Monday, October 31, 2011

Dear Wall Street occupiers: Letters to protesters (AP)

NEW YORK ? Bette Snyder is nourishing the Wall Street protesters from her kitchen in northwestern Ohio.

For the past three weeks, the 69-year-old woman has sent the occupiers of Zuccotti Park tins of home-baked cookies and messages of support.

"Here are some cookies for the demonstrators," she wrote in a note accompanying one of the tins. "I will keep sending them as long as you keep protesting."

The protests at a park in lower Manhattan that have been raging for about a month are inspiring people across the country and around the world to send letters of support ? even if they are only a few words on a scrap of paper with a tin of cookies.

The letters show how effectively protesters have delivered their scathing critiques that the vast majority of people struggle to make ends meet while a small percentage of people control most of the wealth.

"Please accept these humble donations," wrote one sender who did not disclose a name. "I am poor and am fighting foreclosure, but if you are willing to occupy and keep this message alive, I will support you."

Since the protests began on Sept. 17, protesters at the Zuccotti Park encampment say they've received about 100 letters a day. By last week, according to volunteers sorting them, the letter count was about 2,000; some have since been posted online. They come from the unemployed, college students in debt and grandmothers worried about the financial struggles of younger generations. The letters have arrived from all over the United States and from abroad, addressed from South Korea, Australia, Scotland and Germany. They bear messages of hope, advice on tactics and criticism. Some have now been posted online.

With some of the letters are parcels of ponchos, gloves and camping gear for demonstrators. A good number of the senders apologize for being unable to send more donations because of their own financial problems.

The letters and packages arrive at a UPS branch near Zuccotti Park and are taken over to a storage depot in an office building where donations from around the world are sorted. There are shelves of canned food, bags of dry pasta, piles of hand warmers and half-opened boxes waiting to be sorted. On a recent weekday, there were well over 100 letters waiting to be processed in a mail bin. Some were handwritten, others typed on a computer.

"I can honestly say for the first time in my cynical, contrarian years that I am damn proud to be an American!" said one writer, in pink ink, who described herself as a college student.

"Dear 99ers!" began a handwritten letter sent by someone identifying himself as Henry King, from Glasgow, U.K., who writes of parallels between the Wall Street protests and recent demonstrations in Europe. "It is gratifying to watch you channel your righteous anger into organized and active resistance."

More critical was a letter from someone who signed his name as Al Ross, a senior living in Florida. "The movement is growing, but if leadership doesn't emerge soon, then it will turn into an unruly mob scene. At all costs, this has to be prevented," he wrote on yellow pad paper in pen, referring to the leaderless, consensus approach of the Occupy Wall Street protest.

One of the few outright negative letters came from China. "P.S., occupying Wall Street is not right," wrote a person identified as Yi Hu at the School of Economics at Peking University, after an extended discussion of economic theory. "Financial system which is essential part of our economy system is engine of our economy."

The letters are sorted by volunteers like Steve Iskovitz, a 51-year-old from Pittsburgh, an unemployed mental health worker who was laid off in 2009 when his company lost funding. He said he was encouraged by the letters.

"I feel inspired in a way that I haven't been in years," he said.

But while they are inspiring, some of the letters are painful testimonies of their authors' economic difficulties.

A 50-year-old "self-employed handyman" wrote in a two-page letter that he, "like so many others, watched the American dream turn into an unattainable fantasy." After writing about thousands of dollars owed for medical bills, struggling to find full-time work and being "tossed out and treated like an obsolete piece of furniture after 17 years of loyalty" by a "large firm that transported automobiles," he said that "the future has been absolutely devoid of any significance."

"Then I heard about OWS," he wrote of the Occupy Wall Street movement. "It offers something that has been in very short supply these days ? hope. Hope that maybe we can make a difference."

Snyder, a retired journalist who writes cookbooks with her daughter, said she was compelled to send the cookies to the protesters after reading in The New York Times about how a grandmother had sent them baked goods. She figured that since she is a grandmother, too, and enjoyed baking she should do the same.

So for three weeks, she has filled tins with cookies ? batches of oatmeal raisin, ginger snaps and peanut chocolate ? and sent them off.

"I'm like a rebel at heart," she said in a phone interview from her house in Upper Sandusky, halfway between Columbus and Toledo. "If I was in New York, I would be down there."

She said she believed it was important for her to send the message "that there is some old lady in Ohio that is with (the protesters) in spirit."

But more important, she said, she shares the demonstrators' concerns about economic inequities.

"I think the income disparity has really troubled me for about the past decade. And it just seems to get worse," she said. "I just think that young people are having a hard time. They are doing the right things by getting an education, and borrowing a lot of money to do it, but jobs aren't there... The wealth is too heavily concentrated on the top."

Those concerns were bolstered this week by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, which said that the richest 1 percent of Americans have gotten richer in the last 30 years, while the poor and middle class have seen tiny gains, by comparison. And the independent Bertelsmann Foundation, based in Gutersloh, Germany, found the distribution of wealth in this country is the most unequal of industrialized nations it studied, with more than 17 percent of Americans living below the poverty line.

Anna Rowinski, 57, is one of those who are struggling to make ends meet. In a message to the protesters, she wrote: "I'm in your shoes and on your side!"

Reached by phone in Holyoke, Maine, where she recently moved in with her aging mother to take care of her, Rowinski said she thinks the Occupy Wall Street movement has captured the "overall feeling that things can't be going on the way they have been."

"It's all the money," she said. "If you don't have money, you're a nobody."

____

Online:

http://occupywallstreetcarepackages.tumblr.com/

____

Follow Cristian Salazar at http://www.twitter.com/crsalazarAP

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111031/ap_on_re_us/us_occupy_letters

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Anonymous: movie review

Was Shakespeare a fraud? That's the premise of 'Anonymous,' which bends history in classic Hollywood fashion.

"Anonymous," set inside the nefarious political court of Elizabethan England, is about Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford (Rhys Ifans), the rightful author of the plays falsely attributed to that nincompoop imposter William Shakespeare.

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Full disclosure: I think Shakespeare wrote the plays and this is all hooey. But more on that in a moment. How does the film stand up as a "What if?" historical drama?

Answer: Not too well. John Orloff's screenplay could have used a rewrite by de Vere ? or whomever.

The conceit here is that de Vere was too highly placed to reveal his identity and so he dragooned poor Shakespeare (via Ben Jonson, his first choice) into acting as his front. Lest you think that Orloff and the film's director, Roland Emmerich, are content to besmirch only Shakespeare's name, you should also know that Queen Elizabeth herself (played, in a neat bit of then-and-now casting, by the mother-daughter team of Vanessa Redgrave and Joely Richardson) also gets it in the neck. Elizabeth, it seems, was not exactly the Virgin Queen after all. In fact, de Vere was her.... But now I've told too much already.

The Elizabethan period re-creations are imposing, but since the action going on in them is so outlandish, the effort is all for naught. Ifans, normally a knockabout actor, is dulled out here with a snooty rectitude. As Jonson, Sebastian Armesto is impressive but smolders in a vacuum. Whenever things get bogged down in confusing courtly intrigues, Emmerich tosses in a punch-out or a fencing match. Groundlings carouse as only groundlings can.

As William Cecil, Elizabeth's chief adviser, David Thewlis seems to have a difficult time making himself heard through his beard. Cecil's son Robert (Edward Hogg) is even scurvier than his dad, plus he has a hunchback ? the inspiration, apparently, for Shakespeare's, I mean de Vere's ? Richard III. (One of the film's many annoyances is that it regards the plays as mere extenuations of de Vere's political ambitions.)

If "Anonymous" were simply a lousy movie I'd leave it at this. But movies have a way of serving as history texts for gullible audiences. Remember how many people took Oliver Stone's "JFK" seriously at the time? According to James Shapiro, the author of the definitive pro-Bard book "Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?," Sony Pictures is reportedly distributing Shakespeare-debunking lesson plans for literature and history teachers. "A documentary by First Folio Pictures (of which Mr. Emmerich is president) will also be part of this campaign," writes Mr. Shapiro in The New York Times.

This is monstrous. For the record, de Vere died in 1604, before, you know, "Othello" and "King Lear" and "The Tempest" were written. (The film has him writing "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at age 9!) But it's easy to see why de Vere has his champions among those who want to believe that only a man of high position and breeding could have written the plays. This is rank classism posing as scholarship.

Frankly, if I'm going to be offered a heaping pile of revisionism about the greatest writer who ever lived, I'd rather it be from someone with more academic heft than the director of "Independence Day" and "Godzilla." I trust the teachers who receive this film's study guide have a shredder handy. Grade: C- (Rated PG-13 for some violence and sexual content.)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/NYJe0pWQBuo/Anonymous-movie-review

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

How to unbalance nothingness

Friday, October 28, 2011

Nothingness ? this is the research subject-matter of a team of theoretical physicists from the Universities Jena (Germany) and Graz (Austria). "The ground state of our world can't be described by the absence of all matter," Professor Dr. Holger Gies from the Institute of Theoretical Physics of the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena and the Helmholtz-Institute Jena explains. "This so-called quantum vacuum rather turns out to be a complex state of constantly fluctuating quantum fields with physical properties."

The world-wide community of physicists is hoping to be able to witness a particularly spectacular characteristic in a few years' time: the spontaneous decay of the vacuum into pairs of particles of matter and antimatter in super strong electric fields. Due to the new research results of the Austro-German team of physicists, this goal came a few steps closer.

Although first theoretical consideration concerning the spontaneous decay of the vacuum dates back to the year 1931, its comprehensive understanding is still in its infancy. ?A great challenge in modern theoretical physics is the description of quantum fields out of equilibrium," Professor Gies explains. "We are facing this problem in phase transitions in the early Universe as well as in many experiments in solid state physics." Therefore experimental proof of the vacuum decay ? as it might be delivered by high intensity lasers in the near future ? will provide knowledge exceeding this particular field.

The scientists from Graz and Jena now succeeded calculating the time evolution of the vacuum decay in detail. "Even we were surprised by the results," Professor Gies confesses. According to the results particles of matter and antimatter behave in a novel self-focusing way and therefore the possibility of discovering them is higher than expected. "The quantum vacuum has already had some surprises in store," says the Heisenberg-Professor for Theoretical Physics. "To unbalance this nothingness could develop into a new prolific field of research."

###

Friedrich-Schiller-Universitaet Jena: http://www.uni-jena.de

Thanks to Friedrich-Schiller-Universitaet Jena for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114737/How_to_unbalance_nothingness

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Thousands of Iraqis protest Baathist arrest campaign (Reuters)

FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) ? Thousands of Iraqis blocked a highway in western Anbar province Friday to protest against a campaign to arrest former military officers and members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath Party.

In neighboring Salahuddin province, demonstrators took to the streets to support a symbolic move by the provincial council to declare the area autonomous, partly in protest of the Baathist round-up that has angered minority Sunnis across Iraq.

Some Iraqi officials said the arrests of scores of ex-Baathist former army officers this week were triggered by a specific plot against the government, while others said it was a precautionary move before the U.S. troop withdrawal.

"We are determined to get our message across to the central government. Our demand is the release of innocent detainees. said Ramadi farmer Mohammed al-Dulaimi, 45, one of some 3,000 protesters who blocked the highway linking Anbar with Jordan and Syria.

"These arrests will lead to increased sectarianism and tension," he said.

Thousands demonstrated in towns and cities across Salahuddin province, including Samarra, Shirqat and Tikrit, Saddam's hometown.

The Salahuddin provincial council's symbolic decision on Thursday was designed to send a message to the central government in Baghdad. Provinces need a public referendum and parliamentary approval to attain autonomy.

"I served Iraq more than 20 years," said Samarra resident Jassim Mohammed Hussein, a former soldier in Saddam's army. "I haven't received any salary since the occupation in 2003."

"I have come out today strongly in favor of autonomy because it is our only way to get rid of this unjust government," said Hussein, a jobless father of seven.

Authorities say more than 200 ex-Baathists and former high-ranking army officers have been arrested since the start of the round-up this week including dozens in Salahuddin, Diyala, Kirkuk, Basra, Nassiriya and Babil provinces.

Security and police officials said the government issued arrest warrants for around 350 former Baath Party members.

Government officials have long expressed concern that Baathists would try to retake power when U.S. troops depart. The party was banned after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam, who was later tried and executed.

The ban was criticized by those who saw it as leaving an administrative vacuum in the aftermath of the invasion.

Military leaders have expressed concern that violence will rise as Washington withdraws the 39,000 remaining U.S. troops in Iraq by year-end.

(Additional reporting by Ghazwan Hassan; Writing by Muhanad Mohammed; Editing by Jim Loney and Angus MacSwan)

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

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Whirlpool to cut 5,000 jobs to reduce costs (AP)

BENTON HARBOR, Mich. ? Appliance maker Whirlpool Corp. says it will cut 5,000 jobs in an effort as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials.

The jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant.

The company expects the moves will save $400 million by the end of 2013.

Whirlpool also says its third-quarter net income more than doubled to $177 million, or $2.27 per share, from $79 million, or $1.02 per share. Adjusted earnings of $2.35 per share fell short of analyst expectations for $2.75 per share.

The company, whose brands include Maytag and KitchenAid, has been squeezed by higher costs for materials such as steel and copper.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_whirlpool

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Police raids in Bosnia after US embassy attack (AP)

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina ? Officials in Bosnia say police are searching several locations and questioning people who could be linked to the man who fired an automatic weapon at the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo in what authorities called a terrorist attack.

A policeman and the gunman were wounded in Friday's attack. None of the embassy's employees was hurt.

The gunman came from a Muslim-dominated region of Serbia and is a follower of the ultraconservative Muslim Wahhabi sect.

State Prosecutor Dubravko Campara said Saturday morning the investigation is being conducted in coordination with police in Serbia where 15 suspects had already been detained and a number of locations searched.

Meanwhile, anger is mounting in Sarajevo against the Wahhabis whose members are viewed as "terrorists".

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_on_re_eu/eu_bosnia_shooting_spree

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Reggie: Martin made racial, anti-Semitic remarks (AP)

Reggie Jackson heard Billy Martin use racial and anti-Semitic remarks then, and felt it was time to talk about them now.

"You need to set the record straight," the Hall of Fame slugger told The Associated Press on Friday. "They're the truth."

The late Martin managed the New York Yankees in the late 1970s, a fiery time that included a pair of World Series championships. Jackson spoke about Martin in an interview with the MLB Network that will be shown Monday night.

"I did not accept the way he managed me. I did not accept the way he managed Ken Holtzman. I thought there was anti-Semitism there," Jackson said in the MLB Network interview.

"I couldn't accept the racial epithets in reference to players like Elliott Maddox or Billy Sample," he said. "There are players that played for him that would tell you that."

Jackson told the AP that "sometimes it's uncomfortable, but it's real and you can't ignore it."

"There's a certain time that when somebody asks you a question, you answer them," the 65-year-old Jackson said. "I don't think I said anything with venom. If you can express yourself without anger and make it as palatable as you can, that's what you do."

Jackson was asked how often Martin used such language.

"Sometimes," he said. "It wasn't all the time."

Jackson hit three home runs in the clinching Game 6 of the 1977 World Series, earning the nickname "Mr. October." He starred again in the Series the next year as the Yankees won another title.

The relationship between Jackson and Martin was tumultuous, played out against a backdrop of what became known as "The Bronx Zoo."

"He was a guy I never got to know really well. Obviously, we didn't see eye to eye," Jackson said.

Martin died in a car crash on Christmas Day in 1989.

Jackson hit 563 home runs in a career from 1967 through 1987, and was the MVP of the World Series in 1973 and 1977. He says he was aware some players were using performance-enhancing drugs at the time.

"When (Jose) Canseco came in, he talked about steroid use fairly openly and when I was playing with Mark McGwire, he was not suspect, didn't have the size and he was not a steroid user," Jackson told the MLB Network. "McGwire, (Barry) Bonds, (Roger) Clemens ? these guys were great players without PEDs. Would Canseco have his 460 or 470 home runs without? Probably not. McGwire hits 480 or 500. Bonds hits 600. Clemens wins 320."

"The sad part of that, too, is when you see the great players like Prince Fielder and great players like (Albert) Pujols, it makes you unfairly question," Jackson said.

He said he ran across someone Friday who was aware Jackson had referenced current players in his remarks.

"He said to me, 'Why did you have to mention those guys?'" Jackson said. "I told him that's what those guys who used steroids did to the game. They raised suspicions all over baseball."

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

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From Page to Screen: Best Books Made Into Movies

From The Rum Diary to The Help, check out our picks for the best tomes to get the big-screen treatment.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/best-books-made-movies/1-b-331880?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Abest-books-made-movies-331880

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Injured vet spent day at work, nights at protest (AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. ? The Iraq War veteran injured during a clash between police and anti-Wall Street protesters wasn't taking part in the demonstrations out of economic want.

Scott Olsen, 24, makes a good living at a software company and rents a hillside apartment with views of San Francisco Bay. And yet, his friends say, he felt so strongly about economic inequality in the country that he fought for that he slept at a San Francisco protest camp after work.

"He felt you shouldn't wait until something is affecting you to get out and do something about it," said friend and roommate Keith Shannon, who served with Olsen in Iraq.

It was that feeling that drew him to Oakland on Tuesday night, when the clashes broke out and Olsen was struck by a projectile that fractured his skull. Police say they responded only when protesters began throwing bottles and other items at them.

Now, even as officials investigate exactly where the projectile came from, and from whom, Olsen has become a rallying cry for the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators across the nation, with Twitter users and protest websites declaring: "We are all Scott Olsen."

In Las Vegas, a few dozen protesters held a vigil Wednesday night, carrying glow sticks and projecting a photo of the Marine in uniform onto the corrugated-metal side of building at their camp.

More vigils were being planned Thursday night in other cities.

Elsewhere, officials took steps to close some camps that sprang up since the movement began last month against what protesters see as corporate greed and a government that caters to the wealthiest and big business.

In Nashville, Tenn., officials imposed a curfew for a camp at the Capitol complex. In Providence, R.I., officials notified protesters that they were violating laws prohibiting camping overnight at a park.

Some tea party groups complained of a double standard, saying they were charged fees to hold their rallies while Occupy groups have not. One group in Richmond, Va., is asking the city to repay $8,000 spent for permits and other needs.

On Thursday, however, most of the talk was of Olsen and who was responsible for his injury.

The group Iraq Veterans Against the War blamed police. Police say they used tear gas and bean bag rounds, not flash grenades and rubber bullets as some demonstrators have charged.

Interim Oakland police Chief Howard Jordan said Wednesday that the charges of excessive use of force are being investigated. He did not return repeated calls seeking comment on Thursday.

Olsen's condition improved on Thursday, with doctors transferring him from the emergency room to an intensive care unit. His parents were flying to Oakland from Wisconsin, his uncle said.

"His mother, this is obviously a heartbreaker to her," said George Nygaard, also a Marine veteran, said. "I don't think she understands why he was doing this."

Olsen, who is from Onalaska, Wis., served two tours in Iraq, felt the anti-Wall Street movement had a chance to create real change, Shannon said. So each night, he would go out to the tent camps and usually called Shannon with his whereabouts.

On Tuesday night, Olsen had planned to be in San Francisco, but changed course after his veteran's group decided to go to Oakland to support the protesters there. Earlier, police in riot gear cleared an encampment outside city hall that officials said had health and safety problems.

"I think it was a last minute thing," he said about Olsen's decision. "He didn't think about it."

Joshua Shepherd, 27, a Navy veteran who was standing nearby when Olsen got struck, said he didn't know what hit him. "It was like a war zone," he said.

Then there was a scramble and he couldn't clearly see the rush of folks who went to Olsen's aid.

A video posted on YouTube showed Olsen being carried by other protesters through the tear gas, his face bloodied. People shout at him: "What's your name? What's your name?" Olsen, however, just stares back.

Shepherd said it's a cruel irony that Olsen is fighting for his life in the country that he fought to protect. "He was over there protecting the rights and freedoms of America and he comes home, exercises his "freedoms" and, it's here, where he's nearly fatally wounded," Shepherd said.

People at OPSWAT, the San Francisco security software company where Olsen works, were devastated after learning of his injuries. They described him as a humble, quiet guy who worked hard over long hours.

"He's been a big piece of what we do here and our growth strategy, so obviously it's pretty devastating for us that he's in the shape he's in," said Jeff Garon, the company's director of marketing.

Olsen had been helping to develop security applications for U.S. defense agencies, building on expertise gained while on active duty in Iraq, Garon said.

Olsen was awarded seven medals while serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, which he left as a lance corporal in November 2009 after serving for four years. One of them was the Navy-Marine Corps Achievement Medal.

Olsen moved to the Bay Area in July, and quickly found friends in the veterans against the war group. The lanky man with a dry sense of humor did not show a lot of interest in politics as a teen ? he has two tattoos for the group "Insane Clown Posse" on his upper arms, Shannon said.

His tours of duty in Iraq made him more serious, Shannon said.

"He wasn't active in politics before he went in the military, but he became active once he was out ... the experience in the military definitely shaped him," Shannon said.

___

Associated Press writers Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee, Steve Szkotak in Richmond, Va., Garance Burke in San Francisco, Julie Watson in San Diego Lucas L. Johnson II in Nasvhille, Tenn., and Michelle Rindels in Las Vegas contributed to this report. Dearen reported from San Francisco.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_us/us_wall_street_protests

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Friday, October 28, 2011

iPad CF and SD Card Readers Make Transferring Photos to iOS a Snap [Stuff We Like]

iPad CF and SD Card Readers Make Transferring Photos to iOS a SnapIf your camera requires the speed and durability of a Compact Flash card, this handy adapter will let you transfer photos directly from Compact Flash to your iPad.

Apple already has a camera kit that lets you transfer photos from an SD card or via USB, but if you're using Compact Flash cards in your camera, Apple doesn't cater directly to you. Luckily, photo accessory maker Photojojo has put together a few adapters that not only let you use CF cards with your iPad, but even consolidates the USB port and card reader into the same device. They even have a consolidated SD/USB camera kit, which is more portable than Apple's (and at half the price). Hit the link to check out both products.

iPad CF and SD Card Readers | Photojojo via Laughing Squid


You can contact Whitson Gordon, the author of this post, at whitson@lifehacker.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ZgtTDtDbUvM/ipad-cf-and-sd-card-readers-make-transferring-photos-to-ios-a-snap

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Mexico nabs alleged Zetas local chief, 5 others

MEXICO CITY (AP) ? The Mexican navy said Wednesday it had arrested the alleged local chief of the Zetas drug cartel in the Gulf coast port of Veracruz, and said he is tied to the dumping of eight bodies in a rural town a week ago.

The navy said Carlos "The Bam Bam" Pitalua and five other men were arrested on Tuesday. One of the five is suspected in helping break 32 inmates out of three Veracruz prisons in a well-planned, simultaneous escape.

A picture released by the navy shows four of the six dressed in military clothing.

One day after the jail break, gunmen dumped 35 bodies on a busy avenue of Veracruz last month. Some of the victims were reported at the time to have been escaped inmates.

And in central Mexico State, outside Mexico City, prosecutors announced Wednesday they had arrested Adrian Ramirez, alias "The Mushroom," the alleged leader of the Cartel del Centro.

The gang is believed to be one of the spin-off groups from the Beltran Leyva cartel, which has been decimated by the arrests or deaths of its leaders.

Mexico state Attorney General Alfredo Castillo said the Cartel del Centro has been linked to at least 26 killings, and operated mainly in Mexico City suburbs.

The suspects were arrested last week, Castillo said.

And the Mexican army said it had detained two more suspects in a casino fire that killed 52 people in the northern city of Monterrey.

Gunmen entered the casino, spread gasoline and set the building on fire, trapping and asphyxiating dozens. Officials say the motive was extortion of the casino owners.

The Defense Department said in a statement that the two suspects in the Aug. 25 attack on the Casino Royale were detained in Monterrey Wednesday. Another 15 had already been arrested in connection with the case.

Finally, Mexico's National Public Safety System announced that almost one-third of 63,436 low-ranking Mexican police officers tested so far have failed background and security checks.

Almost one-quarter of the police chiefs and top commanders tested so far have also failed, as had about 10 percent of midlevel police commanders and officers. The agency said in a statement that all those who fail the vetting process should be fired, but left open the possibility that some might be reassigned.

Mexico has set a goal of vetting all of its police by the end of 2012. However, only 71,079 have been tested so far, equal to about 18 percent of the total police force of 431,739 officers.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-26-LT-Drug-War-Mexico/id-3ee8124dbebf4cccb9ee3b530eaabf33

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No Ice Cream Sandwich for Google Nexus One (Digital Trends)

Remember when Google boldly strode into the smartphone game at the beginning of 2010 with it?s ?superphone,? the Google Nexus One? Suddenly it doesn?t seem so super anymore: according to multiple reports, Google?s forthcoming Android 4.0?a.k.a. Ice Cream Sandwich?will not support the Nexus One. The move is leaving many Nexus One customers annoyed?and that includes many Android developers.

Google hasn?t issued any official statement on the fate of the Nexus One, but Android product marketing director Hugo Barra told The Telegraph that the Nexus One hardware was too old to run Ice Cream Sandwich, and a quick check with Google itself seems to confirm the company has no plans to upgrade its original smartphone. Some Nexus One fans have noted that it might be possible to move the Nexus One to Ice Cream Sandwich by installing new third-party ROMs, but that?s a lot of effort to keep and Android handset operational.

Google has confirmed that its newer Nexus S phone will be receiving an over-the-air update to Ice Cream Sandwich soon.

Google launched the Nexus One back in early 2010, touting it as the world?s first ?superphone? and unexpectedly getting into the business of selling handsets direct to consumers via the Web. That part didn?t work out?the Nexus One was never a hit with everyday phone users, and many buyers were frustrated by Google?s inexperienced and often non-existent support infrastructure?particularly galling since customers were paying top dollar for the devices.

Nonetheless, even after Google pulled the plug on Web sales, the Nexus One found a surprising new audience: Android developers, for whom the Nexus One was one of the only ?pure? Android phones to be found on the market. Without third-party interfaces, overlays, and modifications to Android, the Nexus One became a perfect testbed for developers building Android apps. Now, with Ice Cream Sandwich, Android developers will have to leave their Nexus One?s behind?or at least relegate them to testing older versions of Android?and move on to devices like the Nexus S and forthcoming Nexus Prime for development work.

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111026/tc_digitaltrends/noicecreamsandwichforgooglenexusone

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Brawl-room battle! It's Maks vs. Len on 'DWTS'

Monday night was Broadway night on ?Dancing With the Stars,? but despite the fun theme and loads of classic show tunes, the ballroom turned into a brawl-room when one pro and one judge went head-to-head in a post-performance war of words.

Yes, somewhere between near perfect performances from Ricki Lake and J.R. Martinez, and the requisite weekly dud from Chaz Bono, sparks flew.

It all started after Hope Solo completed a rumba that was ... well, about what one would expect from a Hope Solo rumba ? a little stiff, not quite sexy enough and not too precise with the footwork. But it wasn?t the absolute worst routine from her or the low point of the night. (For the latter, see Bono?s ?Phantom of the Opera? number, which could serve as a tutorial in how not to tango.)

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At first, head judge Len Goodman assured Solo that he always thought there was ?so much there? in terms of hoofer potential from her. It just never comes out. From there, tough Goodman took over with heel-lead nitpicks and even criticism for Solo?s bad boots. Then he went for the kicker.

?This was your worst dance of the whole season, in my opinion,? he said.

With that, the audience erupted in boos, and feeling their support, Solo?s partner, the always outspoken Maksim Chmerkovskiy, encouraged the crowd to keep the jeers coming.

Goodman was not amused.

?Don?t start all of that, Maks, 'cause half the fault is yours,? he snapped.

And it was on!

Story: You be the judge! Rate the 'Dancing' contestants

Chmerkovskiy pointed out the praise from the audience. Goodman countered, citing his 50 years of experience. The "Dancing" pro? He suggested to the venerable panelist that ?maybe it?s time to get out.?

Fellow judges Carrie Ann Inaba and Bruno Tonioli briefly jumped in at that point, calling for some judicial respect. But it seemed that Chmerkovskiy had already had enough of the unbalanced judging act that gives props for just for trying for hopefuls Bono and Nancy Grace, and a long list of technical complaints for Solo.

?With all due respect, this is my show,? he told co-host Brooke Burke after the panel flashed two 7s and a 6 for the dance. ?You know, I help make it what it is. I love every aspect of it. I love every professional that?s ever been here, and I love ever celebrity that puts effort in to it every week. Having said that, I?m a little tired that we?re being judged some on effort and some being picked on for heel leads. That?s all I?m saying.?

'Dancing' stars step out to support Bono
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Hard to argue with that logic, but some might take exception with the spotlight-stealing effect Chmerkovskiy?s ballroom battle had ? someone like fellow pro Derek Hough, who pulled the best ?Oh no he didn?t!? mug in the background as Chmerkovskiy ranted away. Or Cheryl Burke, who took on the uncomfortable, telltale stare of someone trying get through an awkward holiday meal with the in-laws.

At least it didn?t last too long. Soon enough, the pros and the amateurs put the drama to rest and hit the stage for the just-for-fun group dance, and as group dances go, it wasn?t half bad.

Heck, even grumpy Goodman gave it a thumbs-up.

Pee-wee Herman: I want to go 'Dancing'

Who?ll waltz right out of the competition Tuesday night? Well, given the random mix of ousters we?ve seen so far, it seems just as likely that a worthy boot (like the good-hearted but bad-footed Bono) could go as it does a middle-of-the-pack contender (David Arquette). But then again, the butting of heads in the ballroom could hurt Solo even though she stayed mostly silent through it all.

In other words, we?ll soon see.

Ree Hines remains a loyal member of Team Maks. What did you think of the night?s ballroom battle? Tell us on our Facebook page! Also, be sure to join Ree for our weekly post-performance ?Dancing? chat on Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. ET.?

? 2011 MSNBC Interactive.? Reprints

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45025622/ns/today-entertainment/

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Canon posts higher profits in Q3 earnings report, lowers outlook over Thai flood concerns

Things are looking pretty rosy for Canon these days, though there may be some difficulty on the horizon. Today, the camera maker published a rather strong Q3 earnings report, just a few months after posting relatively ho-hum Q2 results. According to the company, operating profit grew by 17.4 percent to ¥122.55 billion ($1.6 billion) this quarter, compared with ¥104.42 billion ($1.37 billion) a year ago. Net profit, meanwhile, increased by 14.2 percent over the year, reaching ¥77.9 billion ($1.02 billion) during the quarter, versus ¥68.20 billion during Q3 2010. These results come at a time when the yen is strong, and therefore detrimental to Japanese exporters, though Canon attributed much of its success to strong growth in emerging markets, including China and India. For the year, however, Canon lowered its net-profit outlook to ¥230 billion ($3.02 billion) from ¥260 billion ($3.4 billion), on assumptions that the yen will maintain its strength, and on fears that recent flooding in Thailand may impact production. In fact, the manufacturer said the flooding may cut annual sales by ¥50 billion ($657 million) and operating profit by ¥20 billion. Check out the full report, at the source link below.

Canon posts higher profits in Q3 earnings report, lowers outlook over Thai flood concerns originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Oct 2011 04:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Wall Street Journal, Reuters  |  sourceCanon  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/25/canon-posts-higher-profits-in-q3-earnings-report-lowers-outlook/

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Syrians rally for Assad before Arab mission visit (AP)

BEIRUT ? Tens of thousands of Syrians packed a Damascus square Wednesday in a show of support for embattled President Bashar Assad, a few hours ahead of a visit by senior Arab officials trying to start a dialogue between the regime and the opposition.

The Arab ministerial committee led by Qatar's prime minister was expected to arrive later in the day, but prospects for the mission's success were dim. The opposition's refuses any dialogue with the regime, particularly while it continues its military crackdown on protesters, which the U.N. says has killed 3,000 people since March.

Activists said at least nine civilians were killed Wednesday in military operations across the country, six of them in the flashpoint central city of Homs.

The Arab officials' visit follows a meeting in Cairo last week by the 22-nation Arab League, which gave Syria until the end of the month to end military operations, release detainees arrested in the crackdown, and start a dialogue with the opposition.

Bassma Kodmani, spokeswoman for the broad-based opposition group, the Syrian National Council, said it is "impossible" to talk about a dialogue within the current security crackdown.

"And even if the right conditions for dialogue prevail, the only thing to discuss would be a roadmap for the peaceful transfer of power," she told The Associated Press.

Paris-based Kodmani echoed the feelings of Syrian anti-government protesters, many of whom expressed disappointment with the Arab League and called for suspending Syria's membership.

"Russia gives Bashar international protection, Iran gives him weapons, and Arabs give him time," read a banner carried by protesters in northern Syria Tuesday evening. "No dialogue with the killer of children," read another.

The SNC had said in a statement Tuesday it was worried that the Arab League's initiative "did not distinguish between the victim and the executioner."

It also called for international protection for civilians, and for Arab and international observers to be allowed immediately into Syria to monitor the situation.

Human Rights Watch also called on the Arab ministers to demand that the government allow independent, civilian monitors into Syria to observe the behavior of security forces.

Tens of thousands of Syrians carrying white, red and black flags and posters of Assad gathered at Damascus' Omayyad square in a rally timed to coincide with the Arab ministers' visit.

The opposition says authorities regularly stage massive rallies in support of the embattled leader even as his regime becomes increasingly isolated.

Assad, however, still has significant support among many Syrians, including those who benefited financially from the regime, minority groups who fear they will be targeted if the Sunni majority takes over and others who see no clear and safe alternative to the president. He also still has the loyalty of the bulk of the armed forces, key to his remaining in power.

Damascus appears to have grudgingly agreed to the Arab mission even though it refuses to have outsiders interfere in what it considers its internal affairs.

Gulf countries seeking to suspend Syria's membership in the Arab League because of its bloody crackdown on protesters failed to gain enough support for the move at the Oct. 16 meeting in Cairo.

Human Rights Watch also quoted Syrian activists as saying at least 186 protesters and residents have been killed in Syria since the Cairo meeting.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and other rights groups said nine civilians were killed Wednesday in shootings by security forces nationwide, including six in the restive city of Homs. The Observatory also reported nine soldiers were killed in Hama province when the bus they were traveling in was hit by a rocket propelled grenade.

The activists said towns and villages in southern Syria, and some areas in the north and east closed their shops and businesses in compliance with an opposition call for a general strike.

The Syrian government has staunchly defended its crackdown on protesters, saying it is the target of a foreign conspiracy.

On Wednesday, it issued a rare rebuttal to a recent report by Amnesty International that accused security forces and medical personnel of torturing wounded protesters at state-run hospitals. A statement issued by the Syrian Health Ministry said the Amnesty report was "full of fallacies and fabrications."

The accusation that Syria is targeting doctors and raiding hospitals in search of wounded protesters has been made before by leading international human rights groups.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria

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U.S. plans "virtual embassy" for Iran: Clinton (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The United States plans to open a "virtual embassy" for Iran that will give Iranians online information about visas and student exchange programs despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday.

Clinton, in interviews with the Persian language services of the BBC and Voice of America, defended U.S. sanctions against Iran and said Washington had a strong criminal case linking Tehran to a plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington.

Clinton used both interviews to stress that the United States hoped to broaden contacts with regular Iranians despite tensions with the Tehran government, which she said was being transformed into a military dictatorship.

"My goal in speaking to you today is to clearly communicate to the people of Iran, particularly the very large population of young people, that the United States has no argument with you. We want to support your aspirations.

"We would be thrilled if tomorrow the regime in Iran had a change of mind," she told the Voice of America.

Clinton said the "virtual embassy" web site would be open by the end of the year and it would provide Iranians with information on visas and other programs.

The United States broke formal diplomatic relations with Tehran in 1980 following the Iran hostage crisis, and ties have remained tense amid disputes over Iran's nuclear program and U.S. charges that Iran is the most active state sponsor of terrorism around the world.

In his waning months in office, President George W. Bush weighed opening a U.S. Interests Section, which could issue visas, in Tehran, but ultimately decided against it.

Clinton said the United States was providing both technology and training to help Iranians circumvent government limits on the Internet and other forms of communication while seeking to expand sanctions on Tehran.

She acknowledged economic sanctions sometimes caused difficulties for average Iranians, but said they were the best tool to pressure Iran's leaders.

POWER STRUGGLE?

"We see disturbing trends and actions having to do with the continuing covert effort to build a nuclear weapons program ... with a lot of deception, a lot of lying to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the rest of the international community," Clinton told the BBC.

"We see aggressive behavior toward neighbors in the region, we see efforts to try to hijack and undermine the so-called Arab Spring awakening," She said. "We do not want a conflict with Iran but we do want to see the rulers of Iran change their outlook and their behavior."

Clinton said the door remained opened to talks with Tehran on its nuclear program, although she suggested the outlook was complicated by political divisions within the Iranian government itself.

"I believe there's a power struggle going on inside the regime and they can't sort out what they really are willing to do until they sort out who's going to do what," she said.

Clinton said she was aware that many people around the world were skeptical about U.S. charges this month that Iran was tied to a plot to kill the Saudi ambassador, but said she believed Washington had a strong case.

"I taught criminal law some years ago. It's a very strong case. It certainly raises the right questions and I think it will be a successful case," she told the BBC.

Iran has rejected the U.S. accusation as a fabrication designed to sow discord in the oil-rich Gulf.

Clinton said details of the case, in which two Iranians with security links are accused of seeking to kill the Saudi ambassador with help from members of a Mexican drug cartel, reflected a broader pattern of dangerous behavior by the Quds Force, the covert operations arm of Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

"I understand people questioning it because it was such a shocking plot. It was shocking to us when we uncovered it," Clinton told Voice of America.

"They've gotten more reckless," Clinton told the BBC, saying the alleged plot was an attempt by the Quds Force "to thumb their nose at the Americans."

(Editing by Todd Eastham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111026/pl_nm/us_iran_usa

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Recommended Legal Requirements for Websites in the UK

Following on from my previous article on the mandatory legal requirements for UK websites, I recommend adding the following non-mandatory information to your website.

Terms of Use/Disclaimer

Set out the rules applicable to persons using and accessing the goods and services on your website. For example state who may access the website e.g. consumers, businesses, over 18s.

You should also aim to limit your liability for information on the website. For example state which law applies, your limits on liability etc. However, please note that you cannot exclude or limit certain liabilities in particular circumstances ? particularly in relation to consumers, injuries caused by or defects in your goods and services.

Copyright Notice

Protect the information on your website by inserting a copyright notice ?? company name 2010. All rights reserved.? Without this notice, it may be difficult in some countries to take any action against a copyright infringement.

Mandatory Legal Requirements - a shortened list is shown below, click to see the full mandatory requirements?

  • About Us/Contact Information
  • Registration under the Data Protection Act
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disabled Access to your Website
  • Trade Marks and Logos
  • Copyright
  • Online Payment
Subscribe by Email

Source: http://www.webanalyticsworld.net/2011/10/website-%E2%80%93-recommended-legal-requirements.html

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Correction: Russia-Poland-Katyn story (AP)

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_poland_katyn_corrective

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

LG DoublePlay Will Offer Split Keyboard and Dual Screens

The dual-screen?Kyocera Echo?didn’t have much success in the market, and Nokia abandoned the split keyboard design they had with the Nokia e70?and the Nokia 6800 family. Unlike the Echo and the e70, the DoublePlay from LG, exclusively available from T-Mobile,?will have a 3.5” main display and a split sliding keyboard with 2” display. The 2” [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/10/24/lg-doubleplay-will-offer-split-keyboard-and-dual-screens/

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Demi Lovato Promises 'Better And Bigger' Fall Tour

Unbroken singer tells MTV News that fans can expect Lady Gaga, Maroon 5 covers; hints at plans for 2012 world tour.
By Christina Garibaldi


Demi Lovato
Photo: MTV News

Demi Lovato has been hitting a lot of high notes lately. On Monday, the "Skyscraper" singer sang the national anthem at the World Series, she'll be performing alongside Lady Gaga at Z100's Jingle Ball concert in December and she's gearing up to hit the road for 10 tour dates beginning next month.

"[I'm] very excited," Lovato told MTV News about heading out for the first time since leaving the Jonas Brothers' tour to seek treatment for personal issues last November. The 19-year-old has already given fans a sneak peek at what can expect from her during two recent shows in New York and in Los Angeles.

"We're gonna do the same show, but a little bit different ... better and bigger, and my fans just have to come check it out," Lovato said of the dates beginning November 16 in Detroit. "We were just experimenting with the show and trying to see how it all played out and give my fans something that will bait them in for the tour."

Lovato will be performing songs off her Unbroken album, plus her fan favorite rendition of Lil Wayne's "How to Love." But Wayne won't be the only artist she covers onstage. "I'm thinking of maybe a Maroon 5 or Lady Gaga cover," Lovato revealed. "I like 'Born this Way' and 'Moves Like Jagger,' I'd want to perform one of those."

If Lovato isn't heading to your hometown this time around, no need to worry, it looks like she'll be back on the road sooner than expected. "I'm planning on a world tour next year," Lovato told us.

While it's still unconfirmed when Lovato will kick off that world tour, she already has an opening act in mind.

"You know who I did see the other day on the Internet was that little girl Sophia Grace," Lovato said of the eight-year-old U.K. sensation who gained YouTube fame with her cover of Nicki Minaj's "Super Bass." "She's so cute, maybe she can open up for me," Demi said.

Apart from singing skills, Grace and Lovato have at least one more thing in common: their love for Nicki Minaj.

"I just love that she can rap and sing," Lovato said of the Queens rapper. "You know, a lot of people can just rap and she can rap and sing and she has a really good voice. She's fun; she doesn't take herself too seriously. A lot of artists take themselves way too seriously. It's hard to find artists that just want to have fun these days, and that's what she does."

Does that mean Demi would want Minaj to hit the road with her? "She would be amazing. I would be opening up for her though," Lovato laughed.

Will you catch Demi on tour? Let us know in the comments!

Related Videos Related Photos Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673167/demi-lovato-unbroken-tour.jhtml

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Video: Crib escape caught on tape

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/44997955#44997955

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Tunisians turn out in force for first free vote

Abdelfattah Mourou, head of the Tunisian party "Independent Democratic Alliance" casts his vote in La Marsa, near the Tunisian capital, Tunis, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Tunisians began voting Sunday in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Hassene Dridi)

Abdelfattah Mourou, head of the Tunisian party "Independent Democratic Alliance" casts his vote in La Marsa, near the Tunisian capital, Tunis, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Tunisians began voting Sunday in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Hassene Dridi)

Tunisians voters stand in a line in Menzeh near Tunis, Sunday Oct. 23, 2011. Tunisians began voting Sunday in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Amine Landoulsi)

Tayyib Awishi, 83, gestures with ink-marked hands after voting in the working class neighborhood of Hay al-Tadamon, near Tunis. Tunisians voted Sunday Oct. 23, 2011 in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Paul Schemm)

Tunisians in the working class neighborhood of Hay al-Tadamon outside Tunis push to enter a voting station. Tunisians voted Sunday Oct. 23, 2011 in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Paul Schemm)

Rachid Ghannouchi, the leader of Tunisia's main Islamist party Ennahda, shows off his ink-stained finger after voting in Menzeh near Tunis, Sunday Oct. 23, 2011. Tunisians began voting Sunday in their first truly free elections, the culmination of a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule and set off similar rebellions across the Middle East. (AP Photo/Amine Landoulsi)

(AP) ? The people who started the Arab Spring shared one of its earliest fruits on Sunday: a free election. Tunisians who brought down a dictator nine months ago waited for hours to select those who will help shape their fledgling democracy.

"The old elections were fraudulent and this one is for our children and grandchildren so that even if I soon die, I will be happy and content," said Tayyib Awish, resplendent in a crisp white robe and skull cap at a crowded school-cum-polling station in the working class suburb of Hay al-Tadammon near Tunis, the capital.

The spry 83-year-old voted many times for Tunisia's first two presidents in contests whose results were always known ahead of time, but this time was different. "This is a celebration," he said, gesturing with a finger stained blue by polling station ink.

Women with headscarves and without, former political prisoners and young people whose Facebook posts helped fuel the revolution also were among those electing a 217-seat assembly that will appoint a new government and then write a new constitution.

It was the first truly free election in the history of Tunisia, which was under the control of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali for 23 years. Ben Ali was overthrown Jan. 14 by a monthlong uprising, sparked by a fruitseller who set himself on fire in protest of police harassment, then stirred by anger over unemployment, corruption and repression.

The uprising inspired similar rebellions across the Arab world. The autocratic rulers of Egypt and Libya have fallen since, but Tunisia is the first country to hold free elections as a result of the upheaval. Egypt's parliamentary election is set for next month.

President Barack Obama offered congratulations, saying that "less than a year after they inspired the world, the Tunisian people took an important step forward."

The party expected to come out on top is the moderate Islamic movement Ennahda, or renaissance, though no one party is expected to win a majority of assembly seats. An Ennahda victory, especially in a comparatively secular society like Tunisia, could have wide implications for similar religious parties in the region.

Preliminary reports indicate voting went smoothly, with up to 70 percent of registered voters turning up at polling stations. Results might not come until Monday or Tuesday.

People waited in line for hours to vote under the strong North African sun.

"Even if I have to stand in line 24 hours, I would not give up the chance to savor this air of freedom," said former political prisoner Touhami Sakouhi, also voting in Hay al-Tadammon.

In the more affluent Tunis suburb of al-Aouina, 18-year-old language student and former protester Zeinab Souayah said, "I'm going to grow up and think back on these days and tell my children about them."

"It feels great, it's awesome," she added, in English.

Ben Ali's regime was among the Middle East's most corrupt and repressive, and his long-calm country was shocked by the self-immolations at the start of the uprising and the ensuing outbursts of pent-up anger. As protests spread across Tunisia, the police crackdown left more than 300 dead.

Protests have simmered in the months since, periodically ending in violence, but Tunisia's interim authorities have generally managed to contain the unrest ? and keep the months of war in neighboring Libya from spilling over their common border.

The atmosphere on this extraordinary voting day was electric with excitement, but to the relief of many, not violent. Kamel Jendoubi, the head of the election commission, said there were only some scattered election violations, such as campaigning near polling stations or trying to influence voters. Some parties had received warnings, but he did not name them.

The ballot was an extra-large piece of paper bearing the names and symbols of the parties fielding a candidate in each district. The symbols are meant to aid the illiterate, estimated at about 25 percent of the population in a country with one of the region's most educated populations.

Voters in each of the country's 33 districts, six of which are abroad, had roughly 40 to 80 ballot choices. It was a cacophony of options in a country effectively under one-party rule since independence from France in 1956.

Retired engineer Bahri Mohamed Lebid, 73, said he voted "for my religion," a sentiment common among supporters of the Ennahda movement. He said he last tried to vote in 1974, when polling officers forced him to cast a ballot for the ruling party despite his objections.

Ennahda believes that Islam should be the reference point for the country's system and laws and believes that democracy is the best system to maintain people's rights. It has also said it supports Tunisia's liberal laws promoting women's equality ? making it much more progressive than other Islamic movements in the Middle East.

Some voters expressed concern that despite its moderate public line, Ennahda could reverse some of Tunisia's progressive legislation for women if it gains power.

"I am looking for someone to protect the place of women in Tunisia," said 34-year-old Amina Helmi, her hair free of the headscarves that some Tunisian women wear. She said she was "afraid" of Ennahda and voted for the center-left PDP party, the strongest legal opposition movement under Ben Ali.

There are 7.5 million potential voters, though only 4.4 million of them, or just under 60 percent, are actually registered. People can vote with their identity cards but only at certain stations, which caused some confusion.

Mogadi Shukri, 43, a day laborer, said that since he hadn't registered he had to go to a far-away station to vote. "I feeling like am missing out," he said sadly.

A proportional representation system will likely mean that no political party will dominate the assembly, which is expected to be divided roughly among centrist parties, leftist parties and Ennahda. They will need to form coalitions and make compromises to create a constitution.

According to the international election commission running the elections, there were more than 14,000 local and international observers watching polling stations, including delegations from the European Union and the Carter Center.

Many have expressed indifference about the elections out of frustration that life has not improved since the revolution. Tunisia's economy and employment, part of the reason for the revolution in the first place, has only gotten worse since Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia because tourists and foreign investors have stayed away.

Outside the school-turned-polling station in Hay al-Tadammon, a group of young men sat on the street, sipping tea and mocking journalists who were talking to people who had just voted.

Belhussein al-Maliki, 27, said he fought in the January uprising, which engulfed this downtrodden suburb, and lost a relative in the fighting.

"We are jobless, we have nothing and we won't vote," he said bitterly. "Everything is the same, the world is the way it is, and the world will stay the way it is."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-23-ML-Tunisia-Elections/id-01bb5e8c5d0c4eb8ba2fc7b237a8e7eb

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