Friday, July 07, 2006

...and New Jersey is fighting over a budget when they need to address flood control.


July 1, 2006.

Harmony, New Jersey. Nice name for a town.

Photographer states :: As waters receeded on Saturday 71 (July 1) the damage beacame apparent. This section of Harmony was under water to half way up the second floor windows. I was part of the fire crews washig out the mud from the houses.


Posted by Picasa

The Floods of the Northeast



June 28, 2006

Deposit, New York


Posted by Picasa


July 4, 2006.

Kennedy Space Center.

Photographer states :: STS 121 space shuttle Discovery sky rockets off the launch pad on the 4th of July holiday from the Kennedy Space Center on it's way to the international space station.
Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - continued ...

The Guardian unlimited

Two-minute silence for July 7 victims
Mark Oliver and agencies
Friday July 7, 2006
Britain today marked the first anniversary of the July 7 London bombings with a national two-minute silence.
It was one of a series of events taking place today to commemorate the victims of the suicide attacks on three tube trains and a bus.
Across the country, people stopped to observe the silence at midday, remembering the 52 people who died and the 700 injured.
Hundreds of Londoners gathered to take part in the tribute at the sites of the four explosions.
At King's Cross, where 26 people died in a Piccadilly line train seconds after it left the station, one of the busiest parts of the capital became still. Buses pulled over to the side of the road, and other traffic stopped.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/story/0,,1814861,00.html


Berlusconi and Mills to face trial

Staff and agencies
Friday July 7, 2006
Guardian Unlimited
The former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was ordered today to stand trial following an investigation into alleged fraud in the purchase of movie and television rights at Mediaset, his media empire.
David Mills, the estranged husband of the culture secretary, Tessa Jowell, will also have to stand trial for his part in the alleged fraud, the Apcom news agency said.
Mr Mills tonight said that he was "absolutely baffled" by today's decision as he had understood that he had been cleared by the trial judge, Fabio Paparella.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/italy/story/0,,1815571,00.html


Crowds gather to see chunk fall off Eiger
John Hooper
Friday July 7, 2006
A vast chunk of Europe's most ill-famed mountain threatens to break loose and crash down in the next few days, a geologist monitoring the situation told the Guardian on Friday.
Hans-Rudolf Keusen said 2m cubic metres of the Eiger in the Bernese Alps, Switzerland - twice the volume of the Empire State Building - was rapidly working its way loose. He said the mountain appeared to have cracked open as an indirect result of global warming.
There was no danger to human beings. "There aren't any houses underneath, so no one is going to end up getting a rock on the head," Mr Keusen said.

http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,,1815404,00.html



Minister says Israel will swap Palestinian prisoners for soldier
Conal Urquhart in Gaza City
Friday July 7, 2006
The Guardian
An Israeli minister said Israel was prepared to release Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the freedom of an Israeli soldier held captive for almost two weeks.
It was the first public admission that Israel was willing to contemplate a prisoner exchange to free Corporal Gilad Shalit, who was captured during a raid on Israeli positions near Gaza on June 25.
Avi Dichter, the minister of public security, told a conference today: "The release of the soldier Gilad Shalit is a must ... Israel will need to, after some time, release prisoners as a reciprocal gesture. Israel knows how to do this. Israel has done this more than once in the past."
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, told reporters Israel had agreed to withdraw from Gaza and free some prisoners in return for Cpl Shalit's freedom.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,,1815563,00.html



North Korea forfeits aid after missile launches
Staff and agencies
Friday July 7, 2006
South Korean ministers today announced they were halting food aid to North Korea and the Japanese government threatened "severe measures" following the communist regime's missile tests earlier this week.
Shoichi Nakagawa, Japan's minister of agriculture, forestry and fisheries, also suggested the Pyongyang government should repay rice aid worth 7bn yen (£33m) provided in 1995 as a 30-year loan.
"I feel sorry for the people who are starving but we have absolutely no plans to provide food aid to North Korea," he said. "We should also take measures as severe as possible on [North Korean] imports and exports to step up the pressure."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/korea/article/0,,1815375,00.html



Scare over salmonella in chocolate widens

· Other food firms bought Cadbury's base ingredient
· Company now agrees to clean all production lines
Felicity Lawrence and James Meikle
Friday July 7, 2006
The alert over Cadbury products contaminated with salmonella widened yesterday as it emerged other food companies bought chocolate crumb from the Herefordshire factory at the heart of the crisis.
After a meeting with the authorities in London yesterday, it also emerged Cadbury has only now agreed to a comprehensive cleaning of all the production lines at the Marlbrook plant concerned.
It first discovered it had a salmonella problem at the site in January this year, although the authorities believe that previous outbreaks in 2002 at its other factories may be traced back to Herefordshire. Cadbury only admitted to the contamination after an alert from the Health Protection Agency about an unusual rise in human cases of Salmonella montevideo. It agreed to recall more than 1m bars of seven types of chocolate brands that had tested positive two weeks ago.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/food/Story/0,,1814626,00.html


Guantánamo inmate tells of worsening conditions

Associated Press
Friday July 7, 2006
An Australian terror suspect being held at Guantánamo Bay today told relatives that conditions at the prison camp had worsened.
David Hicks said he had not been told about a landmark US court ruling that cancelled his proposed military trial, his lawyer, David McLeod, said.
Mr McLeod, who sat in on the two-hour call, said 31-year-old Mr Hicks sounded "very, very depressed". It was only the fourth conversation he has been allowed to have with his family since arriving at Guantánamo in early 2002.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/guantanamo/story/0,,1814907,00.html



Reid agrees British hacker can be deported for US trial
· American prosecutors say £375,000 damage caused
· Defence claims UFO 'nerd' may face Guantánamo jail internment
Bobbie Johnson, technology correspondent
Friday July 7, 2006
The Guardian
A Briton accused of hacking into the Pentagon's computers is to be extradited to the US, the Home Office has confirmed. Gary McKinnon, from north London, stands accused of what American prosecutors call the "biggest military hack of all time", and potentially faces a sentence of 70 years if found guilty.
The decision over his future had been left to the discretion of the home secretary, John Reid, after a lengthy hearing at Bow Street magistrates court. Lawyers defending Mr McKinnon had claimed that the 40-year-old might even face the prospect of a military tribunal and potential internment in Guantánamo Bay as a so-called enemy of the state.

http://technology.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,,1814821,00.html



Baccalaureate pupil numbers rising, survey finds

Catherine Jones
Friday July 7, 2006
EducationGuardian.co.uk
More British pupils are choosing to take the International Baccalaureate (IB) diploma instead of A-levels, with the numbers set to further increase, new figures show.
And this week the University and Colleges Admissions Service (Ucas) has further championed the IB by including it in its tariff for the first time.
A survey of admissions officers commissioned by ACS International Schools, published today, showed that two-thirds of admissions officers had reported an increase in the number of IB candidate applications and three out of four surveyed expected this figure to increase.

http://education.guardian.co.uk/1419education/story/0,,1815324,00.html


The New York Times

London Solemn on Anniversary of Bombings
By
ALAN COWELL
Published: July 7, 2006
LONDON, July 7 – Much of London fell silent on Friday as Britons observed two minutes silence to mourn the 52 people killed on subway trains and a bus by four bombers exactly one year ago on July 7, 2005.
The commemoration was overshadowed in part by a video, aired on
Al Jazeera Arabic television on Thursday purporting to show one of the attackers warning in a last testament that "what you have witnessed now is only the beginning."
The theme was echoed today by London's police chief, Sir Ian Blair, who told the BBC that the threat of a new attack had "palpably increased" since July last year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/world/europe/07cnd-london.html?hp&ex=1152331200&en=2295d400e040bdf8&ei=5094&partner=homepage



London Bomber Outlines Motives in Video
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 7, 2006
Filed at 3:34 p.m. ET
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- One of the four suicide bombers who attacked London a year ago appeared on an Internet video Friday accusing his country of declaring war on Islam and oppressing Muslims in Palestine, Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya.
''For the non-Muslims in Britain, you may wonder what you have done to deserve this,'' Shehzad Tanweer told Britons on the tape, an excerpt of which was broadcast on the pan-Arab satellite channel
Al-Jazeera on Thursday.
Britons continue to oppress ''our mothers and children, brothers and sisters from the east to the west in Palestine, Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya,'' he said, speaking with a thick north English accent.
''Your government has openly support for the genocide of more than 150,000 innocent Muslims in Fallujah,'' he said, referring to the west Iraqi town where U.S. forces fought Islamic militants for several weeks.
''You have openly declared war on Islam,'' he added.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Britain-Bombings-Tanweer.html



For Gay Rights Movement, a Key Setback
By
PATRICK HEALY
Published: July 7, 2006
When Massachusetts became the first state to legalize gay marriage in November 2003, gay rights advocates imagined a chain reaction that would shake marriage laws until same-sex couples across the nation had the legal right to wed.
Nowhere did gay marriage seem like a natural fit more than New York, where the Stonewall uprising of 1969 provided inspiration for the gay rights movement and where a history of spirited progressivism had led some gay couples to envision their own weddings someday.
Yesterday's court ruling against gay marriage was more than a legal rebuke, then — it came as a shocking insult to gay rights groups. Leaders said they were stunned by both the rejection and the decision's language, which they saw as expressing more concern for the children of heterosexual couples than for the children of gay couples. They also took exception to the ruling's description of homosexuality as a preference rather than an orientation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/nyregion/07gays.html?ei=5094&en=c2a63bf5dad8cae5&hp=&ex=1152331200&adxnnl=1&partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1152279528-4JcFsNWqpKEFoe2sPVjObQ



President Has a Smooth Ride on 'Larry King Live'
By
ALESSANDRA STANLEY
Published: July 7, 2006
Two kinds of celebrities go on "Larry King Live" on CNN: those with something to sell and those with something to hide.
Al Gore and Brandon Routh, the young star of the newly released "Superman Returns," recently appeared on the show to promote their new movies. The second category includes guests like Star Jones Reynolds, Mary Kay Letourneau, and, right after his indictment in 2004, Kenneth L. Lay of Enron. "Larry King Live" is the first stop in any damage control operation — a chance to explain oneself to the least contentious journalist in the land.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/washington/07teevee.html?hp&ex=1152331200&en=edca849fb9e7e86a&ei=5094&partner=homepage



Algerian Tells of Dark Odyssey in U.S. Hands
By
CRAIG S. SMITH and SOUAD MEKHENNET
Published: July 7, 2006
ALGIERS — Two years ago, a motley collection of prisoners spent night after night repeating their telephone numbers to one another from within the dark and dirty cells where they were being held in
Afghanistan. Anyone who got out, they said they agreed, would use the numbers to contact the families of the others to let them know that they were still alive.
At least two of those men are now free and, thanks to the memorization exercise, are back in touch with each other.
The case of one of them, Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen who was held as part of the United States' antiterrorism rendition program, was revealed last year, and German and American officials have acknowledged that he was erroneously detained by the United States. But the tale of the other, an Algerian named Laid Saidi, has never been told before, and it carries a new set of allegations against America's secret detention program.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/world/africa/07algeria.html?hp&ex=1152331200&en=ab93f08dc9973987&ei=5094&partner=homepage



Fewer New Jobs Added in June Than Expected

By
JEREMY W. PETERS
Published: July 7, 2006
Job growth last month was tepid, the Labor Department reported today, with fewer new jobs added than economists had expected. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.6 percent.
Employment Situation Report (pdf)
The Labor Department reported that the United States economy added 121,000 non-farm jobs in June, based on seasonally adjusted figures. Economists say at least 150,000 new jobs are needed each month just to keep pace with the natural growth of the work force.
Forecasters had predicted a figure closer to 175,000 for June, or even higher, especially after a survey released Wednesday by
Automatic Data Processing, a major payroll-services company, showed a rise of 368,000 jobs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/business/07cnd-jobs.html?ei=5094&en=df9d39c637b926e2&hp=&ex=1152331200&adxnnl=1&partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1152280101-hB4u2EIGFv0AVFqO1XkCBA



Border Fight Focuses on Water, Not Immigration
By
RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
Published: July 7, 2006
CALEXICO, Calif. — For more than 100 years, as their names imply, Calexico and its much larger sister city, Mexicali, south of the border, have embraced each other with a bonhomie born of mutual need and satisfaction in the infernal desert.
The pedestrian gate into
Mexico clangs ceaselessly as Mexicans lug back bulging bags from Wal-Mart and 99 Cent Stores in Calexico. The line into the United States slogs along, steady but slower, through an air-conditioned foyer as men and women trudge off to work and, during the school year, children wear the universal face that greets the coming day.
Now, the ties that bind Calexico and Mexicali are being tested as a 20-year dispute over the rights to water leaking into Mexico from a canal on the American side is reaching a peak. Though the raging debate over illegal
immigration in the United States has not upset border relations here, some say the fight over water could affect the number of Mexicans who try to cross here illegally.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/us/07border.html



FBI Mueller's strategy against terrorists is dangerous.
I'll be happy to tell you why. It's dangerous not just to Americans under suspicion or others outside the USA, but, to the aveage citizen and I am not talking 'false arrest' that will become as big a plight as extraordinary rendition.
To begin with this is Representative King's baby. Lots of money spent so there needs to be some kind of 'outcome' he can pander to voters with. That's to start. This is primarily a political stunt as far as I am concerned. It may be to try to sell New York back to the top of the funding of Homeland Security, but, this isn't the way to do it. Additional and dedicated federal taxes is the way to support the needs of 'NATIOANL Security.' That aside:
In this article:
Plotters Sought to Bomb New York Tunnel
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/news/news-security [...]
...there is absolutely no concrete reason to believe this Lebanese citizen was capable of carrying out an attack against the USA or New York tunnels. All there is and Mueller states it, or his representatives do,...
"...FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said in a statement released in Washington: ``At this time we have no indication of any imminent threat to the New York transportation system or anywhere else in the U.S.''..."
"...The Daily News quoted a counterterrorism source as saying officials were alarmed because the plotters allegedly got a pledge of financial and tactical support from Jordanian associates of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq before he was killed last month. The paper said it was not clear if any cash or assistance was delivered...."
"...But it said some experts did not consider the plan feasible because the tunnel was protected by concrete and cast-iron steel and even if the tunnel cracked, the Wall Street district would not flood because it was above the level of the river...."
NOW. This to me is crying 'wolf' one too many times. If the FBI continues in this vein, picking up everyone whom screams terrorist plot on the internet and in the halls of poverty of the USA; without any concrete evidence the plot was feasible, even funding, bank transfers of suspects of extraordinary amounts indicating cooperation to make 'the plot' occur then ON A REGULAR basis the FBI will be wasting their assets on 'jokes' rather than on the real danger.
After the arrests of seven Black homeless men in Miami, every serious terrorist is now doing business through encription. If they are serious, they aren't that stupid. If the FBI continues to harass people by what they say rather than by sincere evidence they're going to make a serious mistake.
Mueller's FBI needs to do serious work and not a lazy man's job !!


Plotters Sought to Bomb New York Tunnel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A plot to bomb New York's Holland Tunnel in an effort to flood the Wall Street financial district has been uncovered by the FBI, with a suspect arrested in Lebanon, New York's Daily News reported on Friday.
Lebanon confirmed on Friday it had arrested a suspect in connection with a plot to bomb a tunnel in New York, a government source said.
Rep. Peter King, a New York Republican and chair of the U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee, said he had argued strenuously against recent cuts in security funding for New York because of exactly such plots.
``There is a lot to what was in today's Daily News story, but that's really all I can confirm about it,'' he told CNN. ``I also confirm that there are significant ongoing plots against the city of New York's mass transit system.''

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/news/news-security-tunnel-report.html



Ex-Soldier's Case Now Goes to Grand Jury
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 7, 2006
Filed at 3:03 p.m. ET
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- The case of a former Army private charged with slaying and raping an Iraqi woman and killing her family will be presented to a grand jury this month.
Steven D. Green, 21, entered a plea of not guilty through his public defenders Thursday. He also waived a detention hearing and a preliminary hearing, and agreed that his case would be prosecuted in the Western District of Kentucky.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Butler said the case would be presented before a grand jury sometime in mid-July, probably in Paducah.
U.S. Magistrate Judge James Moyer set an arraignment date of Aug. 8 in Paducah for Green, who was arrested Friday by FBI agents in Marion, N.C.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Ex-Soldier-Charged-Trial.html?hp&ex=1152331200&en=7c8904883db1d418&ei=5094&partner=homepage



S. Korea Pledges to Talk Soon With North

Filed at 3:35 p.m. ET
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korea said Friday it would withhold food and fertilizer shipments to impoverished North Korea until the missile crisis is resolved, even as it pledged to hold high-level talks with the communist regime next week.
Meanwhile, a top U.S. envoy agreed with China to coordinate strategy on the North.
It remained unclear whether North Korea was planning to fire more missiles. South Korean officials said another long-range missile may be at a launch site, but the latest intelligence showed no signs the reclusive regime was getting ready for more tests.
Pyongyang triggered an international furor Wednesday when it test-fired seven missiles that plunged into the Sea of Japan without causing damage or injury.
Japan and the United States have led an effort for the
U.N. to impose sanctions, but China and Russia have called for softer measures. On Friday, Japan circulated a draft resolution that would order countries to ''take those steps necessary'' to keep the North from acquiring items that could be used for its missile program. Diplomats said it could be put to a vote Saturday.

Phttp://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-NKorea-Missiles.html


Computer Stolen From Mont. Health Office

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 7, 2006
Filed at 3:39 p.m. ET
HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- A state government computer was stolen during a July Fourth break-in at the offices of a drug dependency program, and officials were trying to determine Friday when it contained sensitive information.
Top officials in state government were unaware Friday morning that the Public Health and Human Services computer, assigned to a state chemical dependancy program officer, had disappeared.
Helena Police Chief Troy McGee said a burglar broke in over the holiday. A state worker who went into the building that day noticed a skylight had been broken and called police.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Computer-Stolen.html



Blackwater Backs Dropping Extortion Case
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 7, 2006
Filed at 3:07 p.m. ET
ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) -- A former Blackwater USA employee said Friday an addiction to prescription pain killers led her to try to extort $1 million from the security company by threatening to leak information about the killings of four contractors in Iraq.
Laura Holdren-Nowacki, 35, of Moyock, made the admission in a statement released after she pleaded not guilty to one count of extortion.
District Attorney Frank Parrish said outside of court that, at Blackwater's request, he will ask Monday for the charge to be dropped.
Holdren-Nowacki said she suffered from ''significant depression and severe migraine headaches'' and had taken significantly larger doses of prescription medicine because of her pain.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Blackwater-Extortion.html



Stocks Plunge in Late Afternoon Trading
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 7, 2006
Filed at 3:19 p.m. ET
NEW YORK (AP) -- Corporate profit warnings and record oil prices overshadowed a benign jobs creation report and sent stocks sharply lower Friday as investors worried that the economy was cooling too quickly. The Dow Jones industrials shed 152 points, though the losses on the other major indexes were more modest.
The Labor Department reported just 121,000 new jobs in May, short of the 175,000 economists expected. With the unemployment rate steady at 4.6 percent, the report was exactly what Wall Street had hoped for -- low unemployment, but modest job growth that won't spark a sharp increase in consumer demand, which could foreshadow inflation and interest rate hikes.
However, with
3M Co. warning of lower-than-expected earnings, investors grew concerned that slower economic growth, while good for keeping rates steady, could cut into corporate profits. However, few other companies have warned the markets about falling profits, analysts noted.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Wall-Street.html



For Thrift, Port Authority Will Build 9/11 Shrine

By
DAVID W. DUNLAP
Published: July 7, 2006
The
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey agreed yesterday to take over construction of the World Trade Center memorial and museum. The move is expected to make the tortuous development process more efficient and less expensive.
"It appears that we're the party best suited to do that," said Anthony R. Coscia, the chairman of the authority, after the board approved an agreement with New York State, City Hall, the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation and the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation.
Three hours later, the foundation announced that it was back in the fund-raising business with a national television, radio and print campaign. Solicitations were suspended this spring as the cost of the memorial soared.
"We must all share the responsibility of building a memorial," Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg said, acknowledging — with obvious reluctance — that he was one of the anonymous donors who had already contributed to the foundation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/nyregion/07memorial.html



New AIDS Pill to Treat People in Poor Countries

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Published: July 6, 2006
The
Food and Drug Administration has approved the first 3-in-1 antiretroviral pill for use by the American-sponsored plan for AIDS treatment, something that the White House's acting global AIDS coordinator said yesterday should greatly improve treatment for AIDS patients in poor countries.
Although it is not yet clear how much money it will save, having patients take only one pill twice a day "should facilitate better therapies and better adherence," said the coordinator, Dr. Mark R. Dybul.
The agency posted the approval of the drug on its Web site on Friday evening. It approved the 3-in-1 pill, made by an Indian generic drug company, for patients in countries helped by the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/world/06aids.html



Child Study Finds Failures to Detect Flu

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 6, 2006
Doctors fail to diagnose the
flu in a vast majority of young children suffering from it, depriving them of medicines that could shorten their illness and keep them from spreading it to others, a study suggests.
The research, being published today in The
New England Journal of Medicine, found that flu infections were missed in four of every five preschoolers treated for symptoms at a doctor's office or an emergency room and in about three-quarters of those who were hospitalized.
"Many of the children did not have a test performed, and few of the children were sent home with a specific diagnosis of influenza," said Dr. Katherine Anne Poehling, a pediatrician at
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, who led the government-financed study.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/health/06flu.html



Feeling Boyish, in Shorts or a Suit
NOW that men are more in touch with their feminine sides, the rest of us feel free, if not compelled, to snigger at them. The French spring men's shows, which ended Tuesday, served up athletic shirts and shorts, but a few determined designers showed pearls and eye-catching lace. It was like watching a soccer ball bounce off Byron's head.
Ann Demeulemeester's slithery lace and eyelet shirts may have been Byron as conceivably worn by
Mick Jagger, who, with the Rolling Stones, resumes his latest world tour in Milan next week. Ms. Demeulemeester's fine collection, with its emphasis on a kind of dandy-rock tailoring ("Has she been in Tokyo lately?" an editor said midshow), caught a dressy mood lurking behind the sports mania.
Similarly,
Marc Jacobs's polished collection of hibiscus-print trousers, piqué jackets and silvery brogues for Louis Vuitton displayed an understanding of the feral heart of the LV consumer.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/fashion/06PARIS.html


New Zealand Herald

Powerful typhoon nears southern Japan
3.40pm Friday July 7, 2006
TOKYO - A powerful typhoon was nearing Japan's southern island chain of Okinawa today and was likely to bring strong winds and torrential rain to the area later, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.
Typhoon Ewiniar, meaning "storm god" in the Chuuk language of Micronesia, was south of Okinawa and moving slowly north-northwest early on Friday local time, bringing with it winds of up to 160km per hour, the agency said.
It warned of heavy rain and flooding in parts of Okinawa. The storm was forecast to weaken slightly and move across the southern part of South Korea over the weekend, the agency said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390215


N Korea missile 'aimed at area off Hawaii'

1.00pm Friday July 7, 2006
TOKYO- A North Korean missile launched on Wednesday was aimed at an area of the ocean close to Hawaii, a Japanese newspaper has reported.
Experts estimated the Taepodong-2 ballistic missile to have a range of up to 6000 km (3730 miles), putting Alaska within its reach.
Wednesday's launch apparently failed shortly after take-off and the missile landed in the sea between the Korean peninsula and Japan, a few hundred kilometres from the launch pad.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10390199



Video links bombings to al Qaeda
Saturday July 8, 2006
By Ian Herbert
LONDON - A video by Shehzad Tanweer, right-hand man to the lead London suicide bomber Mohammed Sidique Khan, has lent new weight to the theory that al Qaeda was behind the London bombings.
Tanweer's last testament, like Khan's last September, features an accompanying statement from Ayman al-Zawahiri, al Qaeda's second-in-command, bears the stamp of al Qaeda's video production company and includes a contribution by American Adam Gadahn, widely believed to be running the group's propaganda operation.
But it is also possible al Qaeda has appropriated Tanweer's video as a publicity stunt.
Though it probably helped train the London bombers, no evidence points to a controlling al Qaeda mastermind behind the blasts, which occurred a year ago.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10390258



A blueprint for Australian jihad

Saturday July 8, 2006
By Greg Ansley
Four years ago a bearded Frenchman known as Salahudin arrived a training camp deep in the Himalayas run by the fundamentalist terror group Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, fighting to unite Indian Muslims in a new Islamic state spanning Kashmir and Pakistan.
Salahudin, it is alleged, was the man now identified as Willie Brigitte.
It was Brigitte who would later lead Australian spycatchers to Faheem Khalid Lodhi, a Pakistani-born Australian citizen facing a possible life sentence for planning jihad in Sydney.
Next Thursday Lodhi will be sentenced on three charges of terrorism.
His conviction is the first under the wave of new laws that followed the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington, and the subsequent bombs in Bali.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390247



Protests a turning point in the history of New Zealand

Saturday July 8, 2006
By Ruth Hill
When police in visored helmets and swinging batons, ran on to the field at Hamilton's Rugby Park, something came unstuck in New Zealand's self-image as an open, tolerant society.
Anti-apartheid protester John Minto says it felt "alien".
"It was clear we had crossed some sort of line ...
"Police were no longer a neutral party, they were determined to see the tour proceed - conflict was inevitable."
The protesters, led by Hart (Halt All Racist Tours), thought the tour would be cancelled following massive demonstrations around the country and international pressure.
But the Government refused to call it off. Some critics accused Prime Minister Rob Muldoon of making a calculated decision ahead of the general election to back the 1981 tour and curry favour in marginal rural seats, where pro-tour feeling was strongest.
The Springboks arrived on July 19, 1981, and for the next 56 dramatic days, New Zealand headlined news bulletins around the world.
In scenes reminiscent of South Africa itself, protesters clashed with police and enraged rugby fans; rugby grounds resembled war zones, barbwired and barricaded.
During the final test match at Eden Park, Auckland, a low-flying light plane disrupted the match by dropping flour-bombs on the pitch. (Pilot Marx Jones served six months' jail for the stunt.)
Public confidence in the police was battered when riot police were filmed beating unarmed "clowns" and bare-headed protesters at a sit-down.
The repercussions were even felt within Robben Island Prison, where future South African president Nelson Mandela and other prominent African National Congress (ANC) leaders were imprisoned.
Mandela was quoted as saying that "the sun shone through the dark corridors of the cells" when he heard about the protests in New Zealand.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390269



Tongan prince and princess killed in car crash
UPDATED 1.30pm Friday July 7, 2006
A Tongan prince and princess have been killed in a car crash in San Francisco, local media have reported.
Matangi Tonga said HRH Prince Tu'ipelehake - a nephew of the King of Tonga - Princess Kaimana and their driver Vinisia Hefa died after a teenage driver hit their car at Menlo Park near Palo Alto.
It quoted Tonga's Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Vainga Tone, as saying the government was waiting for an autopsy report before making an official announcement.
"We haven't got confirmation from the Consul General because the coroner is still working on the autopsy and they need time to identify the fingerprints. But if it is true, it is very sad news indeed," Mr Tone told the website.
The Associated Press news agency in San Francisco said California authorities had confirmed that two members of the Tongan royal family were killed in a car crash near Palo Alto.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390171



Tongans worldwide mourn lost royals
Saturday July 8, 2006
By Angela Gregory
Tongans all over the world reacted with shock and grief as word spread yesterday of the deaths of two of Tonga's most popular royals in a car smash in San Francisco.
Prince Tu'ipelehake, nephew of the King, and his wife Princess Kaimana died after the sport utility vehicle they were travelling in was hit by a teenager racing a Mustang at 9pm on Wednesday (4pm on Thursday, New Zealand time).
Their Tongan driver, Vinisia Hefa of East Palo Alto, was also killed in the collision at Menlo Park, about 50km south of San Francisco.
The Associated Press reported that Edith Delgado, 18, appeared to have been racing a black Cadillac Escalade in her white Ford Mustang at between 130km/h and 160km/h when she attempted to pass the Tongans' red Ford Explorer.
Delgado struck the driver's door and the vehicle flipped several times before stopping on its roof.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390311



Philippines to obtain Vietnam War-era helicopters
6.20am Friday July 7, 2006
The Philippines military will soon obtain 26 Vietnam War-era United States helicopters as it attempts to wipe out an insurgency, an Air Force spokesman said.
At least six of the UH-1H helicopters will arrive this month and the other 20 by the end of the year.
Six have been refurbished at the expense of the Philippines Government and the rest were donated by the US.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390112



Beijing high and dry for Olympics
5.20am Friday July 7, 2006
Beijing may divert water from the Yellow River to guarantee supply during the 2008 Olympics, as the world's driest major city ponders how to slake the thirst of 2.5 million extra people.
Beijing would need an extra 5.75 million cu m of water, the Beijing News said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10390111



Report backs organ harvest claim
Saturday July 8, 2006
CHINA - A respected Canadian human rights lawyer and a former Canadian Cabinet member have lent their weight to charges that China has been killing Falun Gong dissidents so it can use their organs.
The two men - lawyer David Matas, and David Kilgour, former secretary of state for Asia and the Pacific - spent two months investigating the accusations, which China has regularly denied.
"It is simply inescapable that this is going on," Kilgour said.
The pair provided transcripts of phone calls placed in Chinese to detention centres and organ transplant clinics in which officials said organs from Falun Gong practitioners could be made available for speedy use. Some of the calls were placed on behalf of the Falun Gong by people inquiring about whether they could get organ transplants.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10390255



Report backs organ harvest claim
Saturday July 8, 2006
CHINA - A respected Canadian human rights lawyer and a former Canadian Cabinet member have lent their weight to charges that China has been killing Falun Gong dissidents so it can use their organs.
The two men - lawyer David Matas, and David Kilgour, former secretary of state for Asia and the Pacific - spent two months investigating the accusations, which China has regularly denied.
"It is simply inescapable that this is going on," Kilgour said.
The pair provided transcripts of phone calls placed in Chinese to detention centres and organ transplant clinics in which officials said organs from Falun Gong practitioners could be made available for speedy use. Some of the calls were placed on behalf of the Falun Gong by people inquiring about whether they could get organ transplants.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10390255

continued ...

The Backyard Zoo. Pesky squirrels eating from the bird feeder.



July 6, 2006.

Milford, Delaware.


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An ancient superstition carries 'the cloven foot' as an apparition to the devil.



July 6, 2006.

Winnipeg, Canada.

This is a baby markhor. I think this little 'kid' can easily dispell all those superstitions. The cloven foot is the mark of agility. The photographer has written an interesting paragraph about a an animal that springs with ease from rocky surface to rocky surface, easy to live in areas where other animals cannot. "Specialization" is a sign of evolution and survival.

Photographer states :: (He titles the picture "Baby Steps")
This baby Markhor is only 2 weeks old. The markhor is a member of the goat family which may weigh up to 110 kg (240 lb). It has unusual spiraling horns which may be straight or flare outward, depending on the subspecies. The markhor occupies arid cliffside habitats in sparsely wooded mountainous regions at altitudes ranging from 700 m (2300') from November to May up to 4000 m (13,000') in the summer. In the spring and summer, the markhor mainly grazes on tussocks of grass. When these have dried up it browses on leaves and twigs. The markhor forages 8 - 12 hours daily, and it is usually active all day except for several hours in the middle of the day, when it rests and chews its cud. Years ago, herds of markhor with 100 or more animals were common. By the 1970's the average herd size was 9, with some as large as 35. The range of the markhor has historically extended from Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikstan to Afghanistan, Pakistan and northern India (Kashmir). Currently its distribution runs from the mountains north of the Amur Darya River in Turkmenistan, east through Afghanistan and Pakistan, just into the extreme northwestern part of India. Within this area, markhor populations are usually very small (<100>

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The Lesser Spot-Nosed Guenon.

Captions to pictures. There are seven with the article.

The first baby monkey born in the San Diego Zoo's new multi-million dollar habitat is a rare breed known as a lesser spot-noses guenon.

Lesser spot-nosed guenons share their habitat with the black mangabeys, a rare primate from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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Morning Papers - concluding

Zoos

San Diego Zoo

Welcome to the Wild Animal Park. You'll never get closer to the animals!

http://www.sandiegozoo.org/wap/wap_landing.html


Zoo Receives New Giraffe
After months of living alone at the Little Rock Zoo, Jigsaw the giraffe has a new companion: a 1-year-old giraffe from San Diego.
The Little Rock Zoo announced yesterday that it has acquired a male giraffe -- which has not yet been named -- from the San Diego Wild Animal Park.
Five-year-old Jigsaw has been living alone since the death of his father, Barney. The elder giraffe died this year after he contracted a digestive condition known as "frothy bloat," which caused him to fall over and die.
Susan Altrui, a spokeswoman for the zoo, says that Jigsaw and the new giraffe have hit it off. The new giraffe, which is eleven-and-a-half feet tall and weighs more than a thousand pounds, is now in quarantine at the zoo. It is expected to be on exhibit later this summer.
Zoo officials are considering letting a donor name the new animal.

http://www.todaysthv.com/news/news.aspx?storyid=30897



Zoo Meals Mimic Wild Diets
Zoo Nutritionist Tries To Balance Animals' Diets
POSTED: 10:20 am CDT July 6, 2006
UPDATED: 1:25 pm CDT July 6, 2006
OMAHA, Neb. -- The Henry Doorly Zoo is widely recognized as one of the top zoos in the world, and in order for the Omaha landmark to continue to thrive, the stars of the show must do well. That's why nutrition is important to zoo officials and its residents.
Each animal receives a specific diet. Sometimes they get treats, but for the most part, the zookeepers and the zoo nutritionist plan the meals.
Cheryl Dikeman is the Henry Doorly Zoo nutritionist -- one of only eight in the country. Dikeman's job for the past year has been to make sure each of the animals in the zoo get a diet as close to what they eat in the wild as possible.
From selecting just the right leaves for the giraffes to figuring out a way to supplement the vitamins lost in the frozen fish that are fed to the penguins each day, Dikeman said she sometimes uses a digestive system we understand to figure out what another animal needs.
"The giraffe is a really good example," Dikeman said. "We know on the inside, the giraffe is a lot like a cow -- digests foods a lot like a cow. When we start working (we use) those animals as models."
Exotic or endangered animals can pose special nutritional challenges.

http://www.ketv.com/family/9476851/detail.html



London Zoo among the Worst in the Country

'Tyson' the Kangaroo suffers while the Ontario government shrugs responsibility
Attention: Assignment Editor, City Editor, Lifestyle Editor, News Editor
LONDON/ON/NEWS RELEASE--(CCNMatthews - July 6, 2006) - The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) investigated three southwestern Ontario zoos this June. It observed Lickety Split Zoo (London), Greenview Aviaries Park and Zoo (Ridgetown) and Pineridge Zoo (Grand Bend), to see if improvements have been made since last year's investigation. Sadly, very little has changed since the 2005 audit where zoo expert, Dr. Ken Gold gave all three zoos a failing grade.

http://www.ccnmatthews.com/news/releases/show.jsp?action=showRelease&searchText=false&showText=all&actionFor=602646



London zoo cited as unfit
Fri, July 7, 2006
Activists call animal conditions 'deplorable" and urge Lickety-Split be improved.
By DANIELA SIMUNAC, FREE PRESS REPORTER
Eighteen-month-old Alasdair MacLean-Fraser looks at Tyson the kangaroo at the Lickety-Split Ranch and Zoo yesterday. The World Society for the Protection of Animals cited the animal yesterday in criticizing the zoo. (Susan Bradnam, The London Free Press)
Animal rights activists have zeroed in on the living conditions for a kangaroo at a private London zoo, branding it one of Canada's worst zoos and calling for it to be improved.
But the owner of the Lickety-Split Ranch and Zoo, Shirley McElroy, said anyone concerned about the living conditions of the red kangaroo Tyson should "come down and see for themselves" if the marsupial is being mistreated.
"Everybody is welcome to come, take a look and check it out," she said yesterday, adding she's had no complaints from the zoo's visitors and "they all come back."

http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/Local/2006/07/07/1672185-sun.html



Missing monkey sighted near hospital

By Ruth Tisdale
Oops the monkey has been sighted near Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital, according to Mill Mountain Zoo director Sean Greene. He said zoo officials were en route to the scene.
The 11-year-old Japanese macaque escaped from the zoo during a routine cage cleaning on Sunday. Scores of searchers have been combing the woods around the zoo since then, hoping for a sight of the missing monkey.

http://www.roanoke.com/news/breaking/wb/72683



Monkey seen a half mile from Roanoke zoo
BY REX BOWMAN
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
Jul 7, 2006
ROANOKE -- A little monkey that made a big escape from Roanoke's Mill Mountain Zoo early Sunday was spotted yesterday for the first time in at least two days.
The 20-pound macaque named Oops was seen eating leaves on a wooded slope behind a hospital, but she once again eluded searchers who spent nearly 90 minutes looking for her amid the thick kudzu behind Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital. The hospital is a half mile down the face of Mill Mountain from the zoo.
Sean Greene, the zoo's director, said he was told a patient alerted the hospital to the monkey's presence by making monkey gestures. The patient apparently was unable to speak, Greene said.
Later, a patient on the hospital's 10th floor saw the monkey and told a nurse. A hospital police officer said patients, nurses and doctors watched the monkey for up to 30 minutes before calling police. Police then called animal-control officers who called zoo officials.
Greene was in the middle of a 4 p.m. news conference at the zoo -- in fact he had just told reporters "we have no idea where it's at" -- when he was told the monkey had been seen near the hospital.
He raced down the slope and spent the next hour and a half with other zoo workers fruitlessly looking for the animal.
Oops' escape made national news when she bolted from the zoo where she was born 11 years ago. Oops is the first animal to break out of the zoo in its 55-year history.
Yesterday, Greene revealed how Oops made her escape: A zookeeper had entered the macaque bunker to clean it, closed the door behind her, but failed to lock it. While the zookeeper had her back turned, Oops turned the handle and opened the door.
"She let herself out," Greene said. He added that the zookeeper is no longer cleaning the macaque area but still has her other duties.
"I stand behind this person," Greene said. "Nobody feels worse about this than this keeper."
Greene said zoo officials still hope the monkey will stay close to the zoo and eventually return. Mill Mountain has plenty of leaves and berries for the monkey to eat, and recent rains mean Oops should be able to find water.
The zoo has called for volunteers to help scour the wooded mountain.
Contact staff writer Rex Bowman at
rbowman@timesdispatch.com or (540) 344-3612.

http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD%2FMGArticle%2FRTD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1149188989244&path=!news&s=1045855934842



SPCA questions baby giraffe's death at Vancouver zoo

Last Updated: Thursday, July 6, 2006 4:21 PM PT
CBC News
The Greater Vancouver Zoo is again under investigation by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, this time for the death of a baby giraffe born in captivity.
The eight-day-old animal died last week, but the zoo didn't make an announcement until Wednesday night.
Dr. Bruce Burton, the veterinarian treating the animal, told CBC Radio the giraffe had gone through a "difficult" birth on June 21.
He said the mother was drugged for the birth and later stepped on the newborn giraffe, likely breaking its ribs. He said the baby also suffered from pneumonia.
The SPCA's Eileen Drever says she isn't satisfied with that explanation, and plans to investigate the death.
But she doubts it could have been prevented under the circumstances.
"It's really unfortunate that this animal had to die. The fact is, nobody forced them to breed the giraffes."
The Aldergrove facility is already facing two counts of cruelty to animals, for its treatment of Hazina the hippopotamus. Those charges were laid after a report by the SPCA.
Burton says the baby giraffe died the same day that Hazina was being moved to a larger enclosure.
"I think everybody was so focused on responding to the SPCA and making sure that everything was fine with Hazina, that maybe not as much attention was being paid to other things at the zoo at the same time."

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2006/07/06/bc-giraffe.html



Truly Nolen Sponsors Tony Gustin’s Creepy Crawly Insect Zoo
By
Brad Harbison
7/6/2006
TUCSON, Ariz. – Truly Nolen announces the sponsorship of Tony Gustin’s Creepy Crawly Insect Zoo, a popular interactive, touring insect exhibit for children.
Gustin, whose family owns Milwaukee-based Unico Spray Products, launched the Creepy Crawly Insect Zoo in 1995 and throughout the years he has continually refined his presentations and exhibits (see
Business Takes Shape). A colorful speaker, Gustin often uses humor to entertain and educate students about insects. The centerpiece of the exhibit is — of course — the insects. Children are given the opportunity to handle bugs such as millipedes, walking sticks, beetles, cockroaches and praying mantids. They also get to interact with Gustin during Q&A sessions

http://www.pctonline.com/news/news.asp?ID=4332



Rare Monkey Born At New Zoo Habitat
Baby Not Yet Named
POSTED: 5:19 pm PDT July 6, 2006
Email This Story Print This Story
SAN DIEGO -- The first baby monkey born in the San Diego Zoo's new multi-million dollar habitat is a rare breed known as a lesser spot-noses guenon.
The youngster, born mid-May, has become more visible recently as it learns to climb and explore the Monkey Trails habitat, San Diego Zoo officials said. The newborn's gender has not yet been determined and it has not been named.
Lesser spot-nosed guenons share their habitat with the black mangabeys, a rare primate from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Both species are threatened in the wild by the rapid deforestation and illegal bushmeat trade.
The baby's father, Lester, had been a victim of the exotic pet trade in the U.S. before the San Diego Zoo adopted him in 1996, officials said.
The lesser spot-nosed guenons are on exhibit daily at The San Diego Zoo.

http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/9480376/detail.html



Zoo Announces Birth Of Takin Mulan

July 6, 2006 02:49 PM EDT
Mulan has arrived at the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens.
No Mulan isn't the Disney movie but a one month old female Takin making her debut today.
Mulan was born to Xena (mother) and Noah (father) and is the third successful Takin birth at the Zoo.
The animal, which is native to mountainous areas of the Himalayas and China, normally resides in bamboo forests and feeds on grasses and leaves.
Takins usually grow to about three to four feet tall and can weigh between 550-770 pounds.

http://www.fox19.com/Global/story.asp?S=5120236&nav=menu63_2



Zoo Atlanta gorilla gives birth
The Associated Press - ATLANTA
A Zoo Atlanta gorilla gave birth Thursday to the fifth western lowland gorilla born at the zoo in the past eight months.
The baby was born while the mother, Sukari, was on exhibit around 3 p.m., and a few zoo visitors who witnessed the birth alerted zoo staff, spokeswoman Susan Elliott said.
"It appears average in size and extremely healthy," Elliott said.
Gorilla mothers keep babies close to their body, so officials probably won't know the sex for three to five weeks. The baby will remain unnamed until they do.
Sukari and baby are expected to be on public exhibit this weekend, Elliott said.

http://www.accessnorthga.com/news/ap_newfullstory.asp?ID=77413



Longtime resident monkey dies at teaching zoo

The staff of America's Teaching Zoo at Moorpark College recently announced that they euthanized a 43-year-old female primate on June 20, after a rapid decline in the animal's condition due to advanced age.
Koko, a brown capuchin monkey, was one of the first animals acquired by the zoo shortly after it opened in 1974. She educated thousands of students in the Exotic Animal Training and Man
agement (EATM) program over the years, said long-time staff member Mara Rodriguez.
Under the guidance of the primate instructor, Koko had been aone-on-one training animal for more than 75 students in 31 years. Over the years Koko was a show and tour favorite, bringing education and entertainment to thousands.

http://www.moorparkacorn.com/news/2006/0707/Community/006.html



Zoo showing off 2 newest babies

By
HINA ALAM
The Lufkin Daily News
Thursday, July 06, 2006
Rafiki and Emi Lane, giraffes at Lufkin's Ellen Trout Zoo, are proud parents.
Their newborn son, Pekua — which means "inquisitive" in Swahili — was born around 7 a.m. Wednesday. He is their third child.
The baby weighed 146.3 pounds and stood 6 feet, 2 inches. That's some baby.
The long-awaited, spindly-legged bundle of joy was born on a bad weather day — when it thundered and rained — but zoo officials said that was good for the baby because he got to stay with the mother all day. She nursed him, and he learned to stand. "No one was here when the giraffe was born," said Celia Falzone, general curator for Ellen Trout Zoo. "But mother and son are doing well."

http://www.lufkindailynews.com/news/content/news/stories/2006/7/6/baby_animals.html



Akron Zoo is planning pajama party Saturday

Beacon Journal staff report
At the Akron Zoo's Pajama Party, from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, kids of all ages can put on their favorite pj's and learn about nocturnal life.
A portable planetarium from Science and Technology for Understanding, Research and Networking will allow visitors to walk into the structure and view constellations and star fields.
The after-hours event -- the zoo is normally closed at this time -- will include a scavenger hunt, animal encounters, a magician and a ``bedtime'' snack.
Reservations are encouraged. Cost is $12 for children and $14 for adults. Tickets purchased the night of the event cost $3 more.
For information, call 330-375-2550 or visit
www.akronzoo.org.

http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/living/community/14985322.htm



Philadelphia Zoo's 'Zoo on Wheels' program part of 'Thrilling Thursday'
By KARIN WILLIAMS, kwilliams@phoenixvillenews.com
07/07/2006
The library hosted the Philadelphia Zoo's "Zoo on Wheels" program, which drew about 400 children, parents, preschool teachers and camp counselors to the Theatre.
Laura Warner, Outreach Programs Manager, gave a presentation on a variety of animals, including mammals, reptiles and birds.
Although the kids in attendance were excited about all the animals, the most "oohs" and "aahs" came when Warner brought out Machu, a blue and gold macaw. Although Machu made barely a peep, Warner educated the audience about the macaw's ability to use its loud squawk to defend itself in the wild. In an attempt to get the bird to squawk, Warner asked the kids to make a lot of noise, but although Machu flapped his wings, he didn't make a peep. Or a squawk.

http://www.phoenixvillenews.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=16887663&BRD=1673&PAG=461&dept_id=17915&rfi=6



Cruelty allegations dog B.C. zoo

MATTHEW KWONG
ALDERGROVE, B.C. -- The BC SPCA may pin more animal-cruelty charges on the Greater Vancouver Zoo after it investigates how a baby giraffe died and why the facility waited a week to announce the death.
Eileen Drever, a senior animal-protection officer, said that while it is still early, the group is not ruling out the possibility that charges might be forthcoming.
"[Laying charges] is definitely not out of the question," she said. "The BC SPCA definitely has concerns about animals there, but we really can't comment until I speak to more experts and after we conduct an inquiry."
The British Columbia Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has the authority to enforce laws relating to animal cruelty under the province's Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act. It helps prepare animal cruelty prosecution cases for the Crown.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060707.BCZOO07/TPStory/National



Zoo makes do without star tenants

Friday, July 07, 2006
Marla Matzer Rose
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
With its pricey, new Asia Quest exhibit just opened and an ambitious 10-year plan to develop dozens more acres ahead of it, the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium has made some bold and tough choices.
For example, the zoo has decided to go without some of its most popular animals for periods rather than display them in conditions that aren’t ideal. If you go to the Columbus Zoo today, you won’t see polar bears or giraffes, though you can buy gift-shop items bearing their likenesses, and you can see giraffes in the zoo’s logo.
"Polar bears are very popular, and they’ve definitely been our No. 1 request to add for a while," said Dusty Lombardi, Living Collection director at the zoo. But their size and taste for colder climates can create challenges for zoos.

http://www.columbusdispatch.com/news-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/07/07/20060707-A4-02.html



Zoo leaders awash with ideas for park
Friday, July 07, 2006
Robert Ruth
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Wyandot Lake won’t become another Cedar Point or Sea World, but its soon-to-be owners think it will make at least $1 million a year in profit.
That’s just an educated guess, though, said Jerry Borin, executive director of the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, which is buying the water park next to the zoo in Delaware County in October.
The zoo’s lease with Six Flags, the park’s operator, requires the amusement company to reveal yearly attendance and gross-revenue totals but not expense and net-profit figures.
"We can’t guarantee everything will be 100 percent foolproof," Borin said. "But we’ve looked at the economics, and they look good."

http://www.columbusdispatch.com/news-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/07/07/20060707-A1-01.html



Call to keep elephants in Thailand
Australian zoos should reconsider their plans to import eight Asian elephants from Thailand, given widespread opposition to the idea, animal welfare groups say.
RSPCA Australia, International Fund for Animal Welfare and Humane Society International say they have offered to find a solution that is in the best interests of the elephants.
The elephants earmarked for Sydney's Taronga Zoo and the Melbourne Zoo are said to be in good condition at a quarantine station in Thailand.
The elephants remain in quarantine at Kanchanaburi, in western Thailand, after an attempt to transport them to Bangkok Airport on June 6 was blocked by animal rights protesters.
Despite negotiations between the Thai and Australian governments, the elephants' departure date is still unknown.
"We encourage the zoos to work with us to help save the species in Thailand and find these eight animals sanctuary where they belong at home in Thailand," the groups said in a joint media statement.
"Not one animal welfare or conservation organisation anywhere in the world has spoken out in favour of bringing the elephants to Australia.
"If the zoos really care about these animals surely it is time for them to consider alternatives such as sending the elephants to a sanctuary in Thailand."
Recent media reports said the zoos were considering legal action against the activists standing in their way.
But a spokesman for the zoos, Mark Williams, said at the time that any talk of legal action to recover transport costs was "premature at best".
Both zoos had complied with all the necessary regulations in bringing the elephants to Australia, Mr Williams said.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Call-to-keep-elephants-in-Thailand/2006/07/06/1152175723339.html



Koala shipment delay 'not case of tit-for-tat'
KULTIDA SAMABUDDHI
The delay in the shipment of four koalas from Australia to Chiang Mai is not linked to problems surrounding the export of eight Thai elephants to zoos in Sydney and Melbourne, an Australian embassy official said yesterday. ''The delay has nothing to do with the protest against the export of the Thai elephants to Australian zoos. This is not a case of tit-for-tat,'' the official said.
The Australian government would go ahead with the transfer of two pairs of koalas to the Chiang Mai Zoo as soon as they were confident the animals would be safe in the hands of Thai zoo-keepers and veterinarians.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/07Jul2006_news13.php

concluding ...


The Antarctica Wind Chime

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Click to animate



July 7, 2006. 9:00 AM.

Antarctica.

A return to a colder Antarctica. It is winter there. The sun's rays are migrating south and last I checked there was a severe storm near Asia in the Pacific which will explain the return to sanity again on the Ice Continent.

The Peninsula, at higher latitudes, has returned to a state of melting which means Patagonia is not in much better condition. The very frigid temperatures at Scott Base again raises the old question, will this last?

There are a lot of places on Antarctica today above zero (click on) including The Larsen Ice, which of course is WAIS (West Antarctica Ice Sheet). The one place I definately wanted frigid temperatures.

The Larsen Ice - REAL TIME - 33 minutes and 21 seconds ago (EDT - 8:33 am, 7.7.06)


36 °F / 2 °C
Mostly Cloudy


Humidity:
93%


Dew Point:
34 °F / 1 °C


Wind:
Calm

Pressure:
29.89 in / 1012 hPa


Visibility:
6.2 miles / 10.0 kilometers


UV:
0 out of 16


Clouds:
Mostly Cloudy 3000 ft / 914 m
(Above Ground Level)

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Morning Papers - concluded

The weather in Antarctica (Crystal Ice Chime) is:

Scott Base

Cloudy

-27.0°

Updated Friday 07 Jul 8:00PM

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

52 °F / 11 °C
Overcast

Humidity:
82%

Dew Point:
46 °F / 8 °C

Wind:
5 mph / 7 km/h from the SE

Pressure:
30.11 in / 1020 hPa

Visibility:
10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers

UV:
0 out of 16

Clouds:
Few 1100 ft / 335 m
Mostly Cloudy 3500 ft / 1066 m
Overcast 4200 ft / 1280 m
(Above Ground Level)


end

Prevent and Stop Forest Fires (click on)



Get the message yet?

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Link suggested between warming, wildfires



July 1, 2006.

Joshua Tree National Park, California.

Photographer states :: First of many Fire Trucks arrive to the fire a few minutes after it begins but after they arrived the winds changed and the fire spread out of control in the desert heat.

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July 1, 2006.

Joshua Tree National Park, California.

Photographer states :: A combination of Desert heat, growing fire and strong updrafts towards a retreating thunderstorm a smoke filled dust devil reaches for the sky.

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