Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Violence breaks out in Myanmar after election

AFP

Mon Nov 8, 12:00 pm ET

YANGON (AFP) – Deadly clashes erupted on Monday between Myanmar government troops and ethnic minority rebels, prompting an exodus across the border in the wake of an election that the junta’s proxies looked sure to win.

At least three civilians were killed when heavy weapons fire hit the town of Myawaddy in Karen State, an official in the military-ruled country said. There was no information on any troop casualties on either side.

Clashes were also reported further south near Myanmar’s Three Pagodas Pass.

2 Myanmar counts votes in poll marred by fraud fears

Sun Nov 7, 6:38 pm ET

YANGON (AFP) – Myanmar counted ballots Monday in its first vote in 20 years as Western governments lashed out at the military-ruled nation for orchestrating an election that junta-backed parties look set to easily win.

With democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi still locked up and two pro-junta parties fielding about two-thirds of the total candidates, world leaders rejected the legitimacy of the poll in a broadside of statements.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi swept her party to power in 1990 but the result was never recognised by the ruling generals. She has been detained for most of the last 20 years and supported a boycott of Sunday’s election.

3 Thousands flee Myanmar clashes after election

AFP

Mon Nov 8, 7:18 am ET

YANGON (AFP) – Deadly clashes erupted on Monday between Myanmar government troops and ethnic minority rebels, prompting an exodus across the border as the junta’s proxies prepared to claim victory in a widely criticised election.

At least three civilians were killed when heavy weapons fire hit the town of Myawaddy in Karen State, an official in the military-ruled country said. There was no information on any troop casualties on either side.

About 10,000 people fled across the frontier to neighbouring Thailand, including many women and children, said Samart Loyfah, the governor of Thailand’s Tak province on the border.

4 German police, activists gear up for nuclear showdown

by Frederic Happe, AFP

33 mins ago

DANNENBERG, Germany (AFP) – German police and protesters geared up Monday for the final journey of a shipment of 123 tonnes of nuclear waste that drew a wave of angry protests during its much-delayed trip from France.

Around 1,500 demonstrators, including farmers with tractors, blocked roads as authorities loaded the cargo on lorries for the 20-kilometre (12-mile) trip to a storage facility in Gorleben, northern Germany.

By evening, seven of the 11 containers had been transferred from the train. Authorities said they hoped to have the operation completed by around midnight (2300 GMT).

5 German police remove nuclear waste train protesters

AFP

Mon Nov 8, 3:51 am ET

DANNENBERG, Germany (AFP) – German police said Monday they had dispersed activists who were blocking a train carrying nuclear waste from France to a storage facility in Germany.

The operation to remove protestors blocking the rail line leading to the nuclear storage facility lasted throughout the night, police said.

“The evacuation is completed, there is nobody left on the tracks,” a police spokeswoman told AFP.

6 Sniffer ‘hero rats’ saving lives in minefields and labs

by Otto Bakano, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 12:24 pm ET

MOROGORO, Tanzania (AFP) – A baby rat in a tiny red and black harness twitches its pointed nose incessantly, probing a grassy field where it is being trained by a pioneering Belgian NGO to smell out deadly landmines.

Other rats trained under the same scheme have already helped clear large swathes of land in neighbouring mine-infested Mozambique.

Babette, the two-month-old baby, walks unsteadily across the weedy patch followed by two trainers rolling a bar that teaches her to go back and forth across the patch in straight lines.

7 Obama backs India’s drive for UN power

by Stephen Collinson, AFP

1 hr 50 mins ago

NEW DELHI (AFP) – US President Barack Obama Monday backed India’s quest for a permanent UN Security Council seat, inviting the world’s largest democracy to take its “rightful” place at the summit of global power.

In a symbolic climax of his three-day visit to a nation he hailed as an “indispensable” US partner, Obama delivered the foreign policy victory to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in a landmark address to the Indian parliament.

But at the same time he warned that with growing power came increased responsibility, as he pointedly criticised India for failing to condemn human rights abuses in neighbouring Myanmar.

8 Guinea votes in historic presidential run-off

by Laurence Boutreux, AFP

Sun Nov 7, 5:51 pm ET

CONAKRY (AFP) – Coup-weary Guineans voted Sunday for the country’s first freely elected leader in a run-off presidential poll which ran peacefully despite a campaign marred by ethnic violence between rival camps.

Polling stations closed as expected at 1800 GMT, with no serious incident reported throughout the day as voters took part in the mineral-rich country’s first democratic election since independence from France in 1958.

“There was a strong mobilisation in all regions, popular interest and extraordinary discipline,” said Aziz Diop, executive secretary of the National Council of Guinean Civil Society Organisations. It had 964 observers spread across the country.

9 Vettel wins Brazilian Grand Prix, Abu Dhabi to decide title

by Gordon Howard, AFP

Sun Nov 7, 1:50 pm ET

SAO PAULO (AFP) – German Sebastian Vettel kept alive his challenge for the Formula One drivers’ world championship on Sunday when he led his Red Bull team-mate and title rival Australian Mark Webber home in the Brazilian Grand Prix.

Their one-two triumph confirmed the Red Bull team as the 2010 constructors’ champions, but left the drivers’ title race wide open with both drivers still fighting to take the crown from leading Ferrari driver two-times champion Spaniard Fernando Alonso.

Alonso finished a steady third for Ferrari ahead of the 2008 champion Briton Lewis Hamilton, who was fourth ahead of last year’s champion and McLaren team-mate Jenson Button.

10 Pope calls cardinals to Rome for abuse talks

by Dario Thuburn, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 12:05 pm ET

VATICAN CITY (AFP) – Pope Benedict XVI has invited all the cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church for unprecedented talks next week on cases of sexual abuse by clergy — a move greeted with scepticism by activists.

“The pope has invited the members of the college of cardinals… to a day of reflection and prayer,” the Vatican said in a statement on Monday.

“The Church’s response to sexual abuse cases” will be one of the themes of the meeting in the Vatican, formally known as a consistory, it added.

11 Iraq leaders fail to resolve political deadlock

by Abdul Hamid Zebari, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 10:42 am ET

ARBIL, Iraq (AFP) – Iraq’s political rivals met to discuss a proposed new power-sharing accord on Monday but ended a first day of talks without a deal as the Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish blocs stuck to their demands.

While the leaders said talks would continue in Baghdad on Tuesday and Wednesday, twin bombings in the Shiite holy cities of Karbala and Najaf killed at least 18 people and wounded 58, mostly Iranian pilgrims.

The meeting in the northern city of Arbil attended by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and his chief rival, former premier Iyad Allawi, followed an agreement on Saturday between the main Shiite bloc and a Kurdish coalition.

12 Iraqi rivals in bid to end political deadlock

by Abdul Hamid Zebari, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 6:44 am ET

ARBIL, Iraq (AFP) – Iraq’s political rivals are meeting in Arbil following a power-sharing deal in which the Shiite Nuri al-Maliki remains premier but which sees the main Sunni-backed bloc being squeezed into foregoing its demands for the presidency.

The meeting in the northern city, attended by Maliki and his rival-in-chief former premier Iyad Allawi, follows an agreement on Saturday between the main Shiite bloc and a Kurdish coalition.

Support of Allawi’s Iraqiya party, the other main player in a saga that has dragged on since inconclusive elections in March, hinges on whether it insists on the presidency or accepts the post of parliament speaker on offer.

13 Pakistan investigate missing wicket-keeper Haider

by Shahid Hashmi, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 9:15 am ET

DUBAI (AFP) – Pakistan cricket authorities said they will investigate the case of wicket-keeper Zulqarnain Haider, who left the team’s hotel in Dubai and did not come to the ground for Monday’s One-Day International against South Africa.

“On Monday morning Haider left the team hotel without informing any member of the team and the management. Haider was in possession of his passport and there are indications that he has left for London,” a Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) release said.

PCB release said they had informed the Dubai Police about Haider’s disappearance.

14 Qantas extends A380 groundings over oil leaks

by Talek Harris, AFP

Mon Nov 8, 8:14 am ET

SYDNEY (AFP) – Qantas extended the grounding of its Airbus A380 superjumbos for at least three more days on Monday after finding oil leaks in some engines, heightening safety fears after two mid-air blow-outs last week.

However Singapore Airlines said Monday its inspections of its 11 A380 superjumbos had found no problems with their Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines, as it continues flying the planes.

In Sydney, Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said rigorous testing had uncovered the anomalies on the Rolls-Royce engines on three separate aircraft, pushing back the return to action of the long-haul planes by 72 hours.

15 World Bank chief calls for gold to anchor forex

AFP

Mon Nov 8, 6:01 am ET

SINGAPORE (AFP) – World Bank president Robert Zoellick has called on bickering G20 nations to bring gold back into the global monetary system as an anchor to guide currency movements.

Ahead of a Group of 20 summit this week in Seoul, Zoellick said an updated gold standard could help retool the world economy at a time of serious tensions over currencies and US monetary policy.

He said the world needed a new regime to succeed the “Bretton Woods II” system of floating currencies, which has been in place since the fixed-rate currency system linked to gold broke down in 1971.

16 Myanmar army-backed parties set to sweep rare poll

By Aung Hla Tun, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 12:56 pm ET

YANGON (Reuters) – The military will keep its grip on power after Myanmar’s first election in 20 years, backed by parties that on Monday looked set to win a vote marred by fraud and denounced by President Barack Obama as stolen.

Europe and Japan also condemned the conduct of the poll.

Complex rules for Sunday’s election thwarted any chance of a pro-democracy upset as Myanmar ends half a century of direct army rule. State TV said voters “freely and happily” cast ballots, but witness accounts suggested low turn-out and irregularities in the former British colony also known as Burma.

17 BP, firms did not cut safety over money: panel

By Ayesha Rascoe, Reuters

19 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The White House oil spill commission said on Monday it found no evidence to support accusations that the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history happened because BP Plc and its partners cut corners to save money.

“To date we have not seen a single instance where a human being made a conscious decision to favor dollars over safety,” the commission’s Chief Counsel Fred Bartlit said at a meeting exploring the causes of the Gulf of Mexico spill.

Bartlit said the panel agreed with about 90 percent of the findings of BP’s internal investigation of the accident released this summer. BP’s report assigned much of the blame for the accident to its drilling partners.

Bullshit.

18 Rolls says progress made in Qantas A380 engine probe

By Rhys Jones and Michael Smith, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 1:35 pm ET

LONDON/SYDNEY (Reuters) – Rolls-Royce Group Plc moved to contain a crisis of confidence in the safety of its engines on Monday, saying progress was being made in finding out what caused last week’s blowout on a Qantas Airbus A380 flight.

Shares in Rolls reversed losses and rose 3 percent as the group eased fears that the failure of one of the four Trent 900 engines powering the Qantas superjumbo signaled a possible wider problem in its family of Trent engines.

“Rolls-Royce has made progress in understanding the cause of the engine failure on the Trent 900-powered A380 Qantas flight QF32 on 4 November,” the company said in a statement, ruling out any link to a Trent 1000 engine test explosion in August.

19 Obama backs India’s quest for U.N. permanent seat

By Patricia Zengerle and Alistair Scrutton, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 9:06 am ET

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama endorsed on Monday India’s long-held demand for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council, a reflection of the Asian country’s growing global weight and its challenge to rival China.

India says a seat on the council would reflect the importance of the G20 nation as its trillion dollar economy helps spur global growth and its government exerts more and more influence over issues from Doha trade to climate change talks.

“In the years ahead, I look forward to a reformed United Nations Security Council that includes India as a permanent member,” Obama said in a speech to India’s parliament on his first official visit to the world’s largest democracy.

20 Obama returns fire after China slams Fed’s move

By Patricia Zengerle and Krittivas Mukherjee, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 8:59 am ET

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – President Barack Obama defended the Federal Reserve’s policy of printing dollars on Monday after China and Russia stepped up criticism ahead of this week’s Group of 20 meeting.

The G20 summit has been pitched as a chance for leaders of the countries that account for 85 percent of world output to prevent a currency row escalating into a rush to protectionism that could imperil the global recovery.

But there is little sign of consensus.

21 Papandreou rules out early Greek election

By Ingrid Melander and Harry Papachristou, Reuters

Sun Nov 7, 7:38 pm ET

ATHENS (Reuters) – Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out calling a snap parliamentary election on Sunday after winning enough support in local polls to decide he could press ahead with a radical austerity programme.

The threat of an early election had unsettled markets and analysts said his decision had removed short-term uncertainties.

Initial official estimates put Papandreou’s socialist party (PASOK) ahead in seven out of 13 regions, with the center-right New Democracy ahead in the rest, although some races we’re very close and almost all were set to go to a run-off next Sunday.

22 Car bombs kill 15, including Iranians, in Iraq

By Aseel Kami, Reuters

2 hrs 42 mins ago

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Three car bombs killed at least 15 people in Iraq on Monday, including two attacks targeting Iranian pilgrims, as political leaders met to try to break an eight-month deadlock over a new government.

Two of the bombs targeted Iranian pilgrims in Iraq’s holy Shi’ite cities of Kerbala and Najaf, killing at least 10 people, while a third struck a bustling street of shops and restaurants in Iraq’s southern oil hub of Basra.

The deputy head of Basra’s provincial council, Ahmed al-Sulaiti, and an Iraqi army source both put the toll from the Basra explosion at five killed and 42 wounded. The Iraqi army source had initially said 12 people were dead.

23 U.S. QE2 decision not a good one: Eurogroup head

By Jan Strupczewski, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 12:19 pm ET

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The chairman of euro zone finance ministers Jean-Claude Juncker criticized on Monday the U.S. Federal Reserve’s bond purchase plans, noting they might not boost the U.S. economy but push capital into emerging economies.

“I don’t think it is a good decision,” Juncker told a European Parliament hearing.

Leaders of the world’s 20 biggest developed and developing economies, the G20, meet in Korea this week to discuss how to prevent a currency row escalating into a rush to protectionism that could imperil the global recovery. The Fed decision is likely to be discussed.

24 Geithner: Beijing supportive of G20 rebalancing effort

By David Lawder, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 9:41 am ET

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Monday said China is supportive of the Group of 20’s framework for rebalancing the global economy, and he expects broad consensus on it at a leaders’ summit this week.

Geithner, speaking in the Indian capital during a state visit with President Barack Obama, earlier met with Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee in part to discuss the G20 agenda.

“I’m very confident that you’re going to see very strong consensus on this basic framework because it meets the basic tests and it’s better than the alternatives,” Geithner told an audience of Indian business leaders.

25 Myanmar clash a reminder of old, underlying tension

By Robert Birsel, Reuters

Mon Nov 8, 8:26 am ET

BANGKOK (Reuters) – A day after Myanmar held an election meant to usher in peace and stability, clashes erupted between minority rebels and government soldiers, a reminder of divisions that have long bedeviled the country.

Fighting broke out between ethnic minority Karen rebels and government troops in two locations along Myanmar’s eastern border with Thailand, in the town of Myawaddy and in another area about 200 km (124 miles) further south near the Three Pagodas Pass, as votes from Sunday’s election were being counted.

Five Thai villagers were wounded when four rocket-propelled grenades landed on Thai soil near the town of Mae Sot opposite Myawaddy, a Thai official said, as about 12,000 people fled the fighting in one of the main trade gateways along the 1,800-km (1,100-mile) border with Thailand.

26 Panel: Dollars did not trump safety in Gulf spill

By DINA CAPPIELLO and SETH BORENSTEIN, Associated Press

58 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The presidential commission investigating the BP Gulf oil spill challenged claims in Congress that the oil company and others sacrificed safety to cut costs. In preliminary findings issued Monday, the first from an independent panel, investigators supported many of BP’s own conclusions about what led to the disaster.

The panel’s chief investigator, Fred H. Bartlit Jr., announced 13 principal findings, many of which seemed to track with investigations of the blowout, including BP’s. Bartlit said he agreed with “about 90 percent” of the company’s own conclusions.

Under commission procedures, Bartlit presented the findings to the seven-member panel. A report is due with Obama in mid-January.

More Bullshit.

27 Obama boosts India for ‘rightful place in world’

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

1 hr 53 mins ago

NEW DELHI – Deepening America’s stake in Asian power politics, President Barack Obama on Monday endorsed India’s bid to become a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, hoping to elevate the nation of a billion people to “its rightful place in the world” alongside an assertive China.

Obama’s declaration, delivered to the pounding applause of India’s parliament members, spoke to a mission broader than the makeup of one global institution. By spending three packed days in India, announcing trade deals, dismissing job-outsourcing gripes and admonishing India’s rival Pakistan, Obama went all in for an ally whose support he hopes to bank on for years.

“I want every Indian citizen to know: The United States of America will not simply be cheering you on from the sidelines,” Obama said inside the soaring legislative chamber of the capital city. “We will be right there with you, shoulder to shoulder, because we believe in the promise of India.”

28 Bush is back, and eager to help history judge him

By CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press

1 hr 7 mins ago

WASHINGTON – George W. Bush knows that history will shape his legacy more than anything he can say. But that’s not gonna stop a guy from trying.

After two years of near silence, Bush is back.

With his new memoir, “Decision Points,” and a promotion tour, the president who in cockier times could not think of a single mistake he had made, lists many. He counts the years without a post-9/11 attack as his transcendent achievement. He says the economic calamity he handed off to Barack Obama was “one ugly way to end a presidency.”

29 Family health history a powerful, underused tool

By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

1 hr 52 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Make Grandma spill the beans: Uncovering all the diseases that lurk in your family tree can trump costly genetic testing in predicting what illnesses you and your children are likely to face.

It may sound old-fashioned, but a Cleveland Clinic study comparing which method best uncovered an increased risk of cancer helps confirm the value of what’s called a family health history.

All it costs is a little time questioning your relatives, yet good family health trees are rare. A government survey estimated less than a third of families have one – and time-crunched doctors seldom push their patients to remedy that.

30 NFL knows how to do drama

By BARRY WILNER, AP Pro Football Writer

50 mins ago

The NFL knows drama, on and off the field.

During a season played in the shadow of a potential labor stoppage – yes, folks, possibly no pro football in 2011 – the headlines have shifted from the sports sections to the gossip pages and even to the police blotters.

Placed in the spotlight as much for news away from the games as for what they could and would do playing were such big names as Ben Roethlisberger, Brett Favre, Randy Moss and Braylon Edwards.

31 Signs of political progress as Iraqi leaders meet

By YAHYA BARZANJI, Associated Press

Mon Nov 8, 2:13 pm ET

IRBIL, Iraq – Leaders of Iraq’s major political blocs met Monday for the first time since March elections in a new push to break an eight-month deadlock on forming a new government. Car bombs in three Shiite cities killed 21 people in a reminder that insurgents remain determined to destabilize the country.

The 90-minute meeting in the northern town of Irbil was the start of three days of negotiations that could signal the deeply divided political blocs are close to a power-sharing agreement in which Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki would keep his job. However, officials said there are still major obstacles to overcome.

Political blocs that in the past settled their differences in the streets remain deeply suspicious of one another. Al-Maliki’s State of Law coalition won 89 seats compared with 91 for the Sunni-backed alliance headed by former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi in the March 7 election.

32 Qantas CEO: Oil leaks in 3 engines of its A380s

By KRISTEN GELINEAU and SLOBODAN LEKIC, Associated Press

37 mins ago

SYDNEY – The investigation of the engine failure that grounded Qantas’ fleet of superjumbo jets is making progress, manufacturer Rolls-Royce said Monday, while the airline announced that tests uncovered worrying oil leaks in the engines of three more Airbus 380s.

Australia’s national carrier said its fleet of six double-decker planes would stay grounded for another 72 hours.

Airbus and other airlines said they would take no action until the investigation is completed, and that it was premature to contemplate any change from the Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines mounted on many of the A380s – the world’s largest passenger jet.

33 MSNBC says Olbermann will be back on air Tuesday

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer

Mon Nov 8, 6:30 am ET

NEW YORK – MSNBC says Keith Olbermann will be back on the air Tuesday, ending his suspension for violating NBC’s rules against making political donations after two shows.

MSNBC’s chief executive Phil Griffin said late Sunday that after several days of deliberation, he had determined that two days off the air was “an appropriate punishment for his violation of our policy.”

The left-leaning cable network’s most popular personality acknowledged donating $2,400 apiece to the campaigns of Kentucky Senate candidate Jack Conway and Arizona Reps. Raul Grijalva and Gabrielle Giffords. NBC News prohibits its employees from making political donations unless an exception is granted in advance by the network news president. In this case, Olbermann’s bosses didn’t know about them until being informed by a reporter.

34 Broadband usage growing even as gaps persist

By JOELLE TESSLER, AP Technology Writer

Mon Nov 8, 1:54 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The U.S. still faces a significant gap in residential broadband use that breaks down along incomes, education levels and other socio-economic factors, even as subscriptions among American households overall grew sevenfold from 2001 to 2009.

What’s more, even when controlling for key socio-economic characteristics, the U.S. continues to confront a racial gap in residential broadband use, with non-Hispanic white Americans and Asian-Americans more likely to go online using a high-speed connection than African-Americans and Hispanics.

Those are some of the key conclusions of a new analysis of Census data released Monday by the Commerce Department.

35 Murkowski on cusp of win; how will she legislate?

By BECKY BOHRER, Associated Press

Mon Nov 8, 6:30 am ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski is on the cusp of vindication after waging a high stakes – and long shot – write-in campaign to keep her job.

Initial returns show write-in ballots holding a 13,439-vote edge over GOP nominee Joe Miller, and though it’s not clear how many of those are for her or will be counted as valid, she’s confident enough in her winning to tell supporters that they’d “made history.” The write-in count starts Wednesday in Juneau.

Murkowski needed broad-based support – from fellow Republicans, Democrats, independents – to be successful in what was a three-way race (Democrat Scott McAdams has conceded). And while a win would return her to Washington, to the colleagues and party leaders who turned their backs on her after her humiliating primary loss to the Sarah Palin-backed Miller, it also raises questions about how she would legislate.

36 Gates, Obama urge repeal of military’s gay ban

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

Sun Nov 7, 10:22 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Robert Gates is encouraging Congress to act before year’s end to repeal the ban on gays serving openly in the military. It’s a position shared by his boss, the president.

But his new Marine commandant thinks otherwise and the Senate has not yet taken action, setting up yet another hurdle for gay activists who see their window quickly closing. After Tuesday’s elections that saw Republicans chip away at Democrats’ majority in the Senate and wrest the House from their control, their hopes for ending the 17-year-old law have dimmed.

“I would like to see the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’ but I’m not sure what the prospects for that are and we’ll just have to see,” Gates told reporters traveling with him to Australia this weekend.

37 Lawyers say proving egg-related lawsuits difficult

By MICHAEL J. CRUMB, Associated Press

Mon Nov 8, 3:14 am ET

DES MOINES, Iowa – Thousands of people likely were sickened by salmonella-contaminated eggs from two Iowa companies last summer, but lawyers said far fewer have the proof needed for a successful lawsuit and most cases filed will be settled out of court.

So far, attorneys in Seattle, Houston, Chicago and Minneapolis have filed at least 10 cases related to recalls by Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms of Iowa. The companies recalled 550 million eggs in August after a salmonella outbreak was traced to their farms.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention linked at least 1,600 illness to the eggs, and CDC spokeswoman Lola Russell said for every case reported there may be up to 30 more.

38 Republicans in charge take aim at health overhaul

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

Sun Nov 7, 10:21 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Resurgent Republicans rallied Sunday behind an agenda based on unwavering opposition to the Obama White House and federal spending, laying the groundwork for gridlock until their 2012 goal: a new president, a “better Senate” and ridding the country of that demonized health care law.

Republicans said they were willing to work with President Barack Obama but also signaled it would be only on their terms. With control of the White House and the Senate, Democrats showed no sign they were conceding the final two years of Obama’s term to Republican lawmakers who claimed the majority in the House.

“I think this week’s election was a historic rejection of American liberalism and the Obama and Pelosi agenda,” said Rep. Mike Pence, the Indiana Republican who is stepping down from his post in GOP leadership. “The American people are tired of the borrowing, the spending, the bailouts, the takeovers.”

39 15,000 refugees flee Myanmar post-vote fighting

Associated Press

Mon Nov 8, 1:23 pm ET

YANGON, Myanmar – Mothers carrying babies and grown men hoisting elders on their backs fled Myanmar with 15,000 countrymen Monday as ethnic rebels clashed with government troops a day after an election widely considered a sham to cement military power.

Fighting raged at key points on the Thai border, wounding at least 10 people on both sides of the frontier as stray shots fell into Thai territory.

The clashes underlined Myanmar’s vulnerability to unrest even as it passes through a key stage of the ruling junta’s self-proclaimed “road map to democracy.” The country has been ruled by the military near-continuously since 1962, and rebellions by its ethnic minorities predate its independence from Britain in 1948.

40 Mo. corrects record on 1923 college-town lynching

By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER, Associated Press

36 mins ago

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Hundreds looked on as an angry mob dragged a black University of Missouri janitor from his jail cell in April 1923, publicly lynching him before he could stand trial on charges of raping a white professor’s 14-year-old daughter.

Historians say the instigators included some of Columbia’s most prominent citizens. The crowd that watched James T. Scott hang was filled with laughing and cheering students from the first public university west of the Mississippi River.

Eighty-seven years later, civic leaders have come together to confront an ugly episode in Columbia and correct the record on the death of Scott, who insisted the rape allegation was a case of mistaken identity.

41 Hearing set in Afghanistan ‘thrill kill’ case

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press

1 hr 57 mins ago

SEATTLE – The soldiers who reported to Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs paint a monstrous picture: He killed Afghan civilians for sport, they say, and encouraged others to do the same. He collected fingers of the dead, plotted against his own men and found it amusing to slaughter animals with his assault rifle.

Gibbs will get a chance to contest that portrait Tuesday during a military hearing at Joint Base Lewis-McChord south of Seattle on charges that include murder, dereliction of duty and trying to impede an investigation.

The Article 32 hearing is similar to a civilian grand jury proceeding, with a military judge looking into charges to see if there is enough evidence to send the case to a court martial.

42 Technology a blessing, a curse for remote island

By MARTHA IRVINE, AP National Writer

Mon Nov 8, 12:14 pm ET

BEAVER ISLAND, Mich. – Muggs Bass doesn’t own a computer. She’s pretty much dead set against e-mail. Anyone who calls her home on Michigan’s remote Beaver Island should be prepared for a busy signal, if she’s on her land-line phone. She has no cell.

“When you don’t have it, you don’t miss it. That’s what I say,” says the spunky 70-year-old grandmother, who’s as comfortable telling jokes at the local pub as she is attending Mass each morning.

Technology isn’t really her thing. So, it’s a small miracle when Bass drives, once a month, to her island’s rural health center to sit down in front of a wide-screen television. There, she and a handful of other islanders connect by video conference with a similar group in Charlevoix, Mich., a two-hour ferry ride to the south and east.

43 APNewsBreak: Georgia details nuclear smuggling

By DESMOND BUTLER, Associated Press

Mon Nov 8, 3:39 am ET

WASHINGTON – Early one morning in March, two Armenians slipped aboard a train in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, unaware they were being watched. They removed a pack of Marlboro Reds hidden in a maintenance box between two cars. Inside the pack, Georgian authorities say, was nuclear bomb grade uranium, encased in lead.

Before long, Georgian officials seized the uranium and arrested the men, breaking up a ring they say was willing to sell material for nuclear weapons to any bidder. International officials see the operation as one victory in the effort to prevent nuclear weapons from falling into terrorists’ hands.

The seizure was reported in April, but few details were disclosed. The Associated Press now has obtained more information from Georgian officials about an operation involving international smugglers and undercover agents. Some elements were confirmed by U.N. and U.S. officials.

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  1. that’s just a little over 2 weeks to Thanksgiving. Gobble-Gobble.

  2. Tweet on the decoupling of the tax cut extension

    Bunch of Dems telling me temp 3-year extension is most likely outcome. Why? Only 55 votes at best in senate for decouple

    But hey, we’ll get ‘progressive legislation’ passed in the 112th Congress with only 53 Dems, right?

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