Prime Time

Ok, so the Rangers actually won a game and tonight we’re going to have to find something to watch other than Bush pere et filles throwing up out the ceremonial first pitch which you know Faux and Fiends will drag out as long as they can.  We’ll talk more about that later.

In the mean time the Giants are still in the catbird seat, they don’t have to win a single game in Arlington so it’s all gravy.  Both teams have decided to pitch their Aces only twice, not on short rest (a big mistake I think), so tonight’s matchup is Bumgarner and Hunter.  They are, at best, the fourth best pitchers on each team.  I maintain my prediction of a Pitchers’ Duel because it doesn’t cost me anything except my pride and surely one will turn up some time.  Besides, I don’t want to raise your expectations of excitement.  Baseball is a game of patience and one of the things that makes the games longer during the Playoffs is that the batters start doing what they should be doing all season- taking more pitches.

So don’t worry about answering your door for the Trick or Treaters, you probably won’t be missing anything important.

Oh, things you can watch while the Bushes are on camera, there are the Steelers @ the Who Dats and The Amazing Race, also-

Later-

I always figured it was talent made a man big, you know, if I was the best at something. I mean, we’re the guys they come to see. Without us, there ain’t a ballgame. Yeah, but look at who’s holding the money and look at who’s facing a jail cell. Talent don’t mean nothing. And where’s Comiskey and Sullivan, Attell, Rothstein? Out in the back room cutting up profits, that’s where. That’s the damn conspiracy.

Look, champ. I know guys like that. I grew up with them. I was the fat kid they wouldn’t let play. “Sit down, fat boy”. That’s what they’d say “Sit down, maybe you’ll learn something.” Well, I learned something alright. Pretty soon, I owned the game, and those guys I grew up with come to me with their hats in their hands. Tell me, champ, all those years of puggin’, how much money did you make?

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Istanbul suicide blast injures 32

AFP

Sun Oct 31, 1:37 pm ET

ISTANBUL (AFP) – A suicide bomb ripped through crowds of shoppers and cafe-goers in the heart of Istanbul on Sunday, injuring 32 people as a ceasefire by the separatist PKK came to an end.

The blast targetted riot police patrolling the busy Taksim Square in the centre of Turkey’s economic capital, police chief Huseyin Capkin said.

“We think it was a suicide attack,” he said, adding that the bomb had gone off before the bomber reached his target.

2 Rousseff looks likely to become Brazil’s first woman president

by Aldo Gamboa, AFP

58 mins ago

BRASILIA (AFP) – Voting stations began to close across Brazil Sunday in a runoff election expected to make Dilma Rousseff — outgoing leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s righthand woman and protegee — the country’s first woman president.

“I am confident in the results of today’s vote,” Rousseff, 62, told reporters as she cast her ballot in her southern home city of Porto Alegre.

But her rival, Jose Serra, the former state governor of Sao Paulo, insisted the results would only be known when the last polls closed at 2100 GMT.

3 Ivorians flock to polls in landmark election

by Thomas Morfin, AFP

46 mins ago

ABIDJAN (AFP) – Ivorians flocked to the polls in the country’s first presidential election in a decade on Sunday, aiming to end years of political turmoil in the divided former West African powerhouse.

Long lines of voters snaked around polling stations even before they opened in the main city Abidjan and in Bouake, the northern stronghold of former rebel forces, as people openly relished the opportunity to vote.

In some areas in Abidjan, the country’s biggest city and home to a third of the nearly six million electorate, polling stations were late in opening and voters complained about a lack of transport but the mood remained buoyant. Polls closed about 5:00 pm (1700 GMT).

4 China’s Wen says World Expo good for reform

by D’Arcy Doran, AFP

Sun Oct 31, 10:19 am ET

SHANGHAI (AFP) – Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Sunday that Shanghai’s World Expo had given the fast-developing country the confidence to keep pushing reform, as visitors flooded the exhibition on its final day.

More than 73 million people — a record for the extravaganza — visited displays by 189 countries during the half-year culture and technology showcase that brought snapshots of the world to ordinary Chinese.

“The success of the Expo has strengthened China’s confidence and resolve to pursue reform and opening up,” Wen told a forum at the Expo attended by Chinese and international officials on the final day.

5 ICC dismisses Pakistan cricketers’ appeal

by Shahid Hashmi, AFP

Sun Oct 31, 7:21 am ET

DUBAI (AFP) – The International Cricket Council (ICC) on Sunday rejected the appeals of Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt and Mohammad Aamer against suspensions for spot-fixing.

The two, along with fast bowler Mohammad Asif, were provisionally suspended by the ICC over allegations they were involved in spot-fixing during Pakistan’s summer tour of England.

All three appealed, but Asif later withdrew his application.

6 Suicide bomber wounds 32 in Istanbul’s main square

By Mehmet Caliskan, Reuters

Sun Oct 31, 12:07 pm ET

Istanbul (Reuters) – A suicide bomber wounded 32 people in an attack targeting Turkish police in Istanbul’s main square Sunday, an area teaming with tourists and shoppers.

No organization has claimed responsibility, officials said, though the city has been targeted in the past by Kurdish separatist militants and al Qaeda, as well as militants from Turkey’s far-left.

Istanbul police chief Huseyin Capkin said a man had approached police stationed at the square before blowing himself up. Television footage immediately after the explosion appeared to show police firing warning shots and people fleeing in panic.

7 Rousseff likely to win as booming Brazil votes

By Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Peter Murphy, Reuters

1 hr 5 mins ago

BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazilians voted for president on Sunday and were likely to hand victory to the ruling party’s Dilma Rousseff, who has vowed to build on an unprecedented run of prosperity that has lifted millions from poverty and made Brazil a darling of foreign investors.

Rousseff, a left-leaning former energy minister, enjoyed a double-digit lead over her centrist opponent, Jose Serra of the PSDB party, in all major polls leading up to the runoff vote.

An election-day exit poll by Ibope polling firm showed Rousseff with 57 percent of the vote compared to 43 percent for Serra, Folha de S.Paulo newspaper said on its website. It did not say it how it obtained the information.

8 Comedians’ pre-election rally throngs Washington

By Mark Hosenball, Reuters

Sat Oct 30, 10:11 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Two of America’s best-known television comedians drew tens of thousands of people to a rally on Saturday that was part variety show, part Halloween celebration and part political rally to call for common sense before Tuesday’s congressional elections.

Satirists Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, hosts of late-night cable TV shows, poked fun at politicians and media for stoking partisan fervor.

Performing in front of the Capitol building, the pair were joined by crooner Tony Bennett, rocker Ozzy Osbourne, singer Sheryl Crow, and British musician Yusuf Islam, formerly known as Cat Stevens, who was refused entry to the United States in 2004 for alleged ties to Islamic extremism.

9 Obama warns of policy rollback if Republicans win

By Jeff Mason, Reuters

Sun Oct 31, 2:44 am ET

CHICAGO (Reuters) – President Barack Obama warned Saturday that Republicans could roll back his agenda if they prevail in Tuesday’s congressional elections as he sought to rally Democrats in a final campaign push.

Making his way through a four-state tour, Obama implored Democratic voters to show up in large numbers. Polls show his party is likely to lose control of the House of Representatives to the Republicans and see its Senate majority weakened.

“Unless each and every one of you turn out and get your friends to turn out and get your families to turn out then we could fall short and all the progress that we’ve made over the last couple of years can be rolled back,” Obama told cheering campaign volunteers at his first stop in Philadelphia.

10 Special Report: For GM IPO, the government is back-seat driver

By Clare Baldwin, Soyoung Kim and Kevin Krolicki, Reuters

Sun Oct 31, 9:09 am ET

NEW YORK/DETROIT (Reuters) – Steve Girsky remembers sitting at his kitchen table in New York on the eve of President Barack Obama’s election when he realized that General Motors was going to run out of cash.

“I put down my pad,” said Girsky, a banker brought in by the United Auto Workers union to report on GM’s finances. “I turned to my wife and said, ‘Remember this night. This is the night we figured out GM’s going out of business.'”

Two weeks later, the same realization was sinking in across America as the chief executives of GM, Ford and Chrysler — and the head of the UAW — flew to Washington to ask Congress for an unprecedented bailout. By November 2008, GM was on a path to become “Government Motors,” with the U.S. Treasury its majority shareholder.

11 Obama makes last campaign stop in pivotal Ohio

By CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press

6 mins ago

CLEVELAND – President Barack Obama made Ohio his final campaign stop Sunday in the tumultuous midterm elections, trying to help hard-pressed Democrats in a state that could prove crucial to his fortunes in two years.

Republicans said it was too little and too late, confident their party will pick up more than 40 House seats and regain the majority they lost four years ago. Republican control of the Senate seems less likely, although they expect to gain several seats there, as well as numerous governors’ seats.

Obama, bracing for perhaps one of the biggest midterm setbacks in recent times, made a four-state weekend sprint to help embattled Democrats as best he can. He said their chances are good if their supporters turn out heavily on Tuesday.

12 Deal or punt decision on Bush tax cuts is Obama’s

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press

2 hrs 29 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Will Congress extend the Bush tax cuts into 2011 in the weeks after Tuesday’s election or let the automatic increase start cutting into most people’s paychecks early next year?

It’s really pretty much up to President Barack Obama.

Despite the punishment his fellow Democrats are expected to take from voters, Obama has shown no sign of retreating from his insistence that families and small businesses with incomes above $250,000 return to higher, Bill Clinton-era tax levels starting Jan. 1.

13 Contraception could be free under health care law

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 2:04 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Fifty years after the pill, another birth control revolution may be on the horizon: free contraception for women in the U.S., thanks to the new health care law.

That could start a shift toward more reliable – and expensive – forms of birth control that are gaining acceptance in other developed countries.

But first, look for a fight over social mores.

14 Taliban hold secret talks with Afghan president

By KATHY GANNON, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 1:54 pm ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – Three Taliban figures met secretly with Afghanistan’s president two weeks ago in an effort by the Afghan government to weaken the U.S.-led coalition’s most vicious enemy, a powerful al-Qaida linked network that straddles the border region with Pakistan.

A former Afghan official said the meeting in Kabul included an ex-Taliban governor, Maulvi Abdul Kabir. He comes from the same Zadran tribe as the leaders of the Haqqani network, an autonomous wing of the Taliban responsible for many attacks against U.S. and Afghan forces, the former official said over the weekend.

U.S. and Afghan officials hope that if Kabir agrees to quit the insurgency, it could split the Zadran tribe and undercut the pool of recruits from which the Haqqanis currently draw fighters. But it was unclear whether any progress toward that end was made during the talks.

15 At least 32 wounded in Istanbul suicide bombing

By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 1:37 pm ET

ISTANBUL – A suicide bomber blew himself up Sunday beside a police vehicle in a major Istanbul square near tourist hotels and a bus terminal, wounding 32 people, including 15 policemen.

The attack in Taksim Square, which was followed by police gunfire and sent hundreds of panicked people racing for cover, coincided with the possible end of a unilateral cease-fire by Kurdish rebels, but there was no immediate claim of responsibility. Turkey, a NATO ally that has deployed troops in a noncombat role in Afghanistan, is also home to cells of radical leftists and Islamic militants.

Istanbul police chief Huseyin Capkin said the bomber tried but failed to get into a parked police van and detonated the bomb just outside the vehicle, blowing himself to pieces. Riot police are routinely stationed at Taksim, a popular spot for street demonstrations that abuts a major pedestrian walkway whose shops and restaurants are usually packed.

16 Only 2 survivors remain from Nazi camp Treblinka

By ARON HELLER, Associated Press

1 hr 2 mins ago

BAT YAM, Israel – They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in occupied Poland.

Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, are devoting their final years to trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people systematically murdered in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. Almost all of them were Jews.

Only 67 people are known to have survived the camp, fleeing in a brazen revolt shortly before Treblinka was destroyed. Following the recent death of a prominent chronicler, Israel’s national Holocaust memorial says the two Israeli men are now the final living link to one of the most notorious death camps in human history.

17 New dioxin rules might force more cleanups

By JOHN FLESHER, AP Environmental Writer

Sun Oct 31, 11:34 am ET

MIDLAND, Mich. – The government has spent many millions of dollars in recent decades cleaning up sites contaminated with dioxin and, in extreme cases, relocating residents of entire neighborhoods tainted by the toxin.

But tough new pollution standards proposed by the Obama administration could require additional dioxin cleanups at scores of abandoned factories, military bases, landfills and other locations declared safe years ago, officials say.

If the guidelines receive final approval, federal and state officials will examine sites with known dioxin contamination to identify those needing work and what the work will cost. Among those expected to be reviewed are notorious places such as the former village of Times Beach, Mo., where about 2,000 people were relocated in the 1980s after dioxin-laced waste oil was sprayed on roads to control dust.

18 Lone Star State gets Rangers back in World Series

By BEN WALKER, AP Baseball Writer

Sun Oct 31, 7:42 am ET

ARLINGTON, Texas – Back in Texas. Back in the World Series.

The Rangers, behind emerging October ace Colby Lewis, came home and threw themselves the biggest tailgate party of them all, beating San Francisco 4-2 on Saturday night and cutting the Giants’ Series edge to 2-1.

Longhorns, Aggies, Horned Frogs – sorry. This was a night to celebrate baseball.

19 Paul Reubens’ Pee-wee is enjoying his second act

By MARK KENNEDY, AP Drama Writer

Sun Oct 31, 7:11 am ET

NEW YORK – The red bow tie is back. The white chunky loafers are, too. So is that too-tight gray suit.

The Secret Word today is: Comeback. Pee-wee has returned from exile.

Paul Reubens, who virtually abandoned the cult character he created nearly two decades ago following scandal, is making his Broadway debut with a reworking of the same theatrical show that started Pee-wee’s career in the late 1980s.

20 Nev. Senate race converges in state capital

By SANDRA CHEREB, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 31, 7:40 am ET

CARSON CITY, Nev. – Nevada’s hotly contested Senate race had rivals Harry Reid and Sharron Angle serving flapjacks, petting dogs and shaking hands as they worked for last-minute votes during Nevada’s statehood celebration.

The Nevada Day Parade, part of three-day state holiday, is one politicians rarely miss, especially in an election year.

Reid, the Democratic majority leader, strolled the back streets before the festivities began Saturday, talking to entrants as they assembled. He watched the parade from along Carson City’s main drag.

21 Brazil TV exit poll: Rousseff next president

Associated Press

25 mins ago

SAO PAULO – A Brazilian television station’s exit poll indicates ruling-party candidate Dilma Rousseff will win the presidency.

The Globo television network’s poll indicates that Rousseff leading centrist rival Jose Serra, 58 percent to 42 percent.

The poll by the Ibope institute interviewed 54,400 people across Brazil and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percent.

22 Fox, Cablevision reach deal to end NY blackout

By TOM McELROY, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 5:15 am ET

NEW YORK – Fox and Cablevision reached an agreement Saturday that will restore programming to more than 3 million New York-area subscribers who have been without some of their favorite shows and baseball playoff games for two weeks.

Signals for all stations and cable channels were restored before the first pitch of Game 3 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and San Francisco Giants, said Fox, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

“In the absence of any meaningful action from the FCC, Cablevision has agreed to pay Fox an unfair price for multiple channels of its programming including many in which our customers have little or no interest,” Cablevision said.

23 In election’s shadow, rally draws laughs, activism

By HOPE YEN and CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 5:16 am ET

WASHINGTON – In the shadow of the Capitol and the election, comedians Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert entertained a huge throng Saturday at a “sanity” rally poking fun at the nation’s ill-tempered politics, fear-mongers and doomsayers.

“We live now in hard times,” Stewart said after all the shtick. “Not end times.”

Part comedy show, part pep talk, the rally drew together tens of thousands stretched across an expanse of the National Mall, a festive congregation of the goofy and the politically disenchanted. People carried signs merrily protesting the existence of protest signs. Some dressed like bananas, wizards, Martians and Uncle Sam.

24 With images of civil rights, blacks urged to vote

By ERRIN HAINES, Associated Press

12 mins ago

ATLANTA – On the Sunday before Election Day, preachers told black churchgoers across the country to get out and vote – and defy predictions that they’ll be complacent or uninterested in a year that President Barack Obama isn’t on the ballot.

Tying the vote to nostalgia and obligation, black pastors invoked the civil rights movement and Obama’s historic 2008 victory. At Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta – the spiritual home of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. – the Rev. Raphael G. Warnock warned attendees that not voting would be nothing short of a sin.

“Go to the polls Tuesday in the name of our ancestors,” Warnock said to cheering listeners who rose to their feet. “Know that your ballot is a blood-stained ballot. This is a sacred obligation.”

25 Democrats see hope for regaining Senate seat in AK

By BECKY BOHRER, Associated Press

2 hrs 2 mins ago

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Democrats believe they can secure their first all-Democratic Senate delegation from Alaska in 40 years, with their once-overlooked nominee making a late charge and claiming the momentum is in his favor in a heated three-way contest.

One major showing of faith: The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has poured more than $160,000 into the race, most of that late as candidate Scott McAdams has worked to convince independents and on-the-fence Democrats that he can beat U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, and GOP primary winner and tea party favorite Joe Miller. Murkowski is running as a write-in candidate.

“We believe that Scott McAdams actually has a real chance of winning this race. Mr. Miller has obviously plummeted because it’s about ideology versus about Alaska,” Sen. Robert Menendez, of New Jersey, said Sunday on ABC.

26 Generation gap divides troops on gays in military

By KRISTIN M. HALL and TOM BREEN, Associated Press

Sun Oct 31, 12:20 pm ET

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – If you want to know what a member of the armed forces thinks about repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell,” you could start by asking how old they are.

Generational differences appear to play a prominent role in whether soldiers, airmen, Marines and sailors are worried about repealing the policy that has barred gays from serving openly since 1993 but faces a possible court-ordered end. Generation may also influence how a change is implemented, if the courts or Congress ultimately lift the ban.

“Younger soldiers wouldn’t have a problem with it, but older soldiers are the ones that enforce Army regulations,” noted Jason Ashley, 43, a former Army first sergeant who served with the 101st Airborne Division based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

Rant of the Week: Keith Olbermann: If the Tea Party wins, America loses

Sadly, we have come to this: voting for the lesser of two evils.

Transcript here

Get Out and VOTE!

“I’m still hanging on to this belief that when people go in that booth — they’re going to be mad at Obama, they’re going to be mad at the Democrats, you know, things haven’t changed, people still aren’t working, they’ve been out of work for two years, their house is getting foreclosed — but when they’re in that booth and the curtain closes and they look at that Republican name, I think a lot of people are just gonna go, ‘oyyyyy,’ I remember what those eight years were like.”

Peter Rothberg at The Nation point out that “ballots are confusing”.  You can bet they are. New York just began using paper ballots that are scanned. The ballot New Yorkers will be handed on Tuesday will have TWO SIDES, one with the candidates and the other with the ballot initiatives. There was a great deal of criticism in September when this system was introduced in the primary. I expect there will be even more gnashing of teeth this Tuesday. Most voters are resistant to change no matter who we may for.

Anyway Mr. Rothberg kindly provides link to a web site “which offers details on candidates, locations of polling places, relevant local laws and what your rights are when in case your vote is challenged.” Use them and help you neighbors and friends who might not be so computer savvy and then offer to take them to VOTE on Tuesday Nov. 2.

Do-It-Yourself Local Voter Guides

On This Day in History: October 31

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

October 31 is the 304th day of the year (305th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 61 days remaining until the end of the year.

This day is internationally known as Halloween, also known as All Hallow’s Eve, Reformation Day, and Day of the Dead for the Philippines

On this day in 1926, Harry Houdini, the most celebrated magician and escape artist of the 20th century, dies of peritonitis in a Detroit hospital.

Houdini was born Erik Weisz in Budapest in 1874, the son of a rabbi. At a young age, he immigrated with his family to Appleton, Wisconsin, and soon demonstrated a natural acrobatic ability and an extraordinary skill at picking locks.

He went on his first international tour in 1900 and performed all over Europe to great acclaim. In executing his escapes, he relied on strength, dexterity, and concentration-not trickery-and was a great showman.

In 1908, Houdini began performing more dangerous and dramatic escapes. In a favorite act, he was bound and then locked in an ironbound chest that was dropped into a water tank or thrown off a boat. In another, he was heavily bound and then suspended upside down in a glass-walled water tank. Other acts featured Houdini being hung from a skyscraper in a straitjacket, or bound and buried-without a coffin-under six feet of dirt.

In his later years, Houdini campaigned against mediums, mind readers, fakirs, and others who claimed supernatural talents but depended on tricks. At the same time, he was deeply interested in spiritualism and made a pact with his wife and friends that the first to die was to try and communicate with the world of reality from the spirit world.

Eyewitnesses to an incident in Montreal gave rise to speculation that Houdini’s death was caused by a McGill University student, J. Gordon Whitehead, who delivered multiple blows to Houdini’s abdomen to test Houdini’s claim that he was able to take any blow to the body above the waist without injury.

The eyewitnesses, students named Jacques Price and Sam Smilovitz (sometimes called Jack Price and Sam Smiley), proferred accounts of the incident that generally corroborated one another. The following is Price’s description of events:

   Houdini was reclining on his couch after his performance, having an art student sketch him. When Whitehead came in and asked if it was true that Houdini could take any blow to the stomach, Houdini replied groggily in the affirmative. In this instance, he was hit three times before Houdini could tighten up his stomach muscles to avoid serious injury. Whitehead reportedly continued hitting Houdini several more times and Houdini acted as though he were in some pain.

Houdini reportedly stated that if he had time to prepare himself properly he would have been in a better position to take the blows. He had apparently been suffering from appendicitis for several days prior and yet refused medical treatment. His appendix would likely have burst on its own without the trauma. Although in serious pain, Houdini continued to travel without seeking medical attention.

When Houdini arrived at the Garrick Theater in Detroit, Michigan on October 24, 1926, for what would be his last performance, he had a fever of 104 F (40 C). Despite a diagnosis of acute appendicitis, Houdini took the stage. He was reported to have passed out during the show, but was revived and continued. Afterwards, he was hospitalized at Detroit’s Grace Hospital.

Houdini died of peritonitis from a ruptured appendix at 1:26 p.m. in Room 401 on October 31, aged 52.

After taking statements from Price and Smilovitz, Houdini’s insurance company concluded that the death was due to the dressing-room incident and paid double indemnity.

Houdini’s funeral was held on November 4, 1926 in New York, with more than 2,000 mourners in attendance. He was interred in the Machpelah Cemetery in Queens, New York, with the crest of the Society of American Magicians inscribed on his gravesite. To this day the Society holds a broken wand ceremony at the grave site in November. Houdini’s widow, Bess, died on February 11, 1943, aged 67, in Needles, California. She had expressed a wish to be buried next to him but instead was interred at the Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Westchester, New York, as her Catholic family refused to allow her to be buried in a Jewish cemetery out of concern for her soul.

 475 – Romulus Augustulus is proclaimed Western Roman Emperor.

1517 – Protestant Reformation: Martin Luther posts his 95 theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg.

1587 – Leiden University Library opens its doors after its founding in 1575.

1822 – Emperor Agustin de Iturbide attempts to dissolve the Mexican Empire.

1861 – American Civil War: Citing failing health, Union General Winfield Scott resigns as Commander of the United States Army.

1863 – The Maori Wars resumes as British forces in New Zealand led by General Duncan Cameron begin their Invasion of the Waikato.

1864 – Nevada is admitted as the 36th U.S. state.

1876 – A monster cyclone ravages India, resulting in over 200,000 deaths.

1913 – Dedication of the Lincoln Highway, the first automobile road across United States.

1913 – The Indianapolis Street Car Strike and subsequent riot begins.

1917 – World War I: Battle of Beersheba – “last successful cavalry charge in history”.

1918 – Banat Republic is founded

1923 – The first of 160 consecutive days of 100 degrees at Marble Bar, Australia.

1924 – World Savings Day is announced in Milan, Italy by the Members of the Association at the 1st International Savings Bank Congress (World Society of Savings Banks).

1926 – Magician Harry Houdini dies of gangrene and peritonitis that developed after his appendix ruptured.

1938 – Great Depression: In an effort to restore investor confidence, the New York Stock Exchange unveils a fifteen-point program aimed to upgrade protection for the investing public.

1940 – World War II: The Battle of Britain ends – the United Kingdom prevents a German invasion.

1941 – After 14 years of work, Mount Rushmore is completed.

1941 – World War II: The destroyer USS Reuben James is torpedoed by a German U-boat near Iceland, killing more than 100 United States Navy sailors. It is the first U.S. Navy vessel sunk by enemy action in WWII.

1941 – A fire in a clothing factory in Huddersfield, England kills 49

1943 – World War II: An F4U Corsair accomplishes the first successful radar-guided interception.

1954 – Algerian War of Independence: The Algerian National Liberation Front begins a revolt against French rule.

1956 – Suez Crisis: The United Kingdom and France begin bombing Egypt to force the reopening of the Suez Canal.

1959 – Lee Harvey Oswald attempts to renounce his American citizenship at the US Embassy in Moscow, USSR.

1961 – In the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin’s body is removed from Lenin’s Tomb.

1963 – An explosion at the Indiana State Fair Coliseum (now Pepsi Coliseum) in Indianapolis kills 74 people during an ice skating show. The explosion also injures 400. A faulty propane tank connection in a concession stand is blamed.

1968 – Vietnam War October surprise: Citing progress with the Paris peace talks, US President Lyndon B. Johnson announces to the nation that he has ordered a complete cessation of “all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam” effective November 1.

1973 – Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape. Three Provisional Irish Republican Army members escape from Mountjoy Prison, Dublin, Republic of Ireland aboard a hijacked helicopter that lands in the exercise yard.

1984 – Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is assassinated by two security guards. Riots soon break out in New Delhi and nearly 10,000 Sikhs are killed.

1986 – The 5th congress of the Communist Party of Sweden is inaugurated. During the course of the congress the party name is changed to the Solidarity Party and the party ceases to be a communist party.

1994 – An American Eagle ATR-72 crashes in Roselawn, Indiana, after circling in icy weather, killing 68 passengers and crew.

1996 – A Fokker F100 operating as TAM Transportes Aereos Regionais Flight 402 crashes into several houses in Sao Paulo, Brazil killing 98 including 2 on the ground.

1997 – 19-year-old British au pair Louise Woodward, convicted by a Cambridge, Massachusetts, jury of second-degree murder the day before, is sentenced to life in prison.

1998 – Iraq disarmament crisis begins: Iraq announces it would no longer cooperate with United Nations weapons inspectors.

1999 – EgyptAir Flight 990 traveling from New York City to Cairo crashes off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts, killing all 217 on-board.

1999 – Yachtsman Jesse Martin returns to Melbourne after 11 months of circumnavigating the world, solo, non-stop and unassisted.

2000 – A Singapore Airlines Boeing 747-400 operating as Flight 006 collides with construction equipment upon takeoff in Taipei, Taiwan killing 79 passengers and four crew members.

2000 – A chartered Antonov An-26 explodes after takeoff in Northern Angola killing 50.

2000 – Soyuz TM-31 launches, carrying the first resident crew to the International Space Station. The ISS has been continuously crewed since.

2002 – A federal grand jury in Houston, Texas indicts former Enron Corp. chief financial officer Andrew Fastow on 78 counts of wire fraud, money laundering, conspiracy and obstruction of justice related to the collapse of his ex-employer.

2003 – A bankruptcy court approves MCI’s reorganization plans, essentially clearing the telecommunications company to exit bankruptcy.

2003 – Mahathir bin Mohamad resigns as Prime Minister of Malaysia and is replaced by Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, marking an end to Mahathir’s 22 years in power.

The Week In Review 10/24 – 30

259 Stories served.  37 per day.

This is actually the hardest diary to execute, and yet perhaps the most valuable because it lets you track story trends over time.  It should be a Sunday morning feature.

Economy- 40

Sunday 10/24 3

Monday 10/25 5

Tuesday 10/26 4

Wednesday 10/27 8

Thursday 10/28 9

Friday 10/29 9

Saturday 10/30 2

Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Iran- 25

Sunday 10/24 10

Monday 10/25 8

Tuesday 10/26 3

Wednesday 10/27 4

International- 25

Sunday 10/24 6

Monday 10/25 1

Wednesday 10/27 1

Thursday 10/28 5

Friday 10/29 6

Saturday 10/30 6

Hatian Cholera Outbreak- 17

Sunday 10/24 4

Monday 10/25 6

Tuesday 10/26 3

Wednesday 10/27 1

Thursday 10/28 1

Friday 10/29 1

Saturday 10/30 1

National- 107

Sunday 10/24 10

Monday 10/25 16

Tuesday 10/26 17

Wednesday 10/27 15

Thursday 10/28 25

Friday 10/29 10

Saturday 10/30 14

Gulf Oil Blowout Disaster- 5

Monday 10/25 2

Thursday 10/28 1

Friday 10/29 2

Science- 17

Sunday 10/24 2

Monday 10/25 2

Tuesday 10/26 4

Wednesday 10/27 3

Thursday 10/28 3

Friday 10/29 1

Saturday 10/30 2

Sports- 19

Sunday 10/24 5

Monday 10/25 1

Tuesday 10/26 2

Wednesday 10/27 4

Thursday 10/28 3

Friday 10/29 2

Saturday 10/30 2

Arts/Fashion- 4

Monday 10/25 2

Wednesday 10/27 1

Saturday 10/30 1

Punting the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition

Punting the Punditsis an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

These programs all look like the “Trick or Treat” editions. Sadly, it appears to be all tricks,

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with Christiane Amanpour: This Sunday, Ms. Amanpour will look at the last ABC News/Washington Post poll before Tuesday’s election. She will be joined by Republican campaign chairman Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Democratic campaign chairman Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J.

Ms. Amanpour will report on her experience at Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear”.

Joining her Round Table discussion is Dick Armey, former House majority leader and current chairman of Freedom Works, along with George Will, Cokie Roberts, Democratic strategist Donna Brazile and ABC News’ Senior Congressional Correspondent Jonathan Karl. They will debate the possible consequences of the Tuesday election

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer: Joining Mr. Scheiffer this Sunday will be Rep. Pete King (R-N.Y.), Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-Minn.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), and Gov. Ed Rendell (D-Pa.).

I think we can all know what Pete King will be ranting about….TERROR!!!

The Chris Matthews Show: Mr. Matthews guest will be Norah O’Donnell, MSNBC Chief Washington Correspondent, John Heilemann, New York Magazine National Political Correspondent, Howard Fineman, Newsweek

Senior Washington Correspondent and Helene Cooper, The New York Times White House Correspondent.

The questions for discussion:

How Many Senate Seats Will Republicans Pick Up Tuesday?

Will Barack Obama Do The “Clintonian Backflip” That Republican Leaders In Congress Are Demanding?

Meet the Press with David Gregory: Democratic National Committee Chairman Former Gov. Tim Kaine (VA) and Republican Governors Association Chairman Gov. Haley Barbour (MS) will join Mr. Gregory for The final arguments for what’s at stake in this midterm election.

NBC News’ Tom Brokaw, Time Magazine’s Mark Halperin, NPR’s Michele Norris, National Journal’s Charlie Cook, and NBC News’ Chuck Todd will comprise the Round Table for a look at the political landscape.

State of the Union with Candy Crowley: A special edition live from CNN’s Election center in New York. It’s the homestretch in the midterm elections and both sides are making their final push to Election Day. Republicans seem set to make great gains, but will it be enough to shift the balance of power in Congress? Joining us, the Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele on the future of the Republican Party.

Then, the view from the other side of the aisle. Majority Whip Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) on the Democratic strategy headed into Tuesday’s election. What will it mean for the Democratic agenda in the next Congress?

Finally, a look at some of the hottest races and what to expect on Election Day. What are the most important issues as voters head to the polls? We’ll talk to former long term Senator and presidential candidate Bob Kerrey (D) and CNN Political Contributor Bill Bennett.

Fareed Zakaris: GPS: The American Dream: the idea that anybody can get ahead, can succeed, can enrich themselves with hard work and smarts. Is that idea dead?

For large swaths of America, it MAY be. The national unemployment rate is 9.6% but that only tells a part of the story. Millions of jobs have been lost in America. The question is: how do we bring jobs — and GOOD jobs — back?

Fareed has gathered four of the top businessmen in America to tell us what’s at the heart of the job problem — how some many have been lost — and what the solutions are — how America can re-gain what its lost:

Eric Schmidt, Chairman and CEO Google

Muhtar Kent, Chairman and CEO of Coca-Cola

Klaus Kleinfeld, CEO of Alcoa

Lou Gerstner, who ran three American giants — RJ Reynolds, American Express & IBM

And Fareed will present solutions of his own — both for the nation and for the American worker.

Frank Rich: The Grand Old Plot Against the Tea Party

ONE dirty little secret of the 2010 election is that it won’t be a political tragedy for Democrats if a Tea Party icon like Sharron Angle or Joe Miller ends up in the United States Senate. Angle, now synonymous with racist ads sliming Hispanics, and Miller, already on record threatening a government shutdown, are fired up and ready to go as symbols of G.O.P. extremism for 2012 and beyond.

What’s not so secret is that some Republicans will be just as happy if some of these characters lose, and for the same reason.

But whatever Tuesday’s results, this much is certain: The Tea Party’s hopes for actually affecting change in Washington will start being dashed the morning after. The ordinary Americans in this movement lack the numbers and financial clout to muscle their way into the back rooms of Republican power no matter how well their candidates perform.

Dana Milbank: The Republican Party could use some adults

In an interview last week with National Journal’s Major Garrett, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell was asked what his priority would be for Republicans after their expected gains in Tuesday’s election.

The possibilities were many: Balance the budget and pay down the debt? Fight the terrorists and reform entitlements? Support and defend the Constitution?

No, McConnell’s priorities were elsewhere. “The single most important thing we want to achieve,” he said, “is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”

The single most important thing?

This bit of truth-telling, reminiscent of McConnell’s lament in August that “I wish we had been able to obstruct more” of Obama’s agenda, underscored a problem that will come to the fore if Republicans succeed in winning a majority on Tuesday: The party is sorely in need of grown-ups.

Robert Reich: Why Aren’t Business Leaders Standing Up to the Tea Party?

America’s business leaders have not exactly shied away from offering political views. Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg has accused President Obama of creating a hostile environment for investment and job-creation, while General Electric’s Jeff Immelt says the administration is out of sync with entrepreneurs.

All of which makes particularly curious the deafening silence of business leaders about the tea party that’s now taking over the GOP and about to take over a chunk of Congress. Maybe business leaders see it as a relatively harmless fringe group advocating the fiscally responsible small-government positions most CEOs agree with. Business leaders should take a closer look.

Rose Aguilar: GOP Hopefuls Threaten Reproductive Rights, Support for Poor Women

The national media proudly proclaimed 2010 as the Year of the GOP Woman, but they’ve largely failed to bring actual women’s issues into the conversation.

Take abortion. “The media silence on abortion means we might end up forcing women to bear their rapists’ baby and the average American doesn’t even know about it,” says Loretta Ross, founding member of the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective.

Raw Story recently reported that at least 78 Republicans on the November ballot oppose abortion, even in cases of rape and incest.

Bob Herbert: The Shame of New York

The whole notion of the rule of law, critical to a democracy, is sabotaged when the guardians of the law – in this case the officers of the New York City Police Department – are permitted to violate the law with impunity.

The police in New York City are not just permitted, they are encouraged to trample on the rights of black and Hispanic New Yorkers by relentlessly enforcing the city’s degrading, unlawful and outright racist stop-and-frisk policy. Hundreds of thousands of wholly innocent individuals, most of them young, are routinely humiliated by the police, day in and day out, year after shameful year.

Morning Shinbun Sunday October 31




Sunday’s Headlines:

Scary Halloween? Don’t count on it: on Dracula’s trail in Romania

USA

Democrats Fight to Keep Senate From G.O.P. Gains

Thousands descend on National Mall for Stewart’s and Colbert’s ‘Sanity’ rally

Europe

Marathon anniversary race helps Greece’s empty coffers

Army chiefs protest against headscarf

Middle East

Yemen makes bomb-plot arrest

Iraqi Gold’s Glitter Dims for Dealers Under Siege

Asia

Indonesia to rebrand dictator as ‘national hero’

Opium is winning the Afghan war

Africa

Ivory Coast to hold long-delayed ‘reconciliation’ poll

Latin America

Haiti could suffer another earthquake, scientists warn

Yemen, the new crucible of global terrorism

Al-Qa’ida has taken firm root in the poverty-stricken nation

By David Randall and Andrew Johnson Sunday, 31 October 2010

The axis of terror got bigger yesterday. After the presence of explosives in two packages bound for the US was confirmed – and a suspected 24 more discovered – their place of origin entered the big league as a crucible of deadly and disruptive terrorism. As Magnus Ranstorp, one of the world’s leading experts on the issue, told The Independent on Sunday: “Yemen has become the new Afghanistan.”

And, to go with this status, there comes to prominence one Yemeni who – in the eyes of America and some leading security specialists – is on a par with Osama bin Laden: Anwar al-Awlaki.

Scary Halloween? Don’t count on it: on Dracula’s trail in Romania

There are two Draculas – Bram Stoker’s lawyer-nibbling Count, and the real one, Vlad III, the arch impaler. Grab your garlic and track them down in Bucharest and beyond this Halloween

Tanya Gold

The Guardian


How would you feel if a tourist came up to you and asked: “Was Elizabeth I really a flesh-eating dwarf? Like in the movie?” I ask because this is how Romanians feel about Dracula.

To explain why, let me introduce the two Draculas – the one the Romanians like, and one they don’t. The one they don’t like is Count Dracula, the vampire in Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel, who invited the lawyer Jonathan Harker to stay in his castle in Transylvania. This book can be read as a novel about a client attempting to eat his solicitor. Stoker’s Dracula was the inspiration for a thousand bad movies and Sesame Street’sCount von Count.

USA

Democrats Fight to Keep Senate From G.O.P. Gains



By JEFF ZELENY and CARL HULSE

Published: October 30, 2010


PHILADELPHIA – The battle for control of Congress rolled into a frenetic final weekend as Democrats fought to preserve the Senate as their power center on Capitol Hill, trying to hold off a Republican surge that could reshape the political order in Washington.

With Republicans in a strong position to capture the House, President Obama on Saturday opened a four-state weekend swing here to rally support for Senate candidates in Connecticut, Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvania, hoping to build a critical firewall to protect the party’s Senate majority from Republican gains across the country.

Thousands descend on National Mall for Stewart’s and Colbert’s ‘Sanity’ rally

Organizers call the Stewart-Colbert rally a politically themed entertainment program, but those attending see it more as a call to action with three days left before final votes are cast in the midterm elections.

By Jordan Steffen and Matea Gold, Tribune Washington Bureau  

WASHINGTON – – A high-spirited spillover crowd numbering in the tens of thousands gathered on the National Mall Saturday, jamming Metro trains and platforms as they flocked to attend what organizers billed as a politically themed entertainment program.

But many of those drawn to the “Rally To Restore Sanity and/or Fear,” put on by “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart and Comedy Central colleague Stephen Colbert, say they view it as a call to action with three days left before final votes are cast in midterm congressional elections.

Europe

Marathon anniversary race helps Greece’s empty coffers

Greek PM joins thousands of runners to compete in long-distance race commemorating 2,500 years since historic victory

Helena Smith

The Observer, Sunday 31 October 2010  


It was the battle that inspired Byron to dream that “Greece might still be free”, and 2,500 years on Greeks hope the defeat of the Persians at Marathon will serve another, more modern purpose: saving the country from insolvency.

As a record number of athletes today mark the landmark anniversary, gathering in the Greek capital to run the 24-mile course which legend records was covered by Phidippides, the Athenian foot soldier, the socialist government is pulling out all the stops.

Army chiefs protest against headscarf



October 31, 2010  

Turkish army chiefs boycotted an official ceremony at the presidential palace because the President’s wife wore an Islamic headscarf, it was reported yesterday.

The army’s top brass were conspicuous by their absence late on Friday at a banquet thrown by President Abdullah Gul to commemorate the creation of the modern, secular Turkey in 1923.

The military organised a separate reception at the same time to give the generals an excuse not to accept the President’s invitation, reports said.

Middle East

Yemen makes bomb-plot arrest

Female suspect held in Sanaa a day after parcels containing explosive material sparked global security alert  

Last Modified: 31 Oct 2010 06:43 GMT  

Yemen has arrested a female student suspected of mailing the explosive parcels from the country to the US that sparked a global security alert, sources say.

The arrest took place on Saturday in the capital, Sanaa, after security forces surrounded a house where the suspect was hiding.

The woman’s lawyer said she was a “quiet student” with no known links of religious or political groups. Her mother was also detained, but was not a prime suspect, the lawyer said.

A Yemeni security official said the woman, a medical student in her 20s, had been traced through a telephone number she left with a cargo company.

Iraqi Gold’s Glitter Dims for Dealers Under Siege  



By JACK HEALY

Published: October 30, 2010


BAGHDAD – Inside Amjad Abed’s tiny gold shop, the display cases sit half empty, and the memories of his two grown sons are in the bullet holes that gouge the walls. Last spring, three gunmen burst in and ransacked the store, scooping up rings that brides choose for weddings and necklaces that husbands buy on credit for anniversaries. They killed Mr. Abed’s sons, who had been tending the shop.

“I lost my sons, I lost all my money,” Mr. Abed, 55, said. “I cannot give a word for what’s happened.”

Asia

Indonesia to rebrand dictator as ‘national hero’

Suharto’s 31-year rule was brutal and corrupt. Yet now they want to honour him

By Sholto Byrnes  Sunday, 31 October 2010

As General Suharto lingered on his deathbed in January 2008, the former president of Indonesia, who had ruled his country from 1967 to 1998, was surrounded by regional leaders and garlanded with tributes from other local luminaries. Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, expressed sadness that his “very old friend” was not receiving “the honour that he deserves”. Malaysia’s long-term Prime Minister, Dr Mahathir, shed a tear as he held the dying man’s hand. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo of the Philippines praised his “pioneering vision… founded on respect and understanding”, while even East Timor’s Jose Ramos-Horta asked the Pope to pray for him.

Opium is winning the Afghan war



Michael Duffy

October 31, 2010

THE parliamentary debate on Australia’s involvement in Afghanistan has involved little mention of its implications for our other big conflict, the war on drugs. In Afghanistan, the US and its allies are, once again, propping up Third World drug producers for political purposes.

According to the UN World Drug Report 2010, Afghanistan has produced 90 per cent of the world’s illicit opium in recent years. A lot of that has come from the province in which Australian troops are stationed.

Africa

Ivory Coast to hold long-delayed ‘reconciliation’ poll

Voters in Ivory Coast are due to cast their ballots in presidential elections which have been delayed six times.  

The BBC 31 October 2010  

Incumbent Laurent Gbagbo is running against 13 candidates, including veteran politicians Alassane Ouattara and Henri Konan Bedie.

There are concerns about security if the results of the poll are contested.

The vote is seen a key step in helping the nation heal its deep ethnic rifts, which came close to splitting the country during civil war in 2002.

A deal signed in 2007 led to an uneasy peace in Ivory Coast – seen as one of West Africa’s most successful countries until the outbreak of the hostilities.

Latin America

Haiti could suffer another earthquake, scientists warn

Strains that triggered January shock could unleash new disaster

Robin McKie

The Observer, Sunday 31 October 2010


Haiti is at serious risk of further devastation from earthquakes in the near future, geologists have warned. Their research, to be published in next month’s issue of Nature Geoscience, indicates that not all the geological strain that triggered the original quake in January has been released as had been thought.

More than 230,000 people died in the magnitude 7.0 quake on 12 January and more than one million were left homeless. Now geologists are warning that Haiti faces the prospect of further devastation.

Ignoring Asia A Blog  

I Am A Witch

(5 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

or Wiccan or Pagan or whatever the PC term is today.

I practice a belief that has but one rule, “Do No harm”, and no hierarchy. We are like any other religion in that we wish to practice our rituals in peace.

This Sunday and through to Monday is the celebration of the last harvest. It is like the New Year. During the night we will light fires indoors and out, where possible, candles if not. We will prepare great meals and drink cider and wine. We will remember our ancestors and those who have passed to the other side of the veil. We will celebrate Life and the turning of the wheel.

Even atheists come to our gatherings on this night. You don’t have to believe in a god to believe in “Doing No Harm”

Blessed Be The Wheel Turns

Bonfires dot the rolling hillsides

Figures dance around and around

To drums that pulse out echoes of darkness

Moving to the pagan sound.

Somewhere in a hidden memory

Images float before my eyes

Of fragrant nights of straw and of bonfires

Dancing ’til the next sunrise.

CHORUS:

I can see the lights in the distance

Trembling in the dark cloak of night

Candles and lanterns are dancing, dancing

A waltz on All…All Souls Night.

Figures of cornstalks bend in the shadows

Held up tall as the flames leap high

The Green Knight holds the holly bush

To mark where the Old Year passes by.

CHORUS

Bonfires dot the rolling hillsides

Figures dance around and around

To drums that pulse out echoes of darkness

Moving to the pagan sound.

Standing on the bridge that crosses

The river that branches out to the sea

The wind is full of a thousand voices

They pass by the bridge and me.

Prime Time

All right people, we got 10 minutes ’till game time, let’s all gather ’round. I’m not much for giving inspirational addresses, but I’d just like to point out that every newspaper in the country has picked us to finish last. The local press seems to think that we’d save everyone the time and trouble if we just went out and shot ourselves. Me, I’m for wasting sportswriters’ time. So I figured we ought to hang around for a while and see if we can give ’em all a nice big shitburger to eat.

So you’re down 2 nothing in the World Series and you’re going home to get healthy.  There’s really nothing wrong with that, though you’ll want to win tonight because otherwise you’ll be up against it, one game away from elimination and all.

Therefore the Rangers play with some urgency while there’s very little pressure on the Giants.  They’re going back to San Francisco whatever happens and you can’t count on them being charitable and wanting to celebrate in their home locker room.

Now like most pundits I revel in my wrongness so after 11 – 7, 9 – 0 slug fests I am once again predicting a Pitchers’ Duel between Lewis and Sanchez even though they’re only the 3rd best on each staff and the Aces have already gotten lit up.  Who knows, if I am consistently spectacularly erroneous enough I’ll probably get a job at The Washington Post or The New York Times.

This is an early edition.  Since I’m all about alternative programming I’m extending the hours.

College Throwball, Michigan State @ Iowa or Missouri @ Nebraska and Ohio State @ Minnesota or Oregon @ USC, Florida @ Georgia.

Later-

SNL- Jon Hamm Rihanna.  GitS: SACAnnihilation, Barrage (Episodes 24 and 25)

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

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