Thursday, July 13, 2006

Morning Papers - continued

The Boston Globe


Hearing to address phone-jamming lawsuit request

July 13, 2006
MANCHESTER, N.H. --A judge gave New Hampshire Democrats the go-ahead today to question high-ranking Republicans as part of a phone jamming lawsuit against the Republican Party.
Democrats want to hear from individuals at the state and national level who might have had knowledge of the plan to jam Democrats' phone lines in 2002 -- a crime that led to convictions against three former G-O-P officials.
The case is scheduled to go to trial on November 27th. Lawyers say that's a tight timeframe given the number of people to be questioned and the possibility some may challenge the Democrats request to question them.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/new_hampshire/articles/2006/07/13/hearing_to_address_phone_jamming_lawsuit_request/



60 bad fixtures found in ceiling
Bolt problem in tunnel known since 1999, says attorney general
By Raja Mishra and Sean P. Murphy, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
Inspectors have found at least 60 faulty bolt fixtures that supported the ceiling of the Interstate 90 connector tunnel in the same section where concrete ceiling panels fell and crushed Milena Del Valle, state officials said yesterday.
Though the tunnel passed at least one previous safety inspection, the faulty bolt fixtures -- which Turnpike Authority officials yesterday called ``suspect" and ``compromised" -- went unnoticed until the 38-year-old's death Monday night spurred an unprecedented criminal investigation of the Big Dig's safety.
State officials were uncertain whether the faulty bolt fixtures found in the approximately 50 ceiling panels along 200 feet of the eastbound connector tunnel might have led to similar failures. The 60 potentially dangerous bolt fixtures make up about 10 percent of all bolt fixtures in that section.
Turnpike officials said there are probably more compromised bolt fixtures in the ceilings above the westbound and high-occupancy vehicle lanes of the connector tunnel.

http://www.boston.com/news/traffic/bigdig/articles/2006/07/13/60_bad_fixtures_found_in_ceiling/



Need for heavy panels was debated

By Scott Allen, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
The engineer who oversaw completion of the Interstate 90 connector said in an interview with the Globe yesterday that he questioned the need for heavy concrete panels in the tunnel's drop ceiling when he came on the job, but that he didn't press the issue with senior Big Dig officials, because the ceiling work was already well underway and he was persuaded it was being done safely.
Several of the 2 1/2- to 3-ton slabs crashed to the roadway Monday night, killing a 38-year-old mother of three and closing the tunnel indefinitely.
Officials of the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority said yesterday that the concrete panels were part of the tunnel's ventilation system and needed to be heavy to remain still when powerful fans operated at full power.
But some have questioned whether the slabs were needed at all, since their main purpose was to improve air circulation and fresh air was already entering at the entrance to the tunnel 200 feet away.

http://www.boston.com/news/traffic/bigdig/articles/2006/07/13/need_for_heavy_panels_was_debated/


Big Dig Ceiling Collapse


http://www.boston.com/news/specials/big_dig_ceiling_collapse/


Israel claims hundreds of hits in Lebanon
Lebanese citizens inspect a damaged bridge that was destroyed late Wednesday when Israeli fighter jets targeted it, on the Awali River, north of the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Thursday, July 13, 2006. Israeli forces intensified their attacks in Lebanon on Thursday, imposing a naval blockade on the country and pounding its only international airport and the Hezbollah TV station in Israel's heaviest air campaign against Lebanon for 24 years. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)
By Sam F. Ghattas, Associated Press Writer July 13, 2006
JERUSALEM --Israel has hit hundreds of targets in Lebanon as part of its effort to force the release of two soldiers captured by Hezbollah guerrillas, a top Israeli general said Thursday.
Israel intensified its attacks against Lebanon on Thursday, blasting Beirut's airport and two Lebanese army air bases near the Syrian border, and imposing a naval blockade. More than 50 people have died in violence following the capture of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah militants.
Warplanes punched holes in the runways of Beirut's international airport and two military air bases, attacks that could draw the Lebanese army into the conflict.
Israel has information that Lebanese guerrillas who captured two Israeli soldiers are trying to transfer them to Iran, the Foreign Ministry spokesman said. Spokesman Mark Regev did not disclose the source of his information.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2006/07/13/israeli_warplanes_attack_beirut_airport_1152787531/



U.N.'s Annan sends team to Middle East
July 13, 2006
UNITED NATIONS --U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan will send three veteran U.N. officials to the Middle East to try to defuse what he called a "major crisis" there, the United Nations said Thursday.
Annan was responding to a flare-up in violence that began two weeks ago when Israeli forces launched an offensive in the Gaza Strip to free a captured soldier. Israel then launched attacks against Lebanon on Wednesday after Hezbollah militants captured two Israeli soldiers.
The team will be led by Vijay Nambiar, Annan's special political adviser. It also includes U.N. Mideast envoy Alvaro de Soto and Terje Roed-Larsen, Anna's special envoy who has overseen implementation of a U.N. resolution demanding Syria end its sway over Lebanon.
"Mr. Nambiar will emphasize to all parties the secretary-general's call to exercise restraint and to do whatever possible to help contain the conflict," Annan's spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a statement released in Rome, where Annan is visiting.
The three officials will head to Cairo for a meeting of the Arab League foreign ministers on Saturday and also travel to Israel, Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, the U.N. said.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2006/07/13/uns_annan_sends_team_to_middle_east/


Guns galore as anarchy stalks Baghdad

By Mariam Karouny July 13, 2006
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Seif has never fired a gun. He wouldn't know how one worked, he says. But that did not stop him buying both a pistol and an AK-47 assault rifle last month.
In Baghdad, it can seem everyone these days is armed, a mark of violence that is ever more anarchic and prompting efforts by the government, U.S. military, and even militia leaders, to curb rogue gunmen, especially among majority Shi'ites, who threaten what the prime minister has called the "last chance" for peace.
Terrified by the thought of being caught up in the sort of street violence seen in several Baghdad neighborhoods in the past week, when dozens of people have been gunned down by squads of militants, Seif typifies Baghdad's spreading gun culture.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2006/07/13/guns_galore_as_anarchy_stalks_baghdad/



Bush gets conflicting signals over Russia policy
By Matt Spetalnick July 13, 2006
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fifteen years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, conflicting forces are once again vying to shape U.S. policy toward Moscow.
With language sometimes echoing Cold War mistrust, lawmakers from across the political spectrum are urging Washington to use this weekend's Group of Eight summit to get tough with Russia over what they see as backsliding on democracy.
Behind the scenes, however, American business interests are lobbying against anything that might offend Moscow's political sensibilities and endanger access to Russia's booming economy.
"Some of the rhetoric has gone too far," said Blake Marshall, executive vice-president of the U.S.-Russia Business Council, a Washington-based lobbying group. "When politics starts to get in the way of commerce, that's a concern to us."
The debate has yet to evoke the kind of ideological fervor it did during the Soviet era when American hawks and doves battled over policy, but new lines of engagement are emerging.
For President Bush, the challenge will be in coming to grips with those differing approaches when he meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday before the G8 major-power summit opens in St. Petersburg.
White House aides see it as a difficult balancing act.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2006/07/13/bush_gets_conflicting_signals_over_russia_policy/



Putin, on defensive, criticizes Cheney
By Associated Press July 13, 2006
MOSCOW -- President Vladimir Putin yesterday called Vice President Dick Cheney's criticism of Russia ``an unsuccessful hunting shot," a comment that underlines tensions ahead of the Group of Eight summit this weekend.
Under fire from critics who say his country does not deserve to be in the G-8 because of democratic backsliding during his more than six years in power, Putin said the elite club of wealthy nations needs Russia because of its energy riches and nuclear might.
Putin reserved his most acerbic words for Cheney, who angered the Kremlin with a speech in May in the ex-Soviet republic of Lithuania in which he accused Russia of cracking down on religious and political rights.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2006/07/13/putin_on_defensive_criticizes_cheney/



Revealing the road to 'The Dark Side'
By Scot Lehigh, Globe Columnist July 13, 2006
IF NEWSPAPERS are the first, the second draft of history on Iraq is in books and broadcast. Two new offerings might well be called the CIA's revenge, so devastating are their accounts of the Bush administration's pre-Iraq War conduct.
One is a ''Frontline'' production titled ''The Dark Side,'' so named for Vice President Dick Cheney's assertion that in combating terror, the administration would have to ''work the dark side.'' The other is ''The One Percent Doctrine,'' Ron Suskind's revealing new book about the way the Bush administration has conducted the war on terror.
That, too, takes its title from a Cheney comment, this time from his reported declaration that if there was even a 1 percent chance of a catastrophe occurring, the administration had to treat that possibility as a certainty when formulating a response.
These two impressive pieces of reporting reveal and reinforce a picture of an administration operating in a world where belief overrode evidence and ideology trumped analysis as it pressed for an ill-conceived war.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/07/13/revealing_the_road_to_the_dark_side/



Lawmakers delay vote on gay marriage measure
By Andrea Estes and Russell Nichols, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
With energetic demonstrators chanting in the street, state lawmakers yesterday delayed a vote on a proposed constitutional amendment to outlaw same-sex marriage until after the November election.
The joint legislative session voted, 100 to 91, to recess until Nov. 9, two days after Election Day. Legislators also defeated in a separate vote a move to reconvene next week.
Gay-marriage advocates said they had pushed for a postponement so they could persuade more legislators to vote against the proposed amendment and prevent it from reaching the ballot in 2008. But supporters of the ban were furious that the vote was put off.
``Profiles in courage," snapped Representative Philip Travis, Democrat of Rehoboth, a vocal opponent of same-sex marriage. ``They leave the building and don't take up the amendment until two days after they are reelected. Those who took a walk will be scrutinized. Everyone will want to know why they wanted to walk out."

http://www.boston.com/news/specials/gay_marriage/articles/2006/07/13/lawmakers_delay_vote_on_gay_marriage_measure/



Autism, mercury, and politics
By Robert Kennedy Jr. July 1, 2005
MOUNTING EVIDENCE suggests that Thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative in children's vaccines, may be responsible for the exponential growth of autism, attention deficit disorder, speech delays, and other childhood neurological disorders now epidemic in the United States.
Prior to 1989, American infants generally received three vaccinations (polio, measles-mumps-rubella, and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis). In the early 1990s, public health officials dramatically increased the number of Thimerosal-containing vaccinations without considering the cumulative impact of the mercury load on developing brains.
In a 1991 memo, Dr. Maurice Hilleman, one of the fathers of Merck's vaccination programs, warned his bosses that 6-month-old children administered the shots on schedule would suffer mercury exposures 87 times the government safety standards. He recommended that Thimerosal be discontinued and complained that the US Food and Drug Administration, which has a notoriously close relationship with the pharmaceutical industry, could not be counted on to take appropriate action as its European counterparts had. Merck ignored Hilleman's warning, and for eight years government officials added seven more shots for children containing Thimerosal.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/07/01/autism_mercury_and_politics/



Party shuns Vermont Democrats in race
Seeks to clear way for independent in US Senate bid
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
WASHINGTON -- Vermont's Democratic Party is maneuvering to keep the Democratic candidates for the state's open US Senate seat off the November ballot, as party leaders seek to clear the way for independent Representative Bernard Sanders in his bid for the Senate.
State Democratic leaders are spearheading efforts to gather signatures to put Sanders on the ballot as a Democrat, even though Sanders has repeatedly said he would turn down the party's nomination if he wins the primary. At least three other candidates have announced their intention to run for the Democratic nomination in the Sept. 12 primary, but party leaders prefer Sanders to any of them.
Ian Carleton, the chairman of the Vermont Democratic Party, said the party's efforts to secure the nomination for Sanders is a concession to political reality: Polls indicate that Sanders is so popular in Vermont that no Democrat has a real chance of beating him.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/07/13/party_shuns_vermont_democrats_in_race/



Dozens evacuated as wildfire rages in Calif. desert
Sites of Hollywood Westerns spared
By Christina Almeida, Associated Press July 13, 2006
YUCCA VALLEY, Calif. -- Firefighters evacuated dozens of homes yesterday as a wildfire raced across 26,000 acres of desert and destroyed 30 homes and buildings in an area where Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, and others filmed Hollywood Westerns.
Historic buildings in the Old West movie-set area of Pioneertown had been spared but several other structures were destroyed, fire officials said yesterday.
Wind exceeding 40 miles per hour fanned the flames, and officials said they didn't expect the weather to change anytime soon.
Dozens were evacuated yesterday from communities in Little Morongo Canyon and Burns Canyon. As many as 1,000 people fled the flames Tuesday, authorities said. Firefighters had no estimate yesterday of when they might have the blaze under control.
``If we have more of the same with the high winds and high temperatures, it could be trouble," said Marc DeRosier, a captain with the California Department of Forestry.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/07/13/dozens_evacuated_as_wildfire_rages_in_calif_desert/



Kashmiri militants eyed in India blasts

Death toll rises to 200, officials say
By Tim Sullivan, Associated Press July 13, 2006
MUMBAI, India -- The prime minister praised this wounded city for its strength yesterday, vowing that ``no one can make India kneel," while a senior investigator said the Mumbai train attacks that killed at least 200 people could be linked to a Kashmiri militant group.
A Foreign Ministry official demanded that Pakistan dismantle all terrorist networks on land it controls -- but fell short of directly accusing India's nuclear-armed rival for the attacks.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh highlighted the achievements of this city of 16 million, also known as Bombay, which staggered back to life despite attacks on the commuter train network Tuesday that killed at least 200 people and wounded more than 700.
``Your resilience and resolve will triumph over the evil designs of the merchants of death and destruction," Singh said in a televised speech. ``Let me say again, no one can make India kneel. No one can come in the path of our progress."

http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2006/07/13/kashmiri_militants_eyed_in_india_blasts/



22 Iraqis are abducted and slain
Victims seized at bus station
By Joshua Partlow and Josh White, Washington Post July 13, 2006
BAGHDAD -- Gunmen kidnapped a group of people in the parking lot of a Baghdad bus station yesterday and killed 22 of them, according to Iraqi police and military officials. The execution-style slayings occurred on the same day Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld visited Iraq and stressed the need to stem the sectarian violence that has killed scores of civilians in recent days.
The early morning raid took place in Muqdadiyah, about 60 miles northeast of Baghdad. The Iraqi military said four people were rescued but that the other captives had been killed by the time Iraqi soldiers arrived on the scene.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2006/07/13/22_iraqis_are_abducted_and_slain/



Fenway for free
A sneak peek into how teens find the cheapest way to see Sox
Josh Earle,16, of Roslindale sneaks into the Red Sox game at Fenway Park by going under the fence on Van Ness St. and into Fenway through RemDawgs on Yawkey Way. Behind him is Sean Driscoll,16, of Hyde Park. (Globe Staff Photo / Stan Grossfeld)
By Stan Grossfeld, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
There was a little blood spilled sneaking into Fenway Park to see the great Pedro Martínez pitch against his old pals last month.
``It was worth it," says Josh Earle, a 16-year-old from Roslindale, dabbing his T-shirt on the minor cut he suffered on his palm while belly sliding under a chain link fence that separates RemDawg's hot dog stand and Fenway Park from the Free World. ``I had to get in to support him. I was one of those kids that painted his face red and held up `K' cards in the bleachers and screamed for Pedro."
Earle and his buddy, Sean Driscoll, 16, of Hyde Park, arrive at Fenway Park at 1 p.m. for a 7:05 game against the Mets. They know the game is sold out; the Sox' last 263 home games have been sold out. ``I've been coming to Fenway since I was born," says Earle. ``I don't have a job. The demand is so high for tickets I can't afford it."

http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2006/07/13/fenway_for_free/


Women's fashion breaks loose

By Tina Cassidy, Globe Correspondent July 13, 2006
When the most recent J. Crew catalog arrived, a mindless glance at the first few pages was disorienting. Wait, was this Liz Lange's latest maternity offering for summer? Page after page carried baby-doll-style tops with ample pleats and fabric around the middle. Hours later, in the check-out at the grocery store, a headline on the cover of Star shouted, ``Reese: Not pregnant -- just bloated!" The poor petite Ms. Witherspoon , even if she was retaining water, was not helped by her billowy top with a drop drawstring waist; she looked so much like a sack of potatoes that her lawyer had to make an official statement declaring that she was not expecting.

http://www.boston.com/yourlife/fashion/articles/2006/07/13/womens_fashion_breaks_loose/



House panel backs bill on FBI ignoring crimes
Bulger-Flemmi case cited; agents would serve time
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff July 13, 2006
WASHINGTON -- A key House panel yesterday approved a bill that would send FBI agents to prison for up to five years if they ignore violent crimes committed by their confidential informants, a stern reaction to abuses involving a former agent and Boston gangsters James ``Whitey" Bulger and Stephen Flemmi.
The bill, approved on a voice vote by the House Judiciary Committee, would require FBI officials to give local authorities information about any ``serious violent felonies" -- including murder, sexual assault, kidnapping, and carjacking -- committed by their informants or other individuals.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/07/13/house_panel_backs_bill_on_fbi_ignoring_crimes/



Zoos

200 trees removed to make way for zoo's rain forest exhibit
Associated Press
EVANSVILLE, Ind. - Crews have removed at least 200 trees at the city's Mesker Park Zoo to make way for an $11 million Amazonian rain forest exhibit that will include 650 trees and plants typically found in the tropics.
The 10,000-square-foot exhibit will include 400 trees outside Amazonia, 100 inside and a new parking lot and zoo entrance shaded by another 150 trees of both hardy tropical varieties and native hardwoods. Many of them are already growing in greenhouses at the zoo.
The zoo director sees the project as good for trees.
"I remember watching them work and a guy with me said, 'What are you going to do when the tree-huggers find out about this?'" said Dan McGinn. "I said, 'You don't understand. We are the tree-huggers. We are replacing much, much more than we are taking out.'"

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/local/14988301.htm



Daby Toure Brings Summer Enchantment To Oregon Zoo

PORTLAND, Oregon - Daby Touré would be a businessman if his father had gotten his way. But a guitar, some self-taught lessons and a determination to succeed have made him into the rising world music star he is today. Touré will enchant the Oregon Zoo crowd when he performs as part of the zoo's Wells Fargo Summer Concert Series presented by Fred Meyer on July 26.

http://www.medfordnews.com/articles/index.cfm?artOID=331534&cp=10997



$1 increase for adults: Zoo fee hike to help pay for elephant enclosure
Tucson Citizen
It will cost adults an extra dollar to see the Reid Park Zoo's two elephants.
Starting Aug. 1, zoo admission will rise from $5 to $6 after a unanimous vote by the City Council Thursday night. Children's admission fees will not increase from the current $2 per child between the ages of 2 and 14. Children younger than 2 are admitted free.
The increase is meant to pay for the construction of the Conservation Learning Center and the Africa Zone of the zoo, which includes the controversial enclosure for an Asian and an African elephant.

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/local/18382.php


One Man's Opinion - Chippewa Zoo

Rick Smith
Web Posted: 7/7/2006 2:46:31 PM
I think it’s time the city of Thunder Bay considered another upgrade at the Wildlife Exhibit at Chippewa Park. As part of their presentation they should issue a clarification of the reason those creatures are there in the first place. If it is true that they are there because they would not survive in the bush, that they are non-releasable because of injuries that, in fact, they are rescued birds and animals and not “captured” so they can be put on display then for Pete’s sake say so! A simple, single-page handout clarifying this and issuing something of a mission statement would go a long way toward eliminating the resentment that these poor creatures were “captured” replacing the negativity with a positive feeling of gratitude that they were rescued.
The two residents of the facility that I felt terribly sorry for were the bears. Their present accommodation is a vast improvement over the appalling “torture pit” of years ago but I would guess if any single negative response from the public outnumbers all others it would be prompted by the plight of the bears.
We did not spot a single moose – was this because some action was taken following reports of neglect leading to curled up hoofs and moose forced to walk on their tendons?
I’m sure a walk about with some knowledgeable, concerned folks would lead to a list of simple, inexpensive solutions to some problems and accentuate the positive, producing an appropriate attitude of gratitude.
This is Rick Smith and That’s One Man’s Opinion

http://www.tbsource.com/Editorials/index.asp?cid=84425


Second gorilla dies at D.C. National Zoo

Staff and agencies
07 July, 2006
Mon Jul 3, 10:14 PM ET
WASHINGTON - Another western lowland gorilla died at the National Zoo on Monday, days after the zoo‘s only other adult male died while veterinary specialists tried to implant a cardiac device.
Officials were awaiting a final pathology report that might provide more information about the cause of Mopie‘s death.
Though Kuja‘s heart function was found to be normal for his age during a routine physical in late March, members of the zoo staff reported the animal was lethargic and experienced appetite loss this month.
The animals are considered endangered with dwindling wild populations. Zoo officials have said one of the leading causes of death among adult male gorillas is heart disease.
On the Net:
Smithsonian Institution ‘s National Zoo:
http://nationalzoo.si.edu

http://www.newsone.ca/hinesbergjournal/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=200940


City zoo on upswing; tops list of tourist draws
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
PATRICK HICKERSON
News staff writer
The Birmingham Zoo was Alabama's top stop in 2005 among admission-charging attractions, according to the state Bureau of Tourism and Travel.
The Birmingham Zoo tallied 449,807 visitors, followed by Visionland (now Alabama Adventure) with 345,000 and the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville - the number-one attraction in 2003 and 2004 - with 320,000. The figures were compiled in April.
The McWane Science Center, which came in seventh place, was the remaining Birmingham-area attraction in the top 10 with 246,699 visitors.

http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1147166636302360.xml&coll=2



Popcorn Park Zoo offers discount
Posted by the
Asbury Park Press on 05/9/06
LACEY: Visitors to Popcorn Park Zoo on West Lacey Road can receive discounted admission by showing their AAA membership cards, according to officials for the Associated Humane Societies, Inc., the group that operates the zoo.
The "Show Your Card and Save" program offers a $1 discount on adult admissions and 50 cents off for senior citizens and children younger than 2 years old. The 7-acre zoo, open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, is a refuge for more than 200 sick, elderly and abused animals. For more information about the zoo, visit
www.ahscares.org on the Web.
Joseph Cacchioli

http://www.app.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060509/NEWS02/605090398/1070/NEWS02


Zoo garage numbers assailed
By
KATHY MULADY
P-I REPORTER
They give up their evenings and big parts of their weekends, take time off work, attend public meetings of all kinds and pore over numbers with city officials.
John Havard and Irene Wall live near Woodland Park Zoo and oppose the proposed parking garage, which would be situated in the center left of this photograph, between the meadow where the zoo stages concerts and Phinney Avenue North.
Their obsession: a four-level parking garage planned for Woodland Park Zoo that they say would be in the wrong place, wouldn't be used, has been assigned the wrong attendance figures and would lose money every year for 20 years.
The problem, garage critics say, is that the expected number of drivers wouldn't park there, so the garage wouldn't be able to cover its bills -- unless the zoo is planning to hold a lot more events. Even now, on days when there are plenty of $4 spaces in the zoo's parking lots, they note, many visitors prefer free street parking near the zoo.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/269512_zoogarage09.html


BBC

Norway's whale catch falls short
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website
Norway's fleet will harpoon just half of its quota this year
Norway's whaling fleet will catch only half of its quota this season.
The government set a quota of 1052 minke whales, but so far only 444 have been landed.
Industry spokesmen predict the final tally for the April to August season will be about 500, and say bad weather earlier in the year prevented hunting.
Western environmental groups say the industry is in crisis, with stores full of unsold meat and a lack of demand from the Norwegian public.
"Norway has some real headaches this summer," said Sue Fisher from the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS).

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5175970.stm



Colombia volcano provokes alert
Officials are closely monitoring the volcano's activity
The Colombian authorities are urging several thousand people to leave their homes on the slopes and foothills of a volcano that is spewing ash and smoke.
A state of maximum alert is in force around the Galeras volcano in the south-west of the country.
About 2,000 people from nearby villages have so far been taken to shelters.
The last major eruption from Galeras, one of Colombia's most active volcanoes, killed nine people in 1993, including scientists monitoring it.
An explosion of rock and gas from the volcano on Wednesday prompted the local authorities

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5176234.stm



Israel imposes Lebanon blockade
Bridges were targeted in overnight raids on south Lebanon
Israel is imposing an air and sea blockade on Lebanon as part of a major offensive after two soldiers were seized by the militant group Hezbollah.
Israeli warships have blocked Lebanese ports, and its international airport was closed after Israeli bombing.
A Lebanese cabinet minister said the Israeli response was disproportionate, and called for a ceasefire.
Raids on targets across south Lebanon have killed at least 35. Two have died in Hezbollah attacks on Israel.
The operation comes as Israel continues a separate offensive in the Gaza Strip. An Israeli soldier was captured there last month.
See map of crisis in Lebanon
The offensive in Lebanon follows a day of heavy fighting in which the Israelis suffered their worst losses on the border for several years.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5175160.stm



Iraq province power transferred

The handover was signalled by a ceremony in a sports stadium
Britain has handed over responsibility for security in one of Iraq's 18 provinces to local forces for the first time since the country was invaded.
An agreement transferring power in Muthanna was signed by Major General John Cooper, who commands coalition forces in southern Iraq.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who was present, said the handover "will bring happiness to all Iraqis".
It ends the long-term presence of coalition troops in the province.
UK Defence Secretary Des Browne said it was a "milestone" for the people of the region and of Iraq.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5175478.stm



'No evidence' of shot Iraqi boy

Claims British troops killed an Iraqi boy after firing baton rounds at a crowd have proved unfounded, according to the Ministry of Defence.
Local media said the 13-year-old was hit and killed in a fracas between troops and locals just south of Amara in south-east Iraq on Wednesday.
But an MoD spokesman said troops had combed hospitals in the area and found no record of any child being admitted.
There was "no substantial evidence" to back up the claims, he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5061422.stm



More Iraqi troops to patrol Basra
The Iraqi soldiers will tackle militias and police corruption
More Iraqi troops will patrol the streets of Basra - the centre of the UK operation in Iraq - it has been announced.
Defence Secretary Des Browne said agreement had been reached with Iraqi ministers on a new security plan.
This is intended to curb the city's militias and tackle police corruption.
Mr Browne, currently visiting the country, said: "I believe this plan can make a real difference to the lives of 1.5 million Basrawis."
As a result of the blueprint, security in the city will be given "a more visible Iraqi lead".
Defence minister Abdul Qader confirmed there would be a doubling of the number of routine patrols carried out by forces from the Iraq 10th Division.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5102904.stm



Police detain 300 in Mumbai probe
Police investigating train blasts in the Indian city of Mumbai have detained about 300 people in a series of raids, and released sketches of suspects.
The raids have been carried out in the city and other parts of the state of Maharashtra amid tightened security.
But so far no formal arrests or charges have been made.
The number of people killed in Tuesday's attacks has reached 200, with more than 700 people still being treated in hospital.
The BBC's Zubair Ahmed in Mumbai says that homes, hotels, railway stations and hideouts of suspects have been targeted over the last two days in an attempt to find out who could have been responsible for the blasts.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5176890.stm


Mumbai is 'bombed but not beaten'
By Monica Chadha
BBC News, Mumbai
Hospitals have becomes theatres of grief
As Mumbai slowly recovers from Tuesday's serial bomb attacks, hospitals in the city are struggling to cope with more than 700 people injured.
Relatives and friends have been left with the unhappy task of searching for their loved ones by scrutinising lists of survivors on display outside most hospital premises.
The medics not only have to help identify charred and mutilated corpses but have also to attend to the injured lying on blood-soaked beds.
In many hospitals distraught relatives are wandering around in shock at what has happened.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5173276.stm



Bush vows Iran diplomacy solution
The visit is being seen as highly significant
US President George Bush, who is visiting Germany, has said the dispute about Iran's nuclear programme can still be solved diplomatically.
He said it would be dangerous if Iran had nuclear weapons and said the world was united in opposing this.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Iran had not given a firm response to proposals on its energy concerns if it stopped enriching uranium.
Mrs Merkel added that a new course might be necessary.
Mrs Merkel has been showing Mr Bush round the historic Baltic port of Stralsund, part of her constituency.
She is hosting a wild boar roast for him later, in the village of Trinwillershagen.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5176848.stm



'Many die' in new Afghan fighting

Nato forces are battling Taleban fighters regularly in Helmand
At least 19 suspected Taleban militants have been killed in clashes in southern Afghanistan, officials say.
A Helmand province government spokesman said Taleban fighters attacked the village of Nawzad, targeting a garrison of Afghan and coalition troops.
Shopkeepers were surrounded and ordered to leave the centre of the village before the attack began, reports said.
Coalition forces launched air strikes, with reports saying 12 Taleban died in a car, with others killed elsewhere.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5175276.stm



No advance in N Korea diplomacy
Mr Hill said talks in Pyongyang appeared to have failed
Diplomatic efforts to resolve the crisis over North Korea's missile tests appear to have made little headway with two sets of talks failing to progress.
Soon after a US envoy said China-North Korea talks had not had a breakthrough, inter-Korean talks collapsed.
But key nations remain at odds on what action to take, setting the scene for a showdown in the UN Security Council.
China says it will veto a Japanese resolution on the issue and, with Russia, has circulated a rival draft.
Japan is seeking a tough resolution - backed by the US, UK and France - that could lead to sanctions against North Korea. But China and Russia have proposed a softer draft that emphasises a diplomatic solution.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5174990.stm



3-in-1 HIV pill is licensed in US

A once-a-day HIV treatment combining three drugs in one pill, has been licensed for the first time by the US Food and Drug Administration.
Atripla, made by Bristol-Myers-Squibb and Gilead Sciences, contains efavirenz, tenofovir and emtricitabine got fast-track approval.
It is expected to be licensed in Europe next year.
HIV experts said patients were increasingly demanding combined treatments.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/5176408.stm



Bard's first folio fetches £2.8m


The First Folio contains 18 plays that had never been printed before
A rare complete copy of the First Folio of William Shakespeare's plays has sold for £2.8m at a Sotheby's auction.
The book, one of about 40 complete copies known to exist, was bought by an anonymous London book dealer.
The auctioneer hailed the book, containing 36 plays, as "the most important book in English literature".
The book, still in its 17th-Century binding, includes 36 plays, 18 of which were published for the first time, including Macbeth and Twelfth Night.
"This was a spectacular auction at Sotheby's. Sales like this are few and far between," said Charles Dupplin, book sales expert at specialist insurers Hiscox.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/5175044.stm



'Moonie' archbishop rocks Vatican

Milingo renounced his marriage four months after the wedding
An African archbishop who scandalised the Catholic Church with a 'Moonie' marriage before returning to the fold looks set to shock the Vatican again.
Emmanuel Milingo has held a surprise news conference calling on the Catholic Church to allow priests to marry.
He has spent the last four years living quietly at a convent south of Rome following his return to the church.
In 2001, he married a woman in a mass wedding conducted by the Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5176508.stm


Fifa opens inquiry over Materazzi
Materazzi scored Italy's first-half equaliser in the final
Italy defender Marco Materazzi faces disciplinary proceedings regarding his conduct in the World Cup final.
France skipper Zinedine Zidane was sent off in extra-time in Berlin for headbutting Materazzi in the chest.
Italy went on to win the title in a penalty shoot-out, but Zidane has since said he reacted to repeated provocation from his opponent.
Fifa has summoned the players to attend a hearing of its disciplinary committee on Thursday 20 July in Zurich.
A decision is expected later that day.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/world_cup_2006/teams/italy/5177140.stm


'Suicide' of World Cup official

Juergen Kiessling was known as Mr World Cup to his colleagues
Berlin's top World Cup official has died four days after shooting himself in the head just hours after the football tournament ended.
Juergen Kiessling, 65, was rushed to hospital from his house in Reinickendorf, a suburb of Berlin, after a neighbour heard the shot.
The motive for the incident is not clear, but reports said Mr Kiessling left two suicide notes.
Berlin hosted the World Cup final on Sunday, when Italy beat France.
Mr Kiessling was known as "Mister WM" (Mr World Cup) by colleagues in Berlin.
He was responsible for the hugely successful Fan Mile in Berlin city centre, a concourse where giant screens showed the matches to hundreds of thousands of fans who could not get tickets.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5177440.stm


Greasing the wheels

By George Arney
BBC News, Moscow
Can corruption drive Russians to drink?
Denis is an alcoholic and a drug addict.
But the drugs, at least, are not his fault.
He started drinking at the age of 13. By 16, he was drinking so heavily that - to use his own words - he was "completely mad, nuts!"
He committed a serious crime - he'd prefer not to say what it was - and then spent a year in prison waiting to be put on trial. After that, being found guilty but "nuts", he spent another four years incarcerated inside a psychiatric hospital.
It was in the hospital that Denis became a drug addict.
Psychiatric nurses aren't very well paid anywhere. In Russia they're paid peanuts.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5169724.stm


Wolfowitz plea ahead of G8 summit
A deal could lift millions from poverty, the World Bank boss says
World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz has called on leaders to push for agreement on a deal to free up global trade at the forthcoming G8 summit in Russia.
In a letter to leaders of the top industrialized and developing nations, Mr Wolfowitz warned that "time was running out" for a deal to be reached.
Long-running negotiations on a trade deal have so far failed to bear fruit.
Leaders of the world's richest nations are preparing to meet in St Petersburg for the G8 summit this weekend.
They will be joined by leaders of the so-called +5 group of major developing nations - China, India, Brazil, South Africa and Mexico.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5163974.stm



Philadelphia Inquirer

Chechen rebel who led attacks is killed
Russia's most-wanted man planned terror attacks that killed 800 people. There was a $10 million bounty on his head.
EKAZHEVO, Russia - Shamil Basayev, the Chechen rebel leader responsible for terror attacks that led to the deaths of more than 800 people, was killed yesterday when a dynamite-laden truck in his convoy exploded next to a muddy field in this village of redbrick houses.
The blast that killed Russia's most-wanted man, who had a $10 million bounty on his head, appeared to have been an accident, according to regional officials. Basayev died along with three other extremists in Ingushetia - a Russian republic plagued by sporadic spill-over violence from neighboring Chechnya, where Russian forces have battled separatists for a dozen years.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15009416.htm



Chechen rebel's mission won't die
By Jim Heintz
Associated Press
MOSCOW - Shamil Basayev was the face and the brains of the Chechen rebels, but his death yesterday is unlikely to be a fatal blow to the insurgency that has bloodied Russian troops for a dozen years.
Just as Basayev thrived for years after a Russian mine blew off one of his legs, the Chechen rebels have kept up their fight despite the loss of an array of charismatic and wily leaders. The violence has spread throughout Russia's poor and resentful, largely Muslim North Caucasus.
Russian politicians crowed that Basayev's demise would take away the man who was an inspiring catalyst for the small guerrilla bands that hide in Chechnya's woods and mountains in often-primitive encampments. The death was seen as a tactical victory for the Russian forces that Basayev had eluded for years.
There are conflicting reports of how Basayev died. Nikolai Patrushev, head of the Federal Security Service, said Basayev was killed as part of a special operation. But other officials, and the rebels, said he died when an explosives-laden truck blew up next to his car: An accident may have accomplished what Russia's military might was unable to do.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15009438.htm



Major Attacks Linked To Basayev

June 14, 1995 Shamil Basayev leads Chechen fighters in an attack on a hospital in Budyonnovsk, about 90 miles north of the Chechen border. About 1,000 people are held hostage and about 100 people are killed; dozens more die when Russian troops unsuccessfully storm the hospital June 17.
August 1999 Four apartment building bombings kill about 300 people in Moscow and two other Russian cities. Basayev denies responsibility; Russia cites the attacks as one of the motives for sending troops back into Chechnya for the second war in a decade.
Oct. 23, 2002 Chechen extremists take 800 people hostage at a Moscow theater. Two days later, Russian special forces storm the building and use narcotic gas to subdue the attackers; 129 hostages and 41 Chechen fighters are killed.
Dec. 27, 2002 A suicide truck bomb attack destroys the headquarters of

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15012762.htm



City faulted on disaster readiness

A task force is preparing to release a report Thursday calling for Phila. to beef up its inadequate emergency services for a "24-hour presence."
By Marcia Gelbart
Inquirer Staff Writer
A task force studying Philadelphia's protocol for dealing with a disaster such as Hurricane Katrina has determined that the city's emergency-management office is not on par with similar agencies in other cities.
The Philadelphia office needs to be strengthened so that it has a "24-hour presence," and should be led by a high-salaried executive with a background in emergency services, task force member James Eisenhower said last week.
Eisenhower, an unsuccessful 2004 Democratic candidate for state attorney general, mentioned those findings during an unrelated board meeting last week of the city's fiscal watchdog, the Pennsylvania Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (PICA).
A broad final report of the 42-member task force on emergency preparedness, which was appointed by Mayor Street in September, is expected to be released at a City Hall news conference Thursday.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15009455.htm



Phila. unready for big disaster

Study says city would be "quickly overwhelmed."
By Jennifer Lin
The question weighed on the mind of every big-city mayor in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina: Could my city handle such a cataclysmic disaster?
The answer for Mayor Street is no.
A million-dollar analysis of the city's emergency readiness, which is to be released at a news conference today, has concluded that Philadelphia could be "quickly overwhelmed in a large-scale or catastrophic event."
The report by consultant James Lee Witt, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in the Clinton administration, said gaps in resources and procedures would make the city vulnerable in times of extreme distress.
While the city can handle big planned events - like the 2000 Republican National Convention or the 2005 Live 8 concert - a major emergency caused by nature or terrorists could turn Philadelphia into New Orleans.
The review, which began in January, found that the city:
Relies heavily on individual knowledge for emergency planning.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025099.htm



Olmert, Hamas leader intensify verbal battle

No prisoner swap, the Israeli insisted. Mashaal said it was the only way. Talks may yet be alive.
By Michael Matza
Inquirer Staff Writer
JERUSALEM - Underscoring the dangerous stalemate between Israel and Hamas, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said he refuses to trade Palestinian prisoners for an Israeli soldier abducted last month by Hamas' military wing, while in Damascus, Hamas' political chief, Khaled Mashaal, said the only solution to the burgeoning crisis is a mediated "swap."
The language from both men was fierce and unequivocal.
"Khaled Mashaal is a terrorist with blood on his hands," Olmert said. "He is the head of an organization which openly, publicly and officially calls for the liquidation of the State of Israel... . He is not a partner" for anything, Olmert told reporters yesterday in his first foreign-media news conference since becoming prime minister.
Mashaal, using similar rhetoric to address Israel, said, "You want to liquidate the Palestinian people and place them on the margins of history... you will fail."

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/15009420.htm


Fears of Iraqi civil war climb with violence that kills 40

Two more bombings and shootings left Baghdad reeling. The new prime minister called for unity.
By Joshua Partlow and Bassam Sebti
Washington Post
BAGHDAD - A barrage of bombings and gunfire killed at least 40 people in Iraq yesterday, as sectarian warfare continued a day after Shiite Muslim militiamen had terrorized a Sunni Arab neighborhood in Baghdad.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on Iraqis to "unite as brothers" and stop the cycle of retaliatory violence.
But the killings that began Sunday morning - with mobs of gunmen pulling Sunnis out of their cars and storming their homes in the al-Jihad neighborhood - spread to Shiite enclaves in the capital and other cities across Iraq.
Many Iraqis expressed fear that the recent attacks were pushing the country past isolated killings into civil war.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/15009422.htm


Tape: Troops were killed because of rape

By Robert H. Reid
Associated Press
BAGHDAD - An al-Qaeda-linked group says it killed three U.S. soldiers last month and mutilated two of their bodies to avenge the rape-slaying of a young Iraqi by troops of the same unit, an institute that monitors extremist Web sites said today.
The Mujahedeen Shura Council made the claim in an Internet video that included the mutilated bodies of two of the soldiers attacked June 16 near Youssifiyah, according to a statement by the SITE Institute.
The institute released still pictures from the video showing two of the American dead, one of whom had been decapitated.
According to the institute, the statement by the insurgent group said the video was released as "revenge for our sister who was dishonored by a soldier of the same brigade."
Five U.S. soldiers have been charged in the March 12 alleged rape and killing of the young Iraqi and the slayings of three of her relatives. The U.S. military released the identities of the suspects yesterday.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/15010648.htm


The Lightning Round
We'll take what we can get
Italy is the new world champion of soccer, having defeated France, which means South Philly has bragging rights for the next four years. May the celebration go on for as long as possible; Italy's fans deserve this joy that had eluded them since 1982.
Besides, who knows when another pro sports championship might arrive in South Philly? The 17-year locust shows up more often. If we must embrace a team from overseas for the opportunity to chant "We're Number One," we'll take it.
Despite Italy's hard-earned victory, the conclusion of World Cup 2006 did not show the "beautiful game" at its best. Retiring French star Zinedine Zidane, perhaps the finest player of his era, disgraced himself by head-butting an Italian opponent and getting ejected in his last game.
Ted Williams said farewell to baseball by hitting a home run in his final at-bat. Zidane chose to assault a man with his bald pate. Given that unsportsmanlike conduct, journalists were wrong to vote Zidane the tournament's best player.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/15009441.htm


'Reforming' FEMA will fail
Katrina exposed flaws in an overly centralized agency. Free markets would do the job better.
By Russell S. Sobel and Peter T. Leeson
The Senate succeeded last week in reconciling two bills intended to reform the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but the proposals do little more than tweak FEMA's organizational chart.
The bills ignore the real problem: FEMA's central-planning approach to organizing economic activity after a natural disaster.
The great weakness of central planning is its inability to respond quickly to changes and unforeseen circumstances. No centralized authority, no matter how well-intentioned its employees and well-functioning its internal operations, can overcome this problem. The superiority of markets over central planning is widely recognized around the world, except apparently by those responsible for American disaster relief policy.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/15009445.htm


Where have you gone, Babe Ruth?
Baseball needs a shot of innocence - a return to the kid-friendly days past when it was all about fun.
By B.G. Kelley
As baseball showcases its All-Stars tonight, there's no way to deny this: The game needs more fun.
Baseball is beleaguered by too many black-eye issues: steroid use; domestic abuse; the bottom-line mentality of team owners; agents and lawyers with little or no regard for the game; and unstable teams full of here-today-gone-tomorrow players who are too often greedy and surly.
Baseball needs to take a page out of its history. Remember Willie Mays playing stickball on the streets of New York with kids? Yogi Berra speaking unguardedly and with ceaseless delight about the game? Ernie Banks coming to the park and genuinely musing, "It's a great day, let's play two"? Richie Ashburn, the symbol of the 1950 pennant-winning Whiz Kids Phillies, signing autograph after autograph for kids?

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/15009446.htm



A Smaller Deficit
Editorial Worth a Bronx cheer
Score one for President Bush, but his budget team is still way behind.
The president said Tuesday that the federal deficit for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 would be only $296 billion. That is good news; last year's deficit was $318 billion. And the Bush administration, never shy about managing expectations, had projected in February that this year's deficit would be a whopping $423 billion.
So a less catastrophic deficit is indeed a ray of sunshine.
But, in this week of the All-Star Game, Robert Bixby, executive director of the nonpartisan fiscal watchdog group Concord Coalition, put the news in perspective with a baseball analogy:
Suppose your team is trailing by eight runs. Then your side scores one run. That is good news. But you are still far behind, and opportunities to erase that deficit are dwindling.
Worse, it's as if Manager Bush glanced at the scoreboard, saw his team trailing 10-3 and pronounced that his pitching staff was doing great. No need to change strategy.
"We're not looking at tax and spending policies in a rational way," said Bixby.
The lower deficit is due in part to an increase in taxes paid by corporations, wealthy individuals and small business owners. It's another bit of evidence that, in this economy, high wage earners are benefitting at a greater pace, with bonuses and bigger salary hikes, than their lower-paid counterparts.
The wealthy are getting wealthier and opening a larger gap on the rest of America.
The president and supporters of his tax cuts claim that the latest revenue uptick proves that tax cuts "pay for themselves" by boosting the economy. It's wishful thinking, this absolutist version of "supply side" theory.
Without doubt, tax cuts can spur economic activity that generates revenue to offset the impact of tax cuts. While this "replacement effect" can vary, it's never 100 percent and rarely more than 50 percent.
The Bush tax cuts are a big reason the government is still operating at a large defict. The red ink is projected to get worse next year.
Fact is, economic growth since the tax cuts in 2001 hasn't been as strong as the growth in the economy in the years following the large Clinton-era income tax increase in 1993. For three consecutive years after the 2001 cuts, tax revenue declined. While revenue has increased over the past year, tax receipts are only now recovering to where they were in 2000.
A lot of factors go into the economy's health, many beyond government's control. What recent history suggests is that supply-siders overestimate the economic benefits of tax cuts, while trying to excuse or minimize the damage they do to the nation's fiscal health.
The last thing the nation should do is look at this budgetary blip and conclude that it justifies extending tax cuts that are set to expire.
"We still have a $300 billion deficit," Bixby said. "We're still not raising enough money to pay for the war, prescription drugs and all else."
We're still down seven runs, and it's getting late in the game.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/15025098.htm



Mind over matter

New technology turns thoughts into actions, offering hope to spinal-cord patients.
By Tom Avril
Inquirer Staff Writer
With the aid of electrodes implanted in his brain, a man paralyzed from the neck down was able to perform certain everyday activities - move a computer cursor, open e-mail, turn on a TV set - merely by imagining them.
The patient, whose spinal cord was injured when an attacker stabbed him in the neck, was even able to open and close a prosthetic hand, his thoughts translated into action by a computer system developed at Brown University.
The results, reported in today's issue of the journal Nature, offer hope that thousands of people with injured spinal cords could someday regain significant function by simply bypassing the injury. Authors predicted a commercial version of the system would be available in just a few years and would also work for victims of stroke and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly called Lou Gehrig's disease.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025100.htm

Video

http://press.nature.com/pdf/press_files/nature/13-07-2006/nature04970-s7.mov



Barbaro is resting but in guarded condition
By Mike Jensen
Inquirer Staff Writer
The surgeon treating injured Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro said yesterday that the horse was resting comfortably at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center, but he is in guarded condition, "facing tough odds."
"Our entire staff is determined to do all they can for this magnificent horse," Dean Richardson, chief of surgery at New Bolton, said in a statement.
Richardson said all decisions are being made "in constant consultation" with owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson, who live several miles west of the Kennett Square facility and visit daily.
"Barbaro's condition is potentially serious, and we are aggressively seeking all treatment options," said Richardson, who performed surgery the day after Barbaro suffered "catastrophic" fractures in his right hind leg in the May 20 Preakness Stakes. "Today, we will focus on further diagnostics and keeping our patient comfortable."

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025006.htm



D.A. need not tell how drug money is spent
Pennsylvania law says the confiscated cash may be spent for any "law enforcement" purpose - and the public need not be told where it went.
By Jeff Shields
Inquirer Staff Writer
The prosecutors and police officers marveled when Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor six weeks ago piled a table high with $2.7 million in cash confiscated in a gambling arrest.
No one present that day had ever seen such a fortune - perhaps the largest seizure of its kind in state history. It was equal to almost a quarter of Castor's annual budget.
But even more amazing than the windfall itself: Castor can decide how the money is spent without ever telling the public what he did with it.
It's a quirk of state law that has observers scratching their heads. New Jersey, for example, requires quarterly reports of such seized assets.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025068.htm


Experiments on prisoners recommended - with limits
Drugs and counseling could be studied, said an independent medical panel that stressed it wants to avoid repeating the Holmesburg horrors.
By Dawn Fallik
Inquirer Staff Writer
Thirty years ago, the federal government severely limited medical experimentation on prisoners after the discovery that pharmaceutical companies and medical researchers were using Philadelphia inmates as medical guinea pigs.
Now, an independent panel has suggested easing those restrictions. But with the lingering specter of Nazi experiments and the local Holmesburg Prison scandal, some say the door should remain shut.
"This is a dangerous cul-de-sac to go down again," said A. Bernard Ackerman, a New York dermatologist who worked at Holmesburg Prison as a second-year resident at the University of Pennsylvania during the trials. "There has to be experimentation in medicine, but populations that are aged, vulnerable or defective mentally should not be used."

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025044.htm


Stores taking tax hike calmly

Buyers can beat Saturday's clock.
By Edward Colimore and Jan Hefler
Inquirer Staff Writers
In Cherry Hill, the Pet Shoppe alerted customers with a sign: "Sales Tax Increase Effective Saturday 15th. Buy Now and Save."
Other businesses, including Eckenhoff Buick in Cherry Hill, placed newspaper ads encouraging people to buy before Saturday.
And some merchants phoned customers, warning them about Saturday's sales-tax increase to 7 percent.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15025069.htm


Kean researcher's own past ends up in spotlight
By Cynthia Burton
Inquirer Staff Writer
A researcher working on Thomas H. Kean Jr.'s proposed film attacking U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez once sent out thousands of anonymous post cards and automated phone calls accusing a New Hampshire candidate's wife of being in an orgasm cult.
Christopher Lyon's resume includes work done for Republican state parties in New York and Virginia, more than one New Jersey congressman, former New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Bret Schundler, and now Kean, Menendez's challenger in New Jersey's U.S. Senate race.
Lyon researched Willie Horton, the furloughed killer who became an issue in the 1988 presidential race between Michael Dukakis and George H.W. Bush, and Bill Clinton's background while Clinton was governor of Arkansas.
Lyon, known as an "opposition researcher," is definitely not the kind of campaign worker politicians brag about. Yet his work often drives strategy in a tight race such as the one between Republican Kean and Democrat Menendez.
Lyon declined to comment.
Campaigns for everything from school board to the presidency hire such researchers. Menendez has one, too, who is digging into Kean's background. As a rule, the tighter a race, the more likely the candidates will attack each other.
What is unusual about Lyon is that he is being shoved from the musty record rooms and exhaustive Internet searches and into the light of controversy surrounding Kean's allegations about Menendez.
Kean says Menendez was no hero when he testified against a bribe-taking boss of Union City, N.J., almost a quarter-century ago. Former prosecutors said Menendez's testimony was a courageous act.
Lyon came into the light when he told a New York Times reporter about the Menendez movie.
Menendez campaign spokesman Matthew Miller said a candidate's background was a legitimate area of inquiry, but that it was the Kean campaign's "deliberate misrepresentation of information that is so objectionable."

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15026528.htm



Center Square The real coward
By Chris Satullo
Inquirer Columnist
The only bullets Karl Rove has ever dodged were legal.
Last week, after learning he would avoid indictment for his role in the sliming of an Iraq war critic, Rove had this to say about two men who risked death in service of country, John Murtha and John Kerry:
"Like too many Democrats, it strikes me that they are ready to give the green light to go to war, but when it gets tough and when it gets difficult they fall back on that party's pattern of cutting and running."
In any sentence with the names Kerry, Murtha and Rove, there is only one possible coward. It's not the Pennsylvania congressman nor the Massachusetts senator.
The only combat for which Rove ever volunteered was political. In that realm, he's mastered the coward's way, the sly attack from the hidden place, the anonymous flier full of innuendo, the invective by surrogates, the timely leak to the friendly writer. The shiv goes in the back, but the fingerprints are smudged.
Sadly, it works. So it gets rewarded and imitated.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/14842903.htm



Karl Rove's Role
Editorial He was a source, and in the wrong
The Valerie Plame case is one tangled mess. But one oft-disputed point is now clear:
Karl Rove, President Bush's chief political adviser, was a source for the newspaper column that initiated this mess. In 2003, Robert Novak told his readers that Plame, a CIA agent, was married to a vocal critic of Bush's misstatements about Iraqi WMD.
In a column this week, Novak said Rove was not the original source, but a confirming one. The columnist, who (unlike other journalists involved in this case) was never threatened with jail for shielding sources, still won't identify the first leaker to readers, except as an "administration official."
Novak also wrote that special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, who investigated whether the Plame leak violated a federal law against outing CIA agents, figured out early on who Novak's sources had been. Novak said that, under subpoena, he only confirmed what the prosecutor suspected.
Novak's column is riddled with vague syntax that leaves mysteries unanswered. What's clear, though, is that Rove abetted the outing of Plame. No, Rove was not charged, as his apologists trumpet. Fitzgerald concluded that the facts of the case didn't fit the spy statute well enough. The only indictment, against White House aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, was for lying to a grand jury.
But is this really the feeble ethical reed to which the supposed party of "values voters" clings: "If they can't convict me, it's not wrong"?
The president originally said he'd fire any staffer responsible for the Plame leak. His press secretary denied that Rove was involved. Then, as the heat rose around Rove, the standard changed. Bush said he'd fire only those convicted of a crime.
Guess the president's first statement became "inoperative." Sound familiar?

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/15025116.htm

The Fishbowl

http://inkyfishbowl.wordpress.com/

Recipe Blueberry-Lavender Compote
Makes 3 cups
2 pints fresh blueberries
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon cornstarch
1/2 cup sugar
Pinch sea salt
1 teaspoon lavender blossoms (or dried culinary lavender)
1. Pick over berries, removing any stems, and give them a rinse.
2. In a saucepan large enough to accommodate the berries, mix the juice with the cornstarch, sugar and salt. Add the berries and lavender and cook over medium heat until the fruit gives up its juice and the liquid thickens, a matter of a few minutes.
3. Take off the heat and cool.
4. Serve over vanilla ice cream, bread pudding, lemon tart, pancakes, etc.
-From Local Flavors: Cooking and Eating From America's Farmers' Markets by Deborah Madison (Broadway 2002).
Per serving (based on 6): 128 calories, 1 gram protein, 31 grams carbohydrates, 26 grams sugar, 0.4 gram fat, no cholesterol, 33 milligrams sodium, 2 grams dietary fiber.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/15023879.htm


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