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UK heatwave expected to break October record

Forecasters predict temperatures of 29C on the fourth day of sunshine for parts of the country Saturday is shaping up to be the hottest October day on record with forecasters predicting temperatures of around 29C as the mini-Indian summer continues. The country will bask in glorious sunshine for the fourth day in succession with hundreds of thousands expected to head to the coast to enjoy what has been an extraordinary fillip after the coldest summer since 1993. The current record for the hottest 1 October was set in March, Cambridgeshire, in 1985, where temperatures reached 29.4C. Tom Tobler, a forecaster with MeteoGroup said: “Today will be another hot and mostly sunny day for England and Wales, but Scotland and Northern Ireland will see some heavy rain. “Temperatures will begin to drop tomorrow in Scotland with cloud and rain gradually moving into northern England during the day but warm weather is expected to continue till Tuesday in the south of England. “It’s not going to be quite as hot on Sunday. Northern England will see some cloud and rain moving in. The highest temperatures will be more concentrated in southern England, and they will still be in the mid to high 20s in London and the surrounding areas,” said Tobler. Travel information firm Trafficlink said: “The heat is likely to bring anything between 30% and 50% more traffic on to the ‘usual summer routes’ which would normally be OK at this time of year. “Road authorities try to take out roadworks during the summer to ease the main routes, but this unexpected blast of heat means a lot of the repairs will remain in place, which won’t help.” Train companies are also expecting up to 25% more passengers as people go for a day out. Weather guardian.co.uk

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UK heatwave expected to break October record

Forecasters predict temperatures of 29C on the fourth day of sunshine for parts of the country Saturday is shaping up to be the hottest October day on record with forecasters predicting temperatures of around 29C as the mini-Indian summer continues. The country will bask in glorious sunshine for the fourth day in succession with hundreds of thousands expected to head to the coast to enjoy what has been an extraordinary fillip after the coldest summer since 1993. The current record for the hottest 1 October was set in March, Cambridgeshire, in 1985, where temperatures reached 29.4C. Tom Tobler, a forecaster with MeteoGroup said: “Today will be another hot and mostly sunny day for England and Wales, but Scotland and Northern Ireland will see some heavy rain. “Temperatures will begin to drop tomorrow in Scotland with cloud and rain gradually moving into northern England during the day but warm weather is expected to continue till Tuesday in the south of England. “It’s not going to be quite as hot on Sunday. Northern England will see some cloud and rain moving in. The highest temperatures will be more concentrated in southern England, and they will still be in the mid to high 20s in London and the surrounding areas,” said Tobler. Travel information firm Trafficlink said: “The heat is likely to bring anything between 30% and 50% more traffic on to the ‘usual summer routes’ which would normally be OK at this time of year. “Road authorities try to take out roadworks during the summer to ease the main routes, but this unexpected blast of heat means a lot of the repairs will remain in place, which won’t help.” Train companies are also expecting up to 25% more passengers as people go for a day out. Weather guardian.co.uk

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Public Employee Rick Perry Says Warren Buffett Hasn’t Got a Clue About the Private Sector

Click here to view this media One of the foremost business investors on the planet doesn’t know much about capitalism, according to Governor Goodhair of Texas. ANDREW SORKIN, CNBC: Governor Perry, real quick. Warren Buffett is going to be in new york tomorrow for an obama fund-raiser. Curious about your thoughts on the Buffet Rule. Gov, RICK PERRY: I think it’s right down to the real problem that we’ve got in Washington, D.C. an administration that is listening to people who really don’t have an understanding about what’s going on out there in the real world. you think — I respect — I think Mr. Buffet is a really intelligent individual. I can promise you he doesn’t know what’s going on in places that where the job creation is at a zero because of overtaxation and overregulation. Dodd-Frank is strangling the small community banks across america. It needs to be repealed. We need to get Washington out of the business of overregulation. It’s killing our country. ANDREW SORKIN: Taxing millionaires? Do you believe ultimately is going to kill jobs? GOV. RICK PERRY: I think taxing millionaires is such a fake way to talk about what’s going on in this country.

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Capitol Police Didn’t Laugh at Satirical Onion Post About Congress Taking Schoolchildren Hostage

Click here to view this media Most people are aware that The Onion is a satirical site and should not be taken seriously. But apparently their recent post mocking the economic hostage-taking we’ve seen from members of Congress — and taking that to its most absurd end — with them literally taking schoolchildren hostage, didn’t sit so well with the Capitol Police this Thursday. While I can understand their agitation, since I’m sure they had to deal with many people that did not understand this was satire. But I have absolutely no sympathy for our current members of Congress, who deserve to be raked over the coals as they were by The Onion . Here’s the story from The Onion that had them terribly upset — Congress Takes Group Of Schoolchildren Hostage : ‘We Need $12 Trillion Or All These Kids Die’ WASHINGTON—Brandishing shotguns and semiautomatic pistols, members of the 112th U.S. Congress took a class of visiting schoolchildren hostage today, barricading themselves inside the Capitol rotunda and demanding $12 trillion dollars in cash. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), who has emerged as spokesman for the bipartisan group, informed FBI negotiators this morning that the ransom was to be placed in stainless-steel suitcases and left on the Capitol steps by 4 p.m. sharp. If their demands are not met in full, the 11-term representative announced, “all the kids will die.” “Bring us the money and we let the children go, simple as that,” said Boehner, appearing in the East Portico with a serrated switchblade held to one of the fourth-grader’s throats. “If you want to play games and stall for extra time, we’re going to shoot one kid an hour, starting with little Dillon here.” “Tick tock,” he added, vanishing back into the building with the terrified child in tow. I won’t share any more here because the next line is not safe for work, so just go read the rest. As humorous as their post was, reading their Twitter feed today was laugh out loud funny and possibly more humorous if you got the joke as well and I’ll share some of that below the fold. Here are a few of their Tweets on this article that came in throughout the day and you can follow their entire timeline here . enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge

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Oh, goody: Someone decided to give Courtney Love a book deal. The rocker and controversy magnet will write not just a memoir, but a “tell-all” memoir, thanks to the deal with HarperCollins’ William Morrow imprint, MediaBistro reports. Love will collaborate with Anthony Bozza, who has co-authored books with other rockers…

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Wall Street Mocks Protesters By Drinking Champagne

Click here to view this media YouTube version Wall Street has shown Americans how they feel about protests. This video shows unidentified occupants watching protests from the balconies of Wall Street in amusement while sipping champagne. EDITOR’S NOTE: We’re taking donations to buy the protesters some pizzas this weekend.

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Media Cast Bush as Rights Abuser, Gloss Over Obama’s Killing of U.S. Citizen

The three network morning shows on Friday all highlighted the United States' success in killing terrorist Anwar al Awlaki. However, although these same programs were sensitive to the slightest possible civil rights violation by the Bush administration, they did not seemed interested the fact that Al Awlaki was an American citizen. Good Morning America, Today and the Early Show mentioned this detail, but didn't provide any analysis or question the President's authority to make such a move. GMA's Brian Ross simply offered, ” He was considered such a serious threat to the U.S. that the President had authorized the use of lethal force against him, even though he was an American citizen .” Early Show and Today simply both described al Awlaki as an “American” or “American-born.” CBS's Bill Plante noted that Awlaki was “the first American who was ever placed on the CIA's kill or capture list.” Writing on ABC News.com , Jake Tapper and Jason Ryan explained: How does President Obama have the right to target for killing a US citizen such as Anwar al-Awlaki? That’s a good question. As of now, the administration’s legal justification is unclear. … Needless to say, this unprecedented ruling has been severely criticized – and all the more so today, with the assassination having been carried out. The points raised by Tapper online weren't repeated on GMA. ABC's Brian Ross gave only biographical information on al Awlaki: “Born in the United States, in New Mexico in 1971, Anwar al Awlaki went to college in Colorado before heading up mosques in San Diego and Virginia.” [ Friday readers : We need today to be our big day! Show your support for NewsBusters by helping us reach our $5,000 goal today. Donate now and get a liberal media bias gift as a thank you.] In contrast, on the April 16, 2009 World News, reporter Jan Crawford covered the “chilling” revelation that detained terror suspects such as Abu Zubayda were “tortured with an insect in a confinement box” by the U.S. A just-released report by the Media Research Center, Red, White, and Partisan , showed that journalists saw civil liberty abuses everywhere during the Bush years. On the first anniversary of 9/11, NBC reporter Jim Avila mourned: JIM AVILA: “This is Jeanean Othman, an American of Palestinian descent. Born 42 years ago in suburban Chicago. Now worried everything she learned as an American about justice and civil rights collapsed along with New York’s Twin Towers.” In the report, the MRC's Tim Graham reminded: On ABC’s Nightline on December 19, 2005, Terry Moran threw this hardball at Vice President Dick Cheney: “I’d like to put this personally, if I can. You’re a grandfather. I’m a father. When we look at those girls and we think that the country we’re about to pass to them is a country where the Vice President can’t say whether or not we have secret prisons around the world, whether water-boarding and mock executions is consistent with our values, and a country where the government is surveilling Americans without the warrant of a court – is that the country we want to pass on to them?” The same networks that fretted over insect “torture” and threats to civil liberties should also follow up on the Obama administration's killing of an American citizen. A transcript of the September 30 GMA segment, which aired at 7:03am EDT, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Let's bring in ABC's chief investigative correspondent, Brian Ross. Of course, Brian, you've been tracking al Awlaki for years and his links go all the way back to 9/11. He even met with two of the 9/11 hijackers. BRIAN ROSS: That's right, George. He was considered such a serious threat to the U.S. that the President had authorized the use of lethal force against him, even though he was an American citizen. The United States has been seeking to kill or capture al Awlaki, for almost two years. LEON PANETTA (Secretary of Defense): Awlaki is a terrorist. MICHAEL LEITER (National Counter Terrorism Center):

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Oops? Mitt Romney’s Anti-Rick Perry Campaign Ad Uses Media Matters Music

The Mitt Romney campaign has recently released a web-only campaign ad that goes after comments made by Rick Perry at the most recent Fox News GOP debate over the issue of immigration . The video itself is a rather predictable example from the “gotcha politics” playbook, however the music bed underneath may sound familiar to anyone accustomed to watching videos online: it’s the same music bed used by… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Mediaite Discovery Date : 30/09/2011 01:44 Number of articles : 3

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Amanda Knox said to have plane on standby if appeal is upheld

Family of victim Meredith Kercher had difficulty finding air tickets, says lawyer as appeal comes to an end Amanda Knox was said to have a plane standing by to whisk her out of Italy if her appeal was upheld, whereas the family of her alleged victim, the British student, Meredith Kercher, were having difficulty getting air tickets to be in court for the decision, their lawyer said on Friday. Francesco Maresca was speaking as the appeal by the 24-year-old Knox and her former Italian boyfriend built towards a much-anticipated climax. In line with Italian court practice, each of the parties to the case was given a last chance to sway the two professional and six lay judges. According to unconfirmed reports in the Italian media, a US television network has put a private jet at the disposal of the Knox family. “Well now,” said Maresca when his turn came to speak. “The Kercher family has problems finding the tickets to come here to hear the outcome on Monday morning.” Money, class and race were all deployed on the penultimate day of an appeal that has also been rich in allusions to sex, religion and even the occult. According to the prosecution, Kercher died resisting a violent sex game involving the appellants and Rudy Guede from Ivory Coast. The defence’s central argument has been that Guede, who has been definitively convicted of the murder, killed Kercher on his own after breaking in to the flat she shared with Knox. The young American’s former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, is the son of a prosperous urologist. The Knoxes are not rich but, said Giuliano Mignini for the prosecution, they had spent $1m on a PR campaign in defence of their daughter’s innocence. Mignini, who oversaw the original investigation, pointedly referred to the appellants as being “of good families”, contrasting their fate in the event of an acquittal with that of a “poor black man”. His remark came in a speech in which he claimed, as evidence of the appellants’ guilt, their reaction to gruesome images of the murder scene shown in court. “At the trial, Amanda never looked at them. Never. Raffaele looked every so often with one eye – icy, expressionless.” His jibe was described as “truly unfair” by Sollecito’s counsel, Donatella Donati. Her client, brought up by his father after his mother’s death, was simply “shy about showing his emotions”. It was followed by a defence onslaught on the evidence, with lawyers appearing to hint Knox and Sollecito were framed.But Donati came closer than anyone to making the charge explicit. She recalled that, after her client was arrested, his father had appeared on a show presented by one of Italy’s best-known TV journalists. Having heard of some of the alleged weaknesses in the police case, the presenter had remarked that, if such claims were true, “Someone will have to pay”. The following morning, said Donati, the police found at the scene of the crime Kercher’s bra clasp, which had lain there, apparently unnoticed, for more than six weeks. On examination the clasp was found to bear a trace of Sollecito’s DNA, though court-appointed experts reported in June that the evidence might have got there by contamination. Donati noted that the clasp also bore the DNA of two other men, and that neither of them was Guede. “So, who were those other men?”, she asked. Closing her address to the court, Donati said it was the defence that had gone after the truth in this case, even though under the Italian system that was the job of the prosecution. “Raffaele Sollecito has no fear of the truth”, she declared with the clear implication that his prosecutors might. Amanda Knox United States Meredith Kercher Italy Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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California man found after car plunged off cliff days ago

David Lavau, 67, survived for five or six days on leaves and creek water after his car plunged off a remote mountain road A 67-year-old man who survived for five or six days on leaves and creek water after his car plunged 61m (200ft) off a remote mountain road was found by his children, who tracked him down like television detectives. Chardonnay, Sean and Lisa Lavau appeared on NBC’s Today show on Friday, describing how on Thursday they found their father’s car and his makeshift camp in a ravine off Lake Hughes Road in the Angeles National Forest, a rugged landscape lying between metropolitan Los Angeles and the Mojave Desert. Another vehicle was found nearby, but its driver did not survive the crash and authorities do not know if they are dealing with one crash or two, said Los Angeles County Fire Department Captain Mark Savage. The accident investigation was turned over to the California Highway Patrol. The survivor, David Lavau, was listed in serious condition on Friday morning, said Adrienne Thompson, spokeswoman at Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital in Valencia. Family members apparently did not immediately realize their father was missing, and then contacted a missing persons detective in Los Angeles who helped them figure out that he had been gone for some time. The detective narrowed the search area using cell phone towers, text messages and debit card purchases, Chardonnay Lavau told NBC and other organizations. Lisa Lavau told KCAL-TV her family had not heard from her father for several days. After narrowing the search area, “We stopped at every ravine, and looked over every hill and then my brother got out of the car and we kept screaming and the next thing we heard Dad saying ‘help, help,’ and there he was,” Lisa Lavau said. Chardonnay Lavau told NBC one of the first things her father asked for after he was found was a chocolate malt. Officials at the scene were told he might have been stranded for up to six days, Savage said. “It’s unconfirmed, the duration, but it’s possibly a significant amount of time,” Savage said. Fire officials responded at around 6.10pm Thursday and a paramedic was lowered to David Lavau from a helicopter. He was evaluated and taken to Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital for treatment. David Lavau suffered multiple rib fractures, a dislocated shoulder, a broken arm and multiple fractures in his back, but none of the injuries was life-threatening, said hospital spokeswoman Bhavna Mistery. He was expected to undergo surgery and it was not clear how long he would be hospitalized, she said. He was doing well and in good spirits surrounded by his family, she added. The three family members who hiked down to him had to be assisted out of the area on foot by firefighters. The crash occurred in a sparsely populated area about 50 miles (80km) north of downtown Los Angeles. Savage said roads in the area have sharp curves and in many areas go down to two lanes, with some steep cliffs and drops over the side. Savage said firefighters remained on the scene late Thursday to do a thorough search of the area to make sure there were no other victims in the accident. The identity of the deceased driver has not been released. The recovery of the body was delayed until daylight on Friday, said Craig Harvey, spokesman for the Los Angeles County coroner’s office. It was being brought up the ravine by a sheriff’s team. California United States guardian.co.uk

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