Avellaneda: asesinó al marido a mazazos y luego intentó que lo cremaran

La mujer de 57 años, quien se encuentra detenida, había logrado que la víctima llegue a un cementerio de Berazategui, con un certificado de defunción falso. Lo denominaron «el caso Belsunce de zona sur» por las similitudes que presentan ambos hechos.

En el barrio Crucesita, de Avellaneda, una mujer de 57 años fue detenida por el crimen de su esposo, a quien se cree asesinó a golpes de maza en la cabeza. Pero lo que asemeja este episodio con el recordado homicidio de la socióloga María Marta es que la presunta asesina logró que el cadáver llegue hasta un cementerio de Berazategui, con certificado de defunción falso, donde casi lo creman.

La mentira se descubrió de casualidad, luego de que se pudiera establecer que la víctima había padecido una brutal golpiza.

El hecho se registró en las primeras horas del domingo pasado, cuando la mujer, identificada como Mariana, atacó a su esposo Claudio, de 58 años, utilizando una maza de obra de unos 5 kilogramos. El hombre falleció por la gravedad de las heridas.

Luego de cometer el homicidio, la mujer convocó a un servicio fúnebre, y hasta logró un certificado de defunción falso, con el que pudo ingresar el cuerpo de la víctima en el cementerio de Berazategui.

Los empleados del lugar comenzaron a sospechar de algunas cuestiones, pararon la cremación y convocaron al lugar a la Policía. Efectivos de la comisaría de Hudson se presentaron inmediatamente y confirmaron que el cuerpo del hombre presentaba heridas en la cabeza, compatibles con golpes efectuados con un objeto contundente. En ese momento empezó la pesquisa.

Los uniformados allanaron la vivienda que compartía el matrimonio, en la calle Rocha 522. Allí se logró encontrar el arma homicida, y rastros de la feroz agresión.

La mujer quedó formalmente detenida, acusada en principio de «encubrimiento agravado y falsificación de documentos», aunque se especula que en las próximas horas será también acusada por el homicidio del hombre.

Fuente: Diario Hoy

Avanza la ley para que la cobertura de fertilización asistida sea gratuita

Serán beneficiarias las parejas que nunca hayan podido tener hijos. La cobertura incluirá asistencia psicológica y potenciales efectos adversos, ya sea dentro del sistema de salud público como privado.

A casi dos meses de que naciera el primer bebé producto de la aplicación de la Ley de Fertilización asistida en la provincia de Buenos Aires, la Cámara de Diputados dio anoche media sanción en general al proyecto en territorio nacional, que contempla incluir el tratamiento gratuito al Programa Médico Obligatorio (PMO). El objetivo es acercar la posibilidad de realizar tratamientos de fertilización asistida para el paciente sin costo alguno, ya sea dentro del sistema de salud pública como privada, así como también regular la práctica.

Si bien el proyecto fue aprobado en general por 150 votos a favor, 4 en contra y 4 abstenciones, los diputados acordaron ayer postergar el debate en particular, artículo por artículo, para discutir «seriamente» la norma en el próximo período o bien en extraordinarias, apremiados por el fin del actual período ordinario que vencía a medianoche.

El proyecto impulsado por la d iput a da del PRO, Silv ia Majdalani, obliga a «brindar la atención, el diagnóstico y el tratamiento de la infertilidad mediante la aplicación de técnicas de fertilización asistida y los fármacos que ésta requiera». No es un detalle menor: los tratamientos de alta complejidad (fecundación in vitro u ovodonación) cuestan 20.000 pesos, en tanto que los más simples (inseminación) oscilan entre los 2.000 y 3.000 pesos.

Los beneficiarios serán «aquellos pacientes que no tengan hijos fruto de la unión de esa pareja» e incluirá la atención por «potenciales efectos adversos que produjera el tratamiento y/o asistencia psicológica que el médico considerara apropiado».

UN LARGO CAMINO
La lucha por conseguir una ley que cubriera este tipo de tratamientos comenzó en 2008, cuando un grupo de ONG intentó reunir 300.000 firmas para que el Congreso incluyera la infertilidad dentro del PMO. Desde entonces el tema tiene estado parlamentario pero nunca se había tratado.

El antecedente más inmediato ocurrió en la provincia de Buenos Aires, cuya ley entró en vigencia en enero de este año.

Fuente: La Razón

Belgrano goleó y se metió en los 16avos de final de la Copa Argentina

Giuliano Bardín a los 15 minutos y Federico Almerares a los 32 y Juan Carlos Maldonado, todos en el primer tiempo marcaron los goles del «Pirata».

Con suplentes, Belgrano de Córdoba goleó por 3 a 0 a Sacachispas en Catamarca y se metió entre los 16 mejores de la Copa Argentina de Fútbol.

Giuliano Bardín a los 15 minutos y Federico Almerares a los 32 y Juan Carlos Maldonado, todos en el primer tiempo marcaron los goles del «Pirata».

El partido contó con el arbitraje de José Capraro.

El celeste dominó de punta a punta el partido y justificó ampliamente la diferencia. De hecho pudo haber marcado un par de goles más.

El equipo de Villa Soldati tuvo también un par de chances, pero la diferencia de categoría fue notable, aunque los cordobeses jugaron con suplentes.

Fuente: Cadena3

Rescatan a una menor que era buscada desde hace dos años

Una adolescente de 14 años, que vivía en el sur del conurbano bonaerense y que era buscada desde hace dos años por sus familiares, fue rescatada el miércoles durante un operativo en la localidad bonaerense de Berazategui por personal de Gendarmería Nacional que además detuvo a un hombre bajo el cargo de promoción y facilitación para la prostitución.

La menor, de nacionalidad argentina, que se encontraba en «estado de vulnerabilidad» fue rescatada en el marco del operativo Centinela por una orden de la Unidad Fiscal de Instrucción y Juicio número 1 de Berazategui, Departamento Judicial de Quilmes, informó Gendarmería Nacional.

Fuente: Diario Hoy

Subieron los peajes de las autopistas porteñas y también uno de la ruta 2

En la Illia, 25 de Mayo y Perito Moreno los nuevos valores van de $2 a $ 6,50 en la hora no pico y de hasta $ 8,50 en horario pico. En la estación Maipú de la Autovía 2 habrá aumentos del 15% para los autos particulares.

Desde hoy rige un nuevo aumento en las autopistas porteñas y en uno de los peajes de la Autovía 2. En el caso de la Ciudad, la suba se aplica en las tres vías que cuentan con cabinas de peaje y la suba llega al 30%: en la Perito Moreno, 25 de Mayo, Illia y en la bajada de Alberti. En el caso de la ruta 2, el incremento se aplica en el peaje de la estación Maipú, ubicado en el kilómetro 273 y las subas van del 15 al 80%, según el tamaño del vehículo.

En la Perito Moreno y la 25 de Mayo, el peaje para autos particulares pasó de $ 5 en las horas comunes a $ 6,50 y en las horas pico, pasó de $ 6,75 a $ 8,50. Se considera horario pico a los viajes que se hacen hacia el Centro de lunes a viernes de 7 a 10 y hacia Provincia de 17 a 20.

En la autopista Illia, el peaje común ahora es de $ 2 (costaba $ 1,75), mientras que el que corre para las horas pico pasó a $ 3 (estaba $2,50). En el peaje de la bajada de Alberti, donde no se cobra diferente por bandas horarias, la tarifa pasó de $ 1,75 a $ 2.

Como beneficio, los usuarios que paguen con el servicio Aupass, de pago electrónico, tendrán un descuento del 15%. Esa quita era hasta ahora del 10%. Para contratar el pago electrónico hay que ingresar a www.aupass.com.ar o llamar al 0800-666-7277 En cuanto a la Autovía 2, el Gobierno bonaerense aprobó ayer los nuevos valores del peaje estación Maipú, ubicada en el kilómetro 273 de la ruta, que rige desde hoy y representa incrementos del 15,4% al 80%, de acuerdo con la categoría del vehículo. La nueva norma, ya publicada en el Boletín Oficial, significa una suba de $ 13 a $ 15 (15,4 %) para la tarifa mínima, que comprende a vehículos de dos ejes (autos) que no superen los 2,10 metros de altura.

También elevó la tarifa para la segunda categoría (vehículos con dos ejes que superen los 2,10 metros) que pasó a costar de $ 20 a $ 30 (50%) e incluye un cronograma de aumentos para el resto de las categorías (3, 4, 5 y 6) que se aplica desde hoy y hasta julio del año próximo. El aumento se sentirá fuerte en los vehículos de mayor porte, que hasta ese momento tendrá subas de hasta 125%.

Fuente: La Razón

Del Potro afirma que saben «lo importante que es para Argentina la final»

El número uno del tenis argentino Juan Martín del Potro, destacó las dificultades de ganar a España como local, pero subrayó las «ganas de ganar» de su equipo a pesar de insistir «en el buen año realizado en la Copa Davis, pase lo que pase en la final»

«Las ganas de ganar las tenemos todos. No dejamos de saber lo importante que es para Argentina esta final. Ha sido un gran año de Copa Davis más allá de lo que pase en esta final», dijo Del Potro.

«Vamos a ver en qué condiciones llegamos. Estuvimos más o menos tranquilos en esta concentración y estaremos en condiciones de afrontar cada uno el partido que nos toque», añadió la raqueta de Tandil.

Juan Martín del Potro vuelve a encontrarse con España en una final de la Copa Davis después de la de Mar del Plata, hace tres años, donde venció el conjunto de Albert Costa.

«La situación es muy diferente a aquella. Todo es distinto. La superficie, el lugar, la situación, En cualquier caso es muy especial para nosotros. Será difícil pero el equipo esta preparado para lograr el título», apuntó Del Potro.

Para el número uno argentino, «jugar una final de la Cop Davis es muy especial. Va a ser complicada lograr la victoria, pero estamos concienciados de lo que nos jugamos», concluyó.

Fuente: EFE

New BA Province Police Chief sworn in

Buenos Aires Province Governor Daniel Scioli today swore in the new Chief of Police for Buenos Aires Province, confirming that Hugo Matzkin would be taking Juan Carlos Paggi’s place, after yesterday he announced he would be stepping down. A ceremony was held in which Scioli paid homage to the former police chief for his service to the force.
Scioli defined Paggi as “A great policeman, a career man, hardworker, great person, a man with strong values who has always given his best.”
The event took place at the Buenos Aires Province government house, where Scioli explained that the police chief was “living through particularly hard times,” and underlined “the importance of his colleagues” during this period.

In an emotive ceremony, the Buenos Aires Province governor also showed great support for Paggi’s successor, Matzkin, whom had been working as his number two in the force.
buenosairesherald.com

Pacers talk with Celtics about Rondo deal

As Boston Celtics general manager Danny Ainge aggressively pursues possible deals for Rajon Rondo(notes), the Indiana Pacers have emerged as an intriguing suitor for the point guard, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

For the past few days, Pacers officials – and third-party surrogates – have been making calls and gathering information and insight into Rondo’s reputation as a teammate and leader, sources said.

The Pacers and Celtics have discussed the preliminary framework of a deal, but two sources said Indiana would need a third team to provide Boston with the talent it wants to do a deal. The Celtics are likely trying to gather the necessary pieces to make a bid for Ainge’s ultimate target: New Orleans point guard Chris Paul(notes), sources said.
It was unclear if the Pacers had begun to reach out to broaden discussions, but there was an expectation they would do so.

The Celtics have been gauging Rondo’s trade value for more than a year, and have held discussions with teams about him across the past few trade deadlines and NBA drafts. There have long been divides within Boston’s front office, coaching staff and locker room about Rondo. He can be moody, difficult and stubborn, and several league sources were dubious if the Pacers’ young coach, Frank Vogel, would have the stature to deal with Rondo.

[ Related: Top 15 NBA free agents: Who tops the list? ]

Boston could be trying to gather players to make a more attractive bid for Paul, sources said. New Orleans has shown no interest in a deal that would include Rondo and any combination of Celtics teammates. Yet, New Orleans GM Dell Demps is determined to get maximum value for Paul, if it’s clear the point guard sees his future elsewhere. Demps has no desire to simply let Paul walk away as a free agent to New York.

Most teams in the league are engaging New Orleans about Paul, whose intentions are to get to the New York Knicks as a free agent in the summer of 2012. Paul does have some history in Oklahoma City, having played there with the Hornets in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, but the Thunder have resisted dialogue on a Paul-for-Russell Westbrook(notes) deal, sources said.

The Thunder are prepared to make Westbrook a substantial contract offer – probably a maximum deal – in the near future.
sports.yahoo.com

Construction grows 6.6% in October

The construction activity grew 6.6 percent in October compared to the volume registered in the same month last year, according to the Indec national statistics bureau.
The official data agency stated that the sector has accumulated a 10 percent increase during the first ten months of the year.
Compared to the volume registered in September 2011, the construction activity has dropped 0.3 percent.
buenosairesherald.com

Permafrost loss worse climate peril than thought

The threat to climate change posed by thawing permafrost, which could release stocks of stored carbon, is greater than estimated, a group of scientists said on Wednesday.
By 2100, the amount of carbon released by permafrost loss could be «1.7-5.2 times larger than those reported,» depending on how swiftly Earth’s surface warms, they said.
In volume terms, this is about the same as the amount of greenhouse gases released today from deforestation, they said.
But the impact on climate could be 2.5 times greater, as much of the gas will be methane, which is 25 times more efficient at trapping solar heat than carbon dioxide (CO2), they said.
Deforestation today accounts for up to 20 percent of total greenhouse-gas emissions that contribute to global warming.
The study, published in the British journal Nature, coincides with a 12-day UN conference on climate change, unfolding in Durban, South Africa.
It touches on one of the biggest sources of concern, but also a major area of uncertainty, in climate science.
Permanently iced land covers around a quarter of the land in the northern hemisphere.
In essence, it is a carbon store, holding in icy stasis the organic remains of plants and animals that died millions of years ago.
The worry is that as temperatures rise, the soils defrost, microbes decompose the ancient carbon and release methane and CO2 to the atmosphere.
Documented evidence suggests this is already happening in parts of the tundra and at the perimeter of ice lakes.
Release of the gas adds to the greenhouse effect, which stokes warming and thus causes more permafrost to thaw — in other words, a vicious circle, or «positive feedback» in climate-speak, results.
In their article, 41 international scientists who work in the Permafrost Carbon Research Network said the potential stocks of stored carbon were bigger than thought.
This is because of a fresh look at how the inventory is calculated, they explained.
Until now, experts measured carbon in the top one metre (3.25 feet) of permafrost, but in some places, the deposits are many times deeper because of the freeze-thaw cycle and the way organic sediment is deposited.
«The latest estimate is that some 18.8 million square kilometers (7.25 million square miles) of northern soils hold about 1,700 billion tonnes of organic carbon,» they write.
«That is about four times more than all the carbon emitted by human activity in modern times and twice as much as is present in the atmosphere now.»
Only part of this carbon would be released, depending on the scenario for warming.
The team used four well-known scenarios. The lowest saw 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of Arctic warming by 2040 compared to the average for 1985-2004, which ramped up to 2 C (3.6 F) by 2100.

Use of public services gains 10.4% in October

The use of public services registered a 10.4 percent increase in October year-on-year, the Indec national statistics bureau reported. It has gained 2.1 percent compared to the previous month.
The sector has accumulated an 11 percent increase during the first ten months of the year.
During October, the sectors that increased the most were telephone services (19.5 percent), tolls (5.8 percent), and Electricity, gas and water (4.2 percent).
buenosairesherald.com

5 storylines to watch during the final stage of PGA Tour Q-School

This is it, folks: We’ve reached the final stage of PGA Tour Qualifying School. For a lucky few, six grueling rounds of golf will culminate with a tour card and spot back in the big leagues next year. For the rest? Well, this is where the road ends.
Of course, there are a bunch of big names in the field this week — Lee Janzen, David Duval and Boo Weekley come to mind — but as we’ve seen in the past, Q-School doesn’t play favorites.
It doesn’t matter if you have a major championship or haven’t played in a PGA Tour event before; you’ll have to grind it out for 108 holes for your card. It’s just one of the reasons to love Q-School.
With that in mind, here are a couple storylines to watch over the next six days.
Can Bobby Gates get past the heartache? Finishing No. 126 on the PGA Tour’s Money List is rough. Sure, you still make a nice chunk of money, but for everyone outside the top 125 cutoff, you lose full-time status for the following year on tour.
Bobby Gates learned a tough lesson in his first year on tour, coming up one putt short of securing the 125th spot. All of the guys on tour are mentally strong, but you have to wonder if Gates can push through the late season heartache and make a return in 2012.
Ty Tryon gives it another go: The rush of teeing it up at the final stage of Q-School is nothing new for Tryon. He became the youngest player, at the age of 17, in the tour’s history to earn his card via Q-School back in 2001.
He was supposed to be a phenom. But instead of making his mark, his career fell into a tailspin that saw him fall off the golf map. After bouncing between the Gateway Tour and NGA Hooters Tour, he finally has a second chance staring him in the face.
Can major champs make a comeback? Rich Beem, David Duval and Lee Janzen are just three of the golfers teeing it up this week at PGA West. The only difference between them and the rest of the guys in the field is that each has a major championship trophy sitting in their home.
Q-School is the only event where even the major champions get treated like regular joes for six days. After years of getting the royal treatment, all three will have to earn their way back onto the PGA Tour.
Arnold Palmer will be watching this week: «The King» will be keeping a close eye on the Q-School leader board, as Palmer’s grandson, Sam Saunders, will be vying for an exempt spot.
Saunders made eight starts on tour this past year, making the cut in two of them. There’s been a lot of talk recently about Saunders getting exemptions due to his connection with Palmer. Finding a way to secure his card would validate those exemptions, and make the tour chatter disappear.
Keep an eye on Adam Hadwin: Want to know something incredible? Adam Hadwin is the highest ranked Canadian golfer in the world. Forget Mike Weir, Hadwin, at No. 238 in the World Rankings, is the guy. And he just barely made it into the Q-School field.
Thanks to a change in the tour’s rules, Hadwin was able to secure a spot in the final stage of Q-School. You have to look out for the guys with luck on their side, and based on the way things have gone for Hadwin, nobody would be surprised if he made some noise over the next six days.
Related: David Duval
sports.yahoo.com

Americans mixed on adequacy of cancer screenings

(Reuters) – Many Americans are satisfied with how often they are screened for cancer but some say they are not screened often enough, while a growing body of evidence suggests too much screening for certain types of cancer may do more harm than good, a Gallup poll showed.
According to the poll released on Wednesday, 58 percent of 1,012 adults surveyed thought standard cancer screenings, such as Pap smears, mammograms or blood tests to detect prostate cancer, were performed often enough.
Thirty-one percent said such cancer screenings were not done often enough, and 7 percent said they were done too often.
«Americans for many years have heard the traditional admonition that ‘early detection’ of cancer is always beneficial for the patient, and the results of the current question suggest that this belief still holds in the minds of most,» Gallup pollsters said in their report.
There is a debate over the value of frequent screening, set off by recommendations that widespread cancer screening for breast and prostate cancer be scaled back.
In October, the government-backed U.S. Preventive Services Task Force triggered an uproar among cancer specialists when it issued a draft recommendation that healthy men not get a common blood test for prostate cancer called the PSA test. The task force is collecting public comment on the draft recommendation against the PSA test until December 13.
The same panel caused a media storm in 2009 after it recommended that doctors scale back routine mammograms for women in their 40s and 50s.
Just over half the respondents in the Gallup poll, conducted between November 3 and 6, were men. The maximum margin of sampling error was 5 percentage points for men and 6 percentage points for women.

CFK insists on ‘fine-tuning’ phase

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner at the the ‘Total Metal’ aluminium factory and Pibera industrial park inauguration ceremony today.
President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner urged large, medium and small businesses to review the structure of their company spending per sector, whilst inaugurating the ‘Total Metal’ aluminium factory and Pibera industrial park this afternoon, and before making her planned trip to Caracas this evening.

“We are going to put together boards for each sector, to gather what the basic inputs are, more so for the small and medium-sized companies. They are to be boards where rational discussions will be able to be made to improve competitiveness of the economy,” stated the head of State during the ceremony opening the tenth industrial park in Berazategui.

Fernández de Kirchner furthered that, “it’s very important that the State act proactively on this matter, taking into account that the economy always remains a central focus.”

“We need the small and medium-sized businesses – whom are the larger job generators- and the bigger companies, to keep on investing. However, we need everyone to adjust and maintain more control over spending. For others to keep selling, you too need to maintain an adequate economic performance,” stated the head of State during her speech.

At the same time, the President recalled all social sectors “monitor the growth model, maintaining the importance of social inclusion.”

The head of state arrived to the Pibera Industrial Park, in El Pato, Berazategui, located in the Buenos Aires Province just after midday.
buenosairesherald.com

Funding crunch imperils progress on AIDS

LONDON (Reuters) – The international community has made extraordinary progress in the past decade in the fight against AIDS, but a funding crisis is putting those gains at risk, the United Nations health agencies said on Wednesday.
A World Health Organisation-led report said the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS and now infects about 34 million people around the world has proven a «formidable challenge» for scientists and public health experts.
«But the tide is turning,» it added. «The tools to achieve an AIDS-free generation are in our hands».
A severe funding crisis at the world’s largest backer of the fight against AIDS and a decline in international donor money to battle the disease is dampening optimism in the HIV/AIDS community about an eventual end to the pandemic.
Annual funding for HIV/AIDS programs fell to $15 billion in 2010 from $15.9 billion in 2009, well below the estimated $22 billion to $24 billion the U.N. agencies say is needed by 2015 to pay for a comprehensive, effective global response.
The public-private Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the world’s largest financial backer of HIV treatment and prevention programs, said last week it was cancelling new grants for countries battling these diseases and would make no new funding available until 2014.
«Just as the world is making huge strides in the fight against HIV and AIDS, the goal of creating an AIDS-free generation, where no children are born with HIV, will not be possible unless the Global Fund is able to continue scaling up its work,» said Patrick Watt, Save the Children’s global campaign director.
«With the main funding body…now out of cash, there is a serious crisis,» said Tido von Schoen-Angerer of the international medical charity Medecins Sans Frontires. «It’s like a car going full speed has suddenly run out of gas.»
In an interview with Reuters as the U.N agencies’ report was released, Gottfried Hirnschall, the WHO’s director for HIV/AIDS, said progress in cutting the number of new HIV infections and dramatically increasing access to life-saving AIDS drugs made this a critical time in the battle.
Scientific studies in the past year have also shown that getting timely AIDS drug treatment to those with HIV can significantly cut the number of people who become newly infected with the virus.
«This is a really exciting year, because we’re seeing downward trends in those areas where we want to see downward trends – in new infections and in mortality – and we’re seeing upward trends where we’d like to see them, primarily in (treatment) coverage rates,» Hirnschall said
Latest figures in Wednesday’s report and from a UNAIDS global study last week show the number of new HIV infections fell to 2.7 million in 2010, down from 3.1 million in 2001, while the number of people getting life-saving AIDS drugs rose to 6.65 million in 2010 from just 400,000 in 2003.
Hirnschall said the data suggested the WHO’s goal to have zero new infections, zero deaths and zero stigma associated with HIV «could in the not too distant future become a reality.»
But the big risk lies in the funding, he said.
«We already have a $7 billion shortfall for this year and what’s even more alarming is that we also had almost a billion dollars less this year than we did last.»
With many large international donor countries struggling with recession and debt crises, public health experts said it was crucial for countries affected by HIV/AIDS to do all they can to fund their own programs and make resources go further.
Wednesday’s report, released ahead of World AIDS Day on December 1 by the WHO, the United Nations AIDS program UNAIDS and the United Nations children’s fund UNICEF, said treatment, prevention and outreach programs are becoming more efficient, with health clinics integrating services and local communities finding more effective ways to get medicines to HIV patients.
«2011 has been a game changing year. With new science, unprecedented political leadership and continued progress in the AIDS response, countries have a window of opportunity to seize this momentum,» said Paul De Lay, deputy director of UNAIDS.
«However, gains made to date are being threatened by a decline in resources.»
Hirnschall said donors should recognize that stepping up investment now will save lives, and more money in the long run.
«The risk is that we carry on as we are for the next 20 years and the whole epidemic will just linger on and on. Or we could load up front and make a big investment now, and then the numbers will really start to come down and it will pay off.»
«The question is, is the world ready to do that?»

Crystal Palace eliminates United from League Cup

MANCHESTER, England (AP)—Manchester United was knocked out of the League Cup quarterfinals by Crystal Palace, with Glenn Murray scoring in the eighth minute of overtime to give the second-tier club a 2-1 victory Wednesday night and its first win at Old Trafford since 1989.

Former Premier League midfielder Darren Ambrose put Palace ahead in the 65th minute when he scored on a 35-yard free kick. United, fielding a mostly second-string lineup, tied the score four minutes later on Federico Macheda’s penalty kick.

Glenn Murray then headed Ambrose’s free kick past goalkeeper Ben Amos to earn Palace a semifinal matchup against fellow League Championship club Cardiff.

Liverpool and Manchester City will meet in the other semifinal.

Crystal Palace had 10 losses and three draws against United since a 3-0 home league win in May 1991. Palace had been winless at Old Trafford since December 1989, losing eight and drawing two.

“We’ve had a quiet period in the season but we came here in confident mood and the spirit is fantastic,” Ambrose said. “We’ve got a great team spirit, it’s a lot different from last year: we can beat anyone, and we showed that tonight.

Europa League

PAOK Thessaloniki scored twice in the first 13 minutes against Tottenham before defending with 10 men for almost two-thirds of the match to win 2-1 and clinch a place in the next round of the Europa League.

Dimitris Salpingidis and Stefanos Athanasiadis scored before Konstantinos Stafylidis was ejected for handball. Luka Modric converted the resulting penalty kick, but the defeat left Spurs facing elimination.

Five other clubs also progressed to the knockout rounds ahead of their final group games.

Atletico Madrid, the 2010 champion, advanced with a 1-0 win at Glasgow Celtic. Metalist Kharkiv clinched the point it needed with a 0-0 tie against Austria Vienna, Braga beat Birmingham 1-0 and Standard Liege and Hannover also qualified for the second round.

PAOK has 11 points from five Group A matches, one more than second-place Rubin Kazan. With Tottenham three points farther back, Spurs need a big win at Shamrock Rovers on Dec. 15 and for PAOK to beat Rubin.

Atletico winger Arda Turan scored with a powerful shot after half an hour in Glasgow to end Celtic’s 10-game unbeaten streak and ensure progress from Group I. Udinese is in second place after a 0-0 draw at Rennes—which is eliminated— and can advance if it avoids defeat against Celtic in its final game.

Metalist won Group G despite failing to win for the first time in five matches, leaving AZ Alkmaar needing to win its game against the Ukrainian team to be sure of finishing in second place and progressing ahead of Austria Vienna.

AZ drew 0-0 at Malmo on Wednesday.
sports.yahoo.com

Trade Secretary, grocery store owners agree on $100 Christmas basket

Domestic Trade Secretary Guillermo Moreno spoke to several grocery store owners of Buenos Aires province to decide which products will be included in the 100 pesos Christmas basket.
“I just finished talking with Moreno, because we have a good relationship with him, despite some unavoidable friction, but we get along well,” the head of the Federation of Grocery stores and supermarkets of Buenos Aires province, Enrique Salvador, explained.
“The hundred pesos basket will not provide a big satisfaction, but it it’s not bad. We might create it,” Salvador added. Earlier he said that it would be very hard to create a Christmas basket four for people with a $100 cost when the annual inflation rate reaches 25 percent.
However, after having “a light, very practical talk with Moreno,” grocery store owners know which products will be included in the Christmas basket. “It could easily include chicken, canned peaches, one or two wines, one or two wines, two bottles of cider, nougat candy and that would amount to approximately $100,” Salvador added.
“This is no solution for a person with a good income and wants to indulge, but for the middle class who is undergoing a bad economic situation, or for those who don’t have jobs,” Salvador concluded.
buenosairesherald.com

IMF denies court access to Govt’s method to measure inflation

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) avoided replying to an inquiry required by Judge Alejandro Catania, who handles the case of the lawsuit filed by the Domestic Trade Secretariat against private consulting agencies.
The IMF’s judicial department stated that “the IMF’s files are inviolable” and that the institution’s representative in Argentina “is granted immunity regarding legal proceedings with written or spoken words.In light of this and other privileges and immunities that the IMF and his residing representative are granted, that are not obliged to comply with the requirement.”
Judge Catania handles the case of the lawsuit filed by the Domestic Trade Secretariat against Melconian & Santangelo private consulting agency, on grounds that they publish inflation rates that lack scientific rigor.
buenosairesherald.com

CFK flies to Caracas, to meet with Chávez, Rousseff

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is en route to Caracas where she will meet with her Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and her Brazilian counterpart, Dilma Rousseff.
Fernández de Kirchner took off at 5 pm from the Metropolitan airport, alongside Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman, Industry Minister Déboa Giorgi and Tucumán Governor José Alperovich and San Juan province governor José Luis Gioja.
The newly appointed Ambassador in Brazil Luis María Kreckler, the Tranversal Front leader Edgardo Depetri, La Cámpora political leader Andrés Larroque and the President’s daughter Florencia Kirchner will also take part of the trip.
Thus, the announcement of the new Cabinet members will likely take place next week, right before Fernández de Kirchner’s swearing-in ceremony on December 10th.
buenosairesherald.com

Lower House passes Gender Identity bill

The Lower House passed the much-debated Gender Identity bill, which allows citizens to officially change their name and sexual identity if they wish to do so, without the need to request for a special permission in court. The bill now goes to the Senate, where it will also be debated.
The bill, drafted after four different bills coming from four caucuses in the Lower House, enables transvestites and transsexuals to officially change their name and gender identity no matter what their biological sex is.

As it became clear that the bill would be preliminary approved, human rights activists and members of several homosexual, transvestite and transsexual rights organizations cheered as lawmakers voted in favour.
The Lower House remains in session and continue to debate other controversial issues such as the Dignified Death bill and the Assisted Fertilization bill.
buenosairesherald.com

Cotto, Margarito differ on warrior’s code

By the fifth round of his fight against Manny Pacquiao, it was apparent it would take a miracle for Antonio Margarito to win. By the eighth, his right eye looked worse than Rocky Balboa’s ever did in the movies. And by the 12th round of that Nov. 13, 2010, bout in Arlington, Texas, there was a lot of concern among those at ringside about Margarito’s eyesight.

Margarito, though, didn’t give up. He didn’t quit. He never thought about it. Nor did he retreat in an effort to avoid Pacquiao’s lightning fast combinations that were, quite literally, busting up his face.
“I am a fighter and real fighters don’t quit,” Margarito growled. “I was there to give the people what they want to see. They came to see a fight and I was giving it to them.”

Boxing fans can be a bloodthirsty group, booing angrily when a referee stops a bout before their lust for violence has been sated. They’re no different than NASCAR fans who, no matter what they might tell you, go to the track by the hundreds of thousands looking to see a fiery wreck. If all crashes were magically eliminated, attendance at NASCAR races would drop very quickly and there would probably be no talk of new long-term TV deals.

That high-speed violence is why we watch, why we’re captivated by guys like Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis and fighters like Margarito and Miguel Cotto. The lust for violence is why Margarito’s bout against Cotto for the World Boxing Association super Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York figures to be a pay-per-view hit. People remember their savage 2008 bout in Las Vegas and know how the rivalry between them has only increased tenfold in the intervening three-and-a-half years.

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The dislike between the men is real and deep. Cotto has come to believe that Margarito wore hand wraps filled with plaster when they fought the first time. At the filming of a promotional piece for HBO, Cotto pulled out his iPad to show Margarito and host Max Kellerman a close-up of Margarito’s ungloved hand, which he said was proof that Margarito’s wraps were loaded.

Saturday’s bout should be no less savage than the first, with each promising to inflict an unreal amount of mayhem upon the other.

Cotto makes no bones about the fact that he plans to target Margarito’s right eye. After the Pacquiao fight, Margarito required several surgeries to repair the injuries he suffered. At one point, before he visited ophthalmologist Alan Crandall, Margarito planned to retire because he was essentially blind in the eye.

Margarito had a broken orbital bone and he had new lens implanted. In addition, he developed a cataract and that needed to be removed surgically.

It led to last week’s dog-and-pony show, in which they New York State Athletic Commission made Margarito jump through hoops before issuing him a license to fight.
The question is, when is enough in a fight enough? Boxers often say they would die in the ring in a bid to win, which is no more than bravado. They want to die in a boxing ring about as much as they want to drive their car into a concrete wall at 120 miles per hour.

Margarito, though, holds firmly to the code of the warrior and says he’d never quit. Cotto scoffed at such talk.

“We have personal lives. We have families. We have people who love us and who depend upon us,” Cotto said. “It’s ridiculous [to say you’d die in the ring]. My health is the most important thing in my life. I have kids and they depend upon me. The reason I’m doing this is my kids. It’s stupid to say you would [be willing to die].”

Margarito trainer Robert Garcia sees such comments as a sign that Cotto doesn’t have the fire he once had, when he was one of boxing’s brightest prospects following the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.

Garcia said the fundamental difference between Margarito and Cotto at this stage of their careers comes down to this: If each boxer was a fireman, Margarito would run into a burning building to save the occupants. Cotto would not.

“Cotto is a warrior, a great fighter,” Garcia said. “But to tell you the truth, when I saw what he said on [HBO’s] ‘Faceoff,’ when he talked about fighting nowhere else [but New York], he’s thinking like a businessman. He’s down to his last few big paydays. He’s thinking of his family, and his kids, and that’s the way a real person thinks. But I’m around fighters 24/7 and they’re different. They all know the risks of the job. They accept the risks as part of it.

“If you are a fireman and there is a burning building with people in it who need to be saved, you don’t stand outside and say, ‘I’m not going in because I have to think of my kids.’ It’s your job. You take the risk and go in, because that’s your job. As a fighter, you go into a dangerous situation, but you do everything possible to win, because that’s your job. You know what the risks are when you become a boxer, but you do it because it’s your job.”

Cuts and bruises and welts will heal over time. Those are, indeed, part of the occupational hazard. Their willingness to accept exceptional amounts of punishment is why each man is going to make several million dollars from Saturday’s fight. They’ll endure the kind of violence most of us could never imagine, let alone take.

But it’s hard not to side with Cotto when he notes that there comes a point where it is no longer wise to fight on. Cotto took a knee in the 11th round of their first fight, clearly realizing he was in a futile battle he would not win.

Cotto will make $5 million plus a percentage of the pay-per-view profits from Saturday’s bout. Margarito will earn $2.5 million as well as a share of the pay-per-view proceeds.

It’s a lot of money and they’ll each take a lot of abuse to earn it. That’s OK. That’s part of what they signed up for in the first place. But when it comes to long-term damage, it’s another matter entirely. In that regard, Cotto has it right.

“I fight as hard as I can, with all of my skill and my condition and my courage,” he said. “And I know what happens when you are in a fight. You receive punishment. It’s part of the job. But to fight [on] when the chance is there that I won’t be able to see my kids, to spend time with my family? No. That’s just crazy talk at that point.”
sports.yahoo.com/box

Dollar moves up a cent, trades at AR$4.30

The US dollar traded at AR$4.26/AR$4.30, moving up one cent compared with the previous price at the close of trading yesterday at Buenos Aires exchange houses.
Meanwhile, the Euro rose by eight cents, trading at AR$5.65/AR$5.77 at City exchange trade agencies.
buenosairesherald.com

Rojkés de Alperovich promises ‘loyalty’ to President CFK

Beatriz Rojkés de Alperovich.
The Peronist senator for Tucumán, Beatriz Rojkés de Alperovich spoke today after it was confirmed that she will be sworn in as the provisional president of the Senate and promised full “loyalty” to President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. The Senate will this morning swear in a third of its members, who were elected in the October 23 elections.
During a radio interview today, Rojkés de Alperovich assured that she “fully supports the political system” used by the head of State, and admitted that she was “proud” to have been chosen to take up second position in the presidential succession. Her taking up the role, is a historic move, as she will be the first woman ever to hold the position.
The parliamentary ceremony was taking place this morning, where 24 senators elected in Buenos Aires, La Rioja, Misiones, Formosa, San Juan, San Luis, Jujuy and Santa Cruz were being sworn in by the Senate president, Julio Cobos.
buenosairesherald.com