Friday, July 20, 2007

Morning Papers - continued...


Flooding in Coffeyville, Kansas (click here)

Floods that started with heavy rain on June 26, 2007, still surrounded parts of Coffeyville, Kansas, on July 9, when the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) flying on NASA’s Terra satellite captured the top image. Coffeyville was flooded on July 1, when the swollen Verdigris River burst through a levee. Water swamped neighborhoods and businesses, including the Coffeyville Resources Refinery. Though the refinery had been shut down in anticipation of the flooding, it leaked more than 42,000 gallons of crude oil into the Verdigris River, reported the Environment News Service. The Environmental Protection Agency was coordinating with Coffeyville Resources to clean up the spill and to ensure that oil did not contaminate drinking water downstream.




Fires in Nevada (click here)




From NASA

HOT, DRY CONDITIONS SPARK WILDFIRES ACROSS WESTERN U.S.
A series of severe wildfires raged across the western United States on Sunday, July 8, 2007, when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image. Actively burning fires are indicated with red pixels.
As this image shows, a number of states have been affected by fire activity, made worse by dry conditions, high temperatures and strong winds, according to fire officials.
California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana each reported wildfires of varying severity over the past few days. Many of these fires have forced evacuations and shut down highways.
One of the largest fires is currently burning in Utah, where winds fanned a massive blaze that has now burned more than 283,000 acres, according to fire officials. The wildfire is the largest in the history of the state.
Over the weekend, the National Incident Information Center received reports of 419 new fires, 56 of which are more than 500 acres large.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2007/2007070925355.html



New York Times

Overhaul Plan for Vote System Will Be Delayed
By
CHRISTOPHER DREW
Published: July 20, 2007
Under pressure from state and local officials, as well as from lobbyists for the disabled, House leaders now advocate putting off the most sweeping changes until 2012, four years later than planned.
Overhauling voting systems before next year’s presidential election had once been a top Democratic priority, primarily to allow greater accountability and be certain that all votes registered on computerized touch-screen systems were counted. But state and local elections officials told Congress they could not make the changes in time for the balloting in November 2008, particularly in light of the extra workload involved in preparing for next year’s much-earlier presidential primary season.
Confronted by similar concerns, Senator
Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California and the chairwoman of the Senate Rules Committee, said she had already decided against seeking any major changes in voting equipment before 2010.
“My sense is there’s no way to get this thing in place by the election of 2008,” Ms. Feinstein said. “Without adequate time, we could cause real problems in the election.”
Senate Democrats say that stretching out the timetable could increase their chances to win enough Republican support to put the changes into law.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/washington/20vote.html?_r=1&hp=&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1184929385-QOgGJsDJJKq1VuwVUvw1TA



The detention facility at Forward Operating Base Justice in Baghdad's Khadimiya neighborhood holds nearly a thousand men arrested in raids.

http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2007/07/19/world/middleeast/20070720_DETAIN_slideshow_1.html



Women Supportive but Skeptical of Clinton, Poll Says
By
KATHARINE Q. SEELYE and DALIA SUSSMAN
Published: July 20, 2007
Women view Senator
Hillary Rodham Clinton more favorably than men do, but she still faces skepticism among some women, especially those who are older and those who are married, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.
Women hold more positive views than men of all the leading Democratic candidates. But winning the support of women, who made up 54 percent of voters in the last presidential election, is especially important to Mrs. Clinton, who has sought to rally them behind her quest to become the nation’s first female president.
The poll found that over all, women tend to agree with her on the issues and see her as a strong leader and as a positive role model.
All of those polled — both women and men — said they thought Mrs. Clinton would be an effective commander in chief, suggesting she has made headway in diminishing concerns that her sex would impede her from leading the nation in wartime. A majority of those polled also said they thought she would win the White House if she captured the
Democratic nomination.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/us/politics/20poll.html?hp



U.S. Generals Request Delay in Judging Iraq
By
THOM SHANKER and DAVID S. CLOUD
Published: July 20, 2007
WASHINGTON, July 19 — The top commanders in
Iraq and the American ambassador to Baghdad appealed for more time beyond their mid-September assessment to more fully judge if the new strategy was making gains.
Ryan C. Crocker, the American ambassador to Baghdad, speaking by video link to lawmakers in Washington on Thursday.
Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the No. 2 commander in Iraq, told Pentagon reporters that while he would provide the mid-September assessment of the new military strategy that Congress has required, it would take “at least until November” to judge with confidence whether the strategy was working.
But their appeals, in three videoconferences on Capitol Hill and at the Pentagon, were met by stern rebukes from lawmakers of both parties.
The sessions appeared aimed in part at conveying that the administration was not planning a major strategy shift in September that would begin reducing the American troop presence, even if benchmarks set by Congress to measure Iraq’s progress were not achieved.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/washington/20policy.html?hp



New York Deal Tightens Limits on Election Cash
By
DANNY HAKIM and NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
Published: July 20, 2007
ALBANY, July 19 — Gov.
Eliot Spitzer and legislative leaders agreed on Thursday to the broadest overhaul of New York’s notoriously lax campaign finance laws since they were enacted after Watergate, ending a stalemate that had halted action at the Capitol for nearly a month.
The agreement would ban contributions from registered lobbyists and substantially reduce the amount of money most donors can give, though it did not go as far as Mr. Spitzer and government watchdog groups had wanted. New York would still have individual contribution limits that are five times higher than federal campaign restrictions and are among the highest of any state that sets limits.
The amount a donor can give a statewide candidate would be reduced to $25,000 from as much as $55,900 per election cycle. Donation limits for State Senate candidates would fall to $11,500 from $15,500, and those for Assembly candidates would drop to $4,600 from $7,600.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/nyregion/20albany.html?_r=1&hp&oref=login



Alliances Shift as Turks Weigh a Political Turn
By
SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: July 20, 2007
ISTANBUL, July 19 — For 84 years, modern Turkey has been defined by a holy trinity — the army, the republic and its founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. Each was linked inextricably to the others and all were beyond reproach.
But a deep transformation is under way in this nation of 73 million, and elections this Sunday may prove a watershed: liberal Turks, once supporters of the ruling secular elite and its main backer, the military, are turning their backs on them and pledging votes to religious politicians as well as a new array of independents.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/europe/20turkey.html?hp



Israel Frees More Than 250 Prisoners
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 20, 2007
RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) -- Israel released more than 250
Palestinian prisoners Friday in a gesture to embattled President Mahmoud Abbas, who pledged not to rest until Israel's jails were emptied of its thousands of Palestinians.
The release was meant to bolster Abbas in his power struggle with the Islamic militant
Hamas, which took control of Gaza by force last month.
Several thousand chanting, clapping Palestinians greeted the prisoners as their buses rolled into Abbas' headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Prisoners were hoisted onto the shoulders of dancing supporters, before they performed noon prayers in a large, open-sided tent.
''This is the beginning,'' said Abbas, wearing a black-and-white checkered baseball cap, a symbol of Palestinian nationalism. ''Efforts must continue. Our work must continue until every prisoner returns to the his home,'' he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Israel-Palestinians.html?hp



U.S. Will Allow Most Types of Lighters on Planes
By
ERIC LIPTON
Published: July 20, 2007
WASHINGTON, July 19 — Federal aviation authorities have decided to stop enforcing a two-year-old rule against taking cigarette lighters on airplanes, concluding that it was a waste of time to search for them before passengers boarded.
The ban was imposed at the insistence of Congress after a passenger, Richard Reed, tried to ignite a bomb in his shoe in 2001 on a flight from Paris to Miami.
Lawmakers said that if Mr. Reid had used a lighter, instead of matches, he might have been able to ignite the bomb, but Kip Hawley, assistant secretary for the
Transportation Security Administration, said in an interview on Thursday that the ban had done little to improve aviation security because small batteries could be used to set off a bomb.
Matches have never been prohibited on flights.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/washington/20tsa.html?hp



La Guardia Near-Crash Is One of a Rising Number
By
MATTHEW L. WALD
Published: July 20, 2007
WASHINGTON, July 19 — On the warm, muggy morning of July 5, a Delta 737 from Cincinnati was dropping fast toward Runway 22 at La Guardia Airport in New York. In the control tower below, a trainee was barking directions to a shifting mass of planes on the ground at one of the country’s busiest but most constricted airports.
In a moment of confusion, the trainee cleared one of them, a 50-seat Comair Delta Connection regional jet bound for Greensboro, N.C., to cross Runway 22.
As the 737, Flight 1238, rolled down the runway at more than 150 miles per hour, an alarm flashed on a radar screen in the tower and someone realized a dire mistake had been made, according to details provided by officials from the Federal Aviation Administration and the pilots’ and controllers’ unions. “No delay, no delay,” a controller shouted to the pilots of the regional jet, urging them to hurry across.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/nyregion/20laguardia.html?hp



FEMA Faulted on Response to Risks in Trailers
By JACQUELINE PALANK
Published: July 20, 2007
WASHINGTON, July 19 — The chairman of the House oversight committee on Thursday accused the
Federal Emergency Management Agency of refusing to acknowledge high levels of formaldehyde in trailers it provided to hurricane evacuees on the Gulf Coast.
In testimony on Thursday, three people who had lived in the trailers said they believed that exposure to formaldehyde, which is found in many building materials, was the cause of health problems including sore throats, burning eyes and respiratory problems .
The administrator of FEMA, R. David Paulison, told the subcommittee he was not “100 percent sure that it was the trailers” that caused residents’ health problems. But Mr. Paulison also said that, in hindsight, the agency could have moved faster when problems were reported in some of the more than 120,000 mobile homes and travel trailers provided to evacuees.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/washington/20fema.html?hp



18 South Koreans Abducted in Afghanistan
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 20, 2007
Filed at 7:03 a.m. ET
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) --
Taliban gunmen abducted 18 members of a South Korean church group, and a purported spokesman for the Islamic militia said Friday that it will question the 15 women and three men about their activities in Afghanistan before deciding their fate.
The Koreans were seized Thursday in Ghazni province as they were traveling by bus from Kabul to the southern city of Kandahar, said Ali Shah Ahmadzai, the provincial police chief.
The driver, released late Thursday, said there were 18 women and five men on the bus, Ahmadzai said. The discrepancy in figures could not be immediately clarified.
A group of 35 to 40 armed Taliban stopped the bus and drove it into the dessert, then abandoned the vehicle and forced the group to walk on foot for about an hour, Ahmadzai said.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Afghan-Kidnappings.html



Human Rat Trap Knows His Enemy. They’re Winning.
By ANAND GIRIDHARADAS
Published: July 20, 2007
MUMBAI, India, July 19 — Behram Harda was a dancer in the Bollywood films of the 1970s, gracing the screen with his twist and his cha-cha.
Then he became a rodent assassin.
Today, in the sprawling B Ward of this teeming, filthy, exhilarating city, Mr. Harda is admired by his colleagues as the last of the great Mumbai rat catchers. His is a dying breed in a city whose dreams of being rat-free recede year by year.
Mr. Harda, 55 years old with salt-and-pepper stubble, is a gentle, relentless executioner. He fumigates. He drops poison laced with garlic and chutney into burrows. He brings new traps to shopkeepers and collects the previous catch for killing. The rats are sometimes drowned in buckets. Other times they are seized by the tail and smashed onto the hot pavement.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/asia/20rats.html



Compelled to Remember the Big One
By
CLYDE HABERMAN
Published: July 20, 2007
We in New York are getting pretty good at assuming the worst when something out of the ordinary happens, like the steam pipe explosion that shot vapor and muck into the air on Wednesday.
For most of us, terrorism is as bad as it gets. When things go wrong, fear of terrorism is the city’s default position. It’s no wonder, given our recent history and given that federal officials and certain presidential candidates flash incessant warnings of doom. They are the opposite of F.D.R., those politicians, cautioning us that we have everything to fear, including fear itself.
Anything short of terrorism somehow becomes bearable. We saw the phenomenon on Wednesday: Yes, a woman died, and others suffered bodily harm, and life turned upside down for many thousands. But at least it wasn’t a terrorist act. Whew!
Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg gave voice to those feelings while trying to reassure the citizenry. “There is no reason to believe that this is anything other than a failure of our infrastructure,” Mr. Bloomberg said.

http://select.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/nyregion/20nyc.html



The Elusive Vick Takes His Hardest Hit
By
WILLIAM C. RHODEN
Published: July 20, 2007
I’ve argued for a number of years that
Michael Vick of the Atlanta Falcons is one of the most important players in the N.F.L. His approach to quarterback — with speed, quickness and a rifle arm — makes him, on some days, the most dangerous player on the field. Many of the arguments against the way he plays the game reflect a deeply rooted cultural bias against athleticism at one of the most hallowed positions in sports.
The debate has now moved beyond the playing field, and Vick is facing an unprecedented rush. The federal government is accusing him of not merely crossing the line between good and bad judgment, but of going completely out of bounds.
Earlier this week, Vick was indicted on federal felony charges alleging that he had sponsored dogfighting since 2001, that he frequently gambled on dogfighting and that he authorized acts of cruelty against animals on property that he owned.
An 18-page indictment suggested that Vick was not just a distant spectator sitting on the 50-yard line; he was the quarterback for Bad Newz Kennels.

http://select.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/sports/football/20rhoden.html



Compelled to Remember the Big One
By
CLYDE HABERMAN
Published: July 20, 2007
We in New York are getting pretty good at assuming the worst when something out of the ordinary happens, like the steam pipe explosion that shot vapor and muck into the air on Wednesday.
For most of us, terrorism is as bad as it gets. When things go wrong, fear of terrorism is the city’s default position. It’s no wonder, given our recent history and given that federal officials and certain presidential candidates flash incessant warnings of doom. They are the opposite of F.D.R., those politicians, cautioning us that we have everything to fear, including fear itself.
Anything short of terrorism somehow becomes bearable. We saw the phenomenon on Wednesday: Yes, a woman died, and others suffered bodily harm, and life turned upside down for many thousands. But at least it wasn’t a terrorist act. Whew!
Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg gave voice to those feelings while trying to reassure the citizenry. “There is no reason to believe that this is anything other than a failure of our infrastructure,” Mr. Bloomberg said.
Only an infrastructure failure. Why that should be a comfort is a mystery. It meant that death could reach up from below and grab hold of us at any time.

http://select.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/nyregion/20nyc.html



Bombings in Pakistan Leave at Least 48 Dead
By
SOMINI SENGUPTA and ISMAIL KHAN
Published: July 20, 2007
ISLAMABAD,
Pakistan, July 19 — Three suspected suicide bombings in far-flung corners of the country left at least 48 dead on Thursday, as the government sought to tame the disorder by resuscitating a widely criticized and now collapsed peace deal in Pakistan’s tribal areas.
Tribal elders were scheduled to go to the tribal area of North Waziristan on Thursday for another attempt at persuading militants affiliated with the
Taliban to resurrect a truce signed last September. The agreement was intended to curb the infiltration of fighters into neighboring Afghanistan and contain attacks against Pakistani security forces.
The Taliban renounced the truce last weekend in the aftermath of the government’s assault on Islamist militants holed up in the sprawling Red Mosque compound here.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/asia/20pakistan.html



Russia Orders 4 British Diplomats Home in Poisoning Case
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
Published: July 20, 2007
MOSCOW, July 19 —
Russia expelled four British diplomats on Thursday in response to Britain’s expulsion of the same number of Russian diplomats earlier this week over Russia’s refusal to extradite a suspect in last year’s radiation poisoning of a former K.G.B. officer in London.
Russia will also tighten visa requirements on British government officials’ travel to Russia, in response to a similar move announced by Britain on Monday, Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mikhail Kamynin, said in a statement.
The symmetrical nature of the reply suggested that Russian authorities wanted to avoid any escalation in the poisoning case, which has unraveled into a bruising and drawn-out controversy for the Kremlin.
In his first public comments on the tit-for-tat diplomatic expulsions, President
Vladimir V. Putin said he believed that relations with Britain would now develop normally.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/europe/20russia.html



Doctor Born in Saudi Arabia Is 4th Charged in Bomb Plot
By
JANE PERLEZ
Published: July 20, 2007
LONDON, July 19 — A Jordanian-trained doctor was charged Thursday with a terrorism offense in the failed car bomb attacks in London and Glasgow, making him the fourth among eight people arrested in
Britain and Australia to be charged in the attacks.
Three people detained by the British police right after the attacks have been released without charge. A fourth is in critical condition from injuries sustained when he drove a gasoline-laden Jeep Cherokee into a terminal at the Glasgow airport.
The man charged Thursday, Dr. Mohammed Asha, 26, is to appear Friday in magistrates’ court here on a charge of conspiracy to cause explosions, the police said. He was born in Saudi Arabia.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/europe/20britain.html



In a World on the Move, a Tiny Land Strains to Cope
By JASON DePARLE
Published: June 24, 2007
MINDELO, Cape Verde — Virtually every aspect of global migration can be seen in this tiny West African nation, where the number of people who have left approaches the number who remain and almost everyone has a close relative in Europe or America.
Border Crossings
The View From Cape Verde
This is the first in a series of articles examining global migration and its consequences.
LEFT BEHIND Steven Ramos, 11, with one of his nieces in Mindelo, Cape Verde. His mother works in Portugal, his father in the Netherlands.
Migrant money buoys the economy. Migrant votes sway politics. Migrant departures split parents from children, and the most famous song by the most famous Cape Verdean venerates the national emotion, “Sodade,” or longing. Lofty talk of opportunity abroad mixes at cafe tables here with accounts of false documents and sham marriages.
The intensity of the national experience makes this barren archipelago the Galapagos of migration, a microcosm of the forces straining American politics and remaking societies across the globe.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/24/world/africa/24verde.html?ex=1185076800&en=dda73987f6c2cecc&ei=5070

Audio/Video

http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/world/20070624_VERDE_FEATURE/blocker.html



North Korean Nuclear Talks Fail to Set Disarmament Timetable, but Yield Agreement on Goals
By
HOWARD W. FRENCH
Published: July 20, 2007
BEIJING, July 19 — Delegates to the six-nation talks aimed at disarming
North Korea of its nuclear weapons said they had failed to set a timetable for disarmament during meetings that were scheduled to end on Friday.
The chief United States envoy, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher R. Hill, tried to put a positive face on the disappointing result, saying that substantial progress had been made during the talks, but that “working groups” of experts from the participating countries would need to devise plans for the timing and sequencing of further steps.
“The consensus was that given our not very successful effort with dates in the spring that we would want to have the working groups” help devise modalities to achieve the objectives of the second round of the talks. Mr. Hill said of the outstanding goals, “I feel it is quite feasible by the end of the year.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/asia/20korea.html



Truck Bomb Hits Baghdad Mosque, and 61 Are Killed
By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Published: June 20, 2007
BAGHDAD, June 19 — A suicide bomber barreled a truck filled with cooking gas and explosives into a square bordered by a large Shiite mosque in the heart of Baghdad on Tuesday, just as worshipers were finishing midday prayers. The Interior Ministry said at least 61 people were killed and 130 wounded.
The attack took place as American forces continued a large-scale assault on strongholds of
Al Qaeda outside the capital where, they say, many of the vehicle bombs are manufactured. The timing seemed intended to demonstrate that the insurgents could still strike with near impunity, blindsiding the American security crackdown in Baghdad.
The powerful explosion destroyed a part of the Khalani Mosque and engulfed a line of minivans and an adjacent parking area in flames. The toll was expected to climb as bodies were counted and some of the wounded died.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/20/world/middleeast/20iraq.html?ex=1185076800&en=e4a30360981d7dee&ei=5070

Audio/Video

http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/world/20070620_IRAQ_FEATURE/blocker.html



Victory for Brown as Labor Holds 2 Seats in Britain
By REUTERS
Published: July 20, 2007
Filed at 3:32 a.m. ET
LONDON (Reuters) - British voters handed a first electoral victory to Prime Minister
Gordon Brown on Friday, when his Labour Party retained two parliamentary seats in by-elections, albeit with reduced majorities.
The results were a blow for the opposition Conservative party, which came third to the Liberal Democrats in both the west London constituency of Ealing Southall and former Prime Minister
Tony Blair's old seat in Sedgefield, county Durham.
Brown has enjoyed a bounce in opinion polls since taking over as prime minister last month and promising sweeping changes in style and policy to restore public trust in his government damaged by the Iraq war.

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-britain-byelection.html



Denmark Airlifts Abouts 200 Iraqis
By REUTERS
Published: July 20, 2007
Filed at 4:41 a.m. ET
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Denmark said on Friday it secretly airlifted out of Iraq about 200 translators and other Iraqi employees of its troops in Iraq and their relatives this week and most were expected to seek asylum in the Nordic nation.
"Out of concern for the interpreters and their families' security as well as the security of the Danish base in Iraq, the Defence Ministry has chosen to inform the public after the interpreters and others had left Iraq," the Denmark Defence Ministry said in a statement.
It said the airlift involved "about 200" people. A ministry spokesman reached by telephone could not provide an exact number but said most of the Iraqis brought to Denmark were translators and their families.
Danish Ambassador to Iraq Bo Eric Weber said the moved followed the killing in December of an Iraqi who had worked with the Danes as an interpreter. Around 80 of those flown out of the country were employed and the rest were family members, he said.
"They had been working for us for about four years, and those who felt their security in Iraq was threatened have been granted visas to go to Denmark" where they can apply for asylum, Weber told Reuters.

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-denmark-iraq-translators.html



China’s Growth Accelerates to 11.9%, and Food Prices Spur Inflation
By
DAVID BARBOZA
Published: July 20, 2007
SHANGHAI, July 19 — China said Thursday that its economy grew 11.9 percent at an annual pace in the second quarter, the fastest pace in more than a decade, and that inflation rose sharply last month, stoking fears that the nation’s economy was overheating.
The quarter’s explosive growth, compared with the period a year earlier, was fueled by a huge trade surplus, booming retail sales and heavy investments in new factories, roads, bridges and real estate projects.
Analysts say that the authorities in Beijing are under mounting pressure to curb the trade surplus and ease pressure on the economy by increasing interest rates or allowing the currency, the yuan, to further appreciate against other currencies.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/business/worldbusiness/20yuan.html



Greece: Damaging Wildfires Burn
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 20, 2007
Wildfires burned homes and forced the evacuations of villages, a convent and a children’s camp in southern
Greece, as a heat wave swept across southeastern Europe. The national fire service reported 115 fires in a 24-hour period as temperatures reached 102 degrees in some spots. In southern Greece, villages near Corinth, 52 miles southwest of Athens, were evacuated after a fire destroyed at least 10 homes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/europe/20briefs-fires.html



Britain: Unions Denounce Call to Boycott Israel
By
STEVEN GREENHOUSE
Published: July 20, 2007
Twenty-nine American labor leaders issued a statement denouncing the call by several British unions to boycott
Israel over its occupation of Palestinian territories. Asserting that “there are victims and victimizers on all sides,” the union leaders said, “We have to question the motives of those resolutions that single out one country.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/europe/20briefs-unions.html



Philippines: Kidnapped Priest Is Released
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 20, 2007
An Italian missionary priest kidnapped more than a month ago has been released after negotiations with a rogue faction of a Muslim separatist group, the Philippine police said. The priest, the Rev. Giancarlo Bossi, 57, was kidnapped June 10 in the nation’s volatile south. On July 10, a Philippine marine convoy searching for him was ambushed by Muslim insurgents, and 14 marines were killed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/asia/20briefs-priest.html



Chad: President Agrees to Admit European Force
By REUTERS
Published: July 20, 2007
President Idriss Déby said he had agreed in principle to let a
European Union force into the east of his country to contain violence that has spread from neighboring Sudan’s Darfur region. The United Nations says that eastern Chad has about 230,000 refugees from Sudan, and that more than 170,000 of Chad’s own citizens have also been displaced as a result of the conflict.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/africa/20briefs-chad.html



An Epic Showdown as Harry Potter Is Initiated Into Adulthood
By
MICHIKO KAKUTANI
Published: July 19, 2007
So, here it is at last: The final confrontation between
Harry Potter, the Boy Who Lived, the Chosen One, the “symbol of hope” for both the Wizard and Muggle worlds, and Lord Voldemort, He Who Must Not Be Named, the nefarious leader of the Death Eaters and would-be ruler of all. Good versus Evil. Love versus Hate. The Seeker versus the Dark Lord.
J. K. Rowling’s monumental, spellbinding epic, 10 years in the making, is deeply rooted in traditional literature and Hollywood sagas — from the Greek myths to Dickens and Tolkien to “Star Wars.” And true to its roots, it ends not with modernist, “Soprano”-esque equivocation, but with good old-fashioned closure: a big-screen, heart-racing, bone-chilling confrontation and an epilogue that clearly lays out people’s fates. Getting to the finish line is not seamless — the last part of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” the seventh and final book in the series, has some lumpy passages of exposition and a couple of clunky detours — but the overall conclusion and its determination of the main characters’ story lines possess a convincing inevitability that make some of the prepublication speculation seem curiously blinkered in retrospect.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/19/books/19potter.html



Sunni Legislators Return to Work in Iraq After Reaching Deal on Speaker
By
RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ABDUL RAZZAQ AL-SAIEDI
Published: July 20, 2007
BAGHDAD, July 19 — Dozens of Sunni Arab legislators ended their five-week boycott of Parliament on Thursday, returning after what appeared to be a deal with Shiite lawmakers allowing Mahmoud Mashhadani, the volatile Sunni Parliament speaker, to return to his job and then resign, potentially with a sizable pension and retirement benefits.
The political developments came as two American soldiers from an Army scout platoon were charged with premeditated murder in the killing of a middle-aged Iraqi man near the northern city of Kirkuk on June 23. Their battalion commander was also dismissed, though military officials emphasized that he was not suspected of any crimes and described his removal as an “administrative action” after senior commanders had lost confidence in him.
Four American soldiers and their Iraqi interpreter were killed Wednesday by a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad, the military announced on Thursday. Another American soldier, from the Third Infantry Division, was shot and killed Thursday south of the capital. So far, 49 American service members have died in
Iraq during July.
In theory, the return to Parliament of 44 members of the main Sunni political bloc, coming days after lawmakers loyal to the Shiite cleric
Moktada al-Sadr ended their own boycott, will make it easier for lawmakers to reach a quorum and pass legislation. But lawmakers remain deeply divided over every major legislative question, including whether to allow former members of Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party to hold positions of power and the distribution of wealth from Iraq’s vast oil fields. Lawmakers also plan to take a monthlong holiday in August.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/world/middleeast/20iraq.html



Norman Mailer, Unbound and on Film: Revisiting His Bigger-Than-Life Selves
By
A. O. SCOTT
Published: July 20, 2007
Who was Norman T. Kingsley? No
Wikipedia entry exists to provide a full biography, but in his day Kingsley — or N. T. K., as he was sometimes called — was a figure of considerable world historical significance. A filmmaker who invited comparison to Buñuel, Dreyer, Fellini and Antonioni, he was also a formidable potential candidate for president of the United States, an object of relentless media fascination and the target of far-reaching conspiracies of the rich and powerful. Backed up by an entourage of hoodlums and street fighters known as the Cash Box, he was, in equal parts, artist, outlaw, pornographer and saint.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/movies/20norm.html



As Dollar Crumples, Tourists Overseas Reel
By
MARK LANDLER
Published: July 19, 2007
HEIDELBERG, Germany, July 17 — A day after Michael Kingsley arrived in this romantic university town, he was in no mood to savor the cobblestone streets, the half-timbered houses or the flower-bedecked windows — to say nothing of the camera-ready castle on the hill.
Mr. Kingsley had left his camera battery and charger in a hotel room in London, and he knew that as an American tourist, buying replacements here was going to sting. The damage: $143. Back home in Falls Church, Va., he said, the same purchase would have set him back no more than $100.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/19/business/worldbusiness/19dollar.html?em&ex=1185076800&en=1a3f13077eb2d9e7&ei=5087%0A



Russia’s Trademark Gun, but Others Grab Profits
WEAPON OF CHOICE An Afghan soldier on patrol with a Kalashnikov. The United States supplies the weapons to Afghanistan and Iraq, and gets them from sources outside Russia.
THE automatic Kalashnikov, the world’s most abundant firearm and a martial symbol with a multiplicity of meanings, turns 60 this year. In some places this is cause to shudder. In
Russia it is treated as a milestone to celebrate, and a chance to cry foul.
Once strictly Communist products, the AK-47 and its offspring are killing tools so durable and easy to use that they were heralded as achievements of state socialism and industrial might. Uncoupled from the laws of supply and demand by their origins in planned economies, they flowed from arms plants in the tens of millions, becoming national defense and foreign policy instruments for the Soviet Union and allied states.
But the 60th birthday party has displayed the rifle’s evolving place in both the market and the Kremlin’s mind. These days the Kalashnikov is seen through capitalist lenses, and argued about in ways that could not possibly have been envisioned by its Communist creators.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/15/weekinreview/15chivers.html



How a Clash Helped Pakistan’s Leader — and Didn’t
By
DAVID ROHDE
Published: July 15, 2007
A NIGHTMARE seemed to be unfolding last week when commandos stormed a hardline Islamic mosque in
Pakistan’s capital. With at least 87 dead, it looked as if the clash could set off an Islamic uprising in the world’s only nuclear-armed Muslim nation.
Instead, few people attended protests organized by religious parties on Friday. What the battle at the mosque seemed to reveal was how complex Pakistani politics is, and how far Islamist radicals are from gaining widespread popular support, Pakistani and American analysts said.
“There was no uprising because the society is not radical and is more opposed to extremism than most commentators think,” said Frederic Grare, a Pakistan analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. “The clash demonstrates that the majority of the people will back a policy aimed at reducing radicals’ influence.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/15/weekinreview/15rohde.html



Exxon Mobil Cleanup Effort Continues on Brooklyn Spill
By DALTON WALKER
Published: July 19, 2007
Inside the walls and barbed wire fence that largely hides the nondescript facility beside Newtown Creek in Brooklyn, a handful of trailers sit in a cluster surrounded by smaller buildings that belong to Exxon Mobil.
It is not much to look at, but Exxon Mobil officials say the operation is slowly eliminating the contamination that has been deep underground in the Greenpoint neighborhood for decades. The operation, and the contamination, stem from an oil spill that occurred more than half a century ago and has been described as more than twice as large as the Exxon Valdez disaster, which released 11 million gallons of crude oil off the Alaskan coast.
The Brooklyn spill, which resulted from an industrial explosion in 1950, released an estimated 17 million gallons of oil and oil products, polluted the soil, left traces of toxic chemicals in Newtown Creek, led to years of community and environmental outcry and became the basis of several continuing lawsuits.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/19/nyregion/19clean.html



A Landscape That the Glaciers Overlooked
But tucked into Ohio’s southeast corner, near where it touches West Virginia and Kentucky, lies a protected pocket the glaciers never bullied, a densely wooded but thinly populated region of rugged slopes and cool hollows, of spring-fed creeks and cascading waterfalls, known as the Hocking Hills. For years, city dwellers from Columbus, only an hour away, have sought refuge there in retreats hidden among oak, cherry, walnut and hickory forests.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/20/realestate/greathomes/20havens.html



Victorian Baths, Unrepressed
By ALEXIA BRUE
Published: July 19, 2007
NANCY EPSTEIN’S master bathroom started with a 1930’s Lalique chandelier. “I fell in love with this chandelier 12 years ago” at the Paul Stamati Gallery in Manhattan, she said recently. “Finally, 5 years ago, I said: ‘Kids, we’re not going on vacation this summer. Mom’s buying the chandelier.’ ”
Once she owned it, she wasn’t sure where it should go, until her decorator suggested that it was the perfect size for the master bath.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/19/garden/19bath.html

continued...

Morning Papers - continued...


North Slope of Alaska (click here) - The north shore is where the oil wells and rotting pipe lines exist.

Pools of melt water collected on Alaska’s North Slope in early July 2007. On July 6, 2007, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) flying on NASA’s Terra satellite captured these images. The top image shows the area in true color, similar to how human eyes would see it from the sky. The bottom image uses a combination of shortwave infrared, near infrared, and red light. In this false-color image, red-brown indicates bare ground, green indicates vegetation, light blue indicates ice, and deep blue-black indicates water. Water appears especially pronounced in this image, including the many melt ponds near the coast that give the coastline a spongy appearance.


New Zealand Herald

The big thaw
5:00AM Saturday July 14, 2007
By
Catherine Masters
New Zealand scientist Grant Redvers with expedition dog Tiksi and boat the Tara. Redvers is leading a research expedition investigating climate change in the Arctic.
You might think you'd go a little stir crazy stuck on a boat in the middle of a creaking frozen ocean with nothing but white all around.
Or you might think it would be the perpetual darkness of winter or the 24-hour daylight of summer that would drive you bonkers.
You'd be wrong. Every day something unexpected happens out on the Arctic Ocean where the ice is so thick, explorers once searched in vain thinking they would find land.
It might be as simple as waking up to the thrill of finding polar bear tracks next to the boat, as Masterton scientist Grant Redvers did recently, and being reminded that, even though you feel you are the only ones alive on an alien planet, this empty chilly place is the home of other powerful beings.
Nature might treat you to a spectacular light show in the sky one day then whip up a storm the next, leaving you listening anxiously to the ice squeezing and grinding on the hull and hoping your boat will withstand the pressure.
Redvers has become used to this magical world, but because of climate change he might leave it far sooner than planned. The ice has thinned and an expedition expected to last two years may be over in little more than one.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10451418



Cruise passengers' flight home delayed by bomb scare
1:11PM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Edward Gay
The Pacific Star cruise was abandoned in Vanuatu after the ship was damaged in last week's storm. Photo / Andrew Read
The last plane-load of Pacific Star cruise passengers returning home to Auckland had their chartered flight delayed by a bomb threat.
Fraser Gillies was one of 1200 passengers who sailed through gale force winds and 10 metre swells on the P&O cruise.
The company abandoned the cruise and has flown passengers back to Auckland.
But before take-off on Wednesday night, a passenger found a bomb threat scrawled on a sick-bag in the pocket in front of their seat.
Mr Gillies said the message was abusive and threatening and the plane was delayed while checks were carried out.
He said the plane was emptied and the threat was taken very seriously by the airline.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452789



Collapse kills 20 in Mumbai
5:15AM Friday July 20, 2007
MUMBAI - At least 20 people were crushed to death and several more trapped when an old building collapsed in India's financial capital, police said yesterday, as rescuers used bulldozers and even bare hands to clear the debris.
The seven-storey building in a crowded northern suburb of Mumbai collapsed early yesterday, but rescue workers began pulling out most bodies hours later.
Police were unsure of how many people lived in the building, but said 25-40 people could still be trapped.
"We got calls from some people trapped under the debris, asking for help," said police officer Shivaji Bodke.
About 15 people had been removed alive, some with serious injuries.
Civic authorities blamed faulty repair work being carried out for the accident.
- REUTERS

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452669



Auckland port deluged with calls about listing ship (+photos)
The ship seen from Okahu Bay. Photo / Richard Huljich
10:52AM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Edward Gay
A ship leaning heavily at the stern in the Auckland Harbour is not in trouble, Ports of Auckland says.
Members of the public have called the ports authority and the harbour master's office, asking if the ship was in trouble.
Harbour Master John Lee Richards said the Nora Maersk is having a hull thruster repaired and will be bought back alongside the wharf at 5.30am.
Deputy harbour master Jim Dilley said: "I've been amazed at the number of people calling up."
The vessel is between Devonport and Mission Bay and Mr Dilley said it's in "no danger at all".

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452745



Three Pakistan suicide bombs kill 52 in one day
10:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
Pakistani policeman inspect the wreckage of a destroyed vehicle hit by a suicide bomber outside a police training centre in Hangu. Photo / Reuters
ISLAMABAD - Three suicide bomb attacks killed at least 52 people in Pakistan on Thursday, as a militant backlash intensified following the army's storming of a radical mosque in Islamabad.
A wave of bomb attacks has swept across Pakistan, killing more than 160, since the assault nine days ago on the Lal Masjid or Red Mosque complex, a militant stronghold.
At least 30 people were killed on Thursday when a car bomber, apparently targeting a vehicle carrying Chinese workers involved in mining activities, rammed into a police van escorting them in the southern town of Hub.
The Chinese were unhurt but all seven policemen in the van and 23 bystanders were killed. Twenty-eight people were wounded.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452752



Taleban stops bus and kidnap koreans - police
4:15PM Friday July 20, 2007
KABUL - Taleban insurgents stopped a bus in Afghanistan and kidnapped some of the passengers, including Korean citizens, a local police chief said on Friday.
The bus was travelling from the southern city of Kandahar to the capital Kabul on Thursday when Taleban rebels stopped it in the Qarabagh district of Ghazni province, the local police chief Khowaja Mohammad Sadeeq told Reuters.
It was not immediately clear how many passengers had been abducted. Local Taleban commander Mohammad Sharif took responsibility.
Taleban insurgents have kidnapped a number of foreign nationals as part of their campaign to overthrow the Afghan government and drive out its Western backers.
Two Germans and six Afghans were abducted southwest of Kabul on Wednesday and are still missing.
One German national was kidnapped in western Afghanistan this month, but was released unharmed after few days.
The Taleban kidnapped two French aid workers and three of their Afghan colleagues in southwestern Afghanistan in April but later released them unharmed.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452805



Colombians accuse banana firm of paramilitary links
2:30PM Friday July 20, 2007
By Christine Kearney
NEW YORK - A group of Colombians has sued top banana producer Chiquita Brands International, alleging it supported paramilitary organisations in Colombia they said terrorized and killed their relatives.
The suit, filed in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, seeks class action status and unspecified damages against Chiquita for "funding, arming, and otherwise supporting terrorist organisations in Colombia, in order to maintain its profitable control of Colombia's banana-growing regions."
Between the early 1990s and 1997, Chiquita funded and helped arm violent guerrilla groups, including the paramilitary organisation Autodefensorias Unidas de Colombia, also known as the AUC, the suit said.
The unnamed Colombian plaintiffs, who include family members of trade unionists, banana workers and political organizers, said the AUC killed their relatives and thousands of others to control regions containing banana plantations.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452780



Judge dismisses civil suit in CIA leak scandal
12:25PM Friday July 20, 2007
WASHINGTON - A US judge has thrown out former CIA analyst Valerie Plame's lawsuit against Vice President Dick Cheney and other Bush administration officials for disclosing her identity to the public.
Plame has said her career was destroyed when administration officials blew her cover in 2003 to retaliate against her husband, Iraq war critic Joseph Wilson.
The couple had sought money damages from the officials for violating their constitutional free speech, due process and privacy rights.
US District Court Judge John Bates dismissed the case on jurisdictional grounds on Thursday local time.
Plame's lawyer said she would appeal.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452778



Russia expels 4 British diplomats as row escalates
7:53AM Friday July 20, 2007
By Dmitry Solovyov and Michael Stott

Russia's Foreign Ministry chief spokesman Mikhail Kamynin speaks to media. Photo / Reuters
MOSCOW - Russia expelled four British diplomats overnight and suspended cooperation with London on fighting terrorism, as a bitter row over Moscow's refusal to extradite a murder suspect escalated.
The Kremlin said Russia had been forced into a "proportionate response" after Britain threw out four Russian diplomats earlier this week.
Foreign Ministry chief spokesman Mikhail Kamynin told reporters the British ambassador had been summoned and handed a note about "the unfriendly actions of Britain towards Russia".
"Four British embassy staff in Moscow are now persona non grata and they should leave the territory of the Russian Federation within 10 days," Kamynin said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452733



Focus of Brazil air crash shifts away from runway
10:30AM Friday July 20, 2007
An aerial view where a TAM airlines Airbus A320 crashed into a building (foreground) in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Photo / Reuters
SAO PAULO - Debate over the cause of Brazil's worst air crash has shifted from widespread claims of a faulty runway to potential pilot error or failure of the plane's braking systems.
Soon after the fiery accident at Sao Paulo's Congonhas airport, which killed all 186 people on board and more on the ground, many officials and aviation experts blamed the rain-soaked runway where the Airbus A320 skidded before slamming into a gas station and cargo terminal.
But Globo TV said the jet had been flying without one of its thrust reversers, which help slow the plane at landing. It reported the device was turned off after a malfunction last week and that the plane had difficulty braking on the same slippery runway one day before the crash.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452759



Dissidents in fear of Kremlin campaign
5:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Kim Sengupta and Anne Penketh
Has the Kremlin declared open season on the Russian dissident community in London?
Billionaire businessman Boris Berezovsky and the former Chechen rebel Akhmed Zakayev certainly think so. And it seems that British security officials share their fears.
Yesterday Berezovsky was taking no chances, after it emerged that a Russian man had been arrested and deported from Britain on suspicion of mounting a plot to kill him.
Berezovsky appeared at a news conference, held only 200m from Downing Street, accompanied by several bodyguards and a unit of London police, and accused Vladimir Putin of trying to kill him last month.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452658



Fiji moves soldiers into diplomatic positions
4:20PM Thursday July 19, 2007
Fiji's military government appears to be pressing ahead with moves to replace many of its overseas diplomats, with reports a top soldier will be moving to New York to take up a United Nations posting.
The move comes as Malaysia's oldest human rights group urges its country to distance itself from Fiji's regime, which is trying to appoint an army officer to be its envoy to Kuala Lumpur.
Radio Fiji today reported Lieutenant Colonel Mason Smith would be heading to New York in two weeks to take up a diplomatic posting for Fiji at the United Nations.
Recent reports said negotiations were underway between America and Fiji to allow Smith to enter the United States, which suspended all official visits by senior Fiji military officials after last year's military coup.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452570



Billionaire 'built hidden sex, drugs den'
5:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Leonard Doyle
Henry T. Nicholas III was, for a brief period, one of the richest men in America. A patron of the Orange County arts scene, he had a trophy wife and enjoyed playing Rod Stewart numbers at full volume from the steps of his mansion.
The 2.01m engineer founded the company Broadcom in 1991, making the innards of cable TV boxes at his Redondo Beach apartment.
When it floated in the go-go years of the internet boom, his shares went up in value 40 times and he soon acquired the trappings of the super rich:
* a private jet
* a Lamborghini
* a mansion in Laguna Hills with its own equestrian estate
and, court documents claim:
* his personal brothel, hidden in an underground grotto, called Ponderosa.
The grotto was reached by hidden doors with secret levers, leading to tunnels and a 185sq m sports bar called "Nick's Cafe".
According to claims in court papers, this was a "secret and convenient lair", to cater for "Mr Nicholas's manic obsession with prostitutes" and his "addiction to cocaine and Ecstasy". He used his private jet to pick up prostitutes as far away as New Orleans, Chicago, Las Vegas and Los Angeles "and bring them back to the Pond for his rock star friends", according to documents filed with Orange County Superior Court. "He provided his guests with transportation and cocaine, Ecstasy, methamphetamines, marijuana, mushrooms, and nitrous oxide [laughing gas]".

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452664



Explosion rocks Manhattan (+photos, video)
3:40PM Thursday July 19, 2007
By Claudia Parsons and John Doran
NEW YORK - An 83-year-old steam pipe exploded underground in midtown Manhattan this morning, shaking buildings, creating a towering geyser of debris and sending people fleeing in scenes reminiscent of the September 11 attacks.
Officials in New York and Washington promptly ruled out terrorism. One person died of cardiac arrest and about 20 others were injured, some seriously, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at a news conference.
Boiling, brownish water and steam gushed geyser-like at least 36 metres high out of a crater about 6 metres wide on Lexington Avenue at 41st Street, one of the busiest areas of New York City near the Grand Central transportation hub.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452534



New York cleans up after asbestos-tainted blast
Page 1 of 2
View as a single page 3:05PM Friday July 20, 2007
By Christine Kearney
NEW YORK - Some New Yorkers doubted official assurances that the air surrounding a deadly steam pipe explosion in midtown Manhattan was safe to breathe despite the discovery of asbestos-tainted debris.
Workers began cleaning up the site of yesterday's blast, which shook buildings, unleashed a geyser of steam and boiling, brownish water and sent people fleeing in scenes reminiscent of the September 11 attacks in 2001.
A six-square-block area beside busy Grand Central Station was cordoned off by police wearing breathing masks after tests showed the debris contained asbestos -- widely used in the past as a flame retardant and insulator but now known to be a dangerous carcinogen.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452803



Israel begins freeing Palestinian prisoners
KITSIYOT, Israel - Israel released dozens of Palestinian prisoners on Friday as part of a U.S.-backed deal to bolster Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas following the takeover of the Gaza Strip by Hamas Islamists last month.
Some of the 250 or so prisoners, mostly members of Abbas's secular Fatah faction, signed early release papers and, bound in handcuffs, boarded buses at Kitsiyot prison in southern Israel.
From there they will be driven to the West Bank city of Ramallah to be greeted by Abbas and reunited with families.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452845



Six UK cabinet ministers own up to smoking a joint
10:10AM Friday July 20, 2007
By Nigel Morris
Days after they backed toughening the law on cannabis, six British Cabinet Ministers have owned up to smoking the drug during their student years.
Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, admitted experimenting with pot while an undergraduate at Oxford.
She said: "I was wrong when I did it more than 25 years ago. I am not looking to excuse that."
Ms Smith added: "I've learned my lesson and I've got a responsibility as Home Secretary now to make sure we put in place the laws, the support, the information to make sure we carry on bringing cannabis use down."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452677



Costello's comments more bad news for Howard
5:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
CANBERRA - A new political biography has reopened leadership tensions between John Howard and his deputy, adding to the Australian Government's election woes.
In a new biography of the Prime Minister, Treasurer Peter Costello snipes at Howard's record as a former treasurer, while the book says Costello has never been invited to dine at an official prime ministerial residence in 11 years in office.
"It doesn't worry me, I am just as happy eating fish and chips on a beach," Costello told Australian radio yesterday as he played down the idea of new divisions over the leadership.
Elections are due in Australia within five months with opinion polls suggesting Howard would be defeated and could lose his own seat if an election were held now.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452678



Wandering seal 'happy as Larry' in Whangarei park
3:20PM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Edward Gay
A seal has made its home at a public park, and despite concerns from some members of the public, conservation department staff say they have no plans to move it.
DoC's Whangarei bio-diversity manager Bryce Lumis said the seal was a young pup and enjoying feeding on mullet in a nearby stream.
"It's fine, as happy as Larry. It's a young seal trying to find it's way in the water system. It's probably been beaten up by older seals at some time," Mr Lumis said.
He said some members of the public were concerned because seals are territorial and bites can be toxic.
"But unless it's endangered or in an area where it could be threatened by cars then our policy is to leave it."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452804



Hospital tests robot surgeon
8:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
A multi-purpose robot will soon give "cutting-edge" technology a whole new meaning as it begins surgeries at Mercy-Ascot Hospital in Hamilton.
Two of the hospital's surgeons, Mike MacKie and Chris Hawke, are trialling the country's first remote-controlled da Vinci surgical robot. They say the $2 million robot allows surgeons to accurately work in unaccommodating, tight parts of the body, such as the pelvis or chest. Such robots have been extensively used in the US to treat prostate cancer, and are now increasingly being used to help patients suffering from bladder cancer.
The robotic machinery allows doctors to sit at a console and manipulate instruments inside patients, while watching the action through a camera. The operations have fewer complications and are said to be less painful for patients.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452718



High dollar bringing import bargains
5:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
By
Maggie McNaughton
Consumers are in for some bargains as the New Zealand dollar soars to dizzying new heights.
Though crippling many exporters, the high dollar is bringing consumers a bonanza of cheaper imported goods.
The New Zealand dollar is continuing its rise towards US80c - a record since it was floated 22 years ago.
Big-ticket items such as major household appliances, furniture and cars could come down in price from around September if the dollar stays high, said ANZ National Bank chief economist Cameron Bagrie.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452724



South claims NZ's first $1m suburb
5:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
Kelvin Heights in Queenstown is laying claim to the title of New Zealand's first million-dollar suburb.
The suburb, perched on the edge of Lake Wakatipu, is home to Queenstown's rich and famous, bathed in late-afternoon winter sun at this time of year and blessed with stunning views.
Quotable Value figures showed the average residential house value for Kelvin Heights was $1,022,000 at the last rateable assessment in September 2005.
Queenstown's QV rating was $908,000, Wanaka $597,000, Arrowtown $481,000, Sunshine Bay/Fernhill $563,000, Frankton (Shotover) $546,000 and Frankton Rd end $632,000.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452708



Chirac interrogated over embezzlement of public money
Page 1 of 2
View as a single page 11:00AM Friday July 20, 2007
By John Lichfield
PARIS - Former President Jacques Chirac was interrogated for four hours yesterday by a judge investigating the alleged embezzlement of public money to fund his political career in the 1980s and 1990s.
The meeting is likely to be the first of many encounters between the former president, 74, and judges investigating alleged illegal fund-raising at the Paris town hall while Chirac was mayor from 1977-1995.
No other former president in the nearly 50 year history of the Fifth Republic has been questioned by a judge investigating criminal activities.
Chirac was interviewed as a "temoin assiste" or material witness, half way between an ordinary witness and a suspect.
Convictions of officials of his former party have already proved that Chirac's rise to the Presidency was, at least partially, funded illegally.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452763



Food story made up
4:15AM Friday July 20, 2007
Beijing police have detained a television reporter for fabricating an investigative story about steamed buns stuffed with cardboard at a time when China's food safety is under intense international scrutiny.
A report directed by Beijing TV and played on China Central Television said an unlicensed snack vendor in Beijing was selling steamed dumplings stuffed with cardboard soaked in caustic soda and seasoned with pork flavouring.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10452676



The fine art of raising environmental awareness
5:00AM Wednesday July 18, 2007
By Grant McCool
Nguyen Lieu's paintings reflect the crisis those who rely on Vietnam's waterways are facing. Photo / Reuters
Nguyen Lieu's brightly coloured canvases warn his country that its coastal environment is in peril.
"Nha Trang is the most beautiful bay, recognised worldwide but exploitation there is chaotic," Lieu, 53, said at Galerie DEWI, where 15 of his oil paintings are exhibited.
His home town on Vietnam's south-central coast has smooth sandy beaches, islands and mountains, but it also reflects the ugly side of rapid development and tourism.
It is a story being repeated up and down the impoverished country's 3200km-long coastline.
Oil slicks, dead rivers and polluted air are part of an often-bleak environmental picture as Vietnam's 85 million people head toward industrialisation. Lieu's art is unusual in communist Vietnam in displaying a consciousness about a contemporary global issue. It shows a dire need to preserve and protect coral reefs and marine life for future generations.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10452139



The Green Test: Jaquie Brown
5:00AM Monday July 16, 2007
The Herald is asking high-profile people about their environmental friendliness.
This Week: TV3 Campbell Live reporter Jaquie Brown
What are you doing personally to make a difference?
I use the green bags when shopping instead of getting plastic bags, because plastic bags are evil.
Because I've only just started doing this I have a surplus of plastic bags at home so I'm recycling them and using them as rubbish bags as much as possible.
I've got five green bags and a big blue one for cold goods.
I'm trying to take the car less.
I turn off lights and power when I'm not using them. In the past I would have kept them on.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10451755



Coal-fired Huntly earns big black mark
Page 1 of 2
View as a single page 5:00AM Monday July 16, 2007
By
Wayne Thompson
Greenpeace ranks Genesis Energy the worst contributor to climate change.
In its updated Clean Energy Guide, Greenpeace said the company earned the ranking because it owns the Huntly coal-fired power station, the largest single source of carbon dioxide emissions.
Greenpeace climate campaigner Susannah Bailey said yesterday Genesis Energy plans involved fossil fuels, for example, the 240-megawatt Rodney gas-fired station for which it will seek consent this year.
Contact had taken second ranking because it owned gas power stations which contributed to climate change.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10451701



Invasive ladybird huge threat to British insects
5:00AM Monday July 16, 2007
By
Michael McCarthy
The harlequin ladybird arrived in Britain less than three years ago.
An invasive ladybird is threatening hundreds of insect species and other organisms as it rapidly spreads across Britain.
Although it arrived in Britain only in September 2004, it has made a solid start on the process that entomologists have feared - ousting the native ladybird species.
Three weeks ago Britain's leading ladybird expert Professor Michael Majerus of Cambridge University surveyed three central London parks and found the harlequin (Harmonia axyridis) had already taken over to an astonishing degree.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10451667



Butterfly wins evolutionary race
Page 1 of 2
View as a single page 5:00AM Monday July 16, 2007
By
Steve Connor
Samoa's blue moon butterfly, faced with extinction by a parasite that preyed on only males, has bounced back within a year.
A butterfly found in Samoa has displayed the fastest known rate of evolution as a result of a dramatic "arms race" with a microscopic parasite that kills only males of the species.
Biologists have witnessed how the butterfly has fought back against the parasite by spreading a gene that confers resistance against a type of bacteria that kills male embryos before they hatch.
The scientists said the rapid spread of the gene is an example of the Red Queen principle of evolution - named after the character in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass who ran faster and faster only to stay in the same place.
Normally the sex ratio of the blue moon butterfly - hypolimnas bolina - on the Samoan islands of Savaii and Upolu is the usual 50:50, but because of attacks by the bacterial parasite the proportion of males fell to below 1 per cent, with females making up more than 99 per cent.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=39&objectid=10451669



'Rich talk' from mothers improves children's memory
4:00PM Friday July 20, 2007
Researchers from the University of Otago say preschoolers' memory and language skills can be improved if their mothers speak to them in a detailed manner. Photo / Reuters
Preschoolers' memory and language skills can be significantly improved if their mothers talk to them in richer ways about past events, according to University of Otago research published today.
Associate Professor Elaine Reese, of the psychology department, said the findings had important implications for efforts to ensure children were well-prepared to learn once they reached school.
The study, published in the United States journal Child Development, found that training mothers to talk in a more detailed way helped their children's memory and narrative development by age 3 1/2.
Dr Reese and then-PhD student Rhiannon Newcombe carried out a year-long intervention study with 115 Dunedin mothers and their 1 1/2 to 3 1/2-year-old children.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/6/story.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10452797



Stockings too tiresome for busy British women
8:22AM Friday July 20, 2007
Modern women no longer have the time to bother with traditional stockings, a survey in Britain has revealed. Photo / New Zealand Herald
LONDON - They have been a symbol of glamour for decades, but it appears the bottom has now fallen out of stockings sales in Britain.
Once associated with sophistication, they are now considered tiresome and inconvenient by the modern, busy, working woman, a survey has shown.
Instead women are choosing leggings and tights, preferring the look of actress Sienna Miller and Kate Middleton, the former girlfriend of Prince William.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/6/story.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10452739



Bleach a key weapon in fighting bacterial infections
1:11PM Friday July 20, 2007
Bleach is a key weapon used by white blood cells to control bacterial infections in the body, New Zealand scientists have discovered.
Exactly how the hard-working white blood cells of the immune system control and kill invading bacteria has long been an area of controversy in medical research.
Now Otago University Associate Professor Tony Kettle and Professor Christine Winterbourn have detailed in international journals Biochemistry and The Journal of Biological Chemistry research which shows exactly how the cells use bleach to control infection.
The Christchurch-based medical scientists have been locked in debate with other international research teams, trying to explain how and why white blood cells, or neutrophils, are so effective in declaring war on bacteria.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/6/story.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10452790



Smoking may bring on early menopause
11:39AM Friday July 20, 2007
Women who smoke are more likely to begin menopause before the age of 45 years, which puts them at increased risk of osteoporosis and heart disease, Norwegian researchers report.
Among a group of 2,123 women aged 59 to 60 years old, those who currently smoked were 59 per cent more likely than non-smokers to have undergone early menopause, Dr Thea F Mikkelsen of the University of Oslo and her colleagues found.
For the heaviest smokers, the risk of early menopause was nearly doubled.
However, women who were smokers, but quit at least 10 years before menopause, were substantially less likely than current smokers to have stopped menstruating before age 45.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/6/story.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10452773



Downward dog could be the answer for PMS sufferers
9:00AM Wednesday July 18, 2007
Practising yoga may help alleviate the symptoms of PMS, an Indian researcher has found. Photo / Reuters
SYDNEY - Scientists have found the first proof that yoga can ease the pain of pre-menstrual tension.
Tests on women with the pre-period syndrome have found the ancient Indian art form can relieve their psychological and physical symptoms.
Furthermore, it appears yoga can actually lift levels of an antidepressant-like hormone, allopregnanolone, typically low in chronic sufferers.
But women's health specialists are sceptical about the findings and say most women with PMS need more than stretching and meditation to get relief.
Indian researcher Dr Ratna Sharma has told the World Congress of Neuroscience in Melbourne that she has the first scientific evidence that yoga helps PMS.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/6/story.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10452184



Video: Plants that phone their owners
1:40PM Thursday July 19, 2007
NEW YORK - Four New York University graduate students have merged telecommunications with the environment to create talking plants.
Plants make actual voice calls to owners to inform them of its needs. Owners can in turn call their plants to find out more about them.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=218&objectid=10452560



Asia's concrete jungles go green
5:00AM Saturday June 30, 2007
By Clifford Coonan
Arthur van Langenberg waters his fruit trees. Photo / Reuters
A small balcony in one of Hong Kong's high-rise gardens boasts branches laden with lemon and lychees, although it would seem there are few more unlikely places for a fruit tree to thrive than 30 storeys off the ground.
Meanwhile, in crowded public housing estates in Singapore, cucumbers and lettuces are growing in rough wooden boxes in concrete yards under fluorescent light.
And Chinese schoolchildren enjoy an afternoon with their parents not far from the Great Wall near Beijing, planting some of the millions of trees keeping the desert at bay and making the air easier to breathe.
Asia's green-fingered enthusiasts are leading a revolution that sets out to combat CO2 emissions, provide a bit of colour, and bring the scent of flowers in people's lives.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=218&objectid=10448699



New Zealand Garden opened at Windsor Great Park
4:52PM Saturday April 28, 2007
One of the largest collections of native New Zealand plants outside the country was been unveiled at England's Windsor Great Park yesterday by Prince Andrew, the Duke of York.
The New Zealand Garden containing more than 3000 native plants is the latest addition to the world famous Savill Garden which this year marked it 75th anniversary.
The royal opening was accompanied by traditional Maori ceremonies provided by Manaia, a UK based Maori culture group.
The new garden has been developed and landscaped under the eye of the new head of Savill Garden, Harvey Stephens, working in conjunction with leading New Zealand landscape designer Sam Martin.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=218&objectid=10436670



Auckland and Wellington bars dominate awards
9:00AM Wednesday July 18, 2007
Galbraith's Alehouse in Mt Eden was named pub of the year at the Bartender Magazine Bar Awards. Photo / New Zealand Herald
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Auckland and Wellington have taken most of the honours at this year's New Zealand Bar Awards.
Wellington's Matterhorn picked up bar of the year for the second year in a row, as well as best drinks selection a second time around.
The capital's Hawthorn Lounge was named new bar of the year.
Auckland picked up a swag of awards, including pub of the year for Galbraith's Alehouse and new pub of the year with Living Room.
The city also boasts the nation's best bartender, Nick Ravenhall from Corner Bar.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=46&objectid=10452194



Curry ingredients may fight Alzheimer's
3:13PM Tuesday July 17, 2007
Scientists have discovered that a compound found in tumeric appears to help the immune system fight Alzheimer's symptoms. Photo / New Zealand Herald
WASHINGTON - An ingredient in curry may help stimulate immune system cells that gobble up the brain-clogging proteins that mark Alzheimer's disease, US researchers said yesterday.
They said they isolated a compound in turmeric, a yellow spice that gives Indian curry powder its distinctive colour, that appears to stimulate a specific response against Alzheimer's symptoms.
It may be possible to infuse this compound into patients and treat the incurable and fatal brain condition, Dr Milan Fiala of the University of California, Los Angeles and colleagues said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=1501145&objectid=10452041



People with moles on their skin live longer
10:17AM Wednesday July 11, 2007
By
Jeremy Laurance
New research suggests moles may be an indicator of youthfulness. Photo / Reuters
People with a lot of moles on their skin are used to be told that they are at greater risk of cancer - but, for once, they have to reason to celebrate - it may be a sign of youthfulness.
"Moley" people can look forward to a longer life than their less pigmented peers, research suggests, despite the fact that they have a marginally higher risk of developing melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer.
A study comparing more than 1,800 twins has found that those with more moles on their skin have longer telomeres - a marker of biological ageing found in all cells.
The findings suggest that the risk of cancer is counteracted by the effects of the telomeres, which protect the chromosomes.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=1501145&objectid=10450883

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