Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Donations pour in to Irwin's wildlife fund



Australian naturalist and animal-lover Steve Irwin has died after being struck in the chest by a stingray's barb.

He'll be missed.

National park could honour Irwin: Beattie

The Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, says Steve Irwin could be honoured by having a national park named after him.
News of the Crocodile Hunter's death from a stringray barb to the chest yesterday has shocked the Australian and international community.
Mr Beattie, in the final week of his election campaign, said the State Government was in talks with Mr Irwin's family about possible ways to honour him.
"We will make sure there is some form of national recognition," Mr Beattie told reporters.
"We want to make certain that ... there's a fitting long-term tribute to Steve Irwin and it may well be we can do all sorts of things like name a national park, we could have particular awards, all sorts of things.
"But I would like to talk that through with the family first and that's what we will do."


http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/national-park-could-honour-irwin-beattie/2006/09/05/1157222119174.html


Irwin's family rejects state funeral offer

Father of 'Crocodile Hunter' Steve Irwin would not have wanted a state funeral because he was "an ordinary bloke" and wanted to be remembered that way.The hugely popular naturalist died in a freak stingray attack on Monday. In the first comments by his family since his death, Bob Irwin thanked his son's many fans for their messages of support.Bob Irwin, who moved his family to the fringe of the Outback in the 1970s to open a reptile park that inspired his young son's obsession with wildlife, said he was deeply saddened by his son's death but that he died doing what he loved."There were many things that could have gone wrong," Irwin said in a news conference that was broadcast live across Australia.Steve knew the risks (of what) he was doing, and he wouldn't have wanted it any other way, added his father. (AP)

http://www.ndtv.com/morenews/showmorestory.asp?slug=Irwin's+family+rejects+state+funeral+offer&id=92762

Posted by Picasa

Lion seeking physical fitness while taking natural behaviors out on a bungy ball

Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - concluding

Zoos


Steve Irwin was ordinary bloke, says dad
AFP
Wednesday, September 06, 2006 11:12 IST
BEERWAH (Australia): Australia's famed Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin would not want a state funeral as he was "just an ordinary bloke", his grieving father Bob said on Wednesday.
Fighting back tears, the weather-beaten, khaki-clad man told an impromptu news conference that his son had been his "best mate" and funeral arrangements would be up to his widow Terri.
Bob Irwin was speaking to reporters outside his son's Australia Zoo in this small northeastern town, where a massive shrine of flowers, notes and personal mementoes has been laid by thousands of fans of television's wildlife warrior.
The premier of northeastern Queensland state, Peter Beattie, had offered to provide a state funeral for Irwin amid the astonishing global outpouring of grief for the ebullient star.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1051448



Indianapolis Zoo welcomes baby iguanas
Aug 31, 2006 06:46 AM EDT
Indianapolis - The Indianapolis Zoo is welcoming some new arrivals.
Two baby iguanas were hatched at the Zoo on Tuesday and a third was born Wednesday. It is the first time the rare Jamaican iguanas have been bred successfully outside Jamaica.
One additional baby could hatch from this group of eggs, and the zoo has a second group of 20 viable eggs that are scheduled hatch in one to two weeks.
The zoo is also waiting for the arrival of a baby elephant. Ivory is expected to give birth sometime in the next few weeks.

http://www.wthr.com/Global/story.asp?S=5348749&nav=9Tai



Zoo unveils exotic rodents

By
BRENDAN BOUFFARD
The State News
JOLIE MYERS · The State News
A Patagonian cavy drinks from a stream Wednesday at Potter Park Zoo. The exhibit was just reopened after dogs killed most of the zoo's cavies in June. The Toronto Zoo donated five cavies to join a sole survivor of the early summer attack.
After a voyage of more than 300 miles, five new Patagonian cavies are on display at the Potter Park Zoo in Lansing.
The cavies, which were quarantined for the past month in the zoo, were first shown to the public last week.
The long-legged rodents, a relative of the guinea pig, look similar to a cross between a miniature deer and jackrabbit. With their long legs, cavies are able to jump 6 feet high.
Gerald Brady, director of the Potter Park Zoo, said the cavies are enjoying their new home.
"When you have a new exhibit, or a new animal, you get such a big boost in attendance," Brady said. "All of the other cavies in the U.S. are very rare."
The animals were donated to the Lansing zoo by the Toronto Zoo earlier this summer.

http://www.statenews.com/article.phtml?pk=37358



Dalton Zoo sets new visitors record
Published on 30/08/2006
POPULAR: Crowds have flocked to South Lakes Wild Animal Park
DALTON Zoo has enjoyed a bumper summer after the hot weather helped trade soar up to 30 per cent.
South Lakes Wild Animal Park is reporting its best summer ever with visitors from across the north of England and Scotland helping it smash all previous attendance records.
People came through the gates of South Lakes Wild Animal Park in their thousands, breaking every record set in the park’s 12-year history. Endangered species across the globe also reaped the rewards with donations to the zoo’s conservation charities at a record high.
Although the zoo is reluctant to divulge exact figures for fear of tipping off competitors, education and marketing manager Karen Brewer said this summer was the “best ever”.
She said: “This is the busiest summer we have ever had, confirming the popularity of South Lakes Wild Animal Park as the region’s leading family attraction.
“Not only are so many new people coming but the comments and feedback from visitors have been fantastic.”
View this story and the latest newspaper in full digital reproduction, just like the printed copy at
www.nwemail.co.uk/digitalcopy
Other stories from this category that may interest you:
Congratulations to David and all the staff at Dalton Zoo. Everyone concerned deserves all the best for their endevours over the summer period. Its good to see a local business to so well when so many things are trying to make things difficult.
Allan Crook , Perth
8/31/2006 9:51:12 AM

http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/viewarticle.aspx?id=406294



Crane delivers Auckland Zoo's first spring arrival
Thursday, 31 August 2006, 3:42 pm
Press Release: Auckland Zoo
31 August 2006
Crane, not stork, delivers Auckland Zoo's first spring arrival
Auckland Zoo has been surprised with a pre-spring arrival. A brolga chick hatched on August 28, marking the Zoo's first 'spring' arrival for 2006 and signalling the start of a busy and exciting season at the Zoo.
Auckland Zoo Curator, John Rowden, is sure the yet-to-be-named brolga chick is the first spring arrival for the Zoo. "It's very exciting," says John. "Spring is my favourite time of the year at the Zoo. Springtime at the Zoo means a flurry of activity and new 'babies'. We also get to see the progress being made in our native breeding programmes - all really great stuff."
"We're really lucky to have these silver-grey cranes. They are native to Australia, yet we are the only Zoo in Australasia that has an active breeding pair," says John.
The brolgas are not the only birds preparing to hatch either. Auckland Zoo, in conjunction with the Bank of New Zealand and Department of Conservation, is preparing for several new kiwi chicks to hatch over the next few months.
The BNZ Save the Kiwi Trust's Operation Nest Egg (O.N.E.) programme has been running for 10 years and Auckland Zoo has released over 135 healthy kiwi chicks back into the wild.
Indications are that the 2006/2007 season is going to be just as busy for the North Island brown kiwi. There are currently 13 eggs in various stages of their 75-day incubation period, with more eggs expected to arrive at the Zoo during spring.
In the wild, predators kill over 95% of kiwi chicks within their first six months of life. However, rearing them in captive facilities like Auckland Zoo before re-introducing them to the wild dramatically increases their chances of survival.

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/SC0608/S00070.htm



Santa`s Reindeer... Sort of, at Dakota Zoo
Chris Gallegos
8/30/2006
Even though some stores may have their Christmas decorations out, .it`s not time for Christmas just yet. Reindeer are synonymous to the winter holiday, but did you know they are also very adaptable to the summer heat?
I found myself in the midst of a reindeer family on my last visit to the zoo and found out that these three really can`t fly.
"Terry, how did you first decide to have reindeer here at the zoo?"
"This is a species that just works well into our system here. They do very well in our winter times. They really thrive in the cold weather," said Terry Lincoln, Director of the Dakota Zoo. "They`ve got special hair, their follicles are hollow, so they are able to withstand temperatures of 80, 90 degrees below zero with no problem and they are about the best insulation factor of any animal out there."
"I see that we have a baby reindeer, who was just born, correct?"

http://www.kfyrtv.com/News_Stories.asp?news=2875



Tiny Menagerie Is Told to Find a New Zoo
Animal Guys, based in a residential area of Altadena, are notified by L.A. County officials that they don't have the right permit to operate.
By J. Michael Kennedy, Times Staff Writer
August 31, 2006
One thing that bothers the Animal Guys is that they have no idea who ratted them out.
Not that they knew they were doing anything illegal — until now.
ADVERTISEMENT
For years, they've been openly running their animal operation in the back of an Altadena home, just a stone's throw from the Angeles National Forest.
Their vans have "Animal Guys" emblazoned on the side.
But now it looks like they will have to move everything, including the lynx, the bobcat, the python, the fox and the alligator.
All because of a pesky zoning law.

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-zoo31aug31,1,3622041.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california&ctrack=1&cset=true



Men arrested for white rhino poaching
10.20am Wednesday August 30, 2006
JOHANNESBURG - Two men posing as tourists booked into a South African lodge, drove off to view the wildlife - and proceeded to shoot two endangered white rhino bulls and hack off their horns, officials said.
The men were arrested after pulling off their audacious crime in the famed Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park and have been linked to a national syndicate targeting the endangered animals, South African conservation officials said on Tuesday.
"It's the first time we've ever had poachers posing as tourists in one of our game parks," said Jeff Gaisford, spokesman for KZN Wildlife, the conservation arm of the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government.
The suspects, who cannot be named until they appear in court, had four rhino horns, three illegal firearms, ammunition and knives that were believed to have been used to remove the rhinos' horns when they were arrested last Wednesday.
They had been under surveillance because of intelligence provided by the police but were not followed for a three-hour period to prevent them from becoming suspicious. During that time they are believed to have shot the animals.
News of the arrests could only be released yesterday because of the "sensitivity" of the police investigation, KZN Wildlife said in a statement, adding that further arrests were expected.
There have been no recorded rhino poaching incidents in KwaZulu-Natal for several years, though there have been periodic reports of the practice elsewhere in the country.
The suspects had booked into the upmarket Hilltop Camp at Hluhluwe-Imfolozi with commanding views of the rugged park, which became a refuge for the white rhino a century ago when only a few dozen were left.
Conservation efforts allowed the white rhino to storm back from the brink of extinction. The southern sub-species now numbers over 11,000 but is still considered to be endangered by some environmentalists.
There are around 3700 of the smaller but more aggressive African black rhinos, whose numbers are also recovering.
The animals are hunted illegally for their horns, which fetch high prices in Yemen, where they are prized for making dagger handles, and in the Far East, where they are coveted for their supposed medicinal qualities.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10398790



Dead cats, dog, malnourished animals found in apartment
August 30, 2006
CONWAY, N.H. --Police found dead cats and a dog and other animals in poor health in an apartment and arrested a woman in Concord on five counts of cruelty to animals.
Kara Steinhilber, 22, who had lived in the Conway apartment, was released late last week on $5,000 bail and was not allowed to possess or care for any animals. She is scheduled to be arraigned on Sept. 19.
Conway Police were asked to do a check on the animals. Other residents at the complex told her that animals in the apartment hadn't been cared for in some time. As she entered the apartment, an animal control officer found a dog who hadn't had food or water for some time. She also found two dogs in a crate, one of them dead and the other barely alive.
Dead cats later were found in a carrier in the apartment.
Each charge is a misdemeanor punishable up to one year in prison and a $2,000 fine.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/new_hampshire/articles/2006/08/30/dead_cats_dog_malnourished_animals_found_in_apartment/



For now, Senate big enough for Lieberman and Lamont

By Andrew Miga, Associated Press Writer August 30, 2006
WASHINGTON --Rivalry or not, the Senate is big enough for Joe Lieberman and Ned Lamont.
For now.
Congress returns for business Tuesday, and Lieberman, the Democrat now running as an independent, will be back for committee assignments, defense legislation and perhaps party meetings.
Close by will be Lamont, who upset Lieberman in the Aug. 8 primary, seizing the Democratic nomination for the Connecticut seat. Lamont plans to meet Wednesday with party leaders, union leaders and business groups.
"I'm not spending much time in Washington, but I think it's important I at least get introduced down there," Lamont said. "A lot of people down there have a certain interest in this race so I figured some of them are saying stuff about me and I might as well meet them."

http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/articles/2006/08/30/for_now_senate_big_enough_for_lieberman_and_lamont/



Alaska wolf control program faces battle
By Mary Pemberton, Associated Press Writer August 30, 2006
ANCHORAGE, Alaska --Alaska's wolf-killing program to boost moose and caribou numbers is facing a new legal challenge.
Two conservation groups filed a lawsuit in Superior Court alleging that the program, in which more than 550 wolves have been killed, is based on faulty science and violates state law.
Defenders of Wildlife and the Alaska Wildlife Alliance asked the court last week to halt the program authorized in 2003 by the state Board of Game. A similar court challenge launched by the Connecticut-based group Friends of Animals was not successful in putting an end to the program.
But in that case, Superior Court Judge Sharon Gleason had ruled that the Game Board had not followed its own rules in approving the programs and had not considered all alternatives besides aerial killing. The Game Board responded with new regulations that satisfied the legal shortcomings and resurrected aerial wolf control in all five areas.

http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2006/08/30/alaska_wolf_control_program_faces_battle/



New zoo tipped to do a roaring trade
31 August 2006
It is a higgledy-piggledy patch of trees, open fields, ponds
and ramshackle buildings.
But in just nine months it could be doing a roaring trade as Norfolk's newest tourist attraction - Cromer Zoo, mark two.
And, while full details of the wildlife that could be on display are not yet being revealed, there will be
jaguars, flamingos, parrots and monkeys. Detailed plans have now been submitted for the zoo, on 10acres of land owned by Benji Cabbell-Manners between Hall Road and Roughton Road on the edge of the town.
Among the proposals are a plant house, at least 20 animal enclosures, a cafe with a veranda overlooking the largest pond, a shop, and a host of new trees planted on the fringes of the site to mask it.
Ken Sims, who runs Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens, near Yarmouth, is the man behind the bold plan to bring a zoo back to Cromer for the first time in 23 years.
The last one opened in 1962 at the top of Howards Hill, and was run by former circus tiger trainer Alex Kerr and his wife Olga, the daughter of Coco the Clown.
It closed on Christmas Day 1983 because of crippling overheads and low winter visitor numbers.
The new zoo's director is Jim Irwin-Davis, whose CV includes work at London Zoo, a decade with the Nigerian wildlife department, managing a wildfowl collection in Surrey, four years in Bahrain, and 17-and-a-half years as curator of Lord Harewood's bird garden in Yorkshire.
Mr Irwin-Davis said wildlife surveys had been carried out, but had not flagged up anything of particular interest on the site.
A bat survey had found Natterer's and Daubenton's bats using a derelict lime kiln as a winter hibernation location, and Mr Irwin-Davis said the building would be conserved to protect the mammals.
The land already has planning consent for a change of use to a zoo, and the drawings will be considered byNorth Norfolk District Council.

http://www.northnorfolknews.co.uk/content/northnorfolknews/news/story.aspx?brand=NNNOnline&category=news&tBrand=NNNonline&tCategory=news&itemid=NOED31%20Aug%202006%2010%3A41%3A09%3A063



Cash setback 'won't stop new zoo plan'

he Royal Zoological Society of Scotland has been denied a £250,000 lottery grant which would have allowed it to carry out a detailed feasibility study for the giant futuristic glasshouse planned at Cuningar Loop between Dalmarnock and Rutherglen.

http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/hi/news/5056583.html



Italian Cultural Day at the Toronto Zoo
Visitors flock from all over the GTA, one luck family wins a one-year membership
A zebra may run with the same power, speed and gracefulness as a professional soccer player sprinting down the pitch, but it will forever be indifferent to participating in the 'beautiful game.'
As part of its marketing plan to increase attendance, the Toronto Zoo held an Italian Cultural Day on Sunday, placing several soccer balls inside the cages of several species - none of whom seemed the least bit interested in going anywhere near the small, round objects. The animals - from bunny rabbits to hyena's to lions - were oblivious to the soccer balls in much the same way they are usually oblivious to the flashing lights of cameras going off all around them.

http://www.corrieretandem.com/viewstory.php?storyid=6579




MNR Doesn't Enforce its Own Rules

WSPA is shocked at the MNR's response to its zoo complaint

Attention: Assignment Editor, City Editor, News Editor, Government/Political Affairs Editor
LONDON, ONTARIO, NEWS RELEASE--(CCNMatthews - Sept. 5, 2006) - The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) is disappointed with the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) response to their zoo complaints. The WSPA submitted a 10 page complaint on July 5, 2006 highlighting the deplorable and disgusting conditions native animals endure at three southwestern zoos (Lickety Split Zoo, Greenview Aviaries Park and Zoo, and Pineridge Zoo).
"We're disgusted that the MNR considers a fox in a box an appropriate environment for our native wildlife," said Melissa Tkachyk, Campaigns Officer. "Clearly they're not concerned how animals are cared for within Ontario zoos."
The Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act states: "Animals enclosures in which animals are on public display should be of a size which enables animals to:
A) Exercise natural behaviours to facilitate public education and interpretation.
B) Achieve a distance from the public and other specimens at which the animals are not psychologically or physically stressed.
C) Achieve a full range of body movement and physical movements normally performed."
The MNR response to our complaint: "no violations of the current conditions relating to animal enclosures were identified."
WSPA is appalled by this response. "Why can't the MNR see what visitors have been complaining about for years? Since this story was reported on in July, people have been writing letters to us, the government and the newspapers voicing their concern," said Tkachyk.
Through WPSA's investigation, it found the fox at Lickety Split had no room to run and no place to escape. At Greenview Aviaries, three bobcats were kept in a small cage with patio blocks and again no room to run. At Pineridge, some of the cages weren't locked and visitors could reach into the cages of dangerous animals. This is an issue the MNR didn't even address in its letter. Is the public's safety not a concern to our government?
WSPA is calling on the Premier and MPP's to fix this problem because the MNR isn't fit for the job.
/For further information:
WWW.ONTARIOZOOS.CA/

http://www.ccnmatthews.com/news/releases/show.jsp?action=showRelease&searchText=false&showText=all&actionFor=610594



Group says it will continue crusade against roadside zoos
Tue, September 5, 2006
Spokesperson says she is shocked the government found no violations
By
RANDY RICHMOND, LONDON FREE PRESS REPORTER
Angry animal-rights activists will appeal to provincial politicians after a Ministry of Natural Resources investigation found nothing wrong with conditions at three area zoos.
“Clearly the Ministry of Natural Resources is not following its own regulations,” Melissa Tkachyk, campaigns officer for the World Society for the Protection of Animals said Tuesday.
“I am shocked.”
The ministry’s own regulations require zoos to keep animals in enclosures that allow them to “exercise natural behaviours” and “achieve a full range of body movements and physical movements normally performed,” she said.

http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/Local/2006/09/05/1803838.html



Rescued elephant befriends camel at ranch
11:39 PM CDT on Tuesday, September 5, 2006
By
GARY REAVES / WFAA-TV
Fund for Animals, which was founded in 1967, created Cleveland Amory Black Beauty Ranch in Murchison as a refuge for wild animals suffering from man's inhumanity. With more that 1,300 animals, the ranch homes animals ranging from burros from the Grand Canyon to chimps rescued from research labs.
But some may say no animal at the ranch has a story more poignant than the 20-year-old African elephant named "Babe."
Babe is a refugee from the circus world and was originally captured as a baby in Africa. Richard Farinato, the ranch's director, said he believes she injured her foot while being shipped across the ocean, which made her poorly suited for circus work where at times elephants have to be intimidated into submission so humans can control them.
"In some cases, electric shock [is used], in some cases repeated beatings, chain her down and beat her until she accepts what you want us to do," Farinato said.
Her misshapen legs and feet, one is bent at a weird angle, make her looks as though she walks on her ankle.

http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/wfaa/latestnews/stories/wfaa060905_mo_babeelephant.6e875bb2.html



Rocky Mountain windfall
By BILL RADFORD THE GAZETTE
The Cheyenne Mountain Zoo has something to roar about: a gift of $1.46 million, the largest donation from an individual in the zoo’s 80-year history.
Zoo officials announced the donation Tuesday, along with a matching gift from the El Pomar Foundation. The money is to be spent on developing the zoo’s next major exhibit, Rocky Mountain Wild, scheduled to open in spring 2008. The exhibit, intended to connect zoo visitors with the wild heritage of the Rocky Mountain region, is to include moose, grizzly bears, mountain lions, lynx, North American river otters and bald eagles.

http://www.gazette.com/display.php?id=1321234



Walk was a real bear
This health kick I'm on is going to kill me.
I came to that conclusion recently as I was walking up Coleman Avenue near the Tanglewood Nature Center -- alone except for my portable CD player -- and saw a black bear about 100 yards in front of me.
Yes. A B-E-A-R And not a charming little yellow one with its head stuck in a honey jar or a large, jolly one singing in a country jamboree at Disney World.
No. This one was large, furry and possibly crabby.
I've seen bears before, but that's been at zoos, where there's plenty of space and a large fence between us.
There was no fence separating this bear and me, and definitely not what I'd call enough space, either...

...As I walking down the hill, instead of thinking how well that potentially dangerous situation worked out for me and counting my blessings, I had the following reflection: "Stupid bear. I had to turn around early. He totally screwed up the number of miles I was going to do today."
Fortunately, I snapped out of that pretty quickly. Walking is supposed to be good for you, not endanger you.
I thought about the absurdity of what had just run through my mind as I finished my trek in my own well-populated neighborhood.
A few days later, I hopped in my car and checked out another route, far away from the bear. I figured I'd give him his space if he'd give me mine.
After all, I don't want this health kick to kill me.
Molly McCarthy is the education writer for the Star-Gazette. The Gen-X lifestyles column appears Fridays.

http://www.stargazettenews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060901/COLUMNIST30/609010301



Siring problems
Star-Telegram
The federal bill grabbing the attention of horse lovers and animal rights activists bans the "shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, receiving, possessing, purchasing, selling, or donation of horses and other equines to be slaughtered for human consumption, and for other purposes."
The "other purposes" aren't outlined in HR 503, which is scheduled for a House vote on Thursday, but the result of this bill's passage would be to shut down an industry that provides a practical public service: disposal of the remains of dead horses.
It must be acknowledged up front that lots of Americans will never be convinced that allowing the slaughter of horses for sale as meat -- for carnivores in zoos, canines at home or connoisseurs in Cannes -- is a public service.

http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/opinion/15416038.htm



School kids should stay out of zoos

Attention: Assignment Editor, City Editor, News Editor, Government/Political Affairs Editor
TORONTO, ONTARIO, LETTER TO EDITOR--(CCNMatthews - Sept. 1, 2006) - Letter to editor,
As students return back to school, parents should be aware their kids could be at risk if the class takes a trip to the zoo. There are no safety regulations, which is why the Minister of Education should prohibit school outings to roadside zoos to protect the health and safety of our school children.
After investigating the conditions of 11 Ontario roadside zoos this summer, I was appalled that visitors are exposed to a number of safety risks. As many zoos do not have appropriate barriers, children were able to put their hands in the cages housing dangerous animals. Tigers were housed behind low, flimsy fences and some of the cages were not even locked.
These conditions shouldn't surprise us as anybody can open a zoo and wouldn't have to abide by welfare or safety regulations. One doesn't even need a permit to keep dangerous animals like lions and tigers in their backyard.
The past dozen years have seen a number of people injured in Ontario by captive animals such as tigers and lions and even small children have been bitten by monkeys. Not only can these bites and wounds be painful but they can also lead to the transmission of diseases.
With the lack of provincial standards that ensure the public's safety at Ontario zoos, WSPA is asking the Minister to ensure that schools don't visit unsafe zoos.
/For further information:
www.ontariozoos.ca/

http://www.ccnmatthews.com/news/releases/show.jsp?action=showRelease&searchText=false&showText=all&actionFor=610453



Byculla zoo still awaits recognition
DNA Correspondent
Friday, September 01, 2006 23:29 IST
CZA official says local authorities haven’t been abiding by the rules.
While zoo officials at the Jijamata Udyan and the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) have plans to modernise the zoo and provide better infrastructure for the animals, the Central Zoo Authority (CZA) remains unconvinced.
In fact, the CZA, which has stipulated stringent guidelines for zoos to follow, is yet to recognize Byculla zoo. It was reported that the London Society of Zoo, Bernard Harrison & Friends Ltd, along with a company based in the US and one in Haryana had shown an interest to partner the BMC in upgrading the zoo. The project was estimated to cost Rs130 crore and a budgetary provision of Rs25 crore had already been made this year.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1050627



SC seeks reply on overcrowded zoos
[ 2 Sep, 2006 0218hrs IST
PTI ]
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday sought replies from the Central Zoo Authority (CZA) and states on a petition filed by a NGO, which said there was an urgent need to limit the number of animals in zoos in view of lack of space.
A Bench comprising Chief Justice Y K Sabharwal and Justices C K Thakker and R V Raveendran issued the notices to CZA and state governments on a PIL filed by People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
Appearing for the petitioner, counsel Raj Panjwani said zoos were suffering due to lack of space, unavailability of veterinary doctors, absence of infrastructure and qualified personnel. The NGO had recently drawn the court's attention to animals living a life of forced celibacy in 163 zoos in the country.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1949034.cms



Aussie seahorse at Anglesey zoo
Aug 29 2006

AUSTRALIAN seahorses have been added to a collection of the species at the Anglesey Sea Zoo.
Hippocampus whitei (or White's Seahorse) now form part of a conservation project at the sea zoo.
The fish were obtained from Bio Services at the Weymouth Sea Life Park because the Anglesey tourist attraction had only one White's seahorse on display.
Anglesey Sea Zoo plays an active part in researching seahorse husbandry and campaigns for greater protection for the creatures in their natural habitat.

http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0200wales/tm_objectid=17642888&method=full&siteid=50082&headline=aussie-seahorse-at-anglesey-zoo-name_page.html



Ball is the pride of the zoo
By Peter Trute
August 30, 2006 12:00
IT'S a long way from the African grasslands, but Taronga Zoo's new lion enclosure already has the feeling of home for its occupants.
Taronga's African lions - dad Jambo, mum Kuchani and their three-year-old offspring Asali and Johari - went on show in their Serengeti-inspired exhibit yesterday.
Planted with native grasses and succulents, the enclosure recreates the African savannah where that is the lions' natural environment but without the dangers of poachers and encroaching agriculture.
However not all the enclosure is as you'd find it in the wild.
One man-made addition was a "bungee ball'' dangling from a tree, which soon became the object of Jambo's attentions.
Carnivore keeper Justine Powell said the bungee ball was designed to help the cats exercise, as was the climbing tree.
"Lions can leap up to 12m so the new bungee ball enables them to exercise the amazing jump and lunge of their natural hunting ability,'' she said.
"The climbing tree has definitely been a huge success, with all the lions climbing their way up it and leaving their claw marks in the bark.''

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,20296265-5006009,00.html



L.A. County Officials Say Backyard Zoo Must Go

(CBS) LOS ANGELES County officials say a Siberian Lynx, a squirrel monkey and more than 100 other other wild animals that have been living in a backyard in Altadena for the last eight years must go.
Paul Hahn and David Riherd run Animal Guys Inc., an education and entertainment company, from the backyard of Riherd's parents’ home with Los Angeles city permits, the Pasadena Star-News reported.
The Animal Guys and their menagerie of 120 animals have appeared on MTV, the Discovery Channel and "The
Tonight Show."
The men, who met at Cal State Northridge, were unaware they needed county permits to operate the private zoo, according to the newspaper.
According to county zoning laws, the zoo can't operate in a residential area.

http://cbs2.com/topstories/local_story_241124513.html



Brew at the Zoo
By DCist contributor Celeste Dawn Mitchell
Two thousand of the khaki crowd's finest came out to party Thursday at Friends of the National Zoo's Young Professionals' (or
FONZ YP's, if you will) sold-out Brew at the Zoo. Proceeds went toward its Asian elephant conservation project. Just in case patrons forgot they were partying for a cause, four-ounce fill-lines on souvenir mugs intimated that this was a classy tasting affair, not a frat kegger.
Though ticket prices were nearly on par with the price of a Nissan Pavilion show, music was an ambient enhancement and not a focal point. Nonetheless, Arlington country-folk-rockers
The Hickories performed "1965" and other tunes from their debut EP for those who chose to ditch the beer lines and grab a spot on the grass.

http://www.dcist.com/archives/2006/08/29/brew_at_the_zoo.php



Zoo's baby elephant gets a name
Associated Press
ST. LOUIS - The Saint Louis Zoo's new baby Asian elephant will be know as Maliha.
The name, which means "strong" and "beautiful" in Hindi, received nearly 8,000 of the more than 20,000 votes cast by mail and online from a field of five names, Zoo officials said Tuesday.
The 341-pound elephant was born Aug. 2 to mother Ellie and father Raja.
Twice as many people offered suggestions for Raja's name, which means "king," when he was born 13 years ago. Maliha is the first baby elephant at the zoo since Raja, but this time the zoo narrowed names to five that had Asian heritage and let people vote.
Voters chose from Sundari (beautiful woman); Nisha (night); Maliha; Sashi (moon) and Jaya (victorious).
Another Asian elephant sired by Raja is due at the zoo in February.

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/local/15391952.htm



Oregon Zoo intent on big cat's return

Wildlife - Officials are working out what it will take, and cost, to bring lions back to the zoo
Wednesday, August 30, 2006
WADE NKRUMAH
What's a zoo without the king of the jungle? For now, the Oregon Zoo's only wild cats are cougars, leopards, ocelots and tigers.
But Tony Vecchio, zoo director, said he's eager for lions to return, hopefully by summer 2009. But like everything else, it's a matter of money.
He said finding money would fall to the Oregon Zoo Foundation, a nonprofit fundraising group. The foundation's development committee would create a plan to seek support from corporations, foundations and individuals, he said.

http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/portland_news/1156904741219130.xml&coll=7



Zoo executives dedicated, caring

Aug. 30, 2006. 01:00 AM
Metro Toronto Zoo
I am writing this letter to address the comments and articles that a few misinformed people have attempted to levy against Metro Zoo in the treatment of its animals.
I have been a senior adviser on the Aboriginal Board at the Metro Zoo for more than four years now and I have also been on the immediate property most of my life. In that time I have had a wonderful working relationship with the Executive Officer Calvin White and the Zoo's Project Manager Paul Harpley and Bill Rappley. Their continued dedication and never-ending work is real proof that the huge decisions regarding all animals are being made by experienced, dedicated, hard-working and deeply caring people.
Thanks to the wonderful direction of the executive officers, the Metro Zoo is the first zoo in this country to take the patience and time to work directly with First Nations and their elders to build the Aboriginal Knowledge Trail. After more than two years of many meetings, and with very careful planning, the Aboriginal Knowledge Trail winds all around the North American animals exhibit of animals that have a spiritual connection with First Nation peoples. Ironically, this project is situated right where our ancestors lived in the past.
I have spent a great deal of time on the zoo's property and have got to know most of the people who work there and I can say, without a doubt, that I have personally never met a better group of hard-working, dedicated people whose main objective is the love and caring of animals, which requires such a delicate balance in keeping up their health and nutrition and spiritual well-being.

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1156888230074&call_pageid=970599119419



Tiger Cubs to Go on Display at National Zoo
Aug 30th - 6:17am
WASHINGTON - The public won't have to wait much longer to see the new Sumatran tiger cubs at the National Zoo.
The new cubs -- two females and a male -- will go on display at 9:45 a.m. on Saturday.
The names of the three new cubs will also be announced on that morning as part of a celebration that will include talks by keepers, arts and crafts, and displays of tiger toys and artifacts.
The cubs were born May 24 and were the sixth litter of Sumatran tigers ever born at the zoo and the third litter for 13-year-old tiger Soyono.
Sumatran tigers are the smallest of nine tiger subspecies, three of which have already become extinct.
As adults, the male cub will weigh about 265 pounds and the females about 200 pounds. Sumatran tigers are endangered -- fewer than 500 are believed to exist in the tropical forests of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
(Copyright 2006 by WTOP and The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
WASHINGTON - The public won't have to wait much longer to see the new Sumatran tiger cubs at the National Zoo.
The new cubs -- two females and a male -- will go on display at 9:45 a.m. on Saturday.
The tiger cubs will go on display on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of National Zoo)
The names of the three new cubs will also be announced on that morning as part of a celebration that will include talks by keepers, arts and crafts, and displays of tiger toys and artifacts.
The cubs were born May 24 and were the sixth litter of Sumatran tigers ever born at the zoo and the third litter for 13-year-old tiger Soyono.
Sumatran tigers are the smallest of nine tiger subspecies, three of which have already become extinct.
As adults, the male cub will weigh about 265 pounds and the females about 200 pounds. Sumatran tigers are endangered -- fewer than 500 are believed to exist in the tropical forests of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=596&sid=897233



A zoo outing fit for children of all ages

By Jason Cannon
Last Saturday, Lizzie, Tiffany and I made our first trip to the Birmingham Zoo as a family.
Lizzie had never been. To her, exotic animals are drawn in vibrant colors on rigid cardboard pages in alphabetical order, so I was looking forward to letting her see the real thing up close.
I didn't really know what to expect. I hadn't been to the zoo in more than 10-years and I certainly hadn't been with a 2-year-old, but I figured it would be a positive experience. Lizzie loves animals.
Lizzie does an impression of a monkey that's almost as good as the real thing. And her cow is Broadway material.
We jumped out of the car and Lizzie was in heaven, even from the parking lot.

http://www.clantonadvertiser.com/articles/2006/04/11/opinion/columnists/9-column.txt



Zoo continuing Safari Slumbers, looking for docents
The Clarion-Ledger
The Jackson Zoo is continuing its overnight sleepover program, Safari Slumbers, this fall. It’s aimed at scout troops, church youth groups, family groups and more.
Three programs are offered: Mississippi Nights, Rain Forest Dreams and Africa After Dark, featuring a behind-the-scenes tour, chats with zookeepers and an up-close visit with an animal guest. Other activities may include stargazing, a sunrise tour, night hike and camp fire stories.
Sleeping would be indoors, on the floor of the zoo’s education building.
The cost is $35 per person and includes a pizza dinner and continental breakfast. A minimum of 10 people is required for booking a group.
The Jackson Zoo is also looking for docents. Docent training classes will be held 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturdays from Sept. 30 through Nov. 11.
To learn more about the program, join the Docent Safari 9 a.m. to noon on Sept. 16 at the zoo.
For more information, to book a group for Safari Slumbers or to find out more about the Docent Safari, call (601) 352-2586.

http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060830/FEAT05/60830022



You Can Now Visit The Zoo In Oshkosh For Free

(WFRV) OSHKOSH Since 2002, the Zoo at the Menominee Park Zoo has been charging an admission fee. Now, thanks to the generosity of an Oshkosh couple, it looks like those days are over.
Tom and Penny Harenburg donated $65,000 to the Zoo for this year, to eliminate the Zoo's $1.00 for children and $2.00 for adults entrance fees.
It will also cover a portion of zoo upkeep and improvement costs.
The Harenburgs are also working with the Oshkosh area Community Foundation, to set up an annual fund to make sure those admission fees never return.

http://wfrv.com/local/local_story_101170914.html


continued ….


Title of Artwork, "Angel's Day Off"

Check with Mike Moore's website.

It's interesting, American Airlines is censoring 'in flight' movies and won't allow any viewing of a documentary by Michael Moore. Like why did they have to single him out over anyone else? It's a political directive. I am wondering if there is special considerations for it from the White House? Were loan consideration, interest rates and the like affilitated with this? I think it's weird.

Boycott American Airlines.

Tell them what you think ! (click on)

I did.

I want a real response from the CEO of American Airlines. What kind of airline is this that carries the name of my home and won't allow selections I value? Freedom is choice. Why not just allow speeches by Bush to play while showing the virtues of killing Iraqis? To censor media ANYWHERE is to limit democracy. I'll never fly American Airlines again ! Ever. In my life !

If they believe in freedom then they believe in choice !

Perhaps, American Airlines should take note that the men who destroyed their aircraft and killed their passengers and employees were under the direction of Osama bin Laden, last known to be in Afghanistan and the mountains bordering Pakistan at Tora Bora. It was that war we needed to fight not the diversionary and illegal war in Iraq.

But, don't care about that, right?

Doesn't the CEO of American Airlines, Gerard J. Arpey (click on) care about the people that fly with him enough to protest the fact Osama bin Laden is still at large? Evidently, not. Politics out weighs patriotism at American Airlines.


I'll be back tomorrow.

Posted by Picasa

Monday, September 04, 2006

Click on to animate



September 3, 2006.
9:00 PM.

Antarctica.

The peninsula is heating up again. The highest recorded temperature is - 2 degrees C. (click on)

Posted by Picasa
The weather in Antarctica (Crystal Ice Chime) is:

Scott Base

Snow

-22.0°

Updated Monday 04 Sep 1:15PM

The weather at Glacier Bay National Park (Crystal Wind Chime) is:


52 °F / 11 °C
Overcast

Humidity:
82%

Dew Point:
46 °F / 8 °C

Wind:
9 mph / 15 km/h from the NW

Pressure:
29.90 in / 1012 hPa

Visibility:
10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers

UV:
0 out of 16

Clouds:
Overcast 6500 ft / 1981 m
(Above Ground


end

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Click on for view in motion



September 3, 2006.
1826 gmt.

Africa - Europe Satellite.

This is the best of all of them. Go, Africa. Gee whiz what a difference a quarter hemisphere makes. The carbon sinks are more than likely intact here. As a matter of fact a Nobel Peace Prize winner were growing forests. Right?

It's an interesting satellite in motion as well. The link is above. It doesn't keep animation going continuously as UNISYS does, so there is some manipulation that has to occur. Hm.

Posted by Picasa


September 4, 2006.
0026 gmt.

Western Hemisphere. Here again, the equatorial air mass is displaced north. That is very near the Tropic of Cancer rather than the Equator. The Tropic of Cancer is about 23 north latitude.

Posted by Picasa

Click on for 12 hour loop



September 4, 2006.
0130z.

Enhanced Infrared Satellite.

The jet stream is making an interesting appearance about the time the equatorial air is displaced as well. For sometime the jet stream has been over taken by the vortices, today it is the other way around. The vortices are still there but there is enough abatement of the cycle to allow a noted return of the jet.

In the past I have been optimistic that the abatement was a permanent reversal. What transpired over days was hemispheric oscillation that amounted to a greater maximum of turbulence. With the drought of the continent easily noted just below the Arctic Circle (over North America that is) it is no wonder that the weather patterns have seemed a bit kinder. There is little water to cause storms.

Noted below the jet stream in the central Atlantic is a lot of turbulence off Africa. We'll see how these manifest. I am somewhat doubtful there will be enough humidity to create a substantial storm this year. Reason to be concerned.

I believe it was NOAA that anticipated a very active season with more record setting circumstances. They have backed off that. There has been a lot of destruction globally by fires of carbon sinks/forests. That might have contributed to the hotter surface from earlier forecasts of last year. It's all exponential. A tree is destroyed by fire and the carbon enters the troposphere. That is compounded by the fact that tree is no longer available for carbon absorption. So, consequently the planet's heat index goes up considerably with loss of such vast amounts of forest.

I don't want to say NOAA's models are ineffective. They did well with the last storm and they will no doubt continue to be reliable. I think the change in direction of prediction of this season is due to an increasing warming pattern enhanced by human activity that destroys biotic mass and causes large deposits of carbon dioxide to the troposphere.

Everyone recognizes the concept of 'tipping point.' Well, it is my estimation the 'tipping point' for a worsening warming pattern is so obsure to most scientific computer models that they aren't as prepared to deal with it. Super computers do the best they can but this is a unique pattern for Earth and I keep stating that regardless of anyone who indicates otherwise. There has never been before this many people on Earth with consumer habits that are destructive to the biotic Earth. There is no super computer that can accurately predict this. They don't have that capacity. What NOAA can do is seek to provide the best information given new data.

It was never the prediction centers problem with Katrina. Every one was right on the mark. It was the government that was supposed to oversee the disaster that dropped the ball. Predicting storms/hurricanes/ typhoons is a much different science than seeking to understand the destiny of Earth under a Human Induced Global Warming pattern.

Posted by Picasa


September 4, 2006.

This is the current weather of the USA. The vortex center is notable over Iowa. There is also some turbulence offshore Southern Florida and over Cuba. The residual rain from John should give some rain to the southwest USA.

Posted by Picasa

Click on for 12 hour loop



September 4, 2006.
0130z.

Enhanced Infrared GOES West Satellite.

Hurricane John has transferred it's enegy to terra firma contributing to a huge heat movement into a vortex over the central continent of North America.

John weakens after lashing southern Baja (click on)

CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico --John weakened to a tropical storm Saturday just hours after it hit land as a hurricane in the southern part of Mexico's Baja California peninsula, ripping the roofs from shacks, knocking out power and sending billboards flying.
Tourists in the resort of Cabo San Lucas scrambled to catch flights out after the airport reopened.
John was a Category 2 storm with 100 mph winds when it struck land near isolated hamlets northeast of Los Cabos on Friday night, but it had slipped to Category 1 status with winds near 85 mph by Saturday morning. By Saturday afternoon it weakened to a tropical storm and the winds dropped to 65 mph by evening.


Posted by Picasa

This is not a good thing.



September 4, 2006.
0030 gmt.

Pacific Global Satellite.

The equatorial air does not belong there, It is at a higher than 'normal' latitude. Normally the equatorial air is over Ecuador. Right? South America. Not Central America. I'm telling you this drought has this planet searching for water for it's equator. The heat transfer to Antartica across South America is plainly noted here. The peninsula is getting warm again, but, residual temperatures from winter still linger to keep ground temperatures below zero.

Posted by Picasa

Link to West Pacific storms



September 4, 2006.
0011 gmt.

The planet is peculiar. It isn't respecting the equator. The equator of the Pacific has taken an odd presence. It is split at the Indonesian islands with a distribution into Antarctica, but the globe of the northern hemisphere has considerable turbulence to the degree it has disrupted the equatorial air. This 'vortex' in the North Pacific is actually IOKE, the Cat/Typhoon 5 storm that started in the Western hemisphere and traveled half the distance of Earth to the Eastern hemisphere. IOKE will become a storm to contend with for Japan.

Oddly, with all that distance some scientists have speculated with greater heat under the carbon dioxide blanket would come higher velocity storms reaching into a 'Cat 6' designation. That hasn't happened and with this demonstration by IOKE which never accelerated over 140 knots per hour, I sincerely doubt that ever will.

I have never subscribed to that concept as I believe Earth's troposphere has a limit due to it's dependance on water vapor to regulate it's climate. As a result water as the dominant ion has a limit to the capacity to energize and expand in the size of a storm this turbulent. That is why there are multiple hurricanes/storms/typhoons rather than one huge storm that continues to grow while churning the oceans to the depths. That is fantasy and is not possible with the limits water physics on Earth.

Posted by Picasa

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Preparedness

This isn't going to take long tonight. I had quite a bit of time while trying to fall asleep in the middle of a tropical storm on an inflatable mattress on the floor to think about the anniversary of Katrina.

There was a lack of preparedness all the way around. One of the first resounding blames has to go to Homeland Security. I remembered even under the direction of Tom Ridge there was a lot of emphasis placed on 'First Responders.' First Responders took high profile after September 11, 2001 and the 'idea' of being prepared beyond what the USA already was became a bit of an obsession. I am not saying having First Responders trained in their field isn't necessary, it is. But, what the focus surmounted to was 'drills' with little to know emphasis on what actually happens in a time of emergency.

The 'drills' were high profile, example below:


NHSRC's Red Team Participates in Postal Service Emergency Exercise (click on)

They were laced with a lot of 'Hollywood' excitement, the news reports were all favorable with references to any and all shortcomings and I believe that is all fine and good. Without such preparedness in pratice I doubt sincerely there would be anyone in this country who gave much thought to what a dirty bomb might do to a populous of people or a weapon of mass destruction. There might be a chance First Responders could save lives and certainly to that end we all needed to know.

What was left out of the equation was the 'aftermath' that would be faced when the First Responders were successful and there was isolation of an entire populous of people. In my contemplation of the very good system New Hanover Health Network had for Wilmington during a time of emergency, namely a hurricane, I wandered through the possibility of Katrina and beyond Katrina.

Wilmington had it's Katrina. The name of the storm was Floyd. For an entire week Wilmington, North Carolina had returned to an earlier state and became an island mostly cut off from the mainland. It relied completely on itself and for those that did not evacuate from Wilmington they did fairly well, but, after a week it was time supply trucks found their way to the city and people were pleased at new supplies and a return of friendly and familiar faces.

When I think of Katrina and it's abandonment by authorities, I do blame Homeland Security first.

Granted, New Orleans and especially the Ninth Ward is not Wilmington. Wilmington sits 'naturally' above sea level but the 'bowl' that is New Orleans exists in the surrounding landscape that was once 'naturally' ocean bay. Wilmington at one time was only reachable by boat. As time passed, lagoons were drained and filled with the same process noted in Florida of their swamp land. People built homes and it was those homes that took the hardest hit and where several deaths took place during Floyd. So in essence, Homeland Security already had a model of survival for New Orleans and their anticipation of "The Big One." It was pre and post Floyd, only no one paid attention.

In preparing for hurricanes and large storms as just experienced by Wilmington an interesting set of standards are used.

l. The hospital and it's occupants will be secluded during a severe storm, therefore it has to be it's own city so to speak. And the highest point in Wilmington is the hospital, by the way. Twenty whopping feet above sea level. Just imagine what sea level rise will do for Wilmington. Bye, bye. We really don't want that to happen here, okay? So the folks in Wilmington, North Carolina and the entire Carolina coast pay attention and are well invested in reversing the trends of Global Warming. But, that is getting off subject.

2. How do you turn a busy hospital into a self contained facility to care for the ill? Well, a 24 hour staff is necessary. So the staff is divided into three teams.

Team A - the Pre-Storm emergency personnel. They might be on duty for a day or two depending on the rate of travel of the storm. They provide respit for the oncoming staff that will sustain autonomously through the storm.

Team B - the During the Storm emergency personnel. They are people well seasoned and capable of taking care of people when no other resources are available. They know they are the only people available for the patients and those that might be brought during the storm, so they take care to sleep on schedule and wake to a day of inhouse news and function to carry on until the city is deemed relieved of danger of any storm processes. That might be a length of stay of one to four days as the returning staff has to make it safely to the hospital to take on their duties.

Team C - the After the Storm emergency personnel. They arrive to relieve a very tired Team B. They resume normal operations after the storm to a community returning to disaster and possibly death yet to be discovered.

3. Now that the personnel are in place and prepared, how do you turn a hospital into a small city?

You break it down. Supplies. Food. Water. Security. Electricity. Authority.

Supplies are on the grounds of the main building. I understand we have about 90 days of most frequently used supplies and a month of all else.

Food. There are two kitchens. One is where staff has lunch and it prepares patient meals. It is well supplied for the duration and stays open throughout the entire time there is an emergency. There is also a second 'visitor' kitchen affiliated with the coffee shop. They stay open as well and serve their usual speciality coffees and home bakings that the staff has grown an affection for.

Water. There is always city water, but, there is also filtered water processes for the hospital and it's patients. There are some water coolers at some stations. There is also a warehouse full of 'sterile water.' So, in an emergency we have plenty of water even though it might get a little expensive if the city water isn't available.

Security. The hospital has it's own security force that is designated as 'Special Police' by the City of Wilmington. Make no mistakes, these people are tough enough but they also have a heart for folks that come to the hospital out of control due to lack of medication or distress. At any rate, they are brave enough to supply a valued service of crowd control if necessary as without a link directly to the police department the hospital would be vulnerable to looting and possibly some real violence when it is realized there are controlled substances within locked areas of each unit and the main pharmacy which is on site.

Electricity. The hospital has a power plant that supplies electricity, especially when there is any interruption of power from outside sources. There are designated 'red outlets' where vital equipment such as ventilators and incubators are plugged 24-7 regardless of the status of the hospital functioning. These items cannot be disturbed in their function. The red outlets have priority over any electricity coming into the facility. There are also backup batteries for lighting in all hallways and there are plenty of flashlights with several dozen sets of batteries for such emergencies.

Authority. No, we don't have a judge and jury. We have holding areas where people can be contained if necessary. The abiding laws of the state, city and federal goverment always apply and that goes for anyone attempting anarchy in any process at the hospital. There are policies within the management that provides for chain of command in making life and death decisions and there is always high ethical standards that apply to any life hanging in the balance. We are first and foremost a hospital and provide care no matter the circumstances.

Last but not least is the structure. The hospital proper if you will. The building is not very different than any high rise. It is akin to any older structure in New York City, but, there are modifications. The building has plates. Expansion plates when it is hot and when the wind outside is at high speed. It sways. It has been measured at one time to sway as much as ten feet or so. The bottom two floors and the top two floors are evacuated to the center floors to allow for any flooding. It is felt those floors are the most vulnerable to the weather and only used when necessary. Nothing tragic has ever happened on any floor of that hospital. And, like I said, the hospital is built on the highest ground in Wilmington. It's considered a safe haven.

So when I ponder the events of Katrina it is with the understanding that floods happen to other cities and especially happen to Wilmington due to hurricanes. No one in this town would take a Cat 5 storm frivolously. Ever. Evacuation would be of utmost importance and done in a timely manner leaving very little opportunity for negligence of safety to the community. The hospital is not to be viewed as a fortress. It is not.

The issue of Katrina cannot be overlooked. The difference between Wilmington and New Orleans Pre-Katrina was preparedness. We don't rely on Wal-Mart to be sure people are provided for and especially those that are hospitalized.

There was no excuse for the negligence of New Orleans or the Gulf Coast, this country has been through it all too often before. Wilmington, North Carolina was a model for Homeland Security LONG BEFORE there was a Secretary Tom Ridge or Michael Chertoff.

In contemplating the events recently of the storm that swept through Wilmington that kept me 'on duty' for nearly 36 hours, I realized how long New Hanover Hospital/Health Network had been doing this without a hitch and I came to terms with the 'blame game' in DC.


Preparedness on the Gulf Coast was never a luxury and yet before Homeland Security existed there was the perparedness of Wilmington, North Carolina. Wilmington did what Homeland Security never did and did it without thinking twice. With a Superstructure like Homeland Security how could Katrina ever have been an issue? There was never a reason for it. Ever. All they had to due was run a laundry list of policies, items, procedures to every hosptial administrator and mayor in the country and follow up with inspections that included successful drills.

That's all they had to do.

They failed those people and left them to die. They left them to hack through roofs to try to find safety and wait for rescue.

There was just no reason for it to happen. Not now. Not after 911. It was all supposed to be planned for and mobilized by a new cabinet level department.

What the heck happened?


It's Saturday Night

Posted by Picasa

Rescued by Emerson Drive

I was bouncing around like a bottle out on the waves
About to go under, about to get swept away
Take it from me I was lost as a man could be

You came and you saved
A drowning man in an ocean of pain
When you gave me your heart to hold on to
Baby, I'm rescued

It's an empty feelin' that fills your soul
When you've got nobdy, you're left out in the cold
I still can't believe how you reached out to me

You came and you saved
A drowning man in an ocean of pain
When you gave me your heart to hold on to
Baby, I'm rescued

Now even on the darkest night
Oh I'm never alone
Your love is a guiding light
Leading me home


You gave me your heart to hold onto
And I'm holding onto you
Baby I'm rescued
Baby I'm rescued

Morning Papers - It's Origins


The Rooster Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers

The Chicago Tribune

John Hits Mexico With Heavy Rains, Winds

By MARK STEVENSON
Associated Press Writer
Published September 2, 2006, 4:11 AM CDT
CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico -- Hurricane John lashed the main city in the southern part of Mexico's Baja California peninsula with fierce winds and rain early Saturday after sparing the tourist resorts of Los Cabos a direct hit.
The Category 2 storm weakened slightly after it made landfall near isolated hamlets about 40 miles northeast of San Jose del Cabo, but was still packing top sustained winds of 100 mph as it passed near the state capital of La Paz -- a city of more than 150,000 people.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-hurricane-john,1,3902760.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Pipe bomb explodes at Metra station; man questioned but released
By Angela Rozas and Jeremy Gorner
Tribune staff reporters
Published September 1, 2006, 8:33 PM CDT
The maker of a sophisticated pipe bomb that exploded in a trash receptacle inside the Hinsdale Metra station early Friday still was at large late in the day, police said.
Nobody was injured in the 6:50 a.m. blast inside the ticket building, authorities said.
A man witnesses had pointed to as possibly being involved was released after a consensual search of his home turned up nothing, Hinsdale Police Chief Bradley Bloom said. The man had been seen near the receptacle and was apprehended at Union Station about an hour and a half later.
Bloom said the department has not ruled that man, or anyone else, out but said police don't have a good description of who may have left the bomb. There are no security cameras at the station, and nobody saw anyone place the bomb, he said.
U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Special Agent Thomas Ahern said authorities do not believe the incident was terrorist-related, although they do not have a motive yet. He said the device was "improvised" but not a manufactured bomb. Its remnants will be sent to a Maryland laboratory for examination, Ahern said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060901hinsdale-metra,1,2644744.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Bush film: Original or outrageous?
'Death of a President' lights up the blogosphere in advance of its Toronto Film Festival premiere.
By Tina Daunt
Times Staff Writer
Published September 1, 2006
This column explores the intersection between celebrity and politics.
A new film mixing archival footage and computer-generated special effects to portray the fictional assassination of President George W. Bush will premiere Sept. 10 at the prestigious Toronto Film Festival — and is already kicking off a firestorm of controversy.
British filmmaker Gabriel Range said "Death of a President" — which is done in a retrospective documentary style that has been described as eerily real — is intended to be a thought-provoking critique of the current political landscape.
"It's a striking premise," Range conceded in a statement. "But it's a serious film which I hope will open up the debate on where current U.S. foreign and domestic policies are taking us."
In the film, President Bush prepares to deliver a speech to business leaders in Chicago, where he is confronted by a massive antiwar demonstration. Unperturbed, Bush goes ahead with the visit, but as he leaves the venue, he is gunned down by a sniper. While the nation mourns, the hunt for his killer — a Syrian-born gunman — swings into action. Range said he reviewed hundreds of hours of footage of Bush to make the film as realistic as possible.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/la-et-cause1sep01,1,6296224.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Immigration activists begin 50-mile march

By Sara Olkon
Tribune staff reporter
Published September 1, 2006, 9:29 PM CDT
Supporters of immigrant rights streamed out of Chinatown Square at noon Friday to kick off a four-day journey that will span the western suburbs and end in Batavia.
Protesters marched west on Cermak Road, the first leg of the 45-mile Immigrant Workers Justice Walk to the home office of U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert. The crowd, about 400-strong, carried a united message by T-shirt and placard: Immigrants' interests matter.
"This is going to be a symbolic pilgrimage calling attention to hard-working, tax-paying people who deserve the opportunity to achieve the American dream," said David "Dino" Martino, political director of the Service Employees International Union.
Organizers said they hope to persuade Hastert, a Republican, to offer legalization for the nation's 11 million to 12 million illegal immigrants and put a moratorium on raids and deportations by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Catherine Salgado of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights said she expects a few hundred supporters will walk the entire distance. She predicted that thousands more would show up at the route's various rallies.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060901immigration-march,1,2866705.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Guilty verdict in rape of girl
By Carlos Sadovi
Tribune staff reporter
Published September 1, 2006, 6:57 PM CDT
Jurors took less than an hour Friday to find a convicted child molester guilty of snatching a 10-year-old girl off the streets and sexually assaulting her near her Brighton Park home in 2004.
After a three-day trial in Cook County Criminal Court, John Malinowski, 44, was found guilty of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated kidnapping and possession of child pornography.
After the verdict was read, the girl, now 13, cried as she hugged family members, prosecutors and Chicago police officers who investigated the Feb. 10, 2004, attack.
Outside court, the girl said testifying in the case was difficult, but she felt she needed to do it to put Malinowski in prison.
"I just feel safer. I just knew I had to do something about it. I didn't want it to happen to anyone else," the girl said. "I'm just happy I'm alive."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060901malinowski-guilty,1,2468937.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Callers may get $60 tax refund
By Mary Dalrymple
Associated Press
Published September 1, 2006
WASHINGTON -- Consumers can claim a standard $30 to $60 refund next year for a tax on long-distance telephone calls that the government declared invalid, the Internal Revenue Service announced Thursday.
Telephone customers had been paying the 3 percent federal excise tax on local and long-distance service. The government this month stopped collecting the tax on long-distance calls after businesses repeatedly fought the tax in court and won.
consumers can use their 2006 tax returns to claim a refund on long-distance telephone taxes paid since March 2003.
The standard refund starts at $30 and increases by $10 for each additional exemption claimed on a tax return, up to $60. A married couple with two dependent children, for example, could claim a $60 refund.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0609010130sep01,1,4935839.story



Kurdistan President Replaces Iraqi Flag
By Associated Press
Published September 1, 2006, 8:25 PM CDT
SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq -- Kurdistan president Massoud Barzani has ordered the Iraqi national flag to be replaced with the Kurdish one in his northern autonomous region in what appeared to be another move toward more self-rule in the north, local officials said Friday.
The order was issued Thursday and applies to the Kurdish region, said Beshraw Ahmed, a spokesman for the Sulaimaniyah municipality.
According to Azad Jundiyanim, a member of President Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Sulaimaniyah, Barzani issued a formal message asking for the Iraqi flag to be lowered. The message was also broadcast on Kurdish radio.
Iraq's northern Kurdish region has slowly been gaining more autonomy since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
On May 7, its parliament in the northern city of Irbil unified the Kurdish region's two long-standing administrations, one headed by Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party and the other by Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/sns-ap-iraq-kurds,1,2605836.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Stolen computer holds workers' information
Tribune staff report
Published September 1, 2006, 6:38 PM CDT
Nearly 60,000 current and retired local public employees, most of them city and Cook County workers, are being notified of a possible compromise of confidential personal information, including Social Security numbers and birth dates.
The sensitive data was contained on a laptop computer stolen from the home of an employee of Nationwide Retirement Solutions, city officials said Friday. Ohio-based Nationwide offers retirement planning services.
The laptop computer was password-protected and the company has found no evidence that information from it was used to access retirement funds or account information, officials said. There also have been no reports of identity theft linked to the data on the computer, a Nationwide spokesman said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-060901theft,1,7779159.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Gates Foundation to aid Chicago high schools
The Associated Press
Published September 1, 2006, 9:24 AM CDT
SEATTLE -- The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is putting $16 million into a new high school improvement program that's to be launched this year in eleven high schools in Chicago and two other districts.
The College Board testing company created its new "EXCELerator" program in New York public schools. It will use the Gates money to expand the program to Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Duval County, Florida.
The aim is to improve graduation and college readiness rates, especially for low-income and minority students.
The College Board will support college and career planning, tutoring, parent and community outreach. The program also will provide money to give teachers more planning time and more opportunities to work in teams.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-060901gates,1,7283566.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Protests stop Mexico's state of the nation speech

By Colin McMahon
Tribune foreign correspondent
Published September 1, 2006, 10:12 PM CDT
MEXICO CITY -- Facing the threat of an ugly confrontation with opposition congressmen, President Vicente Fox abandoned his reading of his state of the nation speech Friday before the Mexican congress, breaking a tradition dating back 180 years.
"Given that the posture of a group of legislators makes it impossible to read the message I have prepared for this occasion, I am leaving the hall," Fox announced after delivering a written version of the annual presidential report, called the Informe.
Half an hour earlier, legislators from the Democratic Revolution Party had swarmed the congressional stage. They waved anti-Fox posters and the tri-colored national flag, chanting "Mexico! Mexico!" And a leading senator from the party stood at the podium, refusing to yield.
"Deliver it and go," the congressman shouted.
The gambit worked. But it also showed Mexicans, again, how fractured their political system has become.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060901mexico,1,3742702.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Democrats cite Pentagon report in war criticism
By Stephen J. Hedges
Washington Bureau
Published September 1, 2006, 7:25 PM CDT
WASHINGTON -- Democrats kept up their verbal assault on President Bush and his national security team Friday over Iraq, while a new Pentagon report underscored the escalating violence there.
In a wave of statements, Democratic Party leaders targeted Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld for casting the Iraq war as part of a broader war on terrorism.
"The Pentagon's new report today indicates that President Bush, Vice President Cheney and Secretary Rumsfeld's speeches are increasingly disconnected from the facts on the ground in Iraq," Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said in a statement.
"Even the Pentagon acknowledges Iraq is tipping into civil war," the Nevada senator said. "Failed Republican policies have left America bogged down in Iraq, with our military stretched thin and less able to fight and win the war on terror."
Bush, in a speech to the American Legion in Utah on Thursday, said, "The war we fight today is more than a military conflict. It is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st Century."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-060901rumsfeld,1,1029350.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Gunmen Slay 13 Pilgrims Near Baghdad
By ELENA BECATOROS
Associated Press Writer
Published September 2, 2006, 5:44 AM CDT
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki met with Iraq's most influential Shiite cleric Saturday to discuss the country's deteriorating security situation, while attacks killed 13 Pakistani and Indian pilgrims south of the capital and three bombings left six people dead.
Al-Maliki met with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad, the cleric's office said. In July, al-Sistani was credited with restraining the Shiite community from widespread retaliation against minority Sunnis following horrific attacks on Shiite civilians.
"If the government does not do its duty in imposing security and order to the people and protecting them, it will give a chance to other powers to do this duty and this a very dangerous matter," al-Sistani's office quoted him as saying.
The meeting came two days after a barrage of coordinated attacks across mainly Shiite eastern Baghdad killed 64 people and wounded 286. Hundreds of Iraqis have been killed in violence this week, despite a massive security operation in the capital involving an extra 12,000 Iraqi and U.S. troops that has targeted some of Baghdad's most problematic neighborhoods.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-iraq,1,7982944.story?coll=chi-news-hed



British Soldier Killed in Afghanistan
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON
Associated Press Writer
Published September 1, 2006, 2:51 PM CDT
KABUL, Afghanistan -- An insurgent attack killed one British soldier and seriously wounded another Friday in the latest fighting to wrack southern Afghanistan, while suspected Taliban gunmen ambushed and shot dead a district chief, officials said.
Insurgents attacked the British soldiers in the southern province of Helmand at 4 p.m., according to statements from NATO and the British Ministry of Defense. One militant was killed in the fighting. The wounded soldier was evacuated for medical treatment.
Britain has nearly 4,000 troops deployed in Helmand as part of a NATO-led security force battling to bring security to turbulent southern Afghanistan.
Twenty-two British soldiers have died in the country since November 2001, 17 of them in March when the NATO force moved into Helmand, the hub of Afghanistan's world-leading heroin industry.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-afghanistan,1,6935765.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Iran Jetliner Accident Kills 29
By NASSER KARIMI
Associated Press Writer
Published September 1, 2006, 5:46 PM CDT
TEHRAN, Iran -- A landing Iranian passenger plane skidded off the runway and raked its wing along the ground, sparking a fire that killed 29 of the 148 people on board Friday in the latest deadly crash of a Russian-made aircraft.
Rescue workers in the northeastern city of Mashhad carried survivors on stretchers out of the gutted craft, which lay in a pool of water near the runway with its middle charred and its roof collapsed. Iranian television footage showed firefighters spraying the engines with water.
"The plane was shaking badly during the landing, then it suddenly lurched to the left," one survivor, Sahar Karimi, told The Associated Press by telephone from a hospital in Mashhad.
"Then it caught fire, and all the passengers rushed to the emergency exit," she said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-iran-plane-crash,1,2640317.story?coll=chi-news-hed



Weakened Ernesto Drenches Mid-Atlantic

By KASEY JONES
Associated Press Writer
Published September 2, 2006, 6:55 AM CDT
BALTIMORE -- Disrupting the start of the Labor Day weekend, Ernesto drenched the Mid-Atlantic region, cut power to more than 400,000 customers and forced evacuations as it weakened to a tropical depression.
Flash flood watches were posted early Saturday for Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York. Flood warnings were issued for North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland and the District of Columbia.
Ernesto was blamed for at least five deaths in Virginia and North Carolina, where it swirled ashore late Thursday as a tropical storm, a day after severe thunderstorms had already drenched the region.
Eastern North Carolina got 8 to 12 inches of rain, while southeastern Virginia measured up to a foot. Seven inches fell in Worcester County on Maryland's Eastern Shore, and a wind gust of 61 mph was recorded in Ocean City, said Ed McDonough, spokesman for the Maryland Emergency Management Agency.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-ernesto,1,4377455.story?coll=chi-news-hed


The Globe and Mail


Business leaders urge a fight against new U.S. border rules, fees
STEVEN CHASE
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
OTTAWA — Business groups are urging the Stephen Harper government to fight Washington's move to bolster its northern border inspections and force Canadian shippers and air travellers to bear the annual $77-million (U.S.) cost.
Nancy Hughes Anthony, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, called the measure “a bold-faced cash grab,” warning it will cost companies sales to the United States by slowing down border crossings and further taxing trade.
“There's already a higher Canadian dollar and now there's an inspection fee — it could be the last straw.”
She predicted it would discourage investment in Canada because it makes the border a larger hurdle to overcome when selling to the United States. “It creates an impression for outside investors that it's yet another reason not to locate in Canada because [crossing] the border is not only possibly five minutes longer because of this inspection, but it's also that many dollars more expensive.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wxr-border02/BNStory/Business/home



Ottawa to regulate and certify organic foods
Canadian Press
Ottawa — Faced with a year-end trade deadline from the European Union, the federal government is moving to regulate and certify organic foods.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is proposing national regulations that would allow agricultural producers to display a “Canada Organic” label on their food products.
Organic foods in Canada are currently certified by a hodgepodge of authorities, many of them accredited by the U.S. Agriculture Dept., which requires certification for organic foods imported from other countries.
Only two governments in Canada — Quebec and British Columbia — currently regulate organic produce within their borders.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.worganicf0902/BNStory/National/home



She spotted fires for 18 years, then vanished without a trace
KATHERINE HARDING
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
HINTON, ALTA. — The secluded orange-and-white watchtower and log cabin where Stephanie Stewart worked alone every summer for 13 years remains fenced off by yellow police tape.
It's been seven days since the tiny, 70-year-old fire lookout worker vanished from her post. The RCMP — who have described Ms. Stewart as not your “typical old lady” — don't know what happened to her, but they fear foul play may be involved.
Ms. Stewart's daughter, Lorie, travelled to Edmonton Thursday to make a public plea for clues in the search for her mother.
“Mom's a hell of a woman,” she said. “She's very strong, she's very capable. She's been on towers for 18 years. She's spent 13 years at Athabasca. The tower life is her life.”
Fire spotters are the first line of defence for the forest service, with 128 active watch towers sprinkled throughout Alberta. Pay depends on level of experience, but the top pay is $20.13 an hour.
Each day, Ms. Stewart would climb an outside ladder to an observation post where she spent the bulk of her day using binoculars to watch for smoke, sending her observations to headquarters by radio, and going to the cabin only to eat and sleep.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wxmissing02/BNStory/National/home



UN forces arrive in Lebanon
TODD PITMAN
Associated Press
TYRE, Lebanon — Italian soldiers began arriving Saturday in Lebanon, part of the first large contingent of international troops dispatched to boost the U.N. force keeping the peace between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.
Italian marines wearing blue berets arrived by helicopter in the Mediterranean port city of Tyre to secure two beaches where the remainder of an 880-strong battalion of Italian soldiers will land through the day. Another 200 Italian troops are expected Sunday in the capital, Beirut.
International troops have been slow to arrive in Lebanon since an Aug. 14 cease-fire brought an end to 34 days of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, in part because it took time to hammer out details over the troops' mandate.
Besides the Italian contingent, just 250 extra French soldiers have made it to the country, though France has said it will send a total of 2,000 troops.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060902.wpeace0902/BNStory/Front/home



Syria open to diplomatic relations with Lebanon: Annan
ZEINA KARAM
Associated Press
BEIRUT — Syrian President Bashar Assad told the U.N. secretary-general Friday that his government is prepared to establish formal diplomatic relations with Lebanon and delineate the border, steps Syria has resisted for six decades.
Many in Lebanon expressed skepticism, saying Assad's promises to U.N. chief Kofi Annan would likely remain just talk unless international pressure mounted on Damascus.
For Syria, the step would be seen as recognition that its decades-long domination of its smaller neighbour is truly over after crumbling the last year.
Many Lebanese suspect Syria has never really accepted Lebanon's independence and remains angry that parts of their country were carved out of the former Syrian province of the Ottoman Empire in 1920.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wsyria0901/BNStory/International/home



‘We must do something about Pakistan'

GRAEME SMITH
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
MAYWAND, AFGHANISTAN — Under a waning moon, with no electricity for light, the headquarters of Afghan forces in the Maywand district of southern Afghanistan was cloaked in heavy darkness.
Despite the late hour, district leader Haji Safullah remained awake in his concrete bunker, sitting cross-legged on ragged carpets, talking with police commanders about how to defeat the Taliban.
“Pakistan,” the former mujahedeen warrior said, his voice a growl in the dark. “We must do something about Pakistan.”
As the Taliban insurgency grows in southern Afghanistan, so do suspicions about Pakistan's role in the war. Afghans tend to blame their old nemesis for everything wrong in their country, but their accusations about the Taliban finding money, shelter, weapons and fighters on the other side of the border are getting more specific these days. Mr. Safullah rhymed off the names of Taliban leaders living in neighbourhoods and compounds around Quetta, in west-central Pakistan, and complained bitterly that his men can't hunt insurgents in those havens.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060902.wxpakistan02/BNStory/International/home



Ottawa to keep safe-injection site open
PETTI FONG
Globe and Mail Update
Vancouver's safe injection site will be kept open until December of 2007, after getting a last-minute reprieve from federal Health Minister Tony Clement.
However, Mr. Clement said he was unable to approve a request that would have extended the life of the Vancouver site for another 31/2 years.
The site, which is North America's only supervised injection facility, must have a federal exemption from drug laws in order to allow addicts to shoot up inside without fear of being arrested.
News that the site was being kept open spread quickly in the Downtown Eastside by early evening yesterday.
"People are feeling very grateful and very relieved," said Dan Small, a manager with the Portland Hotel Society, a non-profit organization that helps run the facility.
"The Prime Minister and Health Minister have done the right thing. They've responded to the evidence and the community," he said.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wsisite0901/BNStory/National/home




Mexican presidential address disrupted
JULIE WATSON
Associated Press
Related to this article
Articles
MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Vicente Fox was forced to forego the last state-of-the-nation address of his presidency Friday after leftist legislators stormed the stage of Congress to protest against disputed July 2 elections.
Instead, he gave his speech on television and called on Mexico to mend deep divisions he said threaten the country's democracy.
It was the first time in modern Mexican history a president hasn't given the annual address to Congress. Mr. Fox arrived at the door of the Legislative Palace, handed in a written copy — as the constitution requires — and announced over the loudspeaker he wouldn't appear before legislators. He did not enter the chambers and Congress was adjourned.
Appearing on television later as thousands of protesters occupied Mexico City's centre, Mr. Fox said the country "requires harmony, not anarchy."

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wmexico0901/BNStory/International/home



Germs, ahoy!

ANNE MCILROY
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
You open the door of the gas station washroom, scanning and sniffing for biohazards. It seems safe. No overflowing urinals or toilets. No sewer stench and your shoes don't stick to the floor.
But research suggests that the riskiest part of your pit stop may come after you flush. Hot water taps usually have far more fecal bacteria on them than toilet seats do, University of Arizona microbiologist Charles Gerba says.
"I'm good at using my elbow," he says.
Scientists, Dr. Gerba in particular, have made a number of discoveries about public washrooms that could turn even the most laissez-faire traveller into a germaphobe.
Consider that when you flush with the lid up, fecal bacteria are propelled into the air, landing on the tank, the floor, the seat and the toilet paper, unless it is protected by a dispenser. Hot-air dryers can also propel bacteria around the room.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060902.wtoilets0902/BNStory/Front/home



'I liked my teacher . . . honestly!'
Eight prominent Canadians . . . as students.
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Adrienne Clarkson loathed gym. Jake Gold failed — and aced — accounting. And it turns out even the head of Trinity College has had a detention or two (or three). As Canadian kids head back to school, Amy Verner leads a few of their role models down memory lane.
Adrienne Clarkson, former Governor General
Age: 67
Home town: Toronto.
Rita Judd prepares her classroom for the upcoming school year at Oak Ridges Public School in Richmond Hill, Ont. (Kevin Van Paassen/The Globe and Mail)
Academic CV: Lisgar Collegiate Institute in Ottawa, Trinity College at the University of Toronto and the Sorbonne in Paris.
Current homework assignment: I'm finishing all the details on my book, Heart Matters. It's being published simultaneously in both languages, which is extremely rare.
Would your teachers have predicted what you do now? My high school English teacher Mr. Mann was particularly inspiring. He picked me out as someone who could be a public speaker. I don't know what one would do as Governor General — giving 627 speeches in six years — without that skill.
Favourite subject: Math, probably because I found it very easy and so satisfying on an intellectual level.
Dreaded subject: I really didn't like gym. In my day, we wore these hideous blue rompers (you should dig them out of a museum some time). I'm not good at hand-eye co-ordination. Baseball and basketball were just terrible for me. I hated the competitiveness and I didn't want people to run into me.
Locker standbys: It was filled with books — and a change of shoes, because when I was at school we walked everywhere and nobody had more than two pairs each season.
Detention tally: None. I was dreadfully good.
Memorable reading: The Anne of Green Gables series. For an immigrant child, they offered Canadian history and a personal idea of what it was like to be a Canadian.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060902.wbacktoschool0902/BNStory/National/home



Dismissed Public Works adviser says he was exceeding expectations

DANIEL LEBLANC
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
OTTAWA — A government adviser whose controversial contract was terminated this week said he had just received a 15-per-cent bonus and a top-level evaluation from Public Works Canada.
“I received the maximum bonus for exceeding expectations last week,” David Rotor said in an interview yesterday, one day after losing his job as a special adviser in charge of a major reform of Ottawa's procurement system.
His salary is confidential, but it had to be approved by the Treasury Board because it was above the $140,000-$170,000 range for government employees at the same level. Government sources said he earned more than $200,000, which meant the bonus was at least $30,000.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060902.wxpublic-works02/BNStory/National/home



Fighting escalates in Darfur

Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt — Sudan has launched a major offensive against rebels in war-torn Darfur, African Union officials said Friday.
The fighting began as a senior U.S. envoy was in Sudan's capital Khartoum to press the government to accept the deployment of UN troops in the western region.
Sudan rejected as illegal Thursday a UN Security Council resolution paving the way for the replacement of 7,000 African Union troops in Darfur with more than 20,000 UN troops and police.
An African Union official in Khartoum, Sam Ibok, said more than 20 civilians have been killed and more than 1,000 displaced since major clashes started early this week.
He said the northern areas are a “no-go” zone for AU forces and therefore he had no precise information.
Sudanese officials could not be reached Friday, a weekend day, to comment on the reports. Rebel commanders did not answer calls.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wdarfur0901/BNStory/International/home



Pair travelling on Canadian passports arrested in New Zealand
Associated Press
Wellington — New Zealand border officials have seized 4.3 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine, commonly known as “ice,” concealed in the luggage of two tourists at Auckland airport, the Customs Service said Friday.
Customs officers discovered the drug packed into picture frames in the luggage of the pair who were travelling to New Zealand via Hong Kong on Canadian passports, said Eddie Kohlhase, services manager for Auckland Airport.
Officers found 43 identically sized picture frames during an X-ray examination, and discovered that each frame contained about 100 grams of crystal methamphetamine.
The street value of the seizure was about five million New Zealand dollars (about $3.6 million Cdn), Mr. Kohlhase said in a statement.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wnzdrugs0901/BNStory/International/home



NASA awards Orion contract
SETH BORENSTEIN
Associated Press
Washington — NASA on Thursday gave a multibillion-dollar contract to build a manned lunar spaceship to Lockheed Martin Corp., the aerospace leader that usually builds unmanned rockets.
The nation's space agency plans to use the Orion crew exploration vehicle to replace the space shuttle fleet, take astronauts to the moon and perhaps to Mars. Reusable and like Apollo and earlier spacecraft, it is perched atop the rocket.
The last time NASA awarded a manned spaceship contract to Lockheed Martin of Bethesda, Md., was in 1996 for a spaceplane that was supposed to replace the space shuttle. NASA spent $912-million (U.S.) and the ship, called X-33, never got built because of technical problems.
The only other competitors for the contract were a team made up of Northrop Grumman Corp., the world's largest shipbuilder and third-largest military contractor, and Boeing Co.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060831.worion0831/BNStory/Science/home



NASA to launch Atlantis next Wednesday
MIKE SCHNEIDER
Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — After a week of weather delays, NASA officials on Thursday set a Wednesday launch time for space shuttle Atlantis on its mission to resume construction of the international space station.
The launch decision was made after a check of Kennedy Space Center following Ernesto's pass as a tropical depression on Wednesday found no serious damage.
“We're back,” said NASA spokesman Bill Johnson. “There was no water intrusion in any operational areas, and so basically we came through this one unscathed.”
The launch time was set for 12:29 p.m. EDT on Wednesday. If the shuttle doesn't lift off then, NASA has launch opportunities in the following two days.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060831.wnasashut0831/BNStory/Science/home



Scientists turn immune cells into tumour fighters
LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S. government scientists turned regular blood cells into tumour attackers that wiped out all signs of cancer in two men with advanced melanoma. The striking finding, unveiled Thursday, marks an important step in the quest for gene therapy for cancer.
But the genetically altered cells didn't help 15 other melanoma victims. So scientists are trying to strengthen the shots.
Still, the U.S. National Cancer Institute called its experiment the first real success in cancer gene therapy — because it fought cancer's worst stage, when it has spread through the body, unlike earlier attempts that targeted single tumours.
And the government hopes to soon begin testing the gene therapy in small numbers of patients dying from more common cancers, such as advanced breast or colon cancer.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060831.wgenes0831/BNStory/specialScienceandHealth/home



Daily dose of multivitamins cuts birth defects, study says
ANDRÉ PICARD
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
All women of childbearing age should be taking a daily multivitamin to reduce the risks of having a child with birth defects, according to the results of a Canadian study.
The new research shows that ensuring an adequate intake of vitamins and minerals by taking a single, cheap pill on a daily basis sharply cuts the likelihood of a wide range of severe birth defects, including neural-tube defects such as spina bifida, brain-damaging hydrocephalus, heart malformations, truncated or missing limbs, urinary-tract abnormalities and cleft palate.
"The data are really very striking. It seems almost too good to be true that a prenatal multivitamin can have such an impact. But it is true," Gideon Koren, director of the Motherisk Program at the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children, said in an interview.
Earlier research showed that increasing the level of folic acid (a type of B vitamin) in the diet of pregnant women with supplements and fortification of foods could virtually eliminate horrific birth defects such as spina bifida.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060831.wxhbirth31/BNStory/specialScienceandHealth/home



Blake pays tribute to Agassi
Associated Press
New York — From the Day-Glo spandex tights to the hot pink vertical bars on his shirt to the white bandanna wrapped atop his head, James Blake paid tribute to Andre Agassi at the U.S. Open on Friday.
Blake donned the sort of garish ensemble Mr. Image Is Everything dared to wear more than a decade ago and, fortunately for Blake, his game looked better than his garb in a 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (5) victory over Teimuraz Gabashvili of Russia in the second round.
His getup was appreciated by Friday's crowd. Before the coin toss, a group of fans chanted, "Andre! Andre! Andre!" and Blake turned to give them a thumbs-up.
"I just wanted to do it once. I know Andre, how he probably doesn't want a ton of fanfare," said Blake, who got Agassi's OK for the outfit. "Andre knows we all do care about him, we all appreciate everything he's done. I think the statement was made. Now it's back to business at hand."

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wtennis-open0901/BNStory/Sports/home



Would-be writers hide away for Three-Day Novel Contest

VANCOUVER
Canadian Press
Would-be authors from around the world have been fuelling up on caffeine and fast food as they prepare to write a novel this weekend.
It's the Three-Day Novel Contest and it's not for anyone with writer's block.
The gruelling event was to start as the clock ticked over into Saturday. It runs through the Labour Day weekend until midnight on Monday, at which point all writing must cease.
The contest is a way for busy people to force their creative juices to flow, contest managing editor Melissa Edwards in an interview.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wnovel0901/BNStory/Entertainment/home



Pssst. You have to see
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Actors shrug it off. Directors like to think they're above it. Producers and film distributors acknowledge it, but wonder if it's real, while publicists and journalists are attracted to it like flies.
Buzz — it's what the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) is all about.
So what are the must-see films everyone is already talking about, even five days before the festival opens?
Sarah Polley's feature directorial debut Away from Her, an adaptation of Alice Munro's short story The Bear Came Over the Mountain, is on everyone's lips. But equally interesting are some of the individual picks, such as the South African film Bunny Chow.
Films such as these can start out with just one person mentioning it to someone else. Suddenly, buzz is born.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060901.wxinsider02/BNStory/Entertainment/home



San Francisco Chronicle


'A CRITICAL STEP' ON WARMING
IMPACT: California's action could spur feds, other states to cut emissions, experts say
Jane Kay, Chronicle Environment Writer
Friday, September 1, 2006
California's new effort to curb greenhouse gases will cut less than one-half of 1 percent of the world's emissions, slowing global warming by just a tiny fraction of a degree, scientists say.
But the groundbreaking program is likely to be a catalyst for other states and the federal government to curtail fossil fuel emissions and will spur development of innovative technologies and policies, experts said Thursday.
Dan Cayan, director of the climate research division of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, called the law's passage "a critical step.''

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/01/MNGBLKTIDU1.DTL&type=science



Hurricane John Makes Landfall in Mexico
By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press Writer
Friday, September 1, 2006
(09-01) 22:13 PDT CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico (AP) --
Hurricane John roared over the sparsely populated eastern tip of the Baja California peninsula late Friday but appeared to spare the glistening resorts of Los Cabos and impoverished local residents huddled in shelters.
The Category 2 storm made landfall near the isolated hamlets of Boca de la Vinorama and Los Barriles, about 40 miles northeast of San Jose del Cabo. It was moving north at 9 mph.
Forecasters expected the hurricane to lash the state capital of La Paz with top sustained winds of 110 mph before crossing the narrow stretch of land and heading out to sea.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2006/09/01/international/i195603D05.DTL



Great white shark introduced at Monterey Bay Aquarium
(09-01) 12:29 PDT MONTEREY -- A great white shark caught outside Santa Monica Bay has been introduced to the Monterey Bay Aquarium's massive Outer Bay exhibit, marking the second time in as many years the aquarium has attempted to keep one of the fearsome predators in captivity.
Aquarists introduced the shark, a juvenile weighing 104 pounds, to the 1 million-gallon tank late Thursday after carting it north in a 3,000-gallon tanker called the "tunabago." The shark, a male measuring 5 feet 8 inches long, seems to be adapting well, officials said.
Aquarium collectors caught the fish with a hook and line Aug. 17 and placed it in a 4 million-gallon, open-water pen off the coast of Malibu. Researchers from the aquarium's White Shark Research Project saw the animal swimming actively and feeding on fish within the pen, suggesting it would be a good candidate for the aquarium's Outer Bay exhibit.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/01/MNG1IKTP904.DTL


A smashing finale to lunar mission
Astronomers prepare to glimpse crater and debris Saturday when European craft ends voyage by plunging into moon
David Perlman, Chronicle Science Editor
Saturday, September 2, 2006
A European spacecraft orbiting the moon will crash on the lunar surface Saturday night or Sunday morning, blasting out a small crater and a cloud of rocky debris that could be visible briefly on Earth to astronomers -- both professional and amateur -- but only to those with powerful telescopes.
The box-shaped little craft, a yard wide and weighing less than 700 pounds, was designed primarily to test a new type of propulsion engine for future voyages to distant planets, but for the past 16 months it has sent back to Earth hundreds of images of lunar craters and has analyzed the moon's surface soils with its instruments.
Named SMART-1, the spacecraft was the European Space Agency's first lunar mission. In preparation for its end, the agency's scientists and engineers have programmed SMART-1's thrusters to send it plunging at 4,473 mph into a target on the moon called the Lake of Excellence, a rocky plain studded with craters and their mountainous rims.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/02/MOON.TMP&type=science



OAKLAND
'Vicious attack': Woman tied up, set afire
Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, September 2, 2006
Police are trying to find the person who beat and tied up a woman and set her on fire behind a North Oakland art center Friday, a crime that shocked neighbors and parents whose children attend an adjacent school.
Investigators are treating the case as an attempted homicide and are seeking witnesses to the "vicious attack," police Lt. Ersie Joyner said.
Firefighters responding to reports of a blaze at 5 a.m. near 44th Street and Shafter Avenue in the city's Temescal neighborhood found what they believed to be a burning pile of debris behind the Studio One Art Center, fire Capt. Melinda Drayton said….
To their horror, they realized that it was a woman who had been badly beaten and set ablaze, Drayton said.
...Residents said they had noticed an increase in prostitution, drug dealing and burglaries in the neighborhood.
"It's pretty awful," said Beth Maher, 41, who has lived on Shafter Avenue for eight years and whose children attend Park Day School.
"It was pretty freaky that she was burned," said Lise Dahms, 40, holding her 2 1/2-year-old son in her arms. Dahms said she had been up all night with a newborn and hadn't heard anything out of the ordinary.
Tamar Carson, 45, another parent at the school, said, "I feel like we're living in really dark times. These things are a reflection of it."
Neighbor Jean Lutwak, 43, agreed, saying the recent criminal activity "makes us very scared, and when we leave the house now, we hide things."
Lutwak said she found it ironic that she was never the victim of a crime while living in the Bronx. Her old home in Oakland, just five blocks away, was broken into twice in one year, she said.
"The funny thing is, I don't know how to feel safe," Lutwak said.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/02/BURNED.TMP



Mexican Lawmakers Block Fox's Speech
By JULIE WATSON, Associated Press Writer
Friday, September 1, 2006
(09-01) 23:47 PDT MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) --
Vicente Fox was forced to forego the last state-of-the-nation address of his presidency Friday after leftist lawmakers stormed the stage of Congress to protest disputed July 2 elections.
It was the first time in modern Mexican history a president hasn't given the annual address to Congress. Instead, Fox handed in a written copy of his report, and his office said he would address the nation in a televised speech later Friday.
A text of the speech Fox had planned to deliver to Congress called on Mexico to mend deep divisions that he said threatened the country's newfound democracy.
"Whoever attacks our laws and institutions also attacks our history and Mexico," he said, a thinly veiled reference to leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2006/09/01/international/i173711D97.DTL



Pentagon Says Iraq Violence Spreading
By ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer
Friday, September 1, 2006
(09-01) 11:28 PDT WASHINGTON, (AP) --
Sectarian violence is spreading in Iraq and the security problems have become more complex than at any time since the U.S. invasion in 2003, the Pentagon said Friday.
In a notably gloomy report to Congress, the Pentagon said illegal militias have become more entrenched, especially in Baghdad neighborhoods where they are seen as providers of security as well as basic social services.
The report described a rising tide of sectarian violence, fed in part by interference from neighboring Iran and Syria and driven by a "vocal minority" of religious extremists who oppose the idea of a democratic Iraq.
Death squads targeting mainly Iraqi civilians are a growing problem, heightening the risk of civil war, it said.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2006/09/01/national/w081151D47.DTL

continued …