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Friday, March 31, 2006
Morning Papers - continued ...
The New York Times
The tapes show that many callers were not told to leave, but to stay put, the standard advice for high-rise fires.
In Operators' Voices, Echoes of Calls for Help
By JIM DWYER
The city released partial recordings today of about 130 telephone calls made to 911 after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, stripped of the voices of the people inside the World Trade Center but still evocative of their invisible struggles for life.
Only the 911 operators and fire department dispatchers can be heard on the recordings, their words mapping the calamity in rough, faint echoes of the men and women in the towers who had called them for help.
They describe crowded islands of fleeting survival, on floors far from the crash and even on those that were directly hit: Hallways are blocked on 104. Send help to 84. It is hard to breathe on 97.
Be calm, the operators implore. God is there. Sit tight.
The recordings, contained on 11 compact discs, also document a broken link in the chain of emergency communications.
The voices captured on those discs track the callers as they are passed by telephone from one agency to another, moving through a confederacy of municipal fiefdoms — police, fire, ambulance — but almost never receiving vital instructions to get out of the buildings.
No more than 2 of the 130 callers were told to leave, the tapes reveal, even though unequivocal orders to evacuate the trade center had been given by fire chiefs and police commanders moments after the first plane struck. The city had no procedure for field commanders to share information with the 911 system, a flaw identified by the 9/11 Commission that city officials say has since been fixed.
The tapes show that many callers were not told to leave, but to stay put, the standard advice for high-rise fires. In the north tower, all three of the building's stairways were destroyed at the 92nd floor. But in the south tower, where one stairway remained passable, the recordings include references to perhaps a few hundred people huddled in offices, unaware of the order to leave.
The calls released today bring to life the fatal frustration and confusion experienced by one unidentified man in the complex's south tower, who called at 9:08 a.m., shortly after the second plane struck the building. For the next 11 minutes, as his call was bounced from police operators to fire dispatchers and back again, the 911 system vindicated its reputation as a rickety, dangerous contraption, one that the administration of former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani tried to overhaul with little success, and one that Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg hopes to improve by spending close to $1 billion.
The voice of the man, who was calling from the offices of Keefe Bruyette on the 88th floor of that building, was removed from the recording by the city. From the operator's responses, it appears that he wanted to leave.
"You cannot — you have to wait until somebody comes there," she tells the man.
The police operator urged him to put wet towels or rags under the door, and said she would connect him to the Fire Department.
As she tried to transfer his call, the phone rang and rang — 15 times, before the police operator gave up and tried a fire department dispatch office in another borough. Eventually, a dispatcher picked up, and he asked the man to repeat the same information that he had provided moments earlier to the police operator. (The police and fire departments had separate computer dispatching systems that were unable to share basic information like the location of an emergency.)
After that, the fire dispatcher hung up, and the man on the 88th floor apparently persisted in asking the police operator — who had stayed on the line — about leaving.
"But I can't tell you to do that, sir," the operator said, who then decided to transfer his call back to the Fire Department. "Let me connect you again. O.K.? Because I really do not want to tell you to do that. I can't tell you to move."
A fire dispatcher picked up and asked — for the third time in the call — for the location of the man on the 88th floor. The dispatcher's instructions were relayed by the police operator.
"O.K.," she said. "I need you to stay in the office. Don't go into the hallway. They're coming upstairs. They are coming. They're trying to get upstairs to you."
Like many other operators that morning, she was invoking advice from a policy known as "defend in place" — meaning that only people just at or above a fire should move, an approach that had long been enshrined in skyscrapers in New York and elsewhere.
At Keefe Bruyette, 67 people died, many of whom had gathered in conference rooms and offices on the 88th and 89th floors. Some tried to reach the roof, a futile trek that the 9/11 Commission said might have been avoided if the city's 911 operators had known that the police had ruled out helicopter rescues — another piece of information that had not been shared with them — and that an evacuation order had been issued.
The calls were released today in response to a Freedom of Information request made by The New York Times on Jan. 25, 2002, for public records concerning the events of Sept. 11. The city refused to release most of them on the grounds that they were needed to prosecute a man accused of complicity in the attacks, or contained opinions that were not subject to disclosure, or were so intensely personal that their release would be an invasion of privacy. The Times sued in state court, and nine family members of people killed in the attacks joined the case.
Judge Richard Braun of the State Supreme Court in Manhattan ruled in early 2003 that the vast majority of the records were public, but said that the city could remove the words of the 911 callers on privacy grounds. Over the next two years, the core of his ruling was affirmed by the appellate division and the New York State Court of Appeals.
That led to the release of the calls today. City officials said that 130 calls were made to 911 from inside the buildings. Of that group, officials were able to identify 27 people and notified their next of kin this week that they could listen to the complete call.
While that might seem like a small number of calls given that approximately 15,000 people were at the trade center that morning, officials said that many of those who got through to 911 were with large groups of people.
One of these groups was on the 105th floor of the south tower, a spot where scores of people had congregated after trying to reach the roof. Among them was Kevin Cosgrove, who worked on the 100th floor, and who had told his family that he had gone down stairs before turning back. He called 911, and said he was in an office overlooking the World Financial Center, across West Street, records show. He said he needed help, and was having difficulty breathing.
One of the recordings — city officials have refused to say who made the call — involved a man on the 105th floor who suggested desperate measures to improve the air.
"Oh, my God," said the dispatcher. "You can't breathe at all?"
The caller's words were deleted.
"O.K.," said the dispatcher. "Listen, when you — listen, please do not break the window. When you break the window — " here, the caller interrupted.
"Don't break the window because there's so much smoke outside," the dispatcher said. "If you break a window, you guys won't be able to breathe; . O.K.? So if there are any other doorways that you can open where you don't see the smoke."
The dispatcher tried to soothe the man, finally saying, "O.K. Listen, calm yourself down. We've got everybody outside. O.K.?"
The man spoke and the dispatcher assured him help was on the way.
"We are," the dispatcher said. "We're trying to get up there, sir. Like you said, the stairs are collapsed. O.K.? Everybody wet the towels and lie on the floor. O.K.? Put the wet towels over your head and lie down; O.K.? I know it's hard to breathe. I know it is."
People on the highest floors in both towers suffered acutely from the smoke and heat, even though they were many floors distant from the entry points of the planes that had crashed into the buildings. In the offices of Cantor Fitzgerald in the north tower, between 25 and 50 people found refuge in a conference room on the 104th floor. One man, Andrew Rosenblum, reached his wife in Long Island, and gave her the names and home phone numbers of colleagues who were with him. As he recited the information, she relayed it to neighbors. Mr. Rosenblum also called a friend and said that the group had used computer terminals to smash windows for fresh air.
Such drastic actions appeared to have been discouraged by the operator. Another Cantor Fitzgerald employee on the 104th floor was Richard Caggiano, who called 911 at 8:53, seven minutes after the plane hit the north tower.
"Don't do that, sir," the operator said. "Don't do that. There's help on the way, sir. Hold on."
Mr. Caggiano's words, which were not made public, prompted a question from the operator.
"Are y'all in a particular room?" she asked. "How many?"
She listened, then said, "25 or 30 in a back room. O.K. They're on the way. They're already there. You can't hear the sirens?"
Just before the south tower collapsed at 9:59 a.m., a spurt of calls reached the 911 operators. One of these was from Shimmy Biegeleisen, who worked for Fiduciary Trust in the south tower on computer systems. He was on the 97th floor where, by chance, an emergency drill had been scheduled for that day. Mr. Biegeleisen called his home in Brooklyn, spoke with his wife and prayed with a friend, Jack Edelman, who remembered hearing him say: "Of David. A Psalm. The earth is the Lord's and all that is in it, the world and those that live in it."
At 9:52, he called 911. The building had seven more minutes before it would collapse. Mr. Biegeleisen would spend those minutes telling first the police operator, then the fire dispatcher, that he was on the 97th floor with six people, that the smoke had gotten heavy.
The police operator tried to encourage Mr. Biegeleisen.
"Heavy smoke. O.K. Sir, please try to keep calm. We'll send somebody up there immediately. Hold on. Stay on the line. I'm contacting E.M.S. Hold on. I'm connecting you to the ambulance service now."
As his call was transferred to the ambulance service, once again, the information about the smoke and the 97th floor was sought and delivered.
"Sir, any smoke over there?" asked the ambulance dispatcher. "O.K. the best thing to do is to keep — keep down on the ground. All right? O.K.?"
The ambulance dispatcher hung up, but the original operator stayed on the line with Mr. Biegeleisen. She could be heard speaking briefly with someone else in the room, and then turned her attention back to him
"We'll disengage. O.K.?" the operator asked. "There were notifications made. We made the notifications. If there's any further, you let us know. You can call back."
Seconds later, the building collapsed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/nyregion/31cnd-tapes.html?hp&ex=1143867600&en=7974754cad2d453e&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Ground Zero Still in Limbo as Talks Fail
By CHARLES V. BAGLI
Gov. George E. Pataki's last-ditch effort to strike a deal with the developer Larry A. Silverstein to speed up the rebuilding at ground zero crashed yesterday, when he was unable to convince New Jersey or City Hall officials that it made financial sense.
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and representatives of Gov. Jon S. Corzine of New Jersey vowed to work with Mr. Pataki to put together a new framework for rebuilding at the World Trade Center site, one that would be likely to diminish Mr. Silverstein's role.
The seemingly irreparable breakdown, coming after months of negotiations and with construction expected to start within days, is clearly a personal and political disappointment for the governor.
Over the last three years, Mr. Pataki tied his legacy, his reputation and perhaps his presidential ambitions to construction of the Freedom Tower and the restoration of the city's skyline after the devastating attack on Sept. 11.
After a furious series of meetings this week, the Pataki administration and Mr. Silverstein were inching back toward an agreement much like one that had been on the table when talks reached a dramatic late-night impasse on March 14.
But Mr. Pataki's solution was coming under increasing fire in public from Mayor Bloomberg and Governor Corzine. They said it would have enriched the developer at public expense, while putting the project itself in jeopardy.
Mr. Pataki had hoped to present his proposal yesterday to the board of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the trade center site. His framework would have relieved Mr. Silverstein of financial responsibility for building the $2 billion Freedom Tower, the tallest, most symbolic and most troubled of the five towers planned for the 16-acre site. But the developer would have retained the right to build three towers on the most valuable parcels on Church Street.
At the end of a 90-minute meeting yesterday morning at the authority's Park Avenue office, it was clear to the Pataki administration that neither Mayor Bloomberg nor Governor Corzine, who shares control of the authority with Mr. Pataki, were willing to go along.
So, the New York governor's office was forced to notify authority commissioners that ground zero was off the agenda.
"Governor Pataki is insisting on moving forward," said Charles A. Gargano, the state's chief economic development official and vice chairman of the Port Authority. "Our goal is to come to a framework agreement, to work out the structure to address many of these issues."
In public, officials from New York, New Jersey and City Hall were careful to avoid criticizing one another yesterday. Indeed, Mayor Bloomberg even said that Mr. Pataki had done a good job under difficult circumstances.
But state officials who were granted anonymity so that they could speak with fewer political constraints defended the deal they had nearly signed with Mr. Silverstein. They said that it would have ensured the completion of all the buildings at ground zero at a quicker pace, while imposing strict deadlines on the developer.
Further, they said, they had forced Mr. Silverstein to make concessions on his rent, the allocation of insurance proceeds and his share of infrastructure costs.
Among the public officials, tension was clearly just below the surface yesterday. Mr. Gargano said that the framework the state had erected for a deal was still on the table. Yet city officials and Anthony R. Coscia, the authority's chairman and a New Jersey appointee, suggested that it was time to start over on an arrangement that all sides could embrace.
If the turn of events was a blow to Mr. Pataki, it also hurt Mr. Silverstein, who leased the World Trade Center six weeks before it was destroyed. The developer has repeatedly vowed to start work on the Freedom Tower next month. But he may not want to start spending tens of millions of dollars without fully knowing what his role will be in the future when it comes to rebuilding the entire complex.
Yesterday, Mr. Silverstein said that he had negotiated in good faith with Governor Pataki, making significant progress on all the critical issues, including rent and the allocation of $2.9 billion in insurance proceeds. Mr. Silverstein, who has been alternately applauded and vilified for his role, rejected any suggestion that he was at fault and blamed government ineptitude.
"We now find that the process has apparently gotten bogged down inside the Port Authority, which is as frustrating to me as I'm sure it is to New Yorkers," Mr. Silverstein said in a statement. "We hope that the different leaders and branches of government will quickly come together so we can move past the uncertainty and get on with what is our paramount obligation — rebuilding the World Trade Center."
But Mr. Coscia put the onus on Mr. Silverstein and brushed aside talk of a rift with Governor Pataki. He said the city and both states would now work together on a unified proposal to offer Mr. Silverstein.
"The issues we find with the Silverstein proposal are equally of concern to New York, New Jersey, Governor Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg," Mr. Coscia said. "My expectation is that there is a growing unanimity of opinion among two governors and the mayor, and that is likely to enhance the chance of having an agreement."
The collapse of the talks is not the only trouble at ground zero. Work has begun on the Sept. 11 memorial, but that project is already over budget and fund-raising has been sluggish. There was a nasty public battle over a planned cultural center and continuing doubts about the economic viability of the Freedom Tower, which is widely considered to be too big, in the wrong place and nearly impossible to lease to corporate tenants, who view it as an obvious terrorist target.
Some downtown executives and community leaders are also worried that the continuing uncertainty at ground zero will undermine the fragile recovery in Lower Manhattan. Although the office vacancy rate downtown is relatively high, they are hoping that rising rents and a tight Midtown market will once again make Lower Manhattan an attractive alternative.
"The business community is eager for a resolution at ground zero so Lower Manhattan can continue it's momentum toward a full recovery," said Eric Deutsch, president of the Alliance for Downtown New York.
The latest crisis was prompted, in part, by the scheduled April groundbreaking for the Freedom Tower. Although Mr. Silverstein continues to insist that he has the money and the desire to do the job, state and city officials and authority executives have grown increasingly concerned that he could run out of money, default on his lease and walk away with tens of millions in profit after completing only two towers.
To be fair, Governor Pataki championed the skyscraper as a symbol of New York's resilience and insisted that it be built first, over Mr. Silverstein's objections. The developer and government officials subsequently reached agreements in 2003 and 2004 on what would be built and when.
Last December, Mr. Coscia of the Port Authority suggested that Mr. Silverstein surrender a major part of the World Trade Center site as a way of addressing the financial problems.
Mayor Bloomberg, who had been largely focused on the redevelopment of the Far West Side in 2004 and 2005, became increasingly focused on Lower Manhattan, backing Mr. Coscia.
The developer refused, not wanting to relinquish what he said were the most valuable parcels.
The Pataki administration then began weeks of negotiations with Mr. Silverstein that left Mr. Coscia and Mayor Bloomberg without seats at the bargaining table. Even after the impasse on March 14, Silverstein executives complained that they were making concessions to Mr. Pataki's negotiators, while reading in the newspapers about new demands by City Hall or New Jersey.
Mr. Coscia said yesterday that two fundamentally different interests were in play.
"Silverstein Properties is pursuing their business interests to further the profitability of this effort," he said, "and we have a responsibility to protect the public's interest."
Sewell Chan and Glenn Collins contributed reporting for this article.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/nyregion/31rebuild.html?pagewanted=print
At Sept. 11 Trial, Tale of Missteps and Management
By SCOTT SHANE and NEIL A. LEWIS
WASHINGTON, March 30 — Three weeks of testimony and dozens of documents released in the sentencing of Zacarias Moussaoui have offered an eerie parallel view of two organizations, Al Qaeda and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and how they pursued their missions before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Al Qaeda, according to a newly revealed account from the chief plotter, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, took its time in choosing targets — attack the White House or perhaps a nuclear plant in Pennsylvania? Organizers sized up and selected operatives, teaching them how to apply for a visa and how to cut a throat, a skill they practiced on sheep and camels. Despite the mistakes of careless subordinates and an erratic boss, Osama bin Laden, Mr. Mohammed tried to keep the plot on course.
Mr. Mohammed, a Pakistani-born, American-trained engineer, "thought simplicity was the key to success," says the summary of his interrogation by the Central Intelligence Agency. It is all the more chilling for the banal managerial skills it ascribes to the man who devised the simultaneous air attacks.
If Mr. Mohammed's guiding principle was simplicity, the United States government relied on sprawling bureaucracies at feuding agencies to look for myriad potential threats. The C.I.A. had lots of information on two hijackers, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Midhar, but the F.B.I. did not know the men had settled in San Diego, where Mr. Mohammed had instructed them to "spend time visiting museums and amusement parks" so they could masquerade as tourists.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/us/nationalspecial3/31plot.html
Preventable Disease Blinds Poor in Third World
By CELIA W. DUGGER
Published: March 31, 2006
ALEMBER, Ethiopia — Mare Alehegn lay back nervously on the metal operating table, her heart visibly pounding beneath her sackcloth dress, and clenched her fists as the paramedic sliced into her eyelid. Repeated infections had scarred the undersides of her eyelids, causing them to contract and forcing her lashes in on her eyes. For years, each blink felt like thorns raking her eyeballs. She had plucked the hairs with crude tweezers, but the stubble grew back sharper still.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/world/africa/31blind.html?hp&ex=1143867600&en=52c33a8daed4b843&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Delphi Asks Bankruptcy Court to Void Union Deals
By MICHELINE MAYNARD
Published: March 31, 2006
DETROIT, March 31 — Delphi, the nation's biggest auto-parts maker, followed through on a months-old threat today and asked a bankruptcy court judge for permission to throw out its labor agreements and impose sharply lower wages and benefits.
It also said it plans to close or sell most of its plants in the United States, and cut its worldwide salaried staff. Together, the moves will eliminate 28,500 jobs.
In addition, Delphi asked the bankruptcy court to reject some of its contracts with General Motors, its biggest customer, which would allow Delphi to renegotiate the prices G.M. pays for parts. It said it would keep only eight of its American plants.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/business/31cnd-delphi.html?hp&ex=1143867600&en=0ec4fa333ed9e67a&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Digital Divide Closing as Blacks Turn to Internet
By MICHEL MARRIOTT
Published: March 31, 2006
African-Americans are steadily gaining access to and ease with the Internet, signaling a remarkable closing of the "digital divide" that many experts had worried would be a crippling disadvantage in achieving success.
Robert Spencer for The New York Times
Marlon Orozco, left, a mentor at a Boston program that introduces computer technology to young people with limited access to it.
Civil rights leaders, educators and national policy makers warned for years that the Internet was bypassing blacks and some Hispanics as whites and Asian-Americans were rapidly increasing their use of it.
But the falling price of laptops, more computers in public schools and libraries and the newest generation of cellphones and hand-held devices that connect to the Internet have all contributed to closing the divide, Internet experts say.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/us/31divide.html?hp&ex=1143867600&en=1f2932d1bfa86422&ei=5094&partner=homepage
New Strain on Duke's Ties With Durham
By RICK LYMAN
DURHAM, N.C., March 30 — Francis Conlin says that he is a pretty sound sleeper, but that his wife is often jarred awake by the raucous noise spilling from one of the frequent and teeming student parties in their neighborhood beside the East Campus of Duke University.
"Screaming at the top of their lungs at 2 in the morning, urinating on lawns, throwing beer cans around, driving fast, that sort of stuff," said Mr. Conlin, a mechanical engineer. "Really, the last two years or so, these guys have been a pain in the neck."
Mr. Conlin's home is just across the alley from a rented house where some members of Duke's lacrosse team lived. In that house, on March 13, a black student from nearby North Carolina Central University was raped, beaten and called racist names, she says, by three white men during a team party at which she was hired to strip.
The incident, straddling at once the quintessential social flashpoints of race, class and gender, has led community and university leaders to fear that the progress they have made in recent years in improving their relationship will be swept away in the storm.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/us/31durham.html
Levee Plans Fall Short of FEMA Standards
By JOHN SCHWARTZ
New Orleans's levees do not meet the standards that the Federal Emergency Management Agency requires for its flood protection program, federal officials said yesterday — and they added that the problem would take as much as $6 billion to fix.
FEMA has long based its flood planning on whether an area is protected against a flood that might have a 1 percent chance of occurring in any year, also known as a 100-year flood. Without that certification, the agency's flood maps have to treat the entire levee system as if it were not there at all, which means that people hoping to build in the affected areas might have to rebuild their homes at elevations of 15 or even 30 feet above sea level in order to meet new federal building standards.
But since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, the agency has toughened its 100-year standard, based on new information about land subsidence and the increasing severity and frequency of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico. There is also new data about weak soils in the area and the failure of some of the city's floodwalls.
As a result, the levees that the Army Corps of Engineers is now building will not meet the new FEMA standard. Donald Powell, the federal coordinator for Gulf Coast rebuilding, said Thursday that the Corps now believes it cannot meet that standard without spending additional billions to upgrade the flood protection system still further.
Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco of Louisiana expressed outrage over what she called a monumental miscalculation and said it was shocking to learn that $6 billion more might be needed for the hurricane protection system.
"This means that, just two months before hurricane season, the Corps of Engineers informs us they cannot ensure even the minimum safety of Southeastern Louisiana," Ms. Blanco said in a statement. "This is totally unacceptable."
But Mr. Powell said in a news briefing yesterday that the $2 billion that the Army Corps of Engineers is currently spending and the $1.4 billion in additional funds it has requested will make the system stronger and better than it has ever been. Asked if he would feel comfortable living in the area despite the government's inability to certify the levees, he responded, "after the Corps completes its work, yes."
Mr. Powell called the difference "a regulatory issue, not necessarily a safety issue." When the current work on the levees is complete, he said, there might be flooding from a storm like Hurricane Katrina, but the levee system would not fail catastrophically again.
Although people can rebuild without the federal flood maps today, many homeowners may well decide that the risks of rebuilding are too great. The Louisiana Recovery Authority has said that its plan to provide grants to those who rebuild will favor those who meet FEMA requirements.
Mr. Powell said that to start the process of getting the new flood maps, the federal government only needs to state that it does intend to meet the certification standard — a process that it can undertake for the entire system at the full $6 billion, or pick and choose projects to cut costs.
The flood advisory documents, which will begin the process of creating final flood maps, could emerge within days, Mr. Powell said. It will take up to 18 months to complete the maps.
In the briefing, Mr. Powell said that rebuilding the city could take 25 years — a sentiment shared by many disaster recovery experts. He added, however, "It could be much shorter than that, depending on how they plan their future. I'm going to be doing everything I can to make this as short as possible."
Matt McBride, a member of the community group in Broadmoor, a New Orleans neighborhood that was inundated during Hurricane Katrina, said many city residents would be disappointed by the levee announcement. While many people in his neighborhood were committed to rebuilding, he said, "It's just one more headache on top of the hundreds that we're dealing with."
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/us/nationalspecial/31levees.html
Rice Concedes 'Tactical Errors' in Iraq
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 1:25 p.m. ET
BLACKBURN, England (AP) -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice conceded Friday that the United States probably has made thousands of ''tactical errors'' in Iraq and elsewhere, but said it will be judged by its larger aims of peace and democracy in the Middle East.
The U.S. diplomat met loud anti-war protests in the streets and skeptical questions about U.S. involvement in Iraq at a foreign policy salon Friday, including one about whether Washington had learned from its ''mistakes over the past three years.''
Rice replied that leaders would be ''brain-dead'' if they did not absorb the lessons of their times.
''I know we've made tactical errors, thousands of them I'm sure,'' Rice told an audience gathered by the British foreign policy think tank Chatham House. ''But when you look back in history, what will be judged will be, did you make the right strategic decisions.''
She said she remains firmly convinced that it was the right strategic decision to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq three years ago, and that it required an invasion to do it.
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Rice.html
Retired F.B.I. Agent Is Accused of Role in Killings
By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
When R. Lindley DeVecchio, a 65-year-old retired F.B.I. supervisor, stood up in a courtroom in Brooklyn yesterday to face charges that he had helped his prized Mafia informant commit four murders, the tension was clear.
On one side of the gallery, filling roughly two-thirds of the blond wood benches, were nearly four dozen mostly gray-haired men in dark-colored suits. Retired F.B.I. agents who had once been Mr. DeVecchio's colleagues, they were now his supporters. Most sat stiffly upright and spoke little.
In front of them, at the prosecution table in the well of the courtroom, sat two somber senior prosecutors from the office of the Brooklyn district attorney, Charles J. Hynes. Mr. Hynes, after a 13-month investigation, had hours earlier announced the indictment of Mr. DeVecchio on charges that he had helped his informant commit four mob murders in the 1980's and early 1990's, accepting weekly payoffs totaling more than $66,000.
Also in the gallery were several more prosecutors and investigators who had worked on the case.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/nyregion/31agent.html
Fewer Marshes + More Man-made Ponds = Increased Wetlands
By FELICITY BARRINGER
WASHINGTON, March 30 — In the bog of the federal regulatory code, a wetland is defined as a marshy area of saturated soils and plants whose roots spend part of their lives immersed in water. In the Interior Department's periodic national surveys, a wetland is defined, more or less, as wet.
Traditional tidal, coastal and upland marshes count, but so do golf course water hazards and other man-made ponds whose surface is less than 20 acres.
And so, even at a time of continued marsh depletion, pond inflation permitted Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton and Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns to announce proudly on Thursday the first net increase in wetlands since the Fish and Wildlife Service started measuring them in 1954. Wetlands acreage, measured largely by aerial surveys, totaled 107.7 million acres at the end of 2004, up by 191,800 acres from 1998.
The two cabinet secretaries hailed the apparent reversal in the long trend of wetland losses. "I'm pleased to complete my term as secretary of interior by announcing some good news, said Ms. Norton, who will step down from her job Friday.
A net total of 523,500 acres of swamps and tidal marshes had been lost, but the Fish and Wildlife Service measured gains of 715,300 acres of shallow-water wetlands, or ponds. According to the report's author, Tom Dahl, those can be 20 to 30 feet deep.
Almost two years ago, President Bush, under attack by environmental groups for loosening controls on development in wetlands, announced that one of his goals was to increase net wetland acreage.
For decades in the early and mid-20th century, draining and filling of wetlands by developers was widely accepted. But, as scientists and public officials recognized the importance of wetlands as nurseries for waterfowl, filters of pollution and barriers against storms, Congress passed protective laws.
One multimillion-dollar project redirected parts of the Kissimmee River in central Florida out of the narrow 30-foot-deep channel constructed by the Army Corps of Engineers and allowed it once again to dampen the surrounding landscape. Another successful wetlands-restoration project in southwestern Indiana is undoing the work farmers did decades ago to drain their land.
These projects helped hold down the net loss of marshland in Thursday's report. But the net gain noted in the report was fueled by an increase in pond acreage, which includes things like ornamental ponds in new developments and mine reclamation ponds.
For instance, the mining of sand and clay for the construction of two major highways in South Carolina, Routes 22 and 31, left the Myrtle Beach area dotted with large, deep ponds that qualify as wetlands in the Interior Department's survey but do not provide the wildlife habitat or perform the filtering functions of tidal marshes or cypress swamps.
"For Route 22, there was nine million cubic yards of fill material needed," said Boyd Holt, a regional hydrogeologist for the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control. "There were probably 30 or 40 ponds as a result of that activity since 1998."
At Thursday's news conference, federal officials said that the report measures the quantity — not the quality — of wetlands. Julie Sibbing, the leading wetlands expert at the National Wildlife Federation, called the mining-site ponds "wet deserts."
"The most stunning thing about this report," she said, "is that we're losing diverse natural wetlands in this country and the administration tells us it's O.K. because we've increased the number of ponds."
The report, which covers 1998 to 2004, does not include the loss of 64,000 acres of coastal wetlands from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/washington/31wetlands.html?pagewanted=print
The Arab News
It Is Anarchy, Not Freedom That Is on the March in Iraq
Hassan Tahsin, hassan_tahsin@hotmail.com
The third anniversary of the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq witnessed thousands of people protesting around the world (in 200 cities) demanding the foreign forces leave Iraq.
In Britain, authorities tightened security in areas surrounding the Parliament building and the government headquarters in London. Anti-WMD groups, “Stop the War” alliance and the British Muslim Society participated in anti-war demonstrations calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Tony Blair.
In Sydney, Australia, protesters emphasized the need for foreign troops to leave Iraq. They carried signs and banners that described the American president as the first terrorist in the world. Some posters depicted Bush as Dracula, the vampire.
Australians described US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as a war criminal and murderer. They said innocent Iraqis’ blood is on her hands.
People in Tokyo and other Japanese cities carried signs that said “End the Occupation”. A member of Peace Movement in Japan described the war in Iraq as illegal and against international law.
Protesters were active in South Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan and a number of Asian and Arabic countries.
There were anti-war marches in Istanbul, Rome, Milan, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Athens, Madrid, Barcelona, Lisbon, in addition to Ottawa and Toronto in Canada and San Paulo in Brazil.
In America people are becoming restive, especially after they found out that they have lost 2300 US solders and the number of those injured and maimed runs into thousands. Canadian movie director Paul Haggis whose Crash won the Academy Award for the best film protested the American presence in Iraq. Many famous actors echoed his views in different parts of the world and many American politicians too voiced opposition to the war. Washington, New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco saw anti-war marches.
In spite of widespread opposition to the war and occupation of Iraq, US President Bush justified his actions saying, “The war on Iraq was the right thing to do. We gave Iraqis their freedom and helped them develop a democratic system. We are going to beat terrorism in Iraq, finish the mission and provide security and safety to our country.”
Continuing his political charade, President Bush said, “America and the world have become much safer after Saddam has been ousted. He was a terrorist supporter and he is being judged for his crimes now. 25 million Iraqis are enjoying their freedom now.”
The truth is totally different from what Bush is saying. Iraq is on the verge of a civil war that would tear the country apart. Some Iraqis may become very rich because of oil money and collaboration with Washington. But the majority of Iraqis will suffer and that after all is what Washington really wants and that’s why it invaded Iraq.
Everyone knows that Saddam Hussein was a dictator; yet the Iraqi people accepted him for long years.
Someone had to support the US president, and who better than British Prime Minister Tony Blair? Blair declared his backing by saying, “I prayed to God and asked His help in terms of joining Washington in its invasion of Iraq. God is the one who will judge Bush for his decision.” This silly statement has made Blair a butt of joke not only in Britain but throughout the world.
Thousands of people have been killed in Iraq, anarchy reigns there; in fact Iraq is about to implode.
According to a latest survey, 68 percent of the Americans consider their president’s handling of the Iraqi war a failure. About 30 percent think there is a big chance for a civil war to break out in Iraq. 60 percent of the Americans are skeptical of Americans winning the war.
This is the miserable reality of Iraq now.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7§ion=0&article=80017&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Turkey Calls for Nuclear-Free Middle East
Maha Akeel, Arab News
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, and OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu at the joint press conference in Jeddah on Thursday. (AN photo by Marwan Al-Johani)
JEDDAH, 31 March 2006 — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) here yesterday and discussed with its Secretary-General, Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, regional developments and concerns. At the press conference that followed the meeting, Ihsanoglu, a Turkish native, commended Turkey for its support to the organization and discussed agreements and future plans.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=80024&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Hamas Blasts West’s Funding Threats
Hisham Abu Taha, Arab News
Palestinians and international activists scuffle with Israeli border police during a demonstration to mark the Land Day on the outskirts of the West Bank village of Rafat on Thursday. The Land Day commemorates riots on March 30, 1976. (AP)
GAZA CITY, 31 March 2006 — The new Hamas Cabinet faced a fusillade of broadside of threats from the West even as ministers took over the reins of power in Palestine. The first day in office for the Hamas ministers was marred by Western boycott announcements, but the party was defiant as they accused the West of failing to respect democracy yesterday.
The Middle East quartet said that the West would slash its funding if the Hamas-led government does not change its policy with regard to Israel. The Middle East quartet issued a statement, “That future assistance to any new government would be reviewed by donors against that government’s commitment” to nonviolence, recognizing Israel and accepting previous agreements between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=80040&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Wanted Fatah Chief in Lebanon Cleared After Surrender
Hadi Tawil, Arab News
BEIRUT, 31 March 2006 — Fatah’s chief in Lebanon, a fugitive since he was sentenced to death in absentia in 1999, surrendered yesterday to a Lebanese military tribunal that swiftly quashed his conviction, a judicial source said.
Sultan Abul Aynain was exonerated of charges that he formed “armed groups” and carried out “terrorist acts,” and was released following the court session in Beirut.
The move came days after Abul Aynain pledged his Fatah faction would round up weapons from refugee camps amid growing calls for militias in the country to be disbanded.
Abul Aynain surrendered to authorities at the military tribunal in Beirut after traveling from the refugee camp of Rashidiyeh in southern Lebanon, where he had been holed up since the death sentence was issued in 1999.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=80031&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Youth Lured by Misguided Zeal: Ahmad
Arab News
AL-GHAT, 31 March 2006 — Deputy Interior Minister Prince Ahmad lamented the fact that some of the youth are turning to terror are misguided and fighting Almighty Allah and his Messenger. Prince Ahmad was speaking to the press after attending a function to honor the winners of the Prince Khaled ibn Ahmad Al-Sudairi for academic excellence yesterday in Al-Ghat region.
Prince Ahmad’s comments came after Saudi security forces arrested 40 suspected terrorists in three different operations around the Kingdom in the past two weeks.
He said that those arrested were a group of individuals, but not all were fully aware of the grievous harm they commit by turning to crime. Some of them are lured by misguided zeal. “It is sad that some of our youth who turn to this misguided and devilish direction. They do not realize they are fighting against Almighty Allah and His Messenger who ordered us to protect lives and property.”
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=80041&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Olmert Plan: The Endgame or Step Toward a Larger Resolution?
Michael Rothfeld, Newsday
NETANYA, Israel, 27 March 2006 — When the latest suicide bomber blew himself up on a quiet December morning at the entrance to the crowded shopping mall, Ella Atlan hurried through the chaos to escape. Later, after the windows had been repaired and the blood scrubbed off the wall, she went back to work.
It had become a grim routine. Five months earlier, the Israeli woman had returned to selling jewelry at the mall near the border with the occupied West Bank after a bomber blew himself up in the same spot. Another bomber attacked there in 2001.
Now Atlan, 34, who is raising four young children in a country where the prospect of a peace deal seems dim, takes some hope in an Israeli plan to unilaterally give most of the West Bank to the Palestinians, four decades after the country captured the territory in a 1967 war with its Arab neighbors.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7§ion=0&article=79825&d=27&m=3&y=2006&pix=opinion.jpg&category=Opinion
Google Earth Raises Privacy, Security Issues
Essam Al-Ghalib, Arab News
JEDDAH, 27 March 2006 — When a permit was issued allowing motor-powered passenger gliders to fly during Jeddah’s annual summer festival, it came with strict instructions as to where flying was permitted. Only two places were designated — the Corniche with flights over the waters of the Red Sea and further inland, over the desert. At no point, were the gliders to fly over inhabited parts of the city.
“That’s so we don’t fly over people’s homes and palaces. This culture closely guards its privacy. Many would be unsettled by the thought of uninvited eyes prying from above,” the expatriate pilot of one of the craft told Arab News two summers ago.
Last summer, when Google launched Google Earth, concern grew over how much it allowed anyone with an Internet connection to view and download satellite and aerial images of the Earth from above for free. Providing detailed aerial views of such landmarks as the Pyramids of Giza, the Eiffel Tower, and Disneyland, to name but a few, Google Earth was not the first to offer this service that has some governments concerned. For providing detailed aerial image maps of government buildings, military installations and other facilities, national security officials of at least three governments have complained to Google.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=79805&d=27&m=3&y=2006
US Has Second Thoughts on Inviting Pakistani Senator
Barbara Ferguson, Arab News
WASHINGTON, 27 March 2006 — Ouch! The US State Department and the White House once again have shown they disagree on foreign policy.
The problem this time is Pakistan.
After extending an invitation to a leading Pakistani senator, the United States changed its mind and revoked the visa of the lawmaker from Balochistan province who happens to be a known critic of President Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
The move has set off charges that the action came at the request of the Pakistani government.
Sanaullah Baloch, a strident critic of Musharraf’s handling of the conflict in Balochistan where the Pakistani Army is battling local tribes, was invited by the State Department last year to attend a program on government accountability scheduled for today and issued a visa.
American officials in Islamabad recently told Baloch, who was scheduled to arrive this weekend, that his invitation had been canceled and his visa revoked because of a “recent withdrawal in funding” which had forced the program to be scaled back, according to The Washington Post.
The State Department has since then changed its tune, and spokeswoman Nancy Beck said last week the problem was not funding but that some new information received by the department after issuing the visa for Baloch that “led us to believe he was not eligible for a visa”.
South Asia experts said the decision could be due to Baloch’s criticism of Musharraf’s Balochistan policy. “What is truly outrageous about his situation is this was a US government-sponsored trip. Since when do we let other countries decide on whom we should invite to our country?” Michael McFaul of the Hoover Institution in Washington, told reporters.
In a telephone interview, Baloch told The Washington Post that Balochistan, the largest province in Pakistan, was being exploited for its natural resources, even though the region was starved of development funds.
The province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan and is strategically important to oil-shipping lanes, is being undermined, said Baloch, by the Pakistani government’s leverage of Islamists in the liberal-minded region. Baloch said the government did not respect human rights in the region and added that about 600 people had been killed there in recent months.
Local tribes in Balochistan demand greater autonomy and a share in the region’s resources.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=79819&d=27&m=3&y=2006
National Panel Set Up to Combat Blindness
M. Ghazanfar Ali Khan & Mohammed Rasooldeen, Arab News
RIYADH, 27 March 2006 — A National Committee for Prevention of Blindness (NCPB) was formed yesterday at Saudi Ophthalmology 2006, an annual international symposium organized by the King Khaled Eye Specialist Hospital in cooperation with the Saudi Ophthalmological Society (SOS). Prince Abdul Aziz ibn Ahmed, regional chairman of the International Agency for Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) and president of SOS, signed the agreement with Dr. Hamad Al-Manie, minister of health, for the formation of the NCPB.
More than 1,500 local participants with 15 guest lecturers from the United States, Australia, Japan, Turkey and Switzerland were present during the signing ceremony.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=79820&d=27&m=3&y=2006
Editorial: Election Preview
27 March 2006
Pundits have long stopped speculating about the outcome of tomorrow’s elections in Israel. Polls have consistently shown the new Kadima party far ahead of its rivals. They predict Kadima will win slightly less than one-third of the 120 seats in Parliament, or about double that of standard-bearers Labor and Likud, traditionally Israel’s largest parties who have suddenly become also-rans.
Thus, in an election campaign bereft of contest, the main threat to Kadima’s winning a landslide is neither Labor nor Likud but apathy — the fear that thousands of Israelis will stay home tomorrow because they see the result as a done deal.
Such indifference is odd in a season that has witnessed seismic changes, whether being the emergence and surprising popularity of Kadima, or the stroke that incapacitated Ariel Sharon, or Hamas sweeping to victory in the Palestinian parliamentary elections. All of these combined should have galvanized the Israeli public to go out and vote one way or the other. Instead, neither the issues nor the candidates — Kadima party leader and acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, ex-union boss Amir Peretz of the Labour Party and former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Likud — have caused much of a ripple.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7§ion=0&article=79811&d=27&m=3&y=200
Bush Losing All Credibility Over Iraqi Developments
James M. Klurfeld, Newsday
Too little, too late. President Bush is going to the American people to bolster his plummeting credibility because the war in Iraq is going badly. He’s even admitting the original war plans weren’t so great and that it won’t be on his watch that troops can be withdrawn. Out of desperation, he’s trying candor or a limited version of it. It’s not enough.
There is one thing Bush has thus far refused to do, and it’s crucial: Fire the people who made the key decisions about whether and how to fight this war. I’m talking about Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley. Along with Vice President Dick Cheney, they brought on this foreign policy disaster. Cheney ought to get the boot, too, but he was elected with Bush.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7§ion=0&article=79826&d=27&m=3&y=2006&pix=opinion.jpg&category=Opinion
All-Too-Familiar Tune: Ringtones in Mosques
Mahmoud Ahmad, Arab News
JEDDAH, 27 March 2006 — As Dhuhr prayer commences, the imam calls the devoted to stand in line and fill any gaps between them. The mosque is a near-perfect atmosphere for peaceful, quiet self-reflection and piety. Suddenly the ambience of the holy place is shattered by the hip-hop beats of Los Angeles rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg. The worshippers turn their head to look at the offender. Tsk-tsk. Once again somebody didn’t turn off his cell phone!
“There is no hope for them,” says Khaled Muhammad, imam of a mosque in Jeddah’s Al-Rawdah neighborhood. “I warn them time and time again against bringing mobile phones inside mosques. If these people were meeting with their company boss they would turn off their phones. Why is it when they’re meeting with God they don’t extend the same courtesy?”
Khaled Muhammad told Arab News that he has given up on trying to curb the sounds of pop music that pop up during prayer, choosing simply to ignore the annoyance and hope that fights don’t break out.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=79806&d=27&m=3&y=2006
UAE Working on a Law to Allow Unions
K.T. Abdurabb, Arab News
DUBAI, 31 March 2006 — United Arab Emirates Labor Minister Ali ibn Abdullah Al-Kaabi said yesterday that the country was working on a law to allow trade unions.
“We are working on a law to allow laborers to form unions and legalize collective bargaining. The proposed labor law guaranteeing the right to strike and worker representation through their organizations will be put before the Cabinet by summer,” said Al-Kaabi.
“We are going to have one union, with separate representatives for the construction, fishing, agriculture and other industries.”
He said the UAE was in negotiations with the International Labor Organization over changes to the current labor laws.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=80027&d=31&m=3&y=2006
Lawrence of Arabia: 70 Years Later
Abeer Mishkhas Special to Review
T. E. Lawrence and Lowell Thomas, tinted photograph.
ON the 70th anniversary of T. E. Lawrence’s death, the Imperial War Museum in London is holding an exhibition of photographs that follows the life of the man and the legend. Walking into the exhibition one is greeted by a model of Lawrence in Arab dress. Above it on the wall is written: “All men dream: But not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: But the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible. This I did.” The quote puts the visitor in the mood for the rest of the exhibition.
It begins with Lawrence’s childhood and a picture of him and his brother, then his school uniform, a lock of his hair and a letter from his father. Lawrence went to school in Oxford where his family settled while he pursued different interests such as brass rubbing and archeology.
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=21§ion=0&article=79989&d=31&m=3&y=2006
IOWA
"The Messenger" of Fort Dodge
High winds rattle area
80 mph winds damage area buildings
By BILL SHEA Messenger staff writer
A powerful storm packing wind gusts of up to 80 mph damaged some buildings and temporarily flooded streets in the Fort Dodge area Thursday evening.
The damage was apparently caused only by strong winds and not tornadoes, according to Mark Russell, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Des Moines.
Russell said there was widespread wind damage throughout northern Iowa.
In Webster County, damaged buildings were found between Fort Dodge and Vincent, said Tony Jorgensen, the county’s emergency management coordinator.
Damaged buildings and scattered debris were located along 170th and 190th streets.
Gerald Ascherl’s machine shed was completely destroyed at his home at 2744 190th Street. Several other outbuildings were also damaged. Ascherl noted that there was slight damage to his home and that neither he nor any livestock were injured.
“I’m pretty sure it was a tornado,” said Ascherl. “I heard a loud roar and then it quit. It only lasted about 20 maybe 30 seconds and then it was over.”
In Fort Dodge, the intersection of Third Avenue South and 10th Street and a portion of South 25th Street near Crossroads Mall were flooded. Both locations are known to flood during heavy rains.
Russell said the storms that passed through the county at about 6 p.m. were ‘‘very good producers of strong winds.’’ He said the storms’ wind gusts were in the range of 60 mph to 80 mph.
http://www.messengernews.net/top_stories_full.asp?3941
"Gazette"
GOP targets Vilsack travels
Published: 03/31/2006 12:58 PM
Updated: 03/31/2006 12:58 PM
By: Associated Press - Associated Press
DES MOINES, IA - Iowa Republicans are taking Democratic Gov. Tom Vilsack to task for his out-of-state travels to test the political waters for "his unannounced bid for the presidency."
Iowa GOP executive director Cullen Sheehan noted that Vilsack is leaving Iowa to "court Florida Democrats" this weekend when he should be focused on unresolved priorities hanging over Iowa's 2006 legislative session.
"As we head into the closing weeks of the Iowa legislative session, Governor Vilsack should be focused on getting things done for Iowans, not running for president," Sheehan said.
"It's unfortunate that Vilsack is choosing to travel to Florida instead of staying in Iowa to finish up important legislative business like cutting taxes on senior pensions," Sheehan added. "That important legislation would keep more of our seniors in this state, rather than flocking to Florida with Gov. Vilsack."
A GOP proposal to phase out Iowa's tax on pension and retirement income is part of the wide-scale budget discussions under way as top policymakers attempt to craft a fiscal 2007 spending plan for state government.
Vilsack plans to participate in Monday's resumption of budget negotiations
http://www.gazetteonline.com/2006/03/31/Home/republicansvilsacktravel.htm
"The Quad City Times"
Kidnap victims multiply in Iraq
By The Associated Press Comments(0)
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — The most likely kidnap victims in Iraq increasingly are Iraqis, with an average of 10 to 20 taken hostage every day for nearly three years, a U.S. official in Baghdad said Thursday.
U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Elizabeth Colton said freedom comes at a heavy price, with ransoms averaging between $20,000 and $30,000.
“It’s huge,” she said. “There are a lot more Iraqis being held hostage in Iraq now than most people are aware of.”
The puzzle is how Iraqis come up with such large ransom payments in a country where unemployment is estimated between 28 and 40 percent and the average monthly wage is about $100. Equally unclear is who the kidnappers are — they have grown increasingly bold and now are striking in broad daylight.
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/news/local/doc442cccafc54be012540315.txt
Next storm season looms
By Tory Brecht Comments(2)
Leaving New Orleans on Thursday, Lynn Pruitt of Muscatine, Iowa, was bombarded with visual reminders that the work he is doing truly matters.
Clumps of tree limbs left on roofs where floodwaters tossed them and piles of discarded furniture on street corners where homeowners still are in the throw-away, rather than rebuild, stage add urgency to a looming June 1 deadline for getting the city’s flood and hurricane defenses back to pre-Katrina levels.
Pruitt and 21 other employees of Muscatine-based Stanley Consultants have been in Louisiana since September, helping organize the massive levee and floodwall rebuilding effort.
“Driving around there today, in some areas I hadn’t been before, you could see the results of the flooding,” he said. “The debris washed up, you could see where the high-water mark was up on the roofs of the houses still with sticks and debris up on them. It’s kind of ominous.”
Stanley Consultants engineers are serving as project managers on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers $770 million Task Force Guardian project to restore about 170 miles of levees and floodwalls. The work entails coordinating the 59 separate contractors selected to do construction work, tracking and reporting the restoration effort for the public and elected officials, and monitoring the rebuilding effort’s progress and quality, said Craig Johnson, who is overseeing the Stanley effort in Louisiana.
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/news/local/doc442ccc02a4dac736743255.txt
A fun way to fight juvenile diabetes
By Laurie Lomba, Moline Comments(0)
Juvenile Diabetes Association, Inc. (JDA), a local non-profit group of parent volunteers in cooperation with Skate City will host our annual “Rolling for a Cure” on Tuesday, April 4. We are so excited that everyone’s favorite mascots, Mo and Ima Mallard, will trade in their ice skates for an evening with us of roller skating fun!
JDA meets monthly to support families of children with Type I (juvenile)
diabetes. Our mission is to promote education and awareness for our community, support research and annually unite members for the common goal of raising funds to send local children to Camp Hertko Hollow in Boone, Iowa. At camp, kids enjoy the fun of day-to-day camp experiences and bond with others facing the same challenges in life. They learn to become more independent and knowledgeable in their own diabetes care. In the meantime, parents may actually relax, because the staff at camp is comprised of doctors, nurses, dieticians, diabetic educators and many volunteers
dedicated to their safety.
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/opinion/letters/doc442cbc7463ed7217725818.txt
Would Mexico be so kind to immigrants?
By Larry Bickmann, LeClaire Comments(11)
Picture this: I immigrate to another country illegally and thus start my existence in that country by breaking their laws. Then I refuse to speak or learn the local
language or to get my own medical insurance and thereby expect the legal citizens to pay for any and all medical bills I may incur.
I want to drive but can’t afford the insurance, so if I total your car, I’ll just run and leave you in a ditch. All my kids will get free schooling and raise classroom sizes to the breaking point of teachers’ abilities to teach constructively. Don’t forget the free social services I expect, especially food stamps for life and continued welfare.
Now since rents are high, I’ll have to live with 10 to 15 of my family members in a three-bedroom house,
raising the population and thereby increasing the need for a larger police force for crimes committed by myself and family members.
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/opinion/letters/doc442cbce75e09d042131197.txt
You can support the troops and not the war
By Mike Sersig, Davenport Comments(16)
The war in Iraq is the
stupidest conflict our country has ever engaged in! It’s a total farce that’s even worse than our involvement in Vietnam.
Having said that though, I wholeheartedly support our troops over there. I support them by wanting them home in one piece!
Mike Sersig
Davenport
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/opinion/letters/doc442cbd3457075054913960.txt
Texas company claims to clone top horses
By Times wire services Comments(1)
Purcell, Okla.
A company that offers horse owners exact duplicates of their animals says it has successfully cloned two top-earning horses.
ViaGen Inc. announced Thursday that two mares had delivered clones of top cutting horses, which are trained to help separate individual animals from cattle herds.
The foals, born at a ranch near Purcell, were doing well, according to the Austin, Texas-based company.
The first cloned horse was born in 2003 in Italy. In 2005, Texas A&M University created the first cloned horse in the United States.
Elaine Hall of Weatherford, Texas, owns one of the horses that was cloned and said the foal is the image of its mother.
“I can already see so many similarities from the original horse, a certain look about the eyes,” she said.
A laboratory at the University of California-Davis has confirmed that one of the clones and its offspring share the same genetics.
http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2006/03/31/news/nation_world/doc442cc6de8bc00235903332.txt
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