Archive for June 7th, 2009

Jun
07

Gay Rights Activist Calls For March On Washington

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Gay Rights Activist Calls For March On Washington

SALT LAKE CITY – An activist who worked alongside slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk announced plans Sunday for a march on Washington this fall to demand that Congress establish equality and marriage rights for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
Cleve Jones said the march planned for Oct. 11 will coincide with National Coming Out Day and launch a new chapter in the gay rights movement. He made the announcement during a rally at the annual Utah Pride Festival.
“We seek nothing more and nothing less than equal protection in all matters governed by civil law in all 50 states,” Jones said.
He stirred up a crowd of thousands just blocks from the Salt Lake City headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, part of a conservative coalition that worked last fall to pass California’s Proposition 8, which overturned a court ruling legalizing gay marriage.
“I’ve got a message for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” Jones shouted. “I’ve got two words from California … I’ve got two words for the prophet … Thank you. Thank you for uniting us. Thank you for galvanizing us.”
Mormons were among the campaign’s most vigorous volunteers and financial contributors, giving tens of millions of dollars to back Proposition 8, which Jones said has helped awaken and unite the gay rights movement in all 50 states.
Like many faiths, Mormons hold traditional marriage as a sacred institution. The church has been active in fighting marriage equality legislation across the U.S. since the 1990s and, in 2006, joined other faiths in asking Congress for a marriage amendment to the Constitution.
Gay marriage is legal in six states. A handful of others allow civil unions for same-sex couples and about 40 either bar the recognition of same-sex marriage or have explicitly defined marriage — through legislation or constitutional amendments — as between a man and a woman.
Jones was a protege of Milk, San Francisco’s first openly gay elected official, who was shot and killed by a fellow member of the Board of Supervisors in 1978. In the mid-80s Jones founded the NAMES Project, the AIDS memorial quilt that recognizes the more than 80,000 Americans who have died from HIV/AIDS.
In an interview Friday, he said a confluence of events — a new president, the success of the movie “Milk” and Proposition 8 — makes this the right time to intensify the fight for equality.
Since November, Jones said he has received hundreds of e-mails from Latter-day Saints who apologized and said they were uncomfortable or ashamed by the faith’s fight against Proposition 8.
“It’s unfortunate that a church and a people who experienced persecution in the past could not come to some accommodation that would allow them to maintain their faith without so vociferously seeking to deny other people their rights,” Jones said.

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Jun
07

Billy Elliot God Of Carnage Look Toward Tonys

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Billy Elliot God Of Carnage Look Toward Tonys

NEW YORK – “Billy Elliot” and “God of Carnage” were the biggest attractions in a Broadway season that finished with a flourish on stage and, despite the economic downturn, at the box office, too.
Expect the two shows’ popularity to extend to Sunday night’s Tonys, where the British musical and the Yasmina Reza play could score major wins.
“Billy Elliot,” the story of a coal miner’s son who dreams to dance, was expected to dominate the musical prizes, while Reza’s satiric look at the collapse of middle-class propriety was the favorite for the best play crown.
Jeff Daniels spoke of the success of “God of Carnage,” up for six Tonys.
“When you have something that happens like that, enjoy it and treasure it,” said Daniels, nominated for lead actor in a play.
Martha Plimpton, whose uncle David Carradine was found hung in a Bangkok, Thailand, hotel Thursday, walked the red carpet in a black off-the-should Reem Acra gown, with emerald earrings by Fred Leighton. Up this year for featured actress in a musical for “Pal Joey,” she said that just attending the Tonys was good enough for her and “getting to wear these jewels and this dress.”
Alice Ripley, nominated for lead actress in a musical for “Next to Normal,” said: “I’m nervous, I’m excited, I’m happy, I’m emotional.”
Besides “Next to Normal,” which examines a family fractured by a mother’s mental illness, the competition for “Billy Elliot” for the top musical prize was “Shrek,” DreamWorks’ tale of a cantankerous green ogre, and “Rock of Ages,” a celebration of ’80s music.
“God of Carnage” faces “reasons to be pretty,” Neil LaBute’s look at an unraveling relationship; “Dividing the Estate,” Horton Foote’s gently comic examination of a squabble over money; and “33 Variations,” Moises Kaufman’s drama about a dying woman’s pursuit of a musical mystery.
“The diversity of offerings, the quality of the shows that were mounted, not to mention big stars, really centered the season,” says Charlotte St. Martin, executive director of The Broadway League, an industry trade organization.
Broadway had a surprisingly robust 2008-2009 season.
And the spring was exceptionally busy, with stars such as Nathan Lane, Bill Irwin, David Hyde Pierce, John Goodman, Matthew Broderick, Allison Janney and Brian Dennehy all arriving in the last week of April.
Attendance during the 2008-2009 season slipped a bit (to 12.15 million from 12.27 million the previous year) but not as much as was feared because of the recession. And grosses for plays and musicals actually were a bit higher than a year earlier, setting a record of 943.3 million.
Forty-three shows opened during the season, the highest number of new productions since 50 opened during the 1982-83 season.
“This is not a year when I would have wanted to be a Tony nominator,” says St. Martin.
Prominent performers who did not receive nomination included Kristin Scott Thomas, Daniel Radcliffe, John Lithgow, as well as Lane, Irwin and Goodman.
The awards were voted on in 27 competitive categories by more than 800 members of the theatrical community, including producers, actors and journalists.
The Tonys are presented by the League and the American Theatre Wing, a nonprofit service organization. The Wing founded the Tonys in 1947.

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Jun
07

Family Upset Over Photos Of Carradines Body

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Family Upset Over Photos Of Carradines Body

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) –
The family of late actor David Carradine is “profoundly disturbed” by photos published in Thailand that are said to be of Carradine's naked body hanging in his Bangkok hotel room, according to family attorney Mark Geragos.
Geragos said a statement from the actor's brother, Keith Carradine, shows that the family will take legal action against people or media outlets that publish the photos “for invasion of privacy and causing severe emotional distress.”
The Thai-language newspaper Thai Rath published photos that show the body of Carradine, who died on June 3 in Bangkok where he was filming a new movie called “Stretch.”
Mystery has surrounded his death following initial reports that he had committed suicide — claims his family has denied repeatedly.
On Saturday, Geragos said Carradine's family had asked the FBI to look into the death.
The family has hired a forensics pathologist to examine the actor's body when it is returned to the United States.
Thai newspapers said the body left Bangkok on Saturday, which Geragos confirmed at the time. The body is expected to arrive in Los Angeles as early as Sunday.
A maid found Carradine hanging in the closet of his hotel suite at Bangkok's plush Swissotel Nai Lert Park hotel.
With coroners awaiting results of toxicology tests, Thai media pointed to suicide or accidental autoerotic asphyxiation as possible causes of death.
Thai officials have said it could take several weeks before the results of an autopsy performed in Bangkok are released.
Carradine starred in the mid-1970s U.S. television show “Kung Fu” and the more recent “Kill Bill” movies,
(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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Jun
07

Lebanese Ruling Coalition Claims Poll Victory

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Lebanese Ruling Coalition Claims Poll Victory

Lebanese ruling coalition claims poll victory
The leader of Lebanon’s governing pro-Western coalition has claimed victory over a Hezbollah-led bloc in a tight parliamentary election.Saad Hariri said his 14 March alliance would retain its majority in the 128-member parliament. A politician close to the Hezbollah-led bloc, supported by Syria and Iran, admitted defeat in Sunday’s elections, Reuters news agency reported. Official results are due on Monday. Turnout was put at more than 52%. “Congratulations to you, congratulations to freedom, congratulations to democracy,” Mr Hariri told a crowd of his cheering supporters in the capital Beirut. “There is no winner and loser in these elections, the only winner is democracy and Lebanon,” he added. Mr Hariri’s coalition was expected to win 70 seats in the new assembly, while the Hezbollah alliance would get 58 seats, Mr Hariri’s Future TV station predicted. Christian voteAn unnamed senior politician close to the Hezbollah-led bloc told Reuters: “We have lost the election. We accept the result as the will of the people.”
Interior Minister Ziad Baroud said turnout had exceeded that of the 2005 election and was “unheard of in the history of Lebanese elections”. Some three million people were eligible to cast ballots. Full results are not expected until later on Monday. Under Lebanon’s power-sharing political system, seats in the 128-member parliament are split equally between Christians and Muslims, with further sub-divisions for various sects. Analysts said earlier that the result could depend on which Christian politicians were elected in a few key constituencies. The Christian vote was said to be split evenly between the two camps. Hezbollah fielded only 11 candidates, though it is a powerful member of the broader opposition coalition, which includes the maverick Christian leader Michel Aoun, and the mainstream Shia movement Amal. The current majority in parliament was swept to power in 2005, following the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri in a car bombing in Beirut. The bombing forced Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon after a 29-year presence amid accusations of Syrian involvement in the attack. The government in Damascus has strongly denied the claims.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

Anti-Syrian Bloc Celebrates Lebanon Election Win

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Anti-Syrian Bloc Celebrates Lebanon Election Win

BEIRUT (Reuters) –
An anti-Syrian coalition defeated Hezbollah in Lebanon's parliamentary election on Sunday in a blow to Syria and Iran and a boost to the United States.
“Congratulations to Lebanon, congratulations to democracy, congratulations to freedom,” the coalition's leader Saad al-Hariri said in a victory speech at his mansion in Beirut.
The outcome was also welcome news for Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which back Hariri's “March 14″ alliance – the date of a 2005 rally against Syria's military presence in Lebanon.
“We have lost the election,” conceded a senior politician close to the bloc of Shi'ite groups Hezbollah and Amal and Christian ally Michel Aoun.
“We accept the result as the will of the people.”
The vote will be viewed as a stinging setback to Aoun, who held the biggest bloc of Christian MPs in the outgoing assembly and had hoped to seal his claim to speak for the Christians.
A source in Hariri's campaign predicted a decisive victory, with his bloc taking at least 70 of the assembly's 128 seats.
Perhaps 100 of the seats were virtually decided in advance, thanks to sectarian voting patterns and political deals, with Sunni and Shi'ite communities voting solidly on opposing sides.
The real electoral battle centered on Christian areas, where Aoun was up against former President Amin Gemayel's Phalange Party, Samir Geagea's Lebanese Forces and independents.
Lebanon's rival camps are at odds over Hezbollah's guerrilla force, which outguns the Lebanese army, and ties with Syria, which dominated Lebanon for three decades until 2005.
The likeliest outcome of the poll is another “national unity” government, analysts say.
SINIORA WINS SEAT
According to unofficial results, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, who has enjoyed Western and Arab support, won a parliamentary seat in the mainly Sunni southern city of Sidon.
Siniora, 66, has headed the cabinet since the Hariri-led coalition won the 2005 parliamentary election. He led the government through 18 months of political conflict with Hezbollah and its allies, but is not expected to keep his post.
Voting was relatively trouble-free across Lebanon, although there were many reports of vote-buying before the poll, with some Lebanese expatriates being offered free air tickets home.
The United States, which lists Hezbollah as a terrorist group, has linked future aid to Lebanon to the shape and policies of the next government. Hezbollah, which says it must keep its arms to deter Israel, is part of the outgoing cabinet.
The anti-Syrian coalition has enjoyed firm backing from many Western countries since the 2005 assassination of Hariri's father Rafik al-Hariri.
The coalition took power in an election following Hariri's killing, but struggled to govern in the face of a sometimes violent conflict with Hezbollah and its allies.
Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah said any new government had to be based on partnership, not on one side monopolizing power.
“Whatever the results of the election, we cannot change the standing delicate balances or repeat the experiences of the past which led to catastrophes on Lebanon,” he told Reuters.
“Whoever wants political stability, the preservation of national unity and the resurrection of Lebanon will find no choice but to accept the principle of consensus.”
Hezbollah and its allies insisted on being given veto power in a unity cabinet — a demand that caused an 18-month political deadlock until it was granted under a Qatari-brokered deal that followed street fighting in Beirut in May 2008.
Leading anti-Syrian politician Walid Jumblatt said he opposed the idea of veto power for the opposition.
Asked if they should be in the government, he told Reuters: “Yes, but I cannot decide on my own. I am part of a coalition and it should be a unanimous decision.”
Tensions in Lebanon have mostly been kept in check since the Qatari-mediated accord dragged the country back from the brink of civil war. A thaw in relations between Saudi Arabia and Syria has also helped maintain stability in recent months.
Security was tight, with 50,000 troops and police deployed across Lebanon, especially in the most contested districts.
Security sources said one person was wounded by gunfire in the northern city of Tripoli and there were brawls between rival supporters elsewhere, but no reports of serious fighting.
Baroud said preliminary figures showed a turnout of more than 54 percent, a high figure for Lebanon, where hundreds of thousands of the 3.26 million eligible voters live abroad.
(Writing by Alistair Lyon; Additional reporting by Nadim Ladki, Tom Perry and Yara Bayoumy; editing by Janet McBride)

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Jun
07

Report Glavine May File Grievance

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Report Glavine May File Grievance

ATLANTA – Braves general manager Frank Wren said Sunday he had no comment on a report Tom Glavine may file a grievance against the team following his release on Wednesday.
Glavine said Friday he believes he was released for financial reasons and to clear a roster spot for Tommy Hanson, who made his major league debut Sunday against the Milwaukee Brewers.
Wren, team chairman Terry McGuirk and president John Schuerholz said Glavine was released because they did not believe the 43-year-old left-hander would make a successful return from surgery on his elbow and shoulder.
“It was purely and only on the merits of what gave us the best chance to win, no financial interest whatsoever involved,” McGuirk said.
FoxSports.com reported Saturday that Glavine’s agent, Gregg Clifton, is exploring filing a grievance.
Glavine would have received a 1 million bonus if he had been activated from the disabled list for Sunday’s start, as he expected.
“I don’t believe for a minute that it was totally a performance-related issue, which I’m totally fine with, but I would have appreciated the honesty,” Glavine said Friday.
According to the collective-bargaining agreement, players can’t be released because of financial reasons.
Schuerholz issued an apology Friday for “the environment and the tone and the manner” of the release.
Schuerholz said he should have better explained the decision to Glavine.
“I, as the president of the club, could have taken more time to explain not only the circumstances around the decision, although we made that decision in unanimous fashion, but to explain to Tommy our high regard for him,” Schuerholz said, adding he hopes the organization can maintain “some sort of relationship” with Glavine.
“But I don’t feel like I really expressed myself as completely and as fully and to the level that somebody like Tommy deserves,” Schuerholz said.
Glavine and Clifton did not respond to requests from The Associated Press for comment about the possible grievance.

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Jun
07

North Korea Wipes Out Iran from The World Cup

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North Korea Wipes Out Iran from The World Cup

It’s the kind of headline even war hawks in Washington wouldn’t dare dream up: North Korea delivers Iran a fatal blow. But on Saturday, it happened. In a stadium in Pyongyang, the football teams of both countries ground out a turgid goalless draw. That means Iran – a nation where the public’s passion for football rivals the religious fervor of its ruling mullahs – will likely miss out on the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. North Korea, meanwhile, stays on course to qualify for the first time in over four decades. (See TIME’s photos of North Korea going to the polls)
The two countries may occupy the remaining seats in the Axis of Evil clubhouse, but they’re hardly on friendly terms on the football pitch. In 2005, the last time the Iranians played a competitive match in the North Korean capital, the game turned sour. Slipping to defeat, North Korean players vented their frustrations on the Syrian referee, pushing the official to the ground. Irate fans hurled missiles – plastic bottles, mostly – at the Iranian team. The scenes then were broadcast via satellite around the world, giving watchers of the isolated communist state a strange, unprecedented glimpse of what civil disturbance could look like in the hermit kingdom. (See TIME’s photos of North Korea’s militarized border)
Saturday’s match, overseen by a stern, whistle-blowing Chinese referee, was far more controlled, though no less feisty. Opposing players harried and hounded, clattering each other with hard tackles while creating few scoring opportunities. The North Korean spectators were uniformed in a sea of red shirts and caps, many banging drums in disciplined, choreographed rhythm. The cameras in the stadium, wielded by the North Korean authorities, didn’t reveal whether the nation’s Dear Leader and known football enthusiast, Kim Jong Il, was in attendance. Advertising billboards arrayed around the pitch for the benefit of the television audience touted companies like Epson and Minolta and Emirates airlines – “Fly Emirates,” read banners inside a stadium where few fans can board an airplane or will ever be permitted to leave the country.
The squads themselves were a picture of contrasts. The Iranians have been long considered one of Asia’s more talented and enigmatic outfits, a team that likes to play an attractive and skillful game of neat touches and quick passing. They boast a number of flashy stars who ply their trade in some of Europe’s elite football leagues. In the past, Iran’s mullahs have issued fatwas chastising national team players for growing their hair long. Still, there were plenty of flowing locks on Iranian heads in Pyongyang; the team commands such adulation from the country’s football faithful that even the clergy can be cowed.
Save for a few players born in Korean enclaves abroad, most of the North Korean team exists in obscurity at home. Ri Myung-guk, the mop-haired beanpole of a goalkeeper, seemed to characterize that alienation, his shoulder-padded jersey far too large for his alarmingly skinny frame, and his sweat pants – always a fashion faux-pas in the football world – pulling up short across his shins. Yet, the last time North Korea’s footballers participated in the World Cup, they were the pride of the continent and the darlings of football fans around the world. In the 1966 tournament held in England, their side of amateur players – given 1,000-to-1 odds of winning the competition – made it to the quarterfinals, famously beating European powerhouse Italy along the way. It’s a feat that was not matched by any Asian country until the 2002 World Cup, when the hosts, South Korea, reached the semis.
With two games left in this qualifying phase, the North is now in pole position to return to the global stage along with its southern neighbor. Iran, on the other hand, is floundering behind the Koreas and Saudi Arabia, and will need a miracle to make it to South Africa next summer.
Media buzz before the showdown in Pyongyang centered around Afshin Ghotbi, the Iranian-American who was named coach of the team ahead of the game in a bid – supposedly encouraged by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – to revitalize Iran’s flagging footballing fortunes. Many in Iran thought Ghotbi ought to have been in charge from the very start of their qualification campaign last year. But politics and prejudice stood in the way of his appointment then – after all, when Iran beat the United States 2-1 in the 1998 World Cup, a victory that saw millions of Iranians fill the nation’s streets in celebration, Ghotbi was in the employ of the Great Satan, scouting in the nation of his birth. Now, Ghotbi’s chances for success are slim, though he is bullish about his players. “The Iran team is oozing quality from every pore,” he said earlier this week. On the basis of their limp display this weekend, though, the Iranians, and the American citizen at the helm, need all the enrichment they can get.
See TIME’s photos: Kim Jong Il [EM] Doctored Photos?)
View this article on Time.comRelated articles on Time.com: Time to Face Facts on Our North Korea Ignorance When Outlaws Get The Bomb North Korean Nuke Test: What Good Is Diplomacy? 44 Years Ago In Time North Korea Opens Up Over Flooding

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Jun
07

Giant Lobster Roll Rolls Into Portland Maine

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Giant Lobster Roll Rolls Into Portland Maine

PORTLAND, Maine – What could be the world’s longest lobster roll turned out to be even longer than expected.
The giant sandwich unveiled Sunday during Maine’s Old Port Festival in Portland measured 61 feet 9.5 inches — more than a foot longer than organizers were aiming for. It also included a few extra pounds of lobster meat — 48 in all, plus four gallons of Miracle Whip and a special blend of herbs and seasonings.
A local roller derby team helped carry the sandwich to the festival, where it was cut into sections and sold to raise money for a youth association.
The association intends to get the roll certified by Guinness World Records.

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Jun
07

Family Upset Over Photos Of Carradines Body

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Family Upset Over Photos Of Carradines Body

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) –
The family of late actor David Carradine is “profoundly disturbed” by photos published in Thailand that are said to be of Carradine's naked body hanging in his Bangkok hotel room, according to family attorney Mark Geragos.
Geragos said a statement from the actor's brother, Keith Carradine, shows that the family will take legal action against people or media outlets that publish the photos “for invasion of privacy and causing severe emotional distress.”
The Thai-language newspaper Thai Rath published photos that show the body of Carradine, who died on June 3 in Bangkok where he was filming a new movie called “Stretch.”
Mystery has surrounded his death following initial reports that he had committed suicide — claims his family has denied repeatedly.
On Saturday, Geragos said Carradine's family had asked the FBI to look into the death.
The family has hired a forensics pathologist to examine the actor's body when it is returned to the United States.
Thai newspapers said the body left Bangkok on Saturday, which Geragos confirmed at the time. The body is expected to arrive in Los Angeles as early as Sunday.
A maid found Carradine hanging in the closet of his hotel suite at Bangkok's plush Swissotel Nai Lert Park hotel.
With coroners awaiting results of toxicology tests, Thai media pointed to suicide or accidental autoerotic asphyxiation as possible causes of death.
Thai officials have said it could take several weeks before the results of an autopsy performed in Bangkok are released.
Carradine starred in the mid-1970s U.S. television show “Kung Fu” and the more recent “Kill Bill” movies,
(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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Jun
07

Gabon Leader Omar Bongo is Dead

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Gabon Leader Omar Bongo is Dead

Gabon leader Omar Bongo ‘is dead’
Africa’s longest-serving leader, President Omar Bongo of Gabon, has died at the age of 73, French media say.Mr Bongo had been treated in a clinic in the Spanish city of Barcelona. He was reported to have cancer, and had suspended his activities in May. Mr Bongo had led his oil-producing West African state since 1967. In May, a French judge announced an investigation into whether Mr Bongo and two other African leader had used state funds to buy homes and cars in France. The three leaders denied any wrongdoing. Mr Bongo became vice-president in 1967, taking over as head of state later that year after the death of Gabon’s first post-independence President Leon Mba. He had built a powerful dynasty in the former French colony during his years in office. Opposition leaders have claimed his son, Ali Ben Bongo, currently defence minister, is being manoeuvred to take over.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

Curtain Time For Neil Patrick Harris Dolly Elton Poison Tonys

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Curtain Time For Neil Patrick Harris Dolly Elton Poison  Tonys

Los Angeles (E! Online) –
If you thought all the stars singing and dancing at the Oscars was impressive, wait until you see the star power in tonight's Tony opener.
Pretty much all we can tell you is that Anne Hathaway, who opened the movie awards show with Hugh Jackman in February, will be sitting up close and personal at Radio City Music Hall as she's shown how it's done.
We know. We saw the dress rehearsal.
Here's what else we know…
• We weren't kidding when we told you Friday that Poison—including the Rock of Love god Bret Michaels—would be taking the stage with the cast of Rock of Ages. Ditto the Elton John, Dolly Parton and Liza Minnelli.
• Neil Patrick Harris is just as funny as you'd expect. Watch for him to point out how other shows can benefit from the Obamas like Joe Turner's Come and Gone has. (Barack of Ages, anyone?)
• Fellow Lead Actress in a Musical nominees Allison Janney (9 to 5: The Musical) and Sutton Foster (Shrek) are totally friendsies! We watched as they greeted each other early in the morning with a big hug. Gotta love that!
• God of Carnage costars and Lead Actor in a Play nominees James Gandolfini and Jeff Daniels have reason to be concerned about getting tongue-tied when they present the Best Featured Actress in a Play award. It took the Dumb & Dumber star three tries to nail Reasons to Be Pretty star Marin Ireland's name, and the Sopranos don a second go to pronounce Blithe Spirit, for which ole' Miss Murder She Wrote Angela Lansbury is nominated.
• Anticipate ample Constantine Maroulis jokes. We'll agree he's an easy target.
• The Shrek cast will be performing the most impressive number from its show, “Welcome to Dulac,” where you'll see Best Featured Actor in a Musical nominee, Christopher Sieber, do his singing and dancing Lord Farquaad entirely on his knees. It's quite a feat!
• Will Ferrell will be funny. But you knew that.
• Something you won't see tonight: During commercial breaks, the lucky peeps inside Radio City Music Hall will be privy to a number of entertaining videos, including a reel of Shrek characters, such as the Sugarplum Fairy, auditioning for other shows. You really haven't lived until you see the Three Pigs do Billy Elliot or the Big Bad Wolf sing “Take Me Out Tonight” from Rent.
The Tony Awards air live from Radio City Music Hall tonight on CBS at 8 p.m. E.T. (tape delayed on the West Coast).
Want more? Check out our 2009 Tony Nominees gallery and make sure you're following us on Twitter @eonline, where we'll be tweeting live from Radio City in a matter of hours!
··· THEY SAID WHAT? Get today's most commented stories now at www.eonline.com

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Jun
07

Chrysler Dealers Scramble To Unload Vehicles

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Chrysler Dealers Scramble To Unload Vehicles

Peter J. Walsh, the owner of Walsh Dodge in Jersey City, N.J., started out selling used cars in his hometown 28 years ago after the birth of his daughter. He slowly built his business, and felt as if he’d finally made it when he earned his Chrysler shingle in 2000.
But on Tuesday, Walsh Dodge will lose that shingle — as will 788 other dealers across the country. Auburn Hills, Mich.-based Chrysler has asked a bankruptcy court for permission to terminate the franchise agreements of about 25 percent of its dealers. Chrysler needs to cut costs, and claims current sales levels don’t justify a network of 3,189 dealers.
For Walsh and the others on the “hit list,” the last days of selling Dodge, Jeep and Chrysler vehicles have been filled with quick sales at deep discounts, along with sad goodbyes from longtime customers and feelings of dismay and anger toward the automaker they worked with for years.
“It is what it is. It’s just a tough situation,” Walsh said, speaking inside his dealership Saturday morning. “It’s been difficult mentally the past couple of months, but we’ll be OK. I don’t feel as bad for myself as I do for the young guys with families that work for me.”
Chrysler maintains that the franchises singled out for termination were chosen because they weren’t profitable, didn’t have all of the automaker’s three brands under one roof, or were located too close to another Chrysler dealer.
But the dealers argued in court that a smaller dealer base won’t save the company any substantial money. They say the dealers cover their own costs, paying for everything from the vehicles on their lots to employees, advertising and tools.
Walsh said that while Chrysler’s products were good, its dealer support was always poor — too focused on the automaker’s own short-term needs.
And while he might have been underperforming some of Chrysler’s sales criteria, Walsh claims some of that was the automaker’s fault, pointing to its insistence that he sell more pickup trucks — a vehicle unsuited to the densely populated urban strip he serves across the Hudson River from New York City.
“How many Dodge pickups can I sell in Jersey City? It’s not Waco, Texas,” Walsh said.
A court hearing that began Thursday in New York with testimony from over a dozen dealers is scheduled to continue with legal arguments on Tuesday. U.S. Judge Arthur Gonzalez is expected to rule after the arguments conclude.
Steven Landry, Chrysler’s executive vice president of North American sales, said Tuesday’s deadline remains fixed. Dealers can sell the vehicles after that date, but they won’t be able to offer Chrysler sales incentives, making it tough for them to compete.
“We won’t be changing any dealers on the list. We won’t be changing the date,” he said.
Landry said Chrysler had commitments for the inventory of 42,000 vehicles on the lots of the affected dealers. Dealers have sold 16,000 vehicles to customers since the May 14 announcement and Landry said the remaining 26,000 cars and trucks would be purchased by remaining dealers.
Chuck Eddy, a Youngstown, Ohio, dealer who was among those chosen to remain with Chrysler, said dealers have quickly bought up the inventory of those going out of business and are preparing for the transition.
“I have no fire sale going on. There’s no dealer in my town who was terminated having a fire sale,” Eddy said. “People are buying the car for the true value.”
At the Viva Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge in El Paso, Texas, finance manager Jay Welsh said news of financial trouble with Chrysler and the upcoming terminations of other dealerships has done little to deter new car buyers.
The dealership, which sells all three of Chrysler’s brands and escaped termination, sold between 55 and 65 cars a month in April and May, compared with an average of about 25 cars a month in January, February and March, he said.
A few buyers have questioned the viability of warranties, while others have been looking for “fire sale” prices that the dealership has yet to offer, he said.
But other dealers said they moved quickly after finding out they were losing their franchise agreements, hoping to keep their losses to a minimum.
By late last week, Dale Horn, owner of a Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep dealership in Malvern, Ark., had sold 30 of the 35 cars and trucks he had when the company told him that his franchise would be yanked.
Horn said that in exchange for its help unloading the vehicles, Chrysler wanted him to sign papers allowing it to shop the inventory “at a figure less than it cost me.” Instead, he decided to try to sell it all himself, taking losses on all but a few, while making tiny profits on the others.
“In essence, I paid people to take some of my cars,” he said. “It’s just not a pleasant deal. If I’m as small as I am, having the problems that I’m having, I feel so bad for the guys that have got 200 in inventory, or 300,” he said.
At other dealers, longtime customers have showed up to both buy a car and say goodbye.
Janet Reuther Schopp, dealer and general manager at Reuther Chrysler Jeep in suburban St. Louis, said former customers and people she’d never seen before came in to help whittle down her already scaled-back inventory of 125 vehicles.
“It was a huge show of respect for us,” said Schopp, who continues a family business her father started 50 years ago. “They thought it was the right thing to do.”
A neighbor sent her niece in to buy. Her attorney bought two cars for him and his wife. A stranger who lost his job made a point of driving out of his way to buy at Reuther and a Boeing employee in St. Louis bought a car from her on principle. Nearly all of them paid full price.
Mike Lobb, general manager of Dave Croft Motors, in Collinsville, Ill., outside St. Louis, will try to survive by selling used cars and running a service center, but still held out hope Saturday that a reprieve might come from Chrysler or the bankruptcy court.
Croft, which normally has 350 new cars on the lot, is down to 100 vehicles. Eighty of his sales in the last three weeks have been to longtime customers.
Walsh, the Jersey City dealer, said he has about 14 vehicles left, which he expects to be redistributed to other Chrysler dealers. He said he’s glad he didn’t take more vehicles when Chrysler officials were pushing dealers to help save the company by boosting their inventories this year.
For Walsh, who plans to keep selling used cars, the move marks the end of Chrysler’s slow painful demise for him. He had to reduce his work force from 30 people to 14 during the past year. And his sales of new and used vehicles have declined a third from their peak of 1,500 units a year in 2000, he said.
“My employees have been with me an average of seven years — they’re all local people — and it puts a hole in my heart when they come in here and I have to tell them I’m letting them go,” Walsh said.
___
Associated Press Writers Victor Epstein in Jersey City, N.J; Ken Thomas in Washington; Tom Krisher in Detroit; Alicia A. Caldwell in El Paso, Texas; and Cheryl Wittenauer in St. Louis contributed to this report.

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Jun
07

Alzheimers Protein contagious

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Alzheimers Protein contagious

Alzheimer’s protein ‘contagious’
Scientists have shown a rogue protein thought to cause Alzheimer’s can spread through the brain, turning healthy tissue bad.They believe the tau protein may share characteristics with the prion proteins which cause vCJD. When injected into the brains of healthy mice it triggered formation of protein tangles linked to Alzheimer’s. However, experts stressed the Nature Cell Biology study did not mean tau could be passed from person to person.
Tau is a protein present in all nerve cells, where it plays a key role in keeping them functioning properly. But a rogue form of the protein can trigger the formation of protein clumps within nerve cells known as neurofibrillary tangles. It is thought that these tangles are likely to be a major cause of Alzheimer’s disease. In the latest study researchers, led by a team from University Hospital, Basel, extracted sections of brain from mice expressing a mutant form of human tau protein. These extracts were injected into specific regions in the brains of healthy mice. New tanglesAnalysis showed that this induced normal human tau proteins in the healthy mice to clump together to form neurofibrillary tangles. These newly-formed tangles were also able to spread to nearby regions in the brain. Another type of rogue protein – the prions – which cause diseases such as vCJD, are thought to be able to twist themselves into a shape which gives them the ability to “infect” nearby healthy tissue. But until now it had not been thought that tau proteins had the same contagious property. Dr Michel Goedert of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, worked on the study. He said: “This opens new avenues in dementia research that will aim to understand how abnormal tau can spread. “We can also investigate how diseases caused by tau aggregates and prions are similar.” Disease progressionProfessor David Allsop, an expert in neuroscience at Lancaster University, said the study might help explain how tangles spread from one region of the brain to another during the course of Alzheimer’s. However, he said: “This does not mean that these diseases are infectious in the same way as mad cow disease and human CJD. “There is no evidence that diseases like Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease can be transmitted from one person to another.” Rebecca Wood, chief executive of the Alzheimer’s Research Trust, said: “This greater understanding of how tangles spread in Alzheimer’s may lead to new ways of stopping them and defeating the disease.” However, Dr Susanne Sorensen, head of research at the Alzheimer’s Society, stressed that work was carried out in genetically modified mice, and there was a lot of work to be done before the implications were fully understood. “There is still so much we do not understand about the changes in tau that lead to tangle formation in humans and, eventually, widespread brain cell death,” she said.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

Some Militants Respond Positively To Obama Speech

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Some Militants Respond Positively To Obama Speech

RAMALLAH, West Bank – From Lebanese guerrillas to Saudi preachers, Islamic extremists have warned followers not to be taken in by President Barack Obama’s conciliatory words — a sign that some may be nervous about losing support if animosity toward the U.S. fades.
But even moderates warn Obama will have to quickly follow his call for a new relationship with the Islamic world with bold actions to prevent a disappointed backlash.
In his speech in Cairo Thursday, Obama listed confronting “violent extremism” as the top priority in addressing tensions between the U.S. and Muslims. He urged the Islamic world to reject radical ideologies and promised to work aggressively to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He also said the U.S. does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlement in the West Bank and endorsed a Palestinian state.
There are already some indications his words are having the desired effect of undercutting extremists. A militant leader in Egypt called on the Taliban to respond positively to Obama’s gestures, and Hamas militants in Gaza say they are ready “to build on this speech.”
Obama may have managed to “plant the seed of doubt in some minds,” said Robert Malley, senior analyst at the International Crisis Group think tank. “There was enough … that represented openings for those who wanted openings.”
Yet Obama’s eloquent promises were seen as only a small step toward halting the region’s drift toward militancy, accelerated in recent years by the U.S. invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and Washington’s perceived pro-Israel bias.
He will be most closely watched on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, particularly his push to get Israel to comply with a settlement freeze. That is something no U.S. administration before him has accomplished.
“Extremists will only be disarmed when the U.S. takes a more neutral stand on Israel,” said Abdel Wahab al-Qasab, a Qatar-based analyst.
Obama has so far followed the Bush administration’s policy of not talking directly to Hamas, which the U.S. regards as a terrorist organization. But in his remarks in Cairo, he seemed to suggest some basis for believing that Palestinian militants who rule Gaza might be drawn into the peace process.
Obama’s Mideast envoy George Mitchell is coming to the region this week to push the president’s agenda with Israelis and Palestinians. He is tentatively scheduled to stop in Syria, where Hamas is headquartered. But a State Department spokesman said Mitchell has no plans to talk to Hamas.
Obama’s message also contained an assurance that U.S. troops in Afghanistan fighting al-Qaida and the Taliban won’t stay longer than absolutely necessary. That too may have resonated with militants in that region, said Ahmed Rashid, a Lahore-based analyst and author of a book on the Taliban.
“The extremists used to lie that the U.S. wants military bases in this region,” he said.
Essam Derbala, a leader of one of Egypt’s largest militant groups, al-Gamaa al-Islamiyya Al-Qaida, told an Egyptian newspaper over the weekend that the Taliban should reciprocate by announcing they will no longer target Americans. That would ensure U.S. troops will eventually leave the region, he said.
Still, many extremists remain wary of the U.S outreach.
Two influential fundamentalist groups, Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah and Egypt’s opposition Muslim Brotherhood, as well as a Saudi preacher, accused Obama of being deceptive. They said he offered soft words to hide unchanged anti-Muslim positions. But that could indicate their nervousness that Obama’s strategy could undercut support for militancy.
This week’s elections in Lebanon and Iran could give an early indication of sentiments in the region.
In Lebanon, Shiite militant group Hezbollah and its allies tried to unseat a pro-Western coalition in a vote on Sunday. In Iran’s June 12 vote, hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is facing a pro-reform challenger likely to take a less confrontational approach with the U.S. if elected.
But what many in the Muslim world will be waiting to see is whether Obama delivers on expectations of a tougher U.S. stance toward Israel.
“If the Israelis continue with settlement activity and defiance and President Obama does nothing, the repercussions will be major,” said Saeb Erekat, an aide to Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “We’re at a crossroads.”
While seemingly tougher on Israel than his predecessor George W. Bush, Obama has not said what, if any, action would take if Israel defies him on settlements. He also has made clear that he is not dramatically revising the fundamentals of past U.S. policy.
Like Bush, he remains committed to Israel’s security, is banking on the unpopular Abbas and refuses to talk to Abbas’ rival, Hamas, unless the Islamic militant group recognizes Israel and renounces violence.
Despite disappointment that the U.S. position had not shifted more dramatically, Hamas leaders praised Obama’s shift in tone. Hamas is eager to win international acceptance of its rule in Gaza, and has gone out of its way to sound pragmatic.
“We think we can build on this speech,” Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said Saturday. “We can take positive things from the speech to open communications with Obama and the U.S. administration.”
In the end, many Muslims were heartened by Obama’s speech because they saw it as a significant change in the tone of discourse with Muslims. They noted he did not use the word “terrorism” or “terrorist” once in the 55-minute address — words that many thought had been devalued under the Bush administration and too often equated with Muslims.
They also heard a more respectful U.S. leader who quoted from the Quran, or Islamic holy book, greeted them in Arabic, and removed his shoes when he toured a Cairo mosque.
One militant Web site that often carries statements from al-Qaida had unusual praise for Obama after the speech, noting his quotations from the Quran demonstrated respect for Islam and branding him the “wise enemy.”
___
AP reporters from across the Middle East contributed to this report.

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Jun
07

18 Killed In Clash Between Mexican Army Gunmen

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18 Killed In Clash Between Mexican Army Gunmen

Eighteen people, including two soldiers, were killed Saturday in a gunbattle between the Mexican army and organized-crime suspects in the Mexican resort town of Acapulco, the Mexican Ministry of Defense said Sunday.
Mexican soldiers hold rifles Saturday during a clash with organized-crime suspects in Acapulco.
The incident began about 7 p.m., when the soldiers went to a location called Avenida Rancho Grande in Acapulco “to exploit information obtained through an anonymous tip,” the ministry said in a statement. The soldiers were met by gunfire, it said. Five people were arrested in connection with the shootout. Two soldiers and 16 gunmen were killed, and nine soldiers were wounded, the statement said. The gunmen were not identified, but the statement called them “members of organized crime.” Authorities seized 36 large-caliber weapons, 13 small-caliber weapons, two grenade launchers, 13 fragmentation grenades, 3,525 rounds of various caliber ammunition, 180 charges and eight vehicles, the ministry said.
Source:CNN

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Jun
07

Villagers Fight Taliban After Pakistan Mosque Blast

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Villagers Fight Taliban After Pakistan Mosque Blast

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) –
Villagers in northwest Pakistan have attacked Taliban militants killing seven of them in revenge for a bomb attack on a mosque that killed at least 40 people, a top government official and residents said on Sunday.
It was the latest in a series of instances of people turning their guns on the Taliban in recent weeks and trying to force them out of their areas and will encourage the Pakistani government which needs public support to defeat the militants.
The United States, which needs sustained Pakistani action to help defeat al Qaeda and cut off militant support for the insurgency in Afghanistan, will also be heartened by the move.
The Pakistani military has been battling Taliban in the Swat valley, northwest of the capital, for more than a month after the militants took advantage of a peace pact to gain new ground.
The army offensive has broad public support even though many in Pakistan are ambivalent about the Taliban and are wary of the government's close alliance with the United States.
Taliban militants have also launched a string of bomb attacks in response to the military offensive and are suspected of being behind a suicide bomb attack on a mosque in the Upper Dir region, near Swat, that killed about 40 people on Friday.
After the blast, enraged villagers formed a militia, known as a lashkar, of about 500 men to expel the militants from the area, said the top government official in the region.
“They are standing up against the militants themselves as they consider them troublemakers,” the government administrator, Atif-ur-Rehman, told Reuters by telephone.
Alarmed by the prospect of nuclear-armed Pakistan drifting into chaos, the United States had criticized a February peace pact with the Taliban in the former tourist valley of Swat as tantamount to abdicating to the militants.
“THEY HAVE TO GO”
One resident of Upper Dir said the militia had demolished houses where Taliban were known to stay.
“We are Muslims, we pray regularly and read the Koran. We don't want them, they have to go,” resident Samiullah Khan said by telephone. “Attacking a mosque is not Islam. They're not Muslim.”
Ethnic Pashtun tribal elder Mohtabar Khan said letting the Taliban stay was asking for trouble.
“It means inviting a military offensive which we don't want. We know how to defend our land,” Khan said.
The military says it has snuffed out “organized resistance” in Swat and would conduct operations on a “limited scale” to destroy militant hideouts and run their leaders to ground.
The military says more than 1,200 militants and about 100 soldiers have been killed since the army began the offensive. There has been no independent confirmation of the casualties.
Rehman said the village militia had cleared the Taliban out of three villages and had surrounded a group of militants.
“This is better than military action because they know their hideouts,” Rehman said. “The fighting is going on and hopefully the rest of the villages will be cleared in two or three days.”
Separately, police and intelligence officials said an Afghan Taliban commander Anwarul Haq Mujahid had been arrested in the northwestern city of Peshawar last week.
Pakistan rejects U.S. and Afghan complaints that Afghan Taliban operate on the Pakistani side of the border but say some Afghan Taliban do slip through.
Pakistani and Afghan Taliban area allied although Afghan Taliban tend to oppose fighting Pakistani security forces, saying all factions should concentrate on expelling foreign forces from Afghanistan.
(Editing by Robert Birsel and Jon Hemming)

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Jun
07

18 Killed In Clash Between Mexican Army Gunmen

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18 Killed In Clash Between Mexican Army Gunmen

Eighteen people, including two soldiers, were killed Saturday in a gunbattle between the Mexican army and organized-crime suspects in the Mexican resort town of Acapulco, the Mexican Ministry of Defense said Sunday.
Mexican soldiers hold rifles Saturday during a clash with organized-crime suspects in Acapulco.
The incident began about 7 p.m., when the soldiers went to a location called Avenida Rancho Grande in Acapulco “to exploit information obtained through an anonymous tip,” the ministry said in a statement. The soldiers were met by gunfire, it said. Five people were arrested in connection with the shootout. Two soldiers and 16 gunmen were killed, and nine soldiers were wounded, the statement said. The gunmen were not identified, but the statement called them “members of organized crime.” Authorities seized 36 large-caliber weapons, 13 small-caliber weapons, two grenade launchers, 13 fragmentation grenades, 3,525 rounds of various caliber ammunition, 180 charges and eight vehicles, the ministry said.
Source:CNN

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Jun
07

Centre-right advance In EU Poll

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Centre-right advance In EU Poll

Centre-right ‘advance’ in EU poll
Centre-right parties have gained ground in elections to the European Parliament, according to exit polls.First results appeared immediately after voting ended in 19 EU countries at 2000 GMT. Eight other countries voted in the past few days. All 736 parliament seats are up for grabs. Preliminary figures suggest the lowest ever turnout, at 43.24%. BBC correspondents say the figures will dent the EU’s credibility, and fringe parties may benefit.
Governments battling the economic downturn, from Greece to Hungary, look set for a heavy defeat, says the BBC’s Oana Lungescu in Brussels. However, governing parties in France and Germany appear to have done relatively well despite the crisis. The BBC’s Europe editor Mark Mardell in Brussels says the parliament in Brussels has been buzzing with activity. Party groupings have quite literally set out their stalls along the main walkway, alongside mini TV studios – some rather grand and gleaming, others little more than a stool and camera, our correspondent says. Voters have been choosing representatives mainly from their own national parties, many of which then join EU-wide groupings with similarly-minded parties from other countries. The largest grouping has for the last five years been the centre-right EPP (288 seats out of a current 785), followed by the centre-left PES (216) and the liberal ALDE (100).
Provisional figures released by the EU suggested turnout was at an all-time low in some countries, including France (40.5%) and Germany (42.2%). In Malta, on the other hand, it was expected to near 80%, and in Brussels, there were long queues outside a polling station on the Grand Place on Sunday. Turnout has fallen at each European election in the last 30 years, from nearly 62% in 1979 to 45.47% in 2004.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

APNewsBreak Major Problems Found In War Spending

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APNewsBreak Major Problems Found In War Spending

WASHINGTON – This is one Christmas gift U.S. taxpayers don’t need. Construction of a 30 million dining facility at a U.S. base in Iraq is scheduled to be completed Dec. 25. But the decision to build it was based on bad planning and botched paperwork.
The project is too far along to stop, making the mess hall a future monument to the waste and inefficiency plaguing the war effort, according to an independent panel investigating contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In its first report to Congress, the Wartime Contracting Commission presents a bleak assessment of how tens of billions of dollars have been spent since 2001. The 111-page report, obtained by The Associated Press, documents poor management, weak oversight, and a failure to learn from past mistakes as recurring themes in wartime contracting.
The report is scheduled to be made public Wednesday at a hearing held by the House Oversight and Government Reform’s national security subcommittee.
U.S. reliance on contractors has grown to “unprecedented proportions,” says the bipartisan commission, established by Congress last year. More than 240,000 private sector employees are supporting military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Thousands more work for the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development.
But the government has no central data base of who all these contractors are, what services they provide, and how much they’re paid. The Pentagon has failed to provide enough trained staff to watch over them, creating conditions for waste and corruption, the commission says.
In Iraq, the panel worries that as U.S. troops depart in larger numbers, there will be too few government eyes on the contractors left to oversee the closing of hundreds of bases and disposal of mountains of federal property.
At Rustamiyah, a seven-acre forward operating base turned over to the Iraqis in March, the military population plunged from 1,490 to 62 in just three months. During the same period, the contractor population dropped from 928 to 338, leaving more than five contractors for every service member.
In Afghanistan, where President Barack Obama has ordered a large increase of U.S. troops, existing bases will have to expand and new ones will be built — without proper oversight unless the Pentagon rapidly changes course.
One commander in Afghanistan told the commission he had no idea how many contractors were on and off his base on a daily basis. Another officer said he had property all over his installation but didn’t know who owned it or what kind of shape it was in.
There are questionable construction projects in Afghanistan, too. The commission visited the New Kabul Compound, a building intended to serve as headquarters for U.S. forces in Afghanistan. But members saw cracks in the structure, broken and leaking pipes, sinking sidewalks and other defects.
“The Army should not have accepted a building in such condition,” the report says.
The commission cites concerns with a massive support contract known as “LOGCAP” that provides troops with essential services, including housing, meals, mail delivery and laundry.
Despite the huge size and importance of the contract, the main program office managing the work for both Afghanistan and Iraq has only 13 government employees. For administrative help, it must rely on a contractor.
KBR Inc., the primary LOGCAP contractor in Iraq, has been paid nearly 32 billion since 2001. The commission says billions of dollars of that amount ended up wasted due to poorly defined work orders, inadequate oversight and contractor inefficiencies.
In one example, defense auditors challenged KBR after it billed the government for 100 million in costs for private security even though the contract prohibited the use of for-hire guards.
KBR has defended its performance and criticized the commission for making “biased” statements against the company.
“As we look back on what we’ve done, we’re real proud of being able to go into a war theater like that as a private contractor and support 200,000 troops,” William P. Utt, chairman of the Houston-based KBR, said in May interview with AP reporters and editors.
KBR is also linked to the dining hall construction snafu, although the commission faults the military’s planning and not the contractor. With American forces scheduled to be out of Iraq by the end of 2011, the U.S. will use the new facility for two years at most.
In July 2008, the Army said a new dining facility was badly needed at the Camp Delta forward operating base because the existing one was too small, had a saggy ceiling, poor lighting and an unsanitary wooden floor.
KBR was awarded a contract in September. Work began in late October as American and Iraqi officials were negotiating the agreement setting the dates for the U.S. troop withdrawal
But during an April visit to Camp Delta, the commission learned that the existing mess hall had just been renovated. The 3.36 million job was done by KBR and completed in June 2008. Commission staff toured the renovated hall “without seeing or hearing of any problems or shortfalls,” the report says.
The decision to push ahead with the new hall was based on paperwork that was never updated and a failure to review the need for the project after the security agreement was signed. Most of the materials have been ordered and construction is well under way. That means canceling the project would save little money because KBR would have a legitimate claim for payment based on the investment it has already made.
The commission urges commanders in Iraq to review thoroughly all ongoing construction and improvement projects and only continue those essential to the life, health and safety of U.S. troops.
___
On the Net:
Wartime Contracting Commission: http://www.wartimecontracting.gov/

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Jun
07

Eighteen Killed In Acapulco Drug Shootout

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Eighteen Killed In Acapulco Drug Shootout

ACAPULCO, Mexico (Reuters) –
Eighteen people were killed in a shootout between drug gangs and soldiers in the Mexican beach resort of Acapulco, the army said on Sunday.
The gun battle, near tourist hotels in the Pacific Ocean resort, was a further blow to Mexico's tourism industry, already reeling from cancellations by foreigners scared away by the swine flu epidemic.
Gunmen battled troops from a cartel safe house, throwing hand grenades at soldiers who had surrounded them and spraying gunfire into military vehicles and nearby homes. The shooting began late on Saturday and went on until after midnight.
“There were grenade and rocket explosions, and weapons like AK-47s,” said an employee of a neighboring hotel. “The fight lasted almost two hours.”
Sixteen suspected members of the Beltran Leyva drug gang were killed as well as two soldiers, including a captain.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon has staked his presidency on crushing drug gangs whose turf wars have killed about 2,300 people this year. Some 45,000 troops and federal police have been deployed across the country.
While the clash was several miles away from the main area where foreign tourists stay in high-rise hotels, a resurgence of violence in Acapulco is bad news for the tourism industry.
Rival drug gangs fought over territory in Acapulco, home to around a million people, several years ago, but the resort has been relatively free of drug violence in recent years.
Tourism, a key industry for Mexico, took a hit in late April and early May when the H1N1 flu virus spread through Mexico and scared off travelers.
Violence associated with drugs across Mexico has damaged investor sentiment and the U.S. government is concerned about instability in Mexico, its ally and a big oil supplier.
President Barack Obama visited Mexico City in April, praised Calderon for tackling the drug gangs and offered more U.S. help in the war.
Drug violence has also hurt Mexican beach resorts, like Cancun and Ixtapa.
The Beltran Leyva gang, rivals of the powerful Sinaloa cartel, is believed to dominate the drug trade around Acapulco, a popular destination for vacationing U.S. college students.
(Additional reporting by Noel Randewich in Mexico City)

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Jun
07

Revitalised England Beat Pakistan

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Revitalised England Beat Pakistan

ICC World Twenty20 Group B:England 185-5 (20 overs) beat Pakistan 137-7 (20 overs) by 48 runs TV highlights on BBC and online at 2315 BST
Kevin Pietersen returned from injury to help England beat Pakistan by 48 runs and secure their place in the World Twenty20 Super Eights.Pietersen, who missed England’s shock defeat by the Netherlands, hit three sixes in his 58 off 38 balls. Luke Wright added 34 and Owais Shah 33 in England’s 185-5 at The Oval. Stuart Broad struck with consecutive balls to reduce Pakistan to 41-3 after six overs and England kept it tight to limit their opponents to 137-7. Full report to follow.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

Ukraine PM To Stand For President

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Ukraine PM To Stand For President

Ukraine PM to stand for president
Ukrainian PM Yulia Tymoshenko has announced that she will stand in presidential elections in 2010.In a statement broadcast live on national TV, Ms Tymoshenko said she would win, adding that the government would be “strong and not venal”. The prime minister was one of the leaders of the 2004 Orange Revolution, but her alliance with current President Viktor Yushchenko has become a rivalry. Scandals have left Ukraine without foreign, defence and finance ministers. Defence Minister Yuri Yekhanurov, seen as an ally of Mr Yushchenko, was sacked by MPs on Friday in a motion put forward by Ms Tymoshenko’s allies. Mr Yushchenko has been critical of plans by Ms Tymoshenko and opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych in order to amend the constitution to abolish direct presidential elections. The president has already said he will stand again in the January elections. Correspondents say his rivalry with Ms Tymoshenko has paralysed the workings of government.

Source:BBC

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Jun
07

Fans Gather For Launch Of iPhone Killer Palm Pre

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Fans Gather For Launch Of iPhone Killer Palm Pre

NEW YORK/CHICAGO (Reuters) –
Small crowds gathered on Saturday for the official launch of Pre, the smartphone seen as Palm Inc's best chance to claw back market share from Apple Inc's iPhone and Research In Motion Ltd's Blackberry.
The new high-end phone, considered a pivotal product for both Palm and Sprint Nextel, has been greeted by rave reviews.
Lines were far shorter than those that snaked around Apple stores for its first hugely popular iPhone two years ago, but many consumers said they were eager for the new product.
“I wanted their iPhone killer. I've been anticipating this for a while,” said Peter Lewis, who bought phones for himself and his wife at a Sprint store in Chicago, where some 45 people were in line when the doors opened at 8 a.m.
“This is my birthday present to myself,” said Wilma Rivera, 36, a heating technician who brought her 17-month-old daughter to Sprint's flagship store in Manhattan.
Rivera, a long-time Palm user, said while she had been tempted by iPhone, sold only by AT&T Inc in the United States, she “never wanted to leave Sprint.”
Sprint, the No. 3 U.S. mobile telephone service, is depending on Pre to help stem defections and win back subscribers from rivals such as AT&T and Verizon Wireless, a venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group Plc.
Sprint spokeswoman Jennifer Walsh Keifer said late on Saturday that Sprint had sold out of Pre phones at a number of different locations around the country and that the company was doing its best to restock stores.
Pre is hitting the shelves just before Apple is widely expected to announce a new iPhone on June 8.
PRICE AND KEYBOARD
The Pre costs $199.99, after a $100 rebate, for customers who sign a two-year service contract. It is priced in line with the $199 smaller-capacity iPhone. Pre's monthly service fees start at $69.99, including unlimited text messaging, lower than the cost of iPhone service plans with similar features.
“It's always nice to see a bunch of people waiting for a product you worked on,” Palm Executive Chairman Jon Rubinstein, a former Apple executive who helped create the iPod, said at a Sprint store in San Francisco's financial district, where more than a dozen people lined up to purchase a Pre.
He said the opportunity for smartphones was big enough to sustain a market for three to five successful vendors.
“For us, the opportunity is not to take customers away from RIM or Apple,” Rubinstein said, but rather to entice users of lower-level cell phones to upgrade to a more powerful smartphone.
Some who waited in line on Saturday were clearly more technologically savvy.
Juan Mondragon, a 33-year-old jewelry store manager in line at another San Francisco store, said he wanted to compare the Pre to his current iPhone, even if the experiment meant paying for two separate service plans.
“At least I can afford it for one month,” Mondragon said.
The Pre's tiny keyboard is expected to attract some consumers who find it difficult to type on iPhone's virtual touchscreen, such as Lynne Margolin, a Chicago grandmother who traded up from a Palm 650 Treo to the Pre on Saturday.
Margolin said she was concerned the number of applications may be limited early on compared to the vast number of “apps” her friends can get on their iPhones.
Pre was the most talked about device at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January. It is the first Palm phone to use the company's new webOS operating system.
Palm investors have been waiting for its new mobile platform since June 2007, when Elevation Partners took a $325 million, 25 percent stake in Palm and brought in Rubinstein.
Sprint hopes to attract corporate clients, but the Pre could have a difficult time making inroads with often conservative corporate technology departments.
(Additional reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Will Dunham)

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Jun
07

US Mulls Putting North Korea Back On Terror List

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US Mulls Putting North Korea Back On Terror List

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
The United States is looking into putting North Korea back on a list of state sponsors of terrorism in response to its nuclear test last month, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in an interview on Sunday.
“We're going to look at it. There's a process for it. Obviously we would want to see recent evidence of their support for international terrorism,” she said on ABC's “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.”
Asked whether she had evidence of the North's support for international terrorism, Clinton said: “We're just beginning to look at it. I don't have an answer for you right now.”
The United States removed North Korea from its terrorism blacklist in October in a bid to revive faltering six-nation denuclearization talks that have completely broken down.
The impoverished Communist-ruled Asian nation was taken off the list after agreeing to a series of verification measures at its nuclear facilities. It has been condemned internationally since its defiant May 25 nuclear test.
“Obviously they were taken off of the list for a purpose, and that purpose is being thwarted by their actions,” Clinton said.
Coming off the list meant North Korea could better tap into international finance and see some trade sanctions lifted — benefits that would be reversed, although other sanctions have remained as a result of its first nuclear test in 2006.
SUPPORT FROM RUSSIA AND CHINA
Clinton said she expected a strong sanctions resolution against North Korea to emerge from the U.N. Security Council, with the backing of China and Russia, which previously balked at such measures and hold veto powers on the council.
“I think what is going somewhere is additional sanctions in the United Nations — arms embargo, other measures taken against North Korea with the full support of China and Russia,” she said in reference to the ongoing U.N. deliberations.
Clinton said the United States would work hard to cut off the flow of money to North Korea.
“If we do not take significant and effective action against the North Koreans now, we'll spark an arms race in Northeast Asia. I don't think anybody wants to see that,” she said.
“And so part of what we're doing is again, sharing with other countries our calculus of the risks and the dangers that would lie ahead if we don't take very strong action.”
Renewed tensions over North Korea's nuclear program coincide with the trial in recent days of two U.S. female journalists held in Pyongyang.
Analysts say the pair, who were working for the Current TV network co-founded by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, have become bargaining chips in negotiations with the United States.
Clinton appealed to the North to free the two women, saying their case was a humanitarian issue and must be viewed separately from the nuclear dossier.
“We think that the charges against these young women are absolutely without merit or foundation. We hope the trial ends quickly, it's resolved and they're sent home.”
Clinton also said she was following very closely reports that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has signaled the appointment of his youngest son as heir to the country's ruling family dynasty.

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