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Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Mr Nel

Mr Nel tried to undermine the quality of her research on Wednesday, saying: "You have a view of what happens in prison but it is not verified and that is worrying. Why don't you verify before you give evidence in a high court
Ms Vergeer said it was not within her remit to understand the workings of all departments.was during the cross-examination of Ms Vergeer on Tuesday that Pistorius's offer of a lump sum of 375000 rand £21,000; $34,000 to the Steenkamp family was revealed by Mr Nel.He said Pistorius had raised the cash by selling his car, but that Reeva Steenkamp's mother, June, had rejected the offer. "She does not want blood money he said.He highlighted separate monthly payments of 6,000 rand (£340; $540), which Pistorius had agreed to pay after being asked by the Steenkamps' lawyer because they were short of money after their daughter death.Mr Nel said these funds mentioned in Ms Vergeers report would be "paid back to the accused in full centMr Nel's questioning led to the Pistorius family accusing him of giving a distorted picture of the financial agreement with the Steenkamps. They said they would provide a full statement on Wednesday.The Paralympic sprinter denied murdering Ms Steenkamp after a row on Valentine's Day last yearsaying he shot her by mistake.60 seconds: Key developments in the trial of Oscar Pistorius
faces up to 15 years in jail after being found guilty of culpable homicide, although the judge may suspend the sentence or impose a fine.On Monday, a defence witness suggested that Pistorius should not be sent to prison but be sentenced to house arrest or community service. Nel described the suggestion as shockingly inappropriateSteenkamp, a 29eaold model and law graduate, was hit three times by bullets shot through a toilet door by Pistorius at his home in the capita Pretoria.

Ken Tsang

The police advance came when protesters blockaded the underpass after being cleared out of other areas of the city on Tuesday.Overnight police used pepper spray and batons to remove protesters from Lung Wo Road which they said earlier had to be cleared as it was a major thoroughfare. They also arrested people fornlawful assembly
Civic Party member Ken Tsang, one of Hong Kong"s pro-democracy political groups, is taken away by policemen, before being allegedly beaten up by police forces Ken Tsang, a social worker and member of the Civic Party, was taken away by plainclothes policemen
Local TV network TVB aired footage that appeared to show a group of plainclothes policeman dragging a handcuffed and unarmed protester and placing him on the ground.
They then assault him, kicking him repeatedly.
The man was named as Ken Tsang, a social worker and member of the opposition Civic Party. He was later taken to hospital
Secretary for Security Lai Tung-kwok said there wasoncern over a video cliphowing police officers who used inappropriate force against an arrested person
He said the officers seen on the video would be removed from their current duties and that an investigation would be carried out.Juliana Liu, BBC News, Hong Kon
The footage shot by broadcaster TVB has been widely shared on social media.
Accusations of police using excessive force were made when authorities fired tear gas as the protests first erupted in late September. But this incident, which took place at aroundon WednesdaGMT Tuesday was different.
The demonstrator, Ken Tsang, a social worker, had already been detained and no longer posed any threat to law enforcement.

between toddlers and chimps

Or at least it depends on the battle. In fact telling a Picasso from a Monet for example, should be easy for a chimpanze have been trained to do it. Scientists taught these small-brained species that chambers next to pictures by one or other of these artists contained food. When later presented with new Picassos and Monets, they were more likely to opt for the artist whose work had previously led them to a reward meaning they had picked up on underlying stylistic differences. Many skills that weconsider complex are in fact the result of relatively simple and often universal cognitive abilities shared by a great many species
There is little distance between toddlers and chimps (Credit: Boaz Rottem / Alamy)
There is little distance between toddlers and chimpsrediBoaz RottemAlamy)
In reality, when it comes to cognitive development, the divide between infant chimpanzees and infant humans is often startlingly small. So small in fact that psychologists once wondered if the key difference between the two species was not our underlying mental machinery, but the cultural traditions and recorded knowledge that humans had accumulated through the ages.Perhaps if an infant chimpanzee was raised in an exclusively human environment it would acquire human abilities, complete with language competency and table

While Nantes

While Nantes is a pleasant city, with white and grey stone buildings flanking the mouth of the Loire River, it doesn't have the spectacular architecture, major historical significance or three-star restaurants of some of its French counterparts. So the city decided to create its own unique attraction
Les Machines, Nantes, France
In 2007 Nantes opened the combined art installation and amusement park on the site of a former shipyard. Les Machines offers both carnival-style rides for which anyone can purchase a ticket, and smaller machines demonstrated by visitors selected from the crowd. The result is a kind of steampunk amusement park, and a breathtaking juxtaposition of old, new – and weird.
Les Machines de L'Ile, Ile de Nantes, Nantes, France
Why not ride on an oversized spider? (Hana Schank)
Les Machines is inspired by Jules Verne, who was born and raised in Nantes, and the installations feel like 19th-century science fiction come to life. Verne’s 1870 novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, for example, inspired the three-storey, 25m-tall Carrousel des Mondes Marin (Marine Worlds Carousel). Visitors can choose to ride on three levels of mechanical sea creatures: squid and crab on the lowest level, suspended fish on the second and boats and jellyfish at the top.
Since the carousel elements are moveable, adults and kids alike scramble into seats and buckle themselves into the mouths of giant fish or aboard boats, pushing pedals and pulling levers to make the machines rock and spew steam.  
Ile de Nantes, Nantes, France
Carousel riders can pull levers to make the boats rock and steam shoot out. (Hana Schank)
The island’s biggest showstopper, however, is a 48-tonne mechanical elephant. The creature, which carries 50 riders, stomps the entire length of the park – from the entrance, across the shipyard and past an old warehouse to the carousel, before looping back to discharge passengers and wait for new ones. The wild ride takes a half hour.
Ile de Nantes, France, Nantes
The park famous, mechanical elephant delights visitors with its presence and its sprayHanna Schan
Inspired by Verne’s 1880 novel The Steam House, in which British colonists travel through in a house wheeled by a steam-powered elephant, the ride gives passengers the chance to view Nantes’ warehouses, ships and 18th-century mansions from a unique vantage point 12m in the air – the equivalent of being on the third storey of a moving house. It also sprays water at unsuspecting observers.
Smaller machines are housed inside the soaring Galerie Des Machinesmachine gallery including a flying heron and a menagerie of prehistoric-looking metal bugs, spiders and other imaginary pedal-powered slithering insects, all fitted with seats for riders.  

Ebola vaccine

He will discuss the Ebola crisis in a video conference on Wednesday with British, French, German and Italian leaders, the White House says.
Mr Banbury issued a stern warning on Tuesday - telling the UN Security Council by video-link from West Africa that if Ebola was not stopped now, the world would "face an entirely unprecedented situation for which we do not have a plan
UN Ebola mission chief Anthony Banbury  speaks to members of the UN Security Council during a meeting on the Ebola crisis at the UN headquarters in New York , on 14 October 2014. Anthony Banbury addressed Security Council members via video link from Accra, Ghana
"If we do not get ahead of the crisis, if we do not reach our targets and the number of people with Ebola rises dramatically as some have predicted, the plan we have is not scalable to the size of such a new crisis," he said.
He called for more money to build treatment centres and more medical personnel to staff them.
It follows the WHO's latest projections suggesting the infection rate could reach 5,000 to 10,000 new cases a week within two months if global efforts to combat the spread of infection were not stepped up.
There have been 8,914 cases overall, including the fatal cases, and the WHO says it expects this number to top 9,000 by the end of the week.
'No protocols' Separately, nurses at a hospital in Texas where a colleague contracted the virus from a Liberian patient who died of Ebola say they worked for days without adequate protective clothing and received little guidance on how to prevent the spread of the virus.
It comes after the head of the US Centers for Disease Control, Thomas Frieden, said there had been a breach of protocol by health workers that led to the nurse becoming infected.
"The CDC is saying that protocols were breached, but the nurses are saying there were no protocols," the head of the national nurses union, Roseann DeMoro, told reporters.

WEATHER


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