This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman (I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Wednesday, January 05, 2005
The December 26th Earthquake may very well be 3 Aftershocks from the 8.1 Quake of December 23, 2004
New Zealand and the Antarctica Vortex Periphery
The Icebergs reported below in "The New Zealand Herald" IS MOST LIKELY DUE TO THE TSUNAMI TO THE ICE SHELF FROM THE 8.3 QUAKE THREE DAYS BEFORE THE DEADLY '?AFTER SHOCKS?' that totalled 9.0. The 9.0 was a result of three events. The quake on December 23rd was one event. It makes for interesting contemplation to realize we could go over 9.0 if indeed there is a series of quakes that result in cumulative effects greater than the 10.0 scale.
DEC 23
14 59 03.6 50.145 S 160.365 E 10 G 8.1 1.3 183
NORTH OF MACQUARIE ISLAND.
MW 8.1 (HRV)
8.0 (GS)
8.1 (HRV)
ME 8.2 (GS)
Mo 1.6*10**21 Nm (HRV)
1.0*10**21 Nm (GS)
5.4*10**20 Nm (PPT). Es 5.2*10**16 Nm (GS).
Felt throughout Tasmania, Australia and over much of the South Island, New Zealand.
Icebergs in our waters for the first time since 1948
06.01.05 1.00pm
by Heather Tyler
If you've got a sinking feeling about summer here's more proof -- icebergs have been spotted in New Zealand waters for the first time since 1948.
The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (Niwa) said today clusters of icebergs had been seen in the Southern Ocean east of Campbell Island, 700km southeast of the South Island.
Niwa scientist Dr Lionel Carter said 15 icebergs, some up to 3km wide, were recorded in a single sighting just before Christmas.
"In 30 years of working for Niwa, this is the first time I have recorded sightings of icebergs in New Zealand waters," he told NZPA.
Previous reportings were in the 1890s, early 1920s, 1930s and in 1948.
In 1892 icebergs were reported as far north as Chatham Rise and in 1931 near Dunedin.
Dr Carter said the icebergs may have been generated by large break-ups of the vast ice shelves in the Ross Sea and Weddel Sea in recent years.
Cloudy conditions had prevented satellite tracking and recording of the icebergs and Niwa had relied on visual confirmation. The icebergs were expected to drift away towards South America.
There was a gap in official records, but he believed it was the first time icebergs had been recorded since 1948.
The icebergs were much bigger. They were melting as they drifted further away from Antarctica and into warmer waters -- that's anything over about 8degC.
"But if a strong southerly picks up they will drift towards Chatham Islands area," Dr Carter said.
He said it was too soon to blame this flotilla of ice on global warming.
However, the coincidence of large collapses of the Antarctic ice shelves with a rapidly changing climate could not be dismissed, which was why considerable effort was going into identifying the causes of ice shelf collapse and its downstream effects on global ocean and climate.
"The presence of the icebergs shows how intimately we are tied to Antarctica," Dr Carter said.
The most northerly iceberg was seen 240km southwest of Antipodes Island, 1030km southeast of Port Chalmers.
- NZPA
The Volume of Ocean that reacted to the Quake is Impressive
The Resonance of the Indian Ocean Tsunami of December 26, 2004
Nature 433, 3 (06 January 2005); doi:10.1038/433003b
Triple slip of tectonic plates caused seafloor surge
MICHAEL HOPKIN
Biggest quake in 40 years redraws the map.
In the aftermath of the tsunami that devastated coastlines around the Indian Ocean, experts are piecing together details of the seismic slip that sparked the waves. The earthquake, the world's biggest for more than 40 years and the fourth largest since 1900, has literally redrawn the map, moving some islands by up to 20 metres.
The destruction, which claimed as many as 150,000 lives, was unleashed by a 'megathrust' — a sudden juddering movement beneath the sea floor. A build-up of pressure caused the floor of the Indian Ocean to lurch some 15 metres towards Indonesia, burrowing under a tectonic plate and triggering the ferocious swells that smashed into surrounding shores.
The earthquake followed almost two centuries of tension during which the India plate pressed against the Burma microplate, which carries the tip of Sumatra as well as the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The plates move against one another at an average rate of about 6 centimetres a year, but this movement does not occur smoothly. There has not been a very large quake along this fault since 1833 — a fact that may have contributed to the huge force of this one. The India plate's jarring slide released the tension on the Burma microplate, causing it to spring violently upwards.
Quakes of this type, called subduction earthquakes, are commonplace throughout the world, but rarely strike with such force, says Roger Musson of the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh. "This is the largest earthquake I've seen in my career as a seismologist," he says. "The length of the rupture was 1,200 kilometres — I could hardly believe it."
The earthquake, measured at magnitude 9.0, actually consisted of three events that occurred within seconds of each other, Musson explains. The initial slip, which happened to the west of Sumatra's northern tip, triggered two further slips to the north. The total force released was enough to jolt the entire planet.
The seafloor bulge unleashed a wave that surged through the Indian Ocean. Initially, the energy of such a wave is distributed throughout the water column, and surface perturbation is small. Only when the water grows shallow, near the coast, does the wave emerge on the surface as a tsunami — the name is Japanese for 'harbour wave'. In this case, the wave hit Indonesia and Thailand within an hour, and then Sri Lanka and India, ultimately reaching as far as eastern Africa.
....................................
Nature 433, 4 (06 January 2005); doi:10.1038/433004a
Tsunamis: a long-term threat
QUIRIN SCHIERMEIER
Other regions around the globe are at higher risk.
Last month's tsunami tragedy, shocking as it was, had ample historical precedent. On 1 November 1755, for example, a fire following an earthquake destroyed two-thirds of Lisbon, Portugal. In panic, the population sought shelter near the shoreline, only to be hit by waves said to be as high as houses. More than 60,000 people died.
Devastating tsunamis are known in historical times to have affected the populated coasts of Papua New Guinea, Japan, Hawaii, Crete, Sicily and the Crimea — to name just a few. In the Pacific region, where 80% of all tsunamis occur, a 1947 analysis indicated that seismic sea waves higher than 7.5 metres occur on average every 15 years1. Records going back to 684 BC refer to four Pacific tsunamis higher than 30 metres.
Outside the Pacific, tsunami frequencies have been studied in some detail only for the Aegean and Black Sea regions. Records there reveal that the coastal and surrounding areas of Turkey have been affected by more than 90 tsunamis over the past 3,000 years2.
For most other areas, information concerning the return periods of tsunamis is scarce. A rough comparison of tsunami frequencies in different parts of the globe was done in 2000 by the London-based Benfield Hazard Research Centre, as part of its Tsunami Risks Project. The resulting risk analysis estimates the return periods of 10-metre waves to be about 1,000 years for the North Atlantic and Indian oceans, southern Japan and the Caribbean, 500 years for the Philippines and the Mediterranean Sea, 250 years for Alaska, South America and Kamchatka in eastern Siberia, and less than 200 years for Hawaii and the southwest Pacific.
The south Asian disaster will have a "huge effect" on instigating more thorough risk assessments, predicts Bill McGuire, a volcanologist and director of the London research centre, as well as encouraging preventive measures in threatened regions.
Morning Papers - continued
Surviving Buddist Statue in Sri Lanka
The Washington Post
Pentagon Scales Back Arms Plans
Current Needs Outweigh Advances in Technology
By Jonathan Weisman and Renae Merle
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, January 5, 2005; Page A01
Rising war costs and a stubborn budget deficit have forced the Pentagon to propose billions of dollars in cuts to advanced weapons systems, as the military refocuses spending from its vision of a transformed fighting force to the more down-to-earth needs of its ground troops.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48425-2005Jan4.html
Gonzales Helped Set the Course for Detainees
Justice Nominee's Hearings Likely to Focus on Interrogation Policies
By R. Jeffrey Smith and Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, January 5, 2005; Page A01
In March 2002, U.S. elation at the capture of al Qaeda operations chief Abu Zubaida was turning to frustration as he refused to bend to CIA interrogation. But the agency's officers, determined to wring more from Abu Zubaida through threatening interrogations, worried about being charged with violating domestic and international proscriptions on torture.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48446-2005Jan4.html
Get Over The Gadgets and Deal the Cards
By Steven Pearlstein
Wednesday, January 5, 2005; Page E01
In the past, the conversation at my monthly poker game would turn to politics, or sports or real estate or . . . well, you know. But no longer. These days, my card-playing pals are so busy showing off their new BlackBerrys or boasting about the newest features on the Palm Pilot that we can hardly get in a decent game of Follow the Queen.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A48743-2005Jan4?language=printer
The Cheney Observer
Odor in the Court
January 4, 2005
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas insists that because he reported the sometimes lavish gifts he has received over the years, he should be off the hook. Legally, perhaps, but not ethically.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-thomas4jan04,1,3577327,print.story?coll=la-news-comment-editorials
Supreme Court judges should turn aside gifts
Published: Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2005
KEY POINTS
BACKGROUND: A recent news article showed how U.S. Supreme Court justices are allowed to accept gifts from entities that don’t have an issue before the court.
CONCLUSION: A panel of the American Bar Association is recommending tighter controls over the receipt of such gifts and it’s high time they were adopted.
A recent news article by The Associated Press presented an aspect of the U.S. Supreme Court that is seldom discussed but should be.
http://www.nashuatelegraph.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050104/OPINION01/101040032/-1/opinion
Pension group asks SEC to deny Halliburton request
JUDITH BURNS
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A leading pension fund has asked the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission to deny a request by Halliburton Co. to block shareholders from voting on a plan that would allow them to nominate their own candidates to the company's board.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/financial_markets/10563470.htm
Canada finds suspected new case of mad cow
By COLIN MCCLELLAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Dr. Gary Little of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, addresses the media at a news conference in Ottawa, Thursday, Dec. 30, 2004, concerning another possible case of mad cow disease. Little said Thursday none of the animals parts made their way into the food or feed systems. (AP PHOTO/Tom Hanson, CP)
OTTAWA -- Canada has found what may be a second case of mad cow disease, officials said Thursday, just a day after the United States said it planned to reopen its border to Canadian beef.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apcanada_story.asp?category=1101&slug=Canada%20US%20Mad%20Cow
Russia and China to hold joint maneuvers
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
MOSCOW -- Once-bitter rivals Russia and China will hold a massive joint military exercise on Chinese territory next year involving submarines and possibly strategic bombers, Russia's defense minister said Monday as the two nations move to bolster already burgeoning military ties.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/printer/ap.asp?category=1103&slug=Russia%20China
Court denies the appeal of Schiavo's parents to reopen case
The Associated Press
TAMPA -- An appeals court Wednesday denied a request from Terri Schiavo's parents to reopen the severely brain-damaged woman's case, based upon a recent statement of Pope John Paul II, according to the court clerk's office.
The Lakeland-based 2nd District Court of Appeal issued the denial without a written opinion.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/florida/sfl-1230schiavo,0,4345161.story?coll=sfla-news-florida
Reilly says he wants control of Big Dig cost recovery effort
By Associated Press
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
BOSTON - Attorney General Tom Reilly says it's time for him to take control of the Big Dig's cost recovery effort.
Reilly says the Turnpike's in-house cost recovery program, which his office participates in, isn't working.
Governor Romney criticized Reilly, saying that as attorney general, Reilly could have tackled Big Dig cost overruns much earlier if he wanted. Reilly is a likely Democratic candidate for governor in 2006.
Turnpike Chairman Matt Amorello issued a written statement hinting he might support transferring the cost recovery effort to Reilly.
The proposal to give Reilly full control of cost recovery was included in a report issued today by The Senate Post Audit and Oversight Committee.
The report made several other recommendations, including threatening to bar Big Dig contractor Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff from any future state contracts.
http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=60991
Independent Media TV
Under Reported
December 14, 2004
Prince Neil Bush - Far From Charming
By: Evelyn Pringle
Independent Media TV
Once upon a time, Prince Neil Bush was best-known for his role in the collapse of the Silverado Savings and Loan. But here come to find out, he is actually the romeo of the Bush Royal Family.
http://www.independent-media.tv/itemprint.cfm?fmedia_id=10144&fcategory_desc=Under%20Reported
Environmental agency files complaint over oil spill by Mexican oil monopoly
ASSOCIATED PRESS
8:23 p.m. December 28, 2004
MEXICO CITY – Mexico's federal environmental prosecutor's office on Tuesday said it has filed a complaint as investigations continue into the cause of an oil spill by the country's state oil monopoly that sent 5,000 barrels of petroleum into a river feeding the Gulf of Mexico.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/mexico/20041228-2023-mexico-oilspill.html
GOP begging Democrats for inauguration tickets
December 29, 2004
BY JESSE J. HOLLAND
Advertisement
WASHINGTON -- It's one of the hottest tickets in Washington this winter, and unlike most of the parties planned for President Bush's second inauguration, it's free and the dress is come-however-you-can-stay-warm. But getting one of the 250,000 tickets to Bush's swearing-in ceremony on the steps of the Capitol won't be easy, particularly for people from so-called red states that voted Republican in November.
For most people, the only way they can get a ticket is through their senator or representative and the demand for them in GOP-majority states is running high.
http://www.suntimes.com/output/elect/cst-nws-inaug29.html
EDITORIAL
Bush's activist bench
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
WHEN IT comes to picking bad judges, President Bush would rather fight than switch. In a move that clearly revealed his ideological stripe, Bush announced last week that he was renominating 20 judges to the federal bench that couldn't pass muster with the previous Senate.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/12/29/EDG13AHP971.DTL
No honeymoon for Bush as approval slumps
By Peter Wallsten
Washington
December 30, 2004
Despite a clear-cut re-election and the prospect of lasting Republican dominance in Congress, President George Bush will begin his second term with polls showing he has the lowest approval ratings of any just-elected sitting president in half a century.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/World/No-honeymoon-for-Bush-as-approval-slumps/2004/12/29/1103996610162.html
The Japan Times
Hundreds of Japanese yet to be verified safe
BANGKOK (Kyodo) Rescue workers and Japanese diplomats said Tuesday that information and evidence suggest more than 30 Japanese citizens may have been swept away in southern Thailand by the tsunamis generated by the magnitude 9 earthquake off Indonesia on Dec. 26.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20050105a1.htm
Team in South Asia to assess SDF aid role
By NAO SHIMOYACHI
Staff writer
The Defense Agency sent a 20-member team Tuesday to South Asia to assess what the Self-Defense Forces can do to help survivors of the Dec. 26 earthquake and widespread killer tsunamis.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20050105a2.htm
Marital expectations help ensure singles ranks soar
By AKEMI NAKAMURA
Staff writer
She's a 38-year-old Tokyo working woman, enjoys single life, drives a sports car and dines at gourmet restaurants.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20050104f1.htm
Aged care, drivers' license woes and an alert
By KEN JOSEPH JR.
'Kaigo hoken'
I have been in Japan many years but have never applied for permanent residence. I had personal insurance under Pacific Star until last year. Their present carrier will not insure past renewal at age 64. I do not know how much longer I will be in Japan but I am positive that at the time I should need nursing care I would return to the U.S.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?fl20050104kj.htm
Wheeler-dealers can always go home if the going gets dicey
By JEFF KINGSTON
UGLY AMERICANS: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboys Who Raided the Asian Markets for Millions, by Ben Mezrich. William Morrow, 2004, $24.95 (cloth).
The financial tycoons depicted in "Ugly Americans" were once dubbed Masters of the Universe, but they emerge here as hedonistic clowns. Their story is something like "Animal House" meets "Bonfire of the Vanities," with adolescent frat boys prowling Japan for babes, booze and big bucks.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?fb20041219a1.htm
The Los Angeles Times
Powell Surveys Area Devastated by Tsunami
By Paul Richter
Times Staff Writer
...The airport at Banda Aceh has become a crucial distribution point for food, while authorities tried to funnel other supplies into Sumatra's interior, where hundreds of thousands were without basic necessities.
But after the visit by the U.S. delegation to the area around Banda Aceh, officials said they believe an inadequate air traffic control system was restricting the flow of American C-130 cargo planes.
Indonesian authorities do not have an air controllers working at Banda Aceh. They rely instead on controllers about 240 miles to the southeast, in Medan.
"The air traffic control system probably could be refined to increase significantly the number of C-130s coming in," said Andrew Natsios, director of the U.S. Agency for International Development. "We think a lot more could be landing."
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-010505powell_lat,0,5036340,print.story?coll=la-home-headlines
50-Year War of Words Tactics shift and ideology has softened, but China and Taiwan still aim radio propaganda at each other 24 hours a day.
By Mark Magnier, Times Staff Writer
TAIPEI, Taiwan — The radio show called "Special Communications" was an unlikely hit, given that it consisted of announcers reading strings of numbers for 15 minutes.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-propaganda5jan05,0,4760345.story?coll=la-home-headlines>
Castaic's Busy Snow Days
Closure of part of Interstate 5 turns the sleepy community into a temporary boom town as truckers and travelers wait out the storms.
By Amanda Covarrubias, Times Staff Writer
Most of the time, Castaic is a mountain hamlet of a few hundred residents pressed hard against Interstate 5 at the southern end of the Grapevine.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-grapevine5jan05,0,5856933.story?coll=la-home-local>
SWEET CHARITY: Taiping prison
State Proposes HMO Drug Regulations
The rules are meant to implement a 2002 law protecting prescription coverage. Co-payment size remains an issue.
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-drugs5jan05,0,7037593.story?coll=la-home-business
Clarence Thomas Is in the Right Seat
As chief justice, he'd lose clout.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-yoo5jan05,0,5780145.story>
The New Strait Times
Taiping prisoners chip in to help tsunami victims
Jaspal Singh
IPOH:
Behind bars for crimes against society, Taiping Prison’s internees only have money paid to them for work done while in jail.
It is not a great deal, but it is all they have to start a new life when they are released. And they are giving it up for victims of the Dec 26 tsunami.
Prison director Narander Singh was awed when some of the longer serving prisoners, "seniors" as he refers to them, spoke to him about putting their money together to help the tsunami victims.
More than half the 1,900 inmates will donate between RM20 and RM50 today.
A small sum it may seem, but this represents the total of all that some prisoners have accumulated while serving sentence.
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Wednesday/Frontpage/20050105080741/Article/indexb_html
TSUNAMI RELIEF:: MRCS relief team contacts hq
Lee Siew Lian reporting from Banda Aceh
Jan 4:
CRACKLING through the static came the heartening words: "We are proud of you."
The Malaysian Red Crescent Society (MRCS) relief team here had their first direct communication with headquarters in Kuala Lumpur last night, on their seventh day here and the ninth day after the earthquake and tsunami that devastated Aceh.
Wan Johari Wan Osman, an amateur ham radio operator, had arrived late on Sunday with his long-range radio equipment.
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Wednesday/National/NST32198835.txt/Article/indexb_html
COVER STORY: A home for every pawed friend
LOKE POH LIN
Jan 5:
Stray-free and responsible ownership of pets. These humane goals are SPCA Selangor’s vision for Malaysia in five years, writes LOKE POH LIN.
WOULDN’T it be heavenly if one could sit at a warong sipping a teh tarik without stray cats milling about picking food off the table next to you? Wouldn't it be wonderful if there were no more stray dogs barking at your car and messing up the neighbourhood garbage cans? Wouldn't it be great if there were no more sickly, mangy animals run over by cars and hurt by abusive human beings?
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Wednesday/Features/20050104164640/Article/indexb_html
The Seattle Post Intelligencer
GOP may object to ratification of governor vote
Legislative tradition poised to fall
By CHRIS McGANN
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER CAPITOL CORRESPONDENT
OLYMPIA -- It's usually no more than a formality.
State House and Senate leaders who gather here next week will announce that, hearing no objection, the Legislature hereby ratifies the 2004 election.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/206605_governor05.html
Study flunks state's math, English criteria
Foundation describes standards as 'poorly written, pretentious'
By GREGORY ROBERTS
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
Washington state ranks almost dead last nationwide when it comes to setting worthwhile standards for student achievement in public schools, an educational research group said in a study released yesterday.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/206601_standards05.html
Aceh inmates stood no chance in tsunami
By CHRIS BRUMMITT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
This photo shows the destruction left the Dec. 26 tsunami near the sea coast of Banda Aceh, Indonesia Wednesday, Jan.5, 2005. US Secretary of State Colin Powell toured Indonesia's tsunami-ravaged Aceh province Wednesday and said the devastation wrought by the disaster was the worst he had ever seen. (AP Photo/Choo Youn-kong, PoolL)
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia -- Soon after the earthquake shook Banda Aceh prison, wardens released the inmates into the central courtyard, fearing a second, more powerful temblor might collapse the cells.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apasia_story.asp?category=1104&slug=Tsunami%20Nowhere%20to%20Run
The Jakarta Post
Strong earthquake aftershock strikes Banda Aceh
BANDA ACEH, Aceh (Antara): A strong aftershock from theearthquake that triggered the Asian tsunami disaster has hit the devastated province of Aceh on Wednesday, but caused no major damage, an official said.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20050105130635&irec=7
Low coordination breeds chaos
The Jakarta Post, Banda Aceh/Lhokseumawe/Jakarta
The massive relief operation for tsunami-hit areas in Aceh is on the brink of chaos with the absence of a single authority directing the aid effort.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20050105.@01&irec=0
At least 1,000 teachers missing in Aceh, 50% of schools destroyed
JAKARTA (Antara): At least 1,000 teachers have been reported missing in Aceh and over 50 percent of school buildings devastated by last week's tsunamis, an official said on Wednesday.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20050105191157&irec=0
Heavy punishment sought for tsunami-aid embezzlers
JAKARTA (Antara): President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono demanded on Wednesday the heavy punishment of those swindling both foreign and domestic assistance for tsunami survivors in Aceh.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20050105190328&irec=1
'Rainbow Warrior' joins Aceh relief
… Working with environmental organization Greenpeace, the Rainbow Warrior vessel departed Singapore on Monday with an MSF team and is scheduled to arrive on Tuesday in Medan, North Sumatra.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20050105.B02&irec=9
Helicopter drops aid load over Medan, damaging car at shopping mall
MEDAN, North Sumatra (AP): A load of relief supplies slung under a U.S. military helicopter fell and slammed into a car parked at a shopping mall in the Indonesian city of Medan early Wednesday, local officials said.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20050105150024&irec=3
Holiday delirium and lack of public civility
B. Herry-Priyono, Jakarta
A colossal catastrophe caused by the gigantic earthquake and tsunami has befallen us on the days we were preparing all kinds of glittery parties and delirious merrymaking to ring in the year 2005.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20050105.E02&irec=1
Indonesia, ASEAN and Australia trapped by sense of superiority
S.P. Seth, Sydney
Indonesia is understandably upset over Australia's recent announcement of its plan to establish a 1,000-mile maritime identification zone to fight terrorism and other international crimes. (Under the plan, Canberra will be able to intercept foreign vessels once they pass within 1,000 nautical miles of Australia's coastline.) According to Indonesia's Foreign Minister, Hassan Wirayuda, the plan is unacceptable because "it breaches our maritime jurisdiction." He added, "We view this concept as having the potential for violating international maritime law."
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20050105.E03&irec=2
Aceh students find scholastic help
Sari P. Setiogi and Slamet Susanto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta/Yogyakarta
For university students in Aceh, the tsunami disaster did not only take away the lives of their families, but also their future, as they might have to give up their studies.
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20050105.A03&irec=5
Anti-Semitism
ADL Notes Increase in Percentage of Anti-Jewish Hate Crimes in LA County
Los Angeles, December 16, 2004….The Hate Crimes Report released by the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations today shows that, while hate crimes are down from their post-9/11/2001 highs, Jews continue to be the most frequently targeted religious group, now accounting for 84% of religious-based hate crimes.
http://www.adl.org/PresRele/ASUS_12/4608_12.htm
continued...
Morning Papers - download the PDF
Medical Worker in Banda Aceh
Today in History
In 1592, born Shah Jahan Mughal emperor of India (1628-58), built Taj Mahal.
In 1779, born Zebulon Montgomery Pike explorer (Pike's Peak).
In 1781, a British naval expedition led by Benedict Arnold burned Richmond, Va.
In 1855, King Camp Gillette inventor (safety razor).
In 1895, French Captain Alfred Dreyfus, convicted of treason, was publicly stripped of his rank. (He was ultimately vindicated.)
In 1914, Henry Ford establishes a minimum wage of $5 per eight-hour day in his automobile factories.
In 1925, Nellie T. Ross succeeded her late husband as governor of Wyoming, becoming the first female governor in U.S. history.
In 1931, born Alvin Ailey, American dancer and choreographer, founding director of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, an internationally renowned modern-dance repertory company. Born in Rogers, Texas, Ailey enrolled at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and became involved with the Lester Horton Dance Theater in 1949. He studied under Horton, and after Horton's death in 1953, Ailey became director of the company, a position he held until 1954. That same year Ailey moved to New York City. There he appeared in a number of stage productions while studying under American dancers Martha Graham, Charles Weidman, Doris Humphrey, and Hanya Holm and American actor Stella Adler. During this time Ailey gained fame for the strength and grace of his performances. In 1958 he formed his own company, which joined the New York City Center in 1972.
In 1933, Construction begins on the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California.
In 1939, born Bridget Parker England, equestrian 3 day event (Olympics-gold-1972).
In 1949, U.S. president Harry S. Truman announces the Fair Deal.
In 1970, Joseph A. Yablonski, an unsuccessful candidate for the presidency of the United Mine Workers of America, was found murdered with his wife and daughter at their Clarksville, Pa., home. UMWA President Anthony Boyle and three others were convicted of the killings.
In 1972, U.S. President Richard Nixon authorizes a $5.5 billion, six-year program to develop plans for a spaceship capable of undertaking multiple missions, thereby launching the space shuttle program.
Reported: MISSING in ACTION
http://www.scopesys.com/today/
The Sydney Morning Herald
Kyoto, coming ready or not
The Kyoto protocol on climate change is coming, whether the United States and Australia like it or not. The Federal Government argues there are flaws in the deal, which commits the world's industrialised economies to a collective 5.2 per cent reduction on 1990 levels of greenhouse gas emissions. And it's right. Any international agreement to combat pollution, on a global level, cuts across national economic interests. No government should cede competitive advantage lightly, especially if, as Kyoto prescribes, the cost of cutting these gas emissions is to be born, initially, only by advanced industrial economies.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Editorial/Kyoto-coming-ready-or-not/2004/12/26/1103996435518.html
'It will take time to track them down'
Prime Minister John Howard said today 560 Australians were still unaccounted for in the wake of the tsunami disaster.
Mr Howard will fly out of Australia today for a meeting of world leaders in Jakarta to discuss help for tsunami-devastated southern Asia.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Asia-Tsunami/It-will-take-time-to-track-them-down/2005/01/05/1104832147391.html
Indonesia, Australia closer than ever
By Cynthia Banham, Tom Allard and Mark Metherell
January 5, 2005
Safe but scared . . . a child who survived the tsunami stares out from an army tent at a refugee camp in Banda Aceh.
Australia's response to Indonesia's tsunami tragedy has heralded a new era of close relations between the two countries, the Indonesian ambassador to Australia said yesterday, and would be remembered for "years to come".
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Asia-Tsunami/Indonesia-Australia-closer-than-ever/2005/01/04/1104832113251.html
Annan reveals shake-up for year of change
The United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, has announced a management shake-up, saying the year ahead offered a "critical opportunity" for the organisation to change.
Speaking at a press conference in New York on Monday, Mr Annan announced the appointment of a new chief of staff, Mark Malloch Brown.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Annan-reveals-shakeup-for-year-of-change/2005/01/04/1104832107988.html
Call to ease dumped import ban
The consumer regulator has urged that anti-dumping laws be pared back to ensure lower prices for consumers, a move that could smooth the path for a trade deal with China.
The chairman of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Graeme Samuel, joined the Federal Government's key economic reform agency in warning that anti-dumping laws had been abused by protectionist industries. "Anti-dumping is a competition issue," Mr Samuel said.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Business/Call-to-ease-dumped-import-ban/2005/01/04/1104832109699.html
US diocese in record $128m sex abuse deal
Hours after agreeing to pay $US100 million ($128.6 million) and make public the secret files of the Catholic diocese of Orange, Bishop Tod Brown knelt in prayer and asked for healing and reconciliation for the victims of sexual abuse by priests.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/US-diocese-in-record-128m-sex-abuse-deal/2005/01/04/1104832108593.html
Court upholds Pinochet's indictment
Chile's Supreme Court upheld the indictment and house arrest of former dictator General Augusto Pinochet for nine kidnappings and one homicide allegedly committed during a long regime marked by human rights abuses.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Breaking-News/Court-upholds-Pinochets-indictment/2005/01/05/1104832158699.html
NZ doubles tsunami aid donation
New Zealand says it has doubled its contribution for tsunami relief to $NZ10 million ($A9.01 million).
The government also pledged to match public contributions to aid agencies, which have already exceeded NZ$4 million ($A3.60 million).
http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/NZ-doubles-tsunami-aid-donations/2005/01/05/1104832154234.html
Seeing terror in a new light
The tsunami that wreaked so much destruction are also reshaping the world's political geography, and for the better. The terrible events of December 26 have already moved the United States to acknowledge a broader, more realistic, view of how to fight terrorism.
The US "war on terrorism" has so far been just that: full-scale war in pursuit of regime change and nation building. Now, in pledging long-term assistance to the tsunami disaster zone, the US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, has explicitly acknowledged the role of poverty, disease and hopelessness in fostering extremism and undermining democracy. It is a pity Mr Powell couched his comments in terms of America's national security interest, rather than the general good. However, his words are no less important for that.
http://www.smh.com.au/editorial/index.html
The Boston Globe
Indonesia starts building refugee camps for 500,000, while world leaders prepare to meet on tsunami relief
By Burt Herman, Associated Press, 1/5/2005 07:02
ADVERTISEMENT
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) The United Nations said Wednesday that camps for up to 500,000 tsunami refugees will be built on devastated Sumatra island, while world leaders headed to Indonesia to discuss how to distribute billions of dollars in aid.
http://www.boston.com/dailynews/005/world/Indonesia_starts_building_refu:.shtml
Newark North
By Steve Bailey, Globe Columnist January 5, 2005
Imagine a giant scrap yard at the foot of our cleaned-up Boston Harbor. Massport is doing just that.
We like to talk about the New Boston and our new harbor, which we spent $3.8 billion reclaiming. Now think lovely Newark, N.J., home of just the kind of Third World scrap yard Massport is considering for 26 acres on the waterfront in the Boston Marine Industrial Park in South Boston. No final decision has been made, but Massport confirms that Metal Management Inc., which operates 40 recycling facilities in 13 states, is the high bidder and leading candidate among three proposals for the waterfront site. In other words, it pays for Massport to say yes to a scrap yard.
http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2005/01/05/newark_north/
http://www.boston.com/
Honesty is the best policy in educating youths about steroids
By Dr. Darshak Sanghavi January 4, 2005
A few years ago, I helped care for a teenager with cystic fibrosis, a chronic lung disease often causing malnutrition. Such patients are usually quite thin. But this young man was suspiciously muscular, and when asked, admitted to using anabolic steroids. He said he needed the look to be an actor someday.
http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/fitness/articles/2005/01/04/honesty_is_the_best_policy_in_educating_youths_about_steroids/
What causes bad breath and how can I get rid of it?
January 4, 2005
Bad breath, or halitosis, is often caused by bacteria in the mouth or upper airway that produce sulfur-containing compounds. Usually it can be banished by flossing and brushing teeth twice a day, and brushing and scraping the tongue. If bacteria also are lurking in deep ''pockets" in the gums, a dental professional must scrape them out.
http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/diseases/articles/2005/01/04/what_causes_bad_breath_and_how_can_i_get_rid_of_it/
The New York Times
Korea's Tricky Task: Digging Up Past Treachery
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
A display of life-size models of Koreans who resisted Japanese imperialism. But maybe it wasn't that simple.
SEOUL, South Korea - This country may be selling plasma television sets to America and it may have the highest percentage of broadband Internet users in the world. But these days, South Korea's political and intellectual class is also looking back, not only at the military era that ended in the late 1980's but also at the Japanese colonial period that ended six decades ago.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/05/international/asia/05letter.html?hp
Powell, in Indonesia, Describes Scenes of Devastation
By SCOTT SHANE
Published: January 5, 2005
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia, Jan. 5 - Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida got their first look at the epicenter of the tsunami's destruction today, flying low in Navy Seahawk helicopters over miles of flattened coastal villages where tens of thousands of people died.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/05/international/worldspecial4/05cnd-quake.html?hp&ex=1104987600&en=fd46b337108d7584&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Bangkok Post
US help for Thai early alert system
Expertise, technical assistance pledged
The United States is willing to provide Thailand with expertise and technical assistance to develop an early warning system to avert future tsunami disasters, Foreign Minister Surakiart Sathirathai said yesterday.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/05Jan2005_news04.php
B4bn monthly tourism revenue loss expected in affected region
Boaters at an undamaged marina in Phuket continue to enjoy their vacations on the island. Efforts are now under way to get a better assessment of damage to coral reefs, a big draw for divers worldwide. — TAWATCHAI KEMGUMNERD
Stricken area to take 2-3 months to restore
NONDHANADA INTARAKOMALYASUT ACHATAYA CHUENNIRAN
Thailand stands to lose four billion baht a month in tourism revenue from the tsunami-struck southern provinces, where it is likely to take at least two to three months to restore facilities, according to Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT).
http://www.bangkokpost.com/Business/05Jan2005_biz12.php
Michael Moore Today
http://www.michaelmoore.com/
Tuesday, January 4, 2004
Just One Senator... An Open Letter to the U.S. Senate from Michael Moore
Dear Members of the U.S. Senate,
Welcome back! The 109th session of Congress has just begun. I'm watching you on C-SPAN right now and you all look so snap-happy and clean-faced. It's like the first day of school all over again, isn't it?
I have a favor to ask of you. Something isn't right with the vote from Ohio. Seems a lot of people didn't get to vote. And those who did, thousands of theirs weren't counted.
Does that seem right to you? I'm just asking. Forget about partisan politics for a moment and ask yourself if there is a more basic right, in a democracy, than the right of the people to vote AND have ALL their votes counted.
Now, I know a lot of you wish this little problem of Ohio would just go away. And many of you who wish this are Democrats. You just want to move on (no pun intended!). I can't say I blame you. It's rough to lose two elections in a row when the first one you actually won and the second one you should have won. And it seems this time around, about 3 million more Americans preferred to continue the war in Iraq and give the rich more tax breaks than those who didn't. No sense living in denial about that.
But something isn't right in Ohio and more than a dozen members of the House of Representatives believe it is worth investigating.
So on Thursday at 1:00pm, Rep. John Conyers of Detroit will rise and object to the vote count in Ohio. According to the laws of this land, he will not be allowed to speak unless at least one of you -- one member of the United States Senate -- agrees to let him have the floor.
A very embarrassing moment during the last session of Congress occurred in the first week when none of you would allow the members of Congress who were black to have the floor to object to the Florida vote count. Remember that? You thought no one would ever notice, didn't you? You certainly lucked out that night when the networks decided not to show how you shut down every single member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
No such luck this year. Everyone now knows about that moment of shame. Thank you? You’re welcome.
But this Thursday, at 1:00pm, you will have a chance to redeem yourself.
Congressman Conyers and a dozen other members of Congress have some serious questions about how the Republican secretary of state in Ohio (who was also the state’s co-chair of Bush’s reelection campaign) conducted the election on November 2. The list of possible offenses of how voters were denied access to the polls and how over a hundred thousand of their votes have yet to be counted is more than worthy of your consideration. It may not change the outcome, but you have a supreme responsibility to make sure that EVERY vote is counted. Who amongst you would disagree with that?
If you would like to read more about the specific charges, I ask that you read these two links: “Senators Should Object to Ohio Vote” —by Jesse Jackson and “Ten Preliminary Reasons Why the Bush Vote Does Not Compute, and Why Congress Must Investigate Rather Than Certify the Electoral College”. I am asking everyone on my mailing list to send you a letter joining me in this call to you to do your job and investigate what happened before you certify the vote.
It only takes one member of the House and one member of the Senate to stop the acceptance of the Electoral College vote and force a legitimate debate and investigation. Do you know why this provision is set in stone in our nation’s laws? I mean, why would we allow just two officials in a body of 535 members to throw a wrench into the works? The law exists because nothing is more sacred than the integrity of the ballot box and if there is ANY possibility of fraud or incompetence, then it MUST be addressed. Because if we don't have the vote, what are we left with?
C'mon Senators! Especially you Democrats. Here is your one shining moment of courage. Will you allow the gavel to come down on our black members of Congress once again? Or will you stand up for their right to object?
We will all be watching.
Yours,
Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
MMFlint@aol.com
P.S. My whereabouts this week: I will be on the Today Show Thursday morning, Jay Leno on Friday night. And... the People's Choice Awards are this Sunday night, live on CBS at 9pm! Can we defeat the superheroes Spiderman, Incredibles and Shrek for best picture? A documentary??? Whoa... tune in...
http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php?messageDate=2005-01-04
The Daily (Sri Lanka)
Parliament mourns, call to work together to rebuild Lanka
by Bharatha Malawaraarachchi and Ranil Wijayapala
Members of Parliament yesterday observed two minutes silence in memory of thousands of people who died and were affected in the tsunami tidal waves.
Parliament paid this supreme respect when the House held first sittings for the new year and also the first sittings since the devastation caused by the tsunami.
Earlier, Speaker W. J. M. Lokubandara making a statement appealed to all citizens to dedicate and commit themselves to re-build the country which had been greatly affected by this incident.
http://www.dailynews.lk/2005/01/05/new15.html
World Bank President due here
World Bank President James D. Wolfensohn will visit Sri Lanka on the weekend of January 8-9 to have a first-hand view of the destruction to lives, livelihoods and property caused by the tsunami of 26 December. His visit will coincide with that of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, the world bank said yesterday.
http://www.dailynews.lk/2005/01/05/new16.html
Fixing the southern environment
The tsunami tragedy of December 26 also presents an opportunity to help nature
A sad story is the disaster at the Andaman coast last weekend, which turned the festive mood of people all over the country into worry and sadness.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/en/301204_Horizons/30Dec2004_hori52.php
more to follow...
Morning Papers - continued
North and South Polar Vortexes
The center of Earth's Vortexes are now directly over the North and South Poles. The hottest 'spot' on Earth is the red area in the area of the tsunami. The vortexes are currently at work removing extra heat from the equatorial areas to the poles. That is why it is 5 degrees warmer especially at the North Polar where the North Polar Cap is an ocean and not a land mass. The deterioration of Earth's Ice Caps and Fields has doubled in the last two and a half years.
Morning Papers - continued...
Forward
Spat Erupts Between Neocons, Intelligence Community
By EDWIN BLACK
December 31, 2004
WASHINGTON — Last June, leading neoconservative Richard Perle received an unexpected phone call at his home. It was Larry Franklin calling. Franklin is the veteran Iran specialist in the Pentagon’s Near East South Asia office, and the key Iraq war planner who had been pressured by the FBI into launching a series of counterintelligence stings. Perle, a former chairman of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board, was an architect of the 2003 Iraq war.
http://www.forward.com/main/article.php?id=2465
Global Warming/Climate Change
67,000 Dead; Media Blames Global Warming
By Craig Chamberlain
Dec. 29, 2004
"A creeping rise in sea levels tied to global warming, pollution and damage to coral reefs may make coastlines even more vulnerable to disasters like tsunamis or storms in the future" So said Alister Doyle, an environmental corrispondent for Reuters.
http://www.useless-knowledge.com/1234/dec/article464.html
Global warming
I am extremely disappointed by the stance that the U.S. delegation has taken at the latest international conference on global warming.
http://www.journalnet.com/articles/2004/12/29/opinion/opinion02.txt
Guest Viewpoint: Kulongoski right to address global warming
By Ronald B. Mitchell
and Randy Berggren
Gov. Ted Kulongoski's Advisory Group on Global Warming has proposed important, effective and realistic steps that Oregon should take to reduce our contributions to global warming and climate change.
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2004/12/29/ed.col.globalwarm.1229.html
Africa and Climate Change Top Blair's G8 Agenda
By Gavin Cordon, PA Whitehall Editor
Tony Blair today pledged to make the plight of Africa and tackling climate change his priorities when Britain takes over the presidency of the G8 group of leading industrialised countries in the new year.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3940688
The New Zealand Herald
World leaders in crisis talks
06.01.05
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and world leaders meet in Jakarta today to deal with Asia's tsunami crisis and a US$2.3 billion ($3.3 billion) humanitarian relief operation.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=9005697
World leaders in crisis talks
06.01.05
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and world leaders meet in Jakarta today to deal with Asia's tsunami crisis and a US$2.3 billion ($3.3 billion) humanitarian relief operation.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=9005697
Large or small, donations total $5.8m
06.01.05
by Wayne Thompson and NZPA
From cookie bakes and sausage sizzles to busking and a small-town charitable trust, New Zealanders have raised more than $5.8 million for tsunami disaster relief agencies.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=1&ObjectID=9005698
War book revives NZ atrocities debate
06.01.05
By Jon Stokes and NZPA
Controversy surrounding New Zealand soldiers' involvement in World War II atrocities has been reignited with the launch of a book by an English military historian.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=1&ObjectID=9005693
The weather in Antarctica (Crystal Ice Chime) is:
Scott Base
Snow
-2.0°
Updated Thursday 06 Jan 3:59AM
The weather at Glacier Bay National Park (Crystal Wind Chime) is:
43 °F / 6 °C
Overcast
FREEZING DRIZZLE ADVISORY CANCELLED
Windchill:
37 °F / 2 °C
Humidity:
87%
Dew Point:
39 °F / 4 °C
Wind:
12 mph / 18 km/h from the SSW
Wind Gust:
17 mph / 28 km/h
Pressure:
30.12 in / 1020 hPa
Visibility:
10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers
UV:
0 out of 12
Clouds (AGL):
Overcast 1100 ft / 335 m
satellite below:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)