Archive for November, 2011

30 NovNCAA Football Rankings Week 13: TCU Rises To No. 17, Baylor To No. 18

The Baylor Bears avoided the trap game versus Texas Tech and are now ranked No. 18 in this week’s coaches poll.

Nov 27, 2011 – The TCU Horned Frogs have proven that they can overcome losing a four-year starter at quarterback, losing key pieces of a talented secondary and still Gary Patterson’s bunch is able to overcome and win.

TCU’s reward is a No. 17 ranking in this week’s coaches poll.

Baylor keeps on winning too, and after shocking the world with a huge win over Oklahoma they avoided the trap versus Texas Tech and disposed of them in a 66-42 offensive slugfest.

Their reward? A No. 18 ranking in arguably one of the greatest seasons in Baylor Bears history.

Here is the full coaches poll for week 13:

1. LSU 2. Alabama 3. Virginia Tech 4. Stanford 5. Oklahoma State 6. Houston 7. Oregon 8. Boise State 9. Michigan State 10. Arkansas 11. Oklahoma 12. Wisconsin 13. South Carolina 14. Georgia 15. Kansas State 16. Michigan 17. TCU 18. Baylor 19. Nebraska 20. West Virginia 21. Clemson 22. Penn State 23. So. Mississippi 24. Florida State 25. Cincinnati

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Source: http://dallas.sbnation.com/baylor-bears/2011/11/27/2590236/ncaa-football-rankings-week-13-tcu-rises-to-no-17-baylor-to-no-18

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30 Nov“Marilyn,” “Artist” “Method” have strong debuts (omg!)

Actress Michelle Williams, who portrays Marilyn Monroe in the film "My Week With Marilyn", poses at a screening of the movie during AFI Fest 2011 in Hollywood November 6, 2011. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Michelle Williams’ portrayal of America’s most iconic actress debuted strongly over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, with the Weinstein Company’s “My Week With Marilyn” opening to $2 million at 244 domestic locations.

In fact, it was a particularly strong play period for indie adult dramas in general, with Weinstein’s “The Artist” also enjoying a big premiere, taking in $210,414 at four theaters — a huge per-theater average of more than $52,600 per screen.

Sony Pictures Classics’ “A Dangerous Method” had an even stronger opening, taking in $240,944 at four locations (per-screen average of $60,233).

Among holdovers, Fox Searchlight’s “The Descendants” continued to dominate the indie box office, grossing $7.2 million from Wednesday through Sunday while expanding from 29 to 433 locations.

Sheila DeLoach, executive VP of distribution for Fox Searchlight, told TheWrap that the studio planned to expand the film’s playdates by 200 on December 9. “But based on demand, we will be looking to move as many of those theaters as possible up to Friday, December 2,” she said. “The audience has clearly crossed from older adults to an all-audience film for adults over 18.”

The movie stars Clooney as a land baron who is selling off family property in Hawaii when his wife is very badly injured in a boating accident. Its per-screen average was $16,628 over the five-day weekend.

And “Marilyn,” which is generating Oscar buzz for star Williams, had a solid per-screen average of $7,266 for the three days. The movie is about the interaction between Laurence Olivier and Monroe during production of “The Prince and the Showgirl.”

Its numbers were strong enough to make “Marilyn” the No. 12 movie in the country.

“The way it played throughout the weekend is an indication that word of mouth is building on the film, and that’s what we thought, which is why we opened early — to get people talking,” Erik Lomis, the Weinstein Company’s head of distribution, told TheWrap.

The R-rated movie, directed by Simon Curtis, opened on 123 screens Wednesday and expanded to 244 screens on Friday.

“We’re getting a more sophisticated audience, an older audience, and people are responding really well,” Lomis said. He said that 71 percent of the audience was 35 and older and 89 percent was 25 and older. Women especially liked the movie — 65 percent of its audience was female.

Lomis said the company will slowly increase the number of screens.

“We’ll be judicious with it,” he said. “We’ll roll it out … through the awards season.”

He said the company will be “even more careful and more judicious” with the rollout of “The Artist.”

Michel Hazanavicius directed the silent, black-and-white, PG-13 movie about a silent movie star whose career is threatened as talkies catch on.

“We couldn’t be happier,” Lomis said. “It’s like the little engine that could, this movie — it’s a silent film, it’s black-and-white and it’s performing with the big boys. It’s a great start.”

Lomis said the movie’s audience was evenly split between men and women, that 67 percent was 35 or older and that 91 percent was 25 or older.

“A Dangerous Method,” directed by David Cronenberg, stars Michael Fassbender as the psychoanalyst Carl Jung and Viggo Mortensen as Sigmund Freud.

Among holdovers, Paramount Vantage’s “Like Crazy” grossed an estimated $609,000 over the five days and $449,000 over three days.

The PG-13 movie played at 150 locations. That’s a per-screen average of just short of $3,000 for the three-day period.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_marilyn_artist_method_strong_debuts225527586/43729240/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/marilyn-artist-method-strong-debuts-225527586.html

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30 NovIn India, a sense of crisis fans embers of reform (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s move to open India’s protected retail sector to global supermarket giants last week surprised critics who had written him off as a policy ditherer, but he was probably motivated by expedience rather than any reformist zeal.

India’s stellar economic growth is slowing, the rupee has skidded to record lows and inflation is stuck close to a double-digit clip. Faced with this predicament, Singh may have simply weighed the benefits of opening a $450 billion market to foreign investment against the political risk, and taken his chance.

Just as he did back in 1991, when the central bank was forced to airlift 47 tonnes of gold to Europe as collateral for a loan to avert a sovereign default, Singh has opted for liberalisation to deal with urgent economic problems.

“In India, we’ve always achieved economic reform at gunpoint,” said political commentator Swapan Dasgupta.

Many seized on Singh’s retail sector decision, taken in the face of dissent within his own cabinet, as a sign that the reform process he had helped father was finally back on track. The frontpage headline of the Economic Times on Friday crowed: “Hello Walmart, Goodbye Inertia”.

Unpopular, saddled with petulant coalition allies, up against a combative opposition and facing elections in five states next year, Singh’s Congress party is likely to shy away from far-reaching economic reforms that could cost it votes.

Nevertheless, the move to allow multinationals into the retail market could be the first of several liberalisation initiatives aimed at silencing complaints from business leaders and even its own supporters that this is a government adrift.

“They are not reformers,” said Surjit Bhalla, chairman of Oxus Investments. “But, given its huge unpopularity, Congress is now looking to do what it can. There’s more than an even chance that reforms will continue.”

Next up may be a decision to open India’s airline sector, which is struggling with cost pressures and a fierce price war, to foreign investors.

RISK AND REWARD

Singh, who will be 80 next year, earned his reformist stripes as finance minister back in 1991 when he prised open India’s state-stifled economy, opening the way for a long run of dazzling growth.

However, as prime minister since 2004, he has presided over less spectacular reforms such as opening the country’s nuclear power market and freeing petrol and fertiliser pricing. And his government, beleaguered by corruption scandals, has slipped into a policy paralysis since it won a second term two years ago, taking the gloss off the “India Shining” story.

Asia’s third-largest economy is nowhere near the crisis it was facing 20 years ago. However, growth has sagged since it topped 9 percent for three years in a row before the global financial crisis, and a monetary tightening cycle to stamp out inflation that began in March 2010 is exacerbating the slowdown.

The move to allow multinationals into India’s vast retail market will eventually help unclog some of the supply bottlenecks that stoke inflation.

It will also generate sorely needed foreign capital, not least for infrastructure investment, which the government’s latest five-year plan targets at an ambitious $1 trillion.

The government has taken other steps recently to attract funds from abroad. It has raised the limit on foreign investment in government and corporate bonds, and the cabinet has approved a law that – once it has parliamentary approval – will allow limited foreign direct investment in pensions firms.

While none of this will address the country’s economic ills in the short term, it may bring an immediate political gain.

Welcoming in the world’s big supermarket brands was risky. It will fuel fury with Congress among the millions of neighbourhood store owners, who could make the party pay in next year’s state elections.

But the promise of world-class shopping will be welcomed by India’s growing ranks of urban middle classes, and Singh’s uncharacteristic boldness could shore up public faith in his government as it gears up for a general election in 2014.

If there is a new phase of reforms underway, it is likely to be tentative rather than sweeping.

Some reforms, such as removing subsidies on diesel, are politically untouchable because of the backlash the party would face from the poor. Even the decision to open up the retail sector was hedged with provisos that will protect shopkeepers in small towns and rural areas.

The government’s plans to pass a food security bill, which would widen subsidies for the poor, are an example of how there has been little change in the populist stance of the Congress party. Critics say the bill will only add to the fiscal deficit.

Nevertheless, with its back to the wall, the government appears to have snapped out of its inertia.

“Reforms have been thrust upon it,” said Bhalla. “As long as the pressure is on this government it will continue to act.”

(Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Ron Popeski)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111127/india_nm/india607494

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30 NovHazing may have played role in death at FAMU

Hazing is being blamed for the death of a Florida A&M University student. His family says the school has a?culture of?hazing.

Robert Champion fell in love with music at about age 6 when he saw a marching band at a parade in downtown Atlanta. So mesmerized by the festivities, he came home, took out pots and pans and started banging away like a little drummer.

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His passion led him to marching bands from middle school through college. He was a drum major for the famed Marching 100 band of Florida A&M University, a group that has performed at Super Bowls, the Grammys and presidential inaugurations. The prestige brought along a “culture of?hazing” and a secret world that played a role in Champion’s death, his family said Monday.

“It needs to stop. The whole purpose is to put this out there and let people know there has to be a change,” Champion’s mother, Pam, said at a news conference.

On Nov. 19, after the school’s football team lost its annual game with rival Bethune-Cookman, Champion collapsed on a bus parked outside an Orlando, Fla., hotel. The 26-year-old junior had been vomiting and complained he couldn’t breathe shortly before he became unconscious.

When authorities arrived about 9:45 p.m., Champion was unresponsive. He died at a nearby hospital.

Authorities have not released any more details, except to say?hazing?played a role. An attorney representing Champion’s family also refused to talk specifics.

“We are confident from what we’ve learned that?hazing?was a part of his death. We’ve got to expose this culture and eradicate it,” Christopher Chestnut said. “There’s a pattern and practice of covering up this culture.”

Since Champion’s death, the school has shuttered the marching band and the rest of the music department’s performances. The longtime band director, Julian White, was fired.

The college also announced an independent review led by a former state attorney general and an ex-local police chief in Tallahassee, where the historically black college is based.

White, who believes he was unfairly dismissed, said Monday he had suspended 26 band members for?hazing?two weeks before Champion died. He took heat for the decision, particularly from the parents of band members, and said the punishments were like suspending star football players.

“And so the band members were apprehensive. ‘Doc, you think we can go without 19 trombone players?’” White said at a Tallahassee news conference. “And other folks. ‘Doc, do you thing you can do it without them?’ My comment was, it doesn’t matter, I am not going to sacrifice the performance for the principle.”

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/UBPY60oMhAM/Hazing-may-have-played-role-in-death-at-FAMU

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29 NovCongo vote begins despite delay fears, violence (Reuters)

KINSHASA (Reuters) ? Voting began slowly on Monday in Congo’s second-post war elections, held in the vast and volatile Central African nation despite fears logistical problems would delay them and irregularities undermine the results.

Thousands queued outside polling stations across the country, which saw sporadic outbreaks of violence as the elections approached, including in the capital at the weekend.

Some then cast their ballots while others complained polls were late opening or that they did not know where to vote.

After a last-minute scramble to prepare for the presidential and parliamentary votes, final rallies were canceled in Kinshasa due to clashes between rival supporters, security forces opened fire on crowds and the main presidential challenger was prevented from campaigning.

The polls – which pit President Joseph Kabila against 10 rivals while more than 18,500 candidates compete for 500 seats in parliament – will test progress toward stability after decades of misrule and two wars in the last 15 years.

Around 5.4 million people were killed by the last war, largely through hunger and disease.

It ended formally in 2003, but localized violence in the mineral-rich state has continued, especially in the east, where a plethora of local and foreign rebel groups vie for control.

Addressing the nation on Sunday evening, Kabila, seen by many as the favorite due to the advantages of incumbency, warned against a return to widespread violence.

“Our country has come a long way, from war and conflict of every type. We must take care not to go back to that,” he said.

In the eastern lakeside town of Goma, security was heavy and polls opened slightly late but voters were enthusiastic.

“I am happy to have voted. I want change so I hope those who lose accept the results. We don’t want trouble,” Joel Mweso, a student, told Reuters.

A Reuters witness also saw residents in the capital, Kinshasa, voting after initial delays. International observers said they had received reports of some delays elsewhere across the nation, but it was too early to give details.

Underscoring security fears, two election commission trucks were ambushed and torched overnight by gunmen just outside Lubumbashi, the usually quiet capital of the mining province of Katanga, the provincial interior minister told Reuters.

Election commission chief Daniel Ngoy Mulunda said Congo would prove critics wrong with credible and peaceful polls.

“Everyone’s going to vote tomorrow, it’s going to be a celebration of democracy. The Congolese people are going to take the second step in the consolidation of their democracy. We have kept our promise,” he said on the eve of the vote.

The first post-war election in 2006 was seen as broadly free and fair but gunbattles erupted after the voting.

United Nations troops and helicopters from Angola and South Africa have been called on to ferry election material to 60,000 polling stations across a nation the size of Western Europe with little infrastructure so some 32 million people can vote.

Provisional results are due on December 6.

Even in the capital voters complained of last-minute confusion over where they were meant to be voting due to polling stations being moved and errors with voter lists.

“We thought voting would be easy, but now we’ve been told we have to go somewhere else, we don’t know where,” said voter Bibi Mbao. “We’re happy to vote but we’re a bit confused, because we’re being sent left and right.”

The opposition has also protested that election lists were not properly vetted, leading to potential fraud. After outbursts of violence during the campaign, there are also fears of a contested result.

“COME A LONG WAY”

Andre Kimbuta, the governor of Kinshasa province, said some areas of the city were difficult to access and polling stations would only receive ballot papers in the morning. Torrential rain began to fall in parts of the capital by mid-morning.

With more than 1,400 legislative candidates in one Kinshasa constituency, some voters struggled to fit newspaper-sized ballot papers into the clear plastic ballot boxes provided.

A European Union observer mission on Sunday condemned moves by the police on Saturday to prevent Kabila’s rival, veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, from campaigning.

Kabila came to power when his father Laurent was assassinated in 2001 and then won the 2006 poll.

The failure of the opposition to unite behind a single candidate – after Kabila’s camp pushed through a law scrapping the need for a run-off if no candidate secures a majority in the first round of voting – has bolstered his chances.

But Tshisekedi, who has spent decades in opposition and boycotted the last poll due to complaints of fraud, has drawn increasingly large crowds as his campaign, which started late, picked up momentum.

Peter Pham, director of the U.S.-based Michael S. Ansari Africa Center, said it appeared that Tshisekedi had cemented himself as the anti-Kabila vote amid frustrations at the slow pace of progress, even if no formal alliance was in place.

“Ironically, the government’s ham-fisted attempts to obstruct his campaign have only served to enhance his stature,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Kenny Katombe in Goma; writing by David Lewis; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/wl_nm/us_congo_democratic_election

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29 NovRobot can squeeze under obstacles

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The bendy robot can get out of any tight spot

A “soft” robot inspired by squid and starfish can crawl, undulate, and squeeze under obstacles.

Built by a team at Harvard University, this robot has several advantages over those with treads, wheels and rigid parts – which have a limited repertoire of movements and may have trouble navigating difficult terrain.

The sea creature-inspired creation was manufactured with soft materials and its motion is driven by compressed air.

Details appear in the journal PNAS.

Professor George Whitesides, Robert Shepherd and their colleagues from Harvard University in Cambridge, US, said the work was inspired by animals such as squid and starfish that lack hard skeletons.

The pneumatically-driven robot is built using flexible materials known as “elastomers”.

Contained within the elastomer layer is a series of chambers that inflate like balloons to enable motion.

The robot can adopt different patterns of movement (gaits) during locomotion and its limbs are capable of fluid motions, the Harvard engineers explain.

They put their creation through its paces on an obstacle course which, they say, would hinder some rigid, metallic robots.

The flexible robot was made to squeeze underneath a glass plate elevated 2cm above the ground in less than a minute by executing a combination of co-ordinated movements.

Soft robots are more resistant than more rigid designs to damage from some common hazards in a real-world setting, such as falling on rocks, or receiving bumps and scrapes from other hard objects.

But the authors concede that the vulnerable elastomer “skins” of soft robots make them more susceptible to punctures from objects such as broken glass or thorns.

Paul.Rincon-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15930007

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29 NovPresident Obama just a fan at this basketball game

President Barack Obama, left, chats with First Lady Michelle Obama in the first half of an NCAA basketball game between Oregon State and Towson in Towson, Md., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

President Barack Obama, left, chats with First Lady Michelle Obama in the first half of an NCAA basketball game between Oregon State and Towson in Towson, Md., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Actor Bill Murray, center, chats with President Barack Obama, left, and first lady Michelle Obama before an NCAA basketball game between Oregon State and Towson in Towson, Md., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama attend the Oregon State versus Towson NCAA college basketball game at Towson University, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, in Towson, Md. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama waves and and first lady Michelle Obama, top left, talks during the Oregon State versus Towson NCAA college basketball game at Towson University, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, in Towson, Md. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama, left, and first lady Michelle Obama talk during the Oregon State versus Towson NCAA college basketball game at Towson University Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, in Towson, Md. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

TOWSON, Md. (AP) ? President Barack Obama was just a fan at this basketball game.

Obama, who plays in pick-up games as often as he can, including one Saturday morning, brought his family Towson University near Baltimore for an afternoon game that pitted the Towson Tigers against the Oregon State Beavers.

Obama’s brother-in-law, Craig Robinson, is Oregon State’s head coach.

The crowd inside Towson’s arena erupted in cheers as Obama and first lady Michelle Obama entered and shook fans’ hands as they made their way to a pair of courtside seats.

Daughters Malia and Sasha sat in the first row of the bleachers. Also attending were Obama’s mother-in-law, Marian Robinson, and Education Secretary Arne Duncan, a former professional basketball player and friend of Obama’s from Chicago.

“Groundhog Day” actor Bill Murray, was in attendance, too, and he greeted Obama before play got under way.

At halftime Saturday, with Oregon State leading 32-20, Obama stepped onto the court to greet Towson football players.

Catching an Oregon State game has become a post-Thanksgiving tradition for the Obamas.

Last year, the Beavers came to Washington and defeated Howard. The year before that, Oregon State traveled east and scored a win against George Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-26-Obama/id-c2046b0aad5b404d9a5191f46052929b

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29 NovPortsmouth 1 Leicester 1: Apple won’t crumble

ABOVE: Portsmouth boss Michael Appleton

Christmas is coming so people are bound to be concerned and it?s inevitable that some people are talking about whether their wages will be paid

28th November 2011

By Ian Winrow

MICHAEL APPLETON admits he is on a crash course in crisis management amid Portsmouth?s latest financial nightmare.

The former West Brom midfielder is just two games into his first full-time manager?s job.

But he is having to operate under a cloud of uncertainty.

Co-owner Vladimir Antonov is fighting extradition to Lithuania where he faces questions relating to his control of the Snoras Bank.

And the fears at Fratton Park are that Antonov?s assets ? including the club ? could be frozen, plunging Pompey back into yet another financial black hole.

Appleton said: ?I?ve been assured in the short and medium that everything will be OK.

?Christmas is coming so people are bound to be concerned and it?s inevitable that some people are talking about whether their wages will be paid.

?It?s been a crazy week and my main focus has been on protecting the players.?

Former Pompey striker David Nugent denied his old team-mates victory with the 74th-minute strike that cancelled out David Norris? opener.

Pompey skipper Norris said: ?We?ve not allowed the off-field matters to distract us and it?s been business as usual.?

Nugent, meanwhile, opted not to celebrate in front of his former fans but team-mate Kasper Schmeichel ? who made a stunning save to deny Dave Kitson ? believes the striker should have milked it.

He said: ?I told him he should have celebrated.

?The crowd had been on his back all game but he said he had some good times down here.?


Source: http://www.dailystar.co.uk/football/view/222875/Portsmouth-1-Leicester-1-Apple-won-t-crumble/

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29 NovSusie_Castillo: I LOVE IT! #Patriots fans in Mexico! @PatriotsMexico

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