Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Jewish friend who influenced Pope John Paul dies (Reuters)

ROME (Reuters) ? Jerzy Kluger, the Polish Jewish boyhood friend of the late Pope John Paul who had a major influence on the pontiff's revolutionary relations with Jews, has died, friends said on Monday.

Kluger, who was 92, died in a Rome hospital on new year's eve of complications from bronchitis and was buried on Monday in Rome's Jewish cemetery. He had been suffering from Alzheimer's disease and had been living in a home for the elderly east of the Italian capital.

Kluger and Karol Wojtyla, the future Pope John Paul II, were classmates in the southern Polish city of Wadowice and were friends from first grade through high school.

"The young Karol Wojtyla learned a lot about Judaism from Kluger," said Italian author Gianfranco Svidercoschi, who was an aide to the late pope and wrote a book about the pontiff's friendship with Kluger.

"He had a great influence on the pope's life," Svidercoschi, who wrote about their friendship in the 1993 book "Letter to a Jewish Friend," told Reuters.

"The young Wojtyla visited the Kluger home in Wadowice, helped Jerzy with his studies, particularly Latin, and started a friendship that would influence his relations with Jews for the rest of his life," said Svidercoschi, who was editor of the Vatican newspaper during part of John Paul's pontificate.

They lost track of each other when World War Two broke out with the German invasion of Poland in 1939 and did not see each other again until 1965.

During the war, Kluger was arrested by the Russians and sent to a gulag in Siberia along with his father.

After Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Kluger was freed and joined Polish forces fighting with the Allies in Africa and Europe under General Wladyslaw Anders and took part in the pivotal battle of Monte Cassino south of Rome.

Towards the end of the war, when he discovered that his mother had been killed in the Auschwitz death camp, he decided to stay in Italy. He studied engineering in Turin and later moved to England.

He settled in Italy again in the early 1960s, working for an import-export company and re-connected with Archbishop Karol Wojtyla in 1965 when Wojtyla was in Rome for the Second Vatican Council. Until they met for the first time since 1938, each presumed the other had died in the war.

After Wojtyla became the first non-Italian pope in 455 years in 1978 they intensified their friendship and Kluger helped organize reunions between the pope and classmates from Wadowice either in Rome or during the pontiff's trips to Poland.

Kluger was in Rome's synagogue when Pope John Paul made his historic visit there in 1986 and called Jews "our beloved elder brothers".

When the pope made his first trip to Israel as pontiff in 2000, Kluger was in attendance at the Yad Vashem memorial to the Holocaust.

Their friendship continued right up to the pope's death in 2005.

"The passing of Jerzy Kluger is both a moment of individual sorrow for the loss of another courageous survivor of the Holocaust, as well as symbolic remembrance for the link with Pope John Paul under whom a revolution in the advancement of Catholic-Jewish relations was realized," said Elan Steinberg vice president of the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants.

"Their childhood friendship was seared by their shared experience of coming under the Nazi yolk in Poland. There can be no question that John Paul's warmth and gestures to the Jewish people was shaped by his personal witness of Nazi horrors," Steinberg said.

(Reporting By Philip Pullella; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120102/wl_nm/us_italy_kluger

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Dragonlance RP - Characters Needed

roleplay/dragonlance-war-re-dawning/

Story

Years have passed since the legendary War of the Lance saw its end. Generations of humankind have seen peace in the lands of Krynn. The dragons have retreated to their lairs to wait in peace for the next move of the Gods ? none have been seen in Ansalon for nearly two centuries. The Knights of Solamnia have settled their disputes and regained their honor in the eyes of men, the elves have opened their borders once again (within reason, of course), and the magi of the Conclave have withdrawn from the affairs of the world. Commerce and the exchange of culture thrives under the watchful eyes of the descendants of the Companions who left the Inn of the Last Home on their grand adventure so many decades before, but these good things can not last forever.

A dark power is stirring, just beyond the edges of Ansalon?s awareness. Everyone feels it, whether they realize it or not ? a tingle at the back of the neck that warns them not to stay out alone at night, a fear at the back of their mind that they can not quite control. The feeling of eyes watching them from all directions. Always watching, but never quite appearing. A whisper from the gods. A warp in the magic. A growing, pulsating threat. Some feel it more deeply than others.

They are the chosen of the Gods.

Heroes of the Shadow, the prophecies call them. A band of mis-matched heroes from every corner of Ansalon, thrown together by the twisting and turning of fate to rise up against the dark forces which threaten the ever-delicate peace brought by the Companions who preceded them. Bonds of brotherhood shall form between the Heroes of the Shadow, and no matter what trials they face, it will be those bonds that see them through alive.

Or dead. So long as they complete their tasks, to the prophecies, it does not matter.

Open Characters -

open ~ Fighter 1 ~ open

open ~ Fighter 2 ~ open

open ~ Cleric ~ open

open ~ Rogue ~ open

open ~ Barbarian ~ open

open ~ Mage ~ open

The Rules

1. There will be no reservation of characters. If I like your character they will be accepted, end of story.
2. Keep to the restrictions on classes. If a position has already been filled, then it is no longer open. If your character really impresses me I may create a new position for them.
3. No god-modding or power-play.
4. Keep to one character per person, until otherwise stated.
5. You must obey the laws of the world.
6. If you have read this far you will know to write your favorite Dragonlance character ? of the original companions ? at the bottom of your profile.
7. Start with only basic skills ? any other abilities will be awarded to you with time.
8. Romance is encouraged, as is enmity, but keep it PG-17.
9. All posts must be at least 300 words long, and well-written.
10. Write in third-person ? do not address your character as ?I? unless in dialogue. You must also write in the past-tense.
11. Keep swearing to a minimum, and use swears which would be used on Krynn.
12. Canon characters will be played only by the GM, if at all.
13. I reserve the right to refuse any aspect of your profile.
14. You must use the provided character skeleton and fill it out completely, to all requirements.
15. If you have read this far you know to disregard the former requirement and put, instead, your favorite quote by your favorite character, along with that character?s name.
16. The GM?s word is law.
17. If you write the name of your

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/Uf32vQr9vs0/viewtopic.php

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Japan cult member nabbed after 17 years on the run

A member of the doomsday cult behind a deadly Tokyo subway gas attack and other crimes turned himself in to police after 17 years on the run, an official said Sunday.

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A Tokyo metropolitan police official said Makoto Hirata, a member of Aum Shinrikyo, conspired with several other members in kidnapping a notary official in 1995 and causing his death. The victim, Kiyoshi Kariya, then 68, was the brother of a follower trying to quit the group.

Hirata, 46, who had been on the run since the summer of 1995, turned himself in at a Tokyo police station and was detained early Sunday, the police official said on condition of anonymity.

The cult also released sarin nerve gas in Tokyo's subway system in 1995, killing 13 people and injuring more than 6,000 in Japan's deadliest act of domestic terrorism.

The cult had amassed an arsenal of chemical, biological and conventional weapons in anticipation of an apocalyptic showdown with the government.

Police say Hirata and other cult members kidnapped Kariya off a Tokyo street and confined him at the group's tightly guarded commune at the foot of Mount Fuji. They allegedly used anesthetics on Kariya to get him to talk about his sister, who escaped from the group after being pressed to donate her land. Kariya died from a drug overdose, police said.

According to court testimony, cult members burned Kariya's body in an incinerator inside the commune and disposed of the ashes in a nearby lake to destroy the evidence.

Public broadcaster NHK said Hirata told police he wanted to "put the past behind him." He was carrying a travel pack containing minimal daily necessities and had Japanese currency worth several hundred dollars in his wallet, it said.

Hirata told police he only drove Kariya to the cult compound and denied other allegations, NHK said.

Hirata was one of the last three wanted cult members. The two others are still on the run.

He is also suspected in the near-fatal shooting of Japan's then top police chief, but the high-profile case was closed last year after the statute of limitations expired.

Nearly 200 members of the cult have been convicted in the gas attack and dozens of other crimes. Thirteen, including cult guru Shoko Asahara, are on death row. No one has been executed.

Hirata's arrest could help fill in missing pieces of the cult investigation.

"As a member of the victim's family, I just want to know the truth," Kariya's son Minoru said in a televised interview. "I hope the new witness will help bring new revelations."

The cult, now renamed Aleph, once had 10,000 members in Japan and another 30,000 in Russia. It remains under police surveillance.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45838009/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Giants?pop 'Boys, clinch East

Eli throws 3 TDs, N.Y. defense sacks Romo five times in 30-14

By TOM CANAVAN

updated 11:30 p.m. ET Jan. 1, 2012

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - Thanks to Eli Manning and Victor Cruz, an all-or-nothing game was all New York Giants and nothing but frustration for the Dallas Cowboys.

Manning threw three touchdown passes, including a 74-yarder to Cruz early, and the Giants claimed the final spot in the NFL playoffs, beating the Cowboys 31-14 on Sunday night to win the NFC East.

"I knew we were going to fight and keep playing until the end, I feel good about the way we're handling the ups and downs, and it comes down to finishing," Manning said after throwing for 346 yards and no interceptions.

New York (9-7) won three of its final four games for 65-year-old coach Tom Coughlin and earned a wild-card home game next Sunday against the Atlanta Falcons (10-6).

"We've had a lot of ups and down, but when our team needed it most we responded," said the up-and-coming Cruz, who has capped his team-record setting season with six catches for 178 yards. "We were able to keep level-headed when we were on the four-game skid."

The Cowboys (8-8) lost four of their final five games in their first full season under coach Jason Garrett.

Dallas was its own worst enemy in a game with the season on the line. They missed tackles on all three of the Giants' three first-half touchdowns, failed to recover two fumbles within their grasp in the half and failed to convert on a Tony Romo sneak on fourth-and-1 at the Giants 10 while trailing 21-7.

"It's extremely painful and it's a damn shame," Jones said. "We have a good team and I thought we would be going to the playoffs, but that didn't happen. We have to be able to take some of the good with the bad and move on. We did a lot of good things this year, but to point to one thing why this happened would be subjective. We're 8-8 and we have to be better than that."

Romo, who played with a bruised right hand, moved the Cowboys in the second half but all he could generate were touchdown passes of 34 and 6 yards to Laurent Robinson, the last one getting Dallas within a 21-14 with 10:15 to play.

Cruz, however, had a 44-yard third-down catch and another for 20 yards to set up a 28-yard Lawrence Tynes' field goal and Manning iced the game with a 4-yard TD pass to Hakeem Nicks with 3:41 to play.

Manning finished 24 of 33 for 346 yards and no interceptions as the Giants beat the Cowboys for the second time in four games and ended a regular season marked by inconsistency on a high note. Cruz, who set a single-season record for yards receiving, finished with six catches for 178 yards, a 29.7 yard average, and of course, he did his touchdown salsa after the first score.

Week?17 in the NFL
Wild weekend ahead

??What chance do the Detroit Lions have against the explosive Saints in New Orleans?

Romo was 29 of 37 for 289 yards but he was sacked six times, including twice by Osi Umenyiora who returned to the lineup for the first time since spraining an ankle late last month. Dallas' final possession ended with Romo being sacked by Justin Tuck and losing a fumble.

"We needed this win," Umenyiora said. "This is the biggest win we've been a part of for a while."

The Giants haven't won a playoff game since beating the-then unbeaten New England Patriots in the Super Bowl in 2008, and the one thing that is apparent is that this team is peaking.

Coming off a 29-14 win over the rival Jets last week in what might have been the Giants best game of the season, Coughlin's team put together another outstanding 30 minutes in jumping to a 21-0 halftime lead.

Cruz, who sparked the win over the Jets' with a team-record 99-yard touchdown, made another monster play on the Giants' second offensive series, turning a short pass into points.

Cruz caught a short square out, eluded a tackle by Terence Newman, turned the corner after getting a seal block from Nicks and outraced two defenders down the sideline in front of the Giants bench for a 7-0 lead.

Dallas went three-and-out but had a chance to get right back into the game when Will Blackmon muffed a punt at near his 30-yard line and Alan Ball failed to recover.

Manning made Dallas pay. Manning hit Nicks for 18 yards and Devin Thomas for 14 en route on a 68-yard yard drive that Bradshaw capped with his 5-yard run. Safety Abram Elam had a chance to tackle Bradshaw in the backfield and Bradshaw scooted into the end zone after he missed.

Manning had passes of 14 and 12 yards to rookie fullback Henry Hynoski in an 80-yard touchdown drive just before the half. Bradshaw, who had a 29-yard run early in the drive, broke a tackle by linebacker Bradie James in scoring on a 10-yard swing pass for a 21-0 lead.

The Giants had chances to put the game away in the third quarter. They moved to the Dallas 42 on the opening possession of the second half and elected to punt.

Romo then drove the Cowboys 94 yards with a no-huddle offense, hitting Robinson on a 34-yard go pattern down the right sideline on a play that cornerback Corey Webster was beaten.

An interception by safety Antrel Rolle gave New York the ball in Dallas territory but they failed to convert a fourth-and-1 at the Dallas 35 and the Cowboys came right back to cut the deficit to seven.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45844779/ns/sports-nfl/

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ASTROGaming: @efenevan Not at BestBuy, but we are carried in the Microsoft Stores like in Scottsdale, AZ. ^W

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

Police: Teen Harasses Deceased Girl's Mom With Fake Facebook Account

A teenager is accused of harassing a mother whose daughter had died in Westmoreland County.Police said a 17-year-old girl created a fake Facebook account of Tonya Lesniak's deceased daughter. Police said the teenager then contacted Lesniak by Facebook and began harassing her.The teen is facing juvenile charges in the case.

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Source: http://www.wpxi.com/news/30103686/detail.html

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Muslims skip NYC mayor's event to protest spying (AP)

NEW YORK ? More than a dozen Muslim clerics and civic leaders skipped Mayor Michael Bloomberg's annual interfaith breakfast Friday, saying they were upset that he supported police department surveillance efforts in their neighborhoods.

The 15 leaders wrote a letter to the mayor, saying they were protesting the spying program first revealed in a series of Associated Press articles. The letter made a controversy out of a normally sedate end-of-the-year meeting.

Bloomberg didn't directly address the boycott during the event, though he did quote his father as telling him that "discrimination against anyone is discrimination against everyone."

He also said: "We have to keep our guard up, but if we don't work together we won't have our own freedoms."

The breakfast is traditionally held at the historic New York Public Library building on 42nd Street and has long served to showcase the city's diversity during overlapping winter holidays.

Hesham El-Meligy, a founder of the Building Bridges Coalition of Staten Island, said he boycotted the breakfast in hopes of persuading the mayor to abandon his support for the surveillance program.

"I don't care about having breakfast, I care about the liberties that I came to this country for," said El-Meligy, who is from Egypt.

Rabbi Michael Weisser signed the letter as a supporter but said he did not participate in the boycott because he hoped to engage the mayor in conversation about the dispute.

"From a Jewish perspective, it reminded me of things that were going on in the 1930s in Germany. We don't need that in America," he said. "The Muslim community is targeted. It's stereotyped. When people think of terrorism, they immediately think Muslim."

He said he had no problem with the police department following leads, but objected to the sense that the department is targeting Muslim organizations because they are Muslim.

"We can't be painting a whole group of people with the same broad brush," he said.

More than 350 people attended Friday's breakfast, more than last year.

On his weekly Friday morning appearance on WOR-AM, Bloomberg defended police, saying they don't target any ethnic group.

"It's like saying you are going after people that are my height with brown hair. If a perp is described that way in the neighborhood, you look at everybody in the neighborhood that's got brown hair, my height, you stop them," he said.

"But we have great race relations here. The communities whether they're Muslim or Jewish or Christian or Hindu or Buddhist or whatever, all contribute to this city. We don't target any one of them. We don't target any neighborhood."

Records examined by the AP show the police department collected information on people who were neither accused nor suspected of wrongdoing.

The AP series detailed police department efforts to infiltrate Muslim neighborhoods and mosques with aggressive programs designed by a CIA officer. Documents reviewed by the AP revealed that undercover police officers known as "rakers" visited businesses such as Islamic bookstores and cafes, chatting up store owners to determine their ethnicities and gauge their views. They also played cricket and eavesdropped in ethnic clubs.

The surveillance efforts have been credited with enabling police to thwart a 2004 plot to bomb the Herald Square subway station.

Critics said the efforts amount to ethnic profiling and violate court guidelines that limit how and why police can collect intelligence before there is evidence of a crime. They have asked a judge to issue a restraining order against the police.

Speaking to the media after the breakfast, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the AP articles contained "half-truths and some just things that are not true" but refused to identify them.

"I'm not going to get into it. I don't have time to do that," Kelly said.

Kelly said that none of the attendees at the breakfast had raised the matter with him.

"We believe we're doing what we have to do, pursuant to the law, to protect this city," he said.

Hussein Rashid, an Islamic studies professor at Hofstra University, wore a blazer over a T-shirt that said "I am not a terrorist." He said he was disappointed the mayor did not address the surveillance program during his remarks.

"The idea of the NYPD spying on New Yorkers is utterly deplorable," he said.

But another attendee, Uma Mysorekar, president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, said she didn't think the breakfast was "an occasion to express our differences."

Imam Mohammad Sherzad of the Hasrat Abubakr Mosque in Queens said he worried the boycott would hurt communication between religious groups and city officials.

"We have to meet each other, we have to explain our problems. If we do a boycott, that's not a good way," Sherzad said.

Police officials have insisted their counterterrorism programs are legal.

"Contrary to assertions, the NYPD lawfully follows leads in terrorist-related investigations and does not engage in the kind of wholesale spying on communities that was falsely alleged," police spokesman Paul Browne said in an email Thursday.

___

Online:

Read AP's previous stories and documents about the NYPD at: http://www.ap.org/nypd

Letter to Bloomberg: http://interfaithletter.wordpress.com/2011/12/26/hello-world/

___

Samantha Gross can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/samanthagross

___

Associated Press reporters Julie Walker and Chris Hawley in New York and Adam Goldman in Washington contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re_us/us_nypd_intelligence

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