Friday, January 31, 2014

Ready for python pizza? Florida diners get a taste hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

Written By ADMIN; About: Ready for python pizza? Florida diners get a taste hollywoodtone.blogspot.com on Friday, January 31, 2014

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Ready for python pizza? Florida diners get a taste

Alligator and frog have long been on the menu in Florida, but a new delicacy has slithered its way onto dinner plates in the US state.


A pizzeria now offers Burmese python meat on what it calls the "Everglades Pizza" -- named for Florida's vast national park, where the snakes are being hunted to protect the nature preserve.


"It was just to create talk about the shop and being creative and this thing literally just went viral," says Evan Daniell, the owner of Evan's Neighborhood Pizza in the Gulf Coast city of Fort Myers.


"People talk about it all the time and whether it's negative or positive, it really doesn't matter because the fact is: we can make it and it's delicious."


So, the big question: what does it taste like?


Evan Daniell owner of Evan's Neighborhood Pizza in Fort Myers Florida puts an "Everglade...

Guillaume Meyer, AFP/File


Evan Daniell, owner of Evan's Neighborhood Pizza in Fort Myers Florida, puts an "Everglades Pizza" in the oven January 28, 2014



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"It's good but a little chewy," says Mike, a tourist taking the python plunge from Minnesota.


"It tastes like chicken but chewier," his wife Becky adds.


Daniell admits that python meat "can be gamier." The chef tenderizes the slabs of snake meat by marinating them for several hours. They are then sliced thinly into what he calls "snake slivers".


Before laying it onto the pizza, making sure "each slice has a piece of python," Daniell pre-cooks the snake in the oven for a few minutes.


"There is some pink into the snake, and as it turns white, it will be done," he explains.


Despite its steep price tag of $45, the "Everglades" pizza certainly has its fans.


"Everglades Pizza" is seen on January 28 2014 at Neighborhood Pizza in the Gulf Coast cit...

Guillaume Meyer, AFP/File


"Everglades Pizza" is seen on January 28, 2014 at Neighborhood Pizza in the Gulf Coast city of Fort Myers, Florida



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Daniell's pal Mike Gookin says he came up with the idea of using the snake meat to spice up pizzas after seeing a news report on the python problem in the Everglades.


The pizza also features alligator sausage and frog legs. Both are native to southern Florida. The pythons are definitely not, but they are everywhere.


"There could be thousands or tens of thousands of Burmese pythons in the wild here," explains Roberto Torres, a field officer with The Nature Conservancy.


The snakes can measure up to 20 feet (six meters) long and they are believed to have made the Everglades their home after being released by their owners.


"They get them as pets and when they get too big, they release them here," Torres says, his feet deep in the mud of the wetlands near the suburbs of Miami where pythons have been spotted regularly.


Burmese pythons have no known predator in Florida, so they sit atop the food chain in their new home. As a result, environmental experts like Torres fear their presence could end up threatening biodiversity in the Everglades.


"It's a perfect habitat for the snake -- it's wet, there is plenty of food. (…) They'll eat anything they can catch -- birds, fish, mammals, cats, dogs," Torres says.


To raise awareness about the python invasion, chefs in Miami have held several events with python on the menu along with other non-native species.


But current food safety regulations do not allow the invasive snakes captured in Florida to be slaughtered and processed regularly to be sold in restaurants.


As a result, Daniell’s python meat is not local.


"I buy it frozen from a wholesaler who imports farmed python from Vietnam," the restaurateur explains.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Ready for python pizza? Florida diners get a taste

Thai opposition under fire for election boycott hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Thai opposition under fire for election boycott

After two decades of election defeats, Thailand's oldest political party stands accused of turning its back on democracy by refusing to contest controversial elections to be held on Sunday.


The elite-backed opposition Democrat Party has joined forces with anti-government supporters who are threatening to disrupt the polls and want Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to step down to make way for an unelected "people's council".


"The party is turning away from democracy," said Pavin Chachavalpongpun, associate professor at the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies at Japan's Kyoto University.


The Democrats are "trying to find a short cut" to power, he added, noting that on the several occasions in the past two decades when they did take office it was with the support of the military.


The opposition accuses Yingluck's Puea Thai party of corruption and buying votes, and says she is a puppet for her elder brother, fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra -- accusations she denies.


Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra leaves the Army Club in Bangkok after a meeting with electio...

Christophe Archambault, AFP/File


Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra leaves the Army Club in Bangkok after a meeting with election officials on January 28, 2014



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The Democrats, who are popular in Bangkok and parts of southern Thailand, argue that elections will not end a cycle of political violence in the kingdom stretching back to around the time of a military coup in 2006 that ousted Thaksin from power.


"For the country, the elections could not solve the problems and conflicts that we are facing," Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva told AFP.


"A reform process needs to be initiated so that people can be confident that come election time, and after the elections, an elected government does not abuse power in the way that it has done over the last couple of years," he said.


Helped by support among rural voters who benefited from their policies, pro-Thaksin parties have won every election in more than a decade, most recently in 2011 with 265 seats against 159 for the Democrats.


Critics say the Democrat Party missed a golden opportunity to increase its support base owing to public anger over corruption allegations and a failed amnesty bill that could have allowed Thaksin to return without going to jail.


Anti-government protesters parade during a rally at China town in Bangkok on February 1 2014

Pornchai Kittiwongsakul, AFP


Anti-government protesters parade during a rally at China town in Bangkok on February 1, 2014



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"No democratic system works without a talented and committed opposition," said Thailand-based author and scholar David Streckfuss.


"They failed in their role of seizing on the moment when they could have really gained in votes."


The Democrats also boycotted an election in 2006, contributing to the political uncertainty that precipitated the coup that toppled Thaksin.


They last came to power in 2008 by parliamentary vote after a court stripped Thaksin's allies of power, angering his "Red Shirts" supporters who launched street protests in 2010 that sparked clashes and a military crackdown that left dozens dead.


Abhisit, who was prime minister at the time, faces a murder charge in connection with those deaths.


'Not in the spirit of democracy'


In December of last year, Democrat lawmakers resigned en masse from parliament to join the protests against Yingluck.


After the premier called snap elections in the hope of defusing the crisis, the Democrats announced they would not be taking part.


Officials prepare election documents during vote preparations at a polling station in Narathiwat Th...

Madaree Tohlala, AFP


Officials prepare election documents during vote preparations at a polling station in Narathiwat, Thailand on February 1, 2014



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"In my opinion, it is a mistake in terms of the spirit of democracy -- it was the wrong decision," said Gothom Arya, an associate professor at Bangkok's Mahidol University.


"They should fight on the parliamentary stage."


Abhisit, the British-born scion of an influential family, denied that his party was giving democracy the cold shoulder.


"We have participated in the democratic process throughout our history," said the Oxford-educated career politician, whose name means "privilege".


"But we have been faced with the situation where we now have an elected majority that does not respect the law, wants to put itself above the law, refuses to accept the verdicts of the courts, is engaged in abuses of power and intimidation of political opponents," he said.


The Democrats pushed Yingluck to stand down to make way for an interim government. When that failed, they signalled they would be ready to participate in a delayed election, but the premier pushed ahead with Sunday's polls.


Now Democrat MPs face a dilemma: under election rules if they do not vote themselves Sunday they could lose their entitlement to run in future polls. Voting would defy their own boycott, however.


Abhisit himself said that the polls were "unconstitutional" and pledged not to cast his ballot in an announcement on his Facebook page on the eve of the election.


"It's a very tricky situation that the Democrats find themselves in," said Streckfuss. "I think they really thought the election date would be changed. And they didn't have a plan B."


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Thai opposition under fire for election boycott

Tour operators fume over Great Barrier Reef dumping plan hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Tour operators fume over Great Barrier Reef dumping plan

Furious tourism operators on the Great Barrier Reef on Saturday threatened legal action after approval was given to dump of up to three million cubic metres of dredge waste in park waters.


Association of Marine Park Tour Operators president Colin McKenzie, the peak industry lobby group covering tourism in the World Heritage-listed reef region, accused the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority of pandering to politicians.


"Leadership of the Authority needs to be replaced. If they won't do their job of preserving the environment out there then they should have people there that will," he told Fairfax radio.


"These guys are just pandering to the politicians. The GBRMPA should do what it is actually being paid to do -- which is provide for the protection and conservation of the reef."


The GBRMPA, tasked with managing and protecting the reef area, on Friday approved a decision by the government in December to allow a major coal port expansion for India's Adani Group on the reef coast, under strict environmental conditions.


Dredge dumping plan in Barrier Reef

, AFP


Dredge dumping plan in Barrier Reef



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It will see Adani dredge three million cubic metres of material from the seabed to allow freighters to dock at the port in Abbot Point, lifting the facility's capacity by 70 percent to make it one of the world's largest coal ports.


The waste will be dumped in the marine park, in an area GBRMPA said does not contain reefs or seagrass beds.


"Well, let me tell you, 220 scientists wrote to the GBRMPA saying 'do not grant this' because it will be bad for the reef," said McKenzie.


"They (the Authority) are not looking at scientific fact, they are not looking at protection of the reef -- they are just doing what their political masters want."


In granting the approval, GBRMPA, whose board is currently under investigation for its links to the mining industry, said that allowing the project to proceed would help contain development to existing ports.


Chairman Russell Reichelt added that the strict environmental conditions imposed on the project by the government would help protect the reef.


Conservationists are not convinced, claiming the dredging will smother corals and seagrasses and expose them to poisons and elevated levels of nutrients.


The Australian Broadcasting Corporation canvassed several tour operators and said they were all looking at legal action, with McKenzie vowing the fight was not over.


"We will take it to (Environment Minister Greg) Hunt, we will appeal this to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, we will take it to court if we have to," he said.


"I think the GBRMPA is in breach of their own act and that will be how we are trying to challenge this."


The reef is already facing pressures from climate change, land-based pollution and crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks and is facing a World Heritage downgrade from UNESCO this year.


UNESCO is concerned about rampant coastal development proposed in the region, particularly port, gas and coal operations, with the body expected to discuss the issue at a meeting in June.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Tour operators fume over Great Barrier Reef dumping plan

Watch Raptors guard Terrence Ross posterize Kenneth Faried hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Watch Raptors guard Terrence Ross posterize Kenneth Faried
Toronto - Last year's slam dunk champion proved once again why he has no fear when he drives towards opponents. Toronto Raptors' Terrence Ross dunked over defender Kenneth Faried in one of the most jaw-dropping highlights of the season.

On Friday night, with Toronto leading 58-53 over the Denver Nuggets, Ross was on the receiving end of a sloppy turnover by the Nuggets. After picking up the loose ball, Ross dribbled strongly towards the lone defender Faried, a known shot-blocker. Ross then soared high above Faried's outstretched arms and dunked in one of the most explosive plays of the game, if not the Raptors season. In NBA parlance, Ross "posterized" Faried, meaning this Ross dunk will likely be featured on many posters showcasing the young guard's talent. By association Faried is in the unenviable position of being the defender attempting to disrupt the play. Ross is the 2013 All-Star Slam Dunk Champion, the first Raptors to win the honour since Vince Careter in 2000. Friday the Raptors beat the Nuggets 100-90. The Raptors won in Denver for the first time since the 2002-03 season and recorded their first 11-win January in 12 years.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Watch Raptors guard Terrence Ross posterize Kenneth Faried

Laws attempt to make documenting animal cruelty illegal at farms hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Laws attempt to make documenting animal cruelty illegal at farms
For more than a decade, Mercy for Animals has investigated animal cruelty in meat production facilities. Proposed laws seek to make obtaining footage critical to the investigations illegal, and in some cases the laws would classify it as eco-terrorism.

A video released by Mercy for Animals is continually circulating on social media and live viewings are held across the country where passersby are paid to watch a segment of the film. Farm to Fridge is a compilation of footage from inside meat production facilities. It shows in graphic detail the living conditions and method of death of the animals. Viewer discretion is advised. Videos like the one above would be unattainable, if the so-called “Ag-gag” laws are enacted. Utah already has one such law, Indiana is currently considering it, and the American Legislative Executive Council (ALEC) has produced a sample bill for lawmakers to introduce, which labels those who obtain the videos as eco-terrorists. A person would be guilty under ALEC’s version if they were entering an animal or research facility to take pictures by photograph, video camera, or other means with the intent to commit criminal activities or defame the facility or its owner; That version also includes a provision that would require those convicted under the law to register with the Attorney General to be listed on a website where they would be searchable on a terrorist registry, much the same way sex offenders do. Matt Rice, Director of Investigations for Mercy for Animals, discussed the laws and the group’s controversial film with Digital Journal. Rice, a former United States Marine, works closely with the undercover investigators that would be labeled terrorists under some of the proposed laws. The interview Your organization routinely sponsors events where people are offered one dollar to watch a four minute video. What typically happens when people agree? When people watch Farm to Fridge, they are shocked, horrified and moved to make changes in their lifestyles to help animals. Most people have no idea that animals on factory farms are crammed into cages so small they cannot turn around or move freely, mutilated without painkillers, and have their throats slit while alive and suffering at the slaughterhouse. We’ve heard from countless people nationwide who have been inspired to adopt a compassionate vegetarian diet after seeing the film. Six states have enacted laws against filming livestock production and slaughter. Why do you think that is? Clearly the meat industry is out of step with most Americans’ basic values when it subjects animals to abuses so egregious they can’t stand the light of day. Cruelty to animals runs rampant on factory farms, and the industry knows it. Rather than improve conditions for animals, agribusiness is attempting to silence individuals who seek to expose and stop it. I’m not a vegetarian or a vegan; however the laws aimed at barring the filming or photographing of these operations worry me as a journalist. Are you aware of any other public sector entities that are afforded this type of protection from investigation? No other industry is afforded this type of protection from criticism. Ag-gag laws are a blatant violation of free speech and freedom of the press. They seek to punish whistleblowers who expose criminal conduct on factory farms.
Matt Rice; Former U.S. Marine and current Director of Investigations for Mercy for Animals.

Mercy for Animals


Matt Rice; Former U.S. Marine and current Director of Investigations for Mercy for Animals.



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What effects do you think those laws will have if they stand up in court? These laws aim to keep consumers in the dark, threaten public health and food safety, and shield animal abusers from public scrutiny. Without undercover investigations, there are no meaningful watchdogs protecting animals from extreme cruelty and violence at factory farms. Lawmakers should be focusing on strengthening animal protection laws, not silencing the brave whistleblowers who dare to expose corruption and cruelty. Do you think animal rights activists will obey the law, or is getting the message out worth the civil disobedience it will take to obtain the footage? Mercy For Animals follows all federal, state and local laws. But in every social justice movement there are those who are willing to disobey unjust laws for the greater good. Fortunately, I don’t believe it will come to that as the vast majority of Americans are opposed to ag-gag laws and it is only a matter of time until these unconstitutional laws are overturned. What is the goal of the film; to completely end the consumption of meat, or to establish more humane methods of meat production and slaughter? The goal of film is to show consumers the journey that animals take from Farm to Fridge. Consumers have a right to know how their food is being produced and how animals on factory farms are abused and neglected so they can make informed choices. Do you think most people are aware of how their food is produced? Most Americans are completely in the dark about how animals are raised and killed for food. They are surprised to learn that not a single federal law protects farmed animals from abuse or neglect during their lives on factory farms and most state laws specifically exclude farmed animals from anti-cruelty protection. Common factory farming practices, such as ripping out the testicles of piglets without painkillers and violently body slamming pigs to death, shock and horrify most Americans. Farm to Fridge aims to pull the curtain back on the factory farming industry and show consumers how animals are routinely abused before they reach their plates. Is there anything else you would like to tell the readers? Farmed animals are every bit as capable of experiencing pain, suffering, and joy as the dogs and cats so many of us know and love and they deserve the same protection from needless cruelty and violence. With the wide variety of healthy and delicious plant-based alternatives to meat, milk and eggs, it has never been easier to leave cruelty off our plates. Each of us can vote for a kinder world every time we sit down to eat by making cruelty-free food choices.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Laws attempt to make documenting animal cruelty illegal at farms

UN slams Israel destruction of Jordan Valley homes hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com UN slams Israel destruction of Jordan Valley homes

The UN humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories criticised Israel's demolition of 36 homes in the Jordan Valley and urged a halt to such actions in the West Bank.


Hundreds of activists, meanwhile, staged an overnight demonstration in the Jordan Valley region.


The moves came as fresh opinion poll evidence showed that faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among both Israelis and Palestinians.


The demolitions in the Jordan Valley community of Ain el-Helwe on Thursday displaced 66 people, including 36 children, James Rawley said in a statement.


"I am deeply concerned about the ongoing displacement and dispossession of Palestinians... along the Jordan Valley where the number of structures demolished more than doubled in the last year," he said.


"This activity not only deprives Palestinians of access to shelter and basic services, it also runs counter to international law."


His office said more than 1,000 people had been displaced last year in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem by demolitions on the grounds that homes had been built without Israeli permits, "which are virtually impossible to obtain".


A girl bearing her national flag walks past Israeli right-wing supporters planting a tree in the Jor...

Menahem Kahana, AFP/File


A girl bearing her national flag walks past Israeli right-wing supporters planting a tree in the Jordan Valley, near the Jewish Settlement of Fatzael, on January 16, 2014



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On Friday, around 300 Palestinians together with Israeli and foreign activists set up camp in abandoned houses near Jericho in the West Bank to protest against Israel's refusal to pull out of the Jordan Valley in case of a peace deal, an AFP photographer said.


The demonstrators in Ain Hijleh village were equipped with generators and said they planned to spend the night in around a dozen of the houses, as Israeli troops and police kept watch from a distance.


They held a banner reading: "No peace with settlements."


Their action -- dubbed "Melh al-Ard" (salt of the earth) -- aimed "to revive an old Palestinian Canaanite village in the Jordan Valley", to counter any Israeli annexation plans, the activists said in a statement.


They condemned Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry.


His efforts would "establish a disfigured Palestinian state and recognises the Israeli entity as a Jewish state", they said.


This file photo shows then US President Bill Clinton (C) standing with PLO leader Yasser Arafat (R) ...

J. David Ake, AFP/File


This file photo shows then US President Bill Clinton (C) standing with PLO leader Yasser Arafat (R) and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzahk Rabin as they shake hands for the first time, at the White House in Washington DC, on September 13, 1993



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Such a state would put Arab Israelis at risk of deportation at any time, the activists said.


Faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among Israelis and Palestinians in the two decades since the Oslo accords and a famous White House lawn handshake, a new poll found Friday.


According to the Zogby Research Services poll, neither side has much confidence in the new push for peace being led by Kerry, which the pollsters believe is proving a hard sell.


Although two decades have elapsed since then Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin shook hands watched by then US leader Bill Clinton, "it is clear several deep differences exist" plaguing the atmosphere between the two sides.


"Twenty years later only 18 percent of Palestinians and 19 percent of Israelis view Oslo as a positive development in the history of their relationship," the poll said.


Both sides believe the other is not committed to peace.


And only around a third of people in each community sees a two-state solution as feasible, even though 74 percent of Israelis and 47 percent of Palestinians agree it is the desired outcome.


"From the results of this poll, it is clear that the past 20 years have taken a toll on the confidence both Palestinians and Israelis have in the peace process that began with the 1993 signing of the Oslo accords," the poll said.


Kerry is trying to draw up a framework agreement which would set out the end game in the resumed negotiations and guide the talks going forward over the next few months.


Twenty years ago both Palestinians, some 61 percent, and Israelis, some 54 percent, said they "were hopeful" when the Oslo accords were signed, setting out a roadmap for the peace process.


The poll was carried out in the Middle East in August 2013 among 1,000 Israelis and Palestinians, just as Kerry persuaded the two sides to resume talks after a three-year hiatus.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com UN slams Israel destruction of Jordan Valley homes

Tens of thousands in Mexico protest energy reform hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Tens of thousands in Mexico protest energy reform

Tens of thousands of people marched in Mexico City to protest constitutional reforms pushed through by President Enrique Pena Nieto that open the oil and gas industry to foreign investment.


An estimated 65,000 people on Friday gathered for the protest in the Zocalo, the main square in capital city, an official at the Secretariat of Public Safety told AFP.


Some 2,500 police officers were deployed but there were no incidents of violence, the official said.


The march was organized by the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), the leftist opposition to the president's ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).


The reforms, which open Mexico's oil industry to foreign investment for the first time in 75 years, were approved in Congress and ratified by a majority of Mexican states in late 2013.


The rule changes are supported by two of the country's leading parties, the PRI and the conservative National Action Party (PAN).


A participant raises a sign during a march against the energy reform in Mexico City on January 31 ...

Omar Torres, AFP


A participant raises a sign during a march against the energy reform, in Mexico City, on January 31, 2014



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But the third party, the PRD, vehemently opposes the reforms.


Many in Mexico look back with pride at the expulsions of foreign oil companies in 1938 by then president Lazaro Cardenas.


One of the PRD's founders is the late leader's son, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas.


"All types of protest are valid" in opposing the reforms, Cardenas told the crowd in the Zocalo, "including civil disobedience."


The foreign investors "will be interested in extracting the largest amount of petroleum possible in the shortest amount of time," Cardenas claimed.


The PRD is hoping to hold a referendum in 2015 to overturn the measures.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Tens of thousands in Mexico protest energy reform

China's manufacturing index falls in January hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com China's manufacturing index falls in January

China's official gauge of its manufacturing sector slipped to a five-month low in January, the government announced Saturday, confirming a slowdown in factory activity in the world's second largest economy.


The monthly purchasing managers' index (PMI) declined to 50.5 in January after recording 51 in December and 51.4 in November, according to the government's National Bureau of Statistics and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing.


Any figure above the 50 mark indicates expansion of manufacturing activity while anything below that signals contraction.


All major components of the PMI index, from new orders to production, declined, indicating downward pressure on the economy, state news agency Xinhua reported.


The decline "could be largely due to the (Spring) festival effect," ANZ bank said in a note, referring to the annual Chinese lunar new year holiday when millions of migrant workers down tools and return to their homes.


The Year of the Horse began on Friday but the widespread closure of factories and workshops started several days earlier.


HSBC bank announced on Thursday that China's manufacturing sector shrank in January for the first time in six months, with the PMI index recording 49.5, placing it in contraction territory.


Qu Hongbin, HSBC bank's economist in Hong Kong, described it as "a soft start to China's manufacturing sectors in 2014, partly due to weaker new export orders and slower domestic business activities during January".


China recorded annual GDP growth of 7.7 percent in 2013, the government said in mid-January, indicating it maintained its slowest expansion in more than a decade.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com China's manufacturing index falls in January

Pro-abortion rally in Madrid over planned curbs hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Pro-abortion rally in Madrid over planned curbs

Pro-choice supporters were set to converge on Madrid's streets on Saturday to voice their opposition to a government plan to restrict access to abortion.


A "freedom train" of protesters from northern Spain was due to arrive in Madrid later Saturday morning while supporting protests were also planned in Paris and London.


Under pressure from the Catholic Church, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's conservative government announced on December 20 it would roll back a 2010 law that allows women to opt freely for abortion in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.


The new law, yet to pass parliament where the ruling People's Party enjoys an absolute majority, would allow abortion only in cases of rape or a threat to the physical or psychological health of the mother.


The "freedom train" left Gijon in northern Spain on Friday, carrying on board pro-choice campaigners who say the government's move will take the country back to the 1980s.


The aim is "to tell conservative (Justice) Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon that we don't want him to change the law," said Begona Pinero, whose feminist group came up with the idea for the journey.


Passengers of the 'Freedom Train' and local residents take part in a march to Spain's...

Cesar Manso, AFP


Passengers of the 'Freedom Train' and local residents take part in a march to Spain's ruling Popular Party's national convention, held in Valladolid, to protest against new abortion law, on January 31, 2014



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"We the women are free and we are capable of deciding when we want to become a mother," she told AFP.


Her group will join up with thousands more protesters from elsewhere in Spain but also from other countries including France, to protest in front of parliament.


Protests are also expected elsewhere in Europe, notably in the British and French capitals.


In Paris pro-choice adherents will march on the Spanish embassy, without the protests organised in cities including Bordeaux, Marseille and Strasbourg -- a total of 30 French towns -- according a feminist group.


The Spanish plan to tighten abortion laws "will take women back to the Stone Age," French Social Affairs Minister Marisol Touraine said last week.


She called for action to ensure that "this proposal is not accepted."


French lawmakers last month approved a controversial abortion bill that scraps a requirement for women to prove they are in distress to legally terminate a pregnancy.


Hundreds of people, 2,000 according to organisers, protest in Brussels on Wednesday against the planned Spanish law change.


In Spain Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government has repeatedly postponed the abortion reform, reportedly struggled with internal dissent, after promising in its 2011 election campaign to tighten the rules.


The delay has drawn cries of impatience from the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy.


Last April, the head of Spain's Catholic Church, Cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela, said the 2010 law had "led to a rise in the number of abortions to terrifying levels".


The national health ministry said about 118,000 abortions were carried out in Spain in 2011, up from 113,000 the previous year.


Campaigners dispute the effect of the legal changes on abortion numbers.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Pro-abortion rally in Madrid over planned curbs

Glencore Xstrata 'to pull out' of Philippine mining project hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Glencore Xstrata 'to pull out' of Philippine mining project

Swiss mining giant Glencore Xstrata is expected to pull out of a $5.9 billion gold-copper mining project in the Philippines, its Australian partner Indophil said.


Melbourne-based Indophil Resources NL said in a quarterly report released this week that "Glencore Xstrata has advised Indophil of its preference to pursue divestment of its interest in Tampakan."


"All indications point to Glencore Xstrata seeking to divest its majority interest in the Tampakan Copper-Gold Project," the report added.


It said that a possible divestment of the Tampakan project had been under consideration since April 2013, seen as necessary in order to fulfil conditions set by the Chinese government to approve the merger of commodities giant Glencore and the mining company Xstrata.


Glencore Xstrata also announced in September that it was no longer focusing on "greenfield" mines started from scratch -- such as the Tampakan site -- preferring to work on existing mines instead.


The Indophil report conceded that the Tampakan project, located in the troubled southern island of Mindanao, had run into problems, chiefly the provincial government's ban on open-pit mining which delayed the start of development.


The mine would be the Philippines' largest ever foreign investment but it has faced opposition from church, community and environmental groups and would require numerous other government and community permits to be obtained.


In August, 2013, Glencore Xstrata said it was laying off nearly all workers at the Tampakan project amid continued delays.


Indophil said in its quarterly report that the company and its local partners "remain optimistic that the pathways for the development of Tampakan will be cleared."


Glencore Xstrata owns 62.5 percent and Indophil owns 37.5 percent of a joint venture that holds a 40-percent controlling stake in Sagittarius Mines, Inc., which operates the Tampakan project.


Glencore Xstrata was also providing the "technical, financial and managerial resources for the development of the Tampakan Project," the Sagittarius Mines website said.


The Indophil statement did not say how the divestment would be carried out.


But it stressed that "with Indophil holding a strategic pre-emptive right over Glencore Xstrata’s interest, Indophil has a considerable 'say' in any Tampakan divestment process."


"We will work with Glencore Xstrata to assist in meeting objectives for the project," the report added.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Glencore Xstrata 'to pull out' of Philippine mining project

South Korea exports remain strong in January hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com South Korea exports remain strong in January

South Korea's exports got off to a good start in January as signs of economic recovery in the EU and Southeast Asia offset the risks from a weak yen, the trade ministry said Saturday.


Exports for the month averaged $2.07 billion a day, up 8.9 percent from a year earlier.


For the whole of January, however, exports came to $45.584 billion, down 0.2 percent from 2013 as there were two less working days in the month compared with the previous year due to the Lunar New Year holiday that began Thursday.


"On the back of an economic recovery trend, exports to the EU went up sharply while shipments to ASEAN and China were also on the increase, led by IT products", the ministry said in a press statement.


Exports to the EU surged 24.7 percent on-year in January, to the Southeast Asian ASEAN bloc 9.9 percent and China 0.8 percent.


Imports in January came to $44.849 billion, down 0.9 percent on-year, mainly due to smaller crude oil imports, leaving a $735 million trade surplus, up from $400 million a year earlier.


"Since the second half of last year, an upward trend in exports has been continuing", it said.


"Exports for the whole 2014 are likely to turn out to be strong thanks to the trend for an economic recovery in the Unites States and Europe".


"The emerging market crisis stemming from a stimulus tapering in the United States is a downside risk for (South Korean) exports but its impact would remain limited as it accounts for only a small portion of the country's exports", it added.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com South Korea exports remain strong in January

First round of Geneva 2 talks end with no breakthrough hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com First round of Geneva 2 talks end with no breakthrough
Geneva - The first round of peace talks designed to end the ongoing civil war in Syria have now ended. There was no breakthrough achieved. Each side blamed the other for the lack of progress.

Lakhdar Brahimi that U.N. Arab League envoy to Syrai said that while there was little progress made in the talks, nevertheless they had raised hopes for a solution to the country's civil war. There were some positive steps he claimed and there was some common ground between the two sides. However, he noted that the two sides were still very far apart. The opposition delegation is set to return to Geneva on February 10. The Syrian delegates told Brahimi that they would need to check with the Syrian government before they could agree to return. The willingness of the opposition to return is somewhat surprising since they were very reluctant to come in the first place and many have dropped out of the Syrian National Coalition because of the decision including the Syrian National Council. Many of the opposition want to negotiate only when they are stronger on the ground whereas at the present time infighting has weakened the opposition and Assad is making gains on the ground in some places. Just before the first session Assad forces managed to secure all the routes to the Aleppo International Airport allowing it to open for the first time in almost a year. The conference seemed doomed from the start as far as reaching an agreement on a transition government. Neither side has changed at all but used the meetings as a grandstand to promote their own agendas. The opposition wants regime change with a transition government without Assad. The Syrian position is that Assad will not go and that the main issue is fighting terrorism. As a result it seems quite unlikely that the main aim of agreeing on a transition government will be achieved. Some observers are already writing a postmortem on the talks as if they have already failed. Samer Abboud writes at Al Jazeera: The negotiations were set up to fail from the beginning as the regime and opposition negotiators came kicking and screaming at the behest of their foreign patrons, with no substantive grounds or political appetite for serious discussion. This is all close to the truth but only with respect to the declared aim of following through with the idea of forming a transitional government. I doubt that the planners of the meetings had much hope of that happening. However, there are common interests in exchanging prisoners, and in providing humanitarian aid, and even in local ceasefires. While an agreement on providing aid in Homs has yet to come to fruition as this is written the problems are with the local forces on the ground to work out the security and logistical details. Aid finally has been delivered to the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp. Brahimi issued a statement in which he said: “It was a very difficult start. But the sides have become used to sitting in the same room. They have presented positions and listened to one another. There have been moments when one side has even acknowledged the concerns and the difficulties and the point of view of the other side. Progress is very slow indeed, but the sides have engaged in an acceptable manner. This is a very modest beginning, but it is a beginning on which we can build.” While this statement puts a positive spin on very modest results it nevertheless contains elements of truth. Brahimi went on to indicate what both sides realized: “Both sides understand that the conflict in their country has imposed immense and unacceptable suffering on the Syrian people. Both sides recognize the urgent need to bring that violence to an end. We hope they will also redouble their efforts to seek earlier opportunities to reduce, to at least reduce, the level of violence on the ground,” Both sides would like to see the violence end but unfortunately by winning the conflict not by negotiating a solution. But in particular areas where there is a stalemate there may be decisions for local ceasefires as being in their interest. The Kurds and Assad have already informally made such arrangements allowing the Kurds to begin to provide security and develop areas they control. For the most part both sides have common ground in trying to alleviate the humanitarian situation that many areas face. Assad should understand that he may be better off allowing aid than trying to starve besieged areas into submission. He represents himself as fighting terrorism not starving his own subjects into accepting his rule. There is not likely to be a giant leap forward, but every positive step is still a move forward that as Brahimi claims can be used as a basis for further moves: “I hope that we can start to build more common ground when next we meet, in Geneva. We will now have a short break in the negotiations, to allow the sides to prepare their more detailed positions on the issues raised already, and on all other aspects of the Geneva Communiqué.” The enormity of the humanitarian disaster in Syria leads many people to suggest that something must be done immediately to stop the civil war. However, as can be seen by the actions of both sides at the talks this seems impossible. What can be done may seem hardly a drop in the proverbial bucket when compared to what needs to happen to create peace and stop the slaughter but it may be all that is achievable at this time and it is much better than nothing at all happening. I have appended two videos with the complete press conference that Brahimi gave after the talks ended. He notes ten areas of agreement that future talks can build upon. A lesser diplomat would have given up by now.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com First round of Geneva 2 talks end with no breakthrough

Mexican castaway 'getting better' after months adrift in Pacific hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Mexican castaway 'getting better' after months adrift in Pacific

A Mexican man who claims to have survived 16 months adrift on the Pacific was on Saturday regaining strength on a remote Marshall Islands atoll as a navy ship was sent to pick him up.


The emaciated castaway, who identified himself as Jose Ivan when he washed up on Ebon Atoll on Thursday, told his rescuers he set sail from Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012 and has been floating on the ocean ever since.


"We've been feeding him nutritious island food and he's getting better," Ebon Mayor Ione de Brum told AFP in a phone interview from the southernmost cluster of coral islands in the Marshalls.


"He has pain in both knees so he cannot stand up by himself. Otherwise, he's OK."


The man, with long hair and beard and dressed only in ragged underpants, was discovered when his 24-foot fibreglass boat with propellerless engines floated onto the reef at Ebon Atoll and he was spotted by two locals.


Ivan said he had a companion who died several months ago, according to Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student doing research on the atoll who spoke with the man Friday.


The castaway indicated to Fjeldstad that he survived by eating turtles, birds and fish and drinking turtle blood when there was no rain.


No fishing gear was on the boat and the man suggested he caught turtles and birds with his bare hands. There was a turtle on the boat when it landed at Ebon.


This NASA file image shows the Pacific Ocean pictured on August 12 2013

Ho, NASA/AFP/File


This NASA file image shows the Pacific Ocean, pictured on August 12, 2013



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De Brum said she and Ivan were communicating through drawings, since he cannot speak English and she cannot speak Spanish.


"I've gotten to know him through pictures he's drawing," she said.


"He said he was on his way to El Salvador by boat when it started drifting."


But beyond that details of how and what happened remain sketchy.


"It's been difficult trying to communicate with him," she added.


Despite communication challenges, the Ebon Atoll community is doing its best to help him, bringing clothes, food and mosquito coils to ensure he is comfortable, she said.


Officials with the police department's Sea Patrol in Majuro told AFP that the agency's surveillance and rescue patrol vessel left early Saturday to pick up Ivan and bring him back to the capital.


The vessel was expected to arrive in Ebon Saturday night and depart for Majuro on Sunday.


Acting Secretary of Foreign Affairs Gee Leong Bing said that as soon as Ivan arrives and his particulars can be verified, official contact would be made with Mexican government authorities to begin the repatriation process.


There are virtually no islands in the more than 12,500 kilometre (8,000 mile) expanse of Pacific Ocean north of the equator between southern Mexico and the Marshall Islands.


Had the drifter not washed onto the reef at Ebon, there is another 1,000 or so miles of open ocean before he might have made landfall in Papua New Guinea or the Solomon Islands.


Stories of survival in the vast Pacific are not uncommon.


In 2006, three Mexicans made international headlines when they were discovered drifting, also in a small fibreglass boat near the Marshall Islands, nine months after setting out on a shark-fishing expedition.


They survived on a diet of rainwater, raw fish and seabirds, with their hope kept alive by reading the bible.


Castaways from Kiribati, to the south, frequently find land in the Marshall Islands after ordeals of weeks or months at sea in small boats.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Mexican castaway 'getting better' after months adrift in Pacific

Brain surgeon walks 6 miles in a storm to save patient's life hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Brain surgeon walks 6 miles in a storm to save patient's life
Birmingham - On Tuesday, Dr. Zenko Hrynkiw walked six miles in the snow to perform a life-saving brain surgery. Dr. Hrynkiw said that any good doctor would have done the same thing.

According to NPR, Hrynkiw, who is a neurosurgeon at the Trinity Medical Center in Birmingham, Alabama, said that it wasn't really much of a deal. According to Fox, Hrynkiw was needed for emergency brain surgery at the Trinity Medical Center, but he was six miles away at the Brookwood Medical Center. Traffic was locked down in traffic, and the doctor was only able to drive a few blocks. Steve Davis, charge nurse in the neuro intensive care unit at Trinity, said that the cell service was bad and the call was fading in and out, but at one point he heard the doctor say that he was walking. According to Huffington Post, Davis says it tool the doctor about five hours to arrive at Trinity, Davis said that Hrynkiw called around 12:30 p.m. to say that he was walking in the door, and then asked where the patient was. Davis said that without the surgery, the chances are that the patient would have died. Davis also said that he has never seen anything like this, but he was not surprised that the doctor did it. Davis said that the doctor is on call 330 days per year, and he is dedicated to his work.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Brain surgeon walks 6 miles in a storm to save patient's life

Syria talks end with accusations, next round uncertain hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Syria talks end with accusations, next round uncertain

Syria's warring sides have traded barbs over the failure to achieve concrete results at peace talks in Geneva, amid doubts over the regime's participation in a planned new round in February.


No ceasefire was agreed as the talks wound up Friday, talks on a transitional government never began, and a deal to allow aid into besieged rebel-held areas of the central city of Homs went nowhere.


Clouding the horizon further, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said nearly 1,900 people had been killed since the talks began a week ago.


Washington also warned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad he could face consequences for failing to live up to international agreements on removing his chemical weapons stockpile.


In Geneva, the week of closed-door negotiations ended with the opposing sides continuing to spar over who is to blame for the bloody conflict that has claimed 130,000 lives.


UN mediator Lakhdar Brahimi, who orchestrated the first meeting between the two sides since the conflict erupted in March 2011, said he aimed to host a second round of talks starting on February 10.


But Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said there were no "tangible results" from the Geneva talks, and that Assad and his government would ponder whether it made sense to return for a second round.


A young Palestinian refugee who fled the Yarmuk refugee camp in Syria carries belongings to new ho...

Mahmoud Zayyat, AFP


A young Palestinian refugee, who fled the Yarmuk refugee camp in Syria, carries belongings to new houses built by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) at the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain El-Helweh on January 31, 2014



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That sparked criticism from key opposition supporter the United States.


"The regime continues to play games," State Department spokesman Edgar Vasquez said.


Opposition chief Ahmad Jarba confirmed his team would be back, even though sitting down with the regime for the first time since the start of the war was like "drinking from a poisoned chalice".


But he stressed that its presence was conditional on receiving "the means to defend our people on the ground."


"The pace of supporting our revolutionaries is quickening, as you may have heard in recent days," he said.


Syria's Foreign Minister Walid Muallem speaks during a press briefing in Geneva on January 31 ...

Philippe Desmazes, AFP


Syria's Foreign Minister Walid Muallem speaks during a press briefing in Geneva, on January 31, 2014



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Unconfirmed media reports this week alleged that the US Congress had secretly approved resuming weapons deliveries to "moderate" Syrian rebel factions.


Working to rally support, Jarba is scheduled Tuesday to visit Russia, Assad's main ally on the global stage.


A senior US official hailed the planned visit, stressing that it indicated "the Russian side recognises that the opposition National Coalition also has a role to play in resolving the Syrian conflict."


Brahimi has urged the United States and Russia, which struggled for eight months to get the warring parties to the table, as well as others to exercise their influence to end the bloodshed in Syria.


US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters ahead of talks in Berlin with Chancellor Angela Merkel that Damascus was not complying with the US-Russian agreed timetable for shipping out its chemical weapons stockpile.


He said the civil war in the country was "destabilising the entire region".


Later Kerry met his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov on the sidelines of a Munich Security Conference, with Syria high on the agenda.


Syrian National Coalition (SNC) leader Ahmad Jarba speaks during a press briefing in Geneva on Janu...

Philippe Desmazes, AFP


Syrian National Coalition (SNC) leader Ahmad Jarba speaks during a press briefing in Geneva, on January 31, 2014



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A senior US State Department official said Kerry pressed Lavrov to put more pressure on Damascus to make real progress on destroying its chemical weapons arsenal.


Neither of the negotiating sides seemed to budge an inch from their long-held positions in Geneva, where the talks revolved around a never-implemented roadmap to peace drawn up by world powers in 2012.


The opposition insists that the transitional government called for in that text, known as the Geneva Communique, requires Assad to step down.


The regime flatly rejects this, and insists that the main focus of the Geneva talks must be on quelling the violence and "terrorism", for which it blames the opposition.


"Neither in this round, nor in the next will they obtain any concessions from the Syrian delegation," Information Minister Omran al-Zohbi told applauding pro-regime demonstrators outside the UN's European headquarters in Geneva where the talks were held.


Just getting the rival camps to sit down for the first time has been seen as a feat by peacemaking veteran Brahimi.


"This is a very modest beginning, but it is a beginning on which we can build," he said, adding that he had noted "a little bit of common ground, perhaps more than the two sides realise or recognise."


Brahimi said though he was "very disappointed" over the lack of breakthrough over the desperate humanitarian situation in Syria.


The regime had pledged early on in the talks to allow women and children safe passage from rebel-held areas of Homs besieged since June 2012, but aid convoys remain on standby waiting for authorisation to enter.


Of the nearly 1,900 people who have died in the Syria conflict since the Geneva talks opened, at least 498 were civilians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.


Forty of them died from a lack of food and medicine in areas under government siege, according to the report.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Syria talks end with accusations, next round uncertain

Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey

Nearly 70 percent of listed Japanese companies are likely to post sales and profit growth this business year, a sign they are gaining traction after years of deflation, a report said Saturday.


More than 1,000 companies out of about 1,500 firms listed on stock markets are on track to log annual rises in both sales and recurring profits for the business year ending in March, the Nikkei business daily said.


The 1,500 companies are expected to post a combined 10 percent rise in sales and a 28 percent increase in recurring profit, the daily said, citing its tally of the companies' forecasts.


The robust earnings are thanks to stronger exports business benefiting from a weaker yen, while domestic consumer spending is also picking up, it said.


Companies are making a steady shift to making profits out of higher sales from the past practice of eking out gains by restructuring businesses, it said.


The tally excluded firms in the financial sector and the report did not mention net profit.


The Nikkei said manufacturers were driving the overall improvement in corporate earnings, with sales expected to jump 16 percent for steelmakers, 14 percent for automakers, and 13 percent for machinery makers.


Companies driven by domestic demand are benefiting from a resurgence in consumer spending, it said, pointing to soaring higher sales of jewellery and expensive watches.


Japanese stock prices have jumped and the yen plunged since late 2012 owing to a policy blitz dubbed Abenomics, which meshes government spending with massive central bank monetary easing aimed at stemming 15 years of deflation.


A weak yen is positive for Japanese exporters but inflates the cost of imports.


Japan's two biggest airlines said Friday that the weak yen sent fuel costs soaring and profits into a nosedive in the nine months to December.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey

‘The Great Beauty’ is only pretty on the outside hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com ‘The Great Beauty’ is only pretty on the outside
‘The Great Beauty’ follows an aging man who finds himself taking stock of his fast-paced lifestyle, and turning his wit on himself and his contemporaries.

Sometimes Oscar nominations can be as puzzling as their snubs, of which there were many this year. When a film is recognized in an overall picture category, it’s expected the movie is exemplary in all of the top categories. When it’s obviously lacking in a fundamental area, one has to wonder if its other strengths outweigh its distinct weakness. The Great Beauty is a stunning, well-acted picture, but the script is a disaster. Journalist Jep Gambardella (Toni Servillo) has spent decades gallivanting through Rome, seducing his way through the city’s extravagant nightlife. But after his 65th birthday and an unexpected blow, he takes a step back from the nightclubs and parties to observe the gorgeous landscape of the timeless city. The striking cinematography is this film’s best asset. From the architecture to the culture to the chaos of the social scene, it is all visually exquisite. The opening sequence at Jep’s outrageous birthday celebration is dazzling. The intoxicated party goers crowd a rooftop, reveling in the booming beats and basking in each other’s bodies. Rapidly cutting from one merrymaker to another, the movie gives the impression that partying in Italy at any age is wild. While Jep finds it difficult to stop carousing, he is forced to confront his mortality. Going to sleep when the sun comes up and bedding random women is losing its lustre. A few funerals, friends who haven’t aged well and others with complicated familial issues are weighing on his shoulders. The pressure to stay young and attractive is growing uglier. However, this burden is presented in a haphazard manner that makes it impossible to become invested in the narrative – however loose it is. It jumps from one scene to another with no logic, just presenting a different situation involving Jep. At its extended length of nearly two-and-a-half hours, the viewer’s mind can drift and return to realize they’ve missed nothing. Director Paolo Sorrentino presents an admirable depiction of aging in a society that values youth, but it spends most of the time meandering aimlessly through impressive visuals – which is apparently enough for the awards committees. Director: Paolo Sorrentino Starring: Toni Servillo, Carlo Verdone and Sabrina Ferilli

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com ‘The Great Beauty’ is only pretty on the outside

Ukraine opposition set for talks with John Kerry hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Ukraine opposition set for talks with John Kerry

Ukraine's opposition leaders were set to meet US Secretary of State John Kerry on Saturday, after the army urged embattled President Viktor Yanukovych to act urgently to end two months of turmoil.


Yanukovych on Friday scrapped controversial anti-protest laws but the reappearance of a leading protester, his face swollen and caked in blood, did little to win over the opposition or international opinion.


Yanukovych, who has been on sick leave since Thursday, repealed draconian anti-protest laws passed in January that had radicalised the two-month anti-government protest movement. The street rallies first erupted when the president backed out of a key pact with the European Union in favour of closer ties with Moscow.


He also signed an amnesty bill for jailed opposition activists, but it will only take effect if protesters vacate the public buildings they have occupied within 15 days.


The manoeuvres came after opposition activist Dmytro Bulatov, who went missing more than a week ago, reappeared Thursday night, saying he was tortured by abductors who cut off his ear and drove nails through his hands before dumping him in a forest.


Map of Ukraine's regions identifying the levels of anti-government protests

, AFP


Map of Ukraine's regions identifying the levels of anti-government protests



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"They crucified me, nailed me, cut my ear off, cut my face," Bulatov said in televised remarks.


White House spokesman Jay Carney said the US was "appalled" at the "obvious signs of torture" inflicted on Bulatov.


EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton also said she was "appalled" while Amnesty International said the "barbaric" act should be immediately investigated.


Ashton said she would return next week to Ukraine, condemning what she described as instances of intimidation and torture against the opposition there.


Ukraine's interior ministry was reported by Interfax as saying Bulatov would be placed under house arrest for a week under suspicion of organising major unrest.


The protest movement's leaders claim that abuse and beatings of activists are widespread.


An Orthodox priest holds an icon near a blockade manned by opposition protesters in central Kiev on ...

Sergei Supinsky, AFP


An Orthodox priest holds an icon near a blockade manned by opposition protesters in central Kiev on January 31, 2014



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A recent outbreak of violence in the protests saw several people shot dead and turned parts of the capital Kiev into a battle zone.


Army weighs in


Weighing in on the crisis for the first time, the Ukrainian armed forces called for Yanukovych to act urgently to stabilise the situation.


The defence ministry, which previously said it would not interfere in the crisis, said the seizure of government buildings was unacceptable and warned that "further escalation of the confrontation threatens the country's territorial integrity".


Ukraine's security service soon after announced a criminal probe into an opposition attempt to seize state power, after information on confiscated computers allegedly revealed the mass protests were "pre-planned".


"An investigation for an attempted takeover of power has been opened," Maxime Lenko, head of the investigations department of the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU), was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.


NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he was "very concerned by attempts to involve the military in the crisis".


An image from TV Channel 5 aired on January 31 2014 shows Ukrainian opposition activist Dmytro Bula...

, Channel 5/AFP


An image from TV Channel 5 aired on January 31, 2014 shows Ukrainian opposition activist Dmytro Bulatov being interviewed in Kiev



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"Ukraine's military is highly respected and must remain neutral," he said on Twitter.


Political analyst Vadym Karasyov said the military's statement indicated it would side with the president.


The amnesty leaves open the possibility that protesters could be allowed to stay at their barricaded camp on Kiev's Independence Square.


Opposition supporters are refusing to leave the camp despite a string of concessions from the authorities, including Yanukovych's acceptance of the resignation of prime minister Mykola Azarov and the entire cabinet.


John Kerry to meet opposition leaders


An anti-government protester holds a Ukrainian flag near a barricade in central Kiev on January 31 ...

Vasily Maximov, AFP


An anti-government protester holds a Ukrainian flag near a barricade in central Kiev on January 31, 2014



image:169676:0::0



Kerry said in Berlin that the measures pledged by Yanukovych did not go far enough.


Opposition leaders including boxer-turned-politician Vitali Klitschko are due to meet Kerry for the first time Saturday, a meeting sure to infuriate Russia, which has warned against foreign interference in Ukraine.


The announcement of the meeting, on the sidelines of a security conference in Munich, came as the White House said it was consulting with Congress over possible sanctions on Ukraine.


On Friday, opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk of the Batkivshchyna party met German President Joachim Gauck and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, saying they had voiced support of his people's "fight for freedoms and liberties".


Yatsenyuk also met the EU's Ashton separately.


Riot police stand guard opposite anti-government protesters in the center of Kiev on January 30 20...

Sergei Supinsky, AFP/File


Riot police stand guard opposite anti-government protesters in the center of Kiev, on January 30, 2014



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In November, Yanukovych scrapped an integration deal with the EU in favour of closer ties with Kiev's historical master Moscow, sparking huge protests.


The unrest has since spiralled into an uprising demanding the president's removal.


Yanukovych on Thursday attacked the "irresponsible" opposition for inflaming tensions but also admitted the authorities had made mistakes and that he needed to take more account of the country's mood.


An advisor to Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Friday that the Ukrainian president would lose power if he did not "quash the rebellion".


"The president has no choice," said Kremlin economic advisor Sergei Glazyev.


Meanwhile rating firm Moody's downgraded Ukraine's sovereign debt rating a notch, citing the escalating political crisis and concerns about whether it would continue to have Russian financial support.


Moody's cut the country's rating, already in speculative territory, to Caa2 from Caa1, and put the country on "negative outlook," signalling it could be downgraded again in the medium term.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Ukraine opposition set for talks with John Kerry

France face England in rugby union Six Nations opener hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com France face England in rugby union Six Nations opener

France coach Philippe Saint-Andre made no attempt to disguise his reliance on size and strength when he named his team to face England in their Six Nations opener on Saturday.


French flair might be noticeable by its absence at the Stade de France as Saint-Andre will look to tackle the 'XV of the Rose' head on with all the French might he can muster.


The signs were clear on his team-sheet revealed Thursday where the 2.05m Alexandre Flanquart found his name listed at lock alongside captain and Stade Francais team-mate Pascal Pape.


Power was in evidence right throughout the side with Toulouse colossus Louis Picamoles at No.8 and Toulon battering ram Mathieu Bastereaud picked at outside centre.


2014 Six Nations Rugby Championship

-, -, AFP


2014 Six Nations Rugby Championship



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But it is also on the bench where Saint-Andre made his feelings known, opting for six forwards and just two backs, proving he expects the match to be won and lost in a bruising encounter up front, and it is there that he wants the maximum number of options.


In selecting two back-row replacements he showed that the breakdown is where he wants to have the greatest impact.


"The players have to be committed, to give everything; we need audacity, generosity, discipline and a lot of combativity," said Saint-Andre.


"We need to be as precise as possible at the breakdown."


It's not just Saint-Andre that is looking primarily at the pack as former England international and Toulon prop Andrew Sheridan also believes that will be the key area.


"It's often very tight against France and these are huge matches for the forwards," he said.


France's rugby union national team's fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc (L) and winger Maxime Med...

Martin Bureau, AFP/File


France's rugby union national team's fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc (L) and winger Maxime Medard take part in a training session, in Marcoussis, outside Paris, on January 30, 2014



image:169775:0::0



"That's often where the result is decided. There are a lot of scrums and carried ball (by the forwards into contact), a bit like the Top 14.


"Against Wales, though, you have a more open game that's a lot more fluid."


If France can win the battle up front, they will be confident in their ability to make inroads against England's inexperienced backs, for whom Northampton centre Luther Burrell and Exeter wing Jack Nowell will be making their debuts.


Gloucester wing Jonny May will be winning only his second cap while his team-mate and inside centre Billy Twelvetrees will claim his ninth.


France's rugby union national team head coach Philippe Saint-Andre pictured during a press co...

Martin Bureau, AFP/File


France's rugby union national team head coach, Philippe Saint-Andre, pictured during a press conference to announce the team for their upcoming Six Nations against England, in Marcoussis, outside Paris, on January 30, 2014



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The combination of Burrell and Twelvetrees in midfield is particularly surprising given that Manu Tuilagi is injured but the experienced Brad Barritt is back from injury.


But while Twelvetrees can probably consider himself very much a potential first-choice starter even with everyone fit, the selections of Burrell, Nowell and May remain a surprise, particularly against traditionally England's toughest opponents.


Yet England head coach Stuart Lancaster has no doubts that the trio are ready for the occasion.


"The upside is that they have no fear. There is no fear factor that sometimes can build during players' careers in international rugby," he said.


"Ultimately I've gone with my gut instinct, which was probably formulated after watching training on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday last week.


France's captain Pascal Pape (L) and England's captain Chris Robshaw pose with the trophy ...

Adrian Dennis, AFP/File


France's captain Pascal Pape (L) and England's captain Chris Robshaw pose with the trophy during the official launch of the 2014 Six Nations International rugby tournament, at the Hurlingham Club in London, on January 22, 2014



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"I had a bit of time to think about it over the weekend. Form, potential and consistency of performance in the Premiership and Europe have been factors."


He added: "My instincts after the three days told me that Jack, Luther and Jonny were ready."


It's a risk to take against the team being described in many quarters as the favourites, just because this Six Nations falls in a post-British and Irish Lions tour year.


France have won the last four championships (three Six Nations and one Five Nations) following a Lions tour and you have to go back to 1994 the last time they failed to do so.


But Saint-Andre, who trails 2-0 in his head-to-head record with Lancaster in France-England ties, has laughed off such a notion.


"You can't be the favourites when you finished last in the 2013 Six Nations! We are outsiders. The favourites are the Welsh and the English," he said.


Last year, England triumphed 23-13 at Twickenham having claimed a 24-22 success at the Stade de France in 2012.


France's last win over England was a 19-12 success in New Zealand in the 2011 World Cup quarter-finals, when Marc Lievremont and Martin Johnson were in charge of the teams.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com France face England in rugby union Six Nations opener

Austin Mahone films cool lyric video for 'Mmm Yeah' single hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Austin Mahone films cool lyric video for 'Mmm Yeah' single
Pop singer Austin Mahone released his lyric video for his newest single "Mmm Yeah," which is a collaboration with acclaimed rapper Pitbull.

It was the ideal way for the teen pop star to kick off his Super Bowl weekend with Good Morning America as he sang this new tune "Mmm Yeah" and his previous hit single "What About Love." He really takes his fans, which are known as "Mahomies," on a journey back to the 1970s era in his Soul Train inspired lyric video. It includes cameos with some of his social media superstar friends such as Nash Grier, King Bach, Cameron Dallas, Sam Pottroff, Kingsley, Madison Pettis, Janoskians, Beau Brooks, Jai Brooks, Luke Brooks, Daniel Sahyoune and James Yammouni. It has already amassed over 365,000 views today, and that number keep climbing exponentially. Mahone continues to excel on his creativity with every new video that he makes and hopefully, his full-length music video for "Mmm Yeah" will be released soon and be as equally compelling. Well done. For more information on pop star Austin Mahone and "Mmm Yeah," visit his official website.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Austin Mahone films cool lyric video for 'Mmm Yeah' single

Mexican gray wolf making a comeback in America's Southwest hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Mexican gray wolf making a comeback in America's Southwest
Native to North America, the Mexican gray wolf, a smaller subspecies of the gray wolf, is one of the rarest and most genetically unique of the wolves. About the size of a German Shephard, adults can weigh between 60-82 pounds.

Annual survey results released on Friday, Jan. 31, 2014, showed the number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico has increased over last years numbers. The survey counted at least 83 of the endangered wolves in the two states, marking the fourth year in a row that their numbers have shown an increase. At one time, the Mexican wolf ranged from Mexico, western Texas, southern New Mexico and into central Arizona. Some scientists have found genetic proof the Mexican wolf even reached up into Colorado at one time. But by the start of the 20th century, a reduction in their natural prey, deer and elk, caused the wolves to turn to preying on domestic livestock. Government agencies, hunters, and trappers waged an all-out war against the wolf, and by the 1950s, the Mexican gray wolf was eradicated in the wild. In 1976, the wolf was included on the endangered species list by the U.S. government. It was declared an endangered subspecies, and has remained on the list to this day.
Mexican gray wolves are not necessarily gray. In fact their fur is a mix of gray rust black and c...

Jim Clark, USFWS


Mexican gray wolves are not necessarily gray. In fact, their fur is a mix of gray, rust, black and cream, making for a really striking coat.



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In March of 1998, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) began an experimental reintroduction program in the Blue Range area of Arizona, releasing 11 wolves. The goal of this project was to reestablish 100 Mexican wolves into the Apache and Gila National Forests in Arizona and New Mexico by the year 2008. The program met with many roadblocks, from political disputes to illegal killings, as well as other problems. An ongoing battle between environmentalists and ranchers, much like what has been going on in Idaho and other northern tier states, has created numerous legal obstacles. There has been concern recently about maintaining genetic diversity. Some conservationists are worried about inbreeding affecting the gene pool, and lowering survivability of pups. This same group feels that releasing only a couple wolves every year is not enough to insure diversity in the genetic pool.
On Wednesday January 16 2013 a four-year-old Mexican gray wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) named M1133 ...

USFWS


On Wednesday, January 16, 2013, a four-year-old Mexican gray wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) named M1133 took his first careful steps out of his crate into Arizona’s Apache National Forest, near the New Mexico border. Courtesy of USFWS



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Arizona Game and Fish Assistant Director Jim deVos says that although the program was thought to be a failure, it has instead proven to everyone that strong, consistent conservation measures can succeed, and the Mexican gray wolf introduction program is an example of that success. A recent story in Digital Journal, Bill seeks to remove federal protection for endangered species, detailed the federal governments efforts to do away with protection of animals on the endangered species list in the U.S. It would prove to be a disaster for this country's many endangered animals, as well as many species of plants.

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Mexican gray wolf making a comeback in America's Southwest

Goodell talking big ahead of Super Bowl hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Goodell talking big ahead of Super Bowl

By Steve Keating


NEW YORK (Reuters) - With gridiron's biggest game being staged on America's biggest stage, National Football League commissioner Roger Goodell used the spotlight on Friday to ponder some big plans.


From the possibility of more games around the world to expanding the number of playoff teams and adding franchises, to courting more women and Hispanic fans, a relaxed Goodell laid out his blueprint for NFL's expansion during his annual pre-Super Bowl state of the league address.


The Denver Broncos will take on the Seattle Seahawks in the first cold weather Super Bowl on Sunday at MetLife Stadium and Goodell joked that even the NFL could not control the weather as fluffy fake snow fell on the stage.


But if nothing else, Mother Nature appears to be a Super Bowl fan with fears of a winter blizzard disrupting the NFL's showcase giving way to a promising forecast of chilly but clear conditions.


"We are doing something innovative and unprecedented," said Goodell. "Something consistent with the essence of football and the Super Bowl.


"This is the number one market and a great stage for this Super Bowl matchup, and the world will be watching."


The world is watching with increasing interest.


Next year the NFL will play three regular season games in London and according to NFL figures, Sunday's Super Bowl broadcast will be available in 198 countries and territories in 25 languages.


Mexico is eager to have the NFL back and Goddell did not rule out the possibility of going to South America for a game in Brazil at one of the new stadiums being built for the soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics.


"We have not heard directly from any officials in that area," said Goodell when asked about talk of taking the NFL to Brazil. "We're always interested in expanding our game.


"We see the opportunity for us to continue to expand our game, come into new markets, and we find that valuable to the league."


BRITISH EXPANSION


While Goodell downplayed talk of London getting an expansion franchise, the commissioner made it clear that developing the British market was the focus of it global strategy. All three games scheduled for London next season are already sold out.


"Our focus, as you know, has been in the United Kingdom," said Goodell. "I'm happy to report that all three games are sold out.


"We're seeing that kind of passion and that kind of excitement about NFL football on a global basis.


"Our games, when we play them, just as in the United Kingdom, are done with a strategy.


"They're done with media coverage, with licensing partners and trying to build the fan base from the ground up."


Growing the fan base at home is also part of the plan.


Recent studies have found that women represent approximately 45 percent of the NFL fan base and is a market the league believes it can continue to develop.


To cater to its growing Hispanic base, the Super Bowl this year for the first time will be broadcast in Spanish in the United States.


"One of our fastest growing audience segments is our Hispanic fans, both here in the States and throughout the world, and we're proud of that, and that's intentional," said Goodell


"We're working harder to reach those fans, introduce them to the game.


"Or, if they already are great fans, we want to give them more of the game.


"Women are really embracing the game. We're not doing anything special other than inviting them into the game.


"If they feel comfortable being fans, they will. They're great fans."


One sure way to bring in new fans at home and aboard is to up the excitement and entertainment value of a product and Goodell said more is on the way with talks progressing about adding two teams to the playoffs.


The playoffs currently involve 12 teams but that number is expected to rise to 14.


"There has been a great deal of focus over the last year on if we would make any modifications to our postseason," admitted Goodell. "There's a lot of benefits to doing that. We think we can make the league more competitive.


"We think we can make the matchups more competitive towards the end of the season.


"There will be more excitement, more memorable moments for our fans."


(Editing by Greg Stutchbury)


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Goodell talking big ahead of Super Bowl

Swiss stroll, Czechs level in Davis Cup hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Swiss stroll, Czechs level in Davis Cup

France, Switzerland and Britain enjoyed perfect starts to their Davis Cup World Group first round ties as Czech Republic made a stuttering start to their three-peat bid.


Roger Federer and newly crowned Australian Open winner Stanislas Wawrinka on Friday put the Swiss 2-0 up in Serbia to leave last year's beaten finalists on the brink of an early elimination.


Australia too were heading for the Davis Cup exit after Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Richard Gasquet were on target for France.


Wimbledon champion Andy Murray and James Ward won their opening singles matches in San Diego as Great Britain pushed the United States to the brink on the opening day.


In Ostrava, the Czechs were left facing an uphill battle when the Netherlands' Robin Haase saw off Radek Stepanek 3-6, 6-4, 6-7 (4/7), 6-2, 6-1.


France's Richard Gasquet returns the ball to Australia's Nick Kyrgios during the Davis Cup...

Jean-Sebastien Evrard, AFP


France's Richard Gasquet returns the ball to Australia's Nick Kyrgios during the Davis Cup first round tennis match on January 31, 2014 at The Vendespace in Mouilleron-le-Captif, western France



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But Tomas Berdych cruised past Igor Sijsling 6-3, 6-3, 6-0 to draw the 2012 and 2013 champions back level ahead of Saturday's doubles.


"I didn't know much about him... I tried to attack him a lot," said Berdych, a semi-finalist at the Australian Open where he lost to eventual champion Wawrinka.


Elsewhere five-time winners Spain, missing Rafael Nadal, were up against it trailing 2-0 to Germany in Frankfurt, Argentina were level 1-1 with Italy in Mar del Plata, Kazakhstan led Belgium 2-0 in Astana, and Japan and Canada were all square in Tokyo.


In San Diego, world number six Murray set the tone for Great Britain with a dominant 6-1, 6-2, 6-3 defeat of Donald Young.


Sam Querrey seemed poised to get the hosts back on terms before Ward -- down two sets and trailing 2-4 in the fourth -- roared back to win 1-6, 7-6 (7/3), 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.


Ward won 10 of the last 11 games, belting seven aces and 53 winners in the three-hour, 11-minute match on a clay court at Petco Park, home of Major League Baseball's San Diego Padres.


Robin Haase of the Netherlands celebrates after defeating Radek Stepanek of Czech Republic in a firs...

Michal Cizek, AFP


Robin Haase of the Netherlands celebrates after defeating Radek Stepanek of Czech Republic in a first round Davis Cup match at the Cez Arena on January 31, 2014 in Ostrava



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"I started reading him a little bit better," Ward said. "He was going to my backhand a lot on the first serve so I started to stand back a little bit further to give myself more time."


On the clay in Mouilleron-le-Captif, France were sitting pretty after Gasquet beat Aussie teenager Nick Kyrgios 7-6 (7/3), 6-2, 6-2, before Tsonga ousted Lleyton Hewitt 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 (7/2).


World number 10 Tsonga had defeated Hewitt, ranked 41, in all their three previous ties and won through in one hour and 51 minutes to give Arnaud Clement's men the chance to finish off the tie in the doubles on Saturday.


"It was the perfect match. I was walking on water for two sets," said Tsonga.


Federer, a last-minute addition to the Swiss team, won through 6-4, 7-5, 6-2 against 268th-ranked Ilija Bozoljac on the hard court surface in Novi Sad.


Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany returns a ball to Roberto Bautista Agut of Spain during a Davis Cup...

Daniel Roland, AFP


Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany returns a ball to Roberto Bautista Agut of Spain during a Davis Cup match in Frankfurt/Main, Germany on January 31, 2014



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The Swiss, bouyed with two Grand Slam winners in their ranks, are favourites with Serbia weakened by the absence of star turns Novak Djokovic and Janko Tipsarevic.


Tired from his exploits in the heat of Melbourne, Wawrinka nevertheless stepped up to battle past 102nd ranked Dusan Lajovic 6-4, 4-6, 6-1, 7-6 (9/7).


"It was a tough match and it wasn’t easy for me to come here after the last few weeks," Wawrinka said. "I didn’t really have enough time to get ready as I was exhausted both mentally and physically, but I was determined to fight and win the match."


In Frankfurt, Philipp Kohlschreiber gave Germany a winning start over Spain with a 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 victory in less than two hours against Roberto Bautista Agut.


Kei Nishikori of Japan returns a shot against Peter Polansky of Canada in their men's singles t...

Toru Yamanaka, AFP


Kei Nishikori of Japan returns a shot against Peter Polansky of Canada in their men's singles tennis match during the Davis Cup World Group first round tie in Tokyo on January 31, 2014



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Spain's 26th-ranked Feliciano Lopez then fell 7-6 (8/6), 7-6 (7/4), 1-6, 5-7, 6-3 to Florian Mayer, ranked 29, in their second rubber.


The Spanish are playing without their stars - world number one Nadal and fifth-ranked David Ferrer.


In Mar del Plata, Carlos Berlocq put hosts Argentina ahead by beating Italy's Andreas Seppi 4-6, 6-0, 6-2, 6-1.


But Italy drew level when Fabio Fognini defeated Juan Monaco 7-5, 6-2, 6-2.


In Tokyo, Japanese number one Kei Nishikori beat Canada's Peter Polansky 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 before Frank Dancevic levelled with a 6-4, 7-6 (7/2), 6-1 win over Go Soeda.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Swiss stroll, Czechs level in Davis Cup