Prime Time

Monday Night Throwball double header, but the real treat is for you Ayn Rand fans- Patricia Neal in The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead’s protagonist, Howard Roark, is an individualistic  young architect who chooses to struggle in obscurity rather than compromise his artistic and personal vision. The book follows his battle to practice what the public sees as modern architecture, which he believes to be superior, despite an establishment centered on tradition-worship. How others in the novel relate to Roark demonstrates Rand’s various archetypes of human character, all of which are variants between Roark, the author’s ideal man of independent-mindedness and integrity, and what she described as the “second-handers.” The complex relationships between Roark and the various kinds of individuals who assist or hinder his progress, or both, allow the novel to be at once a romantic drama and a philosophical work. By Rand’s own admission, Roark is the embodiment of the human spirit and his struggle represents the triumph of individualism over collectivism.

Later-

Dave is in repeats.  Jon has Ben Affleck, Stephen Lisa Birnbach.  Alton does game birds.  Boondocks is doing Stinkmeaner 3: The Hateocracy, but you’ve already seen that, haven’t you?

This whole country’s just like my flock of sheep!

Sheep?

Rednecks, crackers, hillbillies, hausfraus, shut-ins, pea-pickers – everybody that’s got to jump when somebody else blows the whistle. They don’t know it yet, but they’re all gonna be ‘Fighters for Fuller’. They’re mine! I own ’em! They think like I do. Only they’re even more stupid than I am, so I gotta think for ’em. Marcia, you just wait and see. I’m gonna be the power behind the president – and you’ll be the power behind me!

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Thirteen dead in Kashmir, Christian school torched

by Izhar Wani, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 12:00 pm ET

SRINAGAR, India (AFP) – Indian police shot dead 13 people in Kashmir on Monday as stone-throwing rioters defied curfews and torched a Christian school in a surge of anger stoked by the desecration of the Koran.

The death toll was the highest for a single day since a wave of anti-India demonstrations began three months ago, with 84 civilians now killed in unrest in the disputed Muslim-majority region. One policeman also died Monday.

In New Delhi, the cabinet met to discuss steps to defuse the tension, but decided against heeding calls from some in the government to partially lift a 20-year-old emergency law that is despised by many in Kashmir.

2 Belgian Church vows clean slate with abuse victims

by Philippe Siuberski, AFP

1 hr 2 mins ago

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Belgium’s Catholic Church sought Monday to heal deep wounds caused to victims of pedophile priests, vowing to listen to those hurt by a scandal that has caused “much pain” to Pope Benedict XVI.

But the plan unveiled by archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard, the head of the Belgian church, disappointed groups representing victims three days after a report revealed an avalanche of abuse cases that led to 13 suicides.

Leonard told a news conference the church would act to grant victims of sexual abuse by priests or church workers “maximum” access to officials, but did not spell out how audiences would be obtained or what could be delivered.

3 Belgian archbishop vows clean slate

by Philippe Siuberski, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 11:44 am ET

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Rocked by revelations of 13 suicides among an avalanche of abuse testimony, Belgium’s Catholic Church vowed on Monday to listen to its victims but steered clear of any witchhunt.

Its head, archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard, said the church would act to grant victims of sexual abuse by priests or church workers “maximum” access to officials, but did not spell out how audiences could be obtained or what could be delivered.

In fact, the only concrete initiative he announced to deal with complaints was vague plans to create a centre for “recognition, reconciliation and healing” within the church, with a target date for opening of Christmas.

4 Regulators turn to big bank issue after Basel III deal

by Andre Lehmann, AFP

1 hr 14 mins ago

BASEL, Switzerland (AFP) – Regulators on Monday weighed further reforms targeting banks sometimes deemed too big to fail just hours after they announced landmark changes to capital requirement rules.

The tougher rules unveiled late Sunday, called Basel III, would triple the minimum reserves that banks would have to hold against losses, thereby bolstering their resilience in the face of crises.

While hailing the reforms, central bankers said the package still did not address a “moral hazard problem” arising from the fact that some major banks are simply too big or too significant to the economy to be allowed to fail.

5 Bank shares rally despite new tough rules on capital

by Andre Lehmann, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 8:32 am ET

BASEL, Switzerland (AFP) – Bank shares rose on Monday despite new “landmark” rules raising capital held by financial bodies to avert another crisis like the one which nearly broke the system two years ago.

The new rules, called Basel III, would triple the minimum reserves that banks would have to hold against losses.

However, the financial institutions were given nine years to implement the new rules, far longer than the end-2012 deadline that regulators had suggested late last year.

6 New-look America’s Cup set for 2013 on catamarans

by Denholm Barnetson, AFP

38 mins ago

VALENCIA, Spain (AFP) – In a revamp of the world’s oldest international sporting competition, the next America’s Cup regatta, in 2013, will use “cutting-edge” catamarans instead of the traditional monohulls.

The new “action-packed” format for the event is designed to appeal to “the Facebook generation, not the Flintstone generation,” Russell Coutts, the CEO of America’s Cup defenders Oracle, told a news conference here on Monday.

The 72-foot (22-metre) wing-sail catamarans will be “pretty special, very powerful and very demanding,” the four-time America’s Cup winning New Zealander added.

7 Mosque retreat will feed extremism, warns NY imam

by Maxim Kniazkov, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 5:33 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The Islamic cleric behind plans to build a mosque near Ground Zero in New York warned on Sunday that retreating on the project would only strengthen the hand of the Muslim extremists.

But imam Feisal Abdul Rauf did not rule out that developers would move the Islamic center, telling ABC: “The decisions that I will make — that we will make — will be predicated on what is best for everybody.”

Critics say building a mosque two blocks from Ground Zero is offensive to the memory of the nearly 2,800 people killed when Al-Qaeda hijackers steered two planes into the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers on September 11, 2001.

8 Turkey’s ruling party triumphs in key referendum

by Sibel Utku Bila, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 3:18 pm ET

ANKARA (AFP) – Turkish voters on Sunday approved divisive constitutional changes to reshape the judiciary and curb the military’s powers, handing the Islamist-rooted government a major political victory.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said provisional results showed that some 58 percent of the voters backed the amendments in the referendum, hailing the outcome as a “turning point” for Turkish democracy.

“We have passed a historic threshold on the way to advanced democracy and the supremacy of law… September 12 will go down in history as a turning point,” Erdogan told a crowd of jubilant supporters at his party’s office in Istanbul.

9 Afghan poll candidate ‘on the front line of war for women’

by Lynne O’Donnell, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 6:56 pm ET

HERAT, Afghanistan (AFP) – Fawzya Gailani says her husband beat her when she won a seat in Afghanistan’s parliament.

He was jealous that she won more than 14,000 votes in the country’s first parliamentary election in 2005, while he only polled 160.

“He hadn’t really beat me very often before then,” she told AFP of the man she was forced to marry at age 14.

10 Turkish vote boosts PM’s re-election chances

by Hande Culpan, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 12:34 pm ET

ANKARA (AFP) – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Monday celebrated an emphatic victory in a poll on constitutional changes that analysts said strengthened his party’s chances of winning a third term in elections next year.

Transport Minister Binali Yildirim hailed the outcome as a boost for democracy while AKP deputy chairman Huseyin Celik said the party’s agenda was to work on a new constitution after the 2011 elections.

Official provisional results showed 57.88 percent of the voters backed the amendments with 42.12 percent against, giving Erdogan’s Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) a better-than-expected margin of victory. Turnout was 73.7 percent.

11 Greece fears renewed fuel shortages as truckers halt work

AFP

Mon Sep 13, 12:57 pm ET

ATHENS (AFP) – Hundreds of freight trucks lined key roads out of Athens Monday after truckers began a strike protesting government plans to liberalise their sector and help revive the recession-hit Greek economy.

Amid fears of fresh fuel shortages motorists formed long queues at petrol stations as a similar week-long protest in July nearly starved the country of fuel.

Protesters parked hundreds of trucks on hard shoulders at Athens motorway exits to northern Greece and the southwestern Peloponnese peninsula but did not block traffic, an AFP photographer said.

12 Scientists warn research slowdown poses global threat

by Jean-Louis Santini, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 9:10 am ET

BOSTON, Massachusetts (AFP) – A slowdown in research aimed at the development of new and more effective antibiotics poses the threat of a return to a situation that existed in the world before the discovery of penicillin, scientists have warned.

“We have a big resistance problem that has become a global health crisis,” said Doctor Ursula Theuretzbacher of the Austrian Center for Anti-Infective Agents.

She spoke at the 50th annual meeting of the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), which opened in Boston on Sunday.

13 China-Japan row boils despite crew release

by Harumi Ozawa, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 8:29 am ET

TOKYO, Japan (AFP) – Japan on Monday released the 14 crew of a Chinese fishing trawler seized last week but kept its captain in custody, doing little to soothe Beijing’s fury in a bitter row between the Asian rivals.

The diplomatic spat centres on a disputed island chain in the East China Sea, where Japan says the Chinese boat was fishing illegally last week and, when ordered to leave, rammed two Japanese coastguard vessels during a chase.

Since Tokyo arrested the skipper last Wednesday, Beijing has reacted angrily, repeatedly summoning Japan’s ambassador, cancelling talks on joint energy exploration and confronting two Japanese survey ships at sea.

14 Fourteen killed in Koran protests across Indian Kashmir

By Sheikh Mushtaq, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 11:05 am ET

SRINAGAR, India (Reuters) – Police shot dead at least 13 people Monday in anti-government and Koran demonstrations across Indian Kashmir in the biggest single death toll from protests in the disputed region in years.

The toll includes nine people killed in police clashes after Muslim protesters set fire to a Christian missionary school and government buildings in two districts to denounce reports that copies of the Koran had been damaged in the United States.

One policeman was also killed by stone-throwing protesters defying a curfew in the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley.

15 U.S. to tell Congress of up to $60 billion Saudi arms deal

By Phil Stewart, Reuters

26 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration will soon notify Congress of an arms package for Saudi Arabia worth up to $60 billion, U.S. officials said on Monday, a potentially record-breaking deal that may help counter Iran’s growing regional muscle.

A senior U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he expected the Saudis to initially commit to $30 billion in purchases, but that could double.

The package would include 84 new Boeing Co F-15 fighter jets and upgrades to another 70 of them. It also involved 72 Black Hawk helicopters built by Sikorsky Aircraft, a unit of United Technologies Corp.

16 Basel eases capital fears, top banks in spotlight

By Sakari Suoninen and Gilbert Kreijger, Reuters

1 hr 2 mins ago

BASEL, Switzerland/AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – New capital rules set by global regulators brought relief to the world’s banks on Monday, giving weaker lenders time to raise funds and freeing the strong to lift dividends or hit the acquisition trail.

But the biggest international banks still face a capital surcharge on top of Basel III rules announced late on Sunday, to tackle concerns that banks deemed “too big to fail” may take risks that could derail the financial system.

“The (Basel) agreements certainly reduced probability of failure for systemically important banks, but it doesn’t resolve the moral hazard problem as these banks are too big or too interconnected to fail,” said Mario Draghi, governor of the Bank of Italy and head of the Financial Stability Board (FSB).

17 Small-business bill could be Democrats’ last hope on jobs

By Andy Sullivan, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 9:31 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democrats in the U.S. Congress have a late chance to show frustrated voters they are trying to boost the sluggish economy with a plan to extend help to small businesses before the November midterm elections.

As lawmakers return from a month-long break this week, Democrats aim to pass their small-business bill out of the Senate by the end of the week and send it to the House of Representatives for final approval.

The House has backed a version of the bill previously.

18 Iraq combat over but U.S. troops still in danger

By Rania El Gamal, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 6:39 am ET

CAMP SPEICHER, Iraq (Reuters) – U.S. Staff Sergeant Kendrick Manuel swung his rifle over his shoulder and grumbled about being viewed as a “non-combat” soldier in Iraq.

“When NBC talked about the last combat troops are gone, they made it sound like everything is basically over,” he said, after escorting a 19-truck convoy through a part of northern Iraq where roadside bombs and mortar attacks are still a danger.

“To us it was like a slap in the face, because we are still here … we are still going in harm’s way every time we leave out of the gate,” Manuel said at a U.S. military base, Camp Speicher, near Saddam Hussein’s home town of Tikrit.

19 No link found between vaccine mercury and autism

By Frederik Joelving, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 3:38 am ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A new government study adds to the evidence that thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative until recently found in many vaccines, does not increase children’s risk of autism.

It shows kids who had been exposed as babies to high levels of the preservative — through vaccines they received or their mothers received while pregnant — were no more likely to develop autism, including two distinct subtypes of the condition.

“This study should reassure parents about following the recommended immunization schedule,” said Dr. Frank Destefano, director of the Immunization Safety Office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, and the study’s senior author.

20 Japan frees China boat crew, calls for gas talks

By Ben Blanchard and Yoko Kubota, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 6:27 am ET

BEIJING/TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan on Monday freed the crew of a Chinese fishing boat detained last week in disputed waters, but held onto the captain at the center of a territorial rift between the two neighbors.

China demanded Japan release captain Zhan Qixiong after the 14 crew took a charter flight from the southern Japanese island of Ishigaki to the southeastern Chinese coastal city of Fuzhou, China’s official Xinhua news agency said. The fishing boat is also on its way back to China.

A spokesman at the prosecutors’ office on Ishigaki said Zhan was still being held after a court approved extending his detention on Friday. Prosecutors can hold him for up to 20 days while deciding whether to take legal action after his boat collided with two Japanese coast guard ships.

21 Top House Republican hints at tax compromise

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 7:23 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The top Republican in the House of Representatives offered a hint of compromise on the divisive issue of taxes on Sunday, saying he would support extending tax cuts for the middle class even if cuts for the wealthy are allowed to expire.

Representative John Boehner said President Barack Obama’s proposal to renew lower tax rates for families making less than $250,000 but let the lower rates for wealthier Americans expire was “bad policy” — but he will support it if he must.

“If the only option I have is to vote for some of those tax reductions, I’ll vote for it,” Boehner said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” program.

22 Turkey referendum win puts Erdogan in pole for 2011

By Simon Cameron-Moore, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 1:29 am ET

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Turkey’s ruling AK Party on Monday celebrated victory in a referendum on constitutional reform that was seen boosting its chances of winning a third term of single-party rule at an election due within 10 months.

No sooner had Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan declared victory than he stoked hardline secularists’ worst fears by serving notice that his AK party, whose roots lie in political Islam, would start work on a brand new constitution.

The High Election Board is expected to announce the official results on Monday, but television news channels reported the government scored a “yes” vote of 58 percent versus 42 percent for the “no” camp. The turnout, among an electorate of just under 50 million, was put at 77 percent.

23 15 killed in disputed Kashmir in deadly protests

By AIJAZ HUSSAIN, Associated Press Writer

28 mins ago

SRINAGAR, India – Indian forces fought Kashmiri demonstrators in street battles Monday that killed 15 people – including one police officer – in the deadliest day in a summer of violence challenging Indian rule in the disputed territory.

Reports of a Quran desecration in the United States intensified the anger, with activists chanting “Down with America” and burning an effigy of President Barack Obama in a rare anti-U.S. protest here.

The spasm of violence came even as Indian officials debated whether to make goodwill gestures to try to ease tensions in the war-wracked region, which is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both.

24 New drug-resistant superbugs found in 3 states

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE, AP Medical Writer

1 hr 19 mins ago

BOSTON – An infectious-disease nightmare is unfolding: A new gene that can turn many types of bacteria into superbugs resistant to nearly all antibiotics has sickened people in three states and is popping up all over the world, health officials reported Monday.

The U.S. cases and two others in Canada all involve people who had recently received medical care in India, where the problem is widespread. A British medical journal revealed the risk last month in an article describing dozens of cases in Britain in people who had gone to India for medical procedures.

How many deaths the gene may have caused is unknown; there is no central tracking of such cases. So far, the gene has mostly been found in bacteria that cause gut or urinary infections.

25 GOP spokesman: Senate GOP to oppose Obama tax plan

Associated Press

34 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Senate Republicans will oppose any effort to renew soon-to-expire Bush administration tax cuts if upper income taxpayers are excluded from the reductions. A spokesman for Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell said Monday that every Senate Republican has pledged to oppose President Barack Obama’s tax-cutting plan. Obama would renew the tax cuts for most people, but let the top income tax rate rise back to almost 40 percent on family or small business income over $250,000.

McConnell has said a bill extending the tax cuts for only low- and middle-income earners cannot pass the Senate. Forty-one senators can block a bill with a filibuster, but McConnell spokesman Don Stewart declined to say whether all 41 Republicans would support a filibuster.

At issue is a year-end deadline to renew a variety of tax cuts enacted in 2001 – when the federal government was running a surplus.

26 Imam says NYC mosque site is not ‘hallowed ground’

By JENNIFER PELTZ, Associated Press Writer

14 mins ago

NEW YORK – It is two blocks from ground zero, but the site of a proposed mosque and Islamic center shouldn’t be seen as “hallowed ground” in a neighborhood that also contains a strip club and a betting parlor, the cleric leading the effort said Monday.

Making an ardent case for the compatibility of Islam and American values, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf reiterated that he is searching for a solution to the furor the project has created. But he left unanswered exactly what he had in mind.

If anything, Rauf only deepened the questions around the project’s future, telling an audience at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank that he was “exploring all options” – but declining to specify them – while also arguing that a high-profile site is necessary to get across his message of moderate Islam.

27 FACT CHECK: White House health savings challenged

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press Writer

36 mins ago

WASHINGTON – When a government report found that President Barack Obama’s health overhaul would modestly raise the nation’s total health care tab, the White House responded with a statistic suggesting costs would go down. It turns out that may be fuzzy math.

Health reform director Nancy-Ann DeParle wrote on the White House blog last week that the same government report indicates spending per insured person will be more than $1,000 lower in 2019 because of the law – some 9 percent below previous projections.

“The act will make health care more affordable for Americans,” DeParle said.

28 New Medicare chief speaks out against rationing

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press Writer

28 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The nation’s health system can’t be transformed by rationing medical care, President Barack Obama’s new Medicare chief said Monday in his first major speech.

Dr. Donald Berwick’s appointment earlier this summer without Senate confirmation was contentious because some Republicans accused him of being willing to deny care to save on costs. Since then, the administration has kept Berwick out of the limelight, turning the otherwise well-known medical innovation guru into something of a mystery man in Washington.

Berwick broke his silence Monday, telling an audience of health insurance industry representatives that pushing back against unsustainable costs cannot and should not involve “withholding from us, or our neighbors, any care that helps” or “harming one hair on anyone’s head.”

29 Calif. neighbors survey ruins of blasted hillside

By TREVOR HUNNICUTT and GARANCE BURKE, Associated Press Writers

2 hrs 6 mins ago

SAN BRUNO, Calif. – Patrick Yu has had nightmares and headaches since a fireball from a natural gas explosion caused his ceiling to crash down next to him while he slept.

He was one of many residents who returned to the ruined hillsides of their suburban San Francisco neighborhood Sunday after Thursday’s pipeline blast and fire destroyed nearly 50 homes and damaged dozens of others.

The explosion prompted California regulators to order the utility, Pacific Gas and Electric, to survey all its natural gas lines in the state in hopes of heading off another disaster.

30 Russia denies Georgian claims of ethnic cleansing

By ARTHUR MAX, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 12:49 pm ET

THE HAGUE, Netherlands – Russia accused Georgia on Monday of manufacturing allegations of ethnic cleansing in Georgia’s breakaway provinces after it failed to regain control of the areas in an abortive five-day war.

Georgia has complained to the International Court of Justice of the murder of thousands of ethnic Georgians and alleged displacement of some 300,000 people in a two-decade campaign of discrimination by Russian authorities and separatist militias in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Russian, however, portrayed itself as a mediator and peacemaker, and said Georgia had never complained of ethnic discrimination until it lost the 2008 war. The war broke out just before midnight Aug. 7, 2008, and ended in a European Union-brokered cease-fire Aug. 12. Georgia filed its complaint to the Hague-based court – the U.N.’s highest judicial body – on the same day.

31 Japan frees 14 crew members of Chinese ship

By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 9:57 am ET

TOKYO – Japan freed 14 crew members of a Chinese fishing ship Monday nearly a week after their vessel and two Japanese patrol boats collided near disputed southern islets. But China lashed out at Tokyo’s decision to keep the captain in custody.

Such collisions or close calls in disputed waters have frequently touched off nationalistic protests among the broader population about sovereignty and complicate efforts to improve ties between China and Japan – wary neighbors that are the world’s second- and third-largest economies and major trading partners. Beijing has said the confrontation could damage its relations with Japan, underlining the sensitivity of the territorial dispute in the East China Sea.

The dispute has sparked anti-Japanese activists in China and Taiwan, which also claims the islands in question, to sail to the area on their own protest missions – although both governments have sought to rein them in so as not to inflame tensions further.

32 Banks get years to adjust to new global rules

By GREG KELLER AND FRANK JORDANS, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 1:12 pm ET

BASEL, Switzerland – Bankers and analysts said new global rules could mean less money available to lend to businesses and consumers, but praised a decision to leave plenty of time – until 2019 – before the financial stability requirements come into full force.

The so-called Basel III rules, which will gradually require banks to hold greater capital buffers to absorb potential losses, are likely to affect the credit industry by imposing stricter discipline on credit cards, mortgages and other loans.

Requiring banks to keep more capital on hand will limit the amount of money they can lend, but it will make them better able to withstand the blow if many of those loans go sour.

33 Gay candidates for Congress draw interest, hope

By MICHELLE R. SMITH, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 9:05 am ET

WOONSOCKET, R.I. – Laure Rondeau, an 82-year-old Catholic, supports Providence Mayor David Cicilline for Congress because he wants to get the troops out of Afghanistan and says Washington is losing sight of what’s happening to regular people.

The sexual orientation of the openly gay mayor doesn’t figure into her decision.

“That doesn’t bother me at all,” Rondeau says. “He’s been a good mayor of Providence, and I think he’d do well in Congress.”

34 Petraeus issues guidance for Afghan contracting

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 8:22 pm ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – The NATO command has issued new guidelines for awarding billions of dollars worth of international contracts in Afghanistan, saying that without proper oversight the money could end up in the hands of insurgents and criminals, deepen corruption and undermine efforts to win the loyalty of the Afghan people at a critical juncture in the war.

The guidance, issued last week by Gen. David Petraeus and obtained Sunday by The Associated Press, was issued in response to concern that the military’s own contracting procedures could be, in some cases, running counter to efforts on the battlefield.

The changes are aimed, in large part, at addressing complaints that ordinary Afghans have seen little change in their daily lives despite billions poured into their country since 2001.

35 China mass measles vaccination plan sparks outcry

By GILLIAN WONG, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 8:38 pm ET

BEIJING – China’s plans to vaccinate 100 million children and come a step closer to eradicating measles has set off a popular outcry that highlights widening public distrust of the authoritarian government after repeated health scandals.

Since the Health Ministry announced the World Health Organization-backed measles vaccination plan last week, authorities have been flooded with queries and Internet bulletin boards have been plastered with worried messages. Conspiracy theories saying the vaccines are dangerous have spread by cell phone text messages.

The public skepticism has even been covered by state-run media, which noted the lack of trust was about more than vaccines.

36 Pa. pastor denies involvement in wife’s 2008 death

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press Writer

11 mins ago

TANNERSVILLE, Pa. – A retired Pennsylvania pastor whose first wife died under suspicious circumstances more than 11 years ago was charged Monday with killing his second wife and staging a car accident to cover it up. The accusations have prompted police to re-examine the first wife’s death.

Arthur Burton Schirmer, 62, was arraigned Monday in Tannersville on criminal homicide and evidence-tampering charges in the 2008 death of his 56-year-old wife, Betty. He did not enter a plea and was jailed without bail.

Schirmer’s attorney said his client denies foul play was involved in either of the deaths. Authorities “seem to have resurrected a prior tragedy to prosecute Mr. Schirmer for a current tragedy,” Brandon Reish told The Associated Press.

37 Lawyer says alleged NYC cabbie stabber has PTSD

By COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 46 mins ago

NEW YORK – A student accused of slashing a Muslim taxi driver’s neck was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder brought on by the horrors of the war he witnessed while filming a documentary in Afghanistan, his attorney said Monday.

Michael Enright also suffers from chronic alcoholism and is in need of treatment, which he would get if he were allowed out on $250,000 bail, said attorney Lawrence Fisher.

The 21-year-old Enright is accused of telling the driver to “consider this a checkpoint” before stabbing him last month.

38 Bikers make noise on attempt to quiet motorcycles

By DAISY NGUYEN, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 6:28 am ET

CALABASAS, Calif. – The laid-back vibe of this affluent Los Angeles suburb gets a jarring wakeup on weekends when hundreds of motorcycles thunder through the Santa Monica Mountains, triggering car alarms, rattling windows and jolting alive barking dogs.

“They rev their engines with complete disregard for the people who live here,” complained neighborhood resident Tonia Aery. “It’s obnoxious.”

Aery’s wish for peace and quiet could come true after the state Senate passed a bill this month that would make it a motor vehicle violation to ride a roaring hog. The only catch is that the decision now falls to the state’s biker-in-chief, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, an avid motorcyclist.

39 Trial set for Mass. doc in abortion patient death

By DENISE LAVOIE, AP Legal Affairs Writer

Sun Sep 12, 10:06 pm ET

BOSTON – Laura Hope Smith was 22 years old and 13 weeks pregnant when she went to see a Cape Cod doctor for an abortion. She was pronounced dead later that day.

Prosecutors charged the doctor with manslaughter, alleging that he failed to monitor her while she was under anesthesia, delayed calling 911 when she went into cardiopulmonary arrest, and later lied to try to cover up his actions.

Dr. Rapin Osathanondh, an obstetrician who was also a research associate at the Harvard School of Public Health, goes on trial Monday in Barnstable Superior Court. The trial begins on the third anniversary of Smith’s death.

40 Vt. law gives Indian tribe hope for recognition

By LISA RATHKE, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 10:04 pm ET

MONTPELIER, Vt. – Members of Vermont Indian tribes have renewed hope for state recognition, which some have been seeking for decades and the Abenaki tribe needs to sell its signature baskets and other crafts as Indian-made.

A new state law creates a process for a Vermont commission to recommend tribal recognition, which the Abenaki hope will also allow them to seek federal funding for education and other benefits.

“It’s not just for us. It’s for kids, it’s for our grandkids,” said Dawn Macie, 51, of Rutland, a member of the Nulhegan band of the Abenaki.

41 Fellow Americans’ suspicions frustrate US Muslims

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

Sun Sep 12, 6:07 pm ET

NEW YORK – Nine years of denouncing terrorism, of praying side-by-side with Jews and Christians, of insisting “I’m American, too.” None of it could stop a season of hate against Muslims that made for an especially fraught Sept. 11. Now, Muslims are asking why their efforts to be accepted in the United States have been so easily thwarted.

“We have nothing to apologize for, we have nothing to fear, we have nothing to be ashamed of, we have nothing that we’re guilty of – but we need to be out there and we need to express this,” said Imam Mohammed Ibn Faqih in a sermon at the Islamic Institute of Orange County in Anaheim, Calif., the day before the 9/11 anniversary.

There is no simple way for American Muslims to move forward.

42 Bikers make noise on attempt to quiet motorcycles

By DAISY NGUYEN, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 6:28 am ET

CALABASAS, Calif. – The laid-back vibe of this affluent Los Angeles suburb gets a jarring wakeup on weekends when hundreds of motorcycles thunder through the Santa Monica Mountains, triggering car alarms, rattling windows and jolting alive barking dogs.

“They rev their engines with complete disregard for the people who live here,” complained neighborhood resident Tonia Aery. “It’s obnoxious.”

Aery’s wish for peace and quiet could come true after the state Senate passed a bill this month that would make it a motor vehicle violation to ride a roaring hog. The only catch is that the decision now falls to the state’s biker-in-chief, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, an avid motorcyclist.

43 Tea party rallies seek momentum as elections near

By ROBIN HINDERY, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 12:37 pm ET

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Thousands of tea party activists are expected to gather Sunday in Sacramento and at two other major rallies around the country, as the movement’s leaders look to energize conservatives before the November election.

Rallies also are being held in St. Louis and Washington, D.C.

Organizers say the events aim to call attention to what they describe as big government run amok and to recall the sense of national unity Americans felt the day after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Democrats Framing the Economic Message

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

I see the Democrats are finally beginning to understand that the key to winning is the need to frame their own message. It’s about time:

“The Obama tax cuts for the middle class”

Call them “the Obama tax cuts for the middle class.”

Top Democratic leaders in the House are discussing using that phrase to rebrand President Obama’s proposed extension of the Bush tax cuts for those making less than $250,000, senior leadership aides tell me.

The use of the phrase has the informal support of Nancy Pelosi and Majority Whip James Clyburn, and Pelosi has used the phrase in private meetings, leadership aides tell me. Rank and file House Dems are privately discussing the phrase. Top Senate aides also like the idea.

Right on. Take the bull by the horns and start taking the credit for the really good ideas. Don’t even mention the name of that President who initiated those cuts that will benefit the middle class if they are extended. Only invoke his name for the deficit inflating cuts for the wealthiest. Remind voters that even the middle class tax cuts will still benefit the rich.

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Keeping money in the hands of people who will spend it one of the best ways to stimulate the economy. The House and Senate Democrats on the campaign trail need to make this their top message as a way to stimulate job growth and the economy which will reduce the deficit even further. Take back the word “stimulus” as a positive part of that message.

Make “The Obama Tax Cuts the message” the Democratic message.

Cross posted @ GOS

Punting the Pundits

Punting the Punditsis an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the t 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.

Paul Krugman: China, Japan, America

Last week Japan’s minister of finance declared that he and his colleagues wanted a discussion with China about the latter’s purchases of Japanese bonds, to “examine its intention” – diplomat-speak for “Stop it right now.” The news made me want to bang my head against the wall in frustration.

You see, senior American policy figures have repeatedly balked at doing anything about Chinese currency manipulation, at least in part out of fear that the Chinese would stop buying our bonds. Yet in the current environment, Chinese purchases of our bonds don’t help us – they hurt us. The Japanese understand that. Why don’t we?

Some background: If discussion of Chinese currency policy seems confusing, it’s only because many people don’t want to face up to the stark, simple reality – namely, that China is deliberately keeping its currency artificially weak.

Robert Reich: The Two Categories of American Corporation — and Why it Matters

Some giant American corporations depend on a buoyant American economy and a world-class industrial base in the United States. Others are far less dependent. What comes out of Washington in the next few years will reflect which group has most political clout — especially if Republicans take over the House and capture more of the Senate this November.

The first group includes national telecoms like Verizon and AT&T that need a prosperous America because most of their sales are here. Same with finance companies like Bank of America and Travelers Insurance whose business strategy has been built around U.S. consumers. Ditto for certain giant chains like Home Depot. Naturally, all these companies were especially hard hit by the Great Recession and its devastating impact on American consumers.

The second group includes companies like Coca Cola, Exxon-Mobil, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and McDonald’s, that get substantial revenues from their overseas operations. Increasingly this means China, India, and Brazil. Ford and GM are still largely dependent on US sales but becoming less so. GM sold more cars in China last year than in the US. Not surprisingly, American companies that are less dependent on American consumers have been showing the biggest profits.

Dean Baker: Fun With George Will

The Washington Post likes to run columns that are chock full of mistakes so that readers can have fun picking them apart. That is why George Will’s columns appear twice a week. Let’s have a little fun with the latest, which is an attack on President Obama’s economic agenda.

First, Will is anxious to tell readers that Democrats are telling the public that stimulus did not work because many think we need more stimulus. Actually, people who think we need more stimulus simply note that the stimulus was helpful, but not large enough for the task. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the stimulus added between 1.7 and 4.5 percent to GDP since its enactment (that’s between $240 billion and $740 billion in additional output). It also lowered the unemployment rate by between 0.7 and 1.8 percentage points.

This was not enough to fully offset the damage from the collapse of an $8 trillion housing bubble. The collapse wiped out more than $1.2 trillion in annual demand (roughly $600 billion in lost consumption and $600 billion in lost construction). By comparison, the stimulus injected about $300 billion a year into the economy in 2009 and 2010. Roughly half of this was offset by cutbacks at the state and local level. So, we were looking at a net increase government sector stimulus of $150 billion, which was being used to counteract a decline in private sector demand of $1.2 trillion.

Joe Conason: Why the GOP embraced Islamophobia

Fanning fears of Muslims has never made better — or more cynical — political sense

Only a few years ago, an angry political demonstration at ground zero on September 11 would have been deemed an unthinkable offense not only to the bereaved families of victims and responders but to the nation. Yet this anniversary featured a raucous and highly partisan rally, as well over a thousand protesters gathered to show their opposition to the Park51 Islamic center – and to listen to tirades from Republican politicians and commentators against the Obama administration.

More than a flaky Florida pastor’s cancelled threat to burn the Quran (or the actual scattered torchings that took place the same day), the ground zerio rally answered the question posed repeatedly over the past few weeks: Why are millions of Americans suddenly caught up in a torrent of fear and fury over Islam so strong that both the president and the commanding general of U.S. forces in Afghanistan have warned of deadly consequences? What motivates the outpouring of rancor against Muslims, especially in the conservative media? How did they escape until now?

The answer is that until the advent of the Obama presidency, Republicans had no reason to scapegoat Muslims or demonize Islam — and indeed, they could not have inflamed those prejudices without damaging their own leaders, especially George W. Bush.

E.J. Dionne, Jr.: A Chance for Supreme Court Damage Control

Imagine that your neighbors started getting letters describing all sorts of horrific deeds you had allegedly performed. Wouldn’t you feel you had the right to know who was spreading this sleaze-especially if the charges were untrue?

Now imagine a member of Congress telling a lobbyist from Consolidated Megacorp Inc. that she would do all she could to block an extra $2 billion in an appropriations bill to purchase the company’s flawed widgets for the federal government. A week later, television advertisements start appearing in the representative’s district portraying her as corrupt, out of touch and in league with lobbyists.

It turns out they are being paid for by Consolidated Megacorp through contributions to a front group called Americans for Clean Government. Shouldn’t the voters be able to know who is behind the ads?

This hypothetical tale is not fantasyland, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s hideous decision earlier this year in the Citizens United case. But with Congress coming back this week, there’s a chance to limit the damage the court has caused-if three moderate Senate Republicans are willing to act.

In a decision that was either the most Machiavellian in American history or the most naive, a 5-4 conservative majority broke with decades of precedent and said Congress had no right to ban corporate or labor union spending to influence the outcome of elections. The court ruled that corporations such as Consolidated Megacorp have to be treated the same as living, breathing “persons.”

Robert Kuttner: Maybe Not Such a Mid-Term Blowout

Winston Churchill once said that you can always count on Americans to do the right thing–after they’ve tried everything else.

The Obama administration has kept progressive economic policies to be used as a last resort — In Case of Emergency Break Glass.

Well, the emergency is here in the form of a protracted recession and a threatened mid-term election blowout. And sure enough, President Obama is discovering his inner populist.

Rejecting the advice of his departing budget director, Peter Orszag, Obama has insisted that the Bush era tax cuts, which expire this year, be extended for “only” about 98 percent of Americans, but not for households making over $250,000 a year. Hard to argue with that, but watch the GOP try. The more the Republicans hold hostage this plan for tax relief for millionaires, the more voters appreciate whose side they are really on.

Obama has belatedly proposed a $50 billion infrastructure program, to put Americans back to work. He should have proposed four times as much, and long ago, but it’s a start.

He has begun smoking out Republican inconsistency and hypocrisy on issues like regulation of banks, where the GOP tries to be anti-Wall Street but also anti-regulation. And how can the right be in favor of both fiscal discipline and tax cuts for the rich?

The right may have peaked a little too soon. The Gallup Poll for the last week in August showed a ten point swing back to the Democrats in congressional match-up races.

Fareed Zakaria: Post-9/11, we’re safer than we think

Of course, we are not 100 percent safe, nor will we ever be. Open societies and modern technology combine to create a permanent danger. Small groups of people can do terrible things. We could make ourselves much safer still, but that would mean many, many more restrictions on our freedoms to move, congregate, associate and communicate. It’s tough to do terrorism in North Korea.

So the legitimate question now is: Have we gone too far? Is the vast expansion in governmental powers and bureaucracies — layered on top of the already enormous military-industrial complex of the Cold War — warranted? Does an organization that has as few as 400 members and waning global appeal require the permanent institutional response we have created?

Geithner Gets It?

Monday Business Edition

Monday Business Edition is an Open Thread

I don’t believe it.  I think this is pre-election posturing.  Still, as some have suggested, it’s possible this administration may be forced to make some policy promises that are not so easy to walk away from.

Geithner Urges Action on Economy

By DEBORAH SOLOMON, The Wall Street Journal

September 12, 2010

“If the government does nothing going forward, then the impact of policy in Washington will shift from supporting economic growth to hurting economic growth,” Mr. Geithner said during an interview with The Wall Street Journal in his U.S. Treasury office, citing the example of countries who “shift too quickly to premature restraint” after a crisis, including the U.S. in the 1930s.



On Sunday, a top Republican lawmaker signaled there might be room to compromise on extending the Bush tax cuts for high-income earners but, in a sign of how fraught the issue is, his words drew immediate skepticism from Obama administration officials. “I want to do something for all Americans who pay taxes,” House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “If the only option I have is to vote for some of those tax reductions, I’ll vote for it. But I’ve been making the point now for months that we need to extend all the current rates for all Americans if we want to get our economy going again, and we want to get jobs in America.”

[The] typical error most countries make coming out of a financial crisis is they shift too quickly to premature restraint. You saw that in the United States in the 30s, you saw that in Japan in the 90s. It is very important for us to avoid that mistake. If the government does nothing going forward, then the impact of policy in Washington will shift from supporting economic growth to hurting economic growth.

Mr. Geithner, in the interview, rejected the view of many economists that allowing taxes to rise is unwise at this point in the recovery. The White House estimates the one-year cost of extension at $35 billion and the 10-year cost at $700 billion.

“We don’t have unlimited resources,” Mr. Geithner said. “We just don’t think it would be responsible for this country, given the size of our future deficits, and given the substantial burden the middle class has been bearing over the past decade in particular, to go out and borrow $700 billion from our children so we can sustain those Bush tax cuts that only go to the wealthiest 2% of Americans.”

He said the U.S. can no longer rely on consumer spending, which has long powered the economy, to be the growth engine that leads the recovery this time around and said Washington needed to plant the seeds for business investment and exports.

In the mean time here at The Stars Hollow Gazette we’re going to keep teaching Samuelson and not Snake Oil Salesmen.

From Yahoo News Business

1 Bank shares rally despite new tough rules on capital

AFP

1 hr 37 mins ago

BASEL, Switzerland (AFP) – Bank shares rose on Monday despite new “landmark” rules raising capital held by financial bodies to avert another crisis like the one which nearly broke the system two years ago.

The new rules, called Basel III, would force banks to more than triple their current reserves.

They would raise the capital base as a form of insurance against sudden strains in the system or on any particular financial institution, and would be phased in from 2013, a statement from the Bank for International Settlements, the so-called central bankers’ bank, said.

2 Deutsche Bank chief outlines Postbank takeover plan

by William Ickes, AFP

31 mins ago

FRANKFURT (AFP) – The head of Germany’s top bank, Deutsche Bank, unveiled on Monday the strategy behind its record capital increase a day after historic new bank regulations were agreed in Basel, Switzerland.

Josef Ackermann told a Frankfurt press conference the bank sought to become “the undisputable leader in Germany’s retail banking business and advance to the group of top banks in the European private clients business.”

Together, Deutsche Bank and Postbank will have a total of 24 million clients in Germany, he said.

3 Mobile phone users enlist YouMail "digital secretary"

by Glenn Chapman, AFP

Mon Sep 13, 3:24 am ET

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Ranks of mobile phone users are enlisting the services of a “digital secretary” that automatically snubs unwanted callers, transcribes messages, and gives loved ones special handling.

California startup YouMail said Monday that it has passed the half-billion-call mark and now manages more than 1.5 million calls daily.

“The growth is strong and steady,” YouMail founder and chief executive Alex Quilici told AFP. “It is almost more convenient to not answer the phone with YouMail.”

4 Central bankers reach deal on new bank regulations

AFP

Sun Sep 12, 3:12 pm ET

ZURICH (AFP) – Banks will be required to lift their reserves substantially under “landmark” new rules drawn up Sunday by central bankers and regulators seeking to prevent a repeat of the recent financial crisis.

The new regulations, called Basel III, would force banks to more than triple their current reserves and would be phased in from 2013, said a statement issued by the Bank for International Settlements.

“The agreements reached today are a fundamental strengthening of the global capital standards,” said European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet, who chairs the group of regulators at the meeting in northern Switzerland.

5 Obama adviser sees high jobless rate continuing

AFP

Sun Sep 12, 6:42 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President Barack Obama’s new top economist said Sunday he expects the US unemployment rate, which has edged up to 9.6 percent, to remain high for some time.

The US economy lost 54,000 jobs last month, but incoming chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, Austan Goolsbee, declined to predict where the jobless rate might stand at the end of this year.

“I don’t think the unemployment rate will be coming down significantly in the near future,” he told “Fox News Sunday.”

6 German wages tread water as economy grows

by Aurelia End, AFP

Sat Sep 11, 11:53 pm ET

BERLIN (AFP) – German statistics show pay rises lagging behind the country’s growth rate, and the situation will likely last despite calls from trade unions and trade partners for higher salaries.

A study showed German wages rose by less than in any other European Union country in the past 10 years, boosting the biggest EU economy’s competitive position by two spots to fifth in rankings from the World Economic Forum.

In 2010, pay should increase by an average of 1.5 percent according to UniCredit economist Alexander Koch, while the economy is tipped to expand by at least double that.

7 Sweeping Taiwan, China trade pact takes effect

by Peter Harmsen, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 7:18 am ET

TAIPEI (AFP) – A historic trade pact between Taiwan and China came into effect Sunday, tying the two sides closer together than at any point since their split more than six decades ago.

The landmark Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), signed in June, is the most sweeping pact ever penned by the two sides, officially still not at peace after the end of a civil war in 1949.

“With ECFA becoming effective, the cross-Strait ties marched into a new era… Taiwan should better utilise the trend,” Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou told reporters while on a trip to the southern Tainan county.

8 Doomsday warnings of US apocalypse gain ground

by Hugues Honore, AFP

Sat Sep 11, 11:20 pm ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Economists peddling dire warnings that the world’s number one economy is on the brink of collapse, amid high rates of unemployment and a spiraling public deficit, are flourishing here.

The guru of this doomsday line of thinking may be economist Nouriel Roubini, thrust into the forefront after predicting the chaos wrought by the subprime mortgage crisis and the collapse of the housing bubble.

“The US has run out of bullets,” Roubini told an economic forum in Italy earlier this month. “Any shock at this point can tip you back into recession.”

9 Greek PM vows to stay on course as 20,000 protest cuts

by Isabel Malsang, AFP

Sat Sep 11, 3:29 pm ET

THESSALONIKI, Greece (AFP) – Prime Minister George Papandreou vowed in a keynote speech Saturday to maintain his government’s austerity drive, as 20,000 protestors marched against the stinging economic measures.

“I lead this battle without thinking of the political cost,” the prime minister, a socialist, told visitors to the Thessaloniki International Fair. “It is a battle for the survival of Greece.

“Either we fight it all together, or we sink,” he added.

10 Greek PM rules out suspending debt payments

AFP

Sun Sep 12, 11:35 am ET

THESSALONIKI, Greece (AFP) – Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou has ruled out any restructuring of the country’s huge national debt, warning it would be “catastrophic for the economy”.

“The logic of restructuring the debt would be catastrophic for the economy, for our credibility, for our future,” Papandreou told a press conference on Sunday in Thessaloniki a day after sketching out his economic priorities during a visit to the city.

If debt payments were suspended, he said Greece “would head towards a potential and probable collapse of the banking system and the loss of Greek families’ property (which) would be a tragedy,” he added.

11 China posts fastest inflation rise in nearly two years

by Allison Jackson, AFP

Sat Sep 11, 2:29 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China said Saturday that consumer inflation rose at the fastest pace in nearly two years in August, as severe floods and unusually hot weather destroyed crops, driving up food prices.

The figure marked the 10th straight month that the consumer price index, a key measure of inflation, has risen, but analysts said they did not think it would be enough to prompt policymakers to raise interest rates any time soon.

Other key data released by the National Bureau of Statistics showed the world’s second-largest economy remained robust last month, suggesting the Asian giant was not slowing as fast as many had feared.

12 Investors, prepare for volatility

By Angela Moon, Reuters

Fri Sep 10, 6:33 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Investors are using options to brace for big swings next week as Wall Street enters the peak of the most volatile month for stocks historically.

Options on the CBOE Volatility Index (.VIX), Wall Street’s so-called fear gauge, were one of the top-traded contracts in the options market as investors made bets on a sharp jump in the index.

Next week “is the real start of a month to be nervous about,” said Brian Overby, senior options analyst at online brokerage TradeKing in Charlotte, North Carolina.

13 Basel eases bank capital raising fears

By Gilbert Kreijger and Steve Slater, Reuters

1 hr 10 mins ago

AMSTERDAM/LONDON (Reuters) – New bank capital rules agreed by global regulators brought relief to the world’s banks on Monday although one of the architects said the sector would eventually have to raise hundreds of billions of euros.

The new requirements, known as Basel III, will demand banks hold top-quality capital totaling 7 percent of their risk-bearing assets, but a long lead-in time eased fears that lenders will have to rush to raise capital.

Europe is the most likely region for banks to need to raise funds, notable in Germany, Spain and other weak spots.

14 Small-business bill could be Democrats’ last hope on jobs

By Andy Sullivan, Reuters

Mon Sep 13, 2:00 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democrats in the U.S. Congress have a late chance to show frustrated voters they are trying to boost the sluggish economy with a plan to extend help to small businesses before the November midterm elections.

As lawmakers return from a month-long break this week, Democrats aim to pass their small-business bill out of the Senate by the end of the week and send it to the House of Representatives for final approval.

The House has backed a version of the bill previously.

15 Reinsurers look to 2011, get that sinking feeling

By Jonathan Gould and Jason Rhodes, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 9:17 pm ET

MONACO (Reuters) – Reinsurers are trying to stay confident about pricing prospects for 2011 in the face of a chorus of industry observers predicting price and earnings pain.

At their annual Mediterranean meeting, the world’s biggest reinsurance players have once again vowed to maintain discipline in setting prices on the contracts for risk cover they provide to insurers, saying they won’t engage in a competitive race to the bottom.

The world’s biggest reinsurer, Munich Re (MUVGn.DE), predicted it would maintain stable prices overall on its portfolio of business to be renewed at the start of the year, and said some prices were even rising following the sinking of an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico and earthquake in Chile this year.

16 Calif. neighbors survey ruins of blasted hillside

By TREVOR HUNNICUTT and GARANCE BURKE, Associated Press Writers

31 mins ago

SAN BRUNO, Calif. – Patrick Yu has had nightmares and headaches since a fireball from a natural gas explosion caused his ceiling to crash down next to him while he slept.

He was one of many residents who returned to the ruined hillsides of their suburban San Francisco neighborhood Sunday after Thursday’s pipeline blast and fire destroyed nearly 50 homes and damaged dozens of others.

The explosion prompted California regulators to order the utility, Pacific Gas and Electric, to survey all its natural gas lines in the state in hopes of heading off another disaster.

17 Petraeus issues guidance for Afghan contracting

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 8:22 pm ET

KABUL, Afghanistan – The NATO command has issued new guidelines for awarding billions of dollars worth of international contracts in Afghanistan, saying that without proper oversight the money could end up in the hands of insurgents and criminals, deepen corruption and undermine efforts to win the loyalty of the Afghan people at a critical juncture in the war.

The guidance, issued last week by Gen. David Petraeus and obtained Sunday by The Associated Press, was issued in response to concern that the military’s own contracting procedures could be, in some cases, running counter to efforts on the battlefield.

The changes are aimed, in large part, at addressing complaints that ordinary Afghans have seen little change in their daily lives despite billions poured into their country since 2001.

18 Harley unions to vote on Wisconsin labor contract

By DINESH RAMDE, Associated Press Writer

Mon Sep 13, 3:03 am ET

MILWAUKEE – The chief executive of Harley-Davidson Inc. has urged Wisconsin employees to approve an unpopular labor contract Monday, telling them the motorcycle company is prepared to move on without them if they turn it down.

CEO Keith Wandell wrote a letter last week telling the workers it’s up to them to decide whether they want to remain part of Harley’s future.

“We are on a course to build a competitive company for the future and a business that is sustainable long term,” the letter said. “Nothing can get in the way of this objective.”

19 EPA to hold NY hearing, last of 4, on gas drilling

By MARY ESCH, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 6:02 pm ET

ALBANY, N.Y. – The oil and gas industry is urging the Environmental Protection Agency to keep a narrow focus in its study of how a drilling technique that involves blasting chemical-laced water into the ground may affect drinking water – while environmental groups want the study to cover everything from road-building to waste disposal.

The issues will be aired Monday in two-minute speaking slots at an EPA hearing twice postponed last month because of security concerns over rallies and crowds anticipated in the thousands.

The hearing, the last of four around the country, will be held in two sessions on Monday and two more on Wednesday at The Forum in Binghamton, 115 miles southwest of Albany. The EPA is taking comment on how broadly to construct its study of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a technique for releasing natural gas from rock formations thousands of feet underground by injecting at high pressure millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand.

20 Why some gloomy investors are bullish on stocks

By BERNARD CONDON, AP Business Writer

Sun Sep 12, 2:52 pm ET

NEW YORK – Can you make good returns in a lousy market?

If you believe a few respected money managers, there’s opportunity aplenty in stocks now. If you find that surprising, wait until you hear where they think the bargains lurk: big blue chips that almost always fetch premium prices.

Legendary bear Jeremy Grantham of GMO LLC in Boston says the U.S. faces “seven lean years” of meager growth, but he has been pounding the table about blue chip bargains with big dividends. Steven Romick of FPA Crescent predicts rising taxes and an economic malaise but is singing the praises about “bigger is better” stocks now, too.

21 Greek prime minister: no new austerity measures

By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 3:05 pm ET

THESSALONIKI, Greece – The Greek government is planning no new austerity measures as part of efforts to pull the country out of debt and might even exit international supervision earlier than expected, the prime minister said Sunday.

George Papandreou said Greece was on track to meet targets for reducing its deficit by nearly 40 percent this year.

“We will not need any new measures,” he said during a news conference a day after making his annual speech on the economy on the sidelines of a trade fair in northern Greece. Papandreou also reiterated that Athens did not plan to restructure its debt – a move that he said would have been “catastrophic.”

22 Rendell marshals aid for troubled Pa. capital city

By MARC LEVY, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 2:32 pm ET

HARRISBURG, Pa. – The Rendell administration is speeding more than $4 million to help Pennsylvania’s capital city avoid a rare default on a general obligation bond and help it right its troubled finances, even as massive debt threatens to drag it into bankruptcy.

Gov. Ed Rendell insisted Sunday that the aid is not a state bailout, and said he only got involved in assembling the aid package after Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson called him Thursday morning.

All of the state money, except for a $100,000 grant under his control and a $500,000 loan, was due to the city anyway in future months, and should give it “breathing space” to sort out a solution, he said.

On This Day in History: September 13

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

September 13 is the 256th day of the year (257th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 109 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1814, Francis Scot Key pens Star-Spangled Banner

The Star-Spangled Banner is the national anthem of the United States of America. The lyrics come from “Defence of Fort McHenry”, a poem written in 1814 by the 35-year-old lawyer and amateur poet, Francis Scott Key, after witnessing the bombardment of Fort McHenry by the British Royal Navy ships in Chesapeake Bay during the Battle of Fort McHenry in the War of 1812.

The poem was set to the tune of a popular British drinking song, written by John Stafford Smith for the Anacreontic Society, a men’s social club in London. “The Anacreontic Song” (or “To Anacreon in Heaven”), with various lyrics, was already popular in the United States. Set to Key’s poem and renamed “The Star-Spangled Banner“, it would soon become a well-known American patriotic song. With a range of one and a half octaves, it is known for being difficult to sing. Although the song has four stanzas, only the first is commonly sung today, with the fourth (“O thus be it ever when free men shall stand…”) added on more formal occasions. In the fourth stanza, Key urged the adoption of “In God is our Trust” as the national motto (“And this be our motto: In God is our Trust”). The United States adopted the motto “In God We Trust” by law in 1956.

The Star-Spangled Banner” was recognized for official use by the Navy in 1889 and the President in 1916, and was made the national anthem by a congressional resolution on March 3, 1931 (46 Stat. 1508, codified at 36 U.S.C. § 301), which was signed by President Herbert Hoover.

Before 1931, other songs served as the hymns of American officialdom. “Hail, Columbia” served this purpose at official functions for most of the 19th century. “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee“, whose melody was derived from the British national anthem, also served as a de facto anthem before the adoption of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Following the War of 1812 and subsequent American wars, other songs would emerge to compete for popularity at public events, among them “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

 509 BC – The temple of Jupiter on Rome’s Capitoline Hill is dedicated on the ides of September.

122 – The building of Hadrian’s Wall begins.

533 – General Belisarius of the Byzantine Empire defeats Gelimer and the Vandals at the Battle of Ad Decimium, near Carthage, North Africa.

1213 – Ending of Battle of Muret, during the Albigensian Crusade to destroy the Cathar heresy.

1440 – Gilles de Rais is finally taken into custody upon an accusation brought against him by the Bishop of Nantes.

1503 – Michelangelo begins work on his statue of David.

1584 – San Lorenzo del Escorial Palace in Madrid is finished.

1609 – Henry Hudson reached the river that would later be named after him – the Hudson River.

1743 – Great Britain, Austria and Savoy-Sardinia sign the Treaty of Worms (1743).

1759 – Battle of the Plains of Abraham: British defeat French near Quebec City in the Seven Years’ War, known in the United States as the French and Indian War.

1788 – The United States’ Philadelphia Convention sets the date for the country’s first presidential election, and New York City becomes the temporary capital of the U.S..

1791 – King Louis XVI of France accepts the new constitution.

1808 – Finnish War: Inthe Battle of Jutas, Swedish forces under Lieutenant General Georg Carl von Döbeln beat the Russians, making von Döbeln a Swedish war hero.

1812 – War of 1812: A supply wagon sent to relieve Fort Harrison is ambushed in the Attack at the Narrows.

1814 – The British fail to capture Baltimore, Maryland. Turning point in the War of 1812.

1814 – Francis Scott Key writes The Star-Spangled Banner

1847 – Mexican-American War: Six teenage military cadets known as Ninos Heroes die defending Chapultepec Castle in the Battle of Chapultepec. American General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City in the Mexican-American War.

1848 – Vermont railroad worker Phineas Gage incredibly survives a 3-foot-plus iron rod being driven through his head; the reported effects on his behavior and personality stimulate thinking about the nature of the brain and its functions.

1850 – First ascent of Piz Bernina, the highest summit of the eastern Alps.

1862 – American Civil War: Union soldiers find a copy of Robert E. Lee’s battle plans in a field outside Frederick, Maryland. It is the prelude to the Battle of Antietam.

1882 – The Battle of Tel el-Kebir is fought in the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War.

1898 – Hannibal Goodwin patents celluloid photographic film.

1899 – Henry Bliss is the first person in the United States to be killed in an automobile accident.

1900 – Filipino resistance fighters defeat a small American column in the Battle of Pulang Lupa, during the Philippine-American War.

1906 – First fixed-wing aircraft flight in Europe.

1914 – World War I: South African troops open hostilities in German south-west Africa (Namibia) with an assault on the Ramansdrift police station.

1914 – World War I: The Battle of Aisne begins between Germany and France.

1922 – The final act of the Greco-Turkish War, the Great Fire of Smyrna, commences.

1923 – Military coup in Spain – Miguel Primo de Rivera takes over, setting up a dictatorship.

1933 – Elizabeth McCombs is the first woman elected to the New Zealand Parliament.

1935 – Rockslide near Whirlpool Rapids Bridge ends the International Railway (New York – Ontario).

1940 – World War II: German bombs damage Buckingham Palace.

1942 – World War II: Second day of the Battle of Edson’s Ridge in the Guadalcanal campaign. U.S. Marines successfully defeated attacks by the Imperial Japanese Army with heavy losses for the Japanese forces.

1943 – Chiang Kai-shek elected president of the Republic of China.

1943 – The Municipal Theatre of Corfu is destroyed during an aerial bombardment by Luftwaffe.

1948 – Margaret Chase Smith is elected senator, and becomes the first woman to serve in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the United States Senate.

1953 – Nikita Khrushchev appointed secretary-general of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

1956 – IBM introduces the first computer disk storage unit, the RAMAC 305.

1964 – South Vietnamese Generals Lam Van Phat and Duong Van Duc failed in a coup attempt against General Nguyen Khanh.

1968 – Albania leaves the Warsaw Pact.

1971 – State police and National Guardsmen storm New York’s Attica Prison to end a prison revolt.

1971 – People’s Republic of China, Chairman Mao Zedong’s second in command and successor Marshal Lin Biao fled the country via a plane after the failure of alleged coup against the supreme leader, the plane crashed in Mongolia, killing all aboard.

1979 – South Africa grants independence to the “homeland” of Venda (not recognised outside South Africa).

1988 – Hurricane Gilbert is the strongest recorded hurricane in the Western Hemisphere, later replaced by Hurricane Wilma in 2005 (based on barometric pressure).

1989 – Largest anti-Apartheid march in South Africa, led by Desmond Tutu.

1993 – Public unveiling of the Oslo Accords, an Israeli-Palestinian agreement initiated by Norway.

1993 – Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin shakes hands with PLO chairman Yasser Arafat at the White House after signing an accord granting limited Palestinian autonomy.

1994 – Ulysses probe passes the Sun’s south pole.

2001 – Civilian aircraft traffic resumes in the U.S. after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

2007 – The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted.

2008 – Hurricane Ike makes landfall on the Texas Gulf Coast of the United States, causing heavy damage to Galveston Island, Houston and surrounding areas.

Morning Shinbun Monday September 13




Monday’s Headlines:

‘Rampant abuse in Iraq jails’

In Del., GOP comes out swinging against tea party

States opposed to healthcare overhaul pin hopes on Florida court hearing

Europe

France mourns Claude Chabrol, giant of cinema’s New Wave

Papandreou confident as officials arrive for Greek financial checkup

Middle East

Iran demands $500,000 to free US hiker Sarah Shourd

Turkish reform vote gets Western backin

Asia

Vietnam seeks gains as China labor costs rise

Japan offers ‘heartfelt apology’ to U.S. POWs

Africa

Senegal Court Forbids Forcing Children to Beg

Latin America

Why tourists no longer go loco in Acapulco

‘Rampant abuse in Iraq jails’

New Amnesty International report documents wide abuse, torture and detention without trial in Iraqi prisons.

Last Modified: 13 Sep 2010  

Amnesty International has said that tens of thousands of detainees are being held without trial in Iraqi prisons. In a new report, Amnesty said the prisoners face violent and psychological abuse, as well as other forms of mistreatment.

Amnesty said on Monday it believes that around 30,000 people are held in Iraqi jails, noting the case of several who died in custody, while cataloguing physical and psychological abuses against many others.

Last month’s handover of prisoners following the so-called ‘end of US combat operations’ have alarmed the The London-based human rights watchdog.

“Iraq’s security forces have been responsible for systematically violating detainees’ rights and they have been permitted to do so with impunity,” said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty’s director for the Middle East and North Africa.

USA

In Del., GOP comes out swinging against tea party



By Amy Gardner

Monday, September 13, 2010; 3:21 AM  


WILMINGTON, DEL. – It’s the “tea party” vs. the Republican Party in Tuesday’s Senate primary in Delaware, where a popular moderate is suddenly under siege from a little-known conservative who in any other year might have been relegated to the footnotes of 2010’s election records.

That’s not an entirely unfamiliar narrative in a year in which tea party organizations have ousted two incumbent senators. But Christine O’Donnell’s battle with Rep. Mike Castle perhaps embodies the movement’s greatest test, because unlike in other races in which the GOP has offered the tea party an awkward embrace, the Republican Party is fighting back.

States opposed to healthcare overhaul pin hopes on Florida court hearing

The legal attack comes as some polls show a majority of Americans dislike the healthcare measure, and Republicans are campaigning for Congress on the promise they will try to repeal  



Reporting from Washington –

The conservative counterattack on President Obama’s overhaul of health insurance will take center stage in the courts this week when Republican state attorneys general and a leading small-business group urge a federal judge in Florida to strike down the law before it can take effect.

They contend Congress does not have the power under the Constitution to require all Americans to have health insurance. They also say states cannot be pressured to spend more to cover low-income families.

Europe

France mourns Claude Chabrol, giant of cinema’s New Wave



By John Lichfield in Paris Monday, 13 September 2010

The French film director Claude Chabrol, one of the creators of the New Wave movement of the 1950s and 1960s, died yesterday at the age of 80. Like his fellow nouvelle vague pioneer Eric Rohmer, who died in January, Chabrol worked almost to the end. His last movie, Bellamy, starring Gérard Depardieu, appeared last year.

Chabrol, perhaps best known for Le Beau Serge (1957) and Les Biches (1968), started as a cinema theorist and writer.

Papandreou confident as officials arrive for Greek financial checkup

EU, IMF, and ECB officials have arrived in Athens for meetings to determine whether Greece has met the conditions of its economic bailout. Prime Minister George Papandreou has stressed that all targets are being hit.  

GREECE | 13.09.2010  

Officials from the European Union (EU), International Monetary Fund (IMF), and European Central Bank (ECB) arrived in Athens on Monday for a check-up on Greece’s success in meeting the conditions for an ongoing international bailout.

The joint mission is to begin a new audit of Greek finances that will determine the payment of a third, nine-billion-euro installment of the 110-billion-euro ($141 million) bailout loan, planned for December.

Debt restructuring ruled out

Over the weekend, Prime Minister George Papandreou addressed the Greek public to dispel suspicions that the country would have to restructure its immense national debt in order to meet the demands of the international lenders.

Middle East

Iran demands $500,000 to free US hiker Sarah Shourd

State appears willing to release prisoner held on a spying charge, but fate of two fellow American companions unclear

Ian Black, Middle East editor

Iran said today that it would free one of the three American hikers it has held as spies for more than a year on bail of $500,000 (£325,722). But the fate of her friends remains unclear amid controversy in Tehran.

Sarah Shourd, 31, has been in prison with Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, both 28, since they apparently strayed over the border from Iraqi Kurdistan in July 2009. The three are pawns in a tense diplomatic standoff between the US and Iran and have apparently fallen victim to internal political rivalry in the Islamic republic.

Turkish reform vote gets Western backing

The US and European Union have welcomed the result of the Turkish constitutional referendum.

The BBC  13 September 2010

Voters in Turkey gave strong backing to a package of changes to the country’s military-era constitution.

The changes are aimed at bringing Turkey more in line with the EU, which the government wants to join.

This result will help PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who made the reform a test of his leadership, ahead of elections next year, correspondents say.

With nearly all votes in the referendum counted, about 58% had voted “Yes” to amending the constitution.

Mr Erdogan said the result meant the country had “crossed a historic threshold toward advanced democracy and the supremacy of law”.

The European Commission has welcomed the results.

Asia

Vietnam seeks gains as China labor costs rise

With China labor costs rising, Vietnam is hoping that its cheaper labor will attract more foreign investment. But Vietnam’s rickety infrastructure and lack of skilled workers remain obstacles to growth.

By Simon Montlake, Correspondent / September 12, 2010  

Hanoi, Vietnam

A recent spell of walkouts over pay and conditions in China’s southern export zone seems likely to spur low-cost producers to expand operations in countries where wages remain significantly lower than in China.China’s wage inflation is being closely watched in Vietnam, which has expanded aggressively since the 1990s into labor-intensive industries like clothing, footwear, and furniture. The US, its former adversary, is now Vietnam’s biggest export market and last year became the largest investor here. Exports of textiles and garments, an industry that employs around 1.7 million Vietnamese, rose by 17 percent in the first seven months of the year.

Japan offers ‘heartfelt apology’ to U.S. POWs  

Ex-soldier: ‘When you have to watch your own friends get killed … it is awful’

Associated Press

TOKYO – Japan’s foreign minister apologized Monday for the suffering of a group of former World War II prisoners of war visiting from the United States and said they were treated inhumanely.

The six POWs, their relatives and the daughters of two men who died are the first group of U.S. POWs to visit Japan with government sponsorship, though groups from other countries have been invited previously.

Africa

Senegal Court Forbids Forcing Children to Beg

   

By ADAM NOSSITER

Published: September 12, 2010


DAKAR, Senegal – The judge spoke quietly, and decades of custom were quickly rolled back: the Muslim holy men were to be punished for forcing children to beg.

The sentence handed down in a courtroom here last week was gentle, only six months’ probation and a fine for the seven marabouts, or holy men. Yet the result could be a social revolution, in the eyes of some commentators. By government decree, and under international pressure, Senegal has forbidden the marabouts to enlist children to beg on their behalf.

Latin America

Why tourists no longer go loco in Acapulco

Mexico’s vicious drugs war has spilled on to the famous resort’s streets

By Guy Adams Monday, 13 September 2010

Dressed in a vintage safari suit and standing beneath a mango tree, Adolfo Santiago welcomes new arrivals to The Flamingo, a hotel advertised by the sign on its entrance gates as the, “Hideaway of the Hollywood stars, on the highest cliffs in Acapulco”. Above his reception desk are photographs of famous former guests, from Errol Flynn and Red Skelton to Roy Rogers and Cary Grant. Tellingly, almost all of them died several decades ago.

Back in the 1950s, when they were taken, these were black-and-white pictures of the biggest celebrities of the day.

Ignoring Asia A Blog

Pique the Geek 20100912: Cold and Flu Season

Well, summer will be officially over on or around 20100921, the autumnal equinox.  This is the day when the nights begin to grow longer than the days, just like the vernal equinox, when the nights grow shorter than the days.  It all has to do with the unique orbit of our wonderful spaceship earth as it orbits the sun.  Perhaps near that date I cam elaborate.

This time, however, we shall discuss the beginning of the cold and flu season, and how to deal with it.  I have only two rules, and they are important.  Observe them and you will have fewer of them, I suspect.

A cold is usually caused by a rinovirus that infects the upper respiratory system.  A cold is unpleasant, with symptoms including fever, cough, sneezing, a copious nasal discharge, and just all around feeling bad.  Colds rarely cause mortality, just some superficial mobidity.

The flu (short for influenza), on the other hand, is an extremely serious infection that can kill outright.  I have had the flu twice in my life, and thought that I would die (when I really felt badly, HOPED that I would) from it.  For most people, the flu is the most unpleasant infectious disease that they will ever have.  For the very young and the very old, it can be, and often is, fatal.  I should mention the anomalous flu that was pandemic just after The Great War (WW I).  It infected hundreds of millions of people, and was atypical in that it was often the young and strong who died from it.  As a matter of fact, my Great Uncle Walter died from it after returning from The Great Was unscathed.  Hopefully we will not see that one again, so this discussion is confined to the “normal” one.

Before we get in any deeper, here is my opinion about “flu shots”, the immunization against influenza.  I do NOT take them, although the government advocates them.  I choose not to take them for many reasons, the most important being my superstition that stimulating the immune system every year for something that few folks get is a bad idea.  That is JUST a superstition, and I have not a whit of scientific evidence to back it.  Most health officials advocate getting the shot, especially for the population at risk because of young or old age or other factors such as respiratory trouble.  It is up to YOU to decide whether or not to get one, and I take NO position except for my personal opinion on that question.

The thrust of this post concerns the over the counter drugs that one can buy and take to alleviate the symptoms of a cold (mostly), the flu (rarely), and the very common seasonal allergies that occur in the fall of the year (probably most common).  We are entering that season right now, and here are my thoughts.  Please feel free to disagree if you wish.

Right now, ragweed (Ambrosia species) are beginning to bloom.  These plants are ubiquitous, give off LOTS of pollen, and are responsible for more allergic reactions than most others combined.  I am fortunate in that I am not sensitive to pollen as an allergen, but do succumb to it if it overwhelms my system.  In my case, it is an irritant, but that is different.  When I lived in southeastern Arkansas I would often become ill from the pine pollen for a couple of weeks in the spring.  The pollen is so thick that it coats automobiles and washes off into yellow puddles after a rain.  In some woods, when the breeze blows it looks like yellow smoke grenades being used.

Another fall plant commonly blamed for allergies is goldenrod (Solidago species), but in fact they are rarely responsible.  Ragweed in the fall is the primary culprit.

Sometimes it is difficult to tell allergies from a cold, since many of the symptoms are similar.  The flu is quite different. Colds and allergies make you feel bad, cough quite a bit (more so with colds than with allergies).  Fever and minor aches and pains are common in both, as is a nasal discharge.  The main difference in symptoms is that in allergies, the nasal discharge is usually clear and watery, while in a cold it is often very viscous and colored (greenish usually; if yellow you likely have a staph infection).

The flu is quite different, with nasal symptoms not necessarily being very noticeable.  Severe body aches, deep muscle pain, and high fever are hallmarks of the flu, and often severe pulmonary symptoms are present.  In my experience the body aches and muscle pain was extreme, to the point that “even my hair hurt”.  The deadly thing about the flu is that it often predisposes people to pneumonia, and that is often what kills the old and the very young.

There are no cures for any of these conditions.  For allergies there are some treatments that reduce sensitivity in some people, but the best remedy is removal of the allergen.  This is not always practical.  For colds and the flu, time is the only real cure, but some recent antiviral drugs seem to reduce both the severity and duration in many people.  What we are left with, then, are treatments that lessen the symptoms of these ailments.  These treatments fall into several categories, and most of them are drugs, but not all.  Let us look at these conditions symptom by symptom, and see what can be done for them.

Fever is often the most uncomfortable symptom.  Modern drugs do a pretty good job of controlling fever, but what did we do before them?  Not much, really, except for giving hot drinks like mulled wine and the like while keeping the patient well covered to induce sweating, hoping that the sweating would then bring the fever when the covers were removed.  Unless quite a bit of wine was given, the patient rarely felt much improvement!  However, there was one drink treatment that actually worked, and that was willow bark tea.  Willows, of the genus Salix, contain in combination with sugars, a compound called salicylic acid, a proven antipyretic.  Unfortunately, salicylic acid is way too irritating to take directly by mouth (it is used in OTC wart removers), so a German pharmaceutical outfit named Bayer developed a derivative that was not nearly as irritating and worked well.  Since the late 19th century we have had acetylsalicylic acid, known the world over as aspirin.  (Aspirin was originally a trade name, but became part of the public domain).

Now days, in addition to aspirin, we have ibuprofen and acetaminophen as well as several others.  Here is my take on them.  Aspirin is a wonder drug, if you can tolerate it.  It works well, works fast, and has an extremely wide safety margin compared to most others.  However, it causes gastric upset in some folks, and some people are allergic to it (as are many people with asthm ).  People with bleeding disorders should not take it because it has an anticlotting effect.  Children and teens suspected of having the flu should NEVER use aspirin because of the link with Reye Syndrome, an extremely serious condition in that age group specifically seen almost exclusively in these individuals who both have the flu AND take aspirin.  However, if you are an otherwise healthy adult, aspirin is in my opinion the drug of choice for fever.  By the way, there are no stable water based aspirin products since water hydrolyses it back to salicylic acid in a few hours.  The effervescent tablets are dry and when dissolved in water are consumed immediately, not giving enough time for hydrolysis.

Ibuprofen is the next best drug, and for children and teens is the drug of choice because of Reye’s.  Fewer people are intolerant of ibuprofen than are of aspirin, and it does a good job on fever.  In addition, it is stable in water solution, so liquid preparations are available making it easy to administer to children.  It is not nearly as likely as aspirin to cause gastric upset or to trigger asthma.  A few people are allergic to it, but that can be said for almost any drug, or food for that matter.

Then comes acetaminophen.  This drug has been heavily promoted as the “safe” alternative to aspirin.  In my opinion, nothing could be further from the truth.  First of all, it is not particularly potent.  Second of all, the range between therapeutic and toxic dose is very narrow.  Third, the toxic effect of acetaminophen is on the liver, which is a bad thing indeed.  As a matter of fact, the leading cause of hospitilization for liver failure is due to overuse of acetaminophen.  I wrote a long post about the dangers of this drug about a year ago.  I shall restate my bottom line about this drug:  it should be prescription only.  Only people who can not tolerate the safer drugs should even consider it, and then use it with extreme caution.  Alcohol drinkers should not take it at all, in my opinion.  By the way, if you look at the warning statements on aspirin, ibuprofen, and acetaminophen they all have a warning about “people who consume three or more alcoholic drinks per day…”.  This warning is really intended for acetaminophen, but the manufactures lobbied FDA to have it included on other products as well.  NEVER use it for a hangover.  Since it produces stable aqueous solutions, it is widely marketed as a product to use with children.  Give them ibuprofen instead.

Aches and pains are the next most annoying symptom, and the antipyretics are for the most part good analgesics as well.  Ibuprofen seems to have a bit of an edge in this category, so instead of aspirin you might consider it if your aches and pains are particularly severe.  I cracked a couple of ribs a few years ago, and aspirin would not even begin to ease the pain, but with ibuprofen I could sleep.

Nasal symptoms are extremely bothersome, and range from constant running to completely stuffed.  Runny noses are generally caused by allergies (especially if the discharge is clear and watery) and can be treated with a wide range of OTC antihistamines.  These drugs block the action of histamine and reduce the runniness.  Some of them also have a slight anticholinergic action that has an additional drying effect.  The most well known is diphenhydramine (Benedryl is the popular brand name).  This is a very old drug with a proven track record for safety and effectiveness, but is not particularly potent.  A typical dose is 50 mg, and at that level can be quire sedating.  As a matter of fact, it is usually the active ingredient in OTC sleep aids as well.  There are a dozen different antihistamines, so you may have to shop around until you find the one best for you.  Some claim to be nonsedating, and some people are more sensitive than others.  As a matter of practical use, antihistamines are not very useful for a cold, but are quite effective for allergies.  However, it is possible to have both at the same time.

For stuffy noses, decongestants are used.  There are a wide variety of them, and almost all of them are pressor amines, meaning that they stimulate the sympathetic nervous system because they mimic the neurotransmitter norepinephrine.  This can have serious consequences for those with hypertension or other heart related conditions and probably should be avoided by those individuals, at least for the tablets for oral use.  There are topical products (“nose sprays”) that can be used with less danger since they are absorbed systemically to a much less extent.  However, it is possible to become dependent on those sprays in a fairly short time, so only use them when you really need them.  The most common oral decongestant, or at least it used to be, is pseudoephedrine.  It is effective, fast, and cheap.  I said “used to be” because it is now a “behind the counter” drug, if not prescription only, in most states.  This is because that meth cookers use it as starting material, so states are controlling it.  In many OTC preparations it has been replaced by phenylephrine, which is not as good, but is more available.  There used to be on the market a drug called phenylpropanolamine, and it was terrible.  It was removed because of meth as well, but also because it was a dangerous drug.  For the topical sprays there is a wide variety of active ingredients, so you will have to shop around until you find one that works best for you.

Interestingly, the old chicken soup remedy is excellent for congestion.  The hot water vapor, the spices (especially pepper), and the warmth tend to open the nasal passages.  The garlic is also an immune booster, so it is good all the way around.  Besides, sick people need easy to digest nutrition, and chicken soup fills the bill.

Coughing is another symptom that bothers lots of folks, and right off the bat let me say that preparations containing dextromethorphan are essentially worthless and downright dangerous in some cases.  Do not use it.  I suspect that it will be off the market before too long because it is abused, being a dissociative analgesic, like PCP and ketamine, but less potent.

There are two kinds of coughs:  the wet, productive ones that rid the lungs of nasty material, and the dry, unproductive ones that just irritate the throat.  Productive coughing is to be encouraged, because it is helping the body rid itself of infection.  There is a drug that thins these secretions, a little, and makes a productive cough more so.  It is called guiafenisen and is available in several brands and store brands too.  As long as you are not coughing up blood, try not to use a cough suppressant.

However, if you have an unproductive cough, about the only things that work are true narcotics.  Codeine is the most often used one, but hydrocodone is more effective and less apt to cause nausea.  (I can not take codeine because it makes me throw up almost every time).  In some states codeine containing cough suppressants are behind the counter products, available without prescription but you have to sign for it, just like pseudoephedrine.  In others a prescription is required.  I know of no state where you can get hydrocodone without a prescription, but if you are really in distress it may be worth a visit to your doctor.

There are a lot of quack remedies and preventions for colds.  Avoid anything that calls itself homeopathic, even though it may be billed as having “no side effects”.  The reason for no side effects is that these remedies have no effects at all, any active ingredient being so diluted that it has nothing but the placebo effect.  Another thing to avoid are the zinc products that are hyped by a well known wingnut radio personality.  There is no clinical evidence that they are effective, and the nasal swabs were even recalled a couple of years ago because of documented relationships with total and permanent loss of smell.

There are some things that you can do to prevent colds and flu, mainly just common sense things like a good diet, plenty of water, and avoiding bad habits like smoking.  In my personal experience, it seems to me that vitamin C and zinc supplements help a little to reduce the severity and duration of a cold, but this is only my personal feeling.  Clinical results are conflicting.  The best way to avoid a cold or flu is to avoid people ill with them, but that is not always possible.  Since research shows that most colds and flu are transmitted via the hands, lots of handwashing is prudent.  Some of the alcohol based hand sanitizers are better than nothing, but soap and hot water works the best.

If you have a cold, try to stay away from people.  That is not always possible because of work or school, but with the flu there is no choice.  You will be down.  I remember one day when I had the flu that my big accomplishment was getting from the bed to the bathroom.  After a rest, I got back to the bed.  Wash you hands often if you must be with other people when you have a cold, and use lost of tissues, since some infections are airborne.  DO NOT shake hands with people.  I remember once when I had a cold I had to hand out awards to my entire staff of over 50 people.  Handshakes are customary on these occasions, but we decided that bumping elbows would suffice.  Everyone got a kick out it, and I think that they were happy that I was thinking of their health.

Well, you have done it again!  You have wasted another perfectly good batch of photons reading this sick post.  And even though Megyn Kelly looses her harsh attorney facial expression when she reads me say it, I always learn much more than I could possibly hope to teach writing this series.  Please keep questions, comments, corrections, and any other thoughts coming.  Remember, no science or technology issue is off topic in the comments.

Warmest regards,

Doc

Crossposted at Docudharma.com and at Dailykos.com

Prime Time

Sunday Night Throwball, Dallas Cowboys @ Washington Redskins.  On examining my feelings I don’t hate the ‘skins quite as much as the ‘boys.  Tonight Turner Classic is showing 2 films that perfectly illustrate my contention of rampant cultural misogyny in the 60s that sadly persists to this day.

Later-

The Venture Brothers 2nd half Season Premier night on Adult SwimThe Diving Bell vs. the Butter Glider.  Childrens HospitalGive a Painted Brother a Break.

You think you are wise, Mithrandir. Yet for all your subtleties, you have not wisdom. Do you think the eyes of the White Tower are blind? I have seen more than you know. With your left hand you would use me as a shield against Mordor, and with your right you would seek to supplant me. I know who rides with Theoden of Rohan. Oh, yes. Word has reached my ears of this Aragorn, son of Arathorn, and I tell you now, I will not bow to this Ranger from the North, last of a ragged house long bereft of lordship!

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

Now with 35 Top Stories.

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Moving NY mosque would boost Islamic extremism, imam warns

by Maxim Kniazkov, AFP

2 hrs 9 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The Islamic cleric behind plans to build a mosque near Ground Zero in New York warned Sunday that retreating on the project would only strengthen the hand of the Muslim extremists.

But imam Feisal Abdul Rauf did not commit to keeping the Islamic cultural center at its current site, two blocks from where Al-Qaeda hijackers crashed planes into the World Trade Center.

“The decisions that I will make — that we will make — will be predicated on what is best for everybody,” he told ABC’s “This Week” program.

2 Turkey’s ruling party triumphs in key referendum

by Sibel Utku Bila, AFP

1 hr 56 mins ago

ANKARA (AFP) – Turkish voters on Sunday approved divisive constitutional changes to reshape the judiciary and curb the military’s powers, handing the Islamist-rooted government a major political victory.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said provisional results showed that some 58 percent of the voters backed the amendments in the referendum, hailing the outcome as a “turning point” for Turkish democracy.

“We have passed a historic threshold on the way to advanced democracy and the supremacy of law… September 12 will go down in history as a turning point,” Erdogan told a crowd of jubilant supporters at his party’s office in Istanbul.

3 Robotics breakthrough: Scientists make artificial skin

by Richard Ingham, AFP

1 hr 40 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – Biotech wizards have engineered electronic skin that can sense touch, in a major step towards next-generation robotics and prosthetic limbs.

The lab-tested material responds to almost the same pressures as human skin and with the same speed, they reported in the British journal Nature Materials.

Important hurdles remain but the exploit is an advance towards replacing today’s clumsy robots and artificial arms with smarter, touch-sensitive upgrades, they believe.

4 Central bankers reach deal on new bank regulations

AFP

2 hrs 3 mins ago

ZURICH (AFP) – Banks will be required to lift their reserves substantially under “landmark” new rules drawn up Sunday by central bankers and regulators seeking to prevent a repeat of the recent financial crisis.

The new regulations, called Basel III, would force banks to more than triple their current reserves and would be phased in from 2013, said a statement issued by the Bank for International Settlements.

“The agreements reached today are a fundamental strengthening of the global capital standards,” said European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet, who chairs the group of regulators at the meeting in northern Switzerland.

5 Greek PM rules out any restructuring of national debt

AFP

Sun Sep 12, 12:34 pm ET

THESSALONIKI, Greece (AFP) – Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Sunday ruled out any restructuring of the country’s huge national debt, warning it would have disastrous consequences.

And he expressed confidence that the government’s tough austerity measures would win back the confidence of the markets.

“The logic of restructuring the debt would be catastrophic for the economy, for our credibility, for our future,” Papandreou told reporters in Thessaloniki a day after he sketched out his economic priorities in a speech there.

6 Deutsche Bank unveils record capital hike to buy Postbank

by William Ickes, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 1:29 pm ET

FRANKFURT (AFP) – Germany’s leading bank, Deutsche Bank, unveiled a record capital increase Sunday, saying it would raise around 10 billion euros to take over German retail bank Postbank.

The operation would seek to raise “at least 9.8 billion euros” (12.5 billion dollars), the bank said in a statement.

Industry sources told AFP it was the biggest rights issue yet for Deutsche Bank, and the second biggest in German history.

7 Alonso wins for Ferrari as Hamilton crashes

by Tim Collings, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 10:29 am ET

MONZA, Italy (AFP) – Fernando Alonso kept alive his world championship challenge with a near-flawless drive for an emotional and exciting victory in Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix, his maiden race on home soil for Ferrari.

The 29-year-old Spaniard had said he need a victory to maintain his bid for a third world title in his first season with the Italian ‘scarlet scuderia’.

And he delivered a stirring performance to the tifosi in the grandstands of the old Autodromo Nazionale in a race that was nothing short of disastrous for championship leader Lewis Hamilton who retired on the opening lap.

8 China rejects Japan probe of ship incident

by Dan Martin, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 8:59 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China warned on Sunday it would reject an investigation by Tokyo into a ship collision in disputed waters that left a Chinese vessel in Japanese custody as a diplomatic row rumbled on.

Japan has meanwhile complained to China after Beijing called off planned negotiations over oil and gas fields in the contested area of the East China Sea in protest at Japan’s seizure of the Chinese fishing boat.

The Chinese foreign ministry said any evidence collected by Japan on the collision — which took place Tuesday between a Chinese trawler and two Japanese coast guard ships near islands claimed by both sides — would be “illegal, invalid and in vain”.

9 Sweeping Taiwan, China trade pact takes effect

by Peter Harmsen, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 7:18 am ET

TAIPEI (AFP) – A historic trade pact between Taiwan and China came into effect Sunday, tying the two sides closer together than at any point since their split more than six decades ago.

The landmark Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), signed in June, is the most sweeping pact ever penned by the two sides, officially still not at peace after the end of a civil war in 1949.

“With ECFA becoming effective, the cross-Strait ties marched into a new era… Taiwan should better utilise the trend,” Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou told reporters while on a trip to the southern Tainan county.

10 No Koran burning, but activists gather outside US church

by Juan Castro Olivera, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 3:48 am ET

GAINESVILLE, Florida (AFP) – Police sent reinforcements to separate angry activists gathered outside the US church where Korans were to be burned, even though the church’s controversial pastor called off the event.

Signs in red letters stating that “Islam is of the Devil” are still posted outside the Dove World Outreach evangelical church, but a large sign announcing that some 200 Korans would be set ablaze on the anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks was taken down.

After a back-and-forth lasting several days, the church’s firebrand pastor, Terry Jones, said Saturday his church will not burn the Korans. “We will definitely not burn the Koran, no,” Jones, who was in New York, told NBC television. “Not today, not ever.”

11 Obama says Islam not the enemy on 9/11 anniversary

by Sebastian Smith, AFP

Sun Sep 12, 4:25 am ET

NEW YORK (AFP) – US President Barack Obama has told a deeply polarized America that Islam is not the enemy as somber ceremonies marked an unusually tense ninth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

Moving remembrance ceremonies were held Saturday to honor the nearly 3,000 people killed when Al-Qaeda extremists slammed airliners into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon outside Washington and a field in Pennsylvania.

But with thousands of people marching in dueling protests over a proposed Muslim community center two blocks from Ground Zero and a Florida pastor triggering demonstrations across the Muslim world with his threat to burn the Koran, this was the most politicized 9/11 anniversary yet.

12 Dueling protests over New York mosque near Ground Zero

by Sebastian Smith, AFP

Sat Sep 11, 6:27 pm ET

NEW YORK (AFP) – Thousands of people took to the streets Saturday here in dueling protests over building a mosque close to Ground Zero, triggering noisy sidewalk arguments closely watched by a tight police guard.

About 1,500 people first marched in favor of a Muslim organization’s right to build a Muslim community center two blocks from where the World Trade Center once stood until it was destroyed in the 9/11 terror strikes.

But later about 2,000 people gathered close by for a separate rally against the mosque, which was taking place just hours after the solemn ceremonies to mark the ninth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

13 Global regulators agree tougher Basel III bank rules

By Natsuko Waki and Catherine Bosley, Reuters

49 mins ago

BASEL, Switzerland (Reuters) – Global regulators, aiming to prevent any repeat of the international credit crisis, agreed on Sunday to force banks to more than triple the amount of top-quality capital they must hold in reserve.

The biggest change to global banking regulation in decades, known as “Basel III,” will require banks to hold top-quality capital totaling 7 percent of their risk-bearing assets, up from just 2 percent under current rules.

The rules may oblige banks to raise hundreds of billions of dollars of fresh capital over the next decade. Germany’s banking association, for example, has estimated its 10 biggest banks may need 105 billion euros ($141 billion) of additional capital.

14 Two Afghans killed as Koran protests simmer

By Paul Tait, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 11:15 am ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Two people were killed on Sunday in a third straight day of violent Afghan protests sparked by a U.S. pastor’s threat to burn copies of the Koran.

Hundreds of Afghans kept up the angry demonstrations, some apparently unaware that pastor Terry Jones had dropped his plans. Two protesters were shot and killed in the eastern province of Logar, a district official said, taking the death toll since last Friday to three.

The furor over Jones’s plan — a grave insult to Muslims who believe the Koran to be the literal word of God — overshadowed the lead-up to commemorations of the September 11 hijacked airliner attacks on the United States.

15 Top House Republican hints at tax compromise

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 1:56 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The top Republican in the House of Representatives offered a hint of compromise on the divisive issue of taxes on Sunday, saying he would support extending tax cuts for the middle class even if cuts for the wealthy are allowed to expire.

Representative John Boehner said President Barack Obama’s proposal to renew lower tax rates for families making less than $250,000 but let the lower rates for wealthier Americans expire was “bad policy” — but he will support it if he must.

“If the only option I have is to vote for some of those tax reductions, I’ll vote for it,” Boehner said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” program.

16 Turkey’s Erdogan scores reform referendum victory

By Thomas Grove, Reuters

55 mins ago

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Turkish voters strongly backed constitutional reforms on Sunday, handing a government led by conservative Muslims a new victory in a power struggle with secular opponents over the country’s direction.

“The winner today was Turkish democracy,” Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told followers as he declared victory in a vote analysts said boosts the chances of the ruling AK Party winning a third consecutive term in office next year.

Erdogan had portrayed the reforms as an effort to boost the Muslim nation’s democracy and help its European Union candidacy.

17 Fears rise over growing anti-Muslim feeling in U.S.

By Mark Egan, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 12:53 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Amid threats of Koran burning and a heated dispute over a planned Muslim cultural center in New York, Muslim leaders and rights activists warn of growing anti-Muslim feeling in America partly provoked for political reasons.

“Many people now treat Muslims as ‘the other’ — as something to vilify and to discriminate against,” said Daniel Mach of the American Civil Liberties Union.

And, he said, some people have exploited that fear in the media, “for political gain or cheap notoriety.”

18 China raises pressure on Japan in sea dispute

By Chris Buckley, Reuters

Sun Sep 12, 8:52 am ET

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s top-ranked diplomat intensified pressure on Japan over a territorial dispute, warning Tokyo on Sunday against making “misjudgments” over the seizure of a Chinese fishing boat in disputed seas.

China’s latest demand marked another diplomatic escalation in the rift between Asia’s two biggest economies, which has set back their efforts to ease decades of distrust.

State Councillor Dai Bingguo made the warning to Japan’s ambassador in Beijing, Uichiro Niwa, summoned in the early hours to hear China’s call for the release of a Chinese captain and crew whose fishing boat collided with two Japanese coast guard ships in disputed seas last week, Xinhua news agency reported.

19 Boehner says he’d support a middle-class tax cut

By DOUGLASS K. DANIEL, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 7 mins ago

WASHINGTON – House Minority Leader John Boehner says he would vote for President Obama’s plan to extend tax cuts only for middle-class earners, not the wealthy, if that were the only option available to House Republicans.

Boehner, R-Ohio, said it is “bad policy” to exclude the highest-earning Americans from tax relief during the recession, and later Sunday he accused the White House of “class warfare.” But he said he wouldn’t block the breaks for middle-income individuals and families if Democrats won’t support the full package.

Income tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush will expire at the end of this year unless Congress acts and Obama signs the bill. Obama said he would support continuing the lower tax rates for couples earning up to $250,000 or single taxpayers making up to $200,000. But he and the Democratic leadership in Congress refused to back continued lower rates for the fewer than 3 percent of Americans who make more than that.

20 Regulators: PG&E must survey all its gas pipelines

By TREVOR HUNNICUTT and GARANCE BURKE, Associated Press Writers

9 mins ago

SAN BRUNO, Calif. – Residents returned Sunday to the ruined hillsides of their suburban San Francisco neighborhood, three days after a natural gas pipeline exploded into a deadly fireball.

A nearby segment of the line was due to be replaced, the utility responsible said, because it ran through a heavily urbanized area and the risk of failure was “unacceptably high.” That 30-inch diameter pipe about two and a half miles north was installed in 1948, and was slated to be swapped for new 24-inch pipe.

But investigators still don’t know what caused the blast Thursday night, and even as dozens of people returned to their scorched homes – accompanied by gas workers to help restore pilot lights and make sure it is safe to turn power back on – officials tried to confirm just how many people died.

21 Coast to coast, tea partiers promote their cause

By ROBIN HINDERY and KEVIN FREKING, Associated Press Writers

1 hr 56 mins ago

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Originally billed as a chance to reflect on the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a series of raucous tea party rallies around the country on Sunday ended up focusing almost entirely on an event still to come – the Nov. 2 election.

“We are your everyday, average, churchgoing families, we represent the majority of people in this nation, and we’re ready to take back our government,” said Pam Pinkston of Fair Oaks, Calif., one of about 4,000 people to attend Sacramento’s “United to the Finish” gathering.

Thousands of tea party activists also turned up at rallies in Washington, D.C., and St. Louis to spread their message of smaller government and focus their political movement on the pivotal congressional elections in November.

22 EPA to hold NY hearing, last of 4, on gas drilling

By MARY ESCH, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 15 mins ago

ALBANY, N.Y. – The oil and gas industry is urging the Environmental Protection Agency to keep a narrow focus in its study of how a drilling technique that involves blasting chemical-laced water into the ground may affect drinking water – while environmental groups want the study to cover everything from road-building to waste disposal.

The issues will be aired Monday in two-minute speaking slots at an EPA hearing twice postponed last month because of security concerns over rallies and crowds anticipated in the thousands.

The hearing, the last of four around the country, will be held in two sessions on Monday and two more on Wednesday at The Forum in Binghamton, 115 miles southwest of Albany. The EPA is taking comment on how broadly to construct its study of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a technique for releasing natural gas from rock formations thousands of feet underground by injecting at high pressure millions of gallons of water mixed with chemicals and sand.

23 Alabama, Ohio St pull away from Boise in AP poll

BY RALPH D. RUSSO, By College Football Writer

1 hr 37 mins ago

NEW YORK – The combination of impressive victories by Alabama and Ohio State and a stunning loss by Virginia Tech led to Boise State losing all but one of its first-place votes in the AP Top 25.

The Broncos were still No. 3, behind the top-ranked Tide and No. 2 Buckeyes in the poll released Sunday, but the gap has widened.

Alabama received 52 first-place votes and 1,466 points. Ohio State had five first-place votes and 1,410 points and Boise State received one and 1,306.

24 Lesbian seeks reinstatement to Air Force in trial

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 3:17 pm ET

SEATTLE – Opponents of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy against gays serving in the military are hoping for another major legal victory as a federal trial begins Monday over whether to reinstate a lesbian flight nurse discharged from the Air Force Reserve.

The trial comes just days after a federal judge in California declared “don’t ask, don’t tell” an unconstitutional violation of the due process and free speech rights of gays and lesbians. While the ruling does not affect the legal issues in the case of former Maj. Margaret Witt, gay rights activists believe a victory – and her reinstatement – could help build momentum for repealing the policy.

“There’s already political momentum to do something to repeal this unfair statute,” said Aaron Caplan, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles who is on Witt’s legal team. “Judicial opinions from multiple jurisdictions saying there’s a constitutional problem with this ought to encourage Congress to act more swiftly.”

25 Global banking rules aim to balance safety, growth

By GREG KELLER, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 17 mins ago

BASEL, Switzerland – Banks will have to significantly increase their capital reserves under rules endorsed Sunday by the world’s major central banks, which are trying to prevent another financial collapse without impeding the fragile economic recovery.

The new banking rules are designed to strengthen bank finances and rein in excessive risk-taking, but some banks have protested that they may dampen the recovery by forcing them to reduce the lending that fuels economic growth.

Forcing banks to keep more capital on hand will restrict the amount of loans they can make, but it will make them better able to withstand the blow if many of those loans go sour. The rules also are intended to boost confidence that the banking system won’t repeat past mistakes.

26 Congress to tread carefully in run-up to election

By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 2:12 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Congress returns this week with embattled Democrats torn between trying to show they have the economic answers and fearing the further wrath of voters over new government programs. It appears the fears will win out.

The inbox is overflowing as lawmakers end their summer recess and undertake four weeks of writing and trying to pass bills before leaving town ahead of the Nov. 2 election: Bush-era tax cuts are set to expire at year’s end; annual spending bills await action; and President Barack Obama has just come out with a new plan to stimulate the economy through tax credits, breaks for business investment and public works projects.

But progress on any of those before the election is doubtful.

27 GOP tries to take out tea party-backed candidate

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 1:43 pm ET

DOVER, Del. – Arms linked, Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell and her conservative backers kick up their heels and clap to the strains of an original song with lyrics befitting a tea party.

“Look out Washington, D.C., ’cause we are on a roll and we’re rocking across this country with a message to be told.”

It’s a tune that’s unnerving the Republican establishment in Delaware, which fears being felled by swift kicks from O’Donnell – and tea partiers.

28 Greek prime minister: no new austerity measures

By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 3:05 pm ET

THESSALONIKI, Greece – The Greek government is planning no new austerity measures as part of efforts to pull the country out of debt and might even exit international supervision earlier than expected, the prime minister said Sunday.

George Papandreou said Greece was on track to meet targets for reducing its deficit by nearly 40 percent this year.

“We will not need any new measures,” he said during a news conference a day after making his annual speech on the economy on the sidelines of a trade fair in northern Greece. Papandreou also reiterated that Athens did not plan to restructure its debt – a move that he said would have been “catastrophic.”

29 Palin, Beck recall 9/11 attacks at Alaska event

By RACHEL D’ORO, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 6:56 am ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck teamed up in the former Alaska governor’s home state Saturday night, delivering their messages to a crowd of thousands and recalling their thoughts and feelings the day of the 9/11 attacks.

Palin applauded the conservative commentator as an inspiration for millions, saying he represents why so many citizens never have to apologize for being American.

She also laughingly noted “goofy” media speculations about her real intentions for appearing on an Anchorage stage with Beck.

30 Different pope, different times for British trip

By VICTOR L. SIMPSON, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 6:24 am ET

VATICAN CITY – The Falklands war was in full swing and John Paul II was in London as the first pope ever to set foot on English soil.

Even as he snubbed Margaret Thatcher and prayed for peace in implicit criticism of Britain – whose troops were battling Catholic Argentines – the pontiff received a rapturous welcome and was described in glowing terms by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

His successor, Benedict XVI, can expect a far cooler – if not at times downright hostile – reception in his upcoming state visit.

31 Fellow Americans’ suspicions frustrate US Muslims

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

2 hrs 26 mins ago

NEW YORK – Nine years of denouncing terrorism, of praying side-by-side with Jews and Christians, of insisting “I’m American, too.” None of it could stop a season of hate against Muslims that made for an especially fraught Sept. 11. Now, Muslims are asking why their efforts to be accepted in the United States have been so easily thwarted.

“We have nothing to apologize for, we have nothing to fear, we have nothing to be ashamed of, we have nothing that we’re guilty of – but we need to be out there and we need to express this,” said Imam Mohammed Ibn Faqih in a sermon at the Islamic Institute of Orange County in Anaheim, Calif., the day before the 9/11 anniversary.

There is no simple way for American Muslims to move forward.

32 LA environmental school site in toxic soil cleanup

By CHRISTINA HOAG, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 3:30 pm ET

LOS ANGELES – Students at a new green themed school named for noted conservationists Rachel Carson and Al Gore don’t have to go far for a lesson in environmental contamination: Their $75 million campus was laden with toxic soil.

Los Angeles Unified district officials have spent $4 million to clean up the site of the new Carson-Gore Academy of Environmental Studies, which is set to open Monday.

The three-acre site, located in a low-income neighborhood west of downtown LA, was contaminated with carcinogenic solvents that leaked from 17 underground storage tanks discovered during construction. The land had been previously used by light industrial businesses.

33 Trial set for Mass. doc in abortion patient death

By DENISE LAVOIE, AP Legal Affairs Writer

Sun Sep 12, 2:41 pm ET

BOSTON – Laura Hope Smith was 22 years old and 13 weeks pregnant when she went to see a Cape Cod doctor for an abortion. She was pronounced dead later that day.

Prosecutors charged the doctor with manslaughter, alleging that he failed to monitor her while she was under anesthesia, delayed calling 911 when she went into cardiopulmonary arrest, and later lied to try to cover up his actions.

Dr. Rapin Osathanondh, an obstetrician who was also a research associate at the Harvard School of Public Health, goes on trial Monday in Barnstable Superior Court. The trial begins on the third anniversary of Smith’s death.

34 Vt. law gives Indian tribe hope for recognition

By LISA RATHKE, Associated Press Writer

Sun Sep 12, 2:30 pm ET

MONTPELIER, Vt. – Members of Vermont Indian tribes have renewed hope for state recognition, which some have been seeking for decades and the Abenaki tribe needs to sell its signature baskets and other crafts as Indian-made.

A new state law creates a process for a Vermont commission to recommend tribal recognition, which the Abenaki hope will also allow them to seek federal funding for education and other benefits.

“It’s not just for us. It’s for kids, it’s for our grandkids,” said Dawn Macie, 51, of Rutland, a member of the Nulhegan band of the Abenaki.

35 Record gains for US poverty with elections looming

By HOPE YEN and LIZ “Sprinkles” SIDOTI, Associated Press Writers

Sun Sep 12, 1:09 am ET

WASHINGTON – The number of people in the U.S. who are in poverty is on track for a record increase on President Barack Obama’s watch, with the ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels that led to the national war on poverty.

Census figures for 2009 – the recession-ravaged first year of the Democrat’s presidency – are to be released in the coming week, and demographers expect grim findings.

It’s unfortunate timing for Obama and his party just seven weeks before important elections when control of Congress is at stake. The anticipated poverty rate increase – from 13.2 percent to about 15 percent – would be another blow to Democrats struggling to persuade voters to keep them in power.

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