By Darren Franich
Wonder Woman! Vixen! Domino! See our wish list, plus who we think should star (Beyonce, Anna Faris) and direct (Julie Taymor, Terry Gilliam) to make each one fly

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Finance & Insurance Newsletter — Automotive <b>News</b>

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Finance &amp; Insurance Newsletter — Automotive <b>News</b>

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Ask Engadget: best network media player / streamer?

We know you’ve got questions, and if you’re brave enough to ask the world for answers, here’s the outlet to do so. This week’s Ask Engadget inquiry is coming to us from Mark, who needs the stream, If you’re looking to send in an inquiry of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

“I’m tearing my hair out trying to find networked media players that meet my needs for under $200. I want to be able to stream Netflix, Hulu Plus and Amazon Instant Video and play music from Slacker — I’m not interested in Pandora. I’m struggling to find anything that works with Slacker. In addition, I want to be able to stream MP3′s from a Windows 7 Ultimate machine on my network — preferably wirelessly, but wired is possible. The killer though is that I have a large number of video files in MKV, MP4, M4V, WMV, AVI and DVD ISO. Any ideas? I got nothing from Aardvark before Google shuttered it.”

Listen up, streamers — take a five minute break from whatever Netflix marathon you’re on now and help a brother out, won’t you?

Ask Engadget: best network media player / streamer? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 03 Dec 2011 23:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/z9tUZ3NBiYY/

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NYC Protesters Arrested During Demonstration Linking HIV/AIDS Activism With Occupy Wall Street

About 10 protesters trying to draw attention to what they say is a dearth of funding for HIV/AIDS treatment, prevention and affordable housing were arrested Thursday near New York’s City Hall.

A column of protesters — many of them dressed in green T-shirts layered over winter gear to evoke the 13th century English folk hero Robin Hood — marched around 11:30 a.m. from Zuccotti Park to Broadway and Park Place. Event organizers estimated that about 150 people participated, but some protesters interviewed outside City Hall put the event’s headcount at more than 200 people.

The protest, held on World AIDS Day, marked what for many was the public unveiling of a connection between New York’s HIV/AIDS activist community and the Occupy Wall Street movement, event organizers said. Most of the protesters were members of organizations that advocate for those living with HIV/AIDS in New York City and people involved in Occupy Wall Street’s LGBT working group.

Since the Occupy Wall Street movement started in Zuccotti Park in September, protesters in New York and other cities have almost universally decried growing income inequality. Many have called for modern-day efforts to redistribute wealth from the nation’s wealthiest 1 percent to the remaining 99 percent of the population. For many around the globe and in the United States, there is a strong connection between HIV/AIDS infection, treatment and income.

“It’s a lie when we’re told there isn’t enough money to fight AIDS,” said Felix Rivera-Pitre, a leader with the nonprofit VOCAL-NY, in a statement released by the organization Thursday. VOCAL-NY is an advocacy organization for people living with HIV/AIDS.

“The reality is that Wall Street crashed our economy, and now politicians are saying there’s less money for basic needs like health care and housing,” added Rivera-Pitre, who is living in a homeless shelter and has HIV/AIDS.

Rivera-Pitre was among those arrested Thursday and was also jailed in connection with an Occupy Wall Street protest earlier this month.

In July, the CDC issued a report indicating that there is a strong relationship between poverty and HIV infection among heterosexuals living in urban portions of the United States. Poor people have limited access to sexual health care services that may allow for safer sex, early detection and treatment of the disease, according to the report.

Homeless people and those with unstable housing situations also have a more difficult time prioritizing health concerns, receiving medical care or sticking to a treatment regimen, said Sean Barry, executive director of VOCAL-NY. Many also exchange sex for housing, he said.

“We believe that income inequality and the effects of poverty also help to explain some of the racial disparities in HIV infection among gay men,” Barry said.

As the group of protesters neared city hall Thursday, 12 people who had bound themselves together with metal chains walked into the street at Broadway and Park Place. At first, the group stood in the intersection, obstructing traffic. Within 15 minutes, police moved in and cleared one lane of traffic. The remaining protesters laid down on the street, refusing to move. By 12:40 p.m., all of the protesters had been carried away and forcibly cleared from the street.

Police officials did not respond to a request for comment Thursday. Protesters said more than three dozen officers responded to the demonstrations and were involved in making arrests.

Event organizers called the effort an act of civil disobedience and a “die-in.” The term is a reference to a sit-in, a non-violent protest tactic that involves occupying a place peacefully and refusing to move until demands are met — first widely employed by Mohandas Gandhi in South Africa and India, but widely used by civil rights protesters, anti-war activists and student groups in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s. In the 1980s, die-ins were a tactic utilized by ACT UP, a group that has long worked to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS and to demand increases in public funding for treatment and research.

After the die-in and arrests, several VOCAL-NY members lingered on the scene. About 15 officers also stood nearby.

“It went beautifully,” said Wayne Starks, a board member of VOCAL-NY who is 51 and living with AIDS. The big issue for Starks, and many of the other activists on Broadway, is the extension of the so-called millionaire’s tax. “We tried to send a message to our government about how we need to stop cutting funding to fight AIDS and start sending cuts to billionaires,” he said.

Starks said he spent a lot of time in Zuccotti Park before police cleared it out more than two weeks ago, although he did not regularly spend the night there. He said he thinks Occupy Wall Street and VOCAL-NY have essentially the same goals. “It’s human rights. They want affordable housing, we want affordable housing. They want jobs, we need jobs too,” he said.

“The history of AIDS activism is one of the best modern day examples of the power of political protests to bring about social change,” Barry said. “People think it’s merely a health issue, but let’s face it — if HIV did not primarily affect gay men of all races and poor women of color, our government would be taking this issue more seriously. What we’re doing today is our effort to really make the connection again between the health and politics, the messages of Occupy Wall Street and how mass inequality imperils us all.”

The protesters behind Thursday’s march say they have two specific demands. The group would like to see a .02 percent tax implemented on financial transactions, and would like to ensure that the millionaire’s tax is not allowed to expire on Dec. 31.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has said that he would like to see the tax expire because it deters hiring and spending. The Bloomberg administration has also cut more than $10 million from funding to support housing for those living with HIV or AIDS, according to the statement released by VOCAL-NY.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/01/occupy-wall-street-hiv-aids_n_1123902.html

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Metro signs Full Funding Grant Agreement (Offthekuff)

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In a star’s final days, astronomers hunt ‘signal of impending doom’

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

An otherwise nondescript binary star system in the Whirlpool Galaxy has brought astronomers tantalizingly close to their goal of observing a star just before it goes supernova.

The study, submitted in a paper to the Astrophysical Journal, provides the latest result from an Ohio State University galaxy survey underway with the Large Binocular Telescope, located in Arizona.

In the first survey of its kind, the researchers have been scanning 25 nearby galaxies for stars that brighten and dim in unusual ways, in order to catch a few that are about to meet their end. In the three years since the study began, this particular unnamed binary system in the Whirlpool Galaxy was the first among the stars they’ve cataloged to produce a supernova.

The astronomers were trying to find out if there are patterns of brightening or dimming that herald the end of a star’s life. Instead, they saw one star in this binary system dim noticeably before the other one exploded in a supernova during the summer of 2011.

Though they’re still sorting through the data, it’s likely that they didn’t get any direct observations of the star that exploded ? only its much brighter partner.

Yet, principal investigator Christopher Kochanek, professor of astronomy at Ohio State and the Ohio Eminent Scholar in Observational Cosmology, does not regard this first result as a disappointment. Rather, it’s a proof of concept.

“Our underlying goal is to look for any kind of signature behavior that will enable us to identify stars before they explode,” he said. “It’s a speculative goal at this point, but at least now we know that it’s possible.”

“Maybe stars give off a clear signal of impending doom, maybe they don’t,” said study co-author Krzystof Stanek, professor of astronomy at Ohio State, “But we’ll learn something new about dying stars no matter the outcome.”

Postdoctoral researcher Dorota Szczygiel, who led the study of this supernova, explained why the galaxy survey is important.

“The odds are extremely low that we would just happen to be observing a star for several years before it went supernova. We would have to be extremely lucky,” she said.

“With this galaxy survey, we’re making our own luck. We’re studying all the variable stars in 25 galaxies, so that when one of them happens go supernova, we’ve already compiled data on it.” The supernova, labeled 2011dh, was first detected on May 31 and is still visible in telescopes. It originated from a binary star system in the Whirlpool Galaxy ? also known as M51, one of the galaxies that the Ohio State astronomers have been observing for three years.

The system is believed to have contained one very bright blue star and one even brighter red star. From what the astronomers can tell, it’s likely that the red star is the one that dimmed over the three years, before the blue star initiated the supernova.

When the Ohio State researchers reviewed the Large Binocular Telescope data as well as Hubble Space Telescope images of M51, they saw that the red star had dimmed by about 10 percent over three years, at a pace of three percent per year.

Szczygiel believes that the red star likely survived its partner’s supernova.

“After the light from the explosion fades away, we should be able to see the companion that did not explode,” she said.

As astronomers gather data from more supernovae ? Kochanek speculates that as many as one per year could emerge from their data set ? they could assemble a kind of litmus test to predict whether a particular star is near death. Whether it’s going to spawn a supernova or shrink into a black hole, there may be particular signals visible on the surface, and this study has shown that those signals are detectable.

The team won’t be watching our sun for any changes, however. At less than 10 percent of the mass of the star in supernova 2011dh, our star will most likely meet a very boring end.

“There’ll be no supernova for our sun ? it’ll just fizzle out,” Kochanek said. “But that’s okay ? you don’t want to live around an exciting star.”

###

Ohio State University: http://researchnews.osu.edu

Thanks to Ohio State University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115608/In_a_star_s_final_days__astronomers_hunt__signal_of_impending_doom_

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NASA launches super-size rover to Mars: ‘Go, Go!’ (San Jose Mercury News)

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3 American students arrested in Cairo back in US (AP)

ST. LOUIS ? The last of the three American students to arrive home after being arrested amid Cairo’s tumultuous protests described his first hours in custody as “probably the scariest night of my life ever,” saying the youths were hit, forced to lay for hours in the dark nearly in a fetal position and threatened with guns.

Derrik Sweeney, 19, spoke with The Associated Press shortly after arriving at St. Louis’ international airport late Saturday night, greeted with joyful shouts of anxious parents who tightly hugged him as dozens of others in a crowd of supporters and relatives held up signs reading, “We love you Derrik” and “Welcome home, Derrik.”

“The first night was probably the scariest night of my life ever. I was not sure I was going to live. They said if we moved at all, even an inch, they would shoot us. They were behind us with guns,” Sweeney told the AP in a brief phone interview, adding the three had spent about six hours curled up uncomfortably with their hands behind their backs.

Egyptian authorities said they had arrested Sweeney a week earlier along with 19-year-old Gregory Porter and 21-year-old Luke Gates on the rooftop of a university building near Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square amid violent protests engulfing the streets below.

Officials accused the young men of throwing firebombs at Egyptian security forces fighting with the protesters, but Sweeney said he and the other Americans “never did anything to hurt anyone” and never were on the rooftop nor handled or threw any explosives. He called those accusations “very clearly just lies, 100 percent.”

But he said conditions in custody markedly improved after the opening night’s ordeal when they three were taken to some “legitimate” prison or jail. He didn’t elaborate on who he believed was holding him the opening night but he called the treatment humane in the ensuing days.

“There was really marked treatment between the first night and the next three nights or however long it was. The first night, it was kind of rough. They were hitting us; they were saying they were going to shoot us and they were putting us in really uncomfortable positions. But after that first night, we were treated in a just manner ? as a prisoner ? we were given food when we needed and it was OK after that first night.”

At his airport arrival, he also said things became much better in subsequent days when he was allowed to speak with U.S. consular official “and then my mom.”

An Egyptian court ordered the students’ release Thursday, and they were on flights out of Cairo two days later. Porter and Gates also arrived back in their home states late Saturday, all greeted by relieved family members.

“I’m not going to take this as a negative experience. It’s still a great country,” Gates, his parents wrapping their arms around him, said shortly after getting off a flight in Indianapolis.

The protests had flared starting Nov. 19, in anticipation of the landmark parliamentary elections in Egypt due to start Monday. On Friday, the crowd grew to more than 100,000 people and on Saturday fresh clashes erupted between security forces and the Egyptian protesters demanding the military step down. The protests Saturday left one man dead as the violence threatened to overshadow the looming elections.

Porter also was met by his parents and other relatives earlier Saturday evening when he landed at Philadelphia International Airport. Porter took no questions, but said he was thankful for the help he and the other American students received from the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, administrators at the university they were attending, and attorneys in Egypt and the U.S.

“I’m just so thankful to be back, to be in Philadelphia right now,” said Porter, who is from nearby Glenside, Pa., and attends Drexel University in Philadelphia.

All three left the Egyptian capital Saturday morning on separate connecting flights to Frankfurt, Germany, an airport official in Cairo said. The three were studying at American University in Cairo.

Joy Sweeney said staff at the school packed her son’s bags because he wasn’t allowed to return to his dorm room. Waiting for her son had been grueling, she said shortly before he arrived, but she was grateful he would be home before the holiday weekend was over.

“He still hasn’t processed what a big deal this is,” she told the AP shortly before her son arrived at the airport.

She said she was trying not to dwell on the events of the last week and was ecstatic that her son, a student at Georgetown University in Washington, was coming home. The family is from Jefferson City, Mo., about 130 miles west of St. Louis.

Earlier in the week, she talked about how she put a Thanksgiving celebration on hold because the idea seemed “absolutely irrelevant” while her son still was being held.

“It’s been an emotional rollercoaster. I mean, I don’t know how to describe it other than that,” she said Saturday night. “But I never looked at the worst-case scenario.”

___

Matheson reported from Philadelphia. Associated Press photographer Michael Conroy contributed to this report from Indianapolis and AP writers Bill Cormier in Atlanta; Maggie Michael in Cairo; Andale Gross and Erin Gartner in Chicago; Sandy Kozel in Washington; Rick Callahan in Indianapolis; and Maryclaire Dale in Philadelphia also contributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111127/ap_on_re_us/us_egypt_american_students

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Pakistan: 24 troops dead in NATO helicopter attack

Pakistani security personnel stop trucks carrying supplies for NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan at Takhtabeg check post in Pakistani tribal area of Khyber, Pakistan, on their way to Torkham border post on Saturday, Nov 26, 2011. Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on two army checkpoints in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then retaliated by closing a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)

Pakistani security personnel stop trucks carrying supplies for NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan at Takhtabeg check post in Pakistani tribal area of Khyber, Pakistan, on their way to Torkham border post on Saturday, Nov 26, 2011. Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on two army checkpoints in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then retaliated by closing a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)

Pakistani security personnel stop truck carrying supplies for NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan at Takhtabeg check post in Pakistani tribal area of Khyber, Pakistan, on their way to Torkham border post on Saturday, Nov 26, 2011. Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on two army checkpoints in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then retaliated by closing a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)

Trucks carry supplies for NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan are halt at Takhtabeg check post in Pakistani tribal area of Khyber, Pakistan, on their way to Torkham border post on Saturday, Nov 26, 2011. Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on two army checkpoints in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then retaliated by closing a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Qazi Rauf)

Trucks carry supplies for NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan are halt at Takhtabeg check post in Pakistani tribal area of Khyber, Pakistan, on their way to Torkham border post on Saturday, Nov 26, 2011. Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on two army checkpoints in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then retaliated by closing a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Qazi Rauf)

(AP) ? Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters and fighter jets of firing on two army checkpoints in the country’s northwest and killing 24 soldiers. Islamabad retaliated by closing the border crossings used by the international coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

The incident before dawn Saturday was a major blow to already strained relations between Islamabad and U.S.-led forces fighting in Afghanistan. It will add to perceptions in Pakistan that the American presence in the region is malevolent, and further fuel resentment toward the weak government in Islamabad for its cooperation with Washington.

It comes a little more than a year after a similar but less deadly strike near the Afghan border in which U.S. helicopters accidentally killed two Pakistani whom the pilots mistook for insurgents. Pakistan responded by closing the Torkham border crossing to NATO supplies for 10 days until the U.S. apologized.

On Saturday, Pakistan went further, closing both of the country’s border crossings into landlocked Afghanistan. NATO trucks about 30 percent of the non-lethal supplies used by its Afghan-based forces through Pakistan. A short stoppage will have no effect on the war effort, but serves as a reminder of the leverage Pakistan has over the United States from the supply routes running through its territory.

A spokesman for NATO forces in Afghanistan, Brig. Gen. Carsten Jacobson, said it was “highly likely” that close air support called in by Afghan and coalition forces operating in the border area caused Pakistani casualties. NATO is investigating the incident to determine the exact details, he told BBC television.

Gen. John Allen, the top overall commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said in a statement that his “most sincere and personal heartfelt condolences go out to the families and loved ones of any members of Pakistan security forces who may have been killed or injured.”

Much of the violence in Afghanistan is carried out by insurgents that are based just across the border in Pakistan. Coalition forces are not allowed to cross the frontier to attack the militants. The militants, however, sometimes fire artillery and rockets across the line, reportedly from locations close to Pakistani army posts.

American officials have repeatedly accused Pakistani forces of supporting ? or turning a blind eye ? to militants using its territory for cross-border attacks. The border issue is the major source of tension between Islamabad and Washington, which wants to stabilize Afghanistan and withdraw its combat troops there by the end of 2014.

Pakistan army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani “strongly condemned” the alleged attack on the two checkpoints, calling it a “blatant and unacceptable act,” according to an army statement. It said the “unprovoked” attack was carried out by NATO helicopters and fighter jets, killing 24 soldiers and wounding 13 others. Pakistani soldiers responded in self-defense “with all available weapons,” said the statement.

The two checkpoints were around 1,000 feet apart, and one of them was attacked twice, said a government official in Mohmand and a security official in Peshawar, the main city in Pakistan’s northwest. Two officers were among the dead, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

The attack happened around 2 a.m. on Saturday, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told reporters.

Ties between Washington and Islamabad already have been hard hit by the covert U.S. commando raid that killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town on May 2. The Pakistanis were outraged that they were not told about the operation beforehand, and now are even more sensitive about U.S. violations of the country’s sovereignty.

Gilani summoned U.S. Ambassador Cameron Munter to protest the alleged NATO attack, according to a Foreign Ministry statement. It said the attack was a “grave infringement of Pakistan’s sovereignty” and could have serious repercussions on Islamabad’s cooperation with NATO. Pakistan has also lodged protests in Washington and NATO headquarters in Brussels, it said.

A Pakistani customs official told The Associated Press that he received verbal orders Saturday to stop all NATO supplies from crossing the border through Torkham in either direction. The operator of a terminal at the border where NATO trucks park before they cross confirmed the closure. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Saeed Ahmad, a spokesman for security forces at the other crossing in Chaman in southwest Pakistan, said that his crossing was also blocked following orders “from higher-ups.”

The U.S., Pakistani, and Afghan militaries have long wrestled with the technical difficulties of patrolling a border that in many places is disputed or poorly marked.

Saturday’s incident took place a day after a meeting between NATO’s Gen. Allen and Pakistan army chief Gen. Kayani in Islamabad to discuss border operations.

The meeting tackled “coordination, communication and procedures between the Pakistan Army, ISAF (intelligence services) and (the) Afghan Army, aimed at enhancing border control on both sides,” according to a statement from the Pakistani side.

The checkpoints that were attacked had been recently set up in Mohmand’s Salala village by the army. They were intended to stop Pakistani Taliban militants holed up in Afghanistan from crossing the border and staging attacks, said two local government administrators, Maqsood Hasan and Hamid Khan.

The U.S. helicopter attack that killed two Pakistani soldiers on Sept. 30 of last year took place south of Mohmand in the Kurram tribal area. A joint U.S.-Pakistan investigation found that Pakistani soldiers fired at the two U.S. helicopters prior to the attack, a move the investigation team said was likely meant to notify the aircraft of their presence after they passed into Pakistani airspace several times.

Pakistan moved swiftly after the attack to close Torkham to NATO. Suspected militants took advantage of the impasse to launch attacks against stranded or rerouted trucks carrying NATO supplies.

Senior U.S. diplomatic and military officials eventually apologized for the attack, saying it could have been prevented with greater coordination between the U.S. and Pakistan. Pakistan responded by reopening the border crossing.

____

Abbot reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writers Anwarullah Khan in Khar, Pakistan, Matiullah Achakzai in Chaman and Deb Reichmann in Kabul, Afghanistan contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-26-AS-Pakistan/id-90afcc73203b4ee89498548d767b63ac

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More bloodshed in Syria despite Arab deadline (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? The Syrian government ignored Arab powers’ moves to halt its crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising on Friday and more opposition supporters and military personnel were killed in unrelenting violence.

The Syrian military said 10 personnel, including six pilots, were killed in an attack on an air force base and that the incident proved foreign involvement in the eight-month revolt against President Bashar al-Assad’s rule.

Government forces shot dead at least four demonstrators in the capital Damascus who were appealing for foreign intervention to stop the crackdown, activists said. Two other civilians were killed in raids on their homes, they said.

Earlier on Friday, a deadline set by the Arab League for Syria to sign a deal allowing peace monitors into the country expired without any government response. Turkey meanwhile said it could no longer tolerate any more bloodshed.

More than 3,500 people are estimated by the United Nations to have been killed since March, the majority of them civilians gunned down as they took to the streets of Syrian towns and cities to call for an end to Assad’s rule.

Under the Arab League initiative, Syria agreed to withdraw troops from urban centers, release political prisoners, start a dialogue with the opposition and allow in monitors.

The bloodshed did not stop and Arab foreign ministers said in Cairo on Thursday that unless Syria agreed to the monitors, they would consider imposing sanctions including halting flights, curbing trade and stopping deals with the central bank.

The League extended the deadline after it expired on Friday , saying they would wait until the day’s end before deciding what to do.

OBLIQUE

The announcement of the air force attack appeared to be an oblique response.

“An armed terrorist group undertook an evil assassination plot that martyred six pilots, a technical officer and three other personnel on an air force base between Homs and Palmyra,” a military spokesman said on state television.

“This confirms the involvement of foreign elements and their support of these terrorist operations in an effort to weaken the fighting capabilities of our forces,” he said.

The account fits the government narrative that it is facing an armed insurrection by trouble-makers backed by its enemies, rather than a largely peaceful pro-democracy movement inspired by the Arab Spring revolts which toppled the rulers of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya this year.

A Syrian opposition member told Reuters the attack was an ambush on a military bus near Furqlous, 35 km (22 miles) southwest of Homs.

“Furqlous is a military region and it is not difficult for an insurgent guerrilla force to chose targets there,” he said.

State television also showed pictures of thousands of people demonstrating in central Damascus “expressing their rejection of the Arab League decision against Syria.”

In neighboring Turkey, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said he hoped the Syrian government would give a positive response to the Arab League plan.

“If it doesn’t, there are steps we can take in consultation with the Arab League,” he said. “I want to say clearly we have no more tolerance for the bloodshed in Syria..”

The stepped-up pressure followed a French proposal for “humanitarian corridors” to be set up through which food and medicine could be shipped to alleviate civilian suffering.

But some a measure of comfort for Assad came from longtime ally Russia, China and other countries, who expressed opposition to sanctions and warned against a foreign military intervention.

“At the current stage, what is needed is not resolutions, not sanctions, not pressure, but internal Syrian dialogue,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said in Moscow.

Lukashevich said Russia supported the Arab League’s call for a halt to the violence but that “radical opposition” groups with foreign support shared the blame. Outside military intervention was “absolutely unacceptable.”

After a meeting in Moscow on Thursday, diplomats from Russia, China and the other three emerging-market BRICS countries — Brazil, India and South Africa – also warned against foreign intervention without U.N. backing.

AIDING CIVILIANS

A Western diplomatic source said the French plan, with or without approval from Damascus, could link Syrian civilian centers to the frontiers of Turkey and Lebanon, to the Mediterranean coast or to an airport.

Its aim would enable transport of humanitarian supplies or medicines to civilians.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said the plan fell short of a military intervention but acknowledged that humanitarian convoys would need armed protection.

“Of course…by international observers, but there is no question of military intervention in Syria,” he said.

The Arab League suspended Syria’s membership two weeks ago, while this week the prime minister of Turkey – a NATO member with the military wherewithal to mount a cross-border operation – told Assad to quit and said he should be mindful of the fate of other fallen dictators.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based opposition group, said at least 47 people were killed in Syria on Thursday, including 16 soldiers and 17 army deserters, mostly around the city of Homs and Rastan to the north.

Alongside the mainly peaceful protests, armed insurgents have increasingly attacked military targets in recent weeks. Officials say 1,100 members of the security forces have been killed since the outbreak of uprising.

(Reporting by Erika Solomon and Khaled Yacoub Oweis; Writing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111125/wl_nm/us_syria

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