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The Weekly Roomer: Current Events II
Wednesday, 31 October 2007

Turkish helicopters pound rebel Kurds

By Emma Ross-Thomas Tue Oct 30, 3:52 PM ET

SIRNAK, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkish Cobra helicopters pounded Kurdish rebel positions near the Iraqi border on Tuesday and Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan reaffirmed his readiness to send troops over the frontier despite U.S. opposition.

Plumes of smoke could be seen rising from the mountains in Sirnak province after the helicopters flew over rebel positions, witnesses said. A further round of bombing occurred later in the afternoon.

A convoy of up to 40 army vehicles headed east towards the border in brilliant sunshine. Troops scoured the hillsides for landmines, a favored weapon of the guerrillas.

Three Turkish soldiers have been killed in the past 24 hours in the border area. A fourth died on Monday in Tunceli province hundreds of kilometers to the north in a landmine explosion.

Turkey has massed up to 100,000 troops, backed by tanks, artillery, warplanes and combat helicopters along the Iraqi border in preparation for a possible cross-border incursion into northern Iraq where 3,000 rebels are believed to be hiding.

"Turkey has to take military action against terrorism. Our security forces are continuing their operations without interruption," Erdogan told members of his ruling centre-right AK Party in parliament in Ankara.

"We are at the stage of making a decision and we will make the decision on our own ... We are employing all our resources to get results in the shortest time," he said.

The United States and Iraq have urged Turkey to avoid a major military incursion, fearing this would destabilize the wider region. Washington and Baghdad have shown no appetite for tackling the PKK in Iraq despite repeated appeals from Ankara.

U.S.-TURKISH EFFORTS

The White House said President George W. Bush will discuss "joint efforts to counter the PKK" when he meets Erdogan in Washington next week.

"We have a joint desire, a joint need to make sure that the PKK is eradicated, that they are stopped," spokeswoman Dana Perino said.

Erdogan said he would tell Bush Turkey expected "urgent, concrete steps" from the United States against the PKK. He would also seek an explanation of why PKK rebels are using U.S.-made weapons in their fight with Turkish forces.

Iraqi Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani told Tuesday's Milliyet newspaper he wanted the PKK to lay down its weapons but he also criticized Turkey for refusing to discuss the issue directly with his autonomous Kurdish administration in northern Iraq.

"Barzani's attitude is clear. He is sheltering a terrorist organization in that region. That is what is happening and that is against international law," Erdogan later told reporters at a reception at the presidential palace in Ankara.

President Abdullah Gul added: "Barzani has to choose one side."

Ankara insists on speaking only with the central government in Baghdad and suspects Barzani of planning an independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq. It fears this could stoke separatism among Turkey's own large Kurdish population.

"We are not Turkey's enemy. We extend the hand of friendship but we cannot accept persecution," Barzani told a news conference in his capital Arbil, broadcast live on Turkish TV.

"It is our natural right to defend ourselves," he added in comments dubbed into Turkish, reiterating previous statements that Iraqi Kurdish fighters would fight if Turkey invaded.

Turkey's cabinet is due to approve economic sanctions on Wednesday against groups deemed to be providing support to the PKK, a move widely viewed as targeting Barzani's administration.

The measures could include restricting border traffic and reducing electricity exports to northern Iraq.

Turkey's civil aviation authority has denied Istanbul-based charter airline Tarhan Tower permission to fly two of its three weekly flights to Arbil this week, airline officials told Reuters on Tuesday, in an apparent sign of new restrictions.

Ankara blames the PKK for the deaths of more than 30,000 people since the group launched its armed campaign for an ethnic homeland in southeast Turkey in 1984. The United States and the European Union, like Turkey, brand the PKK as a terrorist group.

U.S., Turkish and Iraqi officials will make fresh diplomatic efforts to avert a major military operation when they attend a conference of Iraq's neighbors in Istanbul this weekend.

(Additional reporting by Paul de Bendern and Evren Mesci in Ankara and Tabassum Zakaria and Matt Spetalnick in Washington)


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 12:16 AM CDT
Updated: Wednesday, 31 October 2007 12:21 AM CDT
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Tuesday, 30 October 2007

Cheney Hunts, Sharpton Fumes

AP
Posted: 2007-10-30 12:25:17
UNION VALE, N.Y. (Oct. 30) -- Vice President Dick Cheney spent about eight hours hunting Monday at a secluded Hudson Valley gun club where well-heeled enthusiasts shoot ducks and pheasants.

Photo Gallery: Controversies Over Cheney's Hunting

Ron Edmonds, AP

Vice President Dick Cheney, an avid hunter, spent most of Monday at a New York gun club. The trip became controversial after a photographer snapped a photo of a small Confederate flag hanging in a garage at the club.

    1 of 8
It was Cheney's second visit to Clove Valley Rod & Gun Club in Dutchess County, about 70 miles north of New York City. The previous trip was in fall 2001.

Although a heavy police presence kept the media and curious local residents at a distance, Cheney's visit did stir up a bit of controversy when a New York Daily News photographer snapped a picture of a small Confederate flag hanging inside a garage on the hunt club property.

The photo was shown to New York City civil rights activist, the Rev. Al Sharpton, who issued a statement demanding that the vice president "leave immediately, denounce the club and apologize for going to a club that represents lynching, hate and murder to black people."

What's Your Take?

 

Sharpton's statement was issued hours after Cheney departed the club at 3:45 p.m. for a flight out of the Stewart Air National Guard Base. In a statement issued Monday evening, Cheney spokeswoman Megan Mitchell said neither Cheney nor anyone on his staff saw such a flag at the hunt club.

It's not clear whether the door of the garage that contained the flag was even open at the time the vice president was in the area.

The flag flap was minor compared with the controversy that arose in 2006 after Cheney peppered attorney Harry Whittington with birdshot while quail hunting in Texas. The vice president was criticized for not immediately going public with the incident.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-10-30 07:46:02

Posted by hotelbravo.org at 3:12 PM CDT
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Sunday, 28 October 2007

Da Vinci's 'Last Supper' Goes Online

By COLLEEN BARRY,
AP
Posted: 2007-10-28 12:06:05
Filed Under: Science News
MILAN, Italy (Oct. 28) - Can't get to Milan to see Leonardo Da Vinci's masterpiece "The Last Supper?" As of Saturday, all you need is an Internet connection. Officials put online an image of the "Last Supper" at 16 billion pixels - 1,600 times stronger than the images taken with the typical 10 million pixel digital camera.

The high resolution will allow experts to examine details of the 15th century wall painting that they otherwise could not - including traces of drawings Leonardo put down before painting.

Photo Gallery: Da Vinci Mysteries

Antonio Calanni, AP

Now that a detailed copy of Leonardo Da Vinci's 'The Last Supper' is online, experts are likely to discover more about the famous 15th-century painting. In July, Slavisa Pesci claimed he found hidden figures in it.

    1 of 12

See It for Yourself: 'The Last Supper' in Detail

The high-resolution allows viewers to look at details as though they were inches from the art work, in contrast to regular photographs, which become grainy as you zoom in, said curator Alberto Artioli.

"You can see how Leonardo made the cups transparent, something you can't ordinarily see," said Artioli. "You can also note the state of degradation the painting is in."

Besides allowing experts and art-lovers to study the masterpiece from home, Artioli said the project provides an historical document of how the painting appears in 2007, which will be valuable to future generations of art historians.

Although there appeared to be problems with the Web site late Saturday, it was accessible earlier in day.

The work, in Milan's Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, was restored in a painstaking effort that wrapped up in 1999 - a project aimed at reversing half a millennium of damage to the famed artwork. Leonard painted the "Last Supper" dry, so the painting did not cleave to the surface in the fresco style, meaning it is more delicate and subject to wear.

"Over the years it has been subjected to bombardments; it was used as a stall by Napoleon," Artioli said. The restoration removed 500 years of dirt while also removing previous restoration works that masked Leonardo's own work.

Even those who get to Milan have a hard time gaining admission to see the "Last Supper." Visits have been made more difficult by measures to protect it. Twenty-five visitors are admitted every 15 minutes to see the painting for a total of about 320,000 visitors a year. Visitors must pass through a filtration system to help reduce the work's exposure to dust and pollutants.

"The demand is three or four times higher, but we can't accommodate it because of efforts to preserve the painting," Artioli said.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-10-28 11:24:39

Posted by hotelbravo.org at 3:16 PM CDT
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Saturday, 27 October 2007
..an AOL page

NASA to Search Files on UFO Incident

Posted: 2007-10-27 09:38:21
WASHINGTON (Oct. 27) - NASA  has agreed to search its archives once again for documents on a 1965 UFO incident in Pennsylvania, a step the space agency fought in federal court. The government has refused to open its files about what, if anything, moved across the sky and crashed in the woods near Kecksburg, Pa., 40 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.

Photo Gallery: Famous UFO Sightings

AP

While descending an Austrian mountain in 1954, photographer Erich Kaiser captured an image of what he called mysterious silvery-white flying objects.

    1 of 10

Traffic was tied up in the area as curiosity seekers drove to the area, only to be kept away from the crash site by soldiers.

The Air Force's explanation for the unidentified flying object: a meteor or meteors.

"They could not find anything," one Air Force memo stated after a late-night search on Dec. 9, 1965. Several NASA employees also were reported to have been at the scene.

Eyewitnesses said a flatbed truck drove away a large object shaped like an acorn and about the size of a Volkswagen bus. A mock-up based on the descriptions of local residents sits behind the Kecksburg Volunteer Fire Department.

UFO enthusiasts refused to let the matter die and journalist Leslie Kean of New York City sued NASA four years ago for information.

"This is about the public's right to know," Kean said. "We would be doing this lawsuit regardless of whether UFO groups were interested in it or not. It's a freeodm of information issue."

The agency has turned over several stacks of documents which Kean says are not responsive to the request, an argument that U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan agreed with.

In March, Sullivan rejected NASA's request to throw the case out of court, resulting in negotiations that led to the agency promising last week that it will conduct a more comprehensive search.

Kean said Friday that she sued NASA rather than the Army because the space agency a decade ago released some relevant documents on the case.

2007-10-27 08:21:59

Posted by hotelbravo.org at 1:51 PM CDT
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Perhaps Peace is Too much trouble...?

Anti-War Demos Planned for 11 Cities Saturday

Haider Rizvi, OneWorld US Fri Oct 26, 10:49 PM ET

NEW YORK, Oct 26 (OneWorld) - Preparation for nationwide protests against the Bush administration's war plans against Iran and the continued occupation of Iraq are in full swing.

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Antiwar groups will hold rallies and demonstrations Saturday in 11 major cities across the United States to build pressure on Congress to take decisive measures against the Bush administration's military-led policies.

"Every month, nearly 100 service-people and countless more Iraqis are killed, some 12 billion of our tax dollars are spent, and the death and destruction continue," said Medea Benjamin of CODEPINK, an anti-war group that has organized several demonstrations since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.

"People everywhere want the war to end, but Washington has failed to take decisive action," Benjamin added in a statement. "We want this war to end. Our goal for the 11 regional peace demonstrations is to focus national attention on the urgency of ending the war and to highlight the impact of war spending on domestic needs."

The October 27 antiwar protests will take place in Boston; Chicago; Jonesborough, Tennessee; Los Angeles; New Orleans; New York; Orlando; Salt Lake City; San Francisco; and Seattle.

Organizers said they expect that people in all the 11 cities will participate in the rallies in large numbers because working and middle-class Americans are suffering from economic hardship due to the massive spending of tax dollars on military operations abroad.

The protests come at a time when the Bush administration is seeking Congressional approval for additional spending on military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Bush has asked for $196.4 billion for war-related operations this budget year.

On Thursday, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could cost more than $2 trillion through the next decade. According to the CBO, the United States has already spent about $604 billion on the wars, just $39 billion of which has been dedicated to diplomatic operations and foreign aid.

The administration has dismissed that analysis by saying it was based on "speculation."

"It's just a ton of speculation," said White House press secretary Dana Perino. "We don't know how much the war is going to cost in the future."

Democratic politicians pointed out the vast difference between today's estimates and those the White House offered before the war began in 2003.

"That estimate is a far cry from the administration's original claim of a $50 billion price that the Iraqis could pay themselves," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. "The depth of this tragedy is stunning, particularly for our military families -- and for prospects for peace in the region."

However, despite their opposition to the war, Democrats have not given any clear indication that they would take a firm stand against Bush's request for additional money for war.

Analysts say the proposed additional spending on military operations indicates that the plans to carry out an attack on Iran cannot be ruled out. On Thursday, the Bush administration declared its readiness to roll out an unprecedented package of unilateral sanctions against Tehran.

Independent foreign experts have repeatedly warned about the consequences of such measures, arguing that it would fuel anti-Americanism throughout the Muslim world, and place at further risk the lives of U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"We can't bomb a country simply because we don't like it," said Carah Ong, an analyst at the Washington, DC-based Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, a policy think tank. "Doing so would be recklessly shortsighted and only strengthen the hands of hard-liners in Iran.

Last week, Bush suggested that a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to "World War III." Vice President Dick Cheney also used threatening language against Tehran saying that Iran would face "serious consequences" if the government there does not abandon its nuclear program.

Iran has repeatedly said it has no intention to build nuclear weapons and that its atomic program is meant for peaceful purposes, which is its right under the UN treaty on nuclear nonproliferation (NPT).

The Center and many other organizations are currently trying to build pressure on Congress to prevent a military attack against Iran and opt for a diplomatic solution. The group has also started a signature campaign to send a petition to Congress demanding as much.

"If we want to see a change in Iran's behavior," said Ong, "we must pursue courageous diplomatic leadership to establish a serious, sustained dialogue."

 


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 6:58 AM CDT
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Sunday, 21 October 2007
Elect Sir Sean!
Thursday, 21 September, 2000, 09:52 GMT 10:52 UK
Connery praises SNP leader
Akex Salmond and Sir Sean Connery
Alex Salmond and Sir Sean Connery campaign together
The Scottish National Party's best-known supporter, Sir Sean Connery, has paid tribute to Alex Salmond, who is stepping down as leader.

Mr Salmond, 45, has unexpectedly announced his resignation at the party's annual conference in September after 10 years as national convener.

Sir Sean, who supports the SNP financially and has campaigned alongside Mr Salmond, told BBC News Online Scotland: "He has been great for the party and I look forward to seeing what comes next."

An MP and Member of the Scottish Parliament, Mr Salmond's leadership style has been criticised from within the party in recent years.


It has been a rare privilege to lead the SNP over the last decade

Alex Salmond
Most recently, Mr Salmond was at the centre of the controversy over the suspension of Ian Blackford as party treasurer, who threatened to sue him for defamation.

Speaking at a news conference in Aberdeen, he revealed that he had only reached his decision at the weekend. He said that 10 years into the job seemed "an appropriate time" to reflect on the position.

"I think 10 years has been the allotted term of SNP leaders," he said, pointing out that his predecessor, Gordon Wilson, had served the same length of time in the top job.

Asked for his preferred successor, he said: "I have got my own private thoughts but obviously they are private."

'Complete puzzle'

BBC political correspondent Nick Robinson described the resignation as "a complete puzzle".

"Why if it was always going to be 10 years, hadn't we known about it. The decision seems to be very last-minute," he said.

In a letter to SNP members, he said: "The party is now at its strongest position ever.

Alex and news conference in Aberdeen
Facing the media in Aberdeen
"We are the official opposition in the Scots Parliament, we have over 200 local councillors, we lead the Scottish opinion polls and are at over 30% in the Westminster polls.

"I am absolutely convinced that the SNP will win the next Scottish election and take Scotland forward to independence.

"However, translating that political success onto a personal level, that would effectively lock me into a further decade as party leader.

"It has been a rare privilege to lead the SNP over the last decade. I have enjoyed myself enormously. I have no complaints and no regrets."

Blackford turmoil

He said he had "no intention" of giving up politics and planned to continue as MP and MSP for Banff and Buchan, in the north-east of Scotland.

As an indication that he did not intend to fade away from SNP politics, Mr Salmond added: "I hope to serve Scotland in the future in some other capacity."

The battle for the job has begun with left-winger Alex Neil confirming his intention to stand. He is likely to face competition from deputy leader, John Swinney, who will announce a decision in the next few days.

Alex at conference
In full flight at a party conference
Other names in the frame so far are deputy leader, acting treasurer Kenny MacAskill; justice spokeswoman Roseanna Cunningham and business manager Mike Russell.

Political opponents seized on the Ian Blackford turmoil. Liberal Democrat MP Menzies Campbell said: "It makes no sense whatsoever for Alex Salmond and his treasurer to be fighting each other like ferrets in a sack."

Enterprise Minister Henry McLeish, a Labour MSP, said: "The SNP is a single-issue protest group who use the luxury of knowing they will never be in government to come up with crazy and uncosted promises to the people of Scotland."

Economic background

In March, members of the party's national council approved the policy of an independence referendum being held by an SNP-led Scottish Parliament or by the Scottish Parliament, if the SNP won a Westminster election.

Mr Salmond was an economist with the Royal Bank of Scotland before winning the Banff and Buchan Westminster constituency from the Tories in 1987.

The following year he interrupted the chancellor's Budget speech in protest at the introduction of the poll tax in Scotland. He was thrown out of the chamber for a week.

 

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17 Jul 00 | Scotland
SNP leadership battle begins
17 Jul 00 | Scotland
Reaction to Salmond's departure
17 Jul 00 | Scotland
Resignation letter in full
26 Apr 99 | The Scottish Parliament
CV: Alex Salmond
17 Jul 00 | Talking Point
The Salmond decade
17 Jul 00 | Scotland
Torrid times at the top for Salmond
Internet links:


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Links to more SNP stories

 

In This Section Emphatic SNP win for Swinney Salmond: 'Breakaway is nigh' Backroom boy moves to the fore SNP hopefuls play down cash row Party exile attacks leadership Nationalists air their views SNP leader sides with deputy Filling the room at the top Hopefuls clash on independence Full webcast transcript SNP moves into credit Tussle for the top Attention turns to key SNP ballots John Swinney: My message Alex Neil: My message Conference agenda Live coverage Connery praises SNP leader Party prepares for Salmond swan song The Salmond decade



Posted by hotelbravo.org at 3:34 AM CDT
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Go Boston!

Red Sox blitz Indians to force series decider

By Mike Shalin Sun Oct 21, 1:03 AM ET

BOSTON (Reuters) - The Boston Red Sox hammered the Cleveland Indians 12-2 on Saturday to force a seventh and deciding game in the American League Championship Series.

Five RBIs by J.D. Drew and Curt Schilling's pitching fired the Red Sox, who will seek to complete the comeback from 3-1 down when they send Game 3 losing pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka to the mound on Sunday against Jake Westbrook, who won the third game.

The winners face the Colorado Rockies in the World Series, beginning on Wednesday in either Boston or New York.

"There's nothing more (fun) in sports than a Game 7," Schilling told reporters after improving his post-season record to 10-2.

The Red Sox have won the last two games by a combined score of 19-3.

"It's still two games and you see a lot in a seven-game series," said Cleveland manager Eric Wedge. "It's going to come down to Game 7 between the two teams that won more games than anybody in the regular season, two teams that have beat each up on each other a little bit over the past week, and that's the way it should be.

"It's something everybody should look forward to."

Drew hit a grand slam in the first inning and added an RBI single in a six-run third that knocked Cleveland starter Fausto Carmona from the game. The right fielder has struggled in his first season in Boston after signing a $70 million contract but was called out for a curtain call after the home run.

Schilling delivered seven strong innings, allowing two runs on six hits, walking none and striking out five. He received a huge ovation from the crowd as he walked off after the seventh inning, doffing his cap before entering the dugout.

"(He) really really pitched like the guy that we need," said Red Sox manager Terry Francona.

It was the fifth time in his career that Schilling pitched a post-season game with his team facing elimination and he has won all five starts, for Philadelphia, Arizona and Boston.

The Red Sox are seeking to win their second World Series in the last four years. The Indians have not won it since 1948.

POP FLY

The Red Sox loaded the bases with no one out in the first inning on two infield hits and a walk to David Ortiz. Carmona then struck out Manny Ramirez and got Mike Lowell on a pop fly to short right but Drew connected on a 3-1 pitch, hitting a vicious line drive to left-centerfield.

"I didn't want to walk off the field without any runs, so I was trying to hit the ball hard," Drew said. "It worked out great."

Victor Martinez led off the second inning with a solo home run for Cleveland, after Grady Sizemore had started with a similar fly ball that was called a foul.

The Red Sox broke things open with the six-run third inning that included a pair of Cleveland errors and chased Carmona from the game.

Drew singled home one run and Julio Lugo had a two-run double in the big Boston third.


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 3:13 AM CDT
Updated: Sunday, 21 October 2007 3:16 AM CDT
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Thursday, 18 October 2007
If true, we are nearly devastated that we must adhere to any kind of objectivity and report this possible stupidity.

Study Finds iPhone Contains Harmful Chemicals

Haider Rizvi, OneWorld US Tue Oct 16, 2:51 PM ET

NEW YORK, Oct 16 (OneWorld) - Apple's iPhone contains hazardous chemicals that can endanger human health and the environment, say scientists associated with the environmental organization Greenpeace International who tested the device in their laboratories a few months ago.

Greenpeace scientists claimed this week that they found two types of hazardous substances in the iPhone that have already been eliminated by other mobile phone makers.

"Two of the phthalate plasticisers found at high levels in the headphone cable are toxic to reproduction," said Dr. David Santillo, senior scientist at the Greenpeace Research Laboratories.

Santillo and many other scientists assert that these substances interfere with sexual development in mammals, and therefore their use in products such as toys or other childcare articles have been banned in Europe.

However, though questionable, their use in mobile phones is still legal.

Greenpeace campaigners say they decided to test the iPhone in their UK laboratory in June after Apple management publicly declared that it would address environmental concerns as it launched new products.

In May when the iPhone was launched, thousands of consumers took part in Greenpeace's "Green My Apple" campaign after Apple's Steve Jobs bragged about the fine environmental quality of his company's products.

In introducing the iPhone, he said: "Apple is ahead of, or will soon be ahead of, most of its competitors" on environmental issues.

"We watched closely when the iPhone was launched in June for any mention of the green features of the phone from Apple," said a Greenpeace official. "There was none."

The laboratory tests show the iPhone contains toxic brominated compounds (indicating the presence of brominated flame retardants -- so-called BFRs) and hazardous PVC plastics. The findings are detailed in the Greenpeace report entitled "Missed call: the iPhone's Hazardous Chemicals."

Researchers at the laboratory say they have tested 18 internal and external components of the iPhone and confirmed the presence of brominated compounds in half the samples, including in the phone's antenna.

A mixture of toxic phthalates was found to make up 1.5 percent of the plastic (PVC) coating of the headphone cables, according to Zeina Alhajj, a Greenpeace campaigner .

"Steve Jobs has missed the call on making the iPhone his first step towards greening Apple's products," said Alhajj. "It seems that Apple is far from leading the way for a green electronics industry as competitors, like Nokia, already sell mobile phones free of PVC."

Apple's media relations officials did not return calls for their comments on the Greenpeace study Monday, though an Apple spokesperson did tell the trade publication Macworld that the company "will voluntarily eliminate the use of PVC and BFRs by the end of 2008."

The California-based non-profit Center for Environmental Health is hoping to speed up that process. The group announced its intention Monday to bring a lawsuit against Apple, through which it aims to reach a negotiated settlement to reduce the use of the chemicals in question.

Greenpeace researchers said during the tests they also found the iPhone's battery was "unusually glued and soldered" into the handset, which hinders battery replacement and makes separation for recycling or appropriate disposal more difficult, and therefore adds to the burden of electronic waste.

Several of Apple's competitors have said they have identified extra toxic chemicals they intend to remove in the future -- beyond current minimum legal requirements.

Nokia mobile phones are totally PVC free, while Motorola and Sony Ericsson have already put products on the market with BFR-free components. Nokia and Sony Ericsson have a global take-back policy for their phones and accept responsibility for reuse and recycling of phones they manufacture.

Environmentalists say that saves resources and helps prevent old phones from adding to the mountain of e-waste that has been dumped in Asia and elsewhere.

Apple does not have a global free take-back policy so the eventual fate of the 4 to 10 million iPhones likely to be sold in the product's first year is uncertain, analysts say.

"With next month's European launch of the iPhone, Apple should sell a version which is at least as green as the offerings from Sony Ericsson, Nokia, and Motorola," said Greenpeace's Alhajj.

"Only then can loyal fans of Steve Jobs believe that his promises of a greener Apple will bear any fruit. Right now Steve appears to have any green product news 'on hold'."

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Posted by hotelbravo.org at 6:35 PM CDT
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We sure hope to hell she hired Blackwater cowboy Mercs to keep her alive!

Bhutto returns to sea of support in Pakistan

By Zeeshan Haider Thu Oct 18, 10:12 AM ET

KARACHI (Reuters) - Former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto ended eight years of self-exile on Thursday, returning to Karachi where hundreds of thousands of supporters thronged the streets to welcome her home.

"I am thankful to God, I am very happy that I'm back in my country and I was dreaming of this day," a tearful Bhutto told Reuters as she disembarked an Emirates flight from Dubai and kissed a Koran once she stepped on Pakistani soil.

Bhutto returned to lead her Pakistan People's Party into national elections meant to return the country to civilian rule.

For years Bhutto had vowed to return to Pakistan to end military dictatorship, yet she is coming back as a potential ally for President Pervez Musharraf, the army chief who took power in a 1999 coup.

Before saying goodbye to her two daughters and husband, Asif Ali Zardari, in Dubai, Bhutto described Pakistan as being at a crossroads between democracy and dictatorship.

Musharraf is going through his weakest period, and there is strong speculation he will end up sharing power with Bhutto after national elections due in early January.

The United States is believed to have quietly encouraged their alliance in order to keep nuclear-armed Pakistan pro-Western and committed to fighting al Qaeda and supporting NATO's efforts to stabilize Afghanistan.

Dressed in a green shalwar kameez (loose tunic and trousers), her head covered by a white scarf, Bhutto stood in plain view atop a truck designed to withstand a blast as it edged through a mass of people outside the airport, ignoring police advice to keep behind its bullet proof glass.

"Now that the people have given their verdict, it is necessary that the elections should be free and fair," she said before setting off at the head of a procession into Karachi.

After three hours her truck had gone half kilometer to reach the airport gate, so great was the crowd, and as dusk fell the main road into the downtown area was completely clogged.

Some 20,000 security personnel have been deployed to provide protection against threatened suicide bomb attacks by militants.

Intelligence reports suggested at least three jihadi groups linked to al Qaeda and the Taliban were plotting suicide attacks, according to a provincial official.

"She has an agreement with America. We will carry out attacks on Benazir Bhutto as we did on General Pervez Musharraf," Haji Omar, a Taliban commander in the Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border, told Reuters by satellite telephone.

While the rest of Pakistan was transfixed by Bhutto's homecoming, Musharraf spent most of the day at his army office in Rawalpindi, with no official engagements scheduled, an aide said.

Bhutto's return pleased investors in the Karachi Stock Exchange, whose main index has risen 47 percent this year.

"There is a feeling that the political scenario will stabilize now and there will be consistent economic policies," said Muzzamil Mussani, a dealer at JS Global Capital Ltd, as the index hit a life high of 14,802.61 points, up over 1 percent.

HOMECOMING RALLY

The route to a site near the tomb of Pakistan's founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, where Bhutto was due to address a rally, was lined with die-hard loyalists.

"I sold the goats in my house to travel to Karachi and welcome Benazir Bhutto. Since the day she announced her arrival, we lit oil lamps every night, and my old mother offers long prayers for her safety and success," said Imdad Chandio, a villager from the barren hinterland of Sindh province.

Red, black and green tricolor of Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party festooned streets and billboards displayed giant images of Bhutto and her late father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the country's first popularly elected prime minister, who was ousted and executed by his army chief, General Mohammed Zia-ul-Haq.

Musharraf has already granted an amnesty to protect Bhutto from corruption charges brought by the government of Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister he overthrew and later exiled.

But the Supreme Court is challenging Musharraf's right to bestow an amnesty. It is also hearing challenges to the president's right to have stood for re-election while still army chief in a ballot he won easily on October 6, even though he has promised to be sworn in as a civilian leader.

Judge Javed Iqbal expected a ruling in 10 or 12 days time.

(Additional reporting by Imtiaz Shah and Asim Tanveer)


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 6:30 PM CDT
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Tuesday, 16 October 2007
Since when do the Chinese have or express "outrage?" Could they be becoming westernized and therefore losing it?

Bush hosts Dalai Lama amid Chinese outrage

By Matt Spetalnick and Paul Eckert Tue Oct 16, 3:29 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush hosted the Dalai Lama on Tuesday despite China's warning that U.S. plans to honor the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader could damage relations between Beijing and Washington.

The White House talks were held on the eve of a congressional award ceremony for the Dalai Lama, but the Bush administration took pains to keep the encounter with the president low-key in a bid to placate China.

"We in no way want to stir the pot and make China feel that we are poking a stick in their eye -- to a country that we have ... a good relationship with on a variety of issues," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said.

Beijing has bitterly denounced plans for the Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile in India since staging a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959, to receive the Congressional Gold Medal on Wednesday.

Bush will attend the ceremony on Capitol Hill, the first time a U.S. president will appear in public with the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists and a Nobel Peace laureate whom China regards as a separatist and a traitor.

"We are furious," Tibet's Communist Party boss, Zhang Qingli, told reporters in China. "If the Dalai Lama can receive such an award, there must be no justice or good people in the world."

The White House denied Bush's private meeting with the Dalai Lama, his fourth since taking office, was meddling in China's internal affairs. But Perino said: "We understand that the Chinese have very strong feelings about this."

Returning to his Washington hotel, a smiling Dalai Lama told journalists and a small group of cheering followers that his meeting with Bush had been "like a reunion of one family."

"Naturally he's showing his concern about Tibet and he inquired about the situation there," the Dalai Lama said.

Asked about China's anger over his U.S. visit, he waved his hands dismissively and said: "That always happens."

PLAYING DOWN THE SYMBOLISM

Trying to play down the symbolism of the talks, Bush met the Dalai Lama in the White House residence instead of the Oval Office where he normally welcomes visiting world leaders.

White House staff, who had refused to say when the meeting would take place, afterward said it lasted half an hour but gave no further details. Reporters were not allowed to glimpse the two together and no photographs were released.

Asked why Bush was going ahead with the talks, White House spokesman Tony Fratto said: "He made it clear in his communications with the Chinese ... that when the Dalai Lama was in town for the congressional ceremony that they would meet. So there's no reason not to."

China pulled out of a meeting this week at which world powers were to discuss Iran, in apparent protest at Congress's plan to honor the Dalai Lama with its highest civilian award.

China had also canceled an annual human rights dialogue with Germany to show displeasure over Chancellor Angela Merkel's September meeting with the Dalai Lama.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said China had expressed "resolute opposition" to the U.S. award.

"China has solemnly demanded the United States cancel the above-mentioned and extremely wrongful arrangement," Yang said.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said if the decision to honor the Dalai Lama was not reversed it would have an "extremely serious impact" on bilateral relations.

China pulled out of the meeting on Iran for "technical reasons," he told a news conference.

China's rhetoric against the Dalai Lama has been increasing in line with his accolades abroad, even though the government and his envoys are engaged in a tentative dialogue process.

The Dalai Lama, 72, has said he supports a "middle way" policy that advocates autonomy for Tibet within China. But Qiangba Puncog, Tibet's governor, said China believed he still supported independence and that separatist activities in the region were increasing.

(Additional reporting by Lindsay Beck, Chris Buckley and Guo Shipeng)


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 7:36 PM CDT
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What are these pinheads we are using for cops and prosecutors now days, anyway!?

So she gets off from a manslaughter charge because he must be a liar and she can't be..."came at her?"  Please!  Arrest the bitch!  ...and let the guy go who only held her off while he grabbed his clothes, then fled!  What are these pinheads we are using for cops and prosecutors now days, anyway!?  Could Ethel be white and the homeless guy be black...or some equally despicable variation of the above where race plays a major role..., set me straight!!!

 

Woman, 81, shoots homeless 'washer'

Mon Oct 15, 10:25 PM ET

MOBILE, Ala. - An 81-year-old woman shot a homeless man Monday morning after finding him washing his clothes in her laundry room, police said.

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Ethel Sanders told people she heard noises in her laundry room and found a man standing in his underwear near the washing machine when she went to investigate, police spokesman Officer Eric Gallichant told the Press-Register.

Sanders was carrying a handgun and shot the man when he came at her, Gallichant said. Sanders fell to the ground and dropped the gun after firing, Gallichant said.

The man grabbed the gun, pointed it at Sanders and took his clothes from the washing machine, Gallichant said.

The man fled and Sanders called police just before 8 a.m. Officers caught the man at the nearby Plateau Community Center.

James Penn, 25, was taken to University of South Alabama Medical Center. Gallichant said he is expected to survive. Upon release from the hospital, Penn will be charged with first-degree burglary, Gallichant said.

___

Information from: Press-Register, http://www.al.com/mobileregister


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 8:22 AM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, 16 October 2007 8:29 AM CDT
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Misfired Patriot missile hits farm in Qatar: report

Tue Oct 16, 4:45 AM ET

DUBAI (Reuters) - A Patriot missile hit a farm in Qatar after being accidentally fired from a base used by U.S. forces in the Gulf Arab state, Al Jazeera television said on Tuesday.

The Qatar-based television said the missile launched from Assayliyah base did not cause any casualties. The Patriot system is an anti-missile system.

Officials at Assayliyah were not available for comment.

U.S.-allied Qatar was a launch pad for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. It hosts the U.S. Army's Central Command (CENTCOM).


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 8:09 AM CDT
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This must have been the one Fred was using in the quarry...!

'Truly Gigantic' Dinosaur Skeleton Found

By MICHAEL ASTOR,
AP
Posted: 2007-10-15 18:12:13
Filed Under: Science News
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (Oct. 15) - The skeleton of what is believed to be a new dinosaur species - a 105-foot plant-eater that is among the largest dinosaurs ever found - has been uncovered in Argentina, scientists said Monday.

Scientists from Argentina and Brazil said the Patagonian dinosaur appears to represent a previously unknown species of Titanosaur because of the unique structure of its neck. They named it Futalognkosaurus dukei after the Mapuche Indian words for "giant" and "chief," and for Duke Energy Argentina, which helped fund the skeleton's excavation.

Photo Gallery: Massive Creature

Academia Brasileira de Ciencias / Reuters

Scientists announced on Monday the discovery of a dinosaur, which may be a new species, called Futalognkosaurus dukei in the Patagonia region of Argentina. Here, a sketch shows the animal, left.

    1 of 5
"This is one of the biggest in the world and one of the most complete of these giants that exist," said Jorge Calvo, director of paleontology center of National University of Comahue, Argentina, lead author of a study on the dinosaur published in the peer-reviewed Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.

Scientists said the giant herbivore walked the Earth some 88 million years ago, during the late Cretaceous period.

Since the first bones were found on the banks of Lake Barreales in the Argentine province of Neuquen in 2000, paleontologists have dug up the dinosaur's neck, back region, hips and the first vertebra of its tail.

"I'm pretty certain it's a new species," agreed Peter Mackovicky, associate curator for dinosaurs at Chicago's Field Museum, who was not involved with the discovery. "I've seen some of the remains of Futalognkosaurus and it is truly gigantic."

Calvo said the neck alone must have been 56 feet long, and by studying the vertebrae, they figured the tail probably measured 49 feet. The dinosaur reached over 43 feet tall, and the excavated spinal column alone weighed about 9 tons when excavated.

Patagonia also was home to the other two largest dinosaur skeletons found to date - Argentinosaurus, at around 115 feet long, and Puertasaurus reuili, 115 feet to 131 feet long.

Comparison between the three herbivores, however, is difficult because scientists have only found few vertebrae of Puertasaurus and while the skeleton of Futalognkosaurus (FOO-ta-long-koh-SOHR-us) is fairly complete, scientists have not uncovered any bones from its limbs.

Photo Gallery: Recent Discoveries

Larry Felder

Scientists in Utah this month announced the discovery of Gryposaurus monumentensis, a huge new species that was called the "Arnold Schwarzenegger of duckbilled dinosaurs" by one paleontologist.

    1 of 9
North America's dinosaurs don't even compare, Mackovicky added in a phone interview. "Dinosaurs do get big here, but nothing near the proportions we see in South America."

The site where Futalognkosaurus was found has been a bonanza for paleontologists, yielding more than 1,000 specimens, including 240 fossil plants, 300 teeth and the remains of several other dinosaurs.

"As far as I know, there is no other place in the world where there is such a large and diverse quantity of fossils in such small area. That is truly unique," said Alexander Kellner, a researcher with the Brazilian National Museum and co-author of the dinosaur's scientific description.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-10-15 15:02:26

Posted by hotelbravo.org at 7:48 AM CDT
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Monday, 15 October 2007
..are no NATO allie a righteous US wants on its team!

...creating a crisis too complex for REPUBLICANS...clever...Turks denying Genocide in Armenia and wanting to invade Kurdistan, as well as deny occupied Kurdistan...are no NATO allie a righteous US wants on its team! - Dudley

 

Turkish govt asks parliament to let troops enter Iraq

By Gareth Jones and Hidir Goktas Mon Oct 15, 3:18 PM ET

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey's cabinet asked parliament on Monday for permission to launch attacks on Kurdish separatists in northern Iraq that Washington fears could destabilize one of the most peaceful areas of the country.

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Government spokesman Cemil Cicek said Turkey still hoped military action against the Kurds, who use the mountainous region as base for attacks inside Turkey, would not be needed.

"But the most painful reality of our country, our region, is the reality of terror," he told a news conference.

Iraq urged Turkey not to resort to military action on its territory, calling on it to be "wise and patient."

"The Iraqi government calls on the Turkish government to pursue a diplomatic solution and not a military solution to solve the (problem) of terrorist attacks which our dear neighbor Turkey has witnessed from the PKK," said Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh.

Cicek said the motion, which parliament is expected to approve on Wednesday, would be valid for one year and would allow multiple cross-border operations.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's centre-right government is under heavy public pressure to act after a series of attacks on Turkish troops by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which seeks an independent homeland in eastern Turkey.

The prospect of NATO's second largest army crossing into mainly Kurdish northern Iraq helped propel global oil prices to an all-time high of $86 a barrel on Monday while the lira currency fell more than 2 percent against the dollar.

The United States has urged restraint on Turkey, a key NATO ally strategically located between Europe and the Middle East. But Washington's influence in Ankara is being severely undermined by U.S. Congressional moves to brand as genocide the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915.

Ankara has recalled its envoy to Washington and warned of serious damage to ties if next month the House of Representatives backs a resolution pressed by an Armenian lobby with great influence among the Democrat majority.

Turkey rejects the genocide claims, now fatefully entangled with the northern Iraq issue.

U.S. APPEAL

"We all have an interest in a stable Iraq and a desire to see the PKK brought to justice, but we urge the Turks to continue their discussions with us and the Iraqis and to show restraint from any potentially destabilizing actions," White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said.

That appeal was echoed by Iraq which pointed to a security accord the two neighbors signed late last month as a way to proceed against the PKK.

Under the accord, Iraq and Turkey pledged to take all necessary measures, including financial and intelligence, to combat the PKK and other militant groups.

Turkey's Cicek had earlier repeated criticism of Iraq's failure to take action against the PKK on its territory.

Iraq has said its own security forces are too stretched tackling insurgents elsewhere in the country to be sent to tackle the PKK.

The Baghdad government also has little clout in the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi is expected to discuss the issue in Ankara with Turkish officials on Tuesday.

Cicek said Turkey's sole target, if its troops entered northern Iraq, would be the PKK militants, about 3,000 of whom are believed to be hiding there.

Large-scale incursions by Turkey into northern Iraq in 1995 and 1997, involving an estimated 35,000 and 50,000 troops respectively, failed to dislodge the rebels.

In the text of the motion, seen by Reuters, the government states continued commitment to Iraq's territorial integrity and defends its right under international law to send troops across the border as an act of self-defense.

(Additional reporting by Evren Mesci in Ankara and Mariam Karouny in Baghdad)


Posted by hotelbravo.org at 7:39 PM CDT
Updated: Tuesday, 16 October 2007 8:03 AM CDT
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Saturday, 13 October 2007

Vatican Prints Secrets of Knights Templar

By Philip Pullella,
Reuters
Posted: 2007-10-13 00:08:04
Filed Under: World News
VATICAN CITY (Oct. 12) - The Knights Templar, the medieval Christian military order accused of heresy and sexual misconduct, will soon be partly rehabilitated when the Vatican publishes trial documents it had closely guarded for 700 years.

Photo Gallery: Church Secret Revealed

Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters

The Vatican Secret Archives is publishing 799 copies of a document that was found in 2001 after being lost for centuries. Replicas cost $8,333, but you can click through the photos to get the scoop for free.

    1 of 9
A reproduction of the minutes of trials against the Templars, "'Processus Contra Templarios -- Papal Inquiry into the Trial of the Templars"' is a massive work and much more than a book -- with a $8,333 price tag.

"This is a milestone because it is the first time that these documents are being released by the Vatican, which gives a stamp of authority to the entire project," said Professor Barbara Frale, a medievalist at the Vatican's Secret Archives.

"Nothing before this offered scholars original documents of the trials of the Templars," she told Reuters in a telephone interview ahead of the official presentation of the work on October 25.

The epic comes in a soft leather case that includes a large-format book including scholarly commentary, reproductions of original parchments in Latin, and -- to tantalize Templar buffs -- replicas of the wax seals used by 14th-century Inquisitors.

Reuters was given an advance preview of the work, of which only 799 numbered copies have been made.

One parchment measuring about half a meter wide by some two meters long is so detailed that it includes reproductions of stains and imperfections seen on the originals.

Pope Benedict will be given the first set of the work, published by the Vatican Secret Archives in collaboration with Italy's Scrinium cultural foundation, which acted as curator and will have exclusive world distribution rights.

The Templars, whose full name was "Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon," were founded in 1119 by knights sworn to protecting Christian pilgrims visiting the Holy Land after the Crusaders captured Jerusalem in 1099.

They amassed enormous wealth and helped finance wars of some European monarchs. Legends of their hidden treasures, secret rituals and power have figured over the years in films and bestsellers such as "The Da Vinci Code."

The Knights have also been portrayed as guardians of the legendary Holy Grail, the cup used by Christ at the Last Supper before his crucifixion.

The Vatican expects most copies of the work to be bought up by specialized libraries at top universities and by leading medieval scholars.

Burned at the Stake

The Templars went into decline after Muslims re-conquered the Holy Land at the end of the 13th century and were accused of heresy by King Philip IV of France, their foremost persecutor. Their alleged offences included denying Christ and secretly worshipping idols.

The most titillating part of the documents is the so-called Chinon Parchment, which contains phrases in which Pope Clement V absolves the Templars of charges of heresy, which had been the backbone of King Philip's attempts to eliminate them.

Templars were burned at the stake for heresy by King Philip's agents after they made confessions that most historians believe were given under duress.

The parchment, also known as the Chinon Chart, was "misplaced" in the Vatican archives until 2001, when Frale stumbled across it.

"The parchment was catalogued incorrectly at some point in history. At first I couldn't believe my eyes. I was incredulous," she said.

"This was the document that a lot of historians were looking for," the 37-year-old scholar said.

Philip was heavily indebted to the Templars, who had helped him finance his wars, and getting rid of them was a convenient way of cancelling his debts, some historians say.

Frale said Pope Clement was convinced that while the Templars had committed some grave sins, they were not heretics.

Spitting on the Cross

Their initiation ceremony is believed to have included spitting on the cross, but Frale said they justified this as a ritual of obedience in preparation for possible capture by Muslims. They were also said to have practiced sodomy.

"Simply put, the pope recognized that they were not heretics but guilty of many other minor crimes -- such as abuses, violence and sinful acts within the order," she said. "But that is not the same as heresy."

Despite his conviction that the Templars were not guilty of heresy, in 1312 Pope Clement ordered the Templars disbanded for what Frale called "the good of the Church" following his repeated clashes with the French king.

Frale depicted the trials against the Templars between 1307 and 1312 as a battle of political wills between Clement and Philip, and said the document means Clement's position has to be reappraised by historians.

"This will allow anyone to see what is actually in documents like these and deflate legends that are in vogue these days," she said.

Rosi Fontana, who has helped the Vatican coordinate the project, said: "The most incredible thing is that 700 years have passed and people are still fascinated by all of this."

"The precise reproduction of the parchments will allow scholars to study them, touch them, admire them as if they were dealing with the real thing," Fontana said.

"But even better, it means the originals will not deteriorate as fast as they would if they were constantly being viewed," she said.

Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-10-12 15:26:12
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