Texas man sought in frozen-armadillo attack

Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

October 22, 2011, 11:13 a.m.

Dallas police are searching for a man who allegedly used a frozen armadillo to attack a woman who had been trying to buy the critter.

Investigators told Fox 4 News-Dallas Fort Worth that the fight started in an apartment parking lot Sept. 29 when the suspect was selling the carcass to the alleged victim, who planned to eat it.

The pair were haggling over the price when police said the man hurled the armadillo at the 57-year-old woman twice. The woman was struck in her leg and chest, and suffered bruises, police said.

So far, investigators have been unable to track down the suspect, who they said could face assault charges.

According to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Texas law prohibits the sale of live armadillos, but some Texans still savor the meat. Some developed a taste for armadillo during the Great Depression of the 1930s, when it was known as "Hoover Hog" and "poor man's pork."

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/features/home/~3/kvAk3r_3fgY/la-armadillo-attack-m,0,7365354.story

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Gaming Everything ? Blog Archive ? Game Informer review scores ...

October 22nd, 2011 Posted in 360, 3DS, DS, News, PC, PS3 Posted By: Valay

Batman: Arkham City ? 10
RAGE ? 9
Dead Rising 2: Off the Record ? 9.5
Dark Souls ? 8.75
NBA 2K12 ? 9.5
Resident Evil Code: Veronica X HD ? 8.5
Resident Evil 4 HD ? 9.5
FIFA 12 ? 9.5
Pro Evolution Soccer 2012 ? 9
Renegade Ops ? 8.25
Burnout Crash ? 7.5
Driver: San Francisco ? 8.0
Gears of War 3 ? 9.5
Dance Central 2 ? 8.5
Sesame Street: Once Upon a Monster ? 8.5
Rise of Nightmares ? 5
X-Men: Destiny ? 7
Warhammer 40,000: Space Marines ? 8
Tropico 4 ? 7.75
Tetris Axis ? 8
Aliens: Infestation ? 8.25
Rock of Ages ? 7

Source: http://gamingeverything.com/10866/game-informer-review-scores-november-2011/

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7.2 quake in Turkey kills 75, collapses buildings (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? A powerful 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey, killing at least 75 people and sparking panic as it collapsed buildings into piles of twisted steel and chunks of concrete.

Desperate survivors dug Sunday into the rubble with their bare hands, trying to rescue the trapped and injured.

State-run TRT television reported that 59 people were killed and 150 injured in the eastern town of Ercis, and 15 others died in the provincial center of Van. Another person died in the nearby province of Bitlis.

Ercis, a city of 75,000 in the mountainous province of Van close to the Iranian border, was the hardest hit. It lies on the Ercis Fault in one of Turkey's most earthquake-prone zones. Van, 55 miles (90 kilometers) to the south, also suffered substantial damage.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ? A powerful 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey on Sunday, killing at least 60 people as it collapsed buildings into piles of twisted steel and chunks of concrete. Desperate survivors dug into the rubble with their bare hands, trying to rescue the trapped and injured.

State-run TRT television reported that 45 people were killed and 150 injured in the eastern town of Ercis, and 15 others died in the provincial center of Van. Turkish scientists estimated that up to 1,000 people could already be dead, due to low housing standards in the area and the size of the quake.

Ercis, a city of 75,000 in the mountainous province of Van close to the Iranian border, was the hardest hit. It lies on the Ercis Fault in one of Turkey's most earthquake-prone zones. Van, 55 miles (90 kilometers) to the south, also suffered substantial damage.

As many as 80 buildings collapsed in Ercis, including a dormitory, and 10 buildings collapsed in Van, the Turkish Red Crescent said. Some highways also caved in, CNN-Turk television reported.

"There are so many dead. Several buildings have collapsed. There is too much destruction," Ercis mayor Zulfikar Arapoglu told NTV television. "We need urgent aid. We need medics."

Rescuers in Van scrambled to find survivors in a flattened eight-story building that had shops on the ground floor, television footage showed. Residents sobbed outside the ruins, hoping that missing relatives would be rescued.

"My wife and child are inside! My 4-month-old baby is inside!" CNN-Turk television showed one young man crying.

Witnesses said eight people were rescued from the rubble, but frequent aftershocks were hampering search efforts, CNN-Turk reported.

Serious damage and casualties were also reported in the district of Celebibag, near Ercis.

"There are many people under the rubble," Veysel Keser, mayor of Celebibag, told NTV. "People are in agony, we can hear their screams for help. We need urgent help."

He said many buildings had collapsed, including student dormitories, hotels and gas stations.

The quake's epicenter was in the village of Tabanli, 10 miles (17 kilometers) from Van. It struck at 10:41 a.m. local time, at a depth of 12.4 miles (20 kilometers), according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Turkey lies in one of the world's most active seismic zones and is crossed by numerous fault lines. Lake Van, where Sunday's earthquake hit, is in the country's most earthquake-prone region.

U.S. scientists recorded eight aftershocks within three hours of the quake, including two with a magnitude of 5.6.

Atalay said authorities had no information yet on remote villages but the governor was touring the region by helicopter to assess the damage.

The Kandilli observatory, Turkey's main seismography center, said the quake was capable of killing many people.

"We are estimating a death toll between 500 and 1,000," Mustafa Erdik, head of the Kandilli observatory, told a televised news conference.

In Van, terrified residents spilled into the streets in panic as rescue workers and residents using their bare hands and shovels struggled to find people believed to be trapped under collapsed buildings, television footage showed. At least 50 people were treated in the courtyard of the state hospital, the state-run Anatolia news agency said.

There was no immediate information about a recently restored 10th century Armenian church, Akdamar Church, which is perched on a rocky island in the nearby Lake Van.

Houses also collapsed in the province of Bitlis, where an 8-year-old girl was killed, authorities said. The quake also toppled the minarets of two mosques in the nearby province of Mus.

NTV said Van's airport was damaged and planes were being diverted to neighboring cities.

The earthquake also shook buildings in neighboring Armenia. In the Armenian capital of Yerevan, 100 miles (160 kilometers) from Ercis, people rushed into the streets fearing buildings would collapse but no damage or injuries were immediately reported.

Armenia was the site of a devastating earthquake in 1988 that killed 25,000 people.

Sunday's quake also caused panic among residents in several Iranian towns close to the Turkish border, and cut phone links and caused cracks in buildings in the city of Chaldoran, Iranian state TV reported.

An official said the quake was also felt in Salmas, Maku, Khoi and several other towns in northeastern Iran but no damage was immediately reported.

Israel on Sunday offered humanitarian assistance despite a rift in relations following an 2010 Israeli navy raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla that left nine Turks dead. In September, Turkey expelled the Israeli ambassador and suspended military ties because Israel has not apologized. Israel has sent rescue teams to Turkey after past earthquakes in times of closer ties.

Turkey sees frequent earthquakes. In 1999, two earthquakes with a magnitude of more than 7 struck northwestern Turkey, killing about 18,000 people.

More recently, a 6.0-magnitude quake in March 2010 killed 51 people in eastern Turkey, while in 2003, a 6.4-magnitude earthquake killed 177 people in the southeastern city of Bingol.

Turkey's worst earthquake in the last century came in 1939 in the eastern city of Erzincan, causing an estimated 160,000 deaths.

Istanbul, Turkey's largest city with more than 12 million people, lies in northwestern Turkey near a major fault line. Authorities say Istanbul is ill-prepared for a major earthquake and experts have warned that overcrowding and faulty construction could lead to the deaths of over 40,000 people if a major earthquake struck the city.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111023/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_quake

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Eurozone to banks: Take bigger loss on Greek debt

Luxembourg's Prime Minister and head of the eurogroup Jean-Claude Juncker, left, speaks with Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The chairman of the eurogroup of finance ministers says the delay to a debt crisis creates a "disastrous" image of the eurozone to the outside world. Jean-Claude Juncker, who is also the prime minister of Luxembourg, added that it's not necessarily just France and Germany that have differences of opinion on how to tackle the crisis. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Luxembourg's Prime Minister and head of the eurogroup Jean-Claude Juncker, left, speaks with Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The chairman of the eurogroup of finance ministers says the delay to a debt crisis creates a "disastrous" image of the eurozone to the outside world. Jean-Claude Juncker, who is also the prime minister of Luxembourg, added that it's not necessarily just France and Germany that have differences of opinion on how to tackle the crisis. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos arrives for a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The chairman of the eurogroup of finance ministers says the delay to a debt crisis creates a "disastrous" image of the eurozone to the outside world. Jean-Claude Juncker, who is also the prime minister of Luxembourg, added that it's not necessarily just France and Germany that have differences of opinion on how to tackle the crisis. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde, right, speaks with Luxembourg's Prime Minister and head of the eurogroup Jean-Claude Juncker during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The chairman of the eurogroup of finance ministers says the delay to a debt crisis creates a "disastrous" image of the eurozone to the outside world. Jean-Claude Juncker, who is also the prime minister of Luxembourg, added that it's not necessarily just France and Germany that have differences of opinion on how to tackle the crisis. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

BRUSSELS (AP) ? Eurozone finance ministers agreed that banks should accept bigger losses on their Greek bonds but would not say Saturday how large the writedowns would be.

The move is a key step in helping Athens eventually dig out from underneath its debt burden. But asking banks to more significantly write down their Greek debt will raise concerns about their ability to withstand the losses. As a result, EU ministers meeting in Brussels are also expected to force the banks to raise billions in capital for their rainy-day funds.

Both measures are critical to solving Europe's debt crisis, which is now threatening to engulf larger economies like Italy and Spain and is blamed for dampening growth across Europe and even the world.

"The crisis in the eurozone is doing real damage to many of the European economies, including Britain," George Osborne, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, said as he headed into Saturday's meeting. "We have had enough of short-term measures, sticking plasters that get us through the next few weeks."

European leaders had promised just such a solution would come from a summit on Sunday, but they have now scheduled another one for Wednesday. Still, this weekend, they appeared to be making progress.

And a not a moment too soon: A new report from Greece's international debt inspectors said Athens won't be able to raise money on financial markets until 2021 unless it is allowed to write off more of its debt load.

In July, banks had tentatively agreed to take a loss of about 21 percent on Greek bonds. But if that percentage doesn't increase, the inspectors said the country will need as much as euro252 billion ($350 billion) in new loans through 2020, according to the report, which was given to the ministers on Friday and seen by The Associated Press.

To avoid having to pour more money into Greece, finance ministers from the 17 countries that use the euro have agreed that the banks need to take on more losses.

"Yesterday we agreed that we need a substantial increase in the contribution from the banks," said Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg's prime minister who also chairs the meetings of eurozone finance ministers.

Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter said the eurozone's chief negotiator with banks had been asked to restart those discussions.

Juncker would not say how big the contribution would be, but Germany is pushing to have Greece's private creditors take losses of 50 percent to 60 percent

According to the report, Greece's debt will peak at 186 percent of GDP in 2013 and only decline to 152 percent by the end of 2020. Germany wants that brought down to 120 percent of GDP.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-22-EU-Europe-Financial-Crisis/id-564ccf7bc2b04dd382517c9e7efe9a45

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Divers trapped underwater after ship sinks in Gulf

(AP) ? A team of six Indian divers conducting underwater pipeline installation were believed trapped in a diving chamber nearly 200 feet underwater with dwindling oxygen supplies on Friday after their support ship sank in the Persian Gulf, Iranian officials said.

The divers were among 13 people, including five Iranians and eight non-Iranians, still missing after the Koosha-1, a diving support ship, went down in stormy seas Thursday afternoon, Iran's semi-official Isna news agency reported. Out of 73 people on board, 60 had been rescued, Isna said.

The diving chamber was onboard the ship when it sank, but the divers were inside because they stay in the sealed environment to avoid having pressurize and depressurize for their dives.

"We hope their oxygen has not run out," said Pirouz Mousavi head, of the Pars Energy Zone in southern Iran, quoted by Isna. "We have deployed divers to save those who are trapped in the chamber," which he said was about 180 feet (60 meters) underwater.

The chamber can hold 72-hours worth of oxygen, said Z. Hussain, a manager at Adsun Offshore Diving Contractors Pvt Ltd, the Mumbai, India-based firm that employs the divers. But he said he did not know how much supply there was when it went down.

"The ship sunk in a matter of minutes and the six men in the chamber were trapped underwater," he said. "They've been underwater, it is almost 24 hours," he said.

Other rescue teams were searching for the other missing. Mousavi spoke of 13 still missing, with no confirmed deaths, but a local, official, Ahmad Moradi, said the bodies of six had been found, including an Indian and an Ukrainian.

Calls to Dubai-based Dulam International that is leading the rescue operation were not immediately returned.

The Iran-flagged Koosha-1 had left Thursday from offshore oil rigs near the underwater South Pars gas field, the largest in the world that is shared by both Iran and Qatar. The ship had been involved in installing underwater pipelines. It sank in the Persian Gulf some 15 miles (25 kilometers) off Iran's coast.

___

AP correspondent Ravi Nessman in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-21-ML-Iran-Ship-Sinking/id-88b18341579043458870e69948b48c70

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Joey Quits: Hotel Worker Tells Story Behind Viral Resignation Video

Like almost anyone who's ever held down a job, Joey DeFrancesco harbored dreams of one day quitting work in spectacular fashion.

The way 23-year-old DeFrancesco tells it, he worked a job he didn?t care for at a hotel in Providence, R.I., for more than three years. He often thought about leaving. In his own workplace fantasy, DeFrancesco would march right up to his boss with a letter of resignation. Upon handing it over, a brass band would explode into boisterous song. Then DeFrancesco would march out of the hotel in triumph, waving to his admirers.

The difference between DeFrancesco and the rest of us is that he actually carried out his fantasy.

"I hated them, and they hated me," DeFrancesco tells HuffPost, speaking of management at the Renaissance Providence Hotel, where he worked in room service. "It was this big drawn-out war we were having with management ... I knew I had to get one last shot at them."

A video posted online of DeFrancesco's resignation in late August has gone viral. In the video, DeFrancesco shows up at the hotel with the What Cheer? Brigade, a 19-piece brass band for which he plays trumpet.

"I've worked in this hotel ... for three and a half years," DeFrancesco says at the start of the video. "I'm going to go and quit right now with the help of my bandmates."

DeFrancesco then waves the group through what appears to be a back door, and they wait giddily in the hallway for DeFrancesco's boss to appear. When he arrives to see unwelcome guests, the boss shouts, "All of you out, now!"

DeFrancesco, clearly relishing the moment, hands over his letter of resignation, which the boss declines to take. DeFrancesco drops it at his feet.

"I'm here to tell you that I'm quitting," DeFrancesco says with a smile.

And with that, the band kicks in, marching out of the hotel with stadium-like fanfare. DeFrancesco walks away with his hands aloft like a champion.

The Renaissance is a Marriott property that's operated by a franchisee, according to Jeff Flaherty, a Marriott spokesman. He says that the company is aware of the video, and he confirms that the hotel in the video is in fact the Renaissance. But he notes that the company couldn't comment on DeFrancesco's gripes since it doesn't actually run the hotel.

"It's certainly an interesting way for someone to choose to tender his resignation," Flaherty says.

DeFrancesco says that he worked at the hotel during a hard-fought unionization drive that he supported. According to news reports, workers at the Renaissance voted to join a union a little over a year and a half ago. The workers eventually became members of the service and hotel union UNITE HERE, but DeFrancesco stresses that he was acting on his own behalf and without union approval when he tendered his resignation.

One of the main reasons the workforce had decided to unionize was scheduling issues; they would sometimes get out late at night and have to return for the early-morning shift, just a few hours later. Yet while a lot of benefits came out of joining UNITE HERE -- most notably, raises -- DeFrancesco also says the union push was a bitter one that strained relations between management and rank-and-file workers. He claims that he lost many of the shifts he'd previously had, which is one reason he'd decided to part ways and capture it on video. The general manager at the Renaissance did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

DeFrancesco says he's been overwhelmed by the response to the video, which, as of this writing, has racked up more than a million YouTube views.

"I thought it would just embarrass the boss, but now it's all over the world and it's insane," he says. DeFrancesco says he's been contacted by various television news outlets -- and earlier this week he wound up being interviewed by a German newspaper about the state of American unions.

While some YouTube commenters have knocked him for his gall, the vast majority seem to applaud him for it, no doubt living vicariously through the moment.

Typical of the comments: "Joey is a hero to those who have wanted to quit like this but don't have the balls."

DeFrancesco partly attributes the response to the video to the dismal state of the economy. He believes that bosses of all kinds have been using the downturn as an excuse to expect more out of workers for less.

Those who are lucky enough to actually have jobs, he says, "are getting shit on so much, because people are using the recession to slash everything." The video exploded because "people have this fantasy of [quitting] like that."

DeFrancesco has already landed safely at another gig. Though he won't disclose where he's working, he says it's a job that lets him use his degree in history, which he earned from Rhode Island College while working at the hotel.

The most rewarding response to the video has come from his former co-workers, all of whom loved it, he says. One of them recently sent him a text message.

"You've had quite an effect on productivity at the hotel," it read.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/19/joey-quits-hotel-worker-video_n_1019579.html

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Obama's stolen Teleprompter: The wisecracks (The Week)

New York ? Conservatives riff on a report that a truck loaded with $200,000 worth of presidential speech-giving gear was briefly stolen in Virginia

Conservatives are endlessly amused by President Obama's frequent use of a Teleprompter. They've even christened it: Teleprompter of the United States (TOTUS). So it was like comedy manna from heaven for the Right when news broke Tuesday that thieves had (at least temporarily) nabbed a truck carrying Obama's Teleprompter and $200,000 worth of audio equipment outside a Virginia hotel where an advance team was preparing for a presidential visit. Here, some of the quippier quips:

The nation mourns you, TOTUS
"Early word out of MSNBC suggests all boom mics will remain at half-staff as our nation attempts to deal with this tragic development," says Dan Riehl at?Riehl World View.

Hitting the mute button
Surely Obama is devastated by the loss, says Dennis DiClaudio at Comedy Central. But he "has yet to comment on this. For obvious reasons."

Dead giveaway
"At this time, nothing about the teleprompter thief or thieves is known," says Doug Powers at Michelle Malkin's blog. But word is "that police are on the lookout for anybody who can't stop saying, 'Pass this jobs bill.'"

Backup plan
"The commander-in-chief should start preparing notecards, just in case," says Aaron Morrissey at?DCist. "Or, if none are available, just use a giant hand."

Hard times
"Let us all together contemplate the sheer horror of a president who for a small window of time was under threat of having to read off some paper," says Kirsten Boyd Johnson at?Wonkette. Or, you know, "rent another Teleprompter possibly not as nice as the official one. Pretty ugly stuff."

How bad could a Teleprompter-less Obama be?
Conan O'Brien imagines (watch video clip below):

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111019/cm_theweek/220457

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Google rolls out Ice Cream Sandwich and Samsung Galaxy Nexus to take on iOS 5 (Appolicious)

Image from This Is My NextA week after iOS 5 released for Apple users, Google has fired back with a mobile operating system update of its own with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, and its chock full of new features and revamps.

Google presented the new software alongside Samsung in Hong Kong, showing off the operating system on the first device that will use it, the Google-branded Samsung Galaxy Nexus. The 4G phone will be able to leverage all the new features Google is bringing to bear, like near-field communication technology called Android Beam that will allow users to quickly transfer information between Android phones just by bringing them close together. Among the things you can pass back and forth are contacts, web pages, maps and videos. You can even touch your ICS device to another one while the second device is using an app, and the operating system will bring up that app for you in the Android Market.

Google also has made some solid tweaks to just about every major feature in ICS, from email to photography to the operating system?s display font. In fact, Google has invented a new font ? called Roboto ? to go in the new software. It seems indicative of the fact that with ICS, Google is trying to better design the software, make it more consistent, and basically increase its aesthetic value for users. Those are all very good concepts for Android that will help it to compete with Apple?s simply designed iOS platform, and in some ways, help Google to beat Apple at its own design game.

There?s been major emphasis put on improving the standard of ICS? embedded apps, like its camera and Gmail functions. Photography has been improved with aspects like the ability to shoot panormas and HD video, as well as capture stills while recording, without the need for additional apps. ICS also reduces shutter speed for camera apps so pictures get snapped faster. Photo editing capabilities are there as well, and resulted in some pretty great-looking shots during Google?s tech demo. All the improvements seem like they?ll help the Galaxy Nexus give the iPhone 4S a run for its money in terms of photography.

Image from This Is My NextUser interface is seeing a lot of little improvements too. The Galaxy Nexus has lost all buttons but the power button, and Google has eliminated a lot of unneeded things in favor of gestural and touch controls. Notifications, for example, can be brought down from the bar at the top of the screen just like in Android 2.3 Gingerbread, but now if you see a notification you don?t want or need, you can just drag it to the side and toss it from the list. The same is true with widgets and lots of other lists. It?s possible to make folders for apps, contacts, widgets, photos and a number of other pieces of content, and it?s as simple as dragging one icon over another.

Something that Google didn?t really address, however, was how ICS is supposed to help Android deal with the ongoing problem of fragmentation, or the trouble of having lots of Android devices with different specs, screen sizes and other features. Rather than having two version of Android ? Gingerbread for phones, Honeycomb for tablets ? ICS brings both formats together with one operating system. It was supposed to help unify screen resolutions to make Android easier for developers to create apps for, allowing them to more easily build apps compatible with more devices.

Fragmentation didn?t get discussed during the keynote, which is a bummer because it?s one of the main problems that?s currently holding Android back. But the laundry list of new features, and the overall ease of use Google demonstrated should be a big boon as it takes on Apple?s latest and greatest. As Google pointed out, Android is the best-selling platform in the world; with ICS, Google is really acting like it, bringing a wealth of great features that will help the platform continue to grow and innovate with new apps. Last week, iOS owners were excited for the new things they can do with Apple?s software. This week, Android owners have plenty of reason to be just as excited (and maybe a little more so, because Android Beam looks awesome).

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/software/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_androidapps_com_articles9945_google_rolls_out_ice_cream_sandwich_and_samsung_galaxy_nexus_to_take_on_ios_5/43310081/SIG=13tsn705s/*http%3A//www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/9945-google-rolls-out-ice-cream-sandwich-and-samsung-galaxy-nexus-to-take-on-ios-5

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