Archive for May 25th, 2009

May
25

ArtsCultureOxford Poet Resigns Over Vote Row

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ArtsCultureOxford Poet Resigns Over Vote Row

Oxford poet resigns over vote row
The first woman to become the Oxford Professor of Poetry has resigned following questions over her role in an alleged smear campaign against a rival.But Ruth Padel said she had not engaged in smear tactics and had done “nothing intentional” to lead fellow contender Derek Walcott to pull out of the vote. Mr Walcott, 79 – who had been the favourite to win the post – withdrew following an anonymous letter campaign. An Oxford University spokeswoman said they “respected” Ms Padel’s decision. “This has been a difficult chapter for all concerned and a period of reflection may now be in order,” it said. Mr Walcott pulled out of the contest after Oxford academics received more than 100 anonymous letters reportedly detailing an allegation of sexual harassment made against him in 1982.
He described it as a “low and degrading” campaign against him. Prof Padel insisted she had not taken part in a smear campaign. She said: “As a result of student concern, I naively – and with hindsight unwisely – passed on to two journalists, whom I believed to be covering the whole election responsibly, information that was already in the public domain.” She added: “I acted in complete good faith, and would have been happy to lose to Derek, but I can see that people might interpret my actions otherwise. “I wish to do what is best for the university and I understand that opinion there is divided. I therefore resign from the Chair of Poetry. I hope wounds will now heal and I wish the next professor all the best.” She said she would make a full statement in person at the Hay Festival of Literature, in Powys, on Tuesday morning. ‘Scurrilous campaign’Professor Padel was elected with 297 votes cast by Oxford graduates and academic staff, making her the first woman to take up the role since its creation in 1708. One of those who had nominated her, AC Grayling, the Professor of Philosophy at Birkbeck College, told BBC Radio 4′s The World Tonight she was right to step down. “It would have been really marvellous actually to have a women professor of poetry at Oxford, had it been a straightforward, clean fight. “So it’s deeply, deeply disappointing that things worked out this way and that this kind of scurrilous… campaign was run against Derek Walcott.”

Source:BBC

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May
25

Pope Urges China Reconciliation

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Pope Urges China Reconciliation

Pope urges China reconciliation
By David Willey
BBC News, Rome
The Pope has told Chinese Catholics of the officially tolerated Patriotic Church and those who worship secretly take steps towards reconciliation.Beijing broke off formal diplomatic relations with the Vatican in 1951, and Catholic worship is only permitted in officially recognised churches. But members of the underground church have kept their allegiance to Rome. It is estimated that, altogether, there are more than 10m Catholics throughout China. SecretPope Benedict XVI’s message took the form of some footnotes and additions to a letter that he originally sent two years ago. In that letter, he praised members of the so-called underground church who have remained faithful to Rome during more than half a century of communist rule. While recognising the Pope as their spiritual leader, the officially-sanctioned Patriotic Church appoints its own bishops and priests without reference to Rome. Millions of Chinese Catholics – no-one knows exactly how many – still worship in secret or semi-secret in unofficial Catholic communities. From time to time they are subjected to harassment and persecution by the authorities. Grass rootsThe Vatican recently denounced a new wave of arrests of underground priests and bishops. High level negotiations have been going on during the past year between Vatican officials and Beijing with a view to restoring diplomatic relations. But progress has been slow. The latest message from the Vatican published on a new Chinese language Vatican website encourages the faithful in China to get together at grass roots level with their fellow Christians and to settle their differences in the interests of church unity. The Pope regards the eventual reunification of both Patriotic and underground Chinese Catholics as one of his most important priorities.

Source:BBC

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May
25

Sri Lanka Rejects Tigers Offer

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Sri Lanka Rejects Tigers Offer

Sri Lanka rejects Tigers’ offer
By Anbarasan Ethirajan
BBC News, Colombo
Sri Lanka’s defence secretary has rejected the Tamil Tigers’ offer to enter a democratic process after their military defeat by government forces.In an interview with the BBC, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa said the LTTE rebels could not be trusted to give up “terrorism”. “I do not believe the LTTE can enter a democratic process after years of their violent activities,” Mr Rajapaksa said. The rebels had said they would give up violence after their leader was killed in recent fighting in the north-east. “I am not interested in LTTE at all,” the defence secretary – the most senior civilian official in charge of the war against the Tamil Tigers – told the BBC in a wide-ranging telephone interview. He said there were “enough democratic Tamil political parties in the country” to represent the Tamil minority. On Sunday, speaking to the BBC’s Tamil service, senior rebel spokesman Selvarasa Pathmanathan said they would now use non-violent methods to fight for the rights of the Tamils and had agreed to enter a democratic process to achieve their aims. Army roleMr Rajapaksa also said the work of government forces was not yet over as they had to recover weapons hidden by the LTTE in the northern and eastern regions.
“Some people think that the army’s task is over… it is not. The entire area has to be de-mined and then we have to look for any remnants of the LTTE hiding in the jungles,” Mr Rajapaksa said. He has also appealed to Western nations to dismantle the LTTE’s overseas network and hand over their local leaders, who he said were trying to purchase arms and ammunition for the group. On reports of intrusive checks against Tamils in the capital Colombo in recent weeks, Mr Rajapaksa said the Tamil community was not being singled out. He said everyone – including government officials and politicians – was being stopped at checkpoints for security reasons. “It is not our aim to continue with these security procedures. These checks will be eased once normality gradually returns to the country,” he said. The Tigers’ defeat has almost brought to an end their 26-year fight for a separate Tamil homeland. Most of the senior leadership of the Tamil Tigers is thought to have been killed in fighting with government forces in recent weeks. About 280,000 Sri Lankan civilians have been displaced, posing a huge problem for the government and the international aid agencies. Only a few days ago, visiting UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon had called for a process of national reconciliation that would fully address the legitimate aspirations of the Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Source:BBC

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May
25

Thousands Flee Life Made worse Than Hell By Violence In Pakistan

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Thousands Flee Life Made worse Than Hell By Violence In Pakistan

Young and old, poor and prosperous, sick and healthyresidents of Pakistan’s Swat Valley continue to flee the violence that has erupted there as the military clashes with the Taliban.
The fighting in the Swat Valley region has forced thousands of civilians to abandon their homes.
Those who have fled tell of the whole valley being turned into a battlefield as citizens run away, many of them with no shoes and some elderly. They fall ill from sun and heat exposureparticularly infants and those already weak and sickas they flee. According to the most recent United Nations numbers, about 2.4 million Pakistanis have registered as displaced persons since May 2. Currently, the clashes are concentrated near Mingora, the valley’s largest city. But fighting in the valley over the past three years has made people’s lives “worse than hell,” one former resident told CNN. The 50-year-old man asked that his name be withheld because he fears retribution from the Taliban. He fled Hazara Gul Jaba Aligama, a village 5 miles (8 kilometers) west of Mingora, on Sunday. The Pakistani Army ordered the village vacated, he said, and all the residents from that village and others nearbyseveral thousand peoplefled, mostly on foot, although some cars were used.
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Iftikhar Hussain Shah, 27, a farmer from Union Council Hazara, adjacent to Hazara Gul Jaba Aligama, also recounted the fleeing of thousands. He said the army ordered all five villages evacuated, telling the residents an operation was to take place in the area. His village was already housing people from three other villages nearby, he said. He estimated the total number of those displaced at about 50,000. He said the “miserable condition” of some of the refugees brought him to tears. The group got as far as Chakdara, a town controlled by the military near the southern end of the valley, where a curfew prohibited them from traveling further, the men said. Those displaced have no food or water and are depending on handouts; they have received nothing from the military. Women were staying in two school buildings, Shah said, but men and children were out in the heat with no shelter. Civilians feel betrayed at being told to move, he said, then stopped at Chakdara. The army has been bombing civilian areas from jets and helicopters, said the 50-year-old who asked not to be named. Shelling continues round the clock. Shah said gunshots, artillery and mortars could be heard as the exodus took place. Painda Khan, a Mingora shop owner who lives in the village of Shahgai Saidu Sharif, said that out of his 22-member family, one person has been killed by military shelling and another one is missing. Ten of his relatives fled with him to Islamabad. Khan, who estimates his age at between 65 and 70, told CNN life around Mingora was so desperate, he cannot put it into words. Both he and the 50-year-old man said no food or water remain besides what has been stockpiled. There is no power, and all land lines and cell phones have jammed, and citizens have been confined to their homes by military curfews. Khan said his family left before him, because he wanted to stay behind and protect his home. But the Taliban were occupying a house immediately behind him, and fear drove him outdespite a curfewafter that house was destroyed in an air strike. He walked about 40 miles along the banks of the Swat River, he said, then walked another three hours in the mountains south to Malakand. After spending a night in the fields, he said, he continued to Islamabad, about 100 miles away, using public transportation and rickshaw. Shah said he has no issues with the military operations, but doesn’t understand why civilians have to suffer as a consequence. Over the past two years, he said, the majority of casualties in Swat have been civilianssome 2,700 of them. CNN was not able to independently confirm this toll with the Pakistani military. The 50-year-old blamed both the Taliban and the military, saying it seems they are both enemies of the people. The Taliban, he said, are using locals as human shields and infiltrating the civilian population, shooting from in their midst. In retaliation, the army fires back indiscriminately without differentiating between militants and noncombatants. As a result, he said, civilians make up the majority of the dead. The Taliban takes over any houses vacated by civilians, he said, as well as their possessions. The Taliban are ruling the Mingora area by fear, he said. Anyone who speaks up against them or does anything the Taliban doesn’t like gets killed within a day. Civilians’ bodies are left in the center of town, he said, with a note warning the Taliban is watching and anyone who tries to remove the body before a time specified in the note will be punished. Taliban fighters and checkpoints can be seen in every village. The Taliban has seized all civilians’ guns and ammunition and planted mines in the roads, he said. Some former Mingora residents are helping the Pakistani military identify Taliban hideouts in the valley, Khan said.
Source:CNN

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May
25

Danny Gokey Plans To Thank Milwaukee For Support

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Danny Gokey Plans To Thank Milwaukee For Support

MILWAUKEE – “American Idol” finalist Danny Gokey plans to thank his hometown of Milwaukee at an event that also will raise awareness and money for his charity.
The former church music director is not expected to sing at the free event Tuesday night for contractual reasons. But his church choir, including friend and former “American Idol” contestant Jamar Rogers, do plan to perform.
Gokey also will talk about Sophia’s Heart Foundation, which he started in memory of his wife, who died last summer after surgery for a congenital heart defect. A fundraiser is being held earlier at Hilton Milwaukee City Center.
Gokey tours with the Top 10 “American Idol” finalists starting in July.
___
On the Net:
Foundation: http://www.sophiasheart.org/

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May
25

Korir Petrova Take Titles At Los Angeles Marathon

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Korir Petrova Take Titles At Los Angeles Marathon

LOS ANGELES – Wesley Korir set a course record Monday in capturing the Los Angeles Marathon, the 11th straight year a Kenyan man won. Russia’s Tatiana Petrova was the top woman.
Korir, who ran at the University of Louisville, covered the 26.2 miles in a personal best of 2 hours, 8 minutes, 24 seconds. Ethiopia’s Tariku Jafar was second in 2:09:32 and Kenya’s Laban Kipkemboi was third in 2:10:29.
Paul Kosgei was taken to a hospital for dehydration but is expected to be fine, race officials said.
Korir broke the course record set by Kenya’s Benson Cherono of 2:08:40 set in 2006. He took the pace at the 15-mile mark. He and Jufar exchanged the lead several times down the stretch, but Korir stepped up the pace when he passed the women’s field at the 24-mile mark.
Korir eased to the finish line and didn’t look fatigued, flashing smiles and shaking hands with fans. He earned 100,000 as part of The Challenge, a battle-of-the-sexes format that allowed the top women to start nearly 17 minutes ahead of the men. He also picked up an additional 60,000 for time bonuses.
Petrova broke away from the pack after 19 miles. She surged past Ethiopia’s Amane Gobena to finish in 2:25:59, 49 seconds shy of the course record. Another Russian, Silvia Skvortsova, was third in 2:28:35.
Some of the elite runners were worried about the race date, but the weather was 59 degrees with 76 percent humidity at the start and 62 degrees when the field finished.
Nuta Olaru shared the lead for the first 10 miles, but the 39-year-old Romanian fell back and dropped out after 15 miles.
The lead pack started to string out soon after, with Petrova leading and Kenyans Alice Chelangat and Magdaline Chemjor close behind.
Petrova, who competed in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the Beijing Olympics, earned 40,000 for the win. Her goal was to qualify for the road race at this year’s world championships in August. The Russian federation will decide this week whether Petrova will represent her country in the event.
The race was under new management this year. Dodgers owner Frank McCourt bought the operating rights in September under his new company, Going the Distance, and the date for the race was switched to Memorial Day.

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May
25

Deadly Indian Riots After Sikh Shooting In Austria

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Deadly Indian Riots After Sikh Shooting In Austria

AMRITSAR, India (AFP) –
Two protesters were killed in India's Punjab state Monday in fierce rioting sparked by the shooting dead of a guru in fighting between rival Sikh communities in Austria, police said.
The two men were killed in separate incidents when police opened fire to disperse angry crowds who rioted in cities and towns across the northwestern state.
They were protesting against the death of Sant Rama Nand, who was killed by fellow Sikhs in a temple in the Austrian capital of Vienna on Sunday as he addressed 200 worshippers.
Demonstrators in Punjab torched four train carriages in the city of Jalandhar, police said, despite a curfew imposed to halt the violence.
Curfews were also in place in the cities of Phagwara and Hoshiarpur, with more than 900 troops deployed to control the situation.
In Amritsar, Sikhism's holiest city and home to the Golden Temple, police fired tear gas to control crowds after protesters torched dozens of buses and smashed windows. About 12 people were injured.
“One person was killed at Lambra village by the army bullet and another one was shot dead at Jalandhar by police in order to control the mob,” a police officer who declined to be named told AFP.
Train services throughout the state were also severely disrupted.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, himself a Sikh, said he was “deeply distressed” by the attack on the guru and issued an appeal for calm.
“Whatever the provocation, it is important to maintain peace and harmony among different sections of the people,” he said in a statement.
Sant Rama Nand, 56, died and 16 other people were injured in Vienna during the temple attack, which was reportedly over a dispute about the role of castes in the Sikh religion.
A second guru, or teacher, Sant Niranjan Dass, 66, was among those wounded as Sikhs fought each other with guns and knives inside the temple.
The two gurus, who belong to a group representing low-caste Sikhs, were visiting Vienna to meet worshippers.
Leaders at the temple, which opened in 2005, have campaigned against the caste system, but their stance has angered other Sikhs in Austria.
Guru Nanak, who founded the Sikh religion in the early 16th century, denounced the Hindu hierarchy of castes and taught that all people were equal regardless of caste or gender.
Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna blamed the attack on clan rivalry.
“Two groups of people owing allegiance to different families have set up confrontation amongst themselves and let the gurdwara (temple) be made the place where attacks and counter-attacks have taken place,” he said.
Vienna police said that six Indian men who lived in Austria had been arrested over the assault.
But the Austrian authorities appeared to differ over whether the deadly clash had been planned or if was triggered by a sermon delivered at the temple.
“The sermon appears to have triggered the violence,” Vienna's security and counter-terrorism bureau chief Werner Autericky told journalists. “The motive is not clear. We cannot yet talk of a planned action,” he said.
His comments appeared to contradict those of Vienna police spokesman Michael Takacs, who said the attack had clearly been planned.
Four of the alleged attackers were in a critical state in hospital, but the remaining two have been questioned, police said.
In Jalandhar, the Indian city where many low-caste Sikhs live, the army was out in force as protesters furious at the guru's death obstructed trains and erected road blocks on national highways.
The Sikh religious community has about 2,800 followers in Austria and 25 million worldwide, most of them in northern India.

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May
25

FootballEuropeMourinho Extends Inter Milan Deal

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FootballEuropeMourinho Extends Inter Milan Deal

Mourinho extends Inter Milan deal
Inter Milan boss Jose Mourinho has signed a new deal that will keep him at the San Siro until June 2012.The 46-year-old, who won Serie A in his first season in Italian football, agreed a three-year deal when he first joined the club in June 2008. Mourinho had said there was a “0.01%” chance of him leaving the club after reports linking him with Real Madrid. But his decision to sign a new deal seems to have ended any chance of him joining the Spanish giants. In a statement on the club’s website, Inter Milan said Mourinho had expressed a wish to “continue the project” that had already been started. More to follow.

Source:BBC

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May
25

UN Security Council Condemns NKorea Nuke Test

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UN Security Council Condemns NKorea Nuke Test

UNITED NATIONS – The U.N. Security Council is condemning North Korea’s nuclear test as a clear violation of its resolutions.
The council said in a statement Monday that it will begin work immediately on a new legally binding resolution addressing North Korea’s violations.
The U.N.’s most powerful body held an emergency meeting at Japan’s request after North Korea conducted its second nuclear test earlier Monday.
The council is demanding that North Korea abide by two previous resolutions, which among other things banned further nuclear tests and called for a return to six-party talks aimed at eliminating its nuclear program.

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May
25

The Fame Paradox Pay Attention To Me On My Terms

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The Fame Paradox Pay Attention To Me On My Terms

Look at me. Look at my life, my body, my antics, my kids, my home. It’s OK — come on in. It’s a fair deal: I’m getting famous, you’re getting entertained. Everybody’s happy. What’s the problem?
But … whoa. Wait. Stop. I didn’t sign on for THIS. Why are you looking at me? How dare you look at me! Go away! Can’t you leave me and my family in peace? At least until next season?
A monthlong eruption of celebrity anger over unwanted attention — everyone from Miss California USA Carrie Prejean to Brooke Shields to the stars of the reality show “Jon & Kate Plus 8″ — suggests a new, oddly paradoxical dimension to the way we look at famous people.
In short, Americans who traffic in the commodity that is their lives — Hollywood actors and reality-TV stars alike — aren’t at all happy when their carefully calibrated reality bursts out of the cages they have built to contain it.
“It destroys people’s lives,” Kate Gosselin of “Jon & Kate” said at a recent appearance — a publicity appearance — in Michigan.
Celebrities upset with intrusive coverage are nothing new — Greta Garbo wanted to be left alone as early as the 1930s. And, more recently, stars from Kanye West to Keith Urban to Sarah Jessica Parker have expressed dismay at the media frenzy surrounding their activities and families.
But there’s something different afoot today, something cloudier.
Where George Clooney could say a decade ago that his public performances were separate from his personal life, the lines between public and private have blurred. We are awash in an era of oversharing, an age where millions of regular people broadcast prosaic status updates to the world on Twitter and Huggies sponsors “The Potty Project” featuring real families toilet-training their toddlers.
Today, hundreds of everyday Americans bare their workaday existences to millions of their fellow citizens on reality shows, molding themselves into twinkling, if shooting, stars. On the other end of the spectrum, performers like Tori Spelling, Denise Richards and Jessica Simpson shoehorn their carefully edited personal lives into marketable narratives in a calculated bid to keep the buzz going.
We love it. And they love it. Until the “reality” goes off script and the prying eyes that made them wildly successful suddenly start making them angry. Then you get:
_Prejean, who competed in the Miss USA pageant in a bikini, condemning the people who circulated topless photos of her after she answered celebrity blogger Perez Hilton’s question about marriage by saying it should be between a man and a woman. Prejean said Hilton’s question had a “hidden personal agenda” and that she was “punished” for exercising her freedom of speech. Said Prejean: “This should not happen in America.”
_Shields calling it “inexplicable” that a media storm could erupt over her connection to the New York arrest of Kiefer Sutherland this month. “It is frightening and shocking the access people have to everybody else,” she said last week. In 2005, Shields appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to discuss deeply personal aspects of her life, including her suicidal thoughts and postpartum depression.
_A new documentary about 1970s uber-celebrity Farrah Fawcett, dying of cancer, that includes footage of her discussing the supermarket tabloid that she says robbed her of her privacy — the privacy that she herself is surrendering by starring in a highly publicized documentary about the same topic.
Not to say that anyone is wrong here. It’s all just gotten a lot more complicated in recent years as personal and public lives merge — something that might be expected in a nation where the notion of privacy as a legal right is only about as old as the movie industry.
“You put yourself out there like this, these things are going to happen,” says Lou Manza, who heads the psychology department at Lebanon Valley College in Annville, Pa.
“If you’re going to let the cameras into your life, you shouldn’t be surprised at what the cameras show,” he says. “`I want you to film me’ — OK, well do that, and you’ll get famous, but that’s a double-edged sword. People are going to know all your dirty laundry.”
That conundrum seems particularly distilled in the odd case of Jon and Kate Gosselin, stars of the TLC Series “Jon & Kate Plus 8,” which documents the ins and outs of the southeastern Pennsylvania couple’s family life. Faced with recent magazine reports of infidelity on both sides, the two have lashed out at the media attention to the personal lives they chose to expose, publicly and lucratively, to the world.
“This is certainly not what I envisioned I was signing up for,” Kate Gosselin said during the Michigan appearance. “When I see magazines in stores, it’s really difficult. It amazes me there is an industry that follows you around and writes stories about you.”
In 1961, historian and future Librarian of Congress Daniel J. Boorstin wrote about the growing celebrity culture and the “pseudo-event,” a happening that is orchestrated for the express purpose of being watched and reported on. Boorstin defined celebrity as “a person who is well known for his well-knownness.”
But when Boorstin wrote that, he couldn’t have imagined, in his most outlandish speculation, “The Real Housewives of Orange County” or “Who Wants to Marry My Dad?” — part of an industry that farms, then harvests the tapestry of American daily life into drama-infused show business fodder.
In other words: These days, a lot more of our fellow Americans are suddenly, willingly vaulted into fame — or its Bizarro-universe counterpart, notoriety — without the slightest bit of preparation.
“One of the things about reality and the celebrity narrative is that there are always stakes. Because it’s real,” says Neal Gabler, author of “Life: The Movie — How Entertainment Conquered Reality.”
“A celebrity ceases to be a celebrity when the narrative runs out,” he says. “But the narrative requires other people to amplify it. That’s what the media do. So for someone like Miss California to act as if they have no business doing this, this IS their business.”
So forget about life imitating art or vice versa. As Gabler puts it in his book, “Life has become art, so that the two are now indistinguishable from each other.”
And in an environment like that, is it any wonder that there’s confusion from the amateurs suddenly thrust into the celebrity-industrial complex in ways they never imagined? And that the “Jon & Kate” Web site is brimming with “behind-the-scenes” stories about how they struggle to deal with fame?
“It’s hard being on this side of the camera,” Jon Gosselin says in one Webisode. “People see your life as episodes … I mean, we don’t have privacy at all. If I go out, people know I go out, and photograph it and do everything they gotta do to do something about it.”
Adds Kate Gosselin: “Ready for Season 5 — we think.”
___
EDITOR’S NOTE — Ted Anthony covers American culture for The Associated Press.

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May
25

Deadly Indian Riots After Sikh Shooting In Austria

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Deadly Indian Riots After Sikh Shooting In Austria

AMRITSAR, India (AFP) –
Two protesters were killed in India's Punjab state Monday in fierce rioting sparked by the shooting dead of a guru in fighting between rival Sikh communities in Austria, police said.
The two men were killed in separate incidents when police opened fire to disperse angry crowds who rioted in cities and towns across the northwestern state.
They were protesting against the death of Sant Rama Nand, who was killed by fellow Sikhs in a temple in the Austrian capital of Vienna on Sunday as he addressed 200 worshippers.
Demonstrators in Punjab torched four train carriages in the city of Jalandhar, police said, despite a curfew imposed to halt the violence.
Curfews were also in place in the cities of Phagwara and Hoshiarpur, with more than 900 troops deployed to control the situation.
In Amritsar, Sikhism's holiest city and home to the Golden Temple, police fired tear gas to control crowds after protesters torched dozens of buses and smashed windows. About 12 people were injured.
“One person was killed at Lambra village by the army bullet and another one was shot dead at Jalandhar by police in order to control the mob,” a police officer who declined to be named told AFP.
Train services throughout the state were also severely disrupted.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, himself a Sikh, said he was “deeply distressed” by the attack on the guru and issued an appeal for calm.
“Whatever the provocation, it is important to maintain peace and harmony among different sections of the people,” he said in a statement.
Sant Rama Nand, 56, died and 16 other people were injured in Vienna during the temple attack, which was reportedly over a dispute about the role of castes in the Sikh religion.
A second guru, or teacher, Sant Niranjan Dass, 66, was among those wounded as Sikhs fought each other with guns and knives inside the temple.
The two gurus, who belong to a group representing low-caste Sikhs, were visiting Vienna to meet worshippers.
Leaders at the temple, which opened in 2005, have campaigned against the caste system, but their stance has angered other Sikhs in Austria.
Guru Nanak, who founded the Sikh religion in the early 16th century, denounced the Hindu hierarchy of castes and taught that all people were equal regardless of caste or gender.
Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna blamed the attack on clan rivalry.
“Two groups of people owing allegiance to different families have set up confrontation amongst themselves and let the gurdwara (temple) be made the place where attacks and counter-attacks have taken place,” he said.
Vienna police said that six Indian men who lived in Austria had been arrested over the assault.
But the Austrian authorities appeared to differ over whether the deadly clash had been planned or if was triggered by a sermon delivered at the temple.
“The sermon appears to have triggered the violence,” Vienna's security and counter-terrorism bureau chief Werner Autericky told journalists. “The motive is not clear. We cannot yet talk of a planned action,” he said.
His comments appeared to contradict those of Vienna police spokesman Michael Takacs, who said the attack had clearly been planned.
Four of the alleged attackers were in a critical state in hospital, but the remaining two have been questioned, police said.
In Jalandhar, the Indian city where many low-caste Sikhs live, the army was out in force as protesters furious at the guru's death obstructed trains and erected road blocks on national highways.
The Sikh religious community has about 2,800 followers in Austria and 25 million worldwide, most of them in northern India.

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May
25

Morning Blast Shatters Windows In NYC Starbucks

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Morning Blast Shatters Windows In NYC Starbucks

NEW YORK – An explosion early Monday morning on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, possibly caused by a small bomb made from fireworks, destroyed a sidewalk bench and shattered windows in a Starbucks coffee shop.
No one was injured in the blast, which happened around 3:30 a.m.
Investigators were looking into the similarities between the explosion and others that have taken place in the city over the last four years, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said. The bomb went off around the same time of day as an explosion at the British consulate in May 2005, another at the Mexican consulate in October 2007 and one at the Times Square military recruiting station in March 2008.
In the previous bombings, a bicyclist was seen in the area prior to the explosions. No witnesses came forward immediately Monday, and police still have to see what, if any, security camera footage is available, Kelly said.
“We don’t know the motive. Obviously it is a cause for concern, but we’re going to do an in-depth investigation,” he said.
Kelly said the explosive appears to have been placed on the seat of the bench, but didn’t know what kind of container it was in. He said investigators would examine the remains to determine what kind of explosive it was. He was it was possible it was some kind of firework.
Police also were looking at whether the Starbucks — at 92nd Street and Third Avenue, a few blocks from the Guggenheim Museum — was the target.
Residents living above the coffee shop were evacuated for a time but were allowed to return to their apartments later in the morning.
One of them, Jordan Kovnot, a 26-year-old law school student, told the Daily News, “I heard a giant noise — a big, giant noise, like a crash — and there was a flash.”

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May
25

Versace Denies Boardroom Dispute

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Versace Denies Boardroom Dispute

Versace denies boardroom dispute
Fashion house Versace has denied speculation that there is any dispute between chief executive Giancarlo Di Risio and designer Donatella Versace.Its comments came following press reports that Mr Di Risio was about to depart the Italian firm following a row with co-owner Ms Versace. Versace said in a statement that it “categorically denies the existence of friction” between the two. Revenues at the firm fell 13.4% in the first three months of 2009. Fashion giantMr Di Risio took up the top job at Versace in 2004. Reports had said that he and Ms Versace had clashed over his opinion that the firm needed to cut costs because of the downturn in the global economy. Ms Versace has a 20% stake in the business, which was founded by her late brother Gianni. Versace’s 2008 revenues totalled 336m euros (470m; 296m), up 8% from 2007.

Source:BBC

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May
25

Consensus On EU Fisheries Change

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Consensus On EU Fisheries Change

Consensus on EU fisheries change
By Chris Mason
BBC News, Brussels
European fisheries ministers have concluded a meeting in Brussels with a consensus to effectively scrap current rules that decide fishing quotas.Environmentalists and fishermen alike have long argued the existing system – set annually – has failed the industry. Fish caught over quota are dumped back in the sea even if dead, and in the UK alone numbers of fishermen have fallen by a third over the decade. The European Union has until 2012 to draw up a new Common Fisheries Policy.

It is estimated the existing system of quotas means for every kilogram of cod caught in the North Sea, another kilogram has to be dumped overboard, dead or alive Replacing ‘horse-trading’There was also unanimous support for a new Common Fisheries Policy to be radically decentralised – giving more power to member states and to the industry- an official representing the Czech Republic confirmed to the BBC. This was a central objective of the UK delegation. It was essential the annual “horse-trading” over quotas was replaced by a “longer term view informed by good regional science and management”, according to the Huw Irranca Davies, UK Fisheries Minister. “Discussion of reform of the Common Fisheries Policy was the lengthiest debate today,” said Jakub Sebesta, Minister of Agriculture of the Czech republic, the current holders of the rotating presidency of the EU.
“All member states wanted to take part. We are in a situation where there are fewer fish, there is falling productivity and fleets are getting smaller,” he added. “Lots of suggestions were put forward – an array of ideas,” Mr Sebesta concluded. Danish modelBertie Armstrong, the Chief Executive of the Scottish Fishermen’s Federation, told the BBC he was delighted with the result. “We hoped that decentralisation would be the focus – so that’s very good news. The basic decentralisation message is absolutely key here.”
“The consensus on the need for change is important too – there appears to be genuinely no holds barred in terms of the scale of reform that could happen here, which is great,” Mr Armstrong added. Earlier in the day, Denmark urged Europe to stop over-regulating its fisheries sector and help species survive by taking steps such as putting video cameras on boats to stop fishermen cheating. The EU’s executive, the European Commission, says more than 80% of Europe’s fish stocks are now overfished. The global average is 28%. The environmental pressure group Greenpeace suggests Europe’s fishing fleet needs to halve.

Source:BBC

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May
25

Israeli Document Venezuela Sends Uranium To Iran

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Israeli Document Venezuela Sends Uranium To Iran

JERUSALEM – Venezuela and Bolivia are supplying Iran with uranium for its nuclear program, according to a secret Israeli government report obtained Monday by The Associated Press.
The two South American countries are known to have close ties with Iran, but this is the first allegation that they are involved in the development of Iran’s nuclear program, considered a strategic threat by Israel.
“There are reports that Venezuela supplies Iran with uranium for its nuclear program,” the Foreign Ministry document states, referring to previous Israeli intelligence conclusions. It added, “Bolivia also supplies uranium to Iran.”
The report concludes that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is trying to undermine the United States by supporting Iran.
Venezuela and Bolivia are close allies, and both regimes have a history of opposing U.S. foreign policy and Israeli actions. Venezuela expelled the Israeli ambassador during Israel’s offensive in Gaza this year, and Israel retaliated by expelling the Venezuelan envoy. Bolivia cut ties with Israel over the offensive.
There was no immediate comment from officials in Venezuela or Bolivia on the report’s allegations.
The three-page document about Iranian activities in Latin America was prepared in advance of a visit to South America by Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, who will attend a conference of the Organization of American States in Honduras next week. Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is also scheduled to visit the region.
Israel considers Iran a serious threat because of its nuclear program, development of long-range missiles and frequent references by its president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to Israel’s destruction. Israel dismisses Iran’s insistence that its nuclear program is peaceful, charging that the Iranians are building nuclear weapons.
Iran says its nuclear work is aimed only at producing energy. Its enrichment of uranium has increased concerns about its program because that technology can be used both to produce fuel for power plants and to build bombs.
Israel has been pressing for world action to stop the Iranian program. While saying it prefers diplomatic action, Israel has not taken its military option off the table. Experts believe Israel is capable of destroying some of Iran’s nuclear facilities in airstrikes.
Iran, under Ahmadinejad, has strengthened its ties with both Venezuela and Bolivia, where it opened an embassy last year. Its alliance with the left-led nations is based largely on their shared antagonism to the United States but is also a way for Iran to lessen its international isolation.
The Israeli government report did not say where the uranium that it alleged the two countries were supplying originated from.
Bolivia has uranium deposits. Venezuela is not currently mining its own estimated 50,000 tons of untapped uranium reserves, according to an analysis published in December by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The Carnegie report said, however, that recent collaboration with Iran in strategic minerals has generated speculation that Venezuela could mine uranium for Iran.
The Israeli government report also charges that the Iran-backed Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon have set up cells in Latin America. It says Venezuela has issued permits that allow Iranian residents to travel freely in South America.
The report concludes, “Since Ahmadinejad’s rise to power, Tehran has been promoting an aggressive policy aimed at bolstering its ties with Latin American countries with the declared goal of ‘bringing America to its knees.’”
The document says Venezuela and Bolivia are violating the United Nations Security Council’s economic sanctions with their aid to Iran.
As allies against the U.S., Ahmadinejad and Chavez have set up a 200 billion fund aimed at garnering the support of more South American countries for the cause of “liberation from the American imperialism,” according to the report.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor refused to comment about the secret report.

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May
25

Early Morning Blast Damages Starbucks

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Early Morning Blast Damages Starbucks

NEW YORK (Reuters) –
An explosion on Monday damaged a coffee shop in New York, according to police who were investigating whether the blast was linked to earlier bombings at the British and Mexican consulates.
The small bomb explosion at about 3:30 a.m. EDT shattered windows and damaged a wooden sidewalk bench at a Starbucks on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, police said. The store was closed at the time, and no injuries were reported.
Police were investigating whether the blast was related to an explosion at the British consulate in 2005, a blast at the Mexican consulate in 2007 and an explosion at a U.S. military recruiting station in Times Square in 2008.
Each of the explosions occurred at about the same time of day, police said. In each one, damage was limited and no injuries occurred.
In the earlier incidents, a bicyclist was seen in the vicinity. Police were seeking surveillance video from businesses in the area of Monday's blast.
Police received no warning or calls ahead of the blast, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said.
Police have not determined a motive for any of the explosions.
(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst, Editing by Sandra Maler)

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May
25

The Fame Paradox Pay Attention To Me On My Terms

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The Fame Paradox Pay Attention To Me On My Terms

Look at me. Look at my life, my body, my antics, my kids, my home. It’s OK — come on in. It’s a fair deal: I’m getting famous, you’re getting entertained. Everybody’s happy. What’s the problem?
But … whoa. Wait. Stop. I didn’t sign on for THIS. Why are you looking at me? How dare you look at me! Go away! Can’t you leave me and my family in peace? At least until next season?
A monthlong eruption of celebrity anger over unwanted attention — everyone from Miss California USA Carrie Prejean to Brooke Shields to the stars of the reality show “Jon & Kate Plus 8″ — suggests a new, oddly paradoxical dimension to the way we look at famous people.
In short, Americans who traffic in the commodity that is their lives — Hollywood actors and reality-TV stars alike — aren’t at all happy when their carefully calibrated reality bursts out of the cages they have built to contain it.
“It destroys people’s lives,” Kate Gosselin of “Jon & Kate” said at a recent appearance — a publicity appearance — in Michigan.
Celebrities upset with intrusive coverage are nothing new — Greta Garbo wanted to be left alone as early as the 1930s. And, more recently, stars from Kanye West to Keith Urban to Sarah Jessica Parker have expressed dismay at the media frenzy surrounding their activities and families.
But there’s something different afoot today, something cloudier.
Where George Clooney could say a decade ago that his public performances were separate from his personal life, the lines between public and private have blurred. We are awash in an era of oversharing, an age where millions of regular people broadcast prosaic status updates to the world on Twitter and Huggies sponsors “The Potty Project” featuring real families toilet-training their toddlers.
Today, hundreds of everyday Americans bare their workaday existences to millions of their fellow citizens on reality shows, molding themselves into twinkling, if shooting, stars. On the other end of the spectrum, performers like Tori Spelling, Denise Richards and Jessica Simpson shoehorn their carefully edited personal lives into marketable narratives in a calculated bid to keep the buzz going.
We love it. And they love it. Until the “reality” goes off script and the prying eyes that made them wildly successful suddenly start making them angry. Then you get:
_Prejean, who competed in the Miss USA pageant in a bikini, condemning the people who circulated topless photos of her after she answered celebrity blogger Perez Hilton’s question about marriage by saying it should be between a man and a woman. Prejean said Hilton’s question had a “hidden personal agenda” and that she was “punished” for exercising her freedom of speech. Said Prejean: “This should not happen in America.”
_Shields calling it “inexplicable” that a media storm could erupt over her connection to the New York arrest of Kiefer Sutherland this month. “It is frightening and shocking the access people have to everybody else,” she said last week. In 2005, Shields appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to discuss deeply personal aspects of her life, including her suicidal thoughts and postpartum depression.
_A new documentary about 1970s uber-celebrity Farrah Fawcett, dying of cancer, that includes footage of her discussing the supermarket tabloid that she says robbed her of her privacy — the privacy that she herself is surrendering by starring in a highly publicized documentary about the same topic.
Not to say that anyone is wrong here. It’s all just gotten a lot more complicated in recent years as personal and public lives merge — something that might be expected in a nation where the notion of privacy as a legal right is only about as old as the movie industry.
“You put yourself out there like this, these things are going to happen,” says Lou Manza, who heads the psychology department at Lebanon Valley College in Annville, Pa.
“If you’re going to let the cameras into your life, you shouldn’t be surprised at what the cameras show,” he says. “`I want you to film me’ — OK, well do that, and you’ll get famous, but that’s a double-edged sword. People are going to know all your dirty laundry.”
That conundrum seems particularly distilled in the odd case of Jon and Kate Gosselin, stars of the TLC Series “Jon & Kate Plus 8,” which documents the ins and outs of the southeastern Pennsylvania couple’s family life. Faced with recent magazine reports of infidelity on both sides, the two have lashed out at the media attention to the personal lives they chose to expose, publicly and lucratively, to the world.
“This is certainly not what I envisioned I was signing up for,” Kate Gosselin said during the Michigan appearance. “When I see magazines in stores, it’s really difficult. It amazes me there is an industry that follows you around and writes stories about you.”
In 1961, historian and future Librarian of Congress Daniel J. Boorstin wrote about the growing celebrity culture and the “pseudo-event,” a happening that is orchestrated for the express purpose of being watched and reported on. Boorstin defined celebrity as “a person who is well known for his well-knownness.”
But when Boorstin wrote that, he couldn’t have imagined, in his most outlandish speculation, “The Real Housewives of Orange County” or “Who Wants to Marry My Dad?” — part of an industry that farms, then harvests the tapestry of American daily life into drama-infused show business fodder.
In other words: These days, a lot more of our fellow Americans are suddenly, willingly vaulted into fame — or its Bizarro-universe counterpart, notoriety — without the slightest bit of preparation.
“One of the things about reality and the celebrity narrative is that there are always stakes. Because it’s real,” says Neal Gabler, author of “Life: The Movie — How Entertainment Conquered Reality.”
“A celebrity ceases to be a celebrity when the narrative runs out,” he says. “But the narrative requires other people to amplify it. That’s what the media do. So for someone like Miss California to act as if they have no business doing this, this IS their business.”
So forget about life imitating art or vice versa. As Gabler puts it in his book, “Life has become art, so that the two are now indistinguishable from each other.”
And in an environment like that, is it any wonder that there’s confusion from the amateurs suddenly thrust into the celebrity-industrial complex in ways they never imagined? And that the “Jon & Kate” Web site is brimming with “behind-the-scenes” stories about how they struggle to deal with fame?
“It’s hard being on this side of the camera,” Jon Gosselin says in one Webisode. “People see your life as episodes … I mean, we don’t have privacy at all. If I go out, people know I go out, and photograph it and do everything they gotta do to do something about it.”
Adds Kate Gosselin: “Ready for Season 5 — we think.”
___
EDITOR’S NOTE — Ted Anthony covers American culture for The Associated Press.

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May
25

Hillary Rodham Clinton Surprises Yale Graduates

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Hillary Rodham Clinton Surprises Yale Graduates

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton made a surprise return to her alma mater on Monday, picking up an honorary degree from Yale University 36 years after earning her law degree from the Ivy League school.
Graduates celebrating commencement at Yale erupted in cheers as Clinton was introduced. In keeping with Yale tradition, the names of honorary degree recipients are a closely held secret, although word began trickling out Sunday of Clinton’s participation.
None of the 10 honorary degree recipients spoke during the morning ceremony held for the university at large, where Yale handed out 2,868 undergraduate and graduate degrees. It was the school’s 308th commencement ceremony.
Clinton did speak for about five minutes during the Yale Law School’s separate commencement event held in the early afternoon. There, the 60-year-old Clinton reminisced about her days at Yale, saying the law school was an “encampment for protests and frivolity” when she arrived in the fall of 1969.
She met her future husband, Bill Clinton, at the school the following year, 22 years before he was elected the nation’s 42nd president.
She expressed hope that every graduate would “use every creative gene you have” in order to work “on behalf of the public good.”
Clinton drew laughs from the crowd when she jokingly apologized for taking Yale Law School Dean Harold Hongju Koh “away from the law school and putting him to work in Washington.” Koh was nominated by President Barack Obama to be legal adviser to the State Department, and remains a possible nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In a nod to the rough job market, Clinton also urged the new law school graduates to apply for work in the Obama administration, at the State Department and with the United States Agency for International Development.
Koh said after the law school ceremony he hoped his students learned from Clinton “what is possible to achieve in one lifetime.”
“Everyone who got the honorary degrees were in these seats not that long ago,” Koh said. “And you know, what they know is, they could be a mother, a lawyer and U.S. senator, Secretary of State, presidential candidate. There’s no limit. That’s what they should think. There’s no limit to what they can do.”
Actress and activist Mia Farrow was among the parents in the audience who heard Clinton speak. Ronan, Farrow’s 21-year-old son with director Woody Allen, completed a law degree and is currently going through the security clearance process to work in the Obama administration, she said.
“It was inspiring and wonderful to have a son graduating. And to hear those words (from Clinton) and to see a path, a clear path ahead. He’s joining government and this is a proud day for all the parents here,” she said.
Erin Phillips, 24, is headed to Boston to clerk for a federal district court judge, and was also inspired by Clinton’s visit.
“We heard some rumors last night that she was coming. I was really excited,” Phillips said after the ceremony. “I think it meant a lot and I think everyone has been kind of uniformly thrilled about it. It was a nice surprise.”
Clinton was last in New Haven in 2008, when she visited Yale the day before the Connecticut presidential primary and her own failed presidential bid. She then fondly recalled her days attending Yale Law School and her early career as a child advocate at the Yale Child Study Center.
She spoke to Yale graduates once before, in 1991 when she gave the traditional Class Day speech, which is the major address to graduating seniors held the day before commencement. This year’s Class Day address was delivered Sunday by author Christopher Buckley, a 1975 Yale graduate.
Sculptor Richard Serra, Nobel Prize-winning economist Thomas Schelling and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer John McPhee were among the others receiving honorary degrees from the university Monday.

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May
25

UK PoliticsCameron Pledges Shake-up Of Power

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UK PoliticsCameron Pledges Shake-up Of Power

Cameron pledges shake-up of power
David Cameron has promised his party would deliver a dramatic redistribution of power in response to voter disgust over MPs’ expenses.The Conservative leader, writing in the Guardian, says he would reduce prime ministerial power and boost the role of Parliament to win back public support. Decisions must be handed back “to the man and woman in the street”, he says. His proposals include fixed-term Parliaments, strengthening local government and free votes for MPs. In his article, Mr Cameron writes: “I believe the central objective of the new politics we need should be a massive, sweeping, radical redistribution of power. “From the state to citizens; from the government to Parliament; from Whitehall to communities. From the EU to Britain; from judges to the people; from bureaucracy to democracy. “Through decentralisation, transparency and accountability we must take power away from the political elite and hand it to the man and woman in the street.” Among his proposals are: Limiting the power of the prime minister by considering fixed-term Parliaments, ending the right of Downing Street to control the timing of general electionsBoosting the role of Parliament by giving MPs free votes during the consideration of bills at committee stage. MPs would also be handed the power of deciding the timetabling of billsIncreasing the power of backbench MPs by allowing them to choose the chairmen and members of Commons select committeesCurbing the power of the executive by limiting the use of the royal prerogative which allows the prime minister, in the name of the monarch, to make major decisionsStrengthening local government by allowing councils to reverse Whitehall decisions to close popular services, such as a local post office. They would be given the power to raise money to keep them open.

Source:BBC

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May
25

Crisis Spurs Spike In suburban Survivalists

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Crisis Spurs Spike In suburban Survivalists

SAN DIEGO – Six months ago, Jim Wiseman didn’t even have a spare nutrition bar in his kitchen cabinet.
Now, the 54-year-old businessman and father of five has a backup generator, a water filter, a grain mill and a 4-foot-tall pile of emergency food tucked in his home in the expensive San Diego suburb of La Jolla.
Wiseman isn’t alone. Emergency supply retailers and military surplus stores nationwide have seen business boom in the past few months as an increasing number of Americans spooked by the economy rush to stock up on gear that was once the domain of hardcore survivalists.
These people snapping up everything from water purification tablets to thermal blankets shatter the survivalist stereotype: they are mostly urban professionals with mortgages, SUVs, solid jobs and a twinge of embarrassment about their newfound hobby.
From teachers to real estate agents, these budding emergency gurus say the dismal economy has made them prepare for financial collapse as if it were an oncoming Category 5 hurricane. They worry about rampant inflation, runs on banks, bare grocery shelves and widespread power failures that could make taps run dry.
For Wiseman, a fire protection contractor, that’s meant spending roughly 20,000 since September on survival gear — and trying to persuade others to do the same.
“The UPS guy drops things off and he sees my 4-by-8-by-6-foot pile of food and I say ‘What are you doing to prepare, buddy?’” he said. “Because there won’t be a thing left on any shelf of any supermarket in the country if people’s confidence wavers.”
The surge in interest in emergency stockpiling has been a bonanza for camping supply companies and military surplus vendors, some of whom report sales spikes of up to 50 percent. These companies usually cater to people preparing for earthquakes or hurricanes, but informal customer surveys now indicate the bump is from first-time shoppers who cite financial, not natural, disaster as their primary concern, they say.
Top sellers include 55-gallon water jugs, waterproof containers, freeze-dried foods, water filters, water purification tablets, glow sticks, lamp oil, thermal blankets, dust masks, first-aid kits and inexpensive tents.
Joe Branin, owner of the online emergency supply store Living Fresh, said he’s seen a 700 percent increase in orders for water purification tablets in the past month and a similar increase in orders for sterile water pouches.
He is shipping meals ready to eat and food bars by the case to residential addresses nationwide.
“You’re hearing from the people you will always hear from, who will build their own bunkers and stuff,” he said. “But then you’re hearing from people who usually wouldn’t think about this, but now it’s in their heads: ‘What if something comes to the worst?’”
Online interest in survivalism has increased too. The niche Web site SurvivalBlog.com has seen its page views triple in the past 14 months to nearly 137,000 unique visitors a week. Jim Rawles, a self-described survivalist who runs the site, calls the newcomers “11th hour believers.” He charges 100 an hour for phone consulting on emergency preparedness and says that business also has tripled.
“There’s so many people who are concerned about the economy that there’s a huge interest in preparedness, and it pretty much crosses all lines, social, economic, political and religious,” he said. “There’s a steep learning curve going on right now.”
Art Markman, a cognitive psychologist, said he’s not surprised by the reaction to the nation’s financial woes — even though it may seem irrational. In an increasingly global and automated society, most people are dependent on strangers and systems they don’t understand — and the human brain isn’t programmed to work that way.
“We have no real causal understanding of the way our world works at all,” said Markman, a professor at the University of Texas, Austin. “When times are good, you trust that things are working, but when times are bad you realize you don’t have a clue what you would do if the supermarket didn’t have goods on the shelves and that if the banks disappear, you have no idea where your money is.”
Those preparing for the worst echo those thoughts and say learning to be self sufficient makes them feel more in control amid mounting uncertainty — even if it seems crazy to their friends and families.
Chris Macera, a 29-year-old IT systems administrator, said he started buying extra food to take advantage of sales after he lost his job and he was rehired elsewhere for 30,000 less.
But Macera, who works in suburban Orange County, said that over several months his mentality began to shift from saving money to preparing for possible financial mayhem. He is motivated, too, by memories of the government paralysis that followed Hurricane Katrina.
He now buys 15 pounds of meat at a time and freezes it, and buys wheat in 50-pound bags, mills it into flour and uses it to bake bread. He checks survivalist Web sites for advice at least once a day and listens to survival podcasts.
“You kind of have to sift through the people with their hats on a little bit too tight,” said Macera, who said his colleagues tease him about the grain mill. “But I see a lot of things (on the Web) and they’re real common sense-type things.”
“I don’t want to be a slave to anybody,” he said. “The more systems you’re dependent on, the more likely things are going to go bad for you.”
That’s a philosophy shared by Vincent Springer, a newcomer to emergency preparedness from the Chicago area.
Springer, a high school social studies teacher, says he’s most worried about energy shortages and an economic breakdown that could paralyze the just-in-time supply chain that grocery stores rely on.
In the past few months, Springer has stockpiled enough freeze-dried food for three months and bought 72-hour emergency supply kits for himself, his wife and two young children. The 39-year-old is also teaching himself to can food.
“I’m not looking for a retreat in northern Idaho or any of that stuff, but I think there’s more people like me out there and I think those numbers are growing,” he said.

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May
25

US Lawyers Ask Afghan Court To Help Gitmo Inmate

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US Lawyers Ask Afghan Court To Help Gitmo Inmate

KABUL – U.S. military lawyers asked Afghanistan’s highest court Monday to demand the release of a Guantanamo prisoner they say was only about 12 years old — not 18, as the military maintains — when he was sent to the detention center in Cuba.
Mohammed Jawad’s lawyers say they are enlisting Afghan courts because President Barack Obama’s decision to close Guantanamo and reconsider how detainees should be tried has indefinitely stalled their case in the United States.
“We were in a winning posture in the trial, so to now come along and change the rules in the middle of the game, who knows what’s going to happen,” said Marine Maj. Eric Montalvo, a Pentagon-appointed lawyer who deposited the petition at Afghanistan’s Supreme Court on behalf of Jawad.
While attorneys for many other detainees say the Guantanamo trials offered little chance of acquittal, a judge in the Jawad case had dismissed key confessions and the chief prosecutor resigned after arguing unsuccessfully for a plea deal that would release the Afghan after a brief period of rehabilitation.
A ruling by Afghanistan’s judiciary system, beset with corruption and deep structural problems, would not have legal authority in the United States. But Jawad’s lawyers hope to create political pressure to move the case forward.
“It’s somewhat of an embarrassment to the American judicial system,” Montalvo said.
Jawad was arrested in December 2002 and accused of tossing a grenade at an unmarked Jeep in an attack that wounded two U.S. soldiers and their interpreter. Afghan police delivered him into U.S. custody. He was held in Afghanistan for about a month before his transfer to the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Jawad’s lawyers have said he was 16 or 17 at the time of his arrest, but Montalvo said new information from the detainee’s family indicates he was much younger. Montalvo said the family can estimate how old Jawad is because they recall he was born in a refugee camp in Pakistan about six months after his father was killed in the battle of Khost. The battle — part of a struggle for control of the country in the aftermath of the Soviet withdrawal — took place in the winter of 1990-91.
“If you look at the picture of him when he was detained, I don’t think it was a stretch that he was younger,” Montalvo said.
The lead attorney for Jawad, Air Force Maj. David Frakt, said his client’s family might not know his age and acknowledged they would have an interest in making him seem younger. But he said the estimate is supported by records showing Jawad was only 5-foot-3 and 124 pounds when he arrived at Guantanamo in February 2003. He said Jawad is now roughly 5-foot-9 and 165 pounds.
“He clearly has grown up at Guantanamo,” Frakt said.
A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, said military records show Jawad arrived at Guantanamo at age 18 and is now 24.
A bone scan study by the military shows Jawad was roughly 18 at the time of the grenade attack, according to a court filing by prosecutors, who say Jawad has given conflicting accounts of his age.
But if the family’s estimate is accurate, Jawad would have been one of the youngest detainees ever sent to Guantanamo.
The U.S. has acknowledged holding 12 juveniles at the Navy base in southeast Cuba, but exact ages are often unknown because many detainees, including Jawad, say they did not know their birthday or even the year they were born.
Events recently appeared to be going Jawad’s way in the case.
In October, a U.S. military judge threw out confessions from Jawad because Afghan police had threatened to kill his family. The judge said that amounted to torture. Prosecutors have appealed the dismissal, which came after the resignation of the lead prosecutor, Army Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld.
But Montalvo said any new protocols introduced by the Obama administration might force prosecutors to restart the case. Jawad was about three weeks away from trial when Obama put all cases on hold to review the process of trying and judging the detainees, he said.
Although the move was aimed at correcting the problems of Guantanamo, Montalvo said Jawad has become its unintended victim.
Montalvo said he wants to speed up the process for a client in danger of psychological damage from continued detention. Prison records obtained by the defense show he attempted suicide in 2003, and a psychologist who met with Jawad late last year said he displayed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and major depression.
The two wounded U.S. Special Forces soldiers in the Kabul grenade attack have since undergone dozens of operations, and the interpreter was blinded in one eye, according to prosecutors’ filings.
The U.S. has charged Jawad with attempted murder and argued that he was connected to insurgent groups. Although Jawad confessed to the crime in a first interrogation, he has subsequently pleaded innocent and said he confessed only because he was being threatened.
Regardless of whether Jawad threw the grenade, his lawyers argue that Afghanistan’s constitution at the time did not allow for the extradition of prisoners to another country, making the transfer to Guantanamo illegal.
____
Associated Press writer Fisnik Abrashi contributed to this report from Kabul. Melia contributed from San Juan, Puerto Rico.

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May
25

Rapper TI Gives Farewell Concert Before Going To Prison

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Rapper TI Gives Farewell Concert Before Going To Prison

Rap star T.I. threw himself a going-away party Sunday night, less than two days before he was scheduled to begin serving a prison sentence on federal weapons charges.
T.I. performed to a packed crowd Sunday, days before he was to start a prison term.
The Grammy-winning rapper performed at Atlanta’s Philips Arena before a packed house. He is scheduled to head to prison Tuesday to start a 366-day sentence. During Sunday’s concert, the 28-year-old reiterated a message that’s become familiar in recent weeks: He wants others to learn from his mistakes. “I’m doing the best I can to get out there, man, and put something positive on these young kids, man,” T.I. said during the show. “I try my best. I need y’all help, though.” The rapper played to a sell-out crowd of 16,000 people, said Kenan Woods, a spokesman for the arena. T.I., whose given name is Clifford Harris, played through much of his catalog, including the hits “Whatever You Like,” “Live Your Life” and the Grammy-winning “Swagga Like Us,” Woods said. At times in the show, Harris was joined on stage by fellow rapper Soulja Boy and by his five children and mother, Woods said. He was greeted by a welcoming crowd, and some members of the audience held up signs supporting him. Tickets for the show started at just 10, according to the arena, which called the event “T.I.’s Final Goodbye Bash.”
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What will happen to T.I.’s career?
T.I. sentenced to year and a day in prison, fined
Harris has been the subject of an MTV reality show, “T.I.’s Road to Redemption,” in the lead-up to the prison term. He was sentenced in March on weapons charges related to purchasing machine guns and silencers. In addition to serving prison time, T.I. was placed on house arrest, was given community service and was ordered to pay a 100,300 fine. Though he had been in legal trouble before, Harris’ current situation began when he was arrested just hours before he was to perform at the BET Hip-Hop Awards in Atlanta. The rapper had provided a bodyguard with 12,000 to buy weapons. Harris was not permitted to own any guns, however, because he was convicted in 1998 on felony drug chargespossession of crack cocaine with intent to distributein Cobb County, in suburban Atlanta. After his arrest, he entered a plea agreement, which federal authorities called unique because it allowed the rapper to remain out of prison for a year while he performed community service. Harris has already left a strong mark on the hip-hop genre, music experts told CNN, which should position his career well when he is released. Harris had been named to the Forbes list of top-earning rappers, making an estimated 16 million in 2006. Some music industry observers have said T.I.’s prison term will only make him more popular. “I think that if anything, it will gain him more fans and actually support his fan base, because he’s talked about making a mistake,” Emil Wilbekin, editor in chief of Giant Magazine, told CNN. “He’s talked about taking care of the error of his ways.” The Atlanta rapper has expressed remorse for the situation. “I would like to say thank you to some and apologize to others,” he said at his sentencing in March. “In my life, I have been placed in the worst-case scenario and had to make the best of it.” In a March interview with CNN’s T.J. Holmes, Harris said he no longer felt like he needed to carry weapons to protect himself. He said people should not idolize him for what he’s gone through, but should take note of the fact that he has taken responsibility for his actions. “You shouldn’t take the things that I’ve gone through, and the negative parts of my life, and admire me for that. If anything, admire me for how I’ve accepted responsibility for the part I played in placing myself in these situations, and what I’ve done to recover from it,” Harris said.
Source:CNN

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May
25

Urgent Talks After N Korean Test

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Urgent Talks After N Korean Test

Urgent talks after N Korean test
The UN Security Council is to meet in emergency closed session shortly over North Korea’s latest nuclear test after even its allies joined in condemnation.US President Barack Obama described North Korea’s programme as a “grave threat” to world peace. China accused the North of disregarding international opinion while Moscow said it had raised tension in the region. North Korea said the underground test had been part of work to bolster what it called its nuclear deterrent. It had been warning for weeks that it would strengthen the “deterrent” and walked away from long-running negotiations on its nuclear programme after the US pressed it over the verification of previous agreements.
The blast, which was estimated by international seismologists to have the power of a 4.5 earthquake, appears to have been much more powerful than North Korea’s first nuclear test, in October 2006. Defence officials in neighbouring Russia say it was an explosion of up to 20 kilotons, making it comparable to the American bombs that flattened Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Call for calmUN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was deeply disturbed by the underground test, not only in his UN capacity but also as a Korean.
He said North Korea’s actions were a clear violation of UN resolutions and ran counter to ongoing efforts to curb nuclear proliferation. Mr Ban said he hoped the Security Council would take what he called necessary measures. EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said he hoped for a “very clear and tough reaction” from the Security Council. “We expect that China, Russia and the United States, Japan will continue to put all the pressures so that this regime, which is so unpredictable, becomes a predictable one, in the right direction,” he added. The international community faces a difficult task, confronting what many view as a dangerously unpredictable regime, BBC world affairs correspondent David Loyn reports. After the worst harvest for a decade, the World Food Programme believe a quarter of the population of North Korea need food aid. To divert attention, the government has abruptly broken off talks, test-firing both long- and short-range missiles and then carrying out the underground test, a major escalation, our correspondent says. It could be that this change of mind is part of an internal power struggle as hardliners seek to provoke the world to justify their own repressive rule, he adds. That, perhaps, is why China called for a calm and appropriate response – angry but not so angry for Beijing to back sanctions and encourage the hardliners in North Korea. A measure condemning North Korea will emerge from the UN Security Council but there are few measures available that would bring them back to negotiations and President Obama, the natural conciliator, faces a major challenge, our correspondent says. ‘Stronger than 2006′An official communique read out on North Korean state radio said another round of underground nuclear testing had been “successfully conducted… as part of measures to enhance the Republic’s self-defensive nuclear deterrent in all directions”.
Monitors detected the test at a depth of 10km (six miles), at 0954 (0054 GMT) on Monday. The North did not report the test site but South Korean officials placed it in the north-eastern region around the town of Kilju, the site of North Korea’s first nuclear test. South Korean Defence Minister Lee Sang-hee said the North had also launched two short-range missiles, one at 1208 (0308 GMT), and one at 1703 (0803 GMT). Mr Obama said the US would work with its allies around the world to “stand up to” North Korea. “North Korea is not only deepening its own isolation it’s also inviting stronger international pressure,” he said.

Source:BBC

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