had to beg for transport to come back here,” says Chenjela.

Chenjela says his employers earlier promised to help with school fees but says it will be impossible because the courts have ended the case. The court entered a nolle prosequi for the two Chinese nationals last month.

“I´m crippled, I can never work the way I used to, It’s like been dead, the most unfortunate thing is that the Chinese that crippled me are free,” complains Chenjela. He says his future is in jeopardy adding that he can never go back to mine.

“Just living near this mine is traumatizing enough, I can´t stand this place, I wish I could go far from this place, but where?,” he asks almost sobbing.

Chenjela complains that justice is not for the poor.

“If we were rich we would have received justice, but who has the time to fight for people like us, being poor is just as good as dead,” he complained.

Chenjela says he is unable to continue with school because he has no money to pay fees and he is unable to do any form of manual work to raise money. His old and ailing father Leonard has vowed to fight for his son´s rights.

“They have killed my son, look at him,” he complains.

Leonard a poor peasant farmer says no amount of money would bring back his son to “life.”

“Even if they pay us, the money can’t be compared to the life of my son, he can´t live like before. I will keep fighting to get justice,” says Leonard.

Chenjela believes justice will one day prevail.
 
 
 
This article was copied from  africanews.com

“Reason for Concern”: Stocks Tumble After S&P Cuts U.S. Debt Outlook

Video Player Controls

Already frightened by fears about Europe's debt crisis and China's latest tightening, financial markets got really spooked Monday morning when Standard & Poor's cut its outlook on America's AAA debt rating to negative from stable.
The idea America could lose its AAA rating is not new but S&P's action makes it more likely as a real-world event; specifically, the outlook revision means a 33% chance of a rating change within 2 years, according to S&P.
An actual debt downgrade would raise the cost of interest payments for the U.S. government, as well as raise borrowing costs for U.S. consumers and corporations. Higher rates would have a crushing effect on the debt-laden U.S. economy, which helps explain the market's reaction: Treasury prices fell, sending yields higher, while money flowed out of stocks and other "risk" assets.
In recent trading, the Dow was down more than 200 points to 12,134 while the S&P was trading below the key 1300 level. With the notable exception of precious metals, commodity prices were also tumbling, with notable decline in oil and copper. In addition to silver and gold, the volatility was the big winner with the S&P Volatility Index (VIX) up 18%.
In the accompanying video, I discuss S&P's action and the market's response with my Breakout colleague Jeff Macke and Mark Dow, a fund manager at Pharo Management, which has about $4 billion of assets.
"We believe there is a material risk that U.S. policymakers might not reach an agreement on how to address medium- and long-term budgetary challenges by 2013; if an agreement is not reached and meaningful implementation is not begun by then, this would in our view render the U.S. fiscal profile meaningfully weaker than that of peer 'AAA' sovereigns," S&P said in a statement announcing the change.
"They have to be careful: you can't yell fire in a crowded theater," Dow says of S&P. "But it's a good time to do it with the debt ceiling coming up. There's reason for concern — if people don't get on the ball quickly we're going to have problems not too far out."
And if this kind of market action persists, the problems will be here sooner vs. later.


This article was copied from finance.yahoo.com

Monday 18 April 2011


Kenya's Geoffrey Mutai ran the fastest marathon ever on Monday, finishing the Boston Marathon in 2 hours, 3 minutes, 2 seconds. Despite the blistering time, Mutai's mark isn't being recognized as a world record.
Why not?
Even though it's considered one of the most challenging marathon courses in the world, the Boston Marathon is run on a net downhill, making it ineligible for world records. USA Track and Field only recognizes courses that meet specific criteria about elevation changes as record-eligible. Those courses must drop less than one meter per kilometer to fit the standard. For a 26.2-mile race, that's about 137 feet.
The Boston Marathon begins at 475 feet above sea level and drops all the way to 16 feet by the end. The total drop of 459 feet is well past the record-eligible specifications. That means Haile Gebrselassie's time of 2:03:59, set in Berlin in 2008, will remain the world record.
It's an understandable rule, given that no two marathons are exactly alike. Racing records set on tracks are largely interchangeable whether they occur in Atlanta or Beijing or Rome. Marathon courses vary greatly and don't provide apples-to-apples comparison.
A tailwind accompanied the race and doubtlessly aided in Mutai's time, but the wind was irrelevant given the start-to-finish elevation decrease. Even if Mutai had run the course in a hurricane headwind, the world record still wouldn't have counted.
World record or not, Mutai's performance is one of the greatest in recent memory. He broke the course record by more than three minutes and was one of four men to come in under 2:05, a time which had seemed unconquerable before it was accomplished last year.


This article was copied from yahoo.com

Sunday 17 April 2011

Ivory Coast: Doubts over arrest of Charles Ble Goude

Charles Ble Goude greets the crowd on 5 February 2011 in Abidjan The Young Patriots leader was put under UN sanctions accused of inciting attacks
The whereabouts of Charles Ble Goude, a key ally of deposed Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo, are unclear, after a spokesman withdrew a statement saying he had been arrested.
The BBC's John James says there have been many rumours about Mr Ble Goude.
Mr Ble Goude, known for his vitriolic speeches, mobilised thousands of young men to join the army in the final days of the four-month election dispute.
Many other members of his Young Patriots group were given weapons.
Since December about 1,500 people have been killed and a million forced from their homes.
Mr Gbagbo named Mr Ble Goude his youth minister after he refused to accept that he had lost November's elections and tried to stay in office.
Mr Gbagbo was captured on Monday at the presidential residence by President Alassane Ouattara's forces but Mr Ble Goude was not one of those taken into custody at the same time.
He was put under UN sanctions in 2006 accused of inciting attacks against UN personnel.
Pledge allegiance Mr Ouattara's spokesman Patrick Achi had told the BBC and French radio that Mr Ble Goude was being held in a secure place, without giving further details.

Start Quote

The types of several violence we're hearing about is devastating ”
End Quote Liz Pender International Rescue Committee
He later told the AFP news agency: "The initial information I had has not been subsequently confirmed."
Mr Ble Goude's aide, Semi Bi, told the BBC afterwards that he did not know about the arrest or where Mr Ble Goude was.
Most moderate and undeclared members of the Gbagbo government have now pledged allegiance to President Ouattara, our correspondent in Abidjan says.
Others have fled the country, often to neighbouring Ghana, or sought diplomatic protection, he says.
The conflict threatened to plunge the world's biggest cocoa producer back into civil war.
After a long deadlock, pro-Ouattara forces swept down from their northern bases into the main city, Abidjan.
Mr Gbagbo put up a final stand in the presidential residence but extra firepower from UN and French forces made the difference.
Sexual slavery
A new report from the International Rescue Committee aid agency says alarming numbers of women and girls have also been raped, sexually assaulted, beaten and harassed by armed men as they were fleeing violence, many to neighbouring Liberia.
The IRC's Liz Pender, in the Liberian town of Ganta, said those who are reporting incidents represent a tiny fraction of the victims.
People displaced by fighting in Ivory Coast - 3 April 2011 There are concerns about the humanitarian conditions for the thousands of people who fled
"The types of sexual violence we're hearing about is devastating," she told the BBC's Network Africa programme.
"It's rape, it's gang rape, it's sexual slavery - men taking them as 'wives', keeping them for a week, exchanging them with their friends and the girls or women either manage to escape or are subsequently killed."
One woman told Ms Pender how she was forced to watch as several men took turns raping her sister who was then beaten to death.
The women were reluctant to say which side's fighters had attacked them.
This week, Mr Ouattara, who is recognised by the UN peacekeeping mission in the country as the winner of November's poll, promised to set up a truth and reconciliation commission.
He said that all sides responsible for atrocities in the conflict would face justice.
The UN refugee agency says major reconciliation efforts will be needed for those who fled in the west of the country to be able to return home safely.
It said in a statement that although fighting appeared to have ended, ethnic tensions were still high and many people remain in hiding in the bush.
Some 27,000 people are still reported to be in a church in the western town of Duekoue, where they took shelter as pro-Ouattara forces advanced on Abidjan.


This article was copied from bbc.co.uk

Saturday 16 April 2011

We'll be the first to admit that the oh-so-serious nature of the Royal Wedding can be a bit much. Credit T-Mobile for finding a fun way to poke fun at the hype.
The impending nuptials of Prince William and Kate Middleton get spoofed in this two-minute ad featuring look-alikes for Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Queen Elizabeth, Camilla, and, of course, the happy couple.
The buzzy clip looks a lot like an amateur video of the Royal Wedding. You know the drill. A regal church. Very serious guests sitting patiently. But then the wedding party starts strutting down the aisle in a most un-royal fashion, and the music starts to get funky.
Bridesmaids shake their groove thangs. Prince Charles gets jiggy with it, the Queen busts a move or two, and then Prince Harry (not really, but it looks like him) absolutely OWNS it on the aisle. Finally, Kate and William raise the roof, and all is well in the world.
The clip has to be seen to be appreciated. So, without further pomp and circumstance, here's a look at the Royal Wedding we'd all love to see. It's just a few minutes long and sure to be a lot more entertaining than the real thing.

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Friday 15 April 2011

Verizon Phases Out 'Can You Hear Me Now?' Guy

By Mark Cina, The Hollywood Reporter | Thursday, April 14, 2011, 1:22 PM


Verizon pitchman Paul Marcarelli
Mathew Imaging/WireImage.com
You won't hear him now.
Verizon Wireless is taking its famous cell phone commercials -- featuring actor Paul Marcarelli uttering the phrase, "Can you hear me now?" -- in a new direction.
In a new profile in The Atlantic, Marcarelli says he was informed of the change via email last September.
"Don't feel bad for me, but I'm definitely glad that chapter is over," he said. "Most people my age are now trying to trade in their street cred for money, and I kind of made my money."
[Photos: 2011 Summer Blockbuster Guide]
Marcarelli landed the role of Test Man nine years ago. At first, he says he was embarrassed. "The reality was, it was a job," he says.
His contract obligated him to appear in 20-40 spots a year commercials -- in addition to numerous live events (including appearing in front of 85,000 football fans during the halftime show of the Buffalo Bills' 2002 season opener).
Says Marcarelli (whose previous work included an Old Navy commercial): "Up to that point, I hadn't played to a house larger than 99 seats."
[Photos: Hollywood's Top-Paid CEOs]
But the gig came with a price. He tells The Atlantic how, at his grandmother's funeral, a family friend whispered "Can you hear me now?" as her body was being lowered into the ground.
Marcarelli, who is gay, also says that kids used to drive past his home in Guilford, Connecticut, at night, yelling, "Can you hear me now?" and spewing gay slurs. He says he never filed a police report because he was afraid of the publicity.
"I didn’t want to be put in a position to have to answer any uncomfortable question that would affect my income stream," says the actor, who reportedly received up to $6,000 a commercial. (Marcarelli's initial five-year contract forbid him from talking about his job or from taking any other acting gigs. Verizon even refused to confirm his identity even after AdAge published it in 2002. Later, his contract was amended, but Marcarelli said he still kept quiet because he didn't want to jeopardize his job.)
[Photos: GLAAD Awards' Must-See Moments]
Even today, he still can't talk about everything. ("He's still under contract," Verizon spokesperson Brenda Raney tells THR. When asked about further plans, the company had no comment.)
So, what’s next for Marcarelli? A film career. He has already written and co-produced "The Green," about a gay couple who are ostracized living in a small town. Said Marcarelli, "I still want to make something of value."
See Marcarelli introduce Verizon's iPhone in this recent ad:


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Congress measure against wolves seen as precedent

This image provided by the Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Department shows a collared gray wolf, part of the Smart Creek trio pack is shown southwest AP – This image provided by the Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Department shows a collared gray wolf, part …
BILLINGS, Mont. – The White House is poised to accept a budget bill that includes an unprecedented end-run around Endangered Species Act protections for gray wolves in five Western states — the first time Congress has targeted a species protected under the 37-year-old law.
Lawmakers describe the provision in the spending bill as a necessary intervention in a wildlife dilemma that some say has spun out of control. Sixty-six wolves were reintroduced to the Northern Rockies from Canada in the mid-1990s; there are now at least 1,650.
But legal experts warn the administration's support of lifting protections for the animals opens the door to future meddling by lawmakers catering to anti-wildlife interests.
The endangered act has long been reviled by conservatives who see it as a hindrance to economic development. Now, the administration's support for the wolf provision signals that protections for even the most imperiled animals, fish and plants are negotiable given enough political pressure, experts said.
Officials in Montana and Idaho already are planning public hunts for the predators this fall, hoping to curb increasingly frequent wolf attacks on livestock and big game herds.
"The president could have used some political capital to influence this and he didn't," said Patrick Parenteau, a professor of environmental law from the Vermont Law School. "The message to the environmental community is, don't count on the administration to be there" for the protection of endangered species.
Environmentalists still count Obama as an ally on other issues, ranging from climate change and wilderness preservation to oil and gas exploration. Yet experts in wildlife law say that in the scramble to pass the budget, the administration is circumventing one of the country's bedrock environmental laws.
That's a bitter pill for conservationists, who hoped a Democratic White House would more aggressively protect a law many say was ignored under the Bush administration.
The next potential blow to the law already is looming. A 2012 budget request from the Department of Interior would impose a sharp spending cap on a program that allows citizens to petition for species to be listed as endangered.
Those petitions were used for the majority of the species added to the list over the last four decades.
"We are having the worst attack on the Endangered Species Act in 30 years while we have a Democratic Senate and a Democratic White House," said Kieran Suckling with the Center for Biological Diversity. "They are trying to shut citizens and scientists out of the endangered species process."
To date, the Obama administration has listed 59 species as endangered — a rate of about 30 a year, according to Suckling's group, which closely tracks endangered species issues.
That's up significantly from the Bush years, when the average was eight per year, but far behind the 65 species per year under the Clinton administration.
Western lawmakers who backed the budget bill rider said the wolf issue was unique and merited special intervention. Federal judges over the last decade had repeatedly blocked attempts to downgrade the legal status of an animal population most biologists agreed was thriving.
Meanwhile, wolf attacks have generated resentment among ranchers and sportsmen. Those groups are increasingly frustrated they have been unable to strike back against the predators.
J.B. Ruhl, an expert in the Endangered Species Act at Florida State University, warned against reading too much into the wolf provision, which was latched onto a must-pass bill needed to avert a government shutdown.
"It seems to me the planets had to be aligned just right to make this happen," Ruhl said. "There might be a wing of the Republican party that would love to see the Endangered Species Act reformed, but I don't think they are going to be able to ram that through anytime soon."
Support within the Obama administration for lifting wolf protections predates the budget negotiations. That stance mirrors the government's actions under the Bush administration, when officials first proposed lifting protections.
The White House referred questions to the office of Interior Sec. Ken Salazar.
Interior spokeswoman Kendra Barkoff refused to directly address the legislation. She said the agency views the Endangered Species Act as a "critical safety net" that has prevented the extinction of hundreds of imperiled species.
"It is our responsibility to continue implementing the law," she said.
Some critics of congressional intervention characterized the budget bill rider as Republican meddling on an issue best settled through open hearings. Rep. Edward Markey of Massachusetts, the top Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, accused the GOP of wanting to "kill wolves instead of cutting pork."
Democratic Sens. Ben Cardin of Maryland and Barbara Boxer of California also have spoken against the measure.
Yet it had a degree of bipartisan support heading into the budget negotiations. Montana's two Democratic senators, Jon Tester and Max Baucus, both took credit for getting the language into the budget bill.
"It was a little hard persuading Sen. Boxer and Sen. Cardin that we're not gutting the Endangered Species Act," Baucus said in an interview. "They don't have the same understanding of the wolf problem that we have."
Congress has stepped into divisive wildlife issues before, such as in the 1980s when it exempted from the endangered act a hydroelectric dam proposed by the Tennessee Valley Authority. The dam was constructed in an area inhabited by an endangered fish, the snail darter.
During the West Coast timber wars of the 1990s, Congress used a legislative rider to allow logging despite potential threats to the endangered spotted owl.
The case of wolves is different because lawmakers are directly targeting an endangered animal, not merely promoting economic development a species was thought to be impeding.
The Supreme Court made clear with a ruling in the snail darter case that legislative riders do not violate the U.S. Constitution, said Fred Cheever with the University of Denver's Sturm School of Law.
Still, Cheever said the intervention with wolves still represents a dangerous precedent because it is being used to negate rulings made by federal courts. That effectively eliminates the judicial branch's role in deciding what legal protections are needed to prevent a species from going extinct.
"It's a scary road to go down," Cheever said. "Everything is a bargaining chip, from bombers to baby care. Riders aren't limited to the Endangered Species Act."



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