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Wie bei „Star Wars”! Planet mit zwei Sonnen entdeckt Kepler-10b – Nasa descobre planeta semelhante ao da ficção “Star Wars” Guerra nas Estrelas Kepler-10b – Nasa descobre planeta semelhante ao da ficção “Star Wars” Guerra nas Estrelas Mielious says: Yup!! With two suns and all RT @ bilsugiri : tatooine from star wars?! @ Mielious : Whoa, a planet like Tatooine found! :O

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Denmark has elected its first female prime minister, ousting the right-wing government from power after 10 years of pro-market reforms and ever-stricter controls on immigration. Near complete official results showed yesterday that a left-leaning bloc led by Social Democrat Helle Thorning-Schmidt would gain a narrow majority in the 179-seat Parliament.

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Friday Flicks: Will ‘Drive’ Take Ryan Gosling to Oscar Glory?

Grab some popcorn! NewsFeed’s Glen Levy brings you the movies you should check out (or avoid) this weekend. Drive Tagline: There Are No Clean Getaways There’s hardly a heady history when it comes to the band REO Speedwagon and the movies. But we should thank them for getting the Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn and

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Libya rebels launch assaults on Gaddafi’s last strongholds

Bani Walid and Sirte centres of fierce fighting as rebels and regime loyalists engage in last-ditch battle for supremacy Libyan rebel forces launched offensives against Gaddafi loyalists on Friday but fierce resistance and poor organisation stopped them taking two strongholds whose control is vital to consolidate the grip of the post-revolutionary regime. Rebels occupied the airport at Sirte, a symbolically important town which was Muammar Gaddafi’s birthplace and which sits on the main road between Tripoli and Benghazi. At Bani Walid, 100 miles south of the capital, it quickly became clear that the war to secure Libya’s future is not over. Just outside the town, at a rebel checkpoint, Red Crescent ambulances screeched to a halt to disgorge men killed or wounded in a long day’s fighting, with cries of “Allahu Akbar” ringing out as machine gunfire and an occasional shell burst punctured the hot afternoon air. Plumes of smoke rose above low-rise apartment blocks just short of the hill, where pro-Gaddafi forces held back a rebel assault that began in the morning but was petering out in disarray and frustration by the time the evening drew near. Two separate rebel brigades attacked from north and south, but the defenders fought back with mortars and Grad rockets. Gaddafi snipers, on the high ground, were a menace. “They are fighting hard,” said Ishmail Abbouda, who had been studying in London before returning home to defend the revolution with a Kalashnikov rifle and Beretta pistol tucked into his flak jacket. “It was rough but we are doing well. And it will take another day or two. I think Gaddafi is there.” Fact and rumour were impossible to disentangle. Several rebels spoke of the capture of the bodyguard of Saif al-Islam, the deposed dictator’s fugitive son who had been rumoured to be in Bani Walid. Others described a convoy of 30 SUVs leaving town in the early morning, firing wildly perhaps to create a diversion. Ali Shita, who was lightly injured in the foot and over his left eye by a mortar shell that killed two comrades, hobbled away wincing, watched by Abdel-Rahman Khaled, a burly former Gaddafi bodyguard who defected on 23 March. His unit, the Mohammed Magarief Brigade, is named after a veteran opponent of the regime. “They shot at us from behind in the middle of town, just after eight in the morning,” said Nabil Darawil, wearing a ragtag uniform of T-shirt and baggy combat trousers. “We captured one sniper but there are a lot of them.” It was at least the third attempt to take the town. Many residents have fled. Dr Wissam Abu Jarad, neat in green scrubs at a roadside clinic further north, treated 10 injuries and confirmed four dead by mid-afternoon. Inside his small building an old man wept over the corpse of his nephew as subdued rebels milled around. At the final checkpoint before the town, rebel tempers were running high. Three young men, unarmed, dishevelled and terrified, were shoved into a dilapidated hut and lined up against a breezeblock wall. “Gaddafi forces,” one of their captors screamed. Outside, another fighter whose brother had been killed earlier, fired a single shot over the head of a news photographer. Signs of chaos and bickering were rife among the rebel troops, who argued volubly as the evening pullback was completed. “Victory is certain,” said Ramadan Abdul-Rahman, a local man. “But our forces do need to be better organised.” Bani Walid, two hours south of Tripoli, is the centre of the powerful Warfallah tribe, the country’s largest. If it and Sirte were captured only Sabha, hundreds of miles south on the edge of the Sahara, will still be in the hands of the old regime. Hard news from Sabha is rare, but a British military spokesman said British jets had fired two dozen Brimstone missiles to destroy a group of Libyan armoured vehicles near the town on Thursday. On the Mediterranean coast at Sirte, thick clouds of smoke billowed from the city centre, accompanied by frequent detonations, as rebel units attacked a series of strongholds in the city. Nato jets could be heard and in the afternoon there were a series of loud explosions, possibly of bombs. After capturing much of the city on Thursday night, along with the strategic east-west highway that runs south of the city, opposition forces pushed north into the city and south into the hinterland.At the highway intersection turnoff leading to Sirte, convoys of worn pickup trucks with cannons and machine guns rumbled into the town. Columns of smoke rose at intervals from the city, hidden from view by a wooded hillside. Commanders said they launched the attack after reports that pro-Gaddafi militias had begun attacks on the homes of residents originally from Misrata living in the central District One. A relief force broke through to them on Thursday night, but retreated in the early hours of Friday morning, fearing their presence would attract rocket and artillery fire from loyalist forces at the airbase and further south. Instead, rebels have switched their attention to destroying these forces, pushing out in all directions south of the coastal highway, and capturing the well defended airbase. Misrata Military Council, commanding the operation, said it expected to clear the hinterland far enough to make the city safe for units to destroy strongholds of loyalist troops based around an insurance building and beachfront villas. The fighting came a day after the flag-flying visit to Tripoli by Nicolas Sarkozy and David Cameron. They were followed on Friday by the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who displayed his Muslim faith and solidarity by joining worshippers in newly renamed Martyrs Square, – or Green Square under the old regime. “From here I call out to Sirte,” he said of the besieged coastal city. “Come, right now. Some 10,000 brothers and sisters are hungry and thirsty – embrace your brothers in Tripoli. Spilling blood does not suit us. Let us come together.” Libya Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa Ian Black Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk

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Conservative MP piloting legal aid cuts may profit from the changes

Jonathan Djanogly’s role as insurance firm partner means he could personally profit from bill he is pushing through parliament How to read the accounts The Djanogly Family LLP accounts 2010 The Djanogly Family LLP accounts 2009 The Djanogly Family LLP accounts 2008 The Conservative justice minister piloting controversial plans to cut legal aid and curb payouts that could benefit the insurance industry to the tune of a billion pounds a year will personally profit from the changes, a Guardian investigation can reveal. Jonathan Djanogly, the legal services minister, is pushing a bill through parliament which will attempt to slash the budget for legal aid by £350m as well as forcing claimants to pay out of any awarded damages their lawyers’ success fees and insurance policies that cover court costs. Experts say this will benefit the insurance industry by at least “hundreds of millions of pounds”. The Association of British Insurers admits that industry will benefit from the reforms – and if Ireland’s experience is any guide the proposals in the legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill offer a chance to cut premiums by 16%. Djanogly, who is considered to be one of the 10 richest MPs with interests in a property, a string of stockmarket investments and a Scottish forestry portfolio, also has a personal stake in the insurance industry. In the Commons register of members’ interests, he lists that he is a “minority partner in The Djanogly Family LLP (member of Lloyd’s)”. This means he takes one sixth of the profits from an Lloyds underwriting partnership that deals in accident, health and motor claims. In the past three years Djanogly has been entitled to an average annual payout from the underwriters of £41,000. In 2009 Djanogly was eligible to almost £97,000 from the profits of the partnership – more than his current ministerial salary of £89,000. The ministerial code, issued by the Cabinet Office when the coalition took power last May, clearly states: “Ministers must ensure that no conflict arises, or could reasonably be perceived to arise, between their public duties and their private interests, financial or otherwise.” Labour said the only people arguing for these changes “are the insurance industry and Conservative ministers”. Andrew Slaughter, the shadow justice minister, said: “There are serious questions for the minister to answer. It would be a serious matter if the minister were pursuing legislation from which he might benefit financially.” Djanogly issued a statement to the Guardian. “My financial interests are a matter of public record. I have made declarations both as a minister and as an MP. “The government’s reforms to the no win no fee system are designed to tackle the fear of a compensation culture which inflates legal costs and forces defendants to settle even when they know they have done nothing wrong. The reforms are based on an independent review by Sir Rupert Jackson.” Lord Justice Jackson, an appeal court judge, was tasked to look at curbing litigation costs by the former master of the rolls, Sir Anthony Clarke. His report was produced in January 2010 and Labour declined to endorse it. However the coalition has accepted almost all of the controversial recommendations and went further by cutting back on legal aid, something that Jackson has publicly criticised. In a lecture in Cambridge earlier this month Jackson challenged the government’s plans saying: “The cutbacks in legal aid are contrary to the recommendations in my report. I do, however, stress the vital necessity of making no further cutbacks in legal aid availability or eligibility. The legal aid system plays a crucial role in promoting access to justice at proportionate costs in key areas.” Legal experts say Jackson’s radical change breaks with “centuries of English legal tradition” where payouts are meant to reflect injuries not the cost of a case. The UN has warned that the reforms will prevent claims, such as those in the Trafigura case, where solicitors took the case on a no win no fee basis on behalf of 30,0000 poor Africans, being brought against multinational businesses. The settlement of £30m made by the commodity trader was seen a landmark in global justice. Ken Oliphant, current on secondment from Bristol University to head up the Institute for European Tort Law of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, told the Guardian: “Insurers around the world are trying to put pressure on governments to save on liability costs. You have to understand that legal aid was cut and no win no fee arrangements were meant to replace them, to allow people access to justice. “If you remove that right then you will not allow ordinary people to have access to justice. If they have to pay for legal costs out of damages it may not be worth going to court.” Since having been selected for Huntingdon, the safest of safe seats, after former prime minister Sir John Major stepped down, Djanogly, 46, rose through the ranks of the Tory party to sit on the justice team. Privately educated and with a law degree from Oxford Polytechnic, Djanogly was a partner in a City law firm until 2009. He faced calls last year to step down for hiring private investigators to spy on local Conservatives while mired in the parliamentary expenses scandal. Djanogly’s father Harry is the founder of Coats Viyella and reputed to be the owner of the world’s largest collection of Lowry paintings. Conservatives Conservative conference 2010 Conservative conference 2011 Legal aid UK criminal justice Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk

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Illinois and Pennsylvania saw their jobless rates increase by the most of any state last month, according to new government numbers. Illinois’s unemployment rate rose by 0.4 percentage points to 9.9 percent in August, when the economy added no new jobs at all nationally. Pennsylvania’s increased by the same amount, to 8.2 percent, but remains

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Donald Trump: I’m Impressed with ‘Jim Perry’

Click here to view this media Business mogul/reality star Donald Trump was so impressed after his Wednesday night dinner with Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry that he couldn’t remember the Texas governor’s name the next day. “I had dinner last night with Jim Perry,” Trump told The Street . “I was impressed with him.” The billionaire added that he would consider running again if Republicans picked the “wrong” candidate.

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Starting today, praying in the streets of Paris is illegal, and Interior Minister Claude Gueant said the ban could soon be extended to the rest of France, particularly to Nice and Marseilles, where “the problem persists,” the Telegraph reports. The “problem” in this case being Muslim worshipers filling the streets…

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Zombie Caterpillars: Virus Liquifies Insect (PHOTOS)

First it was zombie ants, now it’s zombie caterpillars. A new study, published in the Sept. 9 edition of Science, unveils the discovery of a gene in caterpillars that makes them susceptible to a virus that literally takes control of their brains and makes them climb to the the treetops, where their bodies liquify and rain down to the ground. The method virtually ensures that the virus continues to thrive as it comes down to Earth. Luckily for us, the baculovirus that causes this behavior only affects invertebrates. National Geographic reports that researcher Kelli Hoover from Penn State University explained the process in greater detail: The virus “ends up using just about all of the caterpillar to make more virus, and there are other genes in the virus that then make the caterpillar melt. So it becomes a pool of millions of virus particles that end up dropping onto the foliage below where it can infect other moths that eat those leaves.” But the baculovirus is even more resilient than it is vicious. According to LiveScience, even if the caterpillars are picked off the treetops by birds, the virus can survive in their stomachs, and is still rained down upon the forest in the form of feces. While the “zombifying” effect has been seen in insects before, the behavior is more commonly known to be seen when a parasitic fungus takes over, not a virus. “Who knew that a virus could change the behavior of its host?” study author Jim Slavicek, of the U.S. Forest Service, said in a statement, according to ScienceDaily. “Maybe this is why we go to work when we have a cold.” Clarification: As one reader has pointed out, the behavior of caterpillars to climb trees is natural, but typically only occurs when the insect is ready. It seems the virus suppresses the gene that causes the caterpillar to think that they should keep preparing to molt (feed), causing them to climb to a place where they eventually die. This said, the virus is still causing a change in the behavior of its host in order to help it spread. An Infected Caterpillar About To Fall (Courtesy of researchers Kelli Hoover and Michael Grove): An Infected Caterpillar (Courtesy of researchers Kelli Hoover and Michael Grove):

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Obama signs America Invents Act into law, makes patent reform a reality

Patent reform’s been bandied about on Capitol Hill for years now, and last week we finally got both houses of Congress to agree on the language to make it happen. Today, in what was a foregone conclusion, President Obama has finally made the thing official by signing the America Invents Act into law. In doing so, he made the dream of a first-to-file patent system in the US a reality. Of course, the law won’t go into effect for another 18 months, so we’ll have to wait awhile before we find out if it can curb all those companies’ litigious inclinations . Obama signs America Invents Act into law, makes patent reform a reality originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Sep 2011 15:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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