Prime Time

Faux says they have Phillies/Giants, but that ain’t true.  No more Baseball ’til Wednesday.  There is Throwball, a grudge match if you like, the Favres @ Green Bay.  New Amazing Race.

Later-

Adult Swim– new Childrens Hospital and Metalocalypse.  New Venture Brothers, The Silent Partners (last week’s episode, Assisted Suicide summary).

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

Evening Edition

From Yahoo News Top Stories

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Epidemic fears grow as cholera hits Haiti capital

by Clarens Renois, AFP

2 hrs 42 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – Haiti’s cholera crisis deepened Sunday as the first cases in the capital raised fears the epidemic could infiltrate Port-au-Prince’s squalid tent cities and spawn a major health disaster.

More than 250 people have died and thousands have been infected, but those numbers could soar if cholera reached the camps where hundreds of thousands live in awful conditions after being displaced by January’s earthquake.

Cholera is primarily passed on through contaminated water or food and could spread like wildfire through the unsanitary tent cities, where displaced families bathe outside, do laundry and share meals in close quarters.

2 Haiti cholera epidemic kills 220: official

by Clarens Renois, AFP

Sat Oct 23, 7:35 pm ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – A sudden cholera epidemic has killed 220 people, officials said Saturday as Haiti scrambled to contain a wider outbreak 10 months after an earthquake devastated the Caribbean nation.

A few days after the first cases appeared in the north, the outbreak looked to be moving closer to the capital, Port-au-Prince, which is heavily populated by homeless residents in tent cities where sanitation is poor.

Regional health director Dieula Louissaint said 12 more people died in the Artibonite department in northern Haiti, boosting that area’s toll 206, while 14 people died in central Haiti closer to the capital.

3 Cholera reaches Haiti capital

by Clarens Renois, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 3:59 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) – An epidemic of cholera that has ravaged northern and central Haiti killing 220 people has reached the country’s densely populated capital, according to UN health officials.

The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said in a statement late Saturday that the Haitian Public Health Ministry’s “national reference laboratory today confirmed cases in Ouest Department, including Port-au-Prince.”

No specific number of cholera cases in Port-au-Prince was given.

4 US under pressure on WikiLeaks allegations

by Robin Millard, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 12:06 pm ET

LONDON (AFP) – Washington on Sunday came under increasing pressure to investigate allegations in the leaked Iraq war documents published by WikiLeaks, which Britain’s deputy premier called “shocking”.

Governments and human rights organisations alike put the focus on answers to the allegations made against US, allied and Iraqi troops as the whistleblowing website released 400,000 classified US military documents.

The flood of material from 2004 to 2009 offers a grim snapshot of the conflict, especially of the abuse of Iraqi civilians by Iraqi security forces.

5 WikiLeaks defends leak of Iraq documents as exposing ‘truth’

by Robin Millard, AFP

Sat Oct 23, 5:28 pm ET

LONDON (AFP) – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Saturday defended the unauthorised release of 400,000 classified US military documents on the war in Iraq, saying they revealed the “truth” about the conflict.

The mass of documents from 2004 to 2009 offer a grim snapshot of the conflict, especially of the abuse of Iraqi civilians by Iraqi security forces.

“This disclosure is about the truth,” Assange told a news conference in London after the whistleblowing website published the logs on the Internet.

6 More high-level Taliban interested in talks: Holbrooke

by Jim Mannion, AFP

16 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – High-level Taliban leaders are showing interest in talks with the US-backed government in Kabul in increasing numbers, as pressure mounts from an intensifying NATO military campaign, a special US envoy said Sunday.

But Richard Holbrooke, the administration’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, cautioned that the feelers so far add up to “contacts and discussions” rather than peace negotiations to end a war now in its tenth year.

“What we’ve got here is an increasing number of Taliban at high levels saying, ‘Hey, we want to talk,'” he said. “We think this is a result in large part of the growing pressure they’re under from General (David) Petraeus and the ISAF command.”

7 Sarkozy hopes end in sight for French pension protest

by Dave Clark, AFP

34 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – President Nicolas Sarkozy hopes to put his titanic battle to raise France’s retirement age behind him this week by signing the measure into law despite a new wave of strikes, rallies and fuel blockades.

With thousands of families heading off for school half-term holidays, and lawmakers expected to give the pensions bill their formal final approval on Wednesday, Sarkozy hopes the mass protest movement will die away.

But, with Sunday newspaper opinion polls showing the embattled president more unpopular than ever, trade unions and student bodies have declared at least two more days of action, and strikes continue in the key fuel sector.

8 Sarkozy eyes end to French pension protest

by Dave Clark, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 9:38 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – President Nicolas Sarkozy hopes to put his titanic battle to raise France’s retirement age behind him this week by signing the measure into law despite a new wave of strikes, rallies and fuel blockades.

With thousands of families heading off for school half-term holidays, and lawmakers exected to give the pensions bill their formal final approval on Wednesday, Sarkozy hopes the mass protest movement will die away.

But, with Sunday newspaper opinion polls showing the embattled president more unpopular than ever, trade unions and student bodies have declared at least two more days of action, and strikes continue in the key fuel sector.

9 Geithner in China for talks on economic ties

by Robert Saiget, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 12:43 pm ET

BEIJING (AFP) – US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner held talks with his Chinese counterpart Sunday on economic ties amid tensions over China’s currency, which Washington believes is undervalued.

Geithner met Vice Premier Wang Qishan in the eastern coastal city of Qingdao a day after a Group of 20 finance ministers meeting wrapped up in South Korea.

Washington has long argued that China’s currency, the yuan, is being kept grossly undervalued in order to help Chinese exporters.

10 EU leaders wary of plan to re-open Lisbon treaty

by Roddy Thomson, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 12:10 pm ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – A fractious European Union summit looms this week as the bloc heads for a hard hurdle — a fresh and risky rewrite of its treaty demanded by France and Germany to shore up the euro.

Leaders of the 27-nation bloc face the challenge at a two-day summit starting Thursday to turn the lessons of the 2008-2009 economic crisis into hard and fast rules tightening debt and deficit discipline.

But a controversial Franco-German proposal issued days ago, denounced by many as a “diktat”, calls for the rules to be enshrined in a new draft of the hard-fought Lisbon treaty, which came into force only last December after eight years of tough talks and failed referenda.

11 Alonso wins in Korea, takes F1 championship lead

by Gordon Howard, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 9:13 am ET

YEONGAM, South Korea (AFP) – Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso won a chaotic, rain-hit Korean Grand Prix on Sunday to seize the lead in the Formula One world championship as his Red Bull rivals crashed out.

The 29-year-old Spaniard took his third victory in the past four races after pole-sitter and race leader Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull Racing was forced to retire with a blown engine on lap 46 of the 55-lap race.

The inaugural Grand Prix in South Korea finished in near-darkness after a rain-delayed start and a red flag after just three laps because of the soaked track, with the race taking almost three hours to complete.

12 Afghanistan offers possible loophole for security firms

by Lynne O’Donnell, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 11:54 am ET

KABUL (AFP) – Afghan President Hamid Karzai Sunday signalled his willingness to backtrack on a blanket ban on all private security firms, asking the foreign community for a list of projects needing protection.

His order that all private security companies be disbanded by the end of the year has caused widespread concern that aid and development projects would be unable to continue without adequate protection in the war-torn country.

The Afghan government had already partially rolled back the ban, allowing private protection to continue for diplomats and foreign military bases.

13 Holocaust survivors hail German ministry expose

AFP

Sun Oct 24, 10:57 am ET

BERLIN (AFP) – Holocaust survivors on Sunday welcomed an official report exposing active complicity by Nazi Germany’s foreign ministry in the systematic slaughter of Jews during World War II.

One of four historians asked to examine the ministry’s role in the Holocaust, Eckart Conze, said ahead of the report’s publication this week that it was much more involved in the Nazis’ killing machine than previously thought.

The American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants hailed the report as shedding light on a chapter that had remained shrouded in secrecy more than six decades on.

14 Deadlock in UN biodiversity talks in Nagoya

by Karl Malakunas, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 9:04 am ET

NAGOYA, Japan (AFP) – UN talks aimed at brokering a deal to protect the world’s diminishing natural resources have made little progress, green groups said ahead of the summit’s crucial second phase starting Monday.

The 12 days of negotiations in the central Japanese city of Nagoya are aimed at securing agreement on how to stop the rapid loss of the world’s plant and animal species, as well as their habitats.

But after the first week environment groups said the conference was becoming bogged down in the same kind of acrimony between developed and developing nations that have plagued UN climate change negotiations.

15 Philippines, Norway vaults saving rice diversity

by Cecil Morella, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 5:12 am ET

LOS BANOS, Philippines (AFP) – In a greenhouse near the Philippine capital, botanists grow strange grasses that bear tiny seeds which are promptly flown to a doomsday vault under Norway’s Arctic permafrost.

The Norway deliveries are just the newest facet of a decades-old effort by more than 100 countries to save the world’s many varieties of rice which might otherwise be lost.

A fire-proof, quake-proof, typhoon-proof gene bank set up by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines in 1962 now holds 115,000 varieties of one of the world’s most important grains.

16 Giants beat Phillies to reach baseball World Series

AFP

Sun Oct 24, 2:11 am ET

PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (AFP) – The San Francisco Giants beat Philadelphia 3-2 to win the National League pennant and reach the World Series for the first time since 2002.

Juan Uribe’s two-out solo home run off Ryan Madson in the eighth inning broke a 2-2 tie and San Francisco held on for the victory that gave them a four-games-to-two triumph in the best-of-seven National League Championship Series.

San Francisco will host the Texas Rangers in game one of the World Series on Wednesday.

17 Russian tycoon to launch fourth British newspaper

by Marie-Pierre Ferey, AFP

Sun Oct 24, 1:17 am ET

LONDON (AFP) – Russian tycoon Alexander Lebedev, who owns three British newspapers, will launch the country’s first quality daily in 25 years this week in a risky bid to grab more of the ailing British press market.

The concise new paper, called “i”, will be available from Tuesday for just 20 pence (31 US cents, 23 euro cents) — a fifth of the price of British broadsheets such as The Times.

It is “specifically targeted at readers and lapsed readers of quality newspapers,” according to Lebedev’s main national daily, The Independent, which will share editorial staff with the new publication.

18 Haiti cholera toll tops 250, but seen stabilizing

By Joseph Guyler Delva, Reuters

2 hrs 59 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – A cholera epidemic in Haiti has killed more than 250 people, the government said on Sunday, but it added the outbreak which has sickened more than 3,000 may be stabilizing with fewer deaths and new cases reported over the last 24 hours.

“We have registered a diminishing in numbers of deaths and of hospitalized people in the most critical areas … The tendency is that it is stabilizing, without being able to say that we have reached a peak,” Gabriel Thimote, director-general of Haiti’s Health Department, told a news conference.

The accumulated deaths since the cholera outbreak began around a week ago in the earthquake-ravaged Caribbean nation stood at 253, while total cases were 3,015, mostly in central rural regions straddling the Artibonite river.

19 Democrat fights for political life in Bush country

By Ed Stoddard, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 11:57 am ET

CRAWFORD, Texas (Reuters) – Deep in the red heart of Texas, a Democrat is fighting for his political life.

Chet Edwards is a 10-term congressman in a district that is conservative to the core and includes Crawford, home to the ranch of former Republican President George W. Bush.

A centrist who supports abortion rights, Edwards has long defied the odds in a district the Cook Partisan Voting Index ranks as the most Republican currently held by a Democrat.

20 Canadian at Guantanamo to announce plea decision

By Jane Sutton, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 10:15 am ET

GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE, Cuba (Reuters) – Canadian captive Omar Khadr strolled across the sun-baked yard in one of the communal camps at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. detention center in Cuba, clearly aware that journalists were staring at him through the fence.

But under the strict “gawk but don’t talk” rule that governs media and prisoner encounters at Guantanamo, any member of the media who tries to talk to a prisoner can be expelled from the U.S. military base.

So none of the sweaty journalists shouted out the question on all their minds — “Omar, are you going to take the deal?”

21 Afghan gameshow brings relief, and a chance of cash

By Patrick Markey, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 1:11 pm ET

KABUL (Reuters) – His country might be at war, but Afghan gameshow host Rahim Mirzad reckons his daily helping of fun and laughs is just the relief his audience needs — and the chance to become a millionaire doesn’t hurt.

In a rundown warehouse studio on Kabul’s dusty outskirts, Mirzad presents the “Treasure” — “Ganjina” in Afghanistan’s Dari language — gameshow, where prize money of up to one million afghanis ($21,000) is on offer, a fortune in one of the world’s poorest countries.

“In Afghanistan after 30 years of war, we had no gameshows, no big television programs like this. This is fun,” said Mirzad, a former journalist. “When they see how emotional people are and how they react, it lets them forget everything.”

22 Foreign troop deaths in Afghanistan near 600 for 2010

By Jonathon Burch, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 10:37 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Total foreign military deaths in Afghanistan in 2010 neared 600 with the death of another service member on Sunday, an unwelcome figure that will likely weigh heavily on Western leaders amid declining support for the war.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said on Sunday one of its service members was killed by a homemade bomb in the south of country, bringing the total to 599 since the beginning of 2010.

No other details of the incident were available. Crude but effective homemade bombs account for well over half of the casualties suffered by foreign troops in Afghanistan this year.

23 G20 inks pact to avert trade war

By David Lawder and Yoo Choonsik, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 1:45 am ET

GYEONGJU, South Korea (Reuters) – The Group of 20 major economies agreed on Saturday to shun competitive currency devaluations but stopped short of setting targets to reduce trade imbalances that are clouding global growth prospects.

At a meeting in South Korea, G20 finance ministers recognized the quickening shift in economic power away from Western industrial nations by striking a surprise deal to give emerging nations a bigger voice in the International Monetary Fund.

A closing communique contained no major policy initiative after a U.S. proposal to limit current account imbalances to 4 percent of gross domestic product, a measure aimed squarely at shrinking China’s surplus, failed to win broad enough backing.

24 Obama dazzles Democratic crowds but is it enough?

By Caren Bohan, Reuters

Sat Oct 23, 11:50 pm ET

MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, dashing through the U.S. West to campaign for endangered Democrats, proved he still has plenty of star power but it’s far from clear that’s enough to rescue his party from an election disaster.

Wrapping up a jam-packed trip with 10 days to go before the November 2 congressional elections, Obama revved up a crowd of more than 11,000 in Minneapolis on Saturday by touting his achievements of healthcare and financial reform legislation.

He warned that if the election results in a return to power for Republicans in the U.S. Congress, they will try to repeal those landmark laws.

25 WikiLeaks says logs show 15,000 more Iraq deaths

By Adrian Croft, Reuters

Sun Oct 24, 2:17 am ET

LONDON (Reuters) – WikiLeaks said on Saturday its release of nearly 400,000 classified U.S. files on the Iraq war showed 15,000 more Iraqi civilians died than previously thought.

Uploaded on the WikiLeaks’ website, the files detailed gruesome cases of prisoner abuse by Iraqi forces that the U.S. military knew about but did not seem to investigate.

In Baghdad, Iraqi officials responded to WikiLeaks’ move by pledging to probe any allegations that police or soldiers had committed crimes and any culprits would be prosecuted.

26 Gay voters angry at Democrats could sway election

By TAMMY WEBBER, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 30 mins ago

CHICAGO – Kate Coatar is seriously considering voting for Green Party candidates instead of Democrats, whom she normally supports. James Wyatt won’t cast a ballot at all because he no longer trusts anyone to fight for causes important to him.

If Democratic candidates are counting on long-standing support from gay voters to help stave off big losses on Nov. 2, they could be in for a surprise.

Across the country, activists say gay voters are angry – at the lack of progress on issues from eliminating employment discrimination to uncertainty over serving in the military to the economy – and some are choosing to sit out this election or look for other candidates.

27 Obama likely to focus on deficit in next 2 years

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

33 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Preparing for political life after a bruising election, President Barack Obama will put greater emphasis on fiscal discipline, a nod to a nation sick of spending and to a Congress poised to become more Republican, conservative and determined to stop him.

He is already giving clues about how he will govern in the last two years of his term.

Obama will try to make gains on deficit reduction, education and energy. He will enforce his health care and financial overhauls and try to protect them from repeal should Republicans win control of Capitol Hill. He will use executive authority when blocked by Congress, and steel for scrutiny and investigations if the GOP is in charge.

28 Governors’ races offer some of sharpest skirmishes

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 22 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Some of the sharpest bare-knuckle skirmishes this election season are the races for governor, especially in states shouldering the highest unemployment rates and largest tax increases.

Many also are important in presidential elections, and both parties are pouring millions of dollars into statehouse races in the closing days of the campaign.

There are now 26 Democratic governors and 24 Republicans. A record 37 governorships are up for grabs on Nov. 2; more than half are contests where an incumbent isn’t running.

29 Employers looking at health insurance options

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 47 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The new health care law wasn’t supposed to undercut employer plans that have provided most people in the U.S. with coverage for generations.

But last week a leading manufacturer told workers their costs will jump partly because of the law. Also, a Democratic governor laid out a scheme for employers to get out of health care by shifting workers into taxpayer-subsidized insurance markets that open in 2014.

While it’s too early to proclaim the demise of job-based coverage, corporate number crunchers are looking at options that could lead to major changes.

30 Auburn up to 3 behind Oregon, Boise St in AP poll

By RALPH D. RUSSO, AP College Football Writer

2 hrs 45 mins ago

NEW YORK – The other team from Alabama surged toward the top of the AP poll while another set of Tigers has emerged as the Big 12’s unexpected national title contender.

Auburn jumped two spots to No. 3 behind top-ranked Oregon and Boise State in the media poll Sunday, and Missouri vaulted 11 spots to No. 7.

Oregon, which moved to No. 1 for the first time last week and followed up with a 60-13 victory against UCLA on Thursday night, received 44 first-place votes. Boise State had 11, Auburn received three and No. 4 TCU received two.

31 Karzai seeks list of aid projects needing security

By KATHARINE HOURELD, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 24, 11:21 am ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – The Afghan president asked Sunday for a list of national aid projects that need protection by private security guards, potentially signaling his wish to reach a compromise over the status of security companies in Afghanistan and safeguard foreign aid projects worth billions of dollars.

President Hamid Karzai spent the day meeting with his ministers and top-level foreign diplomats as they tried to hammer out a compromise between his aim of disbanding private security companies by the end of the year and protecting foreign-funded aid projects threatened by insurgent attacks.

“The list of the big projects and their security needs should be given to the Afghan government and the Afghan government will assess and make a decision,” Karzai said in a statement. “These talks will continue.”

32 Giants eliminate Phillies to win NL pennant

By ROB MAADDI, AP Sports Writer

Sun Oct 24, 8:04 am ET

PHILADELPHIA – No one can say the San Francisco Giants took the easy path to the World Series. They had to wait until the final day to clinch a playoff spot, then had to wait through a tense final out in Philadelphia.

Brian Wilson, Cody Ross and the Giants can exhale. Now they’ll try to bring the first crown to San Francisco.

Juan Uribe hit a tiebreaking homer off Ryan Madson with two outs in the eighth inning and the Giants held off the Phillies 3-2 Saturday night in Game 6 of the NL championship series.

33 Iraqi court orders parliament back to work

By LARA JAKES, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 32 mins ago

BAGHDAD – Iraq’s highest court on Sunday ordered parliament back to work after a virtual seven-month recess, intensifying pressure to break the political stalemate that has held up formation of a new government.

The 325 lawmakers met only once since they were elected on March 7 for a session that lasted 20 minutes and consisted of a reading from Islam’s holy book, the Quran, the playing of the national anthem and swearing in new members.

Under the constitution, parliament was required to meet within 15 days of final court approval of election results, which came on June 1. Lawmakers met on June 14 and should have chosen a parliament speaker during their first session and then the president within 30 days. But these appointments had to be put off because they are part of the negotiations between major political blocs over the rest of the new leadership – including a prime minister and top Cabinet officials.

34 Leaked Iraq war files portray weak, divided nation

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

Sun Oct 24, 5:49 am ET

WASHINGTON – The enormous cache of secret war logs disclosed by the WikiLeaks website paints a picture of an Iraq burdened by persistent sectarian tension and meddling neighbors, suggesting that the country could drift into chaos once U.S. forces leave.

The reports, covering early 2004 to Jan. 1, 2010, help explain why Iraq’s struggle to create a unified, independent state continues, despite a dramatic reduction in violence. They appear to support arguments by some experts that the U.S. should keep thousands of troops there beyond their scheduled departure in 2011, to buy more time for Iraq to become stable.

The threats described in the leaked documents come from outside, including next-door Iran, as well as inside, in the form of sectarian, political and even family rivalries that predate the 2003 American-led invasion and endure today.

35 Some Africans, poor no more, hit by new diseases

By DONNA BRYSON, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 24, 12:00 am ET

JOHANNESBURG – The medical experts gathered from around Africa were here to talk about a continentwide epidemic, but it wasn’t AIDS or malaria – it was diabetes, and the bad habits that often bring it on.

A growing urban middle class is defying the image of Africa as poor, underfed and under-medicated. And with the comforts of middle class life, afflictions familiar in the West are making inroads here too – obesity, diabetes, lung cancer, strokes, heart disease.

A continent that traditionally traveled on foot or by bicycle now increasingly rides cars and buses. More time is spent at desks. Elevators are replacing stairs. White-collar Africans are discovering the gym.

36 Alonso wins in Korea, takes F1 title lead

By CHRIS LINES, AP Auto Racing Writer

2 hrs 3 mins ago

YEONGAM, South Korea – Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso overcame treacherous conditions to win Sunday’s inaugural Formula One Korean Grand Prix, surging to the top of the drivers’ championship standings with just two races left, and within sight of his third title.

It may have been wet and dark when the race finally ended, but that did not dampen the delight in the Ferrari garage, which served as a stark contrast to the misery at Red Bull.

Sitting first and second in the standings entering the race, and qualifying first and second, everything looked set for the Red Bull drivers to stake their claim to the championship, but neither Mark Webber nor Sebastian Vettel finished the race.

37 Tightening Senate races give pause to upbeat GOP

By CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press Writer

Sat Oct 23, 9:42 pm ET

BLUE BELL, Pa. – To understand Republicans’ nagging fear that the Nov. 2 elections might not be quite the massive triumph that many have predicted, check out Pennsylvania’s perplexing Senate race.

Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak has trailed Republican Pat Toomey for months, and a GOP victory always has seemed likely, given that it’s a Republican-trending year in this perpetually contested state. Yet recent polls suggest Sestak has closed the gap, and Republican leaders are imploring supporters not to panic even as they ask themselves: What’s going on?

The Sestak-Toomey race mirrors other Senate contests that are making this one of the most intriguing and unpredictable midterm elections in years.

38 Bahrain Shiites retain chamber seats after vote

By BRIAN MURPHY, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 24, 12:21 pm ET

MANAMA, Bahrain – Embattled by months of crackdowns, Bahrain’s Shiite Muslim majority held onto its strength in parliament, according to election results announced Sunday, but fell short of dealing a humbling blow against the minority Sunni rulers of this island kingdom and key U.S. ally.

Bahrain’s ruling Sunni dynasty hoped that Saturday’s vote would showcase one of the rare examples of Western-style elections in the conservative Gulf Arab region and portray a sense of order in a country with strategic links, including being the home port of the U.S. 5th Fleet – one of the Pentagon’s major counterweights against expanding Iranian military power in the area.

The Shiites, meanwhile, sought political payback with some of their top figures jailed and facing trial later this week on charges of plotting a coup.

39 Immigrant vets face deportation despite service

By JULIANA BARBASSA, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 24, 1:41 pm ET

SAN FRANCISCO – When Rohan Coombs joined the U.S. Marine Corps, he never thought one day he would be locked up in an immigration detention center and facing deportation from the country he had vowed to defend.

Coombs, 43, born in Jamaica, immigrated to the United States legally as a child with his family. He signed up to serve his adopted nation for six years – first in Japan and the Philippines, then in the Persian Gulf during the first war with Iraq.

Up to 8,000 non-citizens enlist in the U.S. Armed Forces every year and serve alongside American troops. As of May 2010, there were 16,966 non-citizens on active duty. The military does not allow illegal immigrants to enlist.

40 Seattle’s proposed tree rules prompt opposition

By PHUONG LE, Associated Press Writer

Sun Oct 24, 1:24 pm ET

SEATTLE – Towering Douglas Firs and lush urban parks helped earned Seattle the nickname Emerald City, so it’s not surprising that felling a tree can prompt heated responses.

A judge was fined $500,000 for cutting down more than 120 cherry and maple trees in a city park for better views, and residents fought for years to save a mature grove of 100 Douglas firs from being cleared for development.

Tree lovers are now fighting proposed city rules that would remove current protections for large, exceptional trees, and do not include a requirement that property owners get a permit to remove a tree.

Rant of the Week: Cenk Uygur

Cops Negotiating with Bank Robbers

Imagine the cops busting a bank robber who made off with millions and then writing him a parking ticket and telling him to have a nice day. That is essentially how the Feds treated the man behind one of the biggest frauds in American history.

Wikileaks War Logs: The Atrocities Revealed

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

This week Wikileaks again made public more of the  documents that had been classified as secret to cover up the atrocities that were carried by the Iraqis themselves on their own people with American troops turning a blind eye. Thousands of deaths were revealed in these documents which have been methodically mapped to provide a “unique picture of every death.

The really horrifying revelation from these documents is that there was a specific order to ignore the Iraqi abuse called FRAGO 242.

This is the impact of Frago 242. A frago is a “fragmentary order” which summarises a complex requirement. This one, issued in June 2004, about a year after the invasion of Iraq, orders coalition troops not to investigate any breach of the laws of armed conflict, such as the abuse of detainees, unless it directly involves members of the coalition. Where the alleged abuse is committed by Iraqi on Iraqi, “only an initial report will be made … No further investigation will be required unless directed by HQ”.

Frago 242 appears to have been issued as part of the wider political effort to pass the management of security from the coalition to Iraqi hands. In effect, it means that the regime has been forced to change its political constitution but allowed to retain its use of torture.

Frago 242 appears to have been issued as part of the wider political effort to pass the management of security from the coalition to Iraqi hands. In effect, it means that the regime has been forced to change its political constitution but allowed to retain its use of torture.

The systematic viciousness of the old dictatorship when Saddam Hussein’s security agencies enforced order without any regard for law continues, reinforced by the chaotic savagery of the new criminal, political and sectarian groups which have emerged since the invasion in 2003 and which have infiltrated some police and army units, using Iraq’s detention cells for their private vendettas.

So basically, the Iraqis were given a free hand to torture and kill helpless prisoners while coalition troops, who were mostly Americans, walked away.

So far the White House and Pentagon have not said very much and no doubt will again try to spin the leaking of these new documents as treasonous war crime that will endanger the troops and hurt the “war on terror”. It would seem that the British are the only ones coming to their senses when Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg called for investigation of abuse claims but shying away from calling for the US to investigate these terrible revelations.

Clegg told BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show: “We can bemoan how these leaks occurred, but I think the nature of the allegations made are extraordinarily serious. They are distressing to read about and they are very serious. I am assuming the US administration will want to provide its own answer. It’s not for us to tell them how to do that.”

Asked if there should be an inquiry into the role of British troops, he said: “I think anything that suggests that basic rules of war, conflict and engagement have been broken or that torture has been in any way condoned are extremely serious and need to be looked at.”

He added: “People will want to hear what the answer is to what are very, very serious allegations of a nature which I think everybody will find quite shocking.”

The Obama Administration continues to add to its own sanctioning of war crimes as it continues to cover up and refuse to investigate the allegations of torture despite all the evidence.

On This Day in History: October 24

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

October 24 is the 297th day of the year (298th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 68 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1901, a 63-year-old schoolteacher named Annie Edson Taylor becomes the first person to take the plunge over Niagara Falls in a barrel. After her husband died in the Civil War, the New York-born Taylor moved all over the U. S. before settling in Bay City, Michigan, around 1898. In July 1901, while reading an article about the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, she learned of the growing popularity of two enormous waterfalls located on the border of upstate New York and Canada. Strapped for cash and seeking fame, Taylor came up with the perfect attention-getting stunt: She would go over Niagara Falls in a barrel.

Desiring to secure her later years financially, she decided she would be the first person to ride Niagara Falls in a barrel. Taylor used a custom-made barrel for her trip, constructed of oak and iron and padded with a mattress. Several delays occurred in the launching of the barrel, particularly because no one wanted to be part of a potential suicide. Two days before Taylor’s own attempt, a domestic cat was sent over the Horseshoe Falls in her barrel to test its strength. Contrary to rumors at the time, the cat survived the plunge unharmed and later was posed with Taylor in photographs.

On October 24, 1901, her 63rd birthday, the barrel was put over the side of a rowboat, and Taylor climbed in, along with her lucky heart-shaped pillow. After screwing down the lid, friends used a bicycle tire pump to compress the air in the barrel. The hole used for this was plugged with a cork, and Taylor was set adrift near the American shore, south of Goat Island.

The Niagara River currents carried the barrel toward the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, which has since been the site for all daredevil stunting at Niagara Falls. Rescuers reached her barrel shortly after the plunge. Taylor was discovered to be alive and relatively uninjured, save for a small gash on her head. The trip itself took less than twenty minutes, but it was some time before the barrel was actually opened. After the journey, Annie Taylor told the press:

If it was with my dying breath, I would caution anyone against attempting the feat… I would sooner walk up to the mouth of a cannon, knowing it was going to blow me to pieces than make another trip over the Fall.

She briefly earned money speaking about her experience, but was never able to build much wealth. Her manager, Frank M. Russell, decamped with her barrel, and most of her savings were used towards private detectives hired to find it. It was eventually located in Chicago, only to permanently disappear some time later.

Annie Taylor died on April 29, 1921, aged 82, at the Niagara County Infirmary in Lockport, New York. She is interred in the “Stunters Section” of Oakwood Cemetery in Niagara Falls, New York.

 69 – Second Battle of Bedriacum, forces under Antonius Primus, the commander of the Danube armies, loyal to Vespasian, defeat the forces of Emperor Vitellius.

1147 – After a siege of 4 months crusader knights led by Afonso Henriques, reconquered Lisbon.

1260 – The spectacular Cathedral of Chartres is dedicated in the presence of King Louis IX of France; the cathedral is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

1260 – Saif ad-Din Qutuz, Mamluk sultan of Egypt, is assassinated by Baibars, who seizes power for himself.

1360 – The Treaty of Bretigny is ratified at Calais, marking the end of the first phase of the Hundred Years’ War.

1590 – John White, The governor of the second Roanoke Colony, returns to England after an unsuccessful search for the “lost” colonists.

1648 – The Peace of Westphalia is signed, marking the end of the Thirty Years’ War.

1795 – Partitions of Poland: The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth is completely divided among Austria, Prussia, and Russia

1812 – Napoleonic Wars: The Battle of Maloyaroslavets takes place near Moscow.

1857 – Sheffield F.C., the world’s first football club, is founded in Sheffield, England.

1861 – The First Transcontinental Telegraph line across the United States is completed, spelling the end for the 18-month-old Pony Express.

1892 – Goodison Park, the world’s first association football specific stadium is opened.

1901 – Annie Edson Taylor becomes the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel.

1911 – Orville Wright remains in the air 9 minutes and 45 seconds in a Wright Glider at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina.

1912 – First Balkan War: The Battle of Kumanovo concludes with the Serbian victory.

1917 – Battle of Caporetto; Italy suffers a catastrophic defeat at the forces of Austria-Hungary and Germany on the Austro-Italian front of World War I (lasts until 19 November – also called Twelfth Battle of the Isonzo).

1917 – The day of the October revolution, The Red Revolution.

1926 – Harry Houdini’s last performance, which is at the Garrick Theatre in Detroit, Michigan.

1929 – “Black Thursday” stock market crash on the New York Stock Exchange.

1930 – A bloodless coup d’etat in Brazil ousts Washington Luis Pereira de Sousa, the last President of the First Republic. Getulio Dornelles Vargas is then installed as “provisional president.”

1931 – The George Washington Bridge opens to public traffic.

1944 – World War II: The Japanese aircraft carrier Zuikaku, and the battleship Musashi are sunk in the Battle of Leyte Gulf.

1945 – Founding of the United Nations

1946 – A camera on board the V-2 No. 13 rocket takes the first photograph of earth from outer space.

1947 – Walt Disney testifies to the House Un-American Activities Committee, naming Disney employees he believes to be communists.

1954 – Dwight D. Eisenhower pledges United States support to South Vietnam

1957 – The USAF starts the X-20 Dyna-Soar program.

1960 – Nedelin catastrophe: An R-16 ballistic missile explodes on the launch pad at the Soviet Union’s Baikonur Cosmodrome space facility, killing over 100. Among the dead is Field Marshal Mitrofan Nedelin, whose death is reported to have occurred in a plane crash

1964 – Northern Rhodesia gains independence from the United Kingdom and becomes the Republic of Zambia (Southern Rhodesia remained a colony)

1973 – Yom Kippur War ends

1977 – Veterans Day is observed on the fourth Monday in October for the seventh and last time. (The holiday is once again observed on November 11 beginning the following year.)

   * 1980 – Government of Poland legalizes Solidarity trade union

1986 – Nezar Hindawi is sentenced to 45 years in prison, the longest sentence handed down by a British court, for the attempted bombing on an El Al flight at Heathrow. After the verdict, the United Kingdom breaks diplomatic relations with Syria, claiming that Hindawi is helped by Syrian officials.

1990 – Italian prime minister Giulio Andreotti reveals to the Italian parliament the existence of Gladio, the Italian “stay-behind” clandestine paramilitary NATO army.

1998 – Launch of Deep Space 1 comet/asteroid mission

2002 – Police arrest spree killers John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, ending the Beltway sniper attacks in the area around Washington, DC.

2003 – Concorde makes its last commercial flight.

2005 – Hurricane Wilma makes landfall in Florida resulting in 35 direct 26 indirect fatalities and causing $20.6B USD in damage.

2006 – Justice Rutherford of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice struck down the “motive clause”, an important part of the Canadian Anti-Terrorism Act.

2008 – “Bloody Friday” saw many of the world’s stock exchanges experience the worst declines in their history, with drops of around 10% in most indices.

Punting the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition

Punting the Punditsis an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with Christiane Amanpour: This Sunday, an exclusive interview with Democratic National Committee Chairman Tim Kaine. As the President wraps up a four-day, five-state campaign swing this week, that will take him to the blue states on the west coast.

The roundtable with George Will, Republican Strategist Ed Gillespie, former White House Communications Director Anita Dunn and ABC News Political Director Amy Walter looks at all the big races and some of the biggest gaffes of this turbulent political season.

Also, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Hugh Shelton (Ret.)discussing his book and his thoughts on Iraq, Afghanistan and DADT

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer: On Sunday Mr. Schieffer’s guests will be Karl Rove, Fox News Contributor (at left)

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee

The Chris Matthews Show: This week’s guests are ,Katty Kay BBC Washington Correspondent, Dan Rather, HDNet Global Correspondent, Andrew Sullivan, The Atlantic Senior Editor and Cynthia Tucker, Atlanta Journal-Constitution Columnist.

They will consider there questions along with Mr. Matthews:

Did President Obama push his own agenda to his party’s detriment?

Will Tea Party members go rogue on Republicans and form a third party?

Meet the Press with David Gregory: Mr. Gregory will have an exclusive interview with RNC Chairman Michael Steele.

Our political roundtable covers all the angles: David Brooks of The New York Times; E.J. Dionne of The Washington Post; Chair of the Democratic Leadership Council Fmr. Rep. Harold Ford Jr. (D-TN); Rachel Maddow, the host of msnbc’s “The Rachel Maddow Show”; and CNBC’s On-Air Editor, Rick Santelli.

State of the Union with Candy Crowley: A special State of the Union from Florida just 10 days before Election Day. Candy Crowley moderates the Florida Senate Debate with Gov. Charlie Crist (I), Rep. Kendrick Meek (D), Marco Rubio (R) live at 9am ET from the University of South Florida. Make sure to tune in for the Florida showdown on the issues central to Florida and the nation in this battleground state.

Fareed Zakaris: GPS: Fareed gives his take on why technology and the global marketplace have taken so many jobs from America – and maybe even taken the American dream, too.

He then sits down with Richard Holbrooke, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan to assess the situation.

Peter Bergen, who interviewed bin Laden in 1997, joins Fareed to share his thoughts on where Osama bin Laden is…and why we haven’t found him yet.

Next up, when Fareed interviewed Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, the Chinese leader said, “freedom of speech is indispensable, for any country.” So just why did China censor and then re-censor Fareed’s interview with the Premier?

After that we look at how the rest of the world views the upcoming American elections? GPS brings you three great global thinkers to share their views on the U.S. midterms, how the world views the U.S. and much more. And finally a last look at Iran’s surprising “social” revolutionary.

Paul Krugman: The Worst Economist in the World

A thought: it has occurred to me that we could use an economics equivalent of Keith Olbermann’s “Worst Person in the World” award. KO does not, of course, mean that the person he goes after on any given night really is the worst person in the world; he just uses the title to highlight some especially awful action or statement.

I’d encourage others to enter this game – and yes, I know that various paid trolls and others will award me the title five times a day if they can. But here’s what caught my eye: the WSJ’s Real Time Economics explaining (or rather, “explaining”) the risks from competitive devaluation:

 

When one country devalues its currency, others tend to follow suit. As a result, nobody achieves trade gains. Instead, the devaluations put upward pressure on the prices of commodities such as oil. Higher commodity prices, in turn, can cut into global economic output. In one ominous sign, the price of oil is up 8.7% since August 27.

Urk.

Bob Herbert: The Way We Treat Our Troops

You can only hope that the very preliminary peace efforts in Afghanistan bear fruit before long. But for evidence that the United States is letting its claim to greatness, and even common decency, slip through its fingers, all you need to do is look at the way we treat our own troops.

The idea that the United States is at war and hardly any of its citizens are paying attention to the terrible burden being shouldered by its men and women in uniform is beyond appalling.

We can get fired up about Lady Gaga and the Tea Party crackpots. We’re into fantasy football, the baseball playoffs and our obsessively narcissistic tweets. But American soldiers fighting and dying in a foreign land? That is such a yawn.

I would bring back the draft in a heartbeat. Then you wouldn’t have these wars that last a lifetime. And you wouldn’t get mind-bending tragedies like the death of Sgt. First Class Lance Vogeler, a 29-year-old who was killed a few weeks ago while serving in the Army in his 12th combat tour. That’s right, his 12th – four in Iraq and eight in Afghanistan.

Gail Collins: Elections: Oshkosh Shrugged

“I’m in Sheboygan!” said Senator Russ Feingold over the phone. “It’s the bratwurst capital of the world!”

Truly, I am learning something new every day in this long campaign season. People, did you know that the official state bird of Alaska is the willow ptarmigan? Or that Alexandria, Ind., is home to the world’s largest ball of paint? Well, you do now.

But about Russ Feingold. He is running for a fourth term, in a very tough race against Ron Johnson, a plastics manufacturer and one of those rich political virgins who have been popping up in races across the country, waving a checkbook and a copy of “Atlas Shrugged.”

It’s ironic that Feingold, who is possibly the most independent member of the Senate, a Mr. Clean who votes against his party regularly, is among the incumbents in the most danger from an anti-Washington voter rebellion. Especially since Johnson is not all that impressive. Unless you like Ayn Rand and are yearning to see the country run just like a plastics business.

Charles M. Blow: Smoke and Horrors

Attorney General Eric Holder Jr.’s recent chest-thumping against the California ballot initiative that seeks to legalize marijuana underscores how the war on drugs in this country has become a war focused on marijuana, one being waged primarily against minorities and promoted, fueled and financed primarily by Democratic politicians.

According to a report released Friday by the Marijuana Arrest Research Project for the Drug Policy Alliance and the N.A.A.C.P. and led by Prof. Harry Levine, a sociologist at the City University of New York: “In the last 20 years, California made 850,000 arrests for possession of small amounts of marijuana, and half-a-million arrests in the last 10 years. The people arrested were disproportionately African-Americans and Latinos, overwhelmingly young people, especially men.”

For instance, the report says that the City of Los Angeles “arrested blacks for marijuana possession at seven times the rate of whites.”

This imbalance is not specific to California; it exists across the country.

Frank Rich: What Happened to Change We Can Believe In?

PRESIDENT Obama, the Rodney Dangerfield of 2010, gets no respect for averting another Great Depression, for saving 3.3 million jobs with stimulus spending, or for salvaging GM and Chrysler from the junkyard. And none of these good deeds, no matter how substantial, will go unpunished if the projected Democratic bloodbath materializes on Election Day. Some are even going unremembered. For Obama, the ultimate indignity is the Times/CBS News poll in September showing that only 8 percent of Americans know that he gave 95 percent of American taxpayers a tax cut.

The reasons for his failure to reap credit for any economic accomplishments are a catechism by now: the dark cloud cast by undiminished unemployment, the relentless disinformation campaign of his political opponents, and the White House’s surprising ineptitude at selling its own achievements. But the most relentless drag on a chief executive who promised change we can believe in is even more ominous. It’s the country’s fatalistic sense that the stacked economic order that gave us the Great Recession remains not just in place but more entrenched and powerful than ever.

No matter how much Obama talks about his “tough” new financial regulatory reforms or offers rote condemnations of Wall Street greed, few believe there’s been real change. That’s not just because so many have lost their jobs, their savings and their homes. It’s also because so many know that the loftiest perpetrators of this national devastation got get-out-of-jail-free cards, that too-big-to-fail banks have grown bigger and that the rich are still the only Americans getting richer.

Brent Budowsky: Admiral Joe Sestak’s big truth

The strong comeback in the Pennsylvania Senate campaign of Democratic Rep. and retired Adm. Joe Sestak is, from my point of view, one of the few great moments in the 2010 campaign.

In a national campaign full of sickening slanders and second-rate minds, Sestak stands out for one big truth that has governed his life, his work and his career, and it is this:

When a man or woman wears the uniform of our nation in the service of our country, he or she does not look at the fellow patriot in the foxhole, in the cockpit or on the bridge and ask: Are you a liberal or conservative? Are you a Democrat or Republican? What Sestak understands, the value that has been seared into Joe Sestak’s soul through a lifetime of service, is that for those who protect and defend our country, the others beside them are truly a band of brothers and sisters united by a patriotic faith that transcends the cheap shots and divisions of what has become our politics.

Dick Cavett: Match Him? Not Likely

He was devilishly fun to be around.

Whatever his dark side may have been, in the times we spent together I saw only the effervescence. Bernie Schwartz appeared to be having the time of his life being Tony Curtis.

I suppose I say “appeared” because despite the exuberance, his life was not unadulterated bliss, and the marital sort terminated five times. The sixth marriage lasted. He said once, “I wouldn’t be caught dead marrying a woman young enough to be my wife.”

He was a man who admitted that his one driving early ambition in life was simply to be a movie star, and he managed to achieve that (some would say) shallow goal.

But he did more. He went on to become not just a dapper guy for whose looks women tumbled in droves. He also proved he was more than only – in one of several phrases that plagued him – a “pretty boy” of the screen. He became a fine realistic film actor.

(Any doubts? See “Sweet Smell of Success.” Or, if that’s not enough, “The Defiant Ones.”)

Morning Shinbun Sunday October 24




Sunday’s Headlines:

Samara: the disappearing wooden city on the Volga

USA

Mama Grizzlies lead Republican hunt for angry women’s votes

Group funding GOP campaigns had its origins backing tobacco

Europe

Stem cell law loopholes allow XCell-Center to operate in Germany

Angelina Jolie’s controversial film divides Bosnian rape victims

Middle East

Gaza hardliners launch arson attack on family leisure park

Iraq’s Maliki says Wikileaks documents could be used in court

Asia

Despite successful U.S. attacks on Taliban leaders in Afghanistan’s northwest, insurgency remains in control

India’s Smaller Cities Show Off Growing Wealth

Africa

MDC furious as police ban Tsvangirai public meetings

‘Joao kept shooting pictures after the blast’

Latin America

Haiti Fears Cholera Will Spread in Capital

Robert Fisk: The shaming of America

Our writer delivers a searing dispatch after the WikiLeaks revelations that expose in detail the brutality of the war in Iraq – and the astonishing, disgraceful deceit of the US

Sunday, 24 October 2010

As usual, the Arabs knew. They knew all about the mass torture, the promiscuous shooting of civilians, the outrageous use of air power against family homes, the vicious American and British mercenaries, the cemeteries of the innocent dead. All of Iraq knew. Because they were the victims.

Only we could pretend we did not know. Only we in the West could counter every claim, every allegation against the Americans or British with some worthy general – the ghastly US military spokesman Mark Kimmitt and the awful chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Peter Pace, come to mind – to ring-fence us with lies.

Samara: the disappearing wooden city on the Volga

Samara is an architectural treasure trove of wooden, art nouveau and constructivist buildings. Like many Russian cities, it is threatened by brutal developers and corrupt local officials. But there are signs of a fightback…

Rowan Moore

The Observer, Sunday 24 October 2010


“Half of Samara knows you’re here,” says a leading fixer in the city’s property business. He adds, with slightly theatrical menace, that unnamed people are keeping tabs on my movements, and during my stay a mysterious yoga teacher and ex-jailbird called Bizon – bearded, like a cut-price Rasputin – keeps appearing and disappearing. It’s not so very scary, except that this is an area where property politics is a serious business. In 2004 the chief architect in the next-door city of Togliatti was murdered, for getting in the way of the wrong people.

USA

Mama Grizzlies lead Republican hunt for angry women’s votes

Family issues top the agenda as Democrats sound the alarm over Republican surge among ‘soccer mom’ swing voters

Paul Harris in New Jersey

The Observer, Sunday 24 October 2010


Anna Little, the tiny, red-headed Republican mayor of Atlantic Highlands, sat in her bustling campaign office and spelled out why next month’s midterm elections could see her elected to Congress .

“Any time one woman stands up for office, other women support her. I am feeling it. This is going to be a breakthrough year for women and the Republican party,” she said.

Little’s hopes might come true. Many Republican activists are calling 2010 the “year of the conservative woman”, both in terms of the number of candidates and what they hope might be a historic shift of female voters from left to right. Anyone wanting to cast a ballot for a Republican woman this year has a wide choice.

Group funding GOP campaigns had its origins backing tobacco

Democratic Rep. Allen Boyd of Florida is the target of attack ads paid for by the Center for Individual Freedom, founded in 1998 to counter restrictions on smoking.

By Kim Geiger and Tom Hamburger, Tribune Washington Bureau

October 24, 2010


Reporting from Tallahassee, Fla. – Rep. Allen Boyd of Florida has marshaled some key advantages for his seventh reelection race: He has outraised his GOP opponent, and has the rare distinction of being a Democrat endorsed by both the National Rifle Assn. and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

But Boyd also voted in favor of the healthcare overhaul this year, and like other Democratic incumbents now faces a barrage of attacks by little-known conservative groups funded by anonymous donors.

Europe

Stem cell law loopholes allow XCell-Center to operate in Germany

The XCell-Center, which would be banned in the UK, has been able to thrive in Germany due to a legal loophole about to be closed under new European legislation.

By Robert Mendick, Chief Reporter

Published: 7:45AM BST 24 Oct 2010


The law governing stem cell clinics is extremely complex.

The UK classifies stem cell treatments as medicines. This means that before procedures can be licensed, the therapies must undergo the same kind of rigorous trials as those used for other medicines.

The stem cell therapies must first be shown to be safe and effective before they can be licensed for use by the general public.

Experts predict a stem cell treatment for multiple sclerosis for example could be between five and ten years away, given the regulatory hoops that must be jumped through first.

Angelina Jolie’s controversial film divides Bosnian rape victims

The star’s debut as a director has sparked fierce controversy over who has the right to tell the story of Serbian rape camps

Peter Beaumont in Sarajevo

A pack of dogs is basking in the sun in the old Jewish cemetery on the hill overlooking the district of Grbavica in Sarajevo. During the siege of Sarajevo in the Bosnian war, the Serbs placed their guns up here to fire into the city. Fifteen years after the war’s end, this scruffy neighbourhood has become the centre of a new conflict.

It is thought to be one of the locations where Angelina Jolie would like to direct her debut film, dealing in part with the experience of a Muslim woman who was a victim of the notorious rape camps. The film has provoked a bitter battle over who has the right to interpret one of the conflict’s dark episodes – and how. The dispute has even split groups that speak for rape survivors..

Middle East

Gaza hardliners launch arson attack on family leisure park

Hamas government is accused of turning a blind eye to crackdown on behaviour in the city by Islamic extremists

Harriet Sherwood in Gaza City

The Observer, Sunday 24 October 2010


Crazy Water Park had already been closed down for two weeks by the Hamas government, over an “unlicensed water whirl”, when 40 armed arsonists struck in the middle of the night last month.

They set fire to the resort’s two main buildings and a tented mosque, causing more than $300,000 (£191,000) worth of damage and leading the owners to wonder whether it was a doomed project.

The theme park, on the fringes of Gaza City, had suffered a previous arson attack on 20 August during Ramadan, following false rumours that it was hosting mixed-gender parties, and had to close for three days because of the damage..

Iraq’s Maliki says Wikileaks documents could be used in court

But ordinary Iraqis didn’t seem to immediately grasp that the 400,000 Wikileaks documents could provide details on the deaths of thousands of people.

By Jane Arraf, Correspondent / October 23, 2010

Baghdad

The trove of leaked secret US military documents filtered its way through top levels in Iraq on Saturday, with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki saying they could be used as evidence in court cases and the US denying that it turned a blind eye to torture.

For ordinary Iraqis, it didn’t appear to have sunk in that the 400,000 documents, released Friday by the WikiLeaks website, contained details of the deaths of thousands of people that could finally provide answers and even evidence for some of the tragedies of the war.

The documents include indications of widespread Iraqi abuse of prisoners seemingly unaddressed by US forces, a much higher Iraqi death toll than had been admitted, including among Iraqis killed at US checkpoints, and fears of Iranian influence.

Asia

Despite successful U.S. attacks on Taliban leaders in Afghanistan’s northwest, insurgency remains in control



By Joshua Partlow

Washington Post Foreign Service  


MAQUR, AFGHANISTAN – October has been a calamitous month for the Taliban guerrillas waging war from sandy mountains and pistachio forests in this corner of northwestern Afghanistan.

The first to die was their leader, Mullah Ismail, hunted down and killled by U.S. Special Operations troops. Next came the heir apparent, Mullah Jamaluddin, even before he could take over as Taliban “shadow” governor.  Within a week, several other top commanders were dead, a new governor had been captured and the most powerful among the remaining insurgents had lit out for the Turkmenistan border – all casualties of the secretive, midnight work of American commandos.

India’s Smaller Cities Show Off Growing Wealth

 

By LYDIA POLGREEN

Published: October 23, 2010


AURANGABAD, India – For decades this central Indian city was vintage old India: crumbling Mughal-era ruins and ancient Buddhist caves surrounded by endless parched acres from which farmers coaxed cotton.

But this month Aurangabad became an emblem of an altogether different India: the booming, increasingly urbanized economic powerhouse filled with ambition and a new desire to flaunt its wealth.

A group of more than 150 local businessmen decided to buy, en masse, a Mercedes-Benz car each, spending nearly $15 million in a single day and putting this small but thriving city on the map. Frustrated that the usual Chamber of Commerce brochures were slow to attract new investment, the businessmen decided to buy the cars as a stunt intended to stimulate investment in Aurangabad, one of several largely unknown but thriving urban centers across India’s more prosperous states.

Africa

MDC furious as police ban Tsvangirai public meetings  

 

Oct 23, 2010 11:56 PM | By HARARE CORRESPONDENT  

Tsvangirai had been scheduled to hold three public meetings at Cyril Jennings Hall in Highfields, Budiriro Community Hall on Thursday and Glen View 1 Hall on Friday, but police refused him permission, saying the MDC-T leader did not inform them in time.

Ironically, one of the co-ministers of Home Affairs, Theresa Makone, is a powerful member of Tsvangirai’s kitchen cabinet and is directly responsible for the police.

The officer commanding Harare South district, Chief Superintendent TA Chagwedera, barred the meetings, citing provisions of the repressive Public Order and Security Act (Posa) which requires political parties first to seek permission from the police before holding public gatherings or meetings.

‘Joao kept shooting pictures after the blast’



JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA Oct 24 2010 07:32  

“He has lost portions of both legs. Also some pelvic damage and internal bleeding,” newspaper spokesperson Robert Christie said in an email to the South African Press Association.

“Here’s all you need to know about the guy … [reporter] Carlotta [Gall] reports that Joao kept shooting pictures after the blast, as the medics expertly applied tourniquets, gave him morphine, and stretchered him to the helicopter,” he said.

Christie said Silva was being flown to Bagram air base near Kabul on Saturday night, where his wounds would be cleaned and checked before he was sent to Germany..

Latin America

Haiti Fears Cholera Will Spread in Capital



By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD

Published: October 23, 2010


MEXICO CITY – With the number of dead rising above 200, health officials battling a cholera outbreak in Haiti grew ever more pessimistic Saturday that the disease could be contained to a rural area and braced for a medical disaster in the capital.

Haitian officials have confirmed 208 dead and a total of 2,674 cases, but with people streaming into hospitals and clinics and suspected cases far from the outbreak’s epicenter – in St.-Marc, 60 miles north of the capital, Port-au-Prince – doctors were certain the toll would rise.

Ignoring Asia A Blog  

F1: Yeongam

There’s no sugar coating it.  Mclaren needs some Red Bull DNFs and especially Hamilton needs some Webber DNFs.

There are only 3 races left (including this one).

Scuderia Marlboro UPC I expect will blow up, their ’10 powerplants have proven entirely unreliable at least for the non-factory customers.  Renault on the other hand has proven exceptionally durable and also highly successful with the right chassis (that last R in RBR stands for Renault) and the factory team has been competitive.  Webber is using a brand new engine, his last.

A Fail Team is Mercedes.  They’re blaming it on the Brawn chassis (which *ahem* won last year) and Michael Schumacher who may or may not be back, but they also power Mclaren so the engine is good enough.  Not that I have any complaints about the times they’ve parked, things happen.  Mechanical failures are part of the game.

At least they’re not Marlboro.

If Webber parks, and that’s not the evil eye, and Vettel wins you’ll have some chat about team orders.  I don’t think Alonso can hang but he’s pretty fast in the short run.

Otherwise you might just start developing your 2011 car to the extent you can.  I think a big problem with Formula One today is the lack of development time, which I think penalizes the less experienced teams.  If you had track time and data to measure you’d be able to make your car competitive more quickly.

Petrov has a 5 position Grid penalty for booting Hulkenberg on the first lap at Suzuka.  It’s reflected below in the pretty tables.

Repeat @ 4:30 pm on Speed

Starting Grid

Grid Driver Tean Q-Time Laps
1 Sebastian Vettel RBR-Renault 01:35.585 19
2 Mark Webber RBR-Renault 01:35.659 21
3 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 01:35.766 23
4 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 01:36.062 20
5 Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 01:36.535 18
6 Felipe Massa Ferrari 01:36.571 18
7 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 01:36.731 21
8 Robert Kubica Renault 01:36.824 21
9 Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 01:36.950 22
10 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 01:36.998 25
11 Nico Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 01:37.620 18
12 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 01:37.643 15
13 Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber-Ferrari 01:37.715 16
14 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 01:37.783 18
15 Jaime Alguersuari STR-Ferrari 01:37.853 18
16 Sebastien Buemi STR-Ferrari 01:38.594 16
17 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 01:38.955 10
18 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 01:40.521 10
19 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 01:40.748 8
20 Vitaly Petrov Renault 01:37.799 18
21 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 01:41.768 9
22 Lucas Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 01:42.325 10
23 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 01:42.444 10
24 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 01:43.283 7

Driver Standings

Rank Name Team Points
1 Mark Webber RBR-Renault 220
2 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 206
3 Sebastian Vettel RBR-Renault 206
4 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 192
5 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 189
6 Felipe Massa Ferrari 128
7 Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 122
8 Robert Kubica Renault 114
9 Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 54
10 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 47
11 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 41
12 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 27
13 Vitaly Petrov Renault 19
14 Nico Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 17
15 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 13
16 Sebastien Buemi STR-Ferrari 8
17 Pedro de la Rosa BMW Sauber-Ferrari 6
18 Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber-Ferrari 4
19 Jaime Alguersuari STR-Ferrari 3
20 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 0
21 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 0
22 Karun Chandhok HRT-Cosworth 0
23 Lucas di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 0
24 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 0
25 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 0
26 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 0

Team Standings

Rank Team Points
1 RBR-Renault 426
2 McLaren-Mercedes 381
3 Ferrari 334
4 Mercedes GP 176
5 Renault 133
6 Force India-Mercedes 60
7 Williams-Cosworth 58
8 BMW Sauber-Ferrari 37
9 STR-Ferrari 11
10 Lotus-Cosworth 0
11 HRT-Cosworth 0
12 Virgin-Cosworth 0

Why do Folks Get Sad?

If you know more about how life can be nice,

Please tell me.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Prime Time

Well, there’s some kind of College Throwball tonight, TTBA.  Phillies back in Philadelphia which may improve their fortunes, or not.  It’s not a place that you want to be, one game away from elimination.

I’m kind of amazed.  There’s very little coverage of the Senior Circuit, maybe the Yankees loss sucked up all the Oxygen.  What there is focuses on the Phillies lack of offense which has been puzzling though I think it unfair to focus on 1 or 2 individuals.  They haven’t been able to put together innings.  It’s not a team that plays long ball anyway.

I fully expect all my brackets to be blown and be exposed for a sentimental fool in any event.

Yeongam Qualifying.  Yeongam @ 1:30 am on Speed.  Sorry for stepping on you last night Doc, but Dad was headed for bed and I wanted him to have a chance to read it.  Repeat @ 4:30 pm.

Later-

SNL- Emma Stone, Kings of Leon.  GitS: SACScandal, Equinox (Episodes 22 and 23).

I want to talk to you for a minute. If you make a noise, I shall blow your head off at once. By the time anyone has heard the shot I shall be running back toward the castle shouting for help. I shall say that you stepped on the trap and your gun went off as you fell. So be quiet.

When I’ve finished I shall kill you. You will the the sixth D’Ascoyne that I’ve killed. You want to know why? In return for what the D’Acoyne’s did to my mother. Because she married for love instead of for rank or money or land. They condemed her to a life of poverty and slavery, in a world for which they had not equipped her to deal. You yourself refused to grant her dying wish, which was to be buried here, at Chalfont. When I saw her poor little coffin underground, saw her exiled in death as she had been in life, I swore to have revenge on your intolerable pride. That revenge I am just about to complete.

I made an oath that I would revenge the wrongs her family had done her. It was no more than a piece of youthful bravado, but it was one of those acorns from which great oaks are destined to grow. Even then I went so far as to examine the family tree and prune it to just the living members. But what could I do to hurt them? What could I take from them, except, perhaps, their lives.

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