Friday, October 29, 2010

Mariah Carey announces she is pregnant

(Reuters) - Mariah Carey, one of the world's top selling singers, said on Thursday that she is pregnant with her first child.
The Grammy Award winning singer and her husband, "America's Got Talent" host and rapper Nick Cannon, made the announcement in an interview broadcast on NBC's Today Show.
"Yes, we're pregnant, this is true. It's still early, we're expecting in the spring," said Carey, confirming rumors that had been swirling for several months.
"It's been a long journey, but it's been tough because I have been trying to hold on to a shred of privacy and that was not easy," said Carey, who also revealed that she suffered a miscarriage soon after she and Cannon married in 2008.
Carey will release her 13th studio album, "Merry Christmas II You," next week. During her 20 year career, Carey has sold more than 200 million albums, singles and videos and scored 18 No. 1 songs in the United States.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Indonesia's volcanic eruption claims 25 lives





 


MOUNT MERAPI, Indonesia – Rescusers scoured the slopes of Indonesia's most volatile volcano Wednesday after it was rocked by an eruption that spewed clouds of searing ash, killing at least 25 villagers including an old man known as the mountain's spiritual gatekeeper.
The blast eased pressure that had been building up behind a lava dome perched on the volcano's crater, but experts said the worst may not be over. The lava dome could unleash deadly gases and debris if it collapses.
"It's a little calmer today," said Surono, the chief of Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation. "No hot clouds, no rumbling. But a lot of energy is pent up back there. There's no telling what's next."
Mount Merapi, which translates as "Fire Mountain," has erupted many times over the last 200 years, often with deadly results. In 1994, 60 people were killed, while in 1930, more than a dozen villages were incinerated, leaving up to 1,300 dead.
Still, as with other volcanoes in Indonesia, many people call its fertile slopes home. More than 11,000 live near Merapi.
Though thousands streamed into makeshift emergency shelters after Tuesday's powerful eruption, many started returning Wednesday saying they had to tend to their crops and protect their homes.
"I keep thinking about what's happening up there, with my cows, my property," said Hadi Sumarmo, who has a farm in Srumbung, a village three miles (seven kilometers) from the crater's mouth. "I just want to go back to check. If I hear sirens, I'll get out again quickly."

Even as rescue officials contended with the volcano — one of 129 to watch in the world's largest archipelago — officials were trying to assess the impact of a 7.7-magnitude earthquake off Sumatra island that triggered a three-meter (10-foot) -high tsunami, killing more than 100 people and leaving scores missing.
The twin disasters happened hours apart in one of the most seismically active regions on the planet.
Officials said earlier that by closely monitoring the famously active volcano they thought they could avoid casualties, but the death toll was quickly rising.
Aris Triyono, of the national search and rescue agency, said his teams were scouring the southern slope of the mountain, which has been pounded by rocks and debris, in search of victims and survivors.
Twenty-five bodies have been brought to the main hospital in the city of Yogyakarta, said Endita Sri Andiyanti, a spokeswoman, and more than a dozen others were admitted with respiratory problems, burns and other injuries.
Among the dead was Maridjan, an 85-year-old man who had been entrusted by a highly respected late king to watch over the volcano's spirits.
"We found his body," said Suseno, a member of the search and rescue team, amid reports that the old man was found in the position of praying, kneeling face-down on the floor.
Maridjan, who for years led ceremonies in which rice and flowers were thrown into the crater to appease spirits, has angered officials in the past by refusing to evacuate even during eruptions.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Ebook: Earning Over $15 a day





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Don't hesitate to buy it, its for only $30. Reviews will be posted later.







Friday, October 8, 2010

Thursday, October 7, 2010

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Move would be Bridge too far - Buck

Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck insists the club still has no plans to leave Stamford Bridge, despite the stadium's capacity of under 42,000 seats
.
The Blues are dominating English football on the field after winning both the Premier League and FA Cup trophies last season and Carlo Ancelotti's side are sitting pretty at top this term after seven games.
But the West Londoners' lie eighth in the table when it comes to attendance averages and a move away from the Bridge has long been mentioned to help them compete with the type of revenues Manchester United and Arsenal command from their gate receipts.
And while Buck admits Chelsea will never rule out leaving their 105-year home, the Blues chairman insists the capital outfit are making up for a smaller capacity venue by focusing on revenue from commercial activity, sponsorship and new media.
He told Sky Sports News."There is a lot of history and tradition here at Stamford Bridge.
"The club has been here since 1905 and so it's very difficult for us to make the philosophical decision that we are going to move on.
"Certainly we wouldn't leave West London or thereabouts and there are very few sites available.
"We have to do things with our other commercial activities to make up the deficit that is created by the fact we don't have a 60,000 seat stadium.
"I can't say that we will never move or have a new stadium but at the moment, it's not at the front of our agenda.
"What's at the front of our agenda is increasing our commercial activities, increasing how our sponsors and increasing how we use new media."

Roy's methods aren't working with Reds

Roy Hodgson needs to drastically change his formation if he is to reverse Liverpool's dismal slump in form.
Liverpool's potential new owners New England Sports Ventures have reassured Roy Hodgson over his managerial future at Anfield, saying they feel he is "the right person to take this club forward" if their takeover goes through.
I'm happy to admit that I thought Hodgson was a fantastic appointment as Rafael Benitez's successor in the summer - and even went as far as tipping them for a top-four finish.
But now I'm not so sure.
Having watched Liverpool's disastrous start to the season under his tutelage, albeit only seven league games in, I just can't see how things will get better for the Reds under the former Fulham boss, who already has an embarrassing League Cup exit to Northampton and a humiliating home defeat by Blackpool on his record.
I can't shake the feeling that Hodgson is simply out of his depth at Anfield, with the glare of the constant spotlight on him overwhelming a man who now looks like he has the world on his shoulders.
The alarm bells started to ring a few weeks ago when Hodgson dropped into a press conference how many extra hours he was working in his new job.
You get the impression he was left to his own devices by Mohammed Al Fayed at Craven Cottage, and thrived on the freedom he had in west London.
But this is Liverpool Football Club - a club in crisis but still a club steeped in the grandest tradition and still one of the biggest in world football when it comes to history, silverware and fanbase.
I was never Benitez's biggest fan but there was never any doubt that he had red running through his veins while he was in charge on Merseyside, and he clearly worked around the clock, living and breathing Liverpool FC.
Benitez's meticulous approach to training and tactics seems to be something the players are only fully appreciating now that he's gone - and although Hodgson is desperate to stamp his own style on his new team, I just don't think the two are compatible.
"My methods have translated from Halmstads to Malmo to Orebro to Neuchatel Xamax to the Swiss national team," Hodgson has claimed in his defence, but that very list of clubs tells it's own story, with his methods perhaps not suited to the bigger clubs in world football, where world-class and World Cup-winning footballers are used to a much different approach.
Despite the distractions of the ongoing ownership and takeover wranglings since the summer, there's simply no way Liverpool should be in the relegation zone with the squad at Hodgson's disposal.
Many critics have pointed the finger at Benitez for the Reds' shortcomings, but although the squad as a whole needs greater depth, there is still a top-class starting XI there if the right players are picked.
Understandably Hodgson has transferred the formation and style that served Fulham so well last season from London to Merseyside - but Fernando Torres is not Bobby Zamora, so asking him to do a similar job in a lone striker role has been a key factor in the Spaniard's dip in form, body language and goals return.
Under Benitez, Torres had the likes of Steven Gerrard and Yossi Benayoun buzzing around him, pressing defenders, winning possession and providing ammunition for his predatory finishing skills in the attacking third.
Liverpool's midfield and attack has looked totally disjointed under Hodgson, with Torres' frustration at his lack of service visible to everyone.
The Reds boss needs to realise he has dropped a clanger in his recruitment of Christian Poulsen, and play the classy Raul Meireles in his best position - which is certainly not on the right wing.
I personally think Hodgson should take a look at the top of the table and mirror Chelsea's 4-3-3 formation, which has served them pretty well so far.
The Blues have a solid back four who are protected by a three-man midfield shield which could be provided by talismanic skipper Steven Gerrard in the centre, Meireles and the much-maligned Lucas Leiva (or Fabio Aurelio when fit for balance on the left of the trio). Jonjo Shelvey could even be an option alongside Gerrard and Meireles, while some Reds fans have called for Daniel Agger to be given a chance in a holding midfield role given Hodgson doesn't seem to want him in central defence.
This midfield trio would allow Glen Johnson the freedom to bomb forward in much the same way Ashley Cole does for the Blues, giving the Reds some much-needed width and delivery from the right flank which has been sorely missing so far.
With Lucas/Aurelio/Agger in the team, Gerrard could be the heartbeat pulling the strings from the middle of the pitch and the man tasked with linking midfield with an attacking trio of Joe Cole, Dirk Kuyt and Torres.
Chelsea play with Nicolas Anelka and Florent Malouda supporting star striker Didier Drogba, and although I'm not Kuyt's biggest fan, his workrate, passion and eye for goal put him way ahead of David Ngog and Ryan Babel, with Maxi Rodriguez another option for Kuyt's position if the Dutchman is unavailable.
This formation would give Torres plenty of company up top and allow him to harass defenders in a gang, rather than ploughing a lone furrow.
With so many teams starting to adopt this formation - one of which being Blackpool who rocked Roy's Reds last time out - Hodgson needs to realise his tried and tested methods are simply not working at Anfield.
Although Liverpool have previously tended to stand by their man, defeat to Everton in the upcoming Merseyside derby could make the call for Hodgson's head deafening, with Reds fans chanting the name of Kenny Dalglish in the humiliating defeat by Ian Holloway's Seasiders last weekend.
Hodgson insists he has not "lost any ability which has served me so well in 35 years of coaching" - and I'm sure he hasn't.
But his current methods are simply not working at the moment - and unless he accepts he may have to adapt his ways sooner rather than later, he may give Liverpool's hierarchy no other choice but to usher him towards the exit door.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

2010 ICC Awards

We’re LIVE at the 2010 ICC Awards at the Grand Castle in Bangalore.
Here’s a look at who won:
Cricketer of the Year: Sachin Tendulkar
Test Cricketer of the Year: Virender Sehwag
ODI Cricketer of the Year: AB de Villiers
Test Team of the Year: India
ODI Team of the Year: Australia
LG People’s Choice Award: Sachin Tendulkar
Women’s Cricketer of the Year: Shelley Nitschke
Twenty20 International Performance of the Year: Brendon McCullum for his unbeaten 116 against Australia.
Associate and Affiliate Player of the Year: Ryan ten Doeschate
Emerging player of the year: Steven Finn
ICC Umpire of the Year: Aleem Dar
West Indies fast bowlers Courtney Walsh and Joel Garner, along with Bishan Singh Bedi and the late Ken Barrington of England joined the 60 male members of the Hall of Fame, while England’s Rachael Heyhoe Flint becomes the first woman to be inducted.


Red carpet arrivals:
Bishan Singh Bedi was among the first to arrive. He’s being inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame this evening and he said it was a huge honour. The media waiting here grilled him on what he thought about India taking on Australia and whther India vs Australia was now turning out to be a bigger rivalry than India vs Pakistan. Bedi said that there has always been a fierce rivalry between the two teams.
The Indian team arrived at the awards in their team bus and while most of them almost ran across the red carpet, Sachin Tendulkar (who was up for three awards tonight) did stop to answer questions. And there were plenty of them! Sachin seemed to be in a great mood after yesterday’s awesome win in Mohali and he said that though every win means alot, yesterday’s win was just very very special. We agree.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Torres strain puts derby outing in doubt

Liverpool striker Fernando Torres is a doubt for the Merseyside derby against Everton at Goodison Park on Sunday October 17.
It has been confirmed that Torres has strained an adductor muscle - a similar injury to the one he sustained in the World Cup final.
The Spain striker limped off after just 10 minutes of the 2-1 Premier League defeat to Blackpool at Anfield on Sunday.
Manager Roy Hodgson said the 26-year-old had strained his groin but did not know the severity of the injury.
Torres pulled out of Spain's squad for the forthcoming Euro 2012 qualifiers against Lithuania and Scotland and had a scan at the club's Melwood training ground.
"Fernando was assessed earlier today at Melwood and underwent a scan this afternoon," said Dr Peter Brukner, head of sports medicine and sports science.
"He will have intensive treatment over the next couple of weeks but it is too early to say if he will be fit for the game against Everton."
The forthcoming derby is hugely significant with Liverpool currently wallowing in 18th place in the Premier League after their worst start to a campaign since 1953-54, when they were relegated.
Everton have also had their difficulties in the current campaign and are just one place above their near-neighbours, on goal difference alone.

Clemence upset by Hodgson criticism

Liverpool legend Ray Clemence believes it is "sad" that Roy Hodgson is being questioned after just three months in charge at Anfield.

Liverpool fans chanted the name of Kenny Dalglish during Sunday's 2-1 home defeat by Blackpool which left their side in the bottom three of the Premier League.
Clemence believes the situation will not change significantly until the Tom Hicks-George Gillett ownership position is sorted out.
The former England keeper said: "I can't believe after two to three months that people are questioning the man (Hodgson).
"He has managed and coached at the highest level. He got Switzerland to over achieve with his organisation and tactical knowledge.
"He has coached in different places in Europe. He made Fulham into an excellent side, took them to a situation they've never been in their history.
"Why wouldn't he be the person to be given the opportunity at Liverpool? But he is in a situation which is not ideal by a long stretch of the imagination at the moment."
Clemence added: "I am sure Roy knows better than I do the changes that need to be made there but his hands appeared to be tied at this moment and will be until Christmas.
"Until the get the club sorted out in terms of who is going to own it, where the money is going to come from, then it is going to be a difficult three or four months.
"The problem is that the fans are confused as well.
"They've been having a go at the top people for so long, the top people still don't appear to want to move, so where do they go now? We'll have a go at the manager.
"It is sad because Liverpool fans over the years have been, and are in mind, are still the most loyal when you consider the number of managers over the years compared to other clubs.
"The man should be given a chance and three months is no time at all to make the changes that need to be made."
Clemence admits he is hurting personally over Liverpool's current plight.
He said: "I loved my time at Spurs, it was the best thing that could have happened to me at that time.
"I had 12 great years there as a player and coach, learnt a lot, and probably wouldn't be in this position today if I hadn't gone to Spurs.
"But if someone nails you to a post and says 'what is the club' then it is Liverpool.
"I had a fantastic time playing-wise there, the fans were always fantastic to me and still are when I go back.
"I love the place, I love the club, I hate to see where it is at the moment and I want to see them back up there as soon as possible in the position I believe they should be in."

Zakir Naik: Concept of God in Hinduism and Islam

About Zakir Naik
A medical doctor by professional training, Dr. Zakir Naik is renowned as a dynamic international orator on Islam and Comparative Religion. Dr. Zakir Naik clarifies Islamic viewpoints and clears misconceptions about Islam, using the Qur'an, authentic Hadith and other religious Scriptures as a basis, in conjunction with reason, logic and scientific facts.

Dr. Zakir is popular for his critical analysis and convincing answers to challenging questions posed by audiences after his public talks. In the last 6 years (by the year 2002, Dr. Zakir Naik has delivered more than 600 public talks in the U.S.A., Canada, U.K., Saudi Arabia, U.A.E., Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, South Africa, Mauritius, Australia, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, Guyana (South America) and many other countries, in addition to numerous public talks in India.

He has successfully participated in several symposia and dialogues with prominent personalities of other faiths. His public dialogue with Dr. William Campbell (of USA), on the topic, “The Qur’an and the Bible in the light of Science” held in city of Chicago, U.S.A., on April 1, 2000 was a resounding success.

Sheikh Ahmed Deedat, the world famous orator on Islam and Comparative Religion, who had called Dr. Zakir, "Deedat plus" in 1994, presented a plaque in May 2000 awarded to Dr. Zakir Abdul-Karim Naik for his achievement in the field of Da'wah and the study of Comparative Religion with the engraving "Son what you have done in 4 years had taken me 40 years to accomplish, Alhamdulillah."

Dr. Zakir Naik appears regularly on many international T.V. Channels in more than 100 countries of the world. He is regularly invited for T.V. and Radio interviews. More than a hundred of his talks, dialogues, debates and symposia are available on video cassettes, video CDs and audio cassettes. He has authored books on Islam and Comparative Religion.



Video Download Link:
http://hotfile.com/dl/73846372/f17bc34/Part1.flv.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/73846006/7c5accb/Part2.flv.html

 

“One Nation Working Together”

The liberal “One Nation Working Together” rally  in Washington Saturday was a trashy affair — much trashier than Fox News host Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally held at the end of August, at least according to one member of the clean-up crew who worked both events.

As the ralliers began to disperse from the “One Nation” rally around 4 p.m., one thing was immediately clear: the area around the Lincoln Memorial had become a landfill.

Fast food remnants littered the area below the Memorial. Empty water bottles were omnipresent as were discarded stick-mounted signs. The limited park-provided trash bins were almost works of art. The trashcan heaps bursting upwards looked like images of volcanoes caught mid-eruption, to say nothing of the areas surrounding the bins. Pompeii never had a chance.

Perhaps the biggest problem was the pamphleteering. With well over a hundred groups passing out buttons, sign-up sheets, newspapers, pamphlets, flyers, rants and manifestos, it should come as no surprise that a lot of the printed material became sidewalk graffiti.

The Daily Caller attempted to see just how much stuff a single person could accumulate at the rally. Apart from time constraints, there were several self-imposed limitations governing TheDC’s research:

• Only free items were counted

• Items were only taken when explicitly offered by the pamphleteers first

• Items were only taken once

• No wood-mounted signs or banners were taken that couldn’t fit into a backpack

TheDC also attempted to pick up anything off the ground, but this became logistically impossible after 1:30 p.m.

The result: 112 items (17 stickers; 22 small leaflets; 14 8.5-x-11 flyers; 7 broadsheet newspapers; 7 pamphlets; 5 business cards; 2 mail-in forms; 2 large signs; 1 208-page book; and 1 postcard. The rest of the 112 items came from a 34-loose-page document titled, “General Motors and UAW Information for Investigation Consideration.”)

Message in a Bottle Survives Epic Journey

Last year, a high school student named Corey Swearingen put a letter in a bottle, sealed it up, and dropped it in the Atlantic Ocean, off the Florida coast. It was kind of an experiment for school. In the letter, he appealed to whomever came across the bottle to contact him and let him know where in the world it showed up. Amazingly, someone did.
About 16 months after the bottle was dropped, Swearingen's marine science teacher heard from someone in Ireland. The letter had made its way across the Atlantic Ocean and washed up on the shores of the Emerald Isle, found by a 17-year-old and his Dad while out for a stroll. In an interview with Florida Today, Swearingen said he never expected the message to be found.
Can't blame him for pessimism. After all, the wine bottle, which, according to Swearingen, is being put up on display in an Irish pub, did face long odds. But it's hardly the first message in a bottle to survive a perilous journey.
In 2009, a message in a bottle washed up on the shores of England. It had been tossed into the waters near the Bahamas nearly five years previous. Incredible, but that pales in comparison to a bottle sent by Emily Hwang. True, Hwang's bottle traveled "only" 1,735 miles from Seattle to Alaska, but it took an amazing 21 years to do so.
There's even a case of a message in a bottle helping a family find a new life. In 1979, Dorothy and John Henry Peckham dropped a message in a bottle in the Pacific Ocean while on a cruise. Amazingly, the bottle found its way to Southeast Asia where it was picked up by 31-year-old Hoa Van Nguyen.
Nguyen wrote back and began a correspondence that eventually led to the Peckhams helping to sponsor Nguyen and his family's immigration to the United States.
Eat your heart out, email. 

Monday, October 4, 2010

Foursquare Down

Foursquare, the popular location based social network that focuses on checking in where you go has been down for upwards of four hours. The company first blamed the downtime on server overloading, but later revised that with a 404-type image on their website that claims that they are “currently upgrading [their] servers.”

It could be that the service went down, and then the company decided to upgrade, but it is much more likely that Foursquare pulled a fail-whale and is frantically trying to get back online.

Twitter has been buzzing without stop about the down time, but the service has been near silent. Since this tweet four hours ago they have said nothing:

The tweet was passed along by Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley, but he had nothing further to say on the matter.

Is Foursquare the new Twitter of going down, or is this just a one time fluke? Given the general durability of the service, we are likely to take the second view. This time, at least.

Allen Stern had a rather funny take on the whole situation:

    "We are hearing from many users (they want to remain anonymous) that they are staying at home until the    service is restored. One user called us on our tips hotline noting that it just “isn’t worth going out if you can’t get a badge”.

A Call For Unity

This book is a leaflet which has been laid out to invite devout Christians and Jews for cooperation to convey people the message of existence and oneness of Allah

Torres out of Spain squad

Fernando Torres has withdrawn from the Spain squad for the Euro 2012 qualifiers against Lithuania and Scotland


The Liverpool striker was forced off with a groin problem after just ten minutes of his side's shock 2-1 defeat to Blackpool on Sunday.
Torres' injury has been assessed by the Spanish medical staff and he has been forced to pull out of the world champions' squad.
Liverpool are still waiting to find out the full extent of the problem and how long their star striker might be sidelined for as they look to turnaround their horrendous start to the season.
Spain will also be without Barcelona forward Pedro and Sevilla winger Jesus Navas after they picked up knocks over the weekend.
Vincente Del Bosque is already without Barcelona schemer Xavi and Arsenal ace Cesc Fabregas for the two games against Lithuania and Scotland.
Del Bosque has drafted in Valencia duo Pablo Hernandez and Aritz Aduriz and Villarreal pair Borja Valero and Bruno Soriano to provide cover for the latest withdrawals.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Wayne Rooney defending himself

Rooney has been plagued by poor form and off-field controversy so far this season. He missed the recent clash with Everton after allegations over his private life before being rested due to an ankle problem for today's clash with Sunderland.
The forward, who could however be named in the England squad on Monday for the Euro 2012 qualifier with Montenegro on October 12, believes playing time is the answer to his poor performances recently.
"I'm only a human being," he said.
"I hurt as well, but I need to get through this and get back to playing football the way I can do."
Rooney added: "I know I can play better, so I'm hoping to get a consistent run of games in the team.
"If I do that, I'm sure my form will be back to its best.
"When you're not playing at your best, you need to just continue playing and doing the simple things, then your form will come good."
Rooney, who has spent the overwhelming majority of his career to date as a first-choice with club and country, continued: "You always want to play well and give the manager no excuses to leave you out, but there are top players here, so you have to be at your best to keep your place. If you're not, the manager has the players to leave you out. All footballers get left out at some stage, but I want to play every game.
"My performances could be better. I obviously missed pre-season and I've only played four or five games this season but the more games that you play, the better your form will become, so I'm hoping to get a run of games."
The former Everton man also highlighted a change of position this season as a factor in his recent struggles
"Last season, I played up front every game, whether it was alone or with Berba (Dimitar Berbatov). I was the out-and-out striker and that was the big difference.
"That's my favourite position and, scoring wise, it's obviously a lot better because you get more chances to score rather than if you are playing in the hole and creating for others."

Milan Jovanovic could quit Liverpool Team



The Serb, signed on a free transfer in the summer from Standard Liege, is seemingly unhappy about his lack of playing time under Roy Hodgson and warned he is getting itchy feet.
"I am starting to find the time dragging on," he is quoted as saying by The Sun.
"I'm a fighter but if things do not sort themselves out I will change club - even though it is too soon to think about it yet.
"I'm on form, I'm working hard and I have started eight competitive games.
"But I've not been in the starting XI for the last few matches - and I've not even come on as a sub."
He continued: "I have to adapt to a new system over here. I have to defend all the time.
"Just three or four teams in the Premier league play attractive football. The others set great store by commitment, discipline and defending.
"I miss Standard and the city of Liege."

Friday, October 1, 2010

Ecuador Correa rescue President

QUITO, Ecuador – Ecuador was under a state of siege Friday, with the military in charge of public order after rescuing President Rafael Correa from a hospital where he had been surrounded, roughed up and tear gassed by rebellious police.

Correa and his ministers called Thursday's revolt — in which insurgents also paralyzed the nation with airport shutdowns and highway blockades — an attempt to overthrow him and not just a simple insurrection over a new law that cuts benefits for public servants.

At least three people — two police officers and a soldier — were killed and dozens injured in the clashes, said Irina Cabezas. the vice president of congress. Five soldiers were wounded — two critically — in the firefight at the hospital before Correa was removed at top speed in an SUV, according to the military and Red Cross.

Correa was trapped for more than 12 hours in the hospital, where he was being treated for the tear-gassing that nearly asphyxiated him when he tried to reason with angry police officers at a capital barracks. The officers also roughed him up and pelted him with water.

The region's leaders and the United States have expressed firm support for Correa. Bolivia's leftist president, Evo Morales, summoned South American presidents to an emergency meeting Friday in Buenos Aires of the continent's fledgling UNASUR defense union.

Correa, 47, speaking from the balcony of the Carondelet palace after his dramatic rescue, told hundreds of cheering supporters that Thursday "was the saddest day of my life." He thanked those who had converged on the hospital Thursday "ready to die to defend democracy" — his loyalists had hurled stones at mutinous police, who repelled them with tear gas.

The president said 27 of his special forces bodyguards had been injured in the melee and the unrest was not just a pay dispute.

Leo Apotheker as new CEO

 SAN FRANCISCO – Hewlett-Packard Co. has hired recently discarded software executive Leo Apotheker to steer the world's largest technology company as it tries to prove it can thrive without its previous leader, Mark Hurd.

Thursday's announcement ends HP's nearly two-month search to fill its top post. It has been empty since HP's board ended Hurd's five-year reign as CEO amid allegations of sexual harassment and deceptive expense reports.

Hurd's ouster wasn't well-received on Wall Street, causing the company's stock to plunge more than 15 percent in the weeks after his departure. The backlash intensified the pressure to find a CEO that would inspire investor confidence.

The initial response to Apotheker's appointment was icy. HP shares fell $1.28, or 3 percent, in extended trading after finishing Thursday's regular session at $42.07, down 46 cents.

Apotheker, 57, spent most of his career at business software maker SAP before being promoted to CEO in April 2008. He lasted less than two years in the position. SAP decided not to renew his contract when it expired nearly eight months ago, largely because SAP's financial performance hadn't been living up to investor expectations.

Since leaving SAP, Apotheker said he has been enjoying some time off and consulting with companies. He is scheduled to take over HP's helm Nov. 1.

Although it's a large company, SAP's emphasis on business software means it has a much narrower focus than HP. Carrying out a strategy crafted by Hurd, HP is trying to build upon its leadership in personal computers and printers by expanding into technology services, data storage and security.

In a Thursday interview, Apotheker said he would start off with a "listening tour" and rely heavily on HP's current management team to help him get a better handle on a company that employees more than 300,000 people.

"HP has such a broad portfolio of products that I don't think there is a single human being on the planet that would know them all and be an expert in all of them," Apotheker said.

SAP also is based in Germany, creating the potential for some cultural adjustments as Apotheker tries to adapt to HP ways that have been shaped during a 71-year history in the free-wheeling Silicon Valley.

HP's board is confident it found the right man for the job.

"Leo is a strategic thinker with a passion for technology, wide-reaching global experience and proven operational discipline — exactly what we were looking for in a CEO," said Robert Ryan, the lead independent director on HP's board.

HP also named another candidate for the CEO position, Ray Lane, as its non-executive chairman.

Lane, 63, is currently a partner at renowned venture capital firm, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, but he is best known in Silicon Valley as the former chief operating officer at SAP rival Oracle Corp.

Although he was hailed for helping Oracle recover from an accounting scandal, Lane was dumped by the company's mercurial CEO, Larry Ellison, a decade ago.

In an ironic twist, Ellison hired Hurd as his top lieutenant after publicly blasting HP's board for forcing him out of his job.

Lane said he doesn't get any special satisfaction from chairing the board of a company that is increasingly competing against Oracle.

"It's irrelevant," Lane said. "Oracle is a partner and a competitor, just like IBM, just like SAP. I think we are going to have the same relationship with have with Oracle as we have with everyone else."

Apotheker's selection as CEO comes as a surprise. Most analysts expected to hire from within after going with two outsiders who clashed with the board. Before Hurd arrived, HP had been run by Carly Fiorina, now a Republican candidate for Senate.

HP's CEO slot is one of the most coveted and troubled in the technology world. Apotheker is the third CEO HP has had in the past decade.

Hurd was pushed out in August after a five-year reign in which he slashed costs — including cutting 50,000 jobs — and bought scores of companies to reduce HP's dependence on its cash-cow printer ink.

The company is now a player in technology services, where it competes with IBM Corp., computer networking, where it competes with Cisco Systems Inc., in addition to PCs and other technologies.

Hurd was revered on Wall Street, as HP's market value nearly doubled under his watch. But he ran afoul of HP's ethics policies, which he tightened after a scandal four years ago involving HP's board spying on the phone records of journalists and board members.

The former CEO was found to have submitted inaccurate expense reports for his dinners with an HP marketing contractor, Jodie Fisher. She accused Hurd of sexual harassment, which kick-started an investigation by HP that uncovered the expense reports. Hurd insists he didn't prepare his own reports, and that Fisher's name wasn't intentionally left off any of them.

Fisher and Hurd settled out of court for an undisclosed sum. Hurd fought with the board over its decision to publicly disclose the claim, even though it found no evidence of sexual harassment.