Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Workers swarm Europe’s streets in anti-cuts protests

by Roddy Thomson, AFP

55 mins ago

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Angry workers mounted mass street protests against spending cuts across Europe Wednesday, bringing cities to a halt, clashing with police and even ramming the gates of Ireland’s parliament.

In Brussels, the heart of the European Union, tens of thousands of people from 30 countries joined the city’s biggest march in a decade as riot police barricaded the EU headquarters against the backlash to brutal spending cuts.

Spain staged its first general strike since 2002 and thousands more also rallied in cities from Portugal to Poland, although leaders such as France’s Nicolas Sarkozy pressed on with a “historic” attack on soaring overspending.

2 Brussels braces as Europe-wide protest kicks off

by Roddy Thomson, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 8:01 am ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Police threw a ring of steel around EU headquarters Wednesday as thousands of workers in a sea of banners from across Europe took to the streets amid mounting anger at painful spending cuts.

Police barricaded banks and shops and blocked access to the European Union building, where labour leaders hoped to mass up to 100,000 people from 30 countries in the afternoon to say “no to austerity”.

“We’re here to say ‘no’ to the multiplying number of austerity plans, whether adopted by governments or by European institutions,” said Bernard Thibault, head of the major CGT French trade union, as the march took off.

3 Europe hands France ultimatum in Roma row

by Claire Rosemberg, AFP

2 hrs 8 mins ago

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Europe slapped down France on Wednesday over its controversial expulsion of Roma Gypsies, threatening legal action unless Paris abides by EU rules on freedom of movement within two weeks.

Following a spat with Paris and weeks of bickering, the European Commission issued a two-page statement criticising France after a lengthy closed-door meeting of the 27 commissioners.

“The Commission considers that France has not yet transposed the directive on free movement into national legislation that makes these rights fully effective and transparent,” the statement said.

4 Lost letters add a twist to DNA breakthrough

AFP

Wed Sep 29, 1:36 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – A treasure trove of letters that lay buried in boxes for decades has shed light on the race to decipher the structure of DNA, the British journal Nature says on Thursday.

The correspondence exposes some of the tensions among the scientists who sought to balance profession rivalry, suspicion and friendship in their quest for biology’s Holy Grail.

“Strained relationships and vivid personalities leap off the pages,” the report says.

5 Obama, US House target China over currency

by Olivier Knox, AFP

1 hr 25 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President Barack Obama charged Wednesday that China’s currency was unfairly undervalued, as US lawmakers prepared to pass a bill to punish Beijing over the weak yuan, blamed here for killing jobs.

“The reason that I’m pushing China about their currency, it’s because their currency’s undervalued,” Obama said, when asked at a “backyard” meeting with voters in midwestern Iowa why he was pressuring Beijing on the issue.

“People generally think that they are managing their currency in ways that make our goods more expensive to sell and their goods cheaper to sell here,” he added, saying that fueled the yawning US trade deficit with China.

6 Americans ready for Ryder Cup and Mother Nature

by Rob Woollard, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 9:53 am ET

NEWPORT, Wales (AFP) – United States Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin said his team were capable of dealing with Mother Nature and Europe on Wednesday as torrential rain disrupted practice for the golfing showpiece.

After heavy downpours lashed the Celtic Manor course overnight and early Wednesday, European captain Colin Montgomerie delayed his team’s tee off for the second day of official practice.

By contrast Pavin and the Americans were back on the course as the rain fell, determined to get a feel for wet weather golf on the challenging 7,378-yard par-71 layout.

7 Cross-dressing meets boy-girl duos on Paris catwalks

by Emma Charlton, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 1:09 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – Cross-dressing in cut-out tuxedos, layering boyfriend cuts with superfine silks, or stepping out in his-and-hers pairs, it was a boy-girl thing on the Paris catwalks on Wednesday.

On day two of Paris Fashion Week, Belgium’s Dries Van Noten sketched an ethereal collection that fused an ultra-feminine, oriental esthetic with boldly masculine cuts, from man-sized suit jackets or waistcoats to roomy shorts.

“It’s the 40s, the 70s and the 90s all mixed,” the designer told AFP backstage. “The forties for their elegance, the quirkiness of the seventies and the androgyny of the 90s.”

8 Aussie dollar’s surge squeezes tourists

by Madeleine Coorey, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 12:00 pm ET

SYDNEY (AFP) – German backpackers Christian Morbe and Kathrin Veith were prepared for their stay in Australia to be expensive, but the skyrocketing Australian dollar is catching tourists like them by surprise.

“Five dollars for a bottle of water at the airport,” exclaims 20-year-old Veith. “That’s pretty heavy.”

The Aussie, as the currency is known, has jumped almost 20 percent against the US dollar since June to post-financial crisis highs — stunning foreign visitors who were expecting more value from the greenback.

9 French budget makes ‘historic’ spending cuts

by Charles Onians, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 8:42 am ET

PARIS (AFP) – President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government launched a “historic” attack on France’s soaring overspending on Wednesday, unveiling a budget which closes tax loopholes and imposes unprecedented spending cuts.

The French economy will grow by 1.5 percent this year, two percent in 2011 and 2.5 percent a year from 2012 to 2014, with inflation set to be a moderate 1.5 percent in 2010 and 2011, the budget said.

The public deficit will hit a record 7.7 percent of gross domestic product this year, far above the 3.0-percent limit laid down by EU rules, on the basis of projections in the budget.

10 Thousands of tickets unsold in Delhi

by Adam Plowright, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 8:18 am ET

NEW DELHI (AFP) – Thousands of tickets remained unsold for the Delhi Commonwealth Games Wednesday, just four days before they begin, with the troubled event also hit by another pullout from a star athlete.

Tickets in all categories were available for most sports during the October 3-14 sporting showpiece, with places still on sale even for the opening and closing ceremonies and the 100-metre finals.

About two million tickets were put on sale for the multi-sport Games, but rumours have long circulated in the capital that the response has been lacklustre amid delays in finalising the sales network.

11 Cricket captain Salman Butt appeals against ban

by Julian Guyer, AFP

Wed Sep 29, 6:19 am ET

LONDON (AFP) – Pakistan Test captain Salman Butt has appealed against his provisional suspension over spot-fixing allegations, International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive Haroon Lorgat said Wednesday.

Butt, together with fast bowlers Mohammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif, was banned from playing by the ICC after allegations made by Britain’s News of the World they’d been involved in a plot to bowl deliberate no-balls during last month’s Test against England at Lord’s as part of a betting scam.

The allegations have since become the subject of a Scotland Yard investigation.

12 Europeans protest, strike against austerity moves

By David Brunnstrom, Reuters

Wed Sep 29, 12:19 pm ET

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of people marched through Brussels on Wednesday in a day of protests across Europe against government austerity measures, which unions say will slow economic recovery and punish the poor.

Up to 5,000 protesters also marched in Warsaw, Spanish unions staged a general strike and trade unions called protests in 11 other capitals to oppose measures such as spending cuts and pension and labor market reforms.

Unions said they achieved their goal of bringing 100,000 people onto the streets of Brussels, but police put the figure at 56,000 and said 218 people were detained for minor offences. Attendance at other rallies appeared to be much smaller.

13 Congress funding fight may delay Wall Street reforms

By Andy Sullivan and Roberta Rampton, Reuters

1 hr 55 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration may have to wait several months to implement parts of the landmark Dodd-Frank financial reform law because Congress has yet to approve funds necessary for its implementation.

Requested funding increases for financial regulators are not likely to be included in a stopgap spending bill to fund government operations through early December, complicating efforts to put the sweeping law in place, according to congressional and regulatory sources.

The delay is likely to last through early December and could stretch into 2011.

14 House set to pass bill aimed at Chinese yuan

By Doug Palmer and Paul Eckert, Reuters

58 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The House of Representatives began debate on legislation to put pressure on China to let its currency rise faster, fanning the flames of a long-running dispute over trade and jobs.

The bill, expected to be passed on Wednesday with heavy support from Democrats but a mixed reaction from Republicans, treats China’s exchange rate as a subsidy. That would open the door to extra duties on Chinese goods entering the United States, some of which are already subject to special levies.

The measure could play well in the U.S. congressional election on November 2, with voters worried about their jobs and a sluggish economy. But it must win Senate approval and be signed into law by President Barack Obama — by no means a sure bet.

15 BP ousts exploration chief, vows to boost safety

By Tom Bergin, Reuters

Wed Sep 29, 12:21 pm ET

LONDON (Reuters) – BP Plc’s incoming Chief Executive Bob Dudley has ousted the oil group’s exploration and production chief following the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and promised to restructure the company to boost safety.

Echoing a move BP made after the Texas City blast in 2005, Dudley also said on Wednesday he was appointing a new safety guru, Mark Bly, who would ensure safe practices across the organization.

BP shares closed up 3.9 percent at 421 pence, against a 0.2 percent drop in the STOXX Europe 600 Oil and Gas index.

16 Obama faces voter policy doubts in backyard meeting

By Patricia Zengerle, Reuters

1 hr 36 mins ago

DES MOINES (Reuters) – President Barack Obama defended his economic policies Wednesday as he faced tough questions from skeptical Americans less than five weeks before congressional elections that threaten his fellow Democrats’ grip on Congress.

Holding the latest in a series of backyard meetings with middle-class voters, Obama heard one small businessman’s fears that his tax plans could “strangle” job creation. The president also fielded concerns about high unemployment and the impact of his healthcare overhaul.

It was a marked contrast to the enthusiastic university crowd that greeted Obama Tuesday in Wisconsin when he sought to fire up his youthful base of support, and showed the obstacles his Democratic Party faces in the November 2 elections.

17 AIG’s Miller says U.S. may profit on bailout

By Paritosh Bansal, Reuters

1 hr 31 mins ago

NEW YORK (Reuters) – American International Group Inc is seeing plans to free itself of U.S. government support start to come together two years after it was bailed out and expects taxpayers to profit from their investment.

AIG is close to finalizing a plan for the government to sell its stake in the insurer, which would see the Treasury Department convert $49 billion of preferred stake into common shares to be sold over time, Chairman Steve Miller said on Wednesday.

AIG also is close to a deal to sell two life insurance units in Japan to Prudential Financial Inc for about $4.8 billion in cash, a source familiar with the matter said.

18 Deficit-cut panel vows tough choices; markets yawn

By Kevin Drawbaugh and Donna Smith, Reuters

2 hrs 47 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A U.S. commission looking for ways to balance the federal budget talked tough about fiscal discipline at its fifth meeting on Wednesday but offered few clues about the potential solution it might recommend.

The commission met for less than three hours amid growing worry about government debt problems in Europe. The U.S. deficit is an underlying market concern, but it has not stopped investors worldwide from buying U.S. Treasuries — considered the world’s safest bet.

The commission’s work is “not going to be easy, it’s not going to be fun, and in many cases, it’s not going to be popular. It is going to require sacrifice,” said Co-Chairman Erskine Bowles at the outset of the meeting.

19 North Korea’s "first" family readies for succession

By Jack Kim and Jeremy Laurence, Reuters

Wed Sep 29, 7:56 am ET

SEOUL (Reuters) – North Korea’s iron ruler Kim Jong-il has anointed his youngest son as successor to lead the isolated state, whose collapsing economy and bid to become a nuclear weapons power pose major threats to the region.

After months of speculation, the state KCNA news agency announced early on Wednesday that the untested Kim Jong-un, thought to be in his late 20s, had been made second in command to his father at the ruling Workers’ Party’s powerful Central Military Commission.

Rising with him were the ailing Kim Jong-il’s sister and her husband, creating a powerful triumvirate ready to take over the family dynasty that has ruled North Korea since its founding after World War Two.

20 Medical experts doubt Lockerbie bomber’s prognosis

By FREDERIC J. FROMMER, Associated Press Writer

24 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Scotland’s prognosis that the Lockerbie bomber had three months to live was not justified, medical experts told Congress on Wednesday, and a senator questioned whether the process was deliberately manipulated to pave the way for the bomber’s release from prison last year.

Abdel Baset al-Megrahi served eight years of a life sentence for the Dec. 21, 1988, bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland, which killed all 259 people on board, most of them Americans, and 11 people on the ground. Suffering from advanced prostate cancer, al-Megrahi was released on compassionate grounds in August 2009 by Scotland’s government. He returned to Libya, outraging people on both sides of the Atlantic. He is still alive.

“The release on compassionate grounds was deeply, deeply flawed and perhaps even intentionally skewed to allow for al-Megrahi’s release,” said Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., chairing a Foreign Relations Committee hearing.

21 US general: Iraq political limbo fuels violence

By BRIAN MURPHY, Associated Press Writer

15 mins ago

BAGHDAD – The top U.S. commander for Baghdad warned Wednesday that Iraq’s prolonged political crisis has encouraged militants to step up attacks and left civilians so frustrated they could be holding back crucial tips on suspected insurgent cells.

The assessment by U.S. Brig. Gen. Rob Baker is the most direct link by American military brass between Iraq’s nearly seven-month impasse on forming a government and a recent spike in violence that has included rocket strikes blamed on Shiite militias and targeted killings by suspected Sunni hit squads against security officials and government workers.

Baker’s comments also boost U.S. pressure on Iraqi political leaders to finally pull together after March elections, which were narrowly won by a Sunni-backed coalition but without enough parliament seats to push aside the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki – who seeks to hold on to power.

22 PROMISES, PROMISES: Pelosi ethics pledge falters

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 31 mins ago

WASHINGTON – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised four years ago that Democrats would lead “the most honest, most open, most ethical Congress in history.”

But as her party defends its record with its majority in jeopardy, two prominent Democrats await ethics trials. Two other party members gave Congressional Black Caucus Foundation scholarships to relatives. Most importantly, lobbyists, corporations and special interests still have unimpeded ways to buy access to members of Congress.

Take House Majority Whip James Clyburn’s annual charity golf tournament, which provides college scholarships for needy students in his South Carolina district and funds the endowment he established at South Carolina State University.

23 Anti-austerity protests sweep across Europe

By RAF CASERT, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 17 mins ago

BRUSSELS – Tens of thousands of workers marched Wednesday through the streets of Europe, decrying the loss of jobs and benefits they fear will come with stinging austerity measures seeking to contain government debt.

Police fired shots in the air to disperse protesters at a general strike in Spain. Greek bus and trolley drivers walked off the job, joined by doctors who staged a 24-hour strike at state hospitals. Unions claimed a crowd of 100,000 marched on European Union headquarters in Brussels.

From Ireland to Greece, workers united around the theme that they are victims of a debt crisis caused by reckless high-spending bankers undermining Europe’s cherished welfare state. They complained of higher taxes, job cuts, soaring unemployment and smaller pensions.

24 In Obama’s backyard visits, GOP is the absent foe

By CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press Writer

4 mins ago

DES MOINES, Iowa – A priest expressed concern to President Barack Obama about an unemployed parishioner. A businessman criticized Obama’s tax policy. A woman said her son and his friends, once inspired by Obama, “are losing their hope.”

Obama addressed all those concerns, and more, during his two-day, four-state tour that ended Wednesday in Richmond. In the middle, he drew raucous cheers at a college rally in Wisconsin.

Despite all his mingling with middle class voters, however, Obama’s chief focus was on people who never showed up: congressional Republicans and their corporate allies who, the president said, are trying to thwart his administration’s progress and turn the clock back to the George W. Bush era.

25 Italy’s Berlusconi wins confidence vote

By ALESSANDRA RIZZO, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 36 mins ago

ROME – Premier Silvio Berlusconi won a confidence vote Wednesday night in the Chamber of Deputies by a wide margin, staving off, at least for now, the specter of early elections.

Berlusconi had staked his coalition’s survival on the outcome of the vote in the lower chamber of Parliament. He garnered 342 votes in favor of his government compared to 275 votes against, with 3 abstentions.

Shaken by a nasty break with one of his two main coalition partners over the summer, Berlusconi called the vote to confirm he could still command a comfortable majority in the legislature, which is halfway through its five-year term.

26 Congress punts tough choices until after election

By ANDREW TAYLOR and LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writers

28 mins ago

WASHINGTON – A deeply unpopular Congress is bolting for the campaign trail without finishing its most basic job – approving a budget for the government year that begins on Friday. Lawmakers also are postponing a major fight over taxes, two embarrassing ethics cases and other political hot potatoes until after the Nov. 2 elections.

With their House and Senate majorities on the line, Democratic leaders called off votes and even debates on all controversial matters.

“It would be one thing if you have a chance to pass something, then by all means have a vote,” Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., said Wednesday. “But it was pretty clear that it was going to be mutually assured destruction.”

27 Maine gov. candidate: I’d tell Obama to go to hell

By DAVID SHARP, Associated Press Writer

28 mins ago

PORTLAND, Maine – Republican gubernatorial candidate Paul LePage told a group of fishermen at a GOP forum that he won’t be afraid to tell President Barack Obama to “go to hell.”

LePage, a favorite of tea partiers, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he regretted the words he chose Sunday in the small coastal town of Brooksville but that he wasn’t backing down in his criticism of the administration for what he describes as free-spending, antibusiness policies.

A Democratic Party official said it showed LePage is hotheaded and ill-suited to govern.

28 Gates, Buffett dine with China’s rich for charity

AFP

Wed Sep 29, 1:26 pm ET

BEIJING – Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said a meeting about charity he attended Wednesday with Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates and dozens of China’s super rich was “a tremendous success,” despite earlier concerns that the country’s newly minted millionaires would be pressured to give up their fortunes.

“Our hopes for this meeting were to learn about giving in China, and share our own views,” Buffett said in a news release from him and Gates late Wednesday. “We had a terrific exchange of views, and learned a great deal about the good work that is already under way.”

Some reports had said some invitees to the private dinner in Beijing were reluctant to attend because they did not want to be pressured.

29 Osama bin Laden evidence readied at detainee trial

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 29, 1:45 pm ET

NEW YORK – Prosecutors plan to give Osama bin Laden a starring role in the terrorism trial of the first Guantanamo Bay detainee to be tried in civilian courts, a test case in the debate over whether suspects scooped up in the war against terrorism can be prosecuted like everyone else.

Jury selection began Wednesday when 53 prospective jurors were introduced to the defendant, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, who briefly turned toward the group in his light blue sweater over a white shirt and a dark tie. He has been described by federal authorities as a bomb maker, document forger and former bin Laden aide. He’s charged with conspiring to kill Americans in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa. The attacks killed 224 people, including a dozen Americans, and were widely viewed as a precursor to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

The trial will be closely watched by those debating the feasibility of civilian trials of high-profile Guantanamo detainees arrested around the world. Some were subjected to harsh interrogations at secret CIA-run camps where the gathering of trial evidence yielded to an immediate need to unearth terrorism threats.

30 NKorea unlikely to alter strategy toward world

By KELLY OLSEN, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 29, 10:37 am ET

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea’s ailing leader Kim Jong Il has laid the groundwork for a transition of power to his youngest son but it remains to be seen if the reclusive nuclear-armed regime will soften its combative stance toward the international community.

The impoverished nation has long used both carrots and sticks to get what it wants: offering dialogue and promises to dismantle its nuclear program to get aid, and when it runs into resistance, conducting missile and atomic tests and threatening to destroy rival South Korea.

Analysts see little prospect of that strategy changing, although some speculate that Pyongyang could seek a period of calm – after a turbulent past two years – to minimize confrontation with the outside world as it enters a time of transition in its top ranks.

31 Chile rescue speeds up, cheering miner families

By VIVIAN SEQUERA, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 29, 6:40 am ET

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile – The families of 33 trapped miners are in high spirits after a surge in the drilling of escape tunnels raised hopes that the men’s rescue may come sooner than scheduled.

Relatives smiled, hugged and yelled “Viva Chile!” as officials reported one of the rescue drills made twice the progress Tuesday than had been expected.

They promised the families that preparations for the rescue effort on the surface would be ready by Oct. 12, and said they are planning for the possibility the miners could be pulled up nearly a month ahead of the official schedule.

32 Study: Audio recordings of US history fading fast

By BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 29, 1:01 pm ET

WASHINGTON – New digital recordings of events in U.S. history and early radio shows are at risk of being lost much faster than older ones on tape and many are already gone, according to a study on sound released Wednesday.

Even recent history – such as recordings from 9/11 or the 2008 election – is at risk because digital sound files can be corrupted, and widely used CD-R discs only last three to five years before files start to fade, said study co-author Sam Brylawski.

“I think we’re assuming that if it’s on the Web it’s going to be there forever,” he said. “That’s one of the biggest challenges.”

33 Recession rips at US marriages, expands income gap

By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 10:42 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The recession seems to be socking Americans in the heart as well as the wallet: Marriages have hit an all-time low while pleas for food stamps have reached a record high and the gap between rich and poor has grown to its widest ever.

The long recession technically ended in mid-2009, economists say, but U.S. Census data released Tuesday show the painful, lingering effects. The annual survey covers all of last year, when unemployment skyrocketed to 10 percent, and the jobless rate is still a stubbornly high 9.6 percent.

The figures also show that Americans on average have been spending about 36 fewer minutes in the office per week and are stuck in traffic a bit less than they had been. But that is hardly good news, either. The reason is largely that people have lost jobs or are scraping by with part-time work.

34 AP IMPACT: Haiti still waiting for pledged US aid

By JONATHAN M. KATZ and MARTHA MENDOZA, Associated Press Writers

Wed Sep 29, 2:54 am ET

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Nearly nine months after the earthquake, more than a million Haitians still live on the streets between piles of rubble. One reason: Not a cent of the $1.15 billion the U.S. promised for rebuilding has arrived.

The money was pledged by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in March for use this year in rebuilding. The U.S. has already spent more than $1.1 billion on post-quake relief, but without long-term funds, the reconstruction of the wrecked capital cannot begin.

With just a week to go before fiscal 2010 ends, the money is still tied up in Washington. At fault: bureaucracy, disorganization and a lack of urgency, The Associated Press learned in interviews with officials in the State Department, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the White House and the U.N. Office of the Special Envoy. One senator has held up a key authorization bill because of a $5 million provision he says will be wasteful.

35 Obama tells questioner he’s ‘Christian by choice’

By CHARLES BABINGTON and DARLENE SUPERVILLE, Associated Press Writers

Tue Sep 28, 11:22 pm ET

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – President Barack Obama, in a rare discussion about his religious beliefs, described himself on Tuesday as a “Christian by choice” who arrived at his faith in adulthood because “the precepts of Jesus Christ” helped him envision the kind of life he wanted to lead.

Obama talked about his beliefs when he was asked, “Why are you a Christian.” The question was posed by a woman at a backyard conversation here, part of a series of meetings Obama is holding to talk informally with Americans.

Some conservatives and political opponents have questioned Obama’s Christian faith. In fact, a Pew Research Center poll in August found that 18 percent of people wrongly believe Obama is Muslim – up from 11 percent who said so in March 2009. Just 34 percent said they thought Obama is Christian.

36 Emanuel faces hurdles if coming home to Chicago

By DON BABWIN and TAMMY WEBBER, Associated Press Writers

Tue Sep 28, 9:08 pm ET

CHICAGO – If Rahm Emanuel wants to run for Chicago mayor, the White House chief of staff will have to persuade voters to do what the couple leasing his Chicago house apparently would not: Welcome him home.

Emanuel, widely expected to announce a decision about his candidacy within days, recently called the tenants renting his home on Chicago’s North Side and asked them to move out so he could move back in, spokesman and close friend Rick Jasculca said Tuesday.

But the couple said no. They extended their lease until next year just days before Mayor Richard Daley announced he wouldn’t seek re-election, Jasculca said, and told Emanuel they don’t want to leave.

37 Gates says too few in US bear the burdens of war

By ANNE FLAHERTY, Associated Press Writer

5 mins ago

DURHAM, N.C. – Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday that most Americans have grown too detached from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and see military service as “something for other people to do.”

In a speech Wednesday at Duke University, Gates said this disconnect has imposed a heavy burden on a small segment of society and wildly driven up the costs of maintaining an all-volunteer force.

Because fewer Americans see military service as their duty, troops today face repeated combat tours and long separations from family. The 2.4 million people serving in the armed forces today represent less than 1 percent of the country’s total population.

38 Record number of children die in hot cars in 2010

By ALLEN G. BREED, AP National Writer

13 mins ago

This year of record temperatures has also led a record number of children dying in hot vehicles, according to a group that tracks such deaths.

According to the Kansas-based organization Kids and Cars, 48 children have died of hyperthermia after being left or becoming trapped in a hot car or truck. The previous record of 47 was set in 2005, says Janette Fennell, the group’s founder and president.

“I’m devastated,” Fennell said Wednesday.

39 SD GOP Sen. Thune looking at 2012 presidential run

By DIRK LAMMERS and CHET BROKAW, Associated Press Writers

38 mins ago

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Sen. John Thune has spent the summer traversing the country, talking policy and raising millions of dollars for a re-election bid that has no opponent.

The nationwide exposure has landed the South Dakota Republican on many a pundit’s short list of 2012 presidential contenders, and Thune acknowledged Wednesday the thought has crossed his mind.

“I’d be less than honest if I said I hadn’t thought about it, based upon the amount of encouragement that I’ve received from people across South Dakota and my colleagues here in the Senate and people across the country,” Thune said on Wednesday on a conference call with South Dakota reporters.

40 Kissinger: Vietnam failures ‘we did to ourselves’

By ROBERT BURNS, AP National Security Writer

1 hr 9 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Henry Kissinger, who helped steer Vietnam policy during the war’s darkest years, said Wednesday he is convinced that “most of what went wrong in Vietnam we did to ourselves” – beginning with underestimating the tenacity of North Vietnamese leaders.

Offering a somber assessment of the conflict, which ended in 1975 with the humiliating fall of Saigon, Kissinger lamented the anguish that engulfed a generation of Americans as the war dragged on.

And he said the core problem for the U.S. was that its central objective of preserving an independent, viable South Vietnamese state was unachievable – and that the U.S. adversary was unbending.

41 Chef turns Katrina experience into new venture

By MARY FOSTER, Associated Press Writer

Wed Sep 29, 2:18 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS – Chef John Besh’s two restaurants were spared when Hurricane Katrina barreled through New Orleans five years ago, but the storm almost wiped him out anyway.

Besh had just taken out a large loan to pay off his partners when the storm shut him down and sent his customers looking for dry ground.

“We came back fast and furious, but we were here with a refrigerator full of food and no one to cook it for,” Besh recalled.

42 Volvo’s smallest U.S. car still rare on roads

By ANN M. JOB, For The Associated Press

Wed Sep 29, 10:57 am ET

The Volvo C30 three-door, small hatchback sure isn’t a “me-too” car. Three years after it came to the United States as Volvo’s smallest vehicle here, the not-quite-14-foot-long C30 with distinctive, large rear liftgate glass and four seats has sold in such low volumes that it’s still a rarity on most roads.

And now that Volvo of Sweden has been sold to Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co. of China and the new owner is assessing Volvo’s products, little is changing near term for the C30, except the price, a slight styling update and stiffer suspension for an uplevel model.

Starting manufacturer’s suggested retail price, including destination charge, for the 2011 C30 increased $500 from 2010. The base model starts at $25,450, with manual transmission and 227-horsepower, turbocharged, five-cylinder engine. With automatic transmission the 2011 C30 starts at $26,700, and the uplevel C30 with sporty R-Design body kit and sport suspension starts at $27,800 with manual transmission.

The New ‘Enemies’ List

Now that Peter Daou and Politico have thoughfully provided us with an Obama Administration ‘Enemies List’ and I have gotten over my embarrassment at not being famous and influential enough to be on it (yet), I thought I’d share one of its prominent members, John Aravosis’, reaction-

(E)ven when you say “the blogs helped cause the President’s problems” what does that mean?  The Obama administration and its apologists would have you believe that the liberal blogs have an almost svengali-like power to trick our readers, and Democratic voters generally, into being disappointed with the President and Congress.  I’m not convinced that our readers are so stupid that they’d believe “lies.”  We could only get away with lying once or twice before our stories simply wouldn’t pan out, our predictions wouldn’t end up happening, and our readers would realize that we had no clue what was really going on in Washington politics.  Except we ended up being right.

On gay rights, Joe and I have an almost perfect track record of predicting everything the Obama administration and Democratic Congress were going to do on DADT, DOMA and ENDA, and ultimately, in predicting just how much trouble our community would be in as a result of the Democrats’ disinterest in our issues.

But the gay community isn’t alone.  Glenn Greenwald and the ACLU surely haven’t been wrong about their early warnings regarding Obama’s civil liberties policies.  And were environmentalists wrong to question whether Team Obama would act forcefully and quickly on global warming?  Have Latinos been wrong to worry that Obama wouldn’t keep his promise to pass immigration reform last year, and now this year?  Then there’s health care reform – yes, the President and the Congress did something, but not nearly what they were capable of doing with the majorities and the public support we gave them.

Perhaps the reason the President’s voters-turned-critics have influence, and perhaps the reason the President and the party are increasingly less popular, isn’t because we’re consistently wrong – but rather because we’re right.

And nothing makes you more hated by fools and liars than being right.

Punting the Pundits

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.

Amy Goodman: FBI Raids and the Criminalization of Dissent

Early in the morning on Friday, Sept. 24, FBI agents in Chicago and Minnesota’s Twin Cities kicked in the doors of anti-war activists, brandishing guns, spending hours rifling through their homes. The FBI took away computers, photos, notebooks and other personal property. Residents were issued subpoenas to appear before a grand jury in Chicago. It was just the latest in the ongoing crackdown on dissent in the U.S., targeting peace organizers as supporters of “foreign terrorist organizations.”

 Coleen Rowley knows about the FBI. She was a career special agent with the FBI who blew the whistle on the bureau’s failures in the lead-up to the 9/11 attacks. TIME magazine named her Person of the Year in 2002. A few days after the raids in her hometown of Minneapolis, she told me, “This is not the first time that you’ve seen this Orwellian turn of the war on terror onto domestic peace groups and social justice groups … we had that begin very quickly after 9/11, and there were Office of Legal Counsel opinions that said the First Amendment no longer controls the war on terror.” . . .

This is all happening while the Obama administration uses fear of terrorism to seek expanded authority to spy on Internet users, and as another scandal is brewing: The Justice Department also revealed this week that FBI agents regularly cheated on an exam testing knowledge of proper rules and procedures governing domestic surveillance. This is more than just a cheating scandal. It’s about basic freedoms at the core of our democracy, the abuse of power and the erosion of civil liberties.  

(my emphasis)

Glen Greenwald:WH messaging about its base

President Obama gave an interview to Rolling Stone and actually said this:

   

The idea that we’ve got a lack of enthusiasm in the Democratic base, that people are sitting on their hands complaining, is just irresponsible. . . . .If we want the kind of country that respects civil rights and civil liberties, we’d better fight in this election.

(Greenwald’s emphasis)

This may be one of the most audaciously hilarious political statements I’ve read in quite some time.  The Holder Justice Department’s record on domestic civil rights enforcement is actually one of the few areas where there has been substantial improvement — and that’s a perfectly legitimate argument to make — but for Barack Obama to cite “civil liberties” as a reason why Democratic apathy is “just irresponsible,” and to claim with a straight face that this election will determine whether we’re “the kind of country that respects” them, is so detached from basic reality that I actually had to read this three or four times to make certain I hadn’t misunderstood it.  To summarize Obama’s apparent claim:  the Republicans better not win in the midterm election, otherwise we’ll have due-process-free and even preventive detention, secret assassinations of U.S. citizens, vastly expanded government surveillance of the Internet, a continuation of Guantanamo, protection of Executive branch crimes through the use of radical secrecy doctrines, escalating punishment for whistleblowers, legal immunity for war crimes, and a massively escalated drone war in Pakistan.  That’s why, as the President inspirationally warns us:  “If we want the kind of country that respects civil liberties, we’d better fight in this election.”

Jane Hamsher: Hectoring the Base: It’s Not About GOTV, It’s About Laying the Blame

Obama is at it again, this time in Rolling Stone:

   

The president told Democrats that making change happen is hard and “if people now want to take their ball and go home, that tells me folks weren’t serious in the first place.”

Yes, for those wondering, this guy actually did win an election in 2008:

 

OBAMA:  It is inexcusable for any Democrat or progressive right now to stand on the sidelines in this midterm election. There may be complaints about us not having gotten certain things done, not fast enough, making certain legislative compromises. But right now, we’ve got a choice between a Republican Party that has moved to the right of George Bush and is looking to lock in the same policies that got us into these disasters in the first place, versus an administration that, with some admitted warts, has been the most successful administration in a generation in moving progressive agendas forward.

   The idea that we’ve got a lack of enthusiasm in the Democratic base, that people are sitting on their hands complaining, is just irresponsible.

I’d like to set the President’s mind at ease here.  Even if the GOP wins both houses of Congress, he’ll still be President.  And they’ll still need his signature on those bills.

But all of this “hippie punching” isn’t about turning out voters.  To do that, as Obama well knows, you have to inspire them.  Notice that nobody actually running for office is wagging their finger at voters and scolding them like a bunch of children.

No, this isn’t about GOTV.  It’s about setting up a narrative for who will take the blame for a disastrous election. And once again, the White House doesn’t care if they make matters worse in order to deflect responsibility from Obama.

David Dayen: Has the White House Lost Their Minds?

Have you ever seen an athlete stay in the game for too long (no intentional resemblance to any quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings) because they cannot imagine a world without the adulation and cheering? That’s about the only analogy I can make to the persistent carping inside the White House, now a definitive strategy and part of the President’s stump speech, telling the liberal base to “stop whining,” “get over it,” “wake up” and “get in gear.” Blue Texan has an more complete list, and contrasts it with messages that would work on him.

Before revealing the latest in this genre, I would just add that I’ve never seen a politician run an election with the message “Don’t be stupid, quit your bitching and vote for me.” This goes orders of magnitude beyond “Here are the stakes, my opponent would vote against everything you care about. That at least has a certain time-tested quality. That would make the election a choice and not a referendum. But “vote for me, you simpletons”? There’s a reason that strategy has never been employed: because it’s so insane to think that open berating would inspire a voter to action.

Bob Herbert: What Is Paladino About?

Is the Republican candidate for governor of New York a racist, sexist, pornography-loving creep? Or are there other, more benign, explanations for the stomach-turning e-mails distributed by Carl Paladino?  

One of the things that can happen in the news business is that some portion of a story becomes so vile, so offensive, it is virtually impossible to effectively recount or describe. Reporters keep their distance. Editors lunge for the delete button.

Such is the case with the images and videos forwarded by Mr. Paladino to a wide variety of people. The public should know about these mailings, and Mr. Paladino should give a full, thoughtful explanation of why he trafficked in such filth.

Joan Walsh: Say it ain’t so, Joe

Vice President Biden knows better than to tell the Democratic base to “stop whining.” Doesn’t he?

It’s been clear for a couple of weeks that Vice President Joe Biden was hitting the campaign trail with an assignment to rally the Democratic base. I watched his sit-down with Rachel Maddow Sept. 15, and he made a passionate appeal to the Maddow demographic, and Maddow herself. “One of the reasons I want to be on your show is to tell the progressives out there, you know, get in gear, man. Our progressive base…you should not stay home…you better get energized. Because the consequences are serious for the outcome of the things we care most about.”

On Monday though, Biden went a little beyond that, telling a crowd in New Hampshire that he wanted to “remind our base constituency to stop whining and get out there and look at the alternatives. This President has done an incredible job. He’s kept his promises.”

Now, I’m trying hard not to have a knee-jerk response to Biden’s dig.

Joe Conason: Are GOP midterm expectations oversold?

The “Democratic doom” narrative is meant to demoralize, but even Scott Rasmussen believes Dems will hold the Senate

Creating the universal premonition of Democratic doom is always among the most useful elements of Republican strategy. A broad feeling of foreboding demoralizes the party base, repels independent voters who prefer the winning side, and strikes emotional chords that are at least as important in electoral behavior as ideologies and issues. So Republican leaders and pundits regularly issue outlandish predictions of crushing victory, echoed across the media spectrum until they become self-fulfilling.

This year’s real conditions for Democrats are certainly threatening, but there are indications that the impending repudiation will not be as devastating as suggested by the current narrative. Whatever ultimately happens in the House, where a Republican takeover appears likely if not inevitable, the Senate will probably remain under Democratic control — despite enormous spending by “independent” groups such as the Club for Growth, the voice of Wall Street conservatives; American Crossroads, the Karl Rove outfit; and the Chamber of Commerce.

Dana Milbank: A sadder but wiser Axelrod packs his bags

It was, perhaps, inevitable: Twenty months in Washington, and David Axelrod has caught the bug.

This startling revelation occurred Monday afternoon, in a webcast interview with Politico’s Mike Allen, who noticed that President Obama’s chief strategist was “looking trim” and asked Axelrod his secret.

“Well, the real secret,” the newly lanky Axelrod explained, is “the first day I went on vacation I got sick and I learned I had a parasite.”

Oh, no! Was it a lobbyist? A defense contractor? One of those nasty social climbers?

“I want to make clear,” Axelrod continued, “that this happened outside of Washington. This is not a commentary on Washington that I have a parasite.”

Well, we in the capital are relieved to know that we are not the source of Axelrod’s digestive distress. But if Washington didn’t take those 25 pounds off of the 6-foot-2-inch Axelrod frame, this town did take something else from Axelrod and his boss: the notion that they would arrive and that the culture of politics would change.

Religion Stumps Americans

(2 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Basic Religion Test Stumps Many Americans

Americans are by all measures a deeply religious people, but they are also deeply ignorant about religion.

Researchers from the independent Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life phoned more than 3,400 Americans and asked them 32 questions about the Bible, Christianity and other world religions, famous religious figures and the constitutional principles governing religion in public life.

On average, people who took the survey answered half the questions incorrectly, and many flubbed even questions about their own faith.

Those who scored the highest were atheists and agnostics, as well as two religious minorities: Jews and Mormons. The results were the same even after the researchers controlled for factors like age and racial differences.

“Even after all these other factors, including education, are taken into account, atheists and agnostics, Jews and Mormons still outperform all the other religious groups in our survey,” said Greg Smith, a senior researcher at Pew.

Take the test.

How much do you know about religion?

Tell us how you did.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Wednesday Morning Reading

I Trust It Is Now Clear Democrats Hate The Left

by Ian Welsh, September 29 2010

Now that virtually everyone of any importance, up to and including the President has told you that they hate you, that you are a bunch of unrealistic ingrates who need to be drug tested, I trust no one still thinks the White House doesn’t hate the left’s guts, and that it comes from the very top, from the President?



Not just that, but for whatever reason, these folks either don’t care about winning elections or are so incompetent they can’t see the obvious.  Everyone with any track record of being, y’know, right, told them the stimulus was too small and every political consultant knows the economy is the most important thing to reelection chances, yet they passed an inadequate stimulus anyway.  In a midterm election where they need the base to come out, they have spent the last six months insulting the base and engaging in policy after policy meant to enrage it.  They could have, for example, put off filing a brief arguing that government secrecy allows the president to assassinate any American he wants anytime until after the election, but they chose not to.

It is, for whatever reason, more important to Democrats to “hippie punch” than it is for them to win elections. It is more important for them to serve Wall Street, even if Wall Street gives more money to Republicans, than it is to win elections.  Further, they are  very happy to do very non-liberal things, like restrict abortion rights, forbid drug reimportation, gut net neutrality or try and cut social security.



This is your Democratic party.  These people are the problem. As long as they are around, the problem can never be solved.  If it could be, they would have done so.  This means, sorry folks, that the only hope for liberalism and for America to avoid a complete economic meltdown, is for Democrats to be swept out of power and for as many Dems who aren’t reliable progressives to lose their seats as possible.

Yes, the Republicans will do worse things, but that’s going to happen anyway.  And in some cases, as with Social Security, it is better to have Republicans in power, because it is easier to fight Republican efforts to gut SS than it is to fight Democratic efforts to do so.

Obama Scapegoats His Own Voters

By: Cenk Uygur Wednesday September 29, 2010 3:05 am

They think they’re going to lose and they’re setting up a scapegoat. It wasn’t that they ran a bad campaign or that they didn’t deliver on their promises – it was their ungrateful voters and the damned professional left. Actually, Washington reporters will love this. There is nothing they enjoy more than beating up on progressive activists and the Democratic base. This strategy is tailored made for the DC elite. They’re going to eat it up!



I think they still believe that the DC media is a good proxy for the mood of the country. That is a stunning and inexcusable error. But they’re so deep in, they can’t even see that losing the election and winning over the DC establishment is not a win or a wash, that’s a gigantic loss. Do you think making David Broder happy will win you the 2012 election?



Almost everyone in Washington is there because they succeeded in this broken, corrupt system. If you make them happy, you’ve probably done the exact opposite of what you were supposed to do.

What got you elected was the promise to throw those bums out on their asses not to cater to them. But if you like, you can take another cheap shot at the people trying to help you and see if that changes the polls. My guess is it won’t. And then when you blame us again, the only people happy will be the ones in DC who hate change.

Obama’s CYA 2010 Talking Points for Rolling Stone

by Taylor Marsh, 28 September 2010 4:18 pm

Barack Obama is never responsible. What’s worse is that it doesn’t even occur to the President to show humility in the face of compromises with Republicans that manifested policies that haven’t solved the problems he was sent to fix. I won’t take you through the litany of bipartisan mush Obama and his loyalists call “accomplishments,” most of which any Democratic president elected in 2008 could have gotten done with a Republican Congress, though we’ll never know what a could have done with a Democratic majority if Pres. Obama would have been bold instead of compromising with the minority at every turn.

The hubris of Pres. Obama to point the finger at voters at a time when it’s his responsibility and that of the Dem leadership to make the case for Democrats is choking.

Pres. Obama obviously thinks Democratic voters are his bitch and an abused one at that; the more you whip the stupid wench the more she’ll perform for you, no matter whether she gets anything for her trouble. After all, she’s got nowhere else to go, right?

On This Day in History: September 29

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

September 29 is the 272nd day of the year (273rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 93 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1547, Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote, is born this day near Madrid.

Cervantes led an adventurous life and achieved much popular success, but he nevertheless struggled financially throughout his life. Little is know about his childhood, except that he was a favorite student of Madrid humanist Juan Lopez, and that his father was an apothecary.

In 1569, Cervantes was living in Rome and working for a future cardinal. Shortly thereafter, he enlisted in the Spanish fleet to fight against the Turks. At the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, he took three bullets and suffered permanent damage to his left hand. Later, he was stationed at Palermo and Naples. On the way home to Madrid in 1575, he and his brother Roderigo were captured by Barbary pirates and held captive in Algiers. Cervantes was ransomed after five years of captivity and returned to Madrid, where he began writing. Although his records indicate he wrote 20 to 30 plays, only two survive. In 1585, he published a romance. During this time, he married a woman 18 years younger than he was and had an illegitimate daughter, whom he raised in his household. He worked as a tax collector and as a requisitioner of supplies for the navy, but was jailed for irregularities in his accounting. Some historians believe he formulated the idea for Don Quixote while in jail.

In 1604, he received the license to publish Don Quixote. Although the book began as a satire of chivalric epics, it was far more complex than a simple satire. The book blended traditional genres to create a sad portrait of a penniless man striving to live by the ideals of the past. The book was a huge success and brought Cervantes literary respect and position, but did not generate much money. He wrote dramas and short stories until a phony sequel, penned by another writer, prompted him to write Don Quixote, Part II in 1615.

Cervantes died in Madrid on April 23, 1616. In honor of the date on which both Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare died, UNESCO established April 23 as the International Day of the Book. (Shakespeare and Cervantes, however, did not actually die on the same day, as the April 23 date for Shakespeare is Julian calendar (Old Style) and the April 23 date for Cervantes is Gregorian calendar (New Style) as those were the calendars in effect in England and in Spain, respectively, at that time. The Gregorian calendar was then ten days ahead of the Julian.)  

 522 BC – Darius I of Persia kills the Magian usurper Gaumata, securing his hold as king of the Persian Empire.

480 BC – Battle of Salamis: The Greek fleet under Themistocles defeats the Persian fleet under Xerxes I.

61 BC – Pompey the Great celebrates his third triumph for victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars on his 45th birthday.

1227 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, is excommunicated by Pope Gregory IX for his failure to participate in the Crusades.

1364 – Battle of Auray: English forces defeat the French in Brittany; end of the Breton War of Succession.

1789 – The U.S. War Department first establishes a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.

1789 – The first U.S. Congress adjourns.

1829 – The Metropolitan Police of London, later also known as the Met, is founded.

1848 – Battle of Pakozd: Hungarian forces defeat Croats at Pakozd; the first battle of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848.

1850 – The Roman Catholic hierarchy is re-established in England and Wales by Pope Pius IX.

1864 – American Civil War: The Battle of Chaffin’s Farm is fought.

1885 – The first practical public electric tramway in the world is opened in Blackpool, England.

1907 – The cornerstone is laid at Washington National Cathedral in the U.S. capital.

1911 – Italy declares war on the Ottoman Empire.

1916 – John D. Rockefeller becomes the first billionaire.

1918 – World War I: The Hindenburg Line is broken by Allied forces. Bulgaria signs an armistice.

1941 – World War II: Holocaust in Kiev, Ukraine: German Einsatzgruppe C begins the Babi Yar massacre, according to the Einsatzgruppen operational situation report.

1943 – World War II: U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower and Italian Marshal Pietro Badoglio sign an armistice aboard the Royal Navy battleship HMS Nelson off Malta.

1949 – The Communist Party of China writes the Common Programme for the future People’s Republic of China.

1951 – The first live sporting event seen coast-to-coast in the United States, a college football game between Duke and the University of Pittsburgh, is televised on NBC.

1954 – The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is signed.

1957 – 20 MCi (740 petabecquerels) of radioactive material is released in an explosion at the Soviet Mayak nuclear plant at Chelyabinsk.

1960 – Nikita Khrushchev, leader of Soviet Union, disrupts a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly with a number of angry outbursts.

1962 – Alouette 1, the first Canadian satellite, is launched.

1963 – The second period of the Second Vatican Council opens.

1963 – The University of East Anglia is established in Norwich, England.

1964 – The Argentine comic strip Mafalda is published for the first time.

1966 – The Chevrolet Camaro, originally named Panther, is introduced.

1971 – Oman joins the Arab League.

1972 – Sino-Japanese relations: Japan establishes diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China after breaking official ties with the Republic of China.

1975 – WGPR in Detroit, Michigan, becomes the world’s first black-owned-and-operated television station.

1979 – Pope John Paul II becomes the first pope to set foot on Irish soil with his pastoral visit to the Republic of Ireland.

1982 – The 1982 Chicago Tylenol murders begin when the first of seven individuals dies in metropolitan Chicago.

1988 – Space Shuttle: NASA launches STS-26, the return to flight mission, after the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.

1990 – Construction of the Washington National Cathedral is completed.

1990 – The YF-22, which would later become the F-22 Raptor, flies for the first time.

1991 – Military coup in Haiti (1991 Haitian coup d’etat).

1992 – Brazilian President Fernando Collor de Mello resigns.

1995 – The United States Navy disbands Fighter Squadron 84 (VF-84), nicknamed the “Jolly Rogers”.

2001 – The Syracuse Herald-Journal, a U.S. newspaper dating back to 1839, ceases publication.

2004 – The asteroid 4179 Toutatis passes within four lunar distances of Earth.

2004 – The Burt Rutan Ansari X Prize entry SpaceShipOne performs a successful spaceflight, the first of two required to win the prize.

2005 – US Senate confirms John Roberts to be the next Chief Justice of the United States.

2006 – US Representative Mark Foley resigns after allegations of inappropriate emails to house pages are revealed.

2006 – Gol Transportes Aereos Flight 1907 collides in mid-air with an Embraer Legacy business jet near Peixoto de Azevedo, Mato Grosso, Brazil, killing 154 total people, and triggering a Brazilian aviation crisis.

2007 – Calder Hall, the world’s first commercial nuclear power station, is demolished in a controlled explosion.

2008 – Following the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual, The Dow Jones Industrial Average falls 777.68 points, the largest single-day point loss in its history.

2009 – An 8.0 magnitude earthquake near the Samoan Islands causes a tsunami .

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

Now with 39 Top Stories.

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 One fifth of world’s plants threatened by extinction: study

AFP

54 mins ago

LONDON (AFP) – More than a fifth of the world’s plant species faces the threat of extinction, a trend with potentially catastrophic effects for life on Earth, according to research released on Wednesday.

But a separate study cautioned that extinction of mammals had been overestimated and suggested some mammal species thought to have been wiped out may yet be rediscovered.

Stephen Hopper, director of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, London, said the report on plant loss was the most accurate mapping yet of the threat to the planet’s estimated 380,000 plant species.

2 Europe navigates between alarm, hope on economy

by Nathaniel Harrison, AFP

Tue Sep 28, 4:31 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – Europe confronted ominous new bond market pressures on Tuesday and braced for massive public protests against spending cuts, dampening the economic landscape despite signs of strength in Germany and Britain.

In Europe on Tuesday long-term yields on Irish and Portuguese sovereign bonds soared to the highest levels since 1997 and sent fresh warning signals about overspending and public debt in the eurozone.

“While the underlying macro picture in the eurozone looks increasingly resilient and reassuring, the risk of accidents in financial and sovereign debt markets remains uncomfortably high, with Ireland and Portugal in the limelight,” Unicredit economist Marco Annunziata said.

3 N.Korea’s heir apparent gets senior party posts: state media

by Simon Martin, AFP

2 hrs 49 mins ago

SEOUL (AFP) – The youngest son of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il has been given senior posts in the ruling communist party, state media said Wednesday, confirming his status as heir apparent to his ailing father.

Kim Jong-Un was named one of two vice-chairmen of its powerful central military commission and a member of its core institution the central committee, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

On Monday the 68-year-old leader had appointed his son a four-star general, a move seen as the first official confirmation that Jong-Un has been picked as eventual leader of the impoverished but nuclear-armed nation.

4 IMF boss sees low risk of ‘currency war’

by Hugues Honore and Andrew Beatty, AFP

2 hrs 18 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The risk of a global currency war is “low” but cannot be ruled out, IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Tuesday, following a spate of currency interventions.

Amid mounting anger that economic powers are pouring money into currency markets to make exports cheaper at the expense of rivals, Strauss-Kahn insisted the potential impact of an all-out currency war should give countries pause.

“I don’t feel today that there is a big risk of a currency war. But that’s part of the downside risk,” Strauss-Kahn told reporters in Washington.

5 At snail’s pace, nudging the world towards better food

by Francoise Kadri, AFP

Tue Sep 28, 12:07 pm ET

ROME (AFP) – For more than two decades, Carlo Petrini has been gently nudging the world towards “good, clean and fair” food, signing up 100,000 people in 163 countries to his Slow Food movement.

“Philosophically, finding slowness again is essential. We need to take a small, homeopathic dose of it every day, to come back to a life rhythm that is more bearable,” the 61-year-old Italian told AFP in an interview in Rome.

Slow Food, whose symbol is a red snail, promotes food that is “good at a sensory level,” but also aims to educate people about traditional and wholesome means of production and defend biodiversity in the food supply.

6 Competitors start arriving for C’wealth Games

by Pratap Chakravarty, AFP

Tue Sep 28, 10:50 am ET

NEW DELHI (AFP) – The clock ticked down on the Delhi Commonwealth Games Tuesday with signs that conditions in the much-criticised athletes’ village were finally improving as hundreds of competitors arrived.

Australia, one of the countries that had slammed the village last week, said organisers were working hard to improve the state of facilities just five days before the start of the event.

“It’s pretty good,” Lynsey Armitage, a member of the Australian lawn bowls team, told reporters. “I’ve been here for the last two days. I feel completely safe and secure.”

7 US commission told 50 percent of oil spill remains in Gulf

by Alex Ogle, AFP

Mon Sep 27, 4:13 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – More than half the oil released from a busted BP well remains in the Gulf of Mexico, a presidential panel was told Monday, as the US pointman lamented a “dysfunctional” response to the disaster.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar meanwhile told the bipartisan commission that the spill had bolstered a drive to reform federal regulations for offshore drilling, promising that lessons were learnt.

In an ominous sign for Gulf residents, however, oceanographer Ian MacDonald told the probe that while much of the oil was dispersed, evaporated or removed by burning and skimming, the “remaining fraction — over 50 percent of the total discharge — is a highly durable material that resists further dissipation.”

8 Malaria vaccine closer than ever, scientists say

by Karin Zeitvogel, AFP

2 hrs 35 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Scientists are closer than ever to rolling out the first malaria vaccine, which could be available in Africa by 2015, a co-inventor of the shot against the killer disease said Tuesday.

Advanced trials of the RTS,S vaccine against falciparum malaria, the deadliest strain of the disease, are under way in seven African countries and going “very well,” said GlaxoSmithKline researcher Joe Cohen, who has been working on developing the vaccine for over 20 years.

“We believe we’ll have the first data coming out of the trials in 2012, and, to make a long story short, we could have the first implementation in Africa between 2015 and 2016,” he told AFP.

9 Medvedev fires veteran Moscow mayor

by Stuart Williams, AFP

Tue Sep 28, 4:23 pm ET

MOSCOW (AFP) – President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday fired Moscow’s strongman mayor Yury Luzhkov, dramatically ending an 18-year rule that transformed the Russian capital but also attracted bitter controversy.

The sacking — one of Medvedev’s boldest moves since coming to power in 2008 — came after the mayor was lambasted by the Kremlin for his aloof handling of the summer wildfire crisis that blanketed Moscow in smog.

A decree, published on the Kremlin web site, ordered Luzhkov, 74, to be “dismissed from the position of Moscow mayor because he has lost the confidence of the Russian president.”

10 World failing to meet 2010 HIV/AIDS care target: UN

by Peter Capella, AFP

Tue Sep 28, 12:16 pm ET

GENEVA (AFP) – UN agencies warned on Friday that the world will fail to meet an end-2010 deadline for “universal” access to HIV/AIDS care and treatment, while new crisis-driven funding cuts could unravel any gains.

The World Health Organisation, UNAIDS, and the UN Children’s Fund UNICEF said in a joint report that the target of universal access — defined as access for 80 percent of the HIV positive population — to prevention, treatment and care was within “clear reach” for “a good number of countries.”

“Nevertheless, this report also demonstrates that, on a global scale, targets for universal access to HIV prevention, treatment and care will not be met by 2010,” the report said.

11 Financial regulators to trot out reform plans

By Dave Clarke, Reuters

2 hrs 20 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. regulators racing to implement new financial market policing powers will appear together before a Senate committee this week to face questions likely tinged with election-season politics.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and five other top regulators are due to testify to the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday about how they intend to put in place a broad-ranging regulatory overhaul that was approved after rancorous debate just two months ago.

Republicans are keen to paint the regulatory reform as a big government takeover of private industry that will jeopardize the economic recovery by driving up borrowing costs for consumer and businesses.

12 North Korea leader’s son seen set for succession

By Jack Kim, Reuters

1 hr 41 mins ago

SEOUL (Reuters) – North Korean leader Kim Jong-il’s son, Jong-un, became his second in command at the ruling Workers’ Party’s powerful Central Military Commission on Wednesday, teeing him up for succession.

Kim Jong-un, believed to have been born in 1983 or 1984 and given his first public title on Tuesday as an army general, was also made a Central Committee member at the first party conference in 30 years, state news agency KCNA said.

The party meeting, where KCNA said Kim Jong-il was in attendance, also made the leader’s sister and her husband members of the political bureau and elevated long-time loyal family aides to its supreme leadership body.

13 Poll gives former Bush official big lead in Ohio

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 4:20 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican Rob Portman, a senior official under former President George W. Bush, has opened a commanding 13-point lead over his Democratic rival in a Senate race in Ohio, a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday said.

Portman, budget director and U.S. trade representative in Bush’s administration, leads Democrat Lee Fisher 50 percent to 37 percent barely more than one month before the November 2 congressional election.

Portman has pulled away from his rival — he led Fisher by 7 percentage points in an early August survey — in a race dominated by voter worries about the economy and stubbornly high unemployment. They are vying for the seat or retiring Republican Senator George Voinovich.

14 Obama hits the road in hopes of firing up voters

By Patricia Zengerle, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 3:05 pm ET

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (Reuters) – President Barack Obama worked to portray Republicans on Tuesday as catering to millionaires over the middle class to try to energize young voters ahead of November 2 congressional elections.

“You’ve got to ask yourselves, ‘What direction do I want this country to go in?'” Obama said at a campaign-style event in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Obama is on a four-state tour this week looking to drum up support from young voters who helped send him to the White House two years ago and who may be crucial in helping Democrats hold on to their congressional majorities on November 2.

15 Lawmakers eyes late-year Senate vote on China yuan

By Doug Palmer, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 5:32 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Senate will wait until after the November 2 congressional elections to vote on legislation to pressure China to raise the value of its currency, Democratic senators said on Tuesday.

Senator Sherrod Brown told reporters he saw strong bipartisan support for currency legislation that the House of Representatives is expected to approve on Wednesday.

However, it is unlikely the Senate will vote on such a bill before lawmakers recess in coming days to go home to campaign, the Ohio Democrat said.

16 Medvedev fires defiant Moscow mayor

By Conor Humphries, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 3:11 pm ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday abruptly sacked veteran Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov, a powerful political opponent who criticized the Kremlin and then defied pressure to resign.

Luzhkov, 74, a pillar of the ruling United Russia party, had ruled the capital since 1992, but angered Medvedev by suggesting the country needed a stronger and more decisive leader. The remark seen as favoring the prime minister, Vladimir Putin.

Putin offered support for Medvedev’s decision, suggesting the mayor had overstepped the mark by challenging the Kremlin. But he also praised Luzhkov and made clear that he himself would help choose a successor.

17 Brazil race tightens as Rousseff slips in poll

By Stuart Grudgings, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 2:21 pm ET

BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazil’s ruling party presidential candidate Dilma Rousseff may be forced into a runoff after an opinion poll on Tuesday showed her lead slipped in the wake of an ethics scandal involving a former aide.

The survey by pollster Datafolha showed Rousseff’s voter support fell to 46 percent from 49 percent a week ago, leaving her with 51 percent of valid votes — just above the threshold she needs to win the election in the first round on Sunday.

The poll was the clearest sign yet that corruption allegations that prompted Rousseff’s successor as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s chief of staff to resign are eroding the frontrunner’s commanding lead and increasing the chances of a runoff vote on October 31.

18 Myanmar tells U.N. it aims for ‘free and fair’ vote

By Louis Charbonneau, Reuters

Tue Sep 28, 11:49 am ET

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – The foreign minister of Myanmar vowed on Tuesday that the country’s ruling junta will do its best to ensure that a November 7 general election, which rights groups have declared a sham, is “free and fair.”

Speaking at the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, Foreign Minister Nyan Win insisted that the vote in the country formerly known as Burma will be “inclusive” — even though Nobel Peace Prize laureate and democratic icon Aung San Suu Kyi and other political prisoners are not allowed to run.

“Whatever the challenges facing us, we are committed to do our best for the successful holding of the free and fair general elections for the best interest of the country and its people,” Win told the 192-nation assembly.

19 Obama both rallies, scolds Dems in campaign trip

By CHARLES BABINGTON and LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, Associated Press Writers

57 mins ago

MADISON, Wis. – Buck up. Stop whining. And get to work.

Clearly frustrated by Republicans’ energy – and his own party’s lack of enthusiasm – President Barack Obama scolded fellow Democrats even as he rallied them Tuesday in an effort to save the party from big GOP gains in the crucial midterm elections. In the final month of campaigning, he’s trying to re-energize young voters, despondent liberals and other Democrats whose excitement over his election has dissipated.

“It is inexcusable for any Democrat or progressive right now to stand on the sidelines,” the president declared in a Rolling Stone magazine interview. He said that supposed supporters who are “sitting on their hands complaining” are irresponsible because the consequences of Republican congressional victories could be dashed Democratic plans.

20 Obama: Democratic voter apathy ‘inexcusable’

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

Tue Sep 28, 7:02 am ET

WASHINGTON – Admonishing his own party, President Barack Obama says it would be “inexcusable” and “irresponsible” for unenthusiastic Democratic voters to sit out the midterm elections, warning that the consequences could be a squandered agenda for years.

“People need to shake off this lethargy. People need to buck up,” Obama told Rolling Stone in an interview to be published Friday. The president told Democrats that making change happen is hard and “if people now want to take their ball and go home, that tells me folks weren’t serious in the first place.”

The midterm elections are in five weeks and polling shows that Republicans, out of power at the White House and on Capitol Hill, have a much more excited base of supporters than Democrats. Obama, campaigning this week in four states, is in a sprint to restore the voter passion that helped him win office.

21 Sour economic mood in living room and boardroom

By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO, AP Retail Writer

58 mins ago

NEW YORK – Americans in both the living room and the boardroom are growing more fearful about the economy, creating a Catch-22 for the job market: Shoppers won’t spend until they feel more secure, and business won’t hire until people start spending.

The eroding views were revealed Tuesday by two separate surveys, one that found everyday Americans are increasingly pessimistic about jobs and another that found CEOs have grimmer predictions about upcoming sales.

“The economy is stuck in an unvirtuous cycle,” said Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo. “Consumers are waiting for more jobs to be created, and businesses are waiting for consumers.”

22 Ethics panel faces partisan split over trial dates

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 45 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The House ethics committee split along party lines Tuesday as Republicans demanded pre-election trials for two prominent Democrats, Charles Rangel and Maxine Waters.

The rift is important politically because proceedings in October could generate negative headlines for Democrats. Trials after the election would likely keep the Democrats’ ethics record in the background in midterm campaigns largely fought over economic issues.

The split shatters anew the image of the committee as a panel where members of both parties work together to investigate allegations of ethical wrongdoing.

23 North Korea leader’s son promoted, seen as heir

By JEAN H. LEE, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 15 mins ago

SEOUL, South Korea – The youngest son of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il was elected to his first prominent posts in the ruling Workers’ Party, state media said early Wednesday, putting him well on the path to succeed his father as leader of the nuclear-armed nation.

The announcement of Kim Jong Un’s ascension to the party’s Central Committee and military commission came a day after news that Kim Jong Il had made him a four-star general – a major promotion that appeared to set into motion a plan to eventually put the little-known, Swiss-schooled 20-something at the helm of the communist country.

Kim Jong Il has led the nation with absolute authority since taking over in 1994 upon the death of his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, in the communist world’s first father-to-son transfer of power.

24 Recession rips at US marriages, expands income gap

By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer

39 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The recession seems to be socking Americans in the heart as well as the wallet: Marriages have hit an all-time low while pleas for food stamps have reached a record high and the gap between rich and poor has grown to its widest ever.

The long recession technically ended in mid-2009, economists say, but U.S. Census data released Tuesday show the painful, lingering effects. The annual survey covers all of last year, when unemployment skyrocketed to 10 percent, and the jobless rate is still a stubbornly high 9.6 percent.

The figures also show that Americans on average have been spending about 36 fewer minutes in the office per week and are stuck in traffic a bit less than they had been. But that is hardly good news, either. The reason is largely that people have lost jobs or are scraping by with part-time work.

25 Emanuel faces hurdles if coming home to Chicago

By DON BABWIN and TAMMY WEBBER, Associated Press Writers

18 mins ago

CHICAGO – If Rahm Emanuel wants to run for Chicago mayor, the White House chief of staff will have to persuade voters to do what the couple leasing his Chicago house apparently would not: Welcome him home.

Emanuel, widely expected to announce a decision about his candidacy within days, recently called the tenants renting his home on Chicago’s North Side and asked them to move out so he could move back in, spokesman and close friend Rick Jasculca said Tuesday.

But the couple said no. They extended their lease until next year just days before Mayor Richard Daley announced he wouldn’t seek re-election, Jasculca said, and told Emanuel they don’t want to leave.

26 AP IMPACT: Haiti still waiting for pledged US aid

By JONATHAN M. KATZ and MARTHA MENDOZA, Associated Press Writers

1 hr 35 mins ago

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Nearly nine months after the earthquake, more than a million Haitians still live on the streets between piles of rubble. One reason: Not a cent of the $1.15 billion the U.S. promised for rebuilding has arrived.

The money was pledged by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in March for use this year in rebuilding. The U.S. has already spent more than $1.1 billion on post-quake relief, but without long-term funds, the reconstruction of the wrecked capital cannot begin.

With just a week to go before fiscal 2010 ends, the money is still tied up in Washington. At fault: bureaucracy, disorganization and a lack of urgency, The Associated Press learned in interviews with officials in the State Department, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the White House and the U.N. Office of the Special Envoy. One senator has held up a key authorization bill because of a $5 million provision he says will be wasteful.

27 Landis says he waited too long to own up to doping

By NEIL FRANKLAND, AP Sports Writer

Tue Sep 28, 5:35 am ET

MELBOURNE, Australia – Disgraced cyclist Floyd Landis says he waited almost four years to reveal his doping because he knew once he’d admitted lying, he would not be believed about the widespread use of performance enhancing drugs in the sport.

After years of denials, Landis – stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title because of doping – admitted in May to using performance-enhancing drugs and accused others, including former teammate and seven-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong, of doping. Armstrong has vehemently denied the accusations and his attorney has described Landis as a “serial liar.”

Landis, speaking at an Australian conference on the eve of the road cycling world championships, said Tuesday that until more people come forward, cycling will continue to have a problem with drug cheats.

28 Consumer confidence drops to lowest since Feb.

By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO, AP Retail Writer

Tue Sep 28, 10:31 am ET

NEW YORK – Americans’ view of the economy turned grimmer in September amid escalating job worries, falling to the lowest point since February.

The downbeat report, released Tuesday, raises more fears about the tenuous U.S. economic recovery. It also further underscores the disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street; consumers’ confidence fell further even as stocks rebounded in September.

The Conference Board, based in New York, said its monthly Consumer Confidence Index now stands at 48.5, down from the revised 53.2 in August. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters were expecting 52.5.

29 Home prices to take hit next year in many markets

By ALAN ZIBEL and JANNA HERRON, AP Real Estate Writers

Tue Sep 28, 4:00 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Don’t take the latest snapshot of U.S. home prices too seriously.

The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city index released Tuesday ticked up in July from June. But the gain is merely temporary, analysts say. They see home values taking a dive in many major markets well into next year.

That’s because the peak home-buying season is now ending after a dismal summer. The hardest-hit markets, already battered by foreclosures, are bracing for a bigger wave of homes sold at foreclosure or through short sales. A short sale is when a lender lets a homeowner sell for less than the mortgage is worth.

30 Colbert sparks debate about ‘expert’ celebrities

By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 7:15 am ET

WASHINGTON – There are congressional hearings and there are comedy shows, and the twain rarely meet.

So when a House panel on immigration combined them on purpose last week with testimony from Stephen Colbert (kohl-BEHR’) and his “truthy” alter ego, debate broke out on the proper roles of the many celebrities – from Angelina Jolie to Bono to Elmo – who advocate in Washington.

In Colbert’s appearance, there was profit to be made from the public, taxpayer-funded forum on one of the nation’s weightiest issues, the plight of migrant workers. Immigrant advocates won national news coverage; Colbert helped generate material for his show; politicians scored live coverage of themselves during a brutal election year; and the media bagged a widely viewed story.

31 Drug expiration date pushes CA execution to brink

By PAUL ELIAS, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 23 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – Five years ago, the planned execution of Michael Morales became so chaotic and confused that California prison officials canceled it two hours before he was to die.

Now, the state’s first lethal injection attempt since then is running dangerously close to another execution night mess.

The problem with Morales in 2006 was a failure to find medical professionals to assist with the execution.

32 FEMA rejects disaster aid for Calif gas line blast

By JULIANA BARBASSA, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 5 mins ago

SAN FRANCISCO – Federal emergency officials have turned down the state’s request for millions in federal disaster aid for the gas pipeline explosion that consumed a Northern California neighborhood earlier this month. The death toll rose to eight Tuesday.

The San Mateo County coroner’s office confirmed James Emil Franco, 58, died Monday morning at a San Francisco hospital. An autopsy was scheduled for Tuesday to determine cause of death.

Franco rented a second-floor room in Jose Alvarado’s home, and the two had developed a bond, the homeowner told the San Francisco Chronicle.

33 Rural teacher shortage leads schools to grow own

By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 41 mins ago

BUFFALO, Mo. – Suzanne Feldman realizes she’s an anomaly: a soon-to-be college graduate who wants to return to the languid rhythms of rural life rather than flee.

The aspiring high school math teacher is a member of the inaugural class of the Ozarks Teacher Corps, a group of southwest Missouri teachers in training who receive $4,000 annual scholarships in exchange for a three-year commitment to work in rural school districts after graduation.

Having grown up in a town with fewer than 3,000 residents, a place where your homeroom instructor is just as likely to be sitting in the same church pew come Sunday, the 21-year-old newlywed knows that small-town teachers are not just educators but also neighbors and role models.

34 12-step manuscript rare glimpse into early AA

By LEANNE ITALIE, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 4:21 pm ET

In 1939, about 5,000 copies of a book offering hopeless drunks a spiritual path to recovery through 12 steps were released by a fledgling fellowship of alcoholics.

They called it “Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered From Alcoholism.”

Sales were dismal at first, but interest picked up in 1941 with help from a story in The Saturday Evening Post and grew into a recovery revolution for everybody from over-eaters and the over-sexed to gamblers and shopaholics.

35 LA teacher suicide sparks test-score pushback

By CHRISTINA HOAG, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 2:04 pm ET

SOUTH GATE, Calif. – The Los Angeles Times should remove teacher performance ratings from its website after the apparent suicide of a teacher despondent over his score, the union representing Los Angeles school teachers said.

United Teachers Los Angeles also has asked school administrators to join with them in the request to the newspaper, which published the ratings last month, union president AJ Duffy said.

The body of 39-year-old Rigoberto Ruelas Jr., a fifth-grade teacher at Miramonte Elementary School, was found Sunday at the foot of a remote forest bridge in what appears to be a suicide.

36 Calls for longer school years face budget reality

By KAREN MATTHEWS, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 9:18 am ET

NEW YORK – President Barack Obama’s call for a longer school day and year for America’s kids echoes a similar call he made a year ago to little effect, illustrating just how deeply entrenched the traditional school calendar is and how little power the federal government has to change it.

Education reformers have long called for U.S. kids to log more time in the classroom so they can catch up with their peers elsewhere in the world, but resistance from leisure-loving teenagers isn’t the only reason there is no mass movement to keep schoolchildren in their seats.

Such a change could cost cash-strapped state governments and local school districts billions of dollars, strip teachers of a time-honored perk of their profession, and irk officials in states that already bridle at federal intrusion into their traditional control over education.

37 Scientists use hovering zeppelin to film whales

By MANUEL VALDES, Associated Press Writer

Tue Sep 28, 5:48 am ET

EVERETT, Wash. – Pilot Katharine Board often sees pods of blue, gray and killer whales as she flies along the California coast. Compared to other pilots, however, she has a unique vantage point – low and slow – from the only operational zeppelin in the United States.

Board’s airship, a modern model of an aircraft that is a throwback to the 1930s era of aviation, gives her a clear and steady view of the sea giants.

“The great thing about moving slowly and low – we fly 1,000 feet above the ground and our cruising speed is 40 miles per hour – is that you really get to see the world, you really do get to see the places you’re in,” Board said.

38 Hundreds protest FBI raids on anti-war activists

By STEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 27, 9:01 pm ET

MINNEAPOLIS – Hundreds of protesters gathered outside FBI offices in Minneapolis and Chicago on Monday, bearing signs and shouting chants condemning the agency’s recent searches of homes and offices of anti-war activists in both cities.

About 150 people protested in Minneapolis, with signs reading: “Stop FBI harassment. Opposing war is not a crime.” Roughly 120 people marched in Chicago, chanting, “Hey, hey! Ho, ho! FBI raids have got to go!”

Search warrants had indicated investigators were looking for connections between the activists and radical groups in Colombia and the Middle East. Activists interviewed by The Associated Press scoffed at the suggestion that they might have provided material support to terrorism, and denied contributing money to terrorists.

39 Hearing begins in alleged plot to murder Afghans

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 27, 8:09 pm ET

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. – A soldier’s videotaped statements describing how he and his colleagues randomly killed three Afghan civilians came under scrutiny Monday at a hearing into one of the most serious war-crimes cases from the war in Afghanistan.

Cpl. Jeremy Morlock of Wasilla, Alaska, is among five Stryker soldiers charged with premeditated murder and conspiracy to commit premeditated murder. In interviews with Army investigators, he described a plot led by Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs to randomly kill civilians for sport while on patrol in Kandahar Province.

Prosecutors have also alleged that members of the platoon mutilated Afghan corpses and even collected fingers and other body parts, and that some posed for photos with Afghan corpses. Morlock talked about how they threw a grenade at a civilian to “wax him.”

Prime Time

Well, last week we said goodbye to H.G. Wells and thwarted her nefarious plot to destroy humanity by using the Minoan Trident to set off the Yellowstone Super Volcano.  Claudia seemed more comfortable with her destiny as a Caretaker and Myka quit because she couldn’t stand the stress anymore.

Oh and Arnie got another one of those shoulder sling flesh wound thingies, on the other side this year I think, from shooting at H.G.’s Corsican Brothers Vest.

I don’t nap through all the episodes you know.

This week we return to the Stargate Universe with, uh…, Stargate Universe Season 2.  When last we saw our band of embattled refugees they were still trapped on The Destiny, a Stargate sowing ship now transiting galaxies and taking them farther out of range by the minute.  In addition to being pursued by nameless aliens and their evil anal probes they are now locked in battle for control of the ship with a boarding party of Lucien Alliance mercenaries.  I once had my Sci Fi friend try to explain to me exactly who was pregnant by whom, but with the consciousness shifting communicator and a rather casual attitude about intercourse it’s really hard to keep track of.  I will note with some skepticism that while they somehow managed to salvage an unlimited supply of ammunition they don’t seem to have remembered to bring along a single condom.  It would really make much more sense if they were using Zats and Staff Weapons because you could probably figure out some way to recharge them, but bullets don’t grow on trees.

Next week Caprica cranks up again and it’s all on Tuesday instead of Friday because Sci Fi got stuck with WWE Friday Night SmackDown.  While the Sci Fi connection may be tenuous at best, it’s another good reason to hate Linda McMahon.

Two NCIS premiers, No Ordinary Family Series Premier, and you can see if Sarah Palin shows up to get booed again.

Later-

What do you know- Dave hosts Jon Stewart performing against himself (well, actually Stephen) and N.E.R.D..  Jon has Arianna, Stephen Ross Douthat (should be good for a laugh).  No Alton.

BoondocksThe Trial of Robert Kelly.

Zap2it TV Listings, Yahoo TV Listings

LBJ

March 31, 1968

There is division in the American house now. There is divisiveness among us all tonight. And holding the trust that is mine, as President of all the people, I cannot disregard the peril to the progress of the American people and the hope and the prospect of peace for all peoples.

So, I would ask all Americans, whatever their personal interests or concern, to guard against divisiveness and all its ugly consequences.

Fifty-two months and 10 days ago, in a moment of tragedy and trauma, the duties of this office fell upon me. I asked then for your help and God’s, that we might continue America on its course, binding up our wounds, healing our history, moving forward in new unity, to clear the American agenda and to keep the American commitment for all of our people.

United we have kept that commitment. United we have enlarged that commitment.

Through all time to come, I think America will be a stronger nation, a more just society, and a land of greater opportunity and fulfillment because of what we have all done together in these years of unparalleled achievement.

Our reward will come in the life of freedom, peace, and hope that our children will enjoy through ages ahead.

What we won when all of our people united just must not now be lost in suspicion, distrust, selfishness, and politics among any of our people.

Believing this as I do, I have concluded that I should not permit the Presidency to become involved in the partisan divisions that are developing in this political year.

With America’s sons in the fields far away, with America’s future under challenge right here at home, with our hopes and the world’s hopes for peace in the balance every day, I do not believe that I should devote an hour or a day of my time to any personal partisan causes or to any duties other than the awesome duties of this office–the Presidency of your country.

Accordingly, I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for another term as your President.

But let men everywhere know, however, that a strong, a confident, and a vigilant America stands ready tonight to seek an honorable peace–and stands ready tonight to defend an honored cause–whatever the price, whatever the burden, whatever the sacrifice that duty may require.

Thank you for listening.

Obama Seeks to Bridge Enthusiasm Gap with More Threats and Insults

By: David Dayen, Tuesday September 28, 2010 9:06 am

Hectoring the Base: It’s Not About GOTV, It’s About Laying the Blame

By: Jane Hamsher Tuesday September 28, 2010 9:49 am  

People Need To Buck Up

(4 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

The biggest mistake I see many make when trying to sell the Democrats is to call the prospects stupid, and tell them buying the product is the only way they can stop being stupid, apparently thinking the prospects will immediately reach for their wallets and say “where do I sign”?

Of course, that result only happens in salespeople’s dreams – and is the reason 90 percent of people who go into sales never make any money at the job.

There is also a (real life) tried and true technique in sales and marketing that the democrats could try: the top sales producers in any industry constantly critique themselves and ask themselves “If I’m not getting the results I want to get, what am I doing to get the results I am getting?

Instead of asking themselves what they are doing to produce the results they are getting (dropping support) – and they are producing those results whether they want to or not – Democrats and their supporters are taking the easy route of blaming the voters (their prospects) and treating the voters as if they are stupid.

Obama: Democratic voter apathy ‘inexcusable’:

WASHINGTON – Admonishing his own party, President Barack Obama says it would be “inexcusable” and “irresponsible” for unenthusiastic Democratic voters to sit out the midterm elections, warning that the consequences could be a squandered agenda for years.

“People need to shake off this lethargy. People need to buck up,” Obama told Rolling Stone in an interview to be published Friday. The president told Democrats that making change happen is hard and “if people now want to take their ball and go home, that tells me folks weren’t serious in the first place.”

Most people can easily see through it when someone tries to “take” them, I think, and they simply hold onto their wallets and walk out of the store. They go looking for someone who will sell them what they want, instead of pitching them on ‘buy from me because the other guys are selling junk’.

People want to hear why they should buy a product, they want to hear what it will do for them. AND they want a demonstration and a history of it doing what it is claimed it will do. People don’t buy products simply because the salepeople tell them another product is crap.

Obama himself could not only save the democrats in the midterms but he could probably give them a larger majority – but he can only do that with action – by starting to  produce something, anything, progressive that it was expected they would produce but haven’t – and the votes Democrats need to save their Congressional majority would immediately follow.

Obama and the Democrats could have independents and liberals all across the country rewarding them for results instead of turning their backs on empty promises and the largest landslides in history this November with just a few simple moves.

Creating and passing an actual, real, universal single payer health care bill and rolling back the bailout of the insurance industry for example might do it all by itself, for example.

Although they could probably sew it right up it for themselves by also starting torture and war crimes trials for Bush and Cheney, while withdrawing from Iraq and Afghanistan and breaking up the big Wall Street investment banks and doing Ken Lay numbers on Goldman Sachs‘s Lloyd Blankfein and Magnetar‘s Alec Litowitz, while firing Tim Geithner, Ben Bernanke, and Rahm Emanuel, and now Robert Gibbs, too.

They’ve got a whole month, after all.

Democrats are smart people, right? They should be at least half as smart as all those independent and progressives who won’t vote for them unless they do those things, right?

It’s all on Obama and the Democrats – but if he and they don’t produce something, anything, progressive to pull it out in November it will be their own fault. Not the fault of those progressives and independents and liberals whose votes they will not have if they don’t produce.

They have a month. I’d suggest they get busy.

……….

Hoyer: House Vote On Tax Cuts For The Middle Class “A Specious Act”

Sept. 27, 2010

Exhibit A for why the Dems will get creamed in November, Steny Hoyer:

WALLACE: Why not pass the extension of the middle-class tax cuts before you go home to campaign for a month?

HOYER: The obstruction is in the Senate. Well, it would be a specious act for us. [. . .] But what we have — what is not a specious act, Chris, is we have absolutely guaranteed that there will be no increase in middle-income taxes. The president’s that. The speaker and I have said that. Harry Reid and Dick Durbin have said that. There will be no increase…

Sheesh.

Load more