Prime Time

I believe in the Church of Baseball. I’ve tried all the major religions, and most of the minor ones. I’ve worshipped Buddha, Allah, Brahma, Vishnu, Siva, trees, mushrooms, and Isadora Duncan. I know things. For instance, there are 108 beads in a Catholic rosary and there are 108 stitches in a baseball. When I heard that, I gave Jesus a chance. But it just didn’t work out between us. The Lord laid too much guilt on me. I prefer metaphysics to theology. You see, there’s no guilt in baseball, and it’s never boring… which makes it like sex. There’s never been a ballplayer slept with me who didn’t have the best year of his career. Making love is like hitting a baseball: you just gotta relax and concentrate. Besides, I’d never sleep with a player hitting under .250… not unless he had a lot of RBIs and was a great glove man up the middle. You see, there’s a certain amount of life wisdom I give these boys. I can expand their minds. Sometimes when I’ve got a ballplayer alone, I’ll just read Emily Dickinson or Walt Whitman to him, and the guys are so sweet, they always stay and listen. ‘Course, a guy’ll listen to anything if he thinks it’s foreplay. I make them feel confident, and they make me feel safe, and pretty. ‘Course, what I give them lasts a lifetime; what they give me lasts 142 games. Sometimes it seems like a bad trade. But bad trades are part of baseball – now who can forget Frank Robinson for Milt Pappas, for God’s sake? It’s a long season and you gotta trust. I’ve tried ’em all, I really have, and the only church that truly feeds the soul, day in, day out, is the Church of Baseball.

You could watch something else, but why?

Later-

Dave hosts Dana Carvey.  Jon has Barack Obama, Stephen Apolo Anton Ohno.  No Alton.

BoondocksThe Block Is Hot.

Fox and Cablevision at last report have not resolved their dispute.  I must admit I don’t follow every pitch, but I do try and report developing scoring situations and their results.  Since this is likely to be a Pitchers’ Duel (the most boring kind of Baseball) there will probably be a lot of ‘inning reports’ (as in “nothing happened this inning”).  Lincecum and Lee may face each other up to 3 times this Series, but the Giant’s Ace-In-The-Hole is Brian Wilson who was the most successful multi-inning reliever both during the season and in the Playoffs.  I’m hard pressed to decide who I hate more, the Polo Grounds deserters or W‘s ex-team, but my smart money still goes on the Senior League because World Series are about pitching, not offense, and the Junior Leaguers’ offense is sabotaged by the pernicious ‘Designated Hitter’ rule that makes their pitchers an easy out anyway.

Giants in 6.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Cholera-hit Haiti told to prepare for worst as toll rises

by Alex Ogle, AFP

17 mins ago

SAINT MARC, Haiti (AFP) – Officials warned Wednesday that Haiti should prepare for the worst as hundreds more patients packed into hospitals amid a deadly cholera outbreak which has claimed almost 300 lives.

A total of 4,147 people were now being treated in hospitals for cholera, said the head of Haiti’s health department Gabriel Thimote, while eight new fatalities brought the death toll to 292.

The World Health Organization warned the outbreak had yet to reach its peak, and said Haiti should prepare for the disease to hit the capital Port-au-Prince, teeming with squalid tent cities.

2 More protests planned after France passes pension reform

by Herve Rouach, AFP

58 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – French lawmakers on Wednesday formally adopted President Nicolas Sarkozy’s fiercely contested law on pension reform, despite weeks of nationwide protests and strikes with even more planned.

The National Assembly voted 336 for and 233 against the law, which raises the minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, on the eve of the latest in a series of protests that have threatened to bring France to a standstill.

Sarkozy must now sign off on the law and publish it in the official gazette, which a presidential advisor has said will happen around November 15.

3 Giants, Rangers ready for World Series clash

by Jim Slater, AFP

2 hrs 59 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Ticket scalpers seek up to 6,000 dollars for World Series seats as first-title hopefuls San Francisco and Texas prepare for Wednesday’s start of Major League Baseball’s championship showdown.

The Giants have not won the crown since 1954, four years before moving from New York to San Francisco, while the Rangers are in the first World Series in their half-century history and had not won a playoff series before this month.

“You dream to be in this position,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. “This is what it’s all about. It just means everything to me and to my players. They play with a deep feeling of passion.”

4 VW profit soars, warns slowdown in sight

AFP

Wed Oct 27, 12:29 pm ET

FRANKFURT (AFP) – Volkswagen, Europe’s biggest automaker, said Wednesday its third-quarter net profit soared more than 10-fold but warned of a slowdown in the final three months of the year.

The group reported a profit of 2.2 billion euros (3.0 billion dollars), reflecting strong demand and strict cost controls but did not raise its full-year outlook even though the targets are considered prudent by analysts.

“Increased demand for our models and our disciplined cost management led to these strong results, which have strengthened our sound financial base,” VW finance director Hans Dieter Poetsch said in a statement.

5 Boston Celtics spoil NBA debut of Heat’s ‘Big 3’

AFP

Wed Oct 27, 12:00 pm ET

BOSTON, Massachusetts (AFP) – The Miami Heat and their vaunted “Big Three” were the hottest ticket in town, but they started off cold and even once LeBron James warmed up they couldn’t stop the Boston Celtics.

In the first game of the NBA season, the league’s latest star-studded team managed just nine points in the first quarter and fell 88-80 to the veteran Celtics.

“This is one of 82,” Dwyane Wade said. “Sorry if everyone thought we were going to go 82 and 0. It just ain’t happening.”

6 Ahead of US vote, Republicans set for big gains

by Olivier Knox, AFP

Wed Oct 27, 6:54 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President Barack Obama’s fired-up Republican foes are set to ride a wave of voter anger over the sour economy to big gains in Congress in the upcoming November 2 election.

Analysts predict Republicans would retake the House of Representatives and cut deeply into the Democrats’ Senate majority, winning a solid base to assail Obama’s agenda two years before his 2012 reelection bid.

Democrats hoped their get-out-the-vote efforts would make the difference in scores of nail-biter races and help contain a Republican tide that was also expected to give the president’s opponents control of key governorships.

7 Deutsche Bank posts sharp loss

AFP

Wed Oct 27, 6:51 am ET

FRANKFURT (AFP) – The biggest German bank, Deutsche Bank, posted on Wednesday a steep third-quarter loss linked to its purchase of Postbank, but said underlying operating results were stable.

Deutsche Bank reported a net loss of 1.2 billion euros (1.66 billion dollars) that included a one-off charge from its takeover of Postbank, a deal meant to broaden Deutsche Bank’s revenue base.

Analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires had forecast a deeper net loss of 1.47 billion euros, and Deutsche Bank shares leapt higher in morning trading on the Frankfurt stock exchange.

8 Special report: Tea Party candidates only a Democrat could love

By Murray Waas, Reuters

1 hr 17 mins ago

DELAWARE COUNTY, Pennsylvania (Reuters) – Jim Schneller is not the type of congressional candidate a political progressive or liberal Democrat would ordinarily support.

A self-avowed Tea Party activist, he opposes abortion even in the cases of rape and incest. He wants to abolish the Federal Reserve, labeling it “unconstitutional.” He vows to “guarantee constitutional rights for home-schooling.” And he is still calling for President Barack Obama to produce his birth certificate or face deportation.

Yet Schneller quite possibly might never have become a candidate for Congress in Pennsylvania’s seventh congressional district were it not for a helping hand from his opponents. As it happens, a dozen Delaware County Democratic Party activists obtained nearly all of the necessary signatures for him to qualify for the ballot, records of the Pennsylvania Secretary of State show.

9 Afghans, West try to lure Taliban fighters out of war

By Patrick Markey, Reuters

Wed Oct 27, 6:47 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – While Afghan President Hamid Karzai seeks talks with Taliban leaders, Afghan and NATO-led forces have quietly tried to chip away at the lower ranks, tempting foot soldiers back into villages with promises of development and aid.

NATO officials say reintegrating insurgents is still in its infancy, with only four or five groups of fighters disarmed and contact with 25 other small groups, many only loosely tied to the Taliban militants.

But the idea of negotiating with insurgents on all levels is gaining ground as U.S. President Barack Obama and NATO allies come under pressure over mounting casualties in a war many Western officials believe can’t be won on the battlefield alone.

10 Public pension reform key issue in California race

By Nichola Groom, Reuters

Wed Oct 27, 3:02 am ET

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – With decades of public service under his belt, 72-year-old California gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown joked last month that he is the best pension investment California has ever seen.

“If everybody in state service worked as long as I have, the pension system would be overfunded by 50 percent,” Brown quipped in a debate.

But at an estimated half a trillion dollars, California’s public pension shortfall is no laughing matter, and Brown quickly moved on to lay out serious solutions.

11 U.N. talks to save nature zero in on historic deal

By Chisa Fujioka and David Fogarty, Reuters

Wed Oct 27, 9:48 am ET

NAGOYA, Japan (Reuters) – Ministers from around the world began on Wednesday a final push for a U.N. deal to protect nature, urged by the World Bank to value the benefits of forests, oceans and rivers on economies and human welfare.

Senior officials from nearly 200 countries have gathered in Nagoya, Japan, to set new goals for 2020 to fight animal and plant extinctions after they missed a goal for a “significant reduction” in losses of biological diversity by 2010.

The meeting hopes to push governments and businesses to commit to sweeping steps to protect ecosystems under threat, such as forests that clean the air, insects that pollinate crops and coral reefs that nurture valuable fisheries.

12 Army vows to change way it buys weapons

By Andrea Shalal-Esa, Reuters

Tue Oct 26, 8:10 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Army needs to dramatically improve the way it buys weapons to ensure that equipment for soldiers is still relevant when they finally get it, the service’s No. 2 uniformed officer said on Tuesday.

“We have to look at the entire system and how we do things, and take into account the rapid technological change that we’re seeing today,” Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter Chiarelli said at the annual Association of the U.S. Army conference.

“I don’t understand how we can take 8 to 10 years or even longer and put something on the street and have it be relevant,” he told reporters after delivering an even more blunt assessment to a panel discussion: “I’m a firm believer that it’s going to take the big bang theory.”

13 Karzai makes concession on security firm ban

By Jonathon Burch, Reuters

Wed Oct 27, 11:12 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Afghan President Hamid Karzai offered a small concession over the timing of a ban on private security firms, which strained ties with Washington, but some aid groups said on Wednesday the ban would not affect them much.

Karzai has stressed his commitment to a decree disbanding private security companies, spurring concern in Washington that aid work in Afghanistan may already be starting to suffer over security fears, but on Wednesday said the original December deadline could be extended up to two months.

Some U.S.-funded development companies have said they have started scaling back projects. On Saturday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Karzai to recommend a joint plan to replace the guard firms gradually rather than enforce a ban that could threaten millions of dollars in aid work.

14 EU, U.S. grapple with crunch in rare earth supplies

By Juliane von Reppert-Bismarck and Paul Eckert, Reuters

Tue Oct 26, 7:55 pm ET

BERLIN/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The European Union and the United States said on Tuesday they were pressing for solutions to concerns China may be exploiting its stranglehold on rare earth metals, crucial in the making of everything from portable phones to wind turbines.

Officials and industry executives in Berlin and Washington warned of severe repercussions from a scarcity of the minerals with magnetic, luminescent and other properties which go into products such as hybrid cars, solar panels and windmills.

The near monopoly China has in producing 97 percent of the world’s supply of rare earths has been well-known among industrial users for years, but came under the international spotlight after reports Beijing halted shipments to Japan over a territorial dispute with Tokyo last month.

15 Republicans poised to win House and gain in Senate

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Tue Oct 26, 7:44 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republicans enter the final week of a bitter election campaign as heavy favorites to win control of the House of Representatives and score big Senate gains, dealing a severe blow to President Barack Obama two years after he entered the White House.

A thirst for change in Washington and worries about the stumbling economy appear likely next Tuesday to break Obama’s Democrats’ grip on Congress in a potential rout that would topple House Speaker Nancy Pelosi from power.

With more than 90 Democratic-held seats at risk on November 2 in the 435-member House, independent analysts project Republicans will pick up at least the 39 Democratic seats they need for control.

16 Guantanamo made Omar Khadr more dangerous, doctor says

By Jane Sutton, Reuters

Tue Oct 26, 6:37 pm ET

GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE, Cuba (Reuters) – A Canadian who admitted he was a teen terrorist has grown more dangerous after being “marinated in radical jihadism” at the Guantanamo detention camp, a psychiatrist told a U.S. war crimes tribunal on Tuesday.

Toronto native Omar Khadr pleaded guilty on Monday to all five terrorism charges against him, including conspiring with al Qaeda to commit terrorist acts and murdering a U.S. soldier with a grenade during an Afghanistan firefight.

Now 24, he was captured at age 15 and has been locked up with adult prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba for more than eight years. At his sentencing hearing, the U.S. military jury heard from a forensic psychiatrist hired by prosecutors to meet with Khadr and assess his dangerousness.

17 Republicans, heading for big gains, ready agenda

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, Associated Press

21 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Republican leaders, ever more confident of their chances of winning control of the House and possibly even the Senate, have begun plotting a 2011 agenda topped by a push for more than $100 billion in spending cuts, tax reductions and attempts to undo key parts of President Barack Obama’s health care and financial regulation laws.

The question is how much of the GOP’s government-shrinking, tax-cutting agenda to advance, and how fast.

It’s certain that Republicans want to capitalize quickly on tea party-fueled anger and the antiestablishment fervor that they believe will provide momentum to accomplish an activist to-do list. It’s equally clear, however, that the outsized expectations of a fed-up electorate and a crop of unruly newcomers could complicate the plans. So could Obama and fellow Democrats who will still be around after Tuesday’s elections.

18 NJ gov: I’m sticking with decision to scrap tunnel

By BETH DeFALCO and ANGELA DELLI SANTI, Associated Press

22 mins ago

TRENTON, N.J. – Gov. Chris Christie cited New Jersey’s lack of money Wednesday in standing by his decision to kill a train tunnel connecting his state to New York City, a move that will force the state to repay up to $350 million of the money it was given to start the nation’s biggest public works project.

Christie, a rising star in the Republican Party for his fearless budget-slashing, has argued that his cash-strapped state can’t afford to pay for any overruns on the $9 billion-plus rail tunnel under the Hudson River. The state is on the hook for $2.7 billion plus overruns.

“In the end, my decision does not change,” Christie said. “I cannot place upon the citizens of New Jersey an open-ended letter of credit, and that’s what this project represents.”

19 Afghan district holds lessons as US makes gains

By TODD PITMAN, Associated Press

18 mins ago

MARJAH, Afghanistan – With bandoliers of bullets wrapped over both shoulders, U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Seth Little knelt in a trench, his machine gun pointing toward a clutch of farmers in a field who stared silently back.

The 23-year-old from Bremen, Ga. was scanning the horizon for Taliban gunmen who were maneuvering unseen somewhere across this rural battlefield, ordering civilians out of their homes in apparent preparation for a fight.

Eight months after U.S.-led forces launched the biggest operation of the war to clear insurgents from the southern poppy-growing district of Marjah, it wasn’t supposed to be this way. Today, the world’s most powerful military is still struggling to rout guerrillas staging complex hit-and-run attacks relentlessly, every day.

Bullshit.  That’s not what the WaPo says.

20 GOP candidates waiting and hoping for 2012

By LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, AP National Political Writer

1 hr 53 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Get ready for the big tease. Republicans positioning for a possible presidential run are, to varying degrees, courting donors, testing messages and plotting strategies. They’re visiting early primary states, wooing key activists and, all the while, stirring interest as they gauge whether to launch full-fledged campaigns.

“We can see 2012 from our house,” Sarah Palin quipped recently, setting off another round of will-she-or-won’t-she speculation.

But even though Nov. 3 is the unofficial start of the 2012 campaign, don’t expect a surge of Republicans to declare their intentions anytime soon.

21 TV commercials shrink to match attention spans

By EMILY FREDRIX, AP Marketing Writer

1 hr 39 mins ago

NEW YORK – And now, a word from our sponsors. A very brief word.

TV commercials are shrinking along with attention spans and advertising budgets. The 15-second ad is increasingly common, gradually supplanting the 30-second spot just as it knocked off the full-minute pitch decades ago.

For viewers, it means more commercials in a more rapid-fire format. For advertisers, shorter commercials are a way to save some money, and research shows they hold on to more eyeballs than the longer format.

22 Lee-Lincecum: Marquee matchup in Series opener

By BEN WALKER, AP Baseball Writer

Wed Oct 27, 11:07 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO – Cliff Lee marvels at Tim Lincecum’s motion. So much torque, so much power. So darn unusual.

“The way he does it, no one else does it that way. I like that,” Lee said Tuesday, a day before the Texas Rangers ace pitches against the San Francisco Giants star in Game 1 of the World Series.

“I like when unorthodox works and it works to that kind of an extent, back-to-back Cy Young winner. He throws in a way that you probably wouldn’t want to show your kid how to throw,” Lee said. “He definitely is doing something right. He’s different.”

23 LeBron back where it ended, with same old result

By JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writer

Wed Oct 27, 7:10 am ET

BOSTON – The Boston fans needed just 45 minutes to pronounce their verdict on the NBA’s alleged new superteam: “Over-rated!”

Mocking Miami in the closing minutes of the much-hyped but lackluster debut of its new superstar trio, the boisterous crowd at the TD Garden serenaded two-time NBA MVP LeBron James and sent him away with another loss on Tuesday night as the Celtics beat the Heat 88-80.

James scored 21 of his 31 points in the second half and helped cut a 19-point deficit to three points in the final 70 seconds. But Ray Allen hit a 3-pointer, and Paul Pierce made a pair of free throws to seal it for the defending Eastern Conference champions.

24 Durable goods orders rise, business spending cools

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

2 hrs 34 mins ago

WASHINGTON – A surge in demand for commercial aircraft lifted orders for big-ticket manufactured goods in September, but businesses spent less on products that would signal expansion.

The Commerce Department says orders for durable goods rose 3.3 percent last month. Overall, it was the best showing since January. But excluding transportation, orders fell 0.8 percent after having risen 1.9 percent in August.

And spending by companies on capital goods excluding aircraft dropped 0.6 percent after rising 4.8 percent in August. The category, which is viewed as a good proxy for business investment in the economy, has declined in two of the past three months.

25 Karzai pushes back deadline on guns-for-hire ban

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press

38 mins ago

KABUL – President Hamid Karzai agreed Wednesday to push back his deadline for kicking private security guards out of Afghanistan, a concession the U.S. and other countries considered essential to prevent billions of dollars worth of development and reconstruction projects from shutting down.

The international community supports the idea of getting rid of the estimated 30,000 to 40,000 guns-for-hire in the war-torn country, but not by the Dec. 17 deadline Karzai had set. International officials spent several days in intense negotiations with the president, and even U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton weighed in with a phone call asking him to reconsider.

Some security contractors still could be barred from working in Afghanistan by Dec. 17 under Karzai’s revised plan, but others will get extensions until at least February.

26 ‘New MySpace’ narrows focus to entertainment

By BARBARA ORTUTAY, AP Technology Writer

Wed Oct 27, 12:56 pm ET

NEW YORK – MySpace, the online social hub that’s been fighting to stay relevant in the age of Facebook and Twitter, is overhauling its image and its website into an entertainment destination for its mostly younger audience.

The social-networking pioneer, which was among the top Internet sites just a few years ago, now has its sights set decidedly lower. Starting Wednesday and over the next month, MySpace will be relaunching its site to focus on giving users more ways to consume music, videos and celebrity gossip.

Entertainment has long been central to the MySpace experience, but over the years the site was also pulled in different directions as it dabbled in classifieds, job ads and even user reviews in a partnership with Citysearch as it pushed to become a social portal for the Web. It didn’t work out, and Facebook is now emerging as that portal.

27 Terror suspect gets victim status in Polish probe

By VANESSA GERA and ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 1:48 pm ET

WARSAW, Poland – Ten years ago this month, al-Qaida terrorists drove an explosives-laden boat into the USS Cole Navy destroyer as it was refueling in Yemen, killing American 17 sailors. But the man suspected of engineering that attack still hasn’t been brought to trial.

Polish prosecutors are looking at him as a victim as they investigate a now-shuttered secret CIA prison that operated in Poland where he was subjected to harsh interrogation techniques, according to former U.S. intelligence officials and publicly available documents.

The chief prosecutor in the case, Jerzy Mierzewski, said Wednesday that Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri has received the status of victim, a move that allows the detainee’s lawyers to participate in the larger investigation by reviewing evidence and calling witnesses.

28 INSIDE WASHINGTON: Sending bureaucrats to Harvard

By MATT APUZZO, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 7:11 am ET

WASHINGTON – Every year, the U.S. spends millions of dollars to send government workers to Harvard for a month, an expensive training arrangement that some in Congress are questioning.

A monthlong leadership course at the Ivy League university costs taxpayers more than $18,000 per employee. That’s more than twice what the average public university charges for tuition and fees, excluding room and board, for an entire year, and enough to pay the same charges for a semester and a half at the average private university.

Government and school officials say that’s what it costs to train executives. And it’s what’s being paid by top companies, which compete with government agencies for talent.

29 Audit shows records at National Archives at risk

By BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press

Tue Oct 26, 9:19 pm ET

WASHINGTON – An audit prompted in part by the loss of the Wright Brothers’ original patent and maps for atomic bomb missions in Japan finds some of the nation’s prized historical documents are in danger of being lost for good.

Nearly 80 percent of U.S. government agencies are at risk of illegally destroying public records and the National Archives is backlogged with hefty volumes of records needing preservation care, the audit by the Government Accountability Office found.

The report by the watchdog arm of Congress, completed this month after a year’s work and obtained by The Associated Press, also found many U.S. agencies do not follow proper procedures for disposing of public records.

30 State goes overseas for lethal injection drug

By AMANDA LEE MYERS and ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 1:49 am ET

FLORENCE, Ariz. – Facing a nationwide shortage of a lethal injection drug, Arizona has taken an unusual step that other death penalty states may soon follow: get their supplies from another country.

Such a move, experts say, raises questions about the effectiveness of the drug. But it also may further complicate executions in the 35 states that allow them, as inmates challenge the use of drugs not approved by federal inspectors for use in the U.S.

Arizona said Tuesday that it got its sodium thiopental from Great Britain, the first time a state has acknowledged obtaining the drug from outside the United States since the shortage began slowing executions in the spring.

31 Are texting and Facebook worse for teens than TV?

By BETH J. HARPAZ, Associated Press

51 mins ago

NEW YORK – Let’s face it: Teenagers spend hours texting, socializing on Facebook and playing video games. And it’s driving their parents nuts.

Sure, there are real dangers associated with all this screen time – everything from cyberbullying to couch-potato obesity. Not to mention driving while texting, shortened attention spans and Internet porn.

But many of today’s parents spent hours as kids sitting in front of screens too – only they were TV screens.

32 Volkswagen adds hybrid SUV, with amenities

By ANN M. JOB, For The Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 2:06 pm ET

Known for its fine, diesel-powered vehicles with noteworthy fuel economy, Germany’s Volkswagen AG is adding a gasoline-electric hybrid sport utility model for 2011.

It’s not that VW is turning against diesels. The automaker is covering all the bases, particularly in the United States where hybrids like the Toyota Prius have been a growing market segment for a decade.

VW’s first mass-production hybrid – the 2011 Touareg Hybrid – is selling alongside the 2011 diesel-powered Touareg TDI and the non-hybrid, gasoline-powered Touareg FSI.

33 Backyard treehouse survives Manhattan legal fight

By VERENA DOBNIK, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 12:31 pm ET

NEW YORK – In the countryside, in the suburbs or even in the leafier districts of New York’s outer boroughs, a treehouse would hardly raise an eyebrow. But in a historic Manhattan neighborhood whose residents have included Mark Twain and Eleanor Roosevelt, it raised hackles.

Shortly after Melinda Hackett put up the round, cedar treehouse for her girls in a broad-trunked London Plane tree in her tiny Greenwich Village backyard, a neighbor called about “a structure in rear which is nailed to a tree” and “looks unsafe,” with no construction permit posted, according to a complaint filed with the city.

“I got home and the police were at the door,” says Hackett, a 49-year-old artist. “Then firefighters came.”

34 Military, gov’t increase investment in algae fuels

By JASON DEAREN, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 9:58 am ET

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – The forest green algae bubbling in a stainless steel fermenting tank in a suburban warehouse may look like primordial pond scum, but it is a promising new source of domestically produced fuels being tested on the nation’s jets and warships.

In a laboratory just a few steps away from the warehouse, white-coated scientists for a company called Solazyme are changing the genetic makeup of algae to construct a new generation of fuels.

These “bioengineered” algae are placed into tanks, where they get fat on sugar beets, switch grass or a host of other plants. The sun’s energy, which is stored in the plants, is transformed by the hungry algae into oil, which can be refined into jet fuel, bio-diesel, cooking oil or even cosmetics.

35 Riches shadow both candidates in Conn. Senate race

By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 4:01 am ET

NEW BRITAIN, Conn. – Richard Blumenthal isn’t flashy. Typically dressed in a plain dark suit, he switched his gas-guzzling state vehicle to an austere Honda Civic hybrid when fuel prices jumped. A fixture at potluck suppers, he’s built a political career over 20 years of taking on the causes of everyday citizens in Connecticut.

While the front-runner Democrat has accused his Republican Senate opponent, Linda McMahon, of attempting to use her millions to buy the seat – a promised $50 million – he appears uneasy when asked about his own wealth, even though he has loaned his campaign $2.25 million as of Oct. 13.

Blumenthal’s family is actually worth tens of millions of dollars. Though his office is in Hartford, his home – like McMahon’s – is in well-heeled Greenwich. And his wife’s family is part-owner of the Empire State Building.

36 UN chief, Clinton call for action on women

By EDITH M. LEDERER, Associated Press Writer

Tue Oct 26, 10:57 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and diplomats from many nations said Tuesday it’s time for actions – not more words – to end sexual violence in war and include women in decisions on peacemaking.

On the 10th anniversary of the first U.N. Security Council resolution to call for women’s “full involvement” in efforts to maintain and promote peace and security, diplomats from more than 80 countries addressed the U.N.’s most powerful body.

Speaker after speaker said there had been some progress but immense challenges lay ahead.

37 Charges dropped against 3 in NYC anti-gay attacks

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR, Associated Press

Tue Oct 26, 8:16 pm ET

NEW YORK – Prosecutors on Tuesday dropped charges against three people accused of taking part in anti-gay attacks on two men and two teens, citing a lack of evidence.

Bryan Almonte and Brian Cepeda, both 17, and Steven Carabello, 16, had been charged with robbery, gang assault and unlawful imprisonment as hate crimes in the Oct. 3 attacks.

Eight other people remain accused in the case, which city officials called the worst anti-gay attacks in recent history. It’s possible more people will be arrested because investigators are still working.

Punting the Pundits

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.

Maureen Dowd: When a Pirate Is the Voice of Chivalry

In a campaign season when many men – and women – are taking harsh stances that could hurt women, a chivalrous voice has at last arrived.

Oddly enough, it belongs to a renegade pirate whose motto is “Keep it dark”: Keith Richards.

You’d think that an only child whose mother killed all the pets he kept as companions would not grow up to be so positive about women. . . .

“I’ve never been able to go to bed with a woman just for sex,” writes the author, happily married for decades to the former model Patti Hansen, whom he is supporting through bladder cancer. “I’ve no interest in that. I want to hug you and kiss you and make you feel good and protect you. And get a nice note the next day, stay in touch.”

The consummate gentleman. Who knew?

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Just say yes to common sense on pot policy

With all the hand-wringing over a Democratic “enthusiasm gap,” one effort to turn out young people at the polls this November is showing real energy and promise. What’s the secret? In a word, as 78-year-old John Burton, chairman of the California Democratic Party, put it, “Pot.”

Proposition 19 would make it legal for Californians over 21 to possess and cultivate marijuana for personal use, and it would authorize city governments to regulate and tax commercial production and sales. Its passage would signal a major victory for common sense over a war on drugs that has been an abysmal failure in the Golden State and throughout the country. As states devastated by the fiscal crisis look for more efficient and effective alternatives to spending $50 billion a year on incarceration, a shift in California might presage changes across the nation.

It would be great if young people would take to the streets and the voting booths on issues like Afghanistan, historical levels of inequality and poverty, or to protect Social Security from a Republicans takeover. But they’re not. And if it’s reforming an ineffective, wasteful and racially unjust drug policy that mobilizes young people — who are at the core of the rising American electorate along with African-Americans, Hispanics, and unmarried women — so be it. According to Public Policy Polling, for those who cite Prop 19 as their top reason for voting, 34 percent are under age 30.

Ruth Marcus: Which Darrell Issa would run House oversight panel?

There are two faces of Issa — Good Darrell and Bad Darrell. Good Darrell sounds responsible, measured, almost statesmanlike. Bad Darrell tosses red meat to a ravenous base.

Good Darrell, writing in USA Today on Oct. 11: “Oversight is not and should not be used as a political weapon against the occupant of the Oval Office. It should not be an instrument of fear or the exclusive domain of the party that controls Congress.”

Bad Darrell, to Rush Limbaugh on Oct. 19: “You know, there will be a certain degree of gridlock as the president adjusts to the fact that he has been one of the most corrupt presidents in modern times.”

Paul Krugman, Krugman % Co.: Friends, Romans, Countrymen: We Are Ages Apart

The United States is not ancient Rome – we are not Romans, and they were not Americans.

In an Oct. 2 column in The New York Times, Thomas L. Friedman quotes a passage from Lewis Mumford’s “The Condition of Man,” a book about the decline of ancient Rome and its parallels with the United States’s situation today.

Mr. Friedman reports that he got a chill down his spine when he read that in Rome, “Everyone aimed at security: no one accepted responsibility. What was plainly lacking, long before the barbarian invasions had done their work, long before economic dislocations became serious, was an inner go. Rome’s life was now an imitation of life: a mere holding on. Security was the watchword – as if life knew any other stability than through constant change, or any form of security except through a constant willingness to take risks.”

Amy Goodman: War Should Be an Election Issue

Just days away from crucial midterm elections, WikiLeaks, the whistle-blower website, unveiled the largest classified military leak in history. Almost 400,000 secret Pentagon documents relating to the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq were made available online. The documents, in excruciating detail, portray the daily torrent of violence, murder, rape and torture to which Iraqis have been subjected since George W. Bush declared “Mission Accomplished.” The WikiLeaks release, dubbed “The Iraq War Logs,” has been topping the headlines in Europe. But in the U.S., it barely warranted a mention on the agenda-setting Sunday talk shows.

First, the documents themselves. I spoke with Julian Assange, the founder and editor in chief of WikiLeaks.org. He explained: “These documents cover the periods of 2004 to the beginning of 2010. It is the most accurate description of a war to have ever been released … each casualty, where it happened, when it happened and who was involved, according to internal U.S. military reporting.”

New York Times Editorial: Haiti’s Latest Misery

The cholera outbreak in Haiti – the first in 50 years – has layered fresh anxiety atop long-standing misery. By Tuesday the disease had sickened more than 3,000 people and killed more than 250. While the authorities have expressed cautious hope that the outbreak might soon stabilize and remain largely confined to the rural Artibonite region, there is still fear that the disease could overwhelm the shattered capital, Port-au-Prince.

The United Nations and foreign relief agencies deserve credit for an energetic response, rapidly setting up mobile treatment centers and delivering clean water, medicine and public-service messages urging cleanliness and caution.

Aid workers have been heroic in keeping people relatively safe and healthy since the Jan. 12 earthquake. And the truth is that many of the hundreds of thousands of people who are now living in camps are in some ways better off than the millions more in Haiti’s slums, because they have better access to services. That is not very comforting. And it is not sustainable.

Dana Milbank: Obama isn’t ducking role in election reprise of ’94

Get out your Wonderbras and your “Forrest Gump” videocassettes. It’s starting to feel like 1994 all over again.

The Democratic president’s approval rating now, as then, is a lowly 44 percent. His party is forecast to lose about 50 seats in the House and eight in the Senate — about the same as in ’94. Voters now, as then, are in a sour mood, and some Democrats are again afraid of being photographed with the unpopular president.

But the strangest similarity may be in President Obama’s speeches. As he barnstorms the country in these closing days before the midterms, he has borrowed Bill Clinton’s 1994 stump speech — in some cases, word for word.

David Sirota: Thank You Sir, May I Have Another: Labor Leaders Destroy Their Own Ability to Influence Democrats

A few weeks back, I wrote a post on the politics of organized labor — a post that was fundamentally about how political power is wielded through both both the carrot of reward and the stick of punishment. Same thing for the converse: If you only use the carrot — or worse, if you hand over the carrot without something in return — you incinerate whatever political power you have, as politicians will know they never have to do anything you ask.

This is not some great revelation — it’s about as rudimentary a political principle as there is. Which is why it’s truly stunning to see that some top professional labor leaders in Washington — i.e. people paid lots of hard-earned union dues to engineer political strategy for labor union members — either A) don’t seem to understand this idea, or B) refuse to understand it out of a corrupt willingness to sell out labor union members on behalf of these leaders’ partisan affinities and/or their personal loyalty to cronies inside the Establishment Democratic Party.

Robert Scheer: The High Price of Patriotism

t’s over for the U.S. in Afghanistan, but that doesn’t mean the death and destruction are about to stop. Quagmires don’t just go away. However, the signs are everywhere that the American course in that nation is doomed, that those directing this forlorn attempt at occupation of a country that has never tolerated occupation know there is no positive end in sight, and that the locals from President Hamid Karzai to the competing warlords and the Taliban are cutting their own deals on the assumption that our wishes no longer matter.

Predictably, the U.S. media dismissed Karzai’s denunciation on Monday of the role of American mercenaries in the wanton destruction of his society. “Karzai rails against America in a diatribe,” was the way a New York Times headline summarized his press conference, suggesting that his complaints were nothing more than the temper tantrum of an ungrateful child.

Can’t say I disagree

From Taylor Marsh (who’s a little too much of a Clinton Cheerleader for me, but she makes a point)-

Obama refusing to endorse Frank Caprio because he supported Hillary, while staying loyal to a former Republican now turned Independent at a time when Democrats need every governor we can get, is the height of pettiness.

Pres. Obama is doing his impression of a spurned teenage girl, while Axelrod and David Plouffe calculate that by losing the House Obama will be helped for 2012. It’s all about Barack Obama. Screw the Democrats going down with his sinking policy ship.

On This Day in History: October 27

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

October 27 is the 300th day of the year (301st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 65 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1904, the New York Subway opens.

While London boasts the world’s oldest underground train network (opened in 1863) and Boston built the first subway in the United States in 1897, the New York City subway soon became the largest American system. The first line, operated by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), traveled 9.1 miles through 28 stations. Running from City Hall in lower Manhattan to Grand Central Terminal in midtown, and then heading west along 42nd Street to Times Square, the line finished by zipping north, all the way to 145th Street and Broadway in Harlem. On opening day, Mayor McClellan so enjoyed his stint as engineer that he stayed at the controls all the way from City Hall to 103rd Street.

History

A demonstration for an underground transit system in New York City was first built by Alfred Ely Beach in 1869. His Beach Pneumatic Transit only extended 312 feet (95 m) under Broadway in Lower Manhattan and exhibited his idea for a subway propelled by pneumatic tube technology. The tunnel was never extended for political and financial reasons, although extensions had been planned to take the tunnel southward to The Battery and northwards towards the Harlem River. The Beach subway was demolished when the BMT Broadway Line was built in the 1910s; thus, it was not integrated into the New York City Subway system.

The first underground line of the subway opened on October 27, 1904, almost 35 years after the opening of the first elevated line in New York City, which became the Ninth Avenue Line. The heavy 1888 snowstorm helped to demonstrate the benefits of an underground transportation system. The oldest structure still in use opened in 1885 as part of the BMT Lexington Avenue Line, and is now part of the BMT Jamaica Line in Brooklyn. The oldest right-of-way, that of the BMT West End Line, was in use in 1863 as a steam railroad called the Brooklyn, Bath and Coney Island Rail Road. The Staten Island Railway, which opened in 1860, currently uses R44 subway cars, but it has no links to the rest of the system and is not usually considered part of the subway proper.

By the time the first subway opened, the lines had been consolidated into two privately owned systems, the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT, later Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation, BMT) and the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT). The city was closely involved: all lines built for the IRT and most other lines built or improved for the BRT after 1913 were built by the city and leased to the companies. The first line of the city-owned and operated Independent Subway System (IND) opened in 1932; this system was intended to compete with the private systems and allow some of the elevated railways to be torn down, but was kept within the core of the City due to the low amount of startup capital provided to the municipal Board Of Transportation, the later MTA, by the state.[3] This required it to be run ‘at cost’, necessitating fares up to double the five cent fare popular at the time.

In 1940, the two private systems were bought by the city; some elevated lines closed immediately, and others closed soon after. Integration was slow, but several connections were built between the IND and BMT, and now operate as one division called the B Division. Since the IRT tunnel segments are too small and stations too narrow to accommodate  B Division cars, and contain curves too sharp for B Division cars, the IRT remains its own division, A Division.

The New York City Transit Authority, a public authority presided by New York City, was created in 1953 to take over subway, bus, and streetcar operations from the city, and was placed under control of the state-level Metropolitan Transportation Authority in 1968.

In 1934, transit workers of the BRT, IRT, and IND founded the Transport Workers Union of America, organized as Local 100. Local 100 remains the largest and most influential local of the labor union. Since the union’s founding, there have been three union strikes. In 1966, transit workers went on strike for 12 days, and again in 1980 for 11 days. On December 20, 2005, transit workers again went on strike over disputes with MTA regarding salary, pensions, retirement age, and health insurance costs. That strike lasted just under three days.

 312 – Constantine the Great is said to have received his famous Vision of the Cross.

710 – Saracen invasion of Sardinia.

939 – Edmund I succeeds Athelstan as King of England.

1275 – Traditional founding of the city of Amsterdam.

1524 – Italian Wars: The French troops lay siege to Pavia.

1553 – Condemned as a heretic, Michael Servetus is burned at the stake just outside Geneva.

1644 – Second Battle of Newbury in the English Civil War.

1682 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is founded.

1795 – The United States and Spain sign the Treaty of Madrid, which establishes the boundaries between Spanish colonies and the U.S.

1806 – The French Army enters Berlin.

1810 – United States annexes the former Spanish colony of West Florida.

1827 – Bellini’s third opera Il pirata is premiered at Teatro alla Scala di Milano

1838 – Missouri governor Lilburn Boggs issues the Extermination Order, which orders all Mormons to leave the state or be exterminated.

1870 – Marshal Francois Achille Bazaine surrenders to Prussian forces at Metz along with 140,000 French soldiers in one of the biggest French defeats of the Franco-Prussian War.

1904 – The first underground New York City Subway line opens; the system becomes the biggest in United States, and one of the biggest in world.

1914 – World War I: The British super-dreadnought battleship HMS Audacious (23,400 tons), is sunk off Tory Island, north-west of Ireland, by a minefield laid by the armed German merchant-cruiser Berlin.

1916 – Battle of Segale: Negus Mikael, marching on the Ethiopian capital in support of his son Emperor Iyasus V, is defeated by Fitawrari abte Giyorgis, securing the throne for Empress Zauditu.

1922 – A referendum in Rhodesia rejects the country’s annexation to the South African Union.

1924 – The Uzbek SSR is founded in the Soviet Union.

1936 – Mrs Wallis Simpson files for divorce which would eventually allow her to marry King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom, thus forcing his abdication from the throne.

1944 – World War II: German forces capture Banska Bystrica during Slovak National Uprising thus bringing it to an end.

1948 – Leopold Sedar Senghor founds the Senegalese Democratic Bloc.

1953 – British nuclear test Totem 2 is carried out at Emu Field, South Australia.

1954 – Benjamin O. Davis Jr. becomes the first African-American general in the United States Air Force.

1958 – Iskander Mirza, the first President of Pakistan, is deposed in a bloodless coup d’etat by General Ayub Khan, who had been appointed the enforcer of martial law by Mirza 20 days earlier.

1961 – NASA launches the first Saturn I rocket in Mission Saturn-Apollo 1.

1961 – Mauritania and Mongolia join the United Nations.

1962 – Major Rudolf Anderson of the United States Air Force becomes the only direct human casualty of the Cuban Missile Crisis when his U-2 reconnaissance airplane is shot down in Cuba by a Soviet-supplied SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile.

1962 – A plane carrying Enrico Mattei, post-war Italian administrator, crashes in mysterious circumstances.

1964 – Ronald Reagan delivers a speech on behalf of Republican candidate for president, Barry Goldwater. The speech launched his political career and came to be known as “A Time for Choosing”.

1967 Catholic priest Philip Berrigan and others of the Baltimore Four protest the Vietnam War by pouring blood on Selective Service records.

1971 – The Democratic Republic of the Congo is renamed Zaire.

1973 – The Canon City meteorite, a 1.4 kg chondrite type meteorite, strikes in Fremont County, Colorado.

1981 – The Soviet submarine U 137 runs aground on the east coast of Sweden.

1986 – The British government suddenly deregulates financial markets, leading to a total restructuring of the way in which they operate in the country, in an event now referred to as the Big Bang.

1988 – Ronald Reagan decides to tear down the new U.S. Embassy in Moscow because of Soviet listening devices in the building structure.

1991 – Turkmenistan achieves independence from the Soviet Union.

1992 – United States Navy radioman Allen R. Schindler, Jr. is brutally murdered by shipmate Terry M. Helvey for being gay, precipitating first military, then national, debate about gays in the military that resulted in the United States “Don’t ask, don’t tell” military policy.

1994 – The U.S. prison population tops 1 million for the first time in American history.

1994 – Gliese 229B is the first Substellar Mass Object to be unquestionably identified.

1995 – Latvia applies for membership in the European Union.

1995 – Former Prime Minister of Italy Bettino Craxi is convicted in absentia of corruption.

1997 – October 27, 1997 mini-crash: Stock markets around the world crash because of fears of a global economic meltdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummets 554.26 points to 7,161.15. For the first time, the New York Stock Exchange activates its “circuit breakers” twice during the day eventually making the controversial move of closing the Exchange early.

1999 – Gunmen open fire in the Armenian Parliament, killing Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan, Parliament Chairman Karen Demirchyan, and 6 other members.

2004 – The Boston Red Sox win the World Series for the first time in 86 years.

2005 – Riots begin in Paris after the deaths of two Muslim teenagers.

Tribute to the Creator of “Moose & Squirrel”

(6 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Nell MinowTribute: Alex Anderson, Creator of Rocky and Bullwinkle

Alex Anderson, who came up with the beloved characters Rocky the flying squirrel, Bullwinkle Moose, and Dudley Do-Right, died this week at age 90. While Jay Ward usually gets the credit, it was his childhood friend and partner Anderson who created those characters — though he had to bring a lawsuit to be given credit for it. Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly has a tribute to Rocky and Bullwinkle that gets the joy of their subversive humor just right:

It’s difficult to imagine, these days, the thrill of discovering Rocky and Bullwinkle as a kid. You felt as though you’d been let into a secret back door to TV, where the characters joked about their show’s low ratings and the very nature of the narrative itself. During one edition, Rocky thinks he hears Boris, and says, “That voice — where have I heard it before?” Bullwinkle replies, “In about 365 other episodes.” Then he added, ever the dumb one, “But I don’t know who it is, either.”

I loved Rocky and Bullwinkle because I could watch it as a kid and then again as a teenager and enjoy it even more. There were jokes I didn’t get until I was in college. They even made a joke once about my dad, who still has a Rocky and Bullwinkle drawing on his wall. I loved it that there was a character named Nell — my niece gave me a Nell Fenwick doll that I keep in my office. And every so often I tune in again to watch Bullwinkle pull another rabbit out of his hat or read fan mail from a flounder.

Olbermann just did Something Exceptional 20101026

I have always been pretty much a fan of Keith Olbermann.  He has good views and applies logic to his subject matter.  But he outdid himself tonight, and I am NOT being sarcastic.

If you look at the Wingnut Channel, everything is just a very narrow slant on politics and some country music, now and then.  Olbermann just transcended all of that, and the rerun is playing right now.  I hope to finish this short post fast enough so that you can tune into it.

Olbermann just risked being called an elite for running, in his last segment tonight, the brilliant violinist Anne Akiko Meyers playing her 1697 Stradivarius violin, using the equally brilliant Gershwin piece, Summertime.  What would Hannity have come and play?  Maybe Leonard Skinnerd?  Or maybe the idiot gun nut?  (By the way, I own legal guns, and shoot from time to time, so do not get the NRA on me).

This piece was just wonderful, and the Strad DOES have a unique ability to sound like four instruments at once.  I shall post on Pique the Geek some theories about why they sound like they do, but this is the best example of HOW, if not WHY they have their unique sound.

I urge everyone to tune in to MSNBC and listen to this marvelous performance.  The opening joke was sort of funny, but do not let that get in your way.  The woman just paid over $3 million for that instrument, but if you can listen as well as I can, you will know why.

Olbermann had the same thought that I did after her performance.  As I was watching and listening, it sounded like there were more than a single instrument, and actually sounded like three of four.  Of course, the artistic ability of the player has a lot to do with it, but she credited most of it to the instrument itself.  EVERYONE needs to see and hear this.

Sorry for such a thrown together post, but you need to see it.  It is astonishing, and only would it be aired on MSNBC.

Warmest regards,

Doc  

Crossposted at Dailykos.com and at Docudharma.com

I love this rant

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

And I agree with almost everything he said.

Especially the part where he said “Both parties will sell out the middle class faster than Jim Cramer can yell ‘booyah.'”

Wikileaks War Log: Interview with Julian Assange

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange on Iraq War Logs, “Tabloid Journalism” and Why WikiLeaks Is “Under Siege”

In an extended interview with Democracy Now!, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange discusses the release of more than 400,000 classified U.S. military records on the war in Iraq, the largest intelligence leak in U.S. history. The disclosure provides a trove of new evidence on the number of civilian casualties, violence, torture, and suffering that has befallen Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. While the Obama administration is defending the U.S. military’s record in Iraq, the allegations in the documents have sparked worldwide condemnation. Assange also describes WikiLeaks “under siege” and that “the real attack on truth” is by tabloid journalism in the U.S. mainstream media.

Juan Williams Firing: NPR Staffing ala Jon

(4 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

I have only one thing to say to Juan Williams about his fear of people in Muslim garb on planes:

Juan, not one of the 9/11 hijackers was wearing Muslim attire. I would be more worried about the completely bald, clean shaved white guy in the camouflage garb with no luggage but a carry-on.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart
NPR Staffing Decision 2010
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Rally to Restore Sanity

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