Beckham, Galaxy in possible farewell tour

By JOHN DUERDEN

updated 1:35 a.m. ET Nov. 29, 2011

SEOUL, South Korea - David Beckham will make what may be a farewell tour with the Los Angeles Galaxy over the coming week in a trio of Asian games that have spawned local discussion about ticket prices.

The Galaxy will play an Indonesian Select XI in Jakarta on Wednesday, followed by a meeting with the Philippines national team in Manila on Dec. 3, then a game against Australian club Melbourne Victory three days later.

Beckham is contractually obliged to appear in all three, and they may be his last appearances in a Galaxy shirt, with speculation about a move back to Europe.

The cost of tickets for the upcoming games had raised eyebrows in local markets, with fears they will be out of reach for poorer fans.

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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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MLS?season to start March 10

Major League Soccer's 2012 season will open March 10 with six games, and the expansion Montreal Impact will play their first MLS home game at Olympic Stadium on March 17.

Startling

Gary Speed, the Wales manager and former English Premier League star was found dead at his home at 42, an apparent suicide.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45472668/ns/sports-soccer/

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Familiar Turns Your Screensaver Into A Social Picture Frame

Screen Shot 2011-11-30 at 1.35.29 PMFamiliar, the artist formerly known as Picadee, launches in beta today. Familiar has an incredibly simple yet compelling value proposition, namely that billions of screens worth of untapped real estate are worth taking advantage of ... Familiar is basically a socially programmed screensaver (yes, screensaver) which allows you to share and display photos with contacts you select through Facebook and via email. In the beta version, all photos you upload to Familiar will turn into a collective screensaver for the people you've connected with, combining with photos that other users have shared in Familiar's 'The Shuffle' function.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ZAsoe2IAgGs/

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Italy borrowing cost soars as euro pressure mounts (Reuters)

BRUSSELS/MILAN (Reuters) ? Italy's borrowing costs hit a euro lifetime high of nearly 8 percent on Tuesday, taking the debt crisis to a new level of intensity hours before new prime minister Mario Monti was to meet euro zone finance ministers to set out his economic reform plans.

Two years into Europe's sovereign debt crisis, investors are fleeing the euro zone bond market, European banks are dumping government debt, deposits are draining from south European banks and a looming recession is aggravating the pain, fuelling doubts about the survival of the single currency.

Italy had to offer a record 7.89 percent yield to sell 3-year bonds, a stunning leap from the 4.93 percent it paid in late October, and 7.56 percent for 10-year bonds, compared with 6.06 percent at that time.

The yields were above levels at which Greece, Ireland and Portugal applied for international bailouts, but European stocks and bonds rallied in apparent relief at the strong demand, with the maximum 7.5 billion euros sold.

"In an ideal world, these yields ... would serve to give the Ecofin/Eurogroup a sense of added urgency, but this is a far from ideal world," said Peter Chatwell, rate strategist at Credit Agricole in London.

Monti was to outline his fiscal and economic reform plans to the 17-nation currency area later on Tuesday amid reports, officially denied in Rome and Washington, of a possible impending approach to the IMF.

The euro and European markets had earlier dipped on a report in business daily La Tribune that ratings agency Standard & Poor's would lower its outlook on France's AAA credit rating to negative within 10 days, dealing a potential body blow to the euro zone's ability to rescue heavily indebted countries.

The European Central Bank failed for the first time since May to fully offset 203.5 billion euros in euro zone government bond purchases. A Reuters poll of economists showed a 40 percent chance of the ECB stepping up bond-buying with freshly created money within six months.

The poll forecast a 60 percent chance of an ECB rate cut to 1.0 percent next week and a big majority of economists said they expect the central bank to announce new long-term liquidity tenders to help keep banks afloat at its December 8 meeting.

Italy has a 1.9 trillion euro debt pile - equivalent to 120 percent of national output - and needs to refinance some 340 billion euros of maturing debt next year with big redemptions starting in late January. It has promised to balance its budget in 2013 but Tuesday's auction suggested it will struggle to keep borrowing costs under control without international help.

Italian daily La Repubblica said EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn would tell euro zone ministers that Italy needs to introduce extra fiscal measures worth 11 billion euros immediately to meet its target.

In Brussels, Eurogroup ministers were expected to approve detailed plans to bolster their bailout fund to help prevent contagion in bond markets, under pressure from the United States and ratings agencies to stop the crisis spreading.

The report about France's credit rating came at a delicate time. Paris is the second largest guarantor of the EFSF bailout fund, and one of only six AAA states in the euro zone. S&P declined comment. French Finance Minister Francois Baroin, asked about the report, said the focus should not be solely on France.

The euro zone ministers are also set to release a long-delayed 8 billion euro loan installment for Greece, vital to stave off bankruptcy in December and buy time for negotiations on an uncertain second bailout program for Athens.

OBAMA PRESSES

Underlining the threat to tottering European economies, ratings agency Moody's warned it may downgrade the subordinated debt of 87 banks across 15 countries due to concerns that their governments would be too cash-strapped to bail them out.

The greatest number of ratings to be reviewed were in Spain, Italy, Austria and France, Moody's said.

U.S. President Barack Obama pressed European Union officials on Monday to act quickly and decisively to resolve their sovereign debt crisis, which the White House said was weighing on the American economy.

Poland's Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski made an appeal for Germany to show more leadership in the crisis.

"You know full well that nobody else can do it," he said in a speech in Berlin on Monday evening, referring to efforts to save Europe's monetary union.

"I will probably be the first Polish foreign minister in history to say so, but here it is: I fear German power less than I am beginning to fear German inactivity. You have become Europe's indispensable nation."

Eurogroup ministers were set to agree details of leveraging the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF) so it can help Italy or Spain should they need aid, although worsening market conditions mean it may miss the original 1 trillion euro target.

Documents obtained by Reuters on Sunday showed the detailed guidelines for the EFSF were ready for approval, opening the way for new operations and multiplying the fund's effective size.

The documents spell out rules for EFSF intervention on the primary and secondary bond markets, for extending precautionary credit lines to governments, leveraging its firepower and its investment and funding strategies.

The EFSF guidelines will clear the way for the 440 billion euro facility to attract cash from private and public investors to its co-investment funds in coming weeks.

The ECB, which is now buying bonds of Spain and Italy on the market to prevent their borrowing costs running out of control, has urged ministers to finalize the technical work quickly.

Officials said the leveraging mechanisms could become operational in January, but that may be too late.

With Germany opposed to the idea of the ECB providing liquidity to the EFSF or acting as a lender of last resort, the euro zone needs a way of calming markets.

The ECB shows no sign yet of responding to widespread calls to massively increase its bond-buying.

It bought 8.5 billion euros of euro-zone government debt in the latest week, at a time of acute turmoil, in line with its previous activity but well short of what economists say is necessary to turn market sentiment around.

One option EU sources said is being is explored is for euro system central banks to lend to the IMF to aid Italy and Spain.

Germany and France are pressing for coercive powers to reject euro zone members' budgets that breach EU rules, alarming some smaller nations who fear the plans by-pass mechanisms for ensuring equal treatment.

Berlin and Paris aim to outline proposals for a fiscal union before an EU summit on December 9 that is increasingly seen by investors as possibly the last chance to avert a breakdown of the single currency area.

(Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia in London, Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin, Cecile Lefort in Sydney; Writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Janet McBride)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/bs_nm/us_eurozone

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In the heart of Cygnus, NASA's Fermi reveals a cosmic-ray cocoon

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The constellation Cygnus, now visible in the western sky as twilight deepens after sunset, hosts one of our galaxy's richest-known stellar construction zones. Astronomers viewing the region at visible wavelengths see only hints of this spectacular activity thanks to a veil of nearby dust clouds forming the Great Rift, a dark lane that splits the Milky Way, a faint band of light marking our galaxy's central plane.

Located in the vicinity of the second-magnitude star Gamma Cygni, the star-forming region was named Cygnus X when it was discovered as a diffuse radio source by surveys in the 1950s. Now, a study using data from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope finds that the tumult of star birth and death in Cygnus X has managed to corral fast-moving particles called cosmic rays.

Cosmic rays are subatomic particles -- mainly protons -- that move through space at nearly the speed of light. In their journey across the galaxy, the particles are deflected by magnetic fields, which scramble their paths and make it impossible to backtrack the particles to their sources.

Yet when cosmic rays collide with interstellar gas, they produce gamma rays -- the most energetic and penetrating form of light -- that travel to us straight from the source. By tracing gamma-ray signals throughout the galaxy, Fermi's Large Area Telescope (LAT) is helping astronomers understand the sources of cosmic rays and how they're accelerated to such high speeds. In fact, this is one of the mission's key goals.

The galaxy's best candidate sites for cosmic-ray acceleration are the rapidly expanding shells of ionized gas and magnetic field associated with supernova explosions. For stars, mass is destiny, and the most massive ones -- known as types O and B -- live fast and die young.

They're also relatively rare because such extreme stars, with masses more than 40 times that of our sun and surface temperatures eight times hotter, exert tremendous influence on their surroundings. With intense ultraviolet radiation and powerful outflows known as stellar winds, the most massive stars rapidly disperse their natal gas clouds, naturally limiting the number of massive stars in any given region.

Which brings us back to Cygnus X. Located about 4,500 light-years away, this star factory is believed to contain enough raw material to make two million stars like our sun. Within it are many young star clusters and several sprawling groups of related O- and B-type stars, called OB associations. One, called Cygnus OB2, contains 65 O stars -- the most massive, luminous and hottest type -- and nearly 500 B stars.

Astronomers estimate that the association's total stellar mass is 30,000 times that of our sun, making Cygnus OB2 the largest object of its type within 6,500 light-years. And with ages of less than 5 million years, few of its most massive stars have lived long enough to exhaust their fuel and explode as supernovae.

Intense light and outflows from the monster stars in Cygnus OB2 and from several other nearby associations and star clusters have excavated vast amounts of gas from their vicinities. The stars reside within cavities filled with hot, thin gas surrounded by ridges of cool, dense gas where stars are now forming. It's within the hollowed-out zones that Fermi's LAT detects intense gamma-ray emission, according to a paper describing the findings that was published in the Nov. 25 edition of the journal Science.

"We are seeing young cosmic rays, with energies comparable to those produced by the most powerful particle accelerators on Earth. They have just started their galactic voyage, zig-zagging away from their accelerator and producing gamma rays when striking gas or starlight in the cavities," said co-author Luigi Tibaldo, a physicist at Padova University and the Italian National Institute of Nuclear Physics.

The energy of the gamma-ray emission, which is measured up to 100 billion electron volts by the LAT and even higher by ground-based gamma-ray detectors, indicates the extreme nature of the accelerated particles. (For comparison, the energy of visible light is between 2 and 3 electron volts.) The environment holds onto its cosmic rays despite their high energies by entangling them in turbulent magnetic fields created by the combined outflows of the region's numerous high-mass stars.

"These shockwaves stir the gas and twist and tangle the magnetic field in a cosmic-scale jacuzzi so the young cosmic rays, freshly ejected from their accelerators, remain trapped in this turmoil until they can leak into quieter interstellar regions, where they can stream more freely," said co-author Isabelle Grenier, an astrophysicist at Paris Diderot University and the Atomic Energy Commission in Saclay, France.

The well known Gamma Cygni supernova remnant ? so named for its proximity to the star -- also lies within this region; astronomers estimate its age at about 7,000 years. The Fermi team considers it possible that the supernova remnant spawned the cosmic rays trapped in the Cygnus X "cocoon," but they also suggest an alternative scenario where the particles became accelerated through repeated interaction with shockwaves produced inside the cocoon by powerful stellar winds.

"Whether the particles further gain or lose energy inside this cocoon needs to be investigated, but its existence shows that cosmic-ray history is much more eventful than a random walk away from their sources," Tibaldo added.

Fermi is providing a never-before-seen glimpse of the early life of cosmic rays, long before they diffuse into the galaxy at large. Astronomers know of a dozen stellar clusters at least as young and rich as Cygnus OB2, including the Arches and Quintuplet clusters near the galaxy's center. Energetic gamma rays are detected in the vicinity of several of them, so perhaps they also corral cosmic rays in their own high-energy cocoons.

###

NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center: http://www.nasa.gov/goddard

Thanks to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center 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/115532/In_the_heart_of_Cygnus__NASA_s_Fermi_reveals_a_cosmic_ray_cocoon

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Daniel Craig slams the Kardashians

Daniel Craig has taken aim at the Kardashian clan.

In an interview with Britain?s GQ magazine, as excerpted by The Daily Mail, the James Bond franchise star blasted the reality TV brood.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: The Many Men Of Kim Kardashian

?Look at the Kardashians, they?re worth millions. I don?t think they were that badly off to begin with, but now look at them,? he reportedly told the magazine.

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?You see that and you think, ?What, you mean all I have to do is behave like a f------ idiot on television and then you?ll pay me millions??

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?I?m not judging it ? well, I am obviously,? he reportedly added.

The actor, whose new film, ?The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo? opens on De. 21, blasted celebrities who share their personal lives and then plead for privacy.

Slideshow: Bond through the ages (on this page)

?I think there?s a lot to be said for keeping your own counsel,? he reportedly told British GQ. ?It?s not about being afraid to be public with your emotions or about who you are and what you stand for. But if you sell it off it?s gone.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Bond & Beyond: Fab Photos Of Brit Daniel Craig

?You can?t buy it back ? you can?t buy your privacy back. 'Ooh I want to be alone.? F--- you,? he reportedly continued. ?We?ve been in your living room. We were at your birth. You filmed it for us and showed us the placenta and now you want some privacy??

Video: Kim Kardashian may not have kids (on this page)

Craig also addressed his recent wedding to Rachel Weisz, his ?Dream House? co-star, whom he married in a private ceremony earlier this year.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Reality TV?s Brunette Bombshell Kim Kardashian!

?We didn?t want it f----- up, because that would be sharing a secret,? the actor explained of why the event wasn?t public knowledge.

He also stopped short of divulging many details about his relationship with his fellow actor-turned-wife.

?Look, I?m in love. I?m very happy. And that is as far as I?m prepared to go. Life is long, life goes wrong and I don?t want to say something now that might be thrown back later,? he reportedly added.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45492726/ns/today-entertainment/

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State cos may cut petrol prices by about one rupee - source (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? State refiners could cut retail prices of petrol by about one rupee a litre or 1.5 percent as softening Singapore spot gasoline prices have offset the impact of a declining rupee, an industry source said on Monday.

The companies cut petrol prices by about 3.2 percent earlier this month, the first reduction in retail prices in nearly three years and the first since prices were decontrolled in June 2010.

"As per current calculations, there is scope to cut the basic price of petrol by about 0.85 rupees a litre, including taxes it should be about one rupee. We have to see price movements in the next two days also before deciding the final impact," the official said on condition of anonymity.

Refiners discuss prices every two weeks and so far in this fortnight, spot FOB gasoline prices in Singapore have averaged $108.76 a barrel compared with $114.13 in the previous fortnight, according to Reuters calculations.

Oil companies had earlier this month cut petrol prices considering the rupee average at 49.30 to a dollar, an Indian Oil Corp press release said. Since then, Reuters data shows the rupee has declined to an average 51.78.

India's three state fuel retailing giants, IOC, Hindustan Petroleum Corp and Bharat Petroleum Corp tend to move their prices in tandem.

Petrol is nowhere near as widely used as diesel in India -- accounting for around 10 percent of fuel demand compared with about 40 percent for diesel -- but it is high-profile because it powers many of the cars owned by the growing middle class.

Gasoline has a 1.09 percent weighting in the inflation index and near double-digit consumer prices have provoked criticism of the government, which subsidises other fuels such as diesel and cooking gas.

The widening price gap between petrol and diesel has slowed the growth of petrol consumption, which has recently fallen behind that of diesel.

(Reporting by Nidhi Verma; Editing by Jo Winterbottom)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/india_nm/india607706

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BrickUnderground's 2011 Holiday Tipping Guide

BrickUnderground:

Just because tips are expected to be on the lighter side this year doesn't mean they will be any less fraught with the usual uncertainty, awkwardness, anxiety, and potential for repercussions.

BrickUnderground has compressed its annual attempt to answer your most pressing tipping questions into this tidy, hopefully comprehensive FAQ. And remember to take our two-click 2011 Holiday Tipping Poll?to find out what your neighbors are tipping.

Read the whole story: BrickUnderground

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/28/brickundergrounds-2011-ho_n_1116204.html

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18,000 vie for 500 seats: Voting begins in Congo

Voting began Monday with delays and setbacks in this massive nation pummeled by war for an election that could further consolidate the country's peace or drag Congo back into conflict.

Over the weekend, police lobbed tear gas at protesters. Opposition leaders and country experts had urged the government to delay the vote due to massive logistical problems, including the late delivery of voting materials, but the election proceeded anyway.

In a polling station in the capital, a poll worker cut orange police tape at the front of the door, marking the start of voting. But another polling station located in a nearby classroom inside the same Catholic school could not open because the ink used to mark the index fingers of voters hadn't been delivered.

The African country could be plunged into violence again if it is unable to agree on the results of the presidential and legislative election

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"We can't start like this. We're not even properly dressed," said Baudouin Lusagila, the head of a polling station whose team lacked the signature blue vests printed with the logo of the election commission. "Of course I'm worried. There is too much improvisation. Too many delays."

PhotoBlog: Amid delays and setbacks, voting begins in Congo

Eleven candidates are vying for president. The vote is the second since the end of Congo's last war and the first to be organized by the government instead of the international community. There were delays at every step in the preparation and as of Sunday, 12 of the 156 voting districts had not yet received ballots. At polling stations that opened on time, lines were small, possibly reflecting fear among voters.

The government wanted to hold the election before the first week of December, when President Joseph Kabila's five-year term expires. On the eve of the vote, Kabila urged citizens to go to the polls and warned of what was at stake.

"Our country, the Democratic Republic of Congo has come a long way, from a situation of war, and of all manner of conflict whose end result was suffering," he said in an address on state television. "Let us be careful not to return to where we have come from. In participating in the vote tomorrow, we are guaranteeing the stability and the future of our country."

In Central Congo, this is the first opportunity in half a century for millions of people to vote. Central Congo is a stronghold of leading opposition presidential candidate Etienne Tshisekedi, who boycotted the 2006 vote and urged his supporters not to register to vote. Central Congo historically has complained of being marginalized, and seceded briefly after independence from Belgium in 1960.

More than 18,000 candidates are competing for the 500 seats in parliament. Posters of candidates featured their number on the ballot, which is as thick as a weekend supplement in a major newspaper. A third of Congolese adults can't read, a rate that is even higher among women, and many were showing up with slips of paper containing the number of their candidate.

Errors were quickly discovered on the ballot with candidate 30 missing altogether. Mboyo Ilombe, candidate 1151, appeared in the wrong spot, between 438 and 439.

'Prejudice the vote'
Inside a polling station at the Matonge High School in Kinshasa, a man who had come to vote for Ilombe came out from behind the voting screen to complain. "1151 is not there," he told the poll workers, handing them the thick ballot. They perused it and agreed with him, then shrugged their shoulders and said they didn't know what to do.

He went back behind the cardboard voting screen, and spent several minutes perusing the ballot, using the light on his cell phone to illuminate the names and photographs of politicians. "I found it," he called out, after discovering his candidate in the wrong place.

"This is going to prejudice the vote for this candidate," said the head of the polling station, Kalamu Wene. "What can we do? We don't have instructions on how to deal with this."

PhotoBlog: Two dead in Congo pre-election violence

The early light voter turnout Monday was a contrast with 2006, when people trudged in the dark to line up outside polling stations before dawn. Long queues built up even before balloting stations opened. About 70 percent of registered voters participated in that election.

The United Nations organized those elections and newly trained police, U.N. peacekeepers and African and European rapid reaction forces provided security. In this vote, Kabila belatedly asked South African troops to help distribute ballot papers.

In 2006, all leading presidential candidates were former warlords commanding armed militias. All those have been integrated into the national army, though militias and Ugandan and Rwandan rebels continue to wreak havoc in the east of the country.

Associated Press writer Saleh Mwanamilongo in Kinshasa, Congo contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45459378/ns/world_news-africa/

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American Airlines bankruptcy: 'Business as usual' for passengers ...

Aa

The parent company for American Airlines, the nation's third largest carrier, filed for bankruptcy, citing high labor costs and a volatile economy.

American Airlines, the largest carrier at Los Angeles International Airport, sought to assure passengers that the filing would not affect their travel plans, saying all tickets, reservations and reward points would be honored.

"American Airlines remains open for business," said Craig Kreeger, the airline's vice president for customer experience. "It's business as usual."

Until it filed for Chapter 11 protection Tuesday, AMR Corp. represented the last major network carrier in the U.S. to avoid bankruptcy in the tumultuous decade since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Many of American Airlines' competitors that renegotiated labor contracts and debts in the bankruptcy process have reported strong profit margins in the past few years.

But AMR posted a net loss of $884 million in the nine months that ended Sept. 30, more than double the loss of the prior year's nine-month period.

The board of directors of AMR Corp. also announced Tuesday that it had appointed Thomas W. Horton chairman and chief executive officer of the company, succeeding Gerard Arpey, who informed the board of his plans to retire.

Arpey, 53, was chief executive officer since 2003 and chairman since 2004.

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Photo: An American Airlines plane at Los Angeles International Airport. Credit: Los Angeles Times

?

Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2011/11/american-airlines-says-business-as-usual-for-passengers-during-bankruptcy.html

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