Saturday, December 31, 2011

Spurs dampen Clippers buzz with big win (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? San Antonio squashed some of the hype surrounding the revamped Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday with a 115-90 victory that lifted the Spurs to 2-0 in the new season.

A blockbuster trade for point guard Chris Paul, and the acquisition of starters Chauncey Billups and Caron Butler, created a buzz about the Clippers that only grew after their season-opening victory over Golden State on Sunday.

However, San Antonio brought them crashing back to Earth on Wednesday with Manu Ginobili scoring 24 points and DeJuan Blair adding 20. The Spurs shot 56 percent for the game.

San Antonio padded a four-point half-time lead into a 25-point advantage in the third, making 16-of-21 shots to add 38 to their tally. Tony Parker added 10 of his 14 points in the decisive quarter to go with his nine assists.

At the other end, San Antonio smothered Los Angeles during the second half where they held them to just 36 points.

"Tonight the best part of our game was our defense," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich told reporters. "Shots went in tonight. Some nights they don't drop but the one thing you can control is your defensive intensity."

Blake Griffin led the Clippers (1-1) with 28 points and nine rebounds and four other Clippers finished in double digits, including Paul with 10.

But Los Angeles had trouble defending the wily Spurs who drained 10 three-pointers on the night, including five from Ginobili. Richard Jefferson also made three and finished with 19 points.

"They shot 52 percent from three, it's tough to win like that," Griffin said. "They hit some tough shots, you have to give it to them. We have to make sure we come out on our game after halftime."

(Writing by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by John O'Brien)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/sp_nm/us_nba_clippers

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Friday, December 30, 2011

LateRooms.com - Catch Ford Madox Brown Exhibition in Manchester

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND, December 28, 2011 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Art lovers have until the end of January 2012 to catch the Ford Madox Brown: Pre-Raphaelite Pioneer exhibition in Manchester.
 
Taking place at the Manchester Art Gallery, the show represents the first major exhibition of the English painter's work since 1964 and features approximately 140 pieces.
 
It is due to run until Sunday January 29th, with admission to the Mosley Street gallery priced at GBP8. Concessions are available for GBP6 and under-18s can go in for free.
 
Divided into 11 key themes, the exhibition explores different stages of Brown's life in an attempt to support a better understanding of his work and influence on the Pre-Raphaelite movement.
 
Visitors can also learn about the years the artist spent in the north-west city working on the Manchester Murals - a series of 12 historical paintings he completed at the Town Hall.
 
Curated by Victorian art expert Julian Treuherz, the exhibition is due to move to a gallery in Ghent, Belgium after it closes in Manchester.
 
The Manchester Art Gallery is open between 10:00 and 17:00 GMT, Tuesday to Sunday.
 
Art lovers can browse LateRooms.com for a diverse selection of hotels in Manchester, including the City Warehouse Apartments.
 
Visit http://www.manchestergalleries.org/ or contact the gallery on 0161 235 8888 for more information on this event.

Editors Notes:

LateRooms.com is part of B2C sector of TUI Travel PLC's Accommodation and Destination Division. Also within this sector are AsiaRooms.com and Hotels-London.co.uk.

LateRooms.com is the UK's leading online accommodation site offering fantastic deals in over 50,000 properties worldwide, ranging from bed and breakfasts to five star luxury hotels.

LateRooms.com offers customers a saving of up to 70 per cent off the normal room rate for a variety of independent and branded hotels.  Customers can book online or by phone 24/7, whether booking 12 months or 12 minutes in advance - whatever time, whatever day. No other accommodation site offers this flexibility.

LateRooms.com arms customers with information to help them choose the right hotel.  Users can read from over 1.2 million true hotel reviews, written by customers who have booked through LateRooms.com and actually stayed at the hotel.

LateRooms.com is the first online site to use VisitBritain's official national classification system to rate its hotels, bed and breakfasts and guest houses. This ensures customers know the standards of quality they can expect when making a reservation.

To view LateRooms.com press pages, please see http://press.laterooms.com/

Follow LateRooms.com on Twitter - @LateRooms

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---
Press release service and press release distribution provided by http://www.24-7pressrelease.com

Source: http://markets.chron.com/chron/news/read?GUID=20276254

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Ask and Answer Questions About Your New Tech Gifts [Help Yourself]

Ask and Answer Questions About Your New Tech GiftsEvery day we're on the lookout for ways to make your work easier and your life better, but Lifehacker readers are smart, insightful folks with all kinds of expertise to share, and we want to give everyone regular access to that exceptional hive mind. Help Yourself is a daily thread where readers can ask and answer questions about tech, productivity, life hacks, and whatever else you need help with.

Did Santa bring you some new gadgets or toys for Christmas? Need any help getting things all set-up just the way you like it? Whether is was an iOS Device, and Android phone, a GPS, or anything else with lights and batteries, ask and answer questions about your new gadgets in the comments.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/MgJ2VHDTDqo/ask-and-answer-questions-about-your-new-tech-gifts

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Featured: Samsung Changing Their Minds about Galaxy S Android 4.0 Update Already?

It was only a few days ago when Samsung officially stated that they are not going to update their most popular phone model yet ? the Galaxy S ? to the biggest version of Android since it was born ? Ice Cream Sandwich.

Samsung said that the phone can?t handle it and there isn?t enough room, either, which I thought was an outright lie. The biggest evidence for this is that the Nexus S has pretty much the exact hardware as the Galaxy S, and yet it will receive Android 4.0. Plus, Galaxy S models have at least 8 GB of internal storage, which means there?s no way they can?t make room for the new version.

The Nexus One story was different because it only had 512 MB of internal storage and only about 300 MB reserved for the OS. From what I hear Android 4.0 is at least twice as big, so it makes sense that there wasn?t room for it. Although, I wouldn?t put it past the custom ROM developers to make a mini-version of Android 4.0, stripped of all the apps, which you can install afterwards if you want.

So now Samsung is going back on their decision, and they are considering updating Galaxy S with Android 4.0. However, I wouldn?t get my hopes up. First, it?s clear that they intend to do something about it, otherwise they wouldn?t have said anything. Second, it might not be what people expect. They will probably just take some features from Android 4.0, and implement them under-the-hood. You would still see the same old Touchwiz, but you?ll have some new features, and all the API?s that developers needs for their Android 4.0 apps.

This is not going to be ideal, but I doubt Samsung is willing to compromise more than this for now. However, people should make it clear online that they will not tolerate this in the future anymore. Samsung can?t afford to repeat the same mistake with Galaxy S2 and Android 5.0 next fall. They better be ready to update it, and for their sake, they should even announce it as soon as Google releases Android 5.0.

Samsung may want to make new sales by only giving the new versions to the new phones, but I believe that?s very short sighted of them, and all the others, too. If they won?t support their customers, they will have no loyalty towards the company, and will leave them at first sign of trouble, or as soon as someone makes a slightly better phone. Having great support has always been a great strategy for business. Samsung just needs to focus on it more.

Tags: android 4.0, Android 5.0, featured, galaxy S, galaxy s2, samsung

Category: androidheadlines.com

Source: http://androidheadlines.com/2011/12/featured-samsung-changing-their-minds-about-galaxy-s-android-4-0-update-already.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Dell Streak Pro D43 launched in China, where Yi shall find some Baidu love

Just as rumored and teased earlier this week, yesterday Dell unveiled the world's first Baidu Yi-powered smartphone dubbed Streak Pro D43. We won't bore you with the hardware details again (the D43's identical to its Japanese Android counterpart 101DL), but it's worth noting that this dual-core 1.5GHz, quadband HSPA phone focuses on features and services tailored for Chinese users, including some seemingly basic Mandarin voice control (no pressure on Siri just yet), contacts synchronization, Baidu Chinese input, Yi's own app store and 100GB of free cloud storage that supports multimedia upload and secure file sharing. Essentially, the Yi platform's basically just another Chinese bastardized Android OS sans Google services -- much like Alibaba's Aliyun, China Mobile's Ophone and Lenovo's LeOS; but if you already reside in China and are cool with Baidu's offering, then get a Micro SIM ready and look out for a China Unicom deal soon.

Continue reading Dell Streak Pro D43 launched in China, where Yi shall find some Baidu love

Dell Streak Pro D43 launched in China, where Yi shall find some Baidu love originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Dec 2011 11:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget China  |  sourceDell (Chinese)  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/21/dell-streak-pro-d43-launched-in-china-where-yi-shall-find-some/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Hay brings same energy, drive to Canada's junior hockey team 17 years later

Asked to describe his coach in three words, Brendan Gallagher almost makes it.

"Competitive, knowledgeable, competitive," says Gallagher, then continues.

"He wants to win more than any other coach."

There is certainly a tirelessness about Don Hay, who coaches Gallagher on both the Western Hockey League's Vancouver Giants and the Canadian junior men's hockey hockey team.

During practice, Hay moves quickly, covers a lot of ice and continually bangs his stick on the ice. He reacts to his players' successes or failures during drills with a gesture or a grimace.

Seventeen years after coaching Canada to gold at the 1995 world junior championship in Red Deer, Alta., Hay is stepping behind Canada's bench again with the 2012 edition of the team.

Canada opens the world junior championship Sunday in Edmonton versus Finland.

Hay can join Brent Sutter, Craig Hartsburg and Terry Simpson as the only men to coach Canada to gold twice.

Those men did it in back-to-back years. The long interval between Hay's stints is by his own choosing.

A successful junior coach with three Memorial Cup titles, as well as some NHL coaching experience, Hay would have been a leading candidate for the job in recent years if he'd thrown his hat into the ring.

But Hay chose 2012, when the tournament returns to Alberta and the scene of his success in '95.

"Being in Canada first and foremost, I feel comfortable coaching in Canada and in a North American rink," Hay said.

"I still have a passion to coach and I really desired to coach Canada again. I thought it was the right opportunity. I'm not getting any younger."

He may not be, but Hay is a fit 57-year-old. He's an avid runner who enters the Vancouver half-marathon every year. Hay has also not tired of challenging teenage hockey players to become better.

"He loves to see improvements in his players and that I think, along with his conditioning, is why he always seems like he has energy," says Ryan Huska, who is both Hay's assistant coach on the Canadian team and a former player of Hay's on the Kamloops Blazers.

"He really does love teaching kids and young players," Huska continued. "He likes to get them to progress and challenges them to move on to the next level and that's what drives him."

Hay, a former minor pro player, left the Kamloops fire department to join the Blazers coaching staff as an assistant from 1986 to 1992. During that apprenticeship, he was an assistant to current Edmonton Oilers head coach Tom Renney.

"Hay is well organized, well prepared and very thorough," Renney said. "He's very demanding and tough, no question about that, but very fair and equitable in how he treats people.

"There are no hidden agendas. A player doesn't have to leave a conversation with Donny asking himself, 'What did he mean by that?' You're going to get the goods."

Hay became head coach of the Blazers in 1993. After winning back-to-back Memorial Cups in 1994 and 1995, as well as winning gold at the world juniors in '95, the natural progression for a successful junior coach is the NHL.

Hay coached the Phoenix Coyotes to a 38-37-0-7 record and got them into the first round of playoffs in 1996-97. But he was turfed after just one season.

After a couple of seasons back in the WHL with the Tri-City Americans, Hay's second NHL stint was even shorter. The Calgary Flames fired him just 68 games into the 2000-01 season.

Hay won't say the NHL didn't give him a legitimate chance, but recalls how shocked he was by the lack of patience he was shown.

"That was my hardest thing when I left juniors. I didn't understand that," he said. "And that really hurt I think because you think you did a good job.

"You think you're doing the right things and you should get rewarded for doing the right things, but you don't. I know the saying is 'A coach is hired to get fired' and it took me a while to figure that out."

He's not in a rush to try the NHL again and why should he? Hay has job stability as head coach of the Vancouver Giants, which is a model WHL franchise in a world-class city.

The Giants have never finished under .500 or out of the playoffs in Hay's seven seasons at the helm. They won the Memorial Cup in 2007 as hosts after finishing third in that tournament the previous year.

The franchise has a wealthy majority owner in Ron Toigo, and some famous minority owners in Gordie Howe, Pat Quinn and singer Michael Buble. The Giants extended Hay's contract last year until 2015.

Hay turned down an assistant coach's job with the Oilers last year. He didn't pursue the same opportunity with the Winnipeg Jets this year because he'd committed to coaching Canada at the world junior tournament.

"I think I'd like to have the opportunity to go back (to the NHL), but if it doesn't come it's not going to affect me," Hay said. "It's got to be a pretty good job to go to for me to leave this one."

Huska says a secret to Hay's success as a junior coach is developing leaders on his teams who set examples for young players.

"They would help pull the other guys along," Huska explained. "He always had a way to transition a new group up. They understood what he wanted and how he wanted his teams to play."

"If they didn't fit in or play the proper way, the room would take care of it and if it didn't, Don would."

Hay and his wife Vicki have three children. Darrell, a defenceman, tried out for the Canadian junior team in both 1999 and 2000, but didn't make the squad. He's currently playing hockey in the Czech Republic.

Their daughters Ashley and Angela are twins. Angela has two children and Hay counts spending time with his grandchildren as one of his favourite things to do away from the rink.

When Hay coached Canada in 1995, he had the best players in the land available to him because an NHL lockout extending into January. He famously cut Brett Lindros from the team because he felt the big forward wasn't the right fit for his team.

Hays says the players on the Canadian junior team today are the same as in '95. They grow up watching the tournament on television and seeing the emotion that so often drives Canada to gold. The players dream of doing the same.

And make no mistake, Hay wants the gold just as much in 2012 as he did in 1995.

"You can just see how badly he wants to win," Gallagher says. "Whenever he's behind that bench, you sense it as players and it makes you want to win just as bad.

"When your coach is that competitive and he's trying just as hard for you, you want to do the same for him."

---

With files from Robin Brownlee in Edmonton.

Source: http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=607633

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Secret US-Taliban talks reach turning point

After 10 months of secret dialogue with Afghanistan's Taliban insurgents, senior U.S. officials say the talks have reached a critical juncture and they will soon know whether a breakthrough is possible, leading to peace talks whose ultimate goal is to end the Afghan war.

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As part of the accelerating, high-stakes diplomacy, Reuters has learned, the United States is considering the transfer of an unspecified number of Taliban prisoners from the Guantanamo Bay military prison into Afghan government custody.

It has asked representatives of the Taliban to match that confidence-building measure with some of their own. Those could include a denunciation of international terrorism and a public willingness to enter formal political talks with the government headed by Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

The officials acknowledged that the Afghanistan diplomacy, which has reached a delicate stage in recent weeks, remains a long shot. Among the complications: U.S. troops are drawing down and will be mostly gone by the end of 2014, potentially reducing the incentive for the Taliban to negotiate.

Still, the senior officials, all of whom insisted on anonymity to share new details of the mostly secret effort, suggested it has been a much larger piece of President Barack Obama's Afghanistan policy than is publicly known.

U.S. officials have held about half a dozen meetings with their insurgent contacts, mostly in Germany and Doha with representatives of Mullah Omar, leader of the Taliban's Quetta Shura, the officials said.

The stakes in the diplomatic effort could not be higher. Failure would likely condemn Afghanistan to continued conflict, perhaps even civil war, after NATO troops finish turning security over to Karzai's weak government by the end of 2014.

Success would mean a political end to the war and the possibility that parts of the Taliban - some hardliners seem likely to reject the talks - could be reconciled.

The effort is now at a pivot point.

"We imagine that we're on the edge of passing into the next phase. Which is actually deciding that we've got a viable channel and being in a position to deliver" on mutual confidence-building measures, said a senior U.S. official.

While some U.S.-Taliban contacts have been previously reported, the extent of the underlying diplomacy and the possible prisoner transfer have not been made public until now.

The reconciliation effort, which has already faced setbacks including a supposed Taliban envoy who turned out to be an imposter, faces hurdles on multiple fronts, the U.S. officials acknowledged.

They include splits within the Taliban; suspicion from Karzai and his advisers; and Pakistan's insistence on playing a major, even dominating, role in Afghanistan's future.

Obama will likely face criticism, including from Republican presidential candidates, for dealing with an insurgent group that has killed U.S. soldiers and advocates a strict Islamic form of government.

But U.S. officials say that the Afghan war, like others before it, will ultimately end in a negotiated settlement.

"The challenges are enormous," a second senior U.S. official acknowledged. "But if you're where we are ... you can't not try. You have to find out what's out there."

Next steps?
If the effort advances, one of the next steps would be more public, unequivocal U.S. support for establishing a Taliban office outside of Afghanistan.

U.S. officials said they have told the Taliban they must not use that office for fundraising, propaganda or constructing a shadow government, but only to facilitate future negotiations that could eventually set the stage for the Taliban to reenter Afghan governance.

On Sunday, a senior member of Afghanistan's High Peace Council said the Taliban had indicated it was willing to open an office in an Islamic country.

But underscoring the fragile nature of the multi-sided diplomacy, Karzai on Wednesday announced he was recalling Afghanistan's ambassador to Qatar, after reports that nation was readying the opening of the Taliban office. Afghan officials complained they were left out of the loop.

On a possible transfer of Taliban prisoners long held at Guantanamo, U.S. officials stressed the move would be a 'national decision' made in consultation with the U.S. Congress. Obama is expected to soon sign into law the 2011 defense authorization bill that contains new provisions on detainee policy.

There are slightly fewer that 20 Afghan citizens at Guantanamo, according to various accountings. It is not known which ones might be transferred, nor what assurances the White House has that the Karzai government would keep them in its custody.

Guantanamo detainees have been released to foreign governments--and sometimes set free by them--before. But the transfer as part of a diplomatic negotiation appears unprecedented.

Ten years after the repressive Taliban government was toppled by its Afghan opponents and their Western backers, a hoped-for political settlement has become a centerpiece of the U.S. strategy to end a war that has killed nearly 3,000 foreign troops and cost the Pentagon alone $330 billion.

While Obama's decision to deploy an extra 30,000 troops in 2009-10 helped push the Taliban out of much of its southern heartland, the war is far from over. Militants remain able to slip in and out of lawless areas of Pakistan, where the Taliban's senior leadership is located.

Bold attacks from the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network have undermined the narrative of improving security and raised questions about how well an inexperienced Afghan military will be able to cope when foreign troops go home.

In that uncertain context, officials say that initial contacts with insurgent representatives since U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton publicly embraced a diplomatic strategy in a February 18, 2011 speech have centered on establishing whether the Taliban was open to reconciliation, despite its pledge to continue its 'sacred jihad' against NATO and U.S. soldiers.

"The question has been to the Taliban, 'You have got a choice to make. Life's moving on," the second U.S. official said. "There's a substantial military campaign out there that will continue to do you substantial damage ... Are you prepared to go forward with some kind of reconciliation process?"

U.S. officials have met with Tayeb Agha, who was a secretary to Mullah Omar, and they have held one meeting arranged by Pakistan with Ibrahim Haqqani, a brother of the Haqqani network's founder. They have not shut the door to further meetings with the Haqqani group, which is blamed for a brazen attack this fall on the U.S. embassy in Kabul and which senior U.S. officials link closely to Pakistan's intelligence agency.

U.S. officials say they have kept Karzai informed of the process and have met with him before and after each encounter, but they declined to confirm whether representatives of his government are present at those meetings.

Evolving Taliban position?
Officials now see themselves on the verge of reaching a second phase in the reconciliation process that, if successful, would clinch the confidence-building measures and allow them to move to a third stage in which the Afghan government and the Taliban would sit down together in talks facilitated by the United States.

"That's why it's especially delicate -- because if we don't deliver the second phase, we don't get to the pay-dirt," the first senior U.S. official said.

Senior administration officials say that confidence-building measures must be implemented, not merely agreed to, before full-fledged political talks can begin. The sequence of such measures has not been determined, and they will ultimately be announced by Afghans, they say.

Underlying the intensive efforts of U.S. negotiators are fundamental questions about whether - and why - the Taliban would want to strike a peace deal with the Western-backed Karzai government.

U.S. officials stress that the 'end conditions' they want the Taliban to embrace -- renouncing violence, breaking with Al Qaida, and respecting the Afghan constitution -- are not preconditions to starting talks.

Encouraging trends on the Afghan battlefield - declining militant attacks, a thinning of the Taliban's mid-level leadership, the emergence of insurgent-on-insurgent violence -- are one reason why U.S. officials believe the Taliban may be more likely to engage in substantive talks than in the past.

They also cite what they see as an overlooked, subtle shift in the Taliban's position on reconciliation over the past year, based in part by statements from Mullah Omar marking Muslim holidays this year.

In July, the Taliban reiterated its long-standing position of rejecting any peace talks as long as foreign troops remain in Afghanistan. In October, a senior Haqqani commander said the United States was insincere about peace in Afghanistan.

But U.S. officials say the Taliban no longer wants to be the global pariah it was in the 1990s. Some elements have suggested flexibility on issues of priority for the West, such as protecting rights for women and girls.

"That's one of the reasons why we think this is serious," a third senior U.S. official said.

Risky strategy
Yet as the process moves ahead, the idea of seeking a peace deal with an extremist movement is fraught with challenge.

At least one purported insurgent representative has turned out to be a fraud, highlighting the difficulty of vetting potential brokers in the shadowy world of the militants largely based in Pakistan.

And the initiative was dealt a major blow in September when former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani, who headed peace efforts for Karzai, was assassinated in an attack Afghanistan said originated in neighboring Pakistan.

Since then, Karzai has been more ambivalent about talks. He ruled out an early resumption in negotiations and said Afghanistan would talk only to Pakistan 'until we have an address for the Taliban.'

The dust-up over the unofficial Taliban office in Qatar, with a spokesman for Karzai stressing that Afghanistan must lead peace negotiations to end the war, suggests tensions in the U.S. and Afghan approaches to the peace process.

Speaking in an interview with CNN aired on Sunday, Karzai counseled caution in making sure that Taliban interlocutors are authentic -- and authentically seeking peace. The Rabbani killing, he said, was a demonstration of such difficulties and "brought us in a shock to the recognition that we were actually talking to nobody."

Critics of Obama's peace initiative are deeply skeptical of the Taliban's willingness to negotiate given that the West's intent to pull out most troops after 2014 would give insurgents a chance to reclaim lost territory or nudge the weak Kabul government toward collapse.

While the United States is expected to keep a modest military presence in Afghanistan beyond then, all of Obama's 'surge' troops will be home by next fall and the administration - looking to refocus on domestic priorities -- is already exploring further reductions.

Another reason to be circumspect is the potential spoiler role of Pakistan, which has so far resisted U.S. pressure to crack down on militants fueling violence in Afghanistan and to cooperate more closely with the U.S. military and diplomatic campaign there.

Such considerations make reconciliation a divisive initiative even within the Obama administration. Few officials describe themselves as optimists about the peace initiative; at the State Department, which is formally leading the talks, senior officials see the odds of brokering a successful agreement at only around 30 percent.

"There's a very real likelihood that these guys aren't serious ... which is why are continuing to prosecute all of the lines of effort here," the third senior U.S. official said. While NATO commanders promise they will keep up pressure on militants as the troop force shrinks, they are facing a tenacious insurgency in eastern Afghanistan that may prove even more challenging than the south.

Still, with Obama committed to withdrawing from Afghanistan, as the United States did last week from Iraq, the administration has few alternatives but to pursue what may well prove to be a quixotic quest for a deal.

"Wars end, and the end of wars have political consequences," the second official said. "You can either try to shape those, or someone does it to you."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45718782/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Mystic Gypsies and supernatural madness

roleplay/gypsy-antiques-and-uncommon-eatery/

RP Theme

The World Of Tewyn So Far?

It all began with a figure in black robes walking into town. It was a town called Pian, in a planet parallel to earth called Tewyn. Pian was a rather normal place to live in, guarded by the Empire of Ramona, and all its Ramonian soldiers, with a powerful dictator in command who lives rather close by. Its' natives are the local people known as the Kurenks, a once simple people, who slowly became civilized as time passed. It is like a much older time like the Roman empire, with some more modern advancements such as lamps and a few telephones.

Names to know in the world

The Being-O-Pedia

Image

Image
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*Ahem* So, it began with the figure in the black robes, with the frightening figure: that is until the stranger revealed their true form: It was actually in truth not some fearsome criminal, but a beautiful young woman. Her skin was tanned, likely since childhood upon birth, as well as being under the watchful eye of the sun for years, Her eyes as mysterious as she was, glowing with a golden curiosity of the present day world, with a shade of dark hair unlike most in Pian. She said she had arrived from Dias, come to fulfill an interest in dusty old antiques and cooking. Her business during the day was mostly work and taking walks around town. At night, there was no telling what she did: she could have been holed up in her home with all kinds of sounds and shadowy images going through her windows, as well as bright, multicolored lights. Her purchases from others would never only consist of normal things, for a girl especially, like dresses, make up, and groceries. Always the strangest ingredients and items, going crazy when she had found an artifact of some sort, and doing everything in her power to buy it.

Socially she preferred being by herself, or with an animal, maybe a few at most, rarely talking to people, or enjoying their company.

Image

She was deemed by the people a Gypsy. And eventually this stuck with her: She then labeled her antique store and food stand as the 'Gypsy Antiques' and 'The Uncommon Eatery,' selling off forgotten treasures and her popular 'Makai Momo' (Devil Dumplings), a popular treat that's as big as your hand, and colored red. She even took up the use of a crystal ball, although it doesn't really tell fortunes, its like a magic wand to her, holding all her spells, working as a weapon, and a ye olden computer/smart phone. At her command is a mighty warrior from another land, who possesses great power. All the power she needs incase a spell goes wrong, or maybe she wants to hunt down some mysterious creature (in other words, this deadly fighter is her new servant). Then again, she's also going around to prevent evil from spreading into the world of the mortals, fighting against Demons, Spirits, Beasts and monsters, and maybe even military groups that want to use this newfound power for themselves?

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Here are the main two roles. I didn't intend for this to be a 1x1, so I'm up for any ideas for extra characters, just shoot me a PM! :D

1) The 'Gypsy'

A mysterious traveler from the land of Dias. Her different appearance and anti social personality shows out to most. In truth, she's intelligent, skilled, and fun to be around, if you can handle all the odd things she does, and win her favor, whether you do it directly, or indirectly. Her fashion sense would be lacking by most girls her age in Pian, and the Ramonian Empire. One of the only people she's ever opened up to is her assistant...

Image

2) The Gypsy's Assistant (JayZeroSnake)

A young man who also comes from a far off land, although not like the land of Dias. The Gypsy gets him fired from his old job to work for her (by force if I may add) as an assistant/bodyguard due to certain abilities and skills he possesses.

Character Sheet Requirements:

Name
Gender
Age
Appearance
History
Items

Optional to the sheet:

Fun Facts
Quote(s)
Theme Song
Extra

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/zCZ4u7UMSZU/viewtopic.php

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Apple co-founder Ron Wayne's stash of early documents (eyes-on)

About a week ago, we traveled to the desert to spend two days with Ron Wayne. The 77-year-old Pahrump, Nevada resident has had a number of careers in his long life, working for Atari, a few slot machine companies, developing devices for use on the ocean floor and running a collectables shop in Northern California. In his semi-retired state, Wayne sells stamps and coins to supplement his checks from the government. He's no doubt best known, however, for his role in the founding of the Apple Computer company, alongside Steves Jobs and Wozniak, a role at which he spent a little more than a week.

During our time in Pahrump, Wayne was kind enough to let us comb over a number of papers from his days with the nascent computer company. The documents, stashed in a USPS mailer kept by the door of his office, were a veritable treasure trove of information, including pages of pages of plans and pencils drawings of an Apple I enclosure Jobs asked Wayne to build -- his creation was ultimately rejected by Apple and lost to history as the company gained steam.

Also stored in the envelope were a facsimile of the contract signed by Wayne, Woz and Jobs, which recently sold on auction for more than $1 million -- in fact, it was Wayne's original copy that hit the auction block. He had parted ways with it for far, far less some time ago. Wayne's Statement of Withdrawal is in the pile as well -- the document effectively ended his term with the company, filed for a $5 fee. Also inside are an Apple I operation manual, with the company's original logo, designed by Wayne himself and an Apple II order form. Check out all of the above in the gallery below.

Apple co-founder Ron Wayne's stash of early documents (eyes-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Dec 2011 09:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung: 25 million phones with Carrier IQ; other devices have 'dormant' code

Samsung Mobile

Samsung Mobile, in its response to U.S. Sen. Al Franken over the Carrier IQ saga, says that it's sold some 25 million cell phones preloaded with Carrier IQ software, which it's been using since 2007. Many of these phones are non-Android feature phones, and Samsung repeats the response we've already heard from HTC in that it's not a customer of Carrier IQ, therefore it doesn't see the data collected.

Interestingly, Samsung also echoes HTC by saying some of its phones also may contain components of Carrier IQ and therefore may trigger the various CIQ detector apps available, but that the software is "dormant." Unlike HTC, however, Samsung did not say whether it was working to remove these dormant components. Says Samsung:

"Because the CIQ agent and other required CIQ software components are not installed, however, these vestigial elements do not and will not function on these devices, and therefore, the devices do not transmit (and never have transmitted) any user data using any CIQ software functionality."

Samsung did not say which phones contain the dormant CIQ code.

Following are the Android smartphones Samsung says contain Carrier IQ:

  • AT&T: Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket
  • Sprint: Moment, Epic 4G, Intercept, Transform, Galaxy Tab (original 7-inch), Galaxy Prevail, Replenish, Conquer 4G, Transform Ultra (Boost Mobile), Epic 4G Touch
  • T-Mobile: Samsung Galaxy S II, Exhibit II 4G

More: Samsung's response (pdf)



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/F9G0rg5Df0A/story01.htm

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Ramping up wind energy research

ScienceDaily (Dec. 14, 2011) ? As the percentage of wind energy contributing to the power grid continues to increase, the variable nature of wind can make it difficult to keep the generation and the load balanced.

But recent work by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, in conjunction with AWS Truepower, may help this balance through a project that alerts control room operators of wind conditions and energy forecasts so they can make well-informed scheduling decisions. This is especially important during extreme events, such as ramps, when there is a sharp increase or decrease in the wind speed over a short period of time, which leads to a large rise or fall in the amount of power generated.

"We're trying to forecast wind energy at any given time," said Chandrika Kamath, the LLNL lead on the project. "One of our goals is to help the people in the control room at the utilities determine when ramp events may occur and how that will affect the power generation from a particular wind farm."

The project, dubbed WindSENSE, is funded by the Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.

To understand ramp events better, Kamath used data-mining techniques to determine if weather conditions in wind farm regions can be effective indicators of days when ramp events are likely to occur. She used wind energy and weather data from two regions -- the Tehachapi Pass in Southern California and the Columbia Basin region on the Oregon-Washington border.

"Our work identified important weather variables associated with ramp events," Kamath said. "This information could be used by the schedulers to reduce the number of data streams they need to monitor when they schedule wind energy on the power grid."

With wind farms predicted to provide more energy for the grid, Kamath said it is necessary to get the wind speed predictions on target.

Wind farms in the Tehachapi Pass currently produce 700 megawatts (MW) of power, but soon will be producing 3,000 MW. In the Columbia Basin, the farms were producing 700 MW of power in 2007, but by 2009, they were producing 3,000 MW. So it is important that the wind forecasts are accurate, especially during ramp events, when the energy can change by over 1,000 MW in an hour.

"The observation targeting research conducted as part of the WindSENSE project resulted in the development and testing of algorithms to provide guidance on where to gather data to improve wind forecast performance," said John Zack, director of forecasting of AWS Truepower. "These new software tools have the potential to help forecast providers and users make informed decisions and maximize their weather sensor deployment investment."

The wind generation forecasts used by utilities are based on computer simulations, driven by observations assimilated into the time progression of the simulation. Observations of certain variables at certain locations have more value than others in reducing the forecast errors in the extreme events, the location of the event and the look-ahead period.

Part of the WindSENSE effort was to identify the locations and the types of sensors that can most improve short-term and extreme-event forecasts. The team used an Ensemble Sensitivity Analysis approach to identify these locations and variables.

"We're trying to reduce the barriers to integrating wind energy on the grid by analyzing historical data and identifying the new data we should collect so we can improve the decision making by the control room operators, " Chandrika said. "Our work is leading to a better understanding of the characteristics and the predictability of the variability associated with wind generation resources."

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Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111214125857.htm

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Bootleg liquor kills 143 people in eastern India

Indian patients take saline as they are treated after drinking toxic alcohol, in hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside the eastern Indian city of Kolkata, officials said.(AP Photo/Bikas Das)

Indian patients take saline as they are treated after drinking toxic alcohol, in hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside the eastern Indian city of Kolkata, officials said.(AP Photo/Bikas Das)

An Indian woman cries after her relative died from toxic alcohol outside a hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside Kolkata, officials said. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)

Men who drank toxic alcohol receive saline intravenously in a hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside Kolkata, officials said. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)

People who drank toxic alcohol take saline in a hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside Kolkata, officials said. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)

An Indian woman is comforted as she cries after hearing her relative's death from toxic alcohol outside a hospital in Diamond Harbour, near Kolkata, India, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. A tainted batch of bootleg liquor has killed scores and sent dozens more to the hospital in villages outside Kolkata, officials said.(AP Photo/Bikas Das)

(AP) ? Bootleg liquor containing toxic methanol killed 143 people and sickened dozens more who drank the cheap, illicit brew bought at small shops in eastern India, officials said Thursday. Police arrested 10 suspected bootleggers.

Emergency medical teams rushed to the village outside Kolkata, and thousands of relatives, many of them wailing in grief, gathered outside the packed hospital. Inside, dead bodies lay on the floor covered in quilts, while the ill waited on staircases to be treated. Groups of men sat in the halls with saline drips running into their arms.

Abdul Gayen cried inconsolably for his son, Safiulla, a laborer who drank some of the liquor Monday night and then complained of lightheadedness. When Safiulla woke up the next morning, he fell and began frothing at the mouth, Gayen said. He died before his family could get him to the hospital.

"Safiulla was the lone bread earner in our family. I don't know what will happen to us now," he said.

Illegal liquor operations flourish in the slums of urban India and among the rural poor who can't afford the alcohol at state-sanctioned shops. The hooch, often mixed with cheap chemicals to increase potency and profit, causes illness and death sometimes ? and occasionally mass carnage.

Many of the victims ? day laborers, street hawkers, rickshaw drivers ? had gathered along a road near a railway station after work to drink the illicit booze they bought for 10 rupees (20 cents) a half liter, less than a third the price of legal alcohol, district magistrate Naraya Swarup Nigam said.

They later began vomiting, suffering piercing headaches and frothing at the mouth, he said.

Angry villagers later ransacked booze shops around the village of Sangrampur, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Kolkata, the city formerly known as Calcutta.

Police arrested 10 people in connection with making and distributing the methanol-tainted booze and demolished 10 illicit liquor dens in the area, said Luxmi Narayan Meena, district superintendent of police.

Arman Seikh, 23, rushed his brother-in-law to the hospital.

"He complained of burning chest and severe stomach pain last night," he told The Associated Press.

Police officials said the liquor was from an illegal distillery in the village of Mograhat that supplies 70 shops in the area. Police are searching for the kingpin of the operation, who has fled, they said.

Drinking alcohol contains ethanol, whereas highly toxic methanol ? a clear liquid that can be used as fuel, solvent or antifreeze ? can induce comas and cause blindness and is deadly in high doses.

Anwar Hassan Mullah brought six sickened people to a hospital, and all of them died, he told NDTV news channel. He blamed police for turning a blind eye to bootleggers who spike their alcohol to boost its kick.

"It's a very sad thing that this has happened," Mullah said. "Why don't the police stop this? I cannot understand. What connection do they have (to the bootleggers)?"

By Thursday evening, the death toll had skyrocketed to 143, said Surajit Kar Purkayaspha, a top West Bengal police official. About 100 people were being treated in hospitals, he said.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee ordered an inquiry into the deaths, called for a meeting of the state's major political parties to address the problem and promised a crackdown.

"I want to take strong action against those manufacturing and selling illegal liquor," she said, according to Press Trust of India. "But this is a social problem also, and this has to be dealt with socially also along with action."

Despite religious and cultural taboos against drinking among Indians, 5 percent ? roughly 60 million people ? are alcoholics. Two-thirds of the alcohol consumed in the country is illegal homemade hooch or undocumented liquor smuggled in, according to The Lancet medical journal.

The state of Gujarat, where all liquor is banned, just approved a death penalty for making, transporting or selling spurious liquor that kills people. The strict measures were proposed after 157 people died from drinking a bad batch of liquor in the city of Ahmedabad in 2009. At least 180 people died in 2008 around the southern Indian city of Bangalore from a toxic batch of homemade liquor.

The mass casualties came just days after a hospital fire in Kolkata killed more than 90 people and led to the arrest of the facility's directors for culpable homicide.

Illicit liquor is a hugely profitable industry across India, where bootleggers pay no taxes and sell enormous quantities of their product, said Johnson Edayaranmula, executive director of the Indian Alcohol Policy Alliance, an organization that fights alcohol-related problems.

The bootleggers, working in homes, hidden warehouses and even in forests, can turn 1 liter of genuine alcohol into 1,000 liters of bootlegged swill with chemicals and additives that usually cause no harm, but on occasion can lead to tragedy, he said.

Every week, one or two people across the country die from tainted liquor, he said. In 2009, at least 112 people died from a toxic brew in western India.

"People don't know what they are drinking," he said. "It's all easy money, big profits. No one is bothered by the health or social consequences."

The trade is allowed to flourish despite strict laws against spurious liquor because corrupt police, local officials and tax authorities all get a cut of the profits, he said.

"Many people are getting a share out of it, so who is going to take action against these people," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Manik Banerjee contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-15-AS-India-Liquor-Deaths/id-9a490cf0eba8474fa40c02df83d3f5dc

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Former Miss USA Rima Fakih Arrested for Drunken Driving (omg!)

Former Miss USA Rima Fakih was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving, People reports.

The 26-year-old beauty queen was stopped by police in Highland Park, Mich., over the weekend and now faces DUI charges. "[She's] very saddened and very apologetic for the situation that she's in right now," her lawyer, Donald, Elder, told the magazine.

See other celebs who've gotten in trouble this year

Fakih, who won the title in 2010 and the first Arab American to ever win the pageant, was involved in a minor stripper pole scandal last year after photos from a 2007 "Stripper 101" contest surfaced.

"I was just being silly and jumping up and there were a few pictures exchanged," she said at the time. "I know it looks really negative but it's not really what you've seen. I didn't do anything wrong."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_former_miss_usa_rima_fakih_arrested_drunken_driving144700080/43808857/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/former-miss-usa-rima-fakih-arrested-drunken-driving-144700080.html

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Whistleblower saw monkeys abused, PETA says

By Miguel Llanos, msnbc.com

PETA

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals on Monday, Dec. 5, 2011, released this image that it says shows a monkey with a surgically attached tube at a biomedical lab in Everett, Wash. Experimental chemicals were continuously infused into its veins through the tube, PETA said a whistleblower alleges.

A multinational?biomedical lab was the focus of a federal complaint filed Monday by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which?said a whistleblower had come forward with images and accounts of?abuse of test monkeys.

PETA urged the federal Animal Plant and Inspection Service to investigate the U.S. headquarters of?Shin Nippon Biomedical Laboratories, saying it was contacted by "a whistleblower who resigned her position at SNBL in 2010 after working there for several years."?

Shin Nippon's U.S. headquarters, based in Everett, Wash., has yet to respond to msnbc.com's request for comment on the allegations.

Use of animals for testing of new drugs and other medical applications?is allowed in the U.S. but must adhere to the health and safety provisions of the?federal Animal Welfare act.

PETA said the whistleblower had requested anonymity but quoted her as saying that when it came to drawing blood for tests "the monkeys wince, scream, tremble and shake, and try to defend themselves. Eventually, many of the monkeys stop fighting and reacting ? it is like the life is gone from them."

In its complaint that the Animal Welfare Act was violated, PETA?states that the reports by the whistleblower?include:

PETA

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals on Monday, Dec. 5, 2011, released this image of a monkey with a bruise allegedly taken at a biomedical lab in Everett, Wash. PETA says a whistleblower alleges monkeys were routinely bruised but not treated for injuries.

  • "Employees at SNBL used excessive force in their handling of monkeys, particularly when putting monkeys into squeeze cages, wherein a sliding cage wall is pulled forward to restrain the monkey against the front of the cage. Employees would use so much force that monkeys suffered with bloodied noses and bruises to their bodies. Sometimes, the monkeys would suffer broken fingers and toes. Careless workers frequently injured monkeys by slamming the cage doors onto their tails. Some tails would become bent or deformed, and would be left that way, while other tails were broken so badly that they had to be amputated."
  • "Many studies at SNBL require that blood be drawn from the animals at frequent intervals?generally, at the following time points after the animal receives the test drug: 1 minute, 5 minute, 10 minute, 15 minute, 30 minute, 1 hour, 2 hour, 4 hour, 6 hour, 8 hour, 12 hour, 16 hour, 24 hour, 36 hour, 48 hour, and so on. According to the whistleblower, by the 30 minute mark, the animals' veins would have ruptured and for blood draws past this point, veterinary technicians poke and dig into the arm or leg many times to get blood?resulting in much swelling, redness, and bruising."
  • "In one set of experiments, monkeys were attached to their cages with a metal tether which was surgically attached to their bodies and, through which ice cold saline solution and test compounds were continuously infused into the monkeys? veins. The monkeys were hooked up in this manner for many months; they would shiver and chatter their teeth non-stop through this time."

PETA also cited fines over the past decade against the lab, as well as an incident where a monkey died when it was left inside its cage while it went through a hot-water cleaning process.

While PETA opposes?any animal testing, even that authorized by the federal law, it pursues?legal action under that law?"to shed light on especially egregious and illegal activity," said PETA's Justin Goodman, who works on lab investigations.

More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/05/9227484-peta-whistleblower-says-monkeys-mistreated-at-drug-lab

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Monday, December 5, 2011

93% Hugo

All Critics (151) | Top Critics (38) | Fresh (141) | Rotten (10)

Scorsese transforms this innocent tale into an ardent love letter to the cinema and a moving plea for film preservation.

'Hugo': Scorsese's humbling hommage to his favorite art

Thematic potency and cinematic virtuosity -- the production was designed by Dante Ferretti and photographed by Robert Richardson -- can't conceal a deadly inertness at the film's core.

For all the wizardry on display, Hugo often feels like a film about magic instead of a magical film...

I have seen the future of 3-D moviemaking, and it belongs to Martin Scorsese, unlikely as that may sound.

It's a fairy tale for mature viewers, but the airy exterior hides emotional depth.

Hugo is a master filmmaker's gift to children. It teaches, in an age-appropriate way, why movies are important and why it's essential that we take care of them. One of Scorsese's best!

Opulent, dazzling, enchanting screen adaptation of a beloved children's book. It's family-friendly fun.

( ... ) goose down floating around the set takes Scorsese's hard-hitting career into soft new dimensions

Leave it to Martin Scorsese to use 3-D not as a gimmick, but as a means of drawing us into a unique and magical environment...

The lesson to be learned is that [Scorsese] should stick to what he knows best, for Hugo won't appeal to anyone, least of all kids.

The on-screen craftsmanship is impeccable, from Robert Richardson's stunning cinematography to Dante Ferretti's production design and Sandy Powell's costumes.

Hugo is cinema shining a light reverently up its own fundament.

A dreamy triumph for Scorsese

The film demands patience from children and adults alike -- in fact, it's simply too slow for young viewers -- but like great literature, if you immerse yourself in it, the rewards are plentiful.

As a crazy mix of Cinema Paradiso, Cronos and David Copperfield it's unusually stimulating family fare.

The man responsible for Raging Bull, Taxi Driver and GoodFellas has tackled his first family film. Not only that: it's in 3-D, and a must-see for anyone who loves cinema.

The heart-shaped story may be the key that sets Hugo in motion, but this rediscovery of the cin?ma de papa is most memorable for its technical wizardry and astonishing visual trickery.

Hugo's best moments are those that aren't actually Hugo.

It is glorious to be thrown and blown about in this make-believe metropolis. The digitally enhanced shapes and colours suggest Jeunet and Caro reworked by a polychromatic Piranesi.

As soon as the lights went up in the theater, I told my viewing companions that I honestly felt that seeing the film was a privilege.

[T]here's certainly much to admire here... [but] Hugo feels like two very different films inelegantly spliced together...

It's possible to see the attraction, but when people break into applause over the credits, some are going to be left cold.

It's a deeply felt piece of work, something which only Scorsese could have brought to the screen...

Beautifully photographed and well acted but the storyline, especially when Kingsley's character takes center stage, is tediously tiring

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/hugo/

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Oklahoma vs Oklahoma State 2011 NCAA Football Picks Week 14

The Oklahoma State Cowboys (10-1, 7-1 Big 12) will get their final opportunity to wow the 2011 NCAA football picks voters when they take the field against the Oklahoma Sooners (9-2, 6-2 Big 12) on Saturday at 8:00pm ET on ABC in this year?s installment of the Bedlam rivalry. The Cowboys can finish the regular season with one loss and ranked no lower than third with a win over the Sooners, but a blowout win combined by an LSU blowout loss, could perhaps confuse this year?s BCS Title Game scenarios even more. The Cowboys were rolling right along before a crucial loss all but knocked them out of National Title contention. Yes, Alabama also has only one loss, but their loss came to the best team in the country. Oklahoma State?s only loss was a huge NCAA football odds upset at the hands of the Iowa State Cyclones in a game that saw OSU dominate the betting lines as -27.5 point favorites.

The Cowboys may have been playing with heavy hearts in that game, as the university had just lost their women?s basketball Head Coach and Assistant Coach in a tragic plane crash just days after the Cowboys held a service to honor the 10-year anniversary of another fatal plane crash that took the lives of some of the members of the men?s basketball program. It almost sounds made-up, but nothing about these tragedies s unreal. Quarterback Brandon Weeden and wide-out Justin Blackmon will try to give their home fans one last show this season and when they take the field against the Sooners, they will be doing so as 3.5 point NCAA football predictions favorites at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Oklahoma has featured one of the nation's most powerful offenses this season, but on Saturday against Oklahoma State, they will be without leading rusher, Dominique Whaley, and leading wide receiver, Ryan Broyles. Oklahoma State has lost the last seven games in this Bedlam rivalry series, and now would be a good time for Head Coach Mike Gundy to secure his first win over a depleted Sooners squad. They must fight tooth and nail however, because Bob Stoops has a system in place that does not rely on any single player, but on the team as a whole. The Cowboys have not taken the field since their November 18th loss to Iowa State so he has to make sure that his team comes out ready to play because if they are slow to come out of the gates, then Oklahoma will pull away before the Cowboys figure out what hit them.

If you're looking for the inside edge, subscribe to our free sports picks newsletter and get the insight you need to make an informed decision from the top NCAA football handicapping experts before every sports wager!

NCAA Football Odds at Bodog Sportsbook
Oklahoma Sooners +3.5, Over 71 (-105), Money Lines +135
Oklahoma State Cowboys -3.5, Under 71 (-115), Money Lines -155

Submitted by Michael Davis on Sat, 12/03/2011 - 11:11am.

Source: http://www.onlinesportshandicapping.com/news-995/football-picks/120311-oklahoma-vs-oklahoma-state-2011-ncaa-football-picks-week-14.html

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