Le Tour: Stage 10

Le.  Tour.  De.  France.

And then there were 2.

The reason these elbow and collarbone injuries are such a big deal is that you actually spend a lot of time with your weight on the handlebars.

Today’s 112 mile stage from Chambery to Gap has the one category 1 climb that might change things but is unlikely to since everyone seems to be writing their Champs Elysees scripts and excuses.

Unless Schleck uses it to drop Contador which he keeps threatening to do.

As I mentioned way back a week ago the problem with unlimited racing formulas is that small time gaps tend to magnify and there are not a lot of what NASCAR types call ‘passing opportunities’.  Now sometimes there are flaming chunks of twisted metal and the prospect of seeing that live may suit your Madam Defarge sensibilities and will certainly cement your revolutionary credentials on sport.

If it were popular like the World Cup everyone would be watching.

On This Day in History: July 14

Fête Nationale, or Bastille Day as it is called here in the US, marks the storming of an infamous fortress in Paris and the beginning of the French Revolution. Bastion de Saint-Antoine was built in 1370 during the 100 Years War to defend the east end of Paris and one of the royal palaces. At the time of the battle, the Bastille only held seven prisoners. Most had been removed, the most infamous, the comte de Solages aka the Marquis de Sade, was moved to an insane asylum 10 days before.

Early in the morning, the crowds had stormed the Hôtel des Invalides, gathering arms but without powder which was stored at the Bastille, 30,000 lbs. of gun powder.

The regular garrison consisted of 82 invalides (veteran soldiers no longer suitable for service in the field). It had however been reinforced on 7 July by 32 grenadiers of the Swiss Salis-Samade Regiment from the troops on the Champ de Mars. The walls mounted eighteen eight-pound guns and twelve smaller pieces. The governor was Bernard-René de Launay, son of the previous governor and actually born within the Bastille.

The list of vainqueurs de la Bastille has around 600 names, and the total of the crowd was probably less than one thousand. The crowd gathered outside around mid-morning, calling for the surrender of the prison, the removal of the guns and the release of the arms and gunpowder. Two representatives of the crowd outside were invited into the fortress and negotiations began, and another was admitted around noon with definite demands. The negotiations dragged on while the crowd grew and became impatient. Around 13:30 the crowd surged into the undefended outer courtyard, and the chains on the drawbridge  to the inner courtyard were cut, crushing one unfortunate vainqueur. About this time gunfire began, though some stories state that the Governor had a cannon fire into the crowd killing several women, children, and men turning the crowd into a mob. The crowd seemed to have felt it had been drawn into a trap and the fighting became more violent and intense, while attempts by deputies to organize a cease-fire were ignored by the attackers.

The firing continued, and at 15:00 the attackers were reinforced by mutinous gardes françaises and other deserters from among the regular troops, along with two cannons. A substantial force of Royal Army troops encamped on the nearby Champs de Mars did not intervene. With the possibility of a mutual massacre suddenly apparent Governor de Launay ordered a cease fire at 17:00. A letter offering his terms was handed out to the besiegers through a gap in the inner gate. His demands were refused, but de Launay nonetheless capitulated, as he realized that his troops could not hold out much longer; he opened the gates to the inner courtyard, and the vainqueurs swept in to liberate the fortress at 17:30.

Ninety-eight attackers and one defender had died in the actual fighting. De Launay was seized and dragged towards the Hôtel de Ville in a storm of abuse. Outside the Hôtel a discussion as to his fate began. The badly beaten de Launay shouted “Enough! Let me die!” and kicked a pastry cook named Dulait in the groin. De Launay was then stabbed repeatedly and fell, and his head was sawed off and fixed on a pike to be carried through the streets. The three officers of the permanent Bastille garrison were also killed by the crowd; surviving police reports detail their wounds and clothing. Two of the invalides of the garrison were lynched, but all but two of the Swiss regulars of the Salis-Samade Regiment were protected by the French Guards and eventually released to return to their regiment. Their officer, Lieutenant Louis de Flue, wrote a detailed report on the defense of the Bastille which was incorporated in the logbook of the Salis-Samade and has survived. It is (perhaps unfairly) critical of the dead Marquis de Launay, whom de Flue accuses of weak and indecisive leadership. The blame for the fall of the Bastille would rather appear to lay with the inertia of the commanders of the substantial force of Royal Army troops encamped on the Champs de Mars, who made no effort to intervene when the nearby Hôtel des Invalides or the Bastille were attacked.

Returning to the Hôtel de Ville, the mob accused the prévôt ès marchands (roughly, mayor) Jacques de Flesselles of treachery, and he was assassinated en route to an ostensible trial at the Palais-Royal.

The key to the west portal of the Bastille was presented to Pres, George Washington  by the Marquis de Lafayette on March 17, 1790 and is on display at Mt Vernon.

All that is left of the Bastille is located at the Square Henri-Galli on Boulevard Henri IV. The stones of one of the eight towers were discovered in 1899 during the excavation for the Metro. The footprint is marked by special paving stones along the sidewalk and streets around the Place de la Bastille. The Fossé de Paris, the ditch behind the Bastille, is now a marina for pleasure boats.

 1223 – Louis VIII becomes King of France upon the death of his father, Philip II of France.

1698 – The Darien scheme begins with five ships, bearing about 1,200 people, departing Leith for the Isthmus of Panama.

1769 – The de Portolá Expedition establishes a base in California, and sets out to find the Port of Monterey (now Monterey, California).

1771 – Foundation of the Mission San Antonio de Padua in modern California by the Franciscan friar Junípero Serra.

1789 – French Revolution: Citizens of Paris storm the Bastille and free seven prisoners.

1790 – French Revolution: Citizens of Paris celebrate the constitutional monarchy and national reconciliation in the Fête de la Fédération.

1791 – The Priestley Riots drive Joseph Priestley, a supporter of the French Revolution, out of Birmingham, England.

1798 – The Sedition Act becomes law in the United States making it a federal crime to write, publish, or utter false or malicious statements about the United States government.

1865 – First ascent of the Matterhorn by Edward Whymper and party, four of whom die on the descent.

1881 – Billy the Kid is shot and killed by Pat Garrett outside Fort Sumner.

1900 – Armies of the Eight-Nation Alliance capture Tientsin during the Boxer Rebellion.

1902 – The Campanile in St Mark’s Square, Venice collapses, also demolishing the loggetta.

1916 – Start of the Battle of Delville Wood as an action in the Battle of the Somme, which was to last until 3 September 1916.

1933 – Gleichschaltung: In Germany, all political parties are outlawed except the Nazi Party.

1943 – In Joplin, Missouri, the George Washington Carver National Monument becomes the first United States National Monument in honor of an African American.

1948 – Palmiro Togliatti, leader of the Italian Communist Party, is shot near the Italian Parliament.

1950 – Korean War: North Korean troops initiate the Battle of Taejon.

1958 – Iraqi Revolution: in Iraq the monarchy is overthrown by popular forces lead by Abdul Karim Kassem, who becomes the nation’s new leader.

1965 – The Mariner 4 flyby of Mars takes the first close-up photos of another planet.

1969 – Football War: after Honduras loses a soccer match against El Salvador, rioting breaks out in Honduras against Salvadoran migrant workers.

1969 – The United States $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills are officially withdrawn from circulation.

1992 – 386BSD is released by Lynne Jolitz and William Jolitz beginning the Open Source Operating System Revolution. Linus Torvalds release his Linux soon afterwards.

2000 – A powerful solar flare, later named the Bastille Day event, causes a geomagnetic storm on Earth.

2002 – French President Jacques Chirac escapes an assassination attempt unscathed during Bastille Day celebrations.

2003 – The United States Government admits to the existence of “Area 51”.

2007 – Russia withdraws from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe.

Prime Time

Major League Baseball All-Star Game!

Explain to me why I should be watching this exhibition again?  Am I scouting for stretch and playoff trades?

As a Mets fan I’m content to work off injuries and dangle our bait and satisfied when everyone plays to their potential.

And we’re competing against the hated Braves and not the upstart Phillies, what could be better than that?

The reason for Junior League ascendancy of late is simply that since the designated hitter rule every single game they play is an exhibition unless it’s in a National League park during (shudder) inter-League play.

Now, about those wild cards and short play-offs, and there’s that lowering the mound thing…

Every record since the live ball is suspect.

Not Baseball

  • AMCTin Cup
  • ESPN– Sweden @ US Women’s Football for the Cup deprived.
  • History– 10 pm Top Shot from Sunday.
  • SciFiWarehouse 13, last week’s season premier and a brand new episode.
  • Turner ClassicTo Be or Not to Be, the good Jack Benny/Carol Lombard one not Mel and Ann Bancroft’s homage.
  • Food– 10 pm New Chopped.

Later-

Jon 6/28, Stephen 6/30.  Letterman, Kristin Chenoweth and M.I.A..  Alton, Crabs.

Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 BP praying cap will end Gulf oil nightmare

by Mira Oberman AFP

Tue Jul 13, 12:32 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AFP) – BP was poised Tuesday to test whether a huge cap can hold back crude flooding up from a well below the floor of the Gulf of Mexico, praying an end to the 13-week oil leak may be in sight.

Crucial seismic surveys were being carried out first after underwater robots successfully lowered a 30-foot-tall (10-meter) device known as a capping stack on top of the ruptured wellhead late Monday.

On the 85th day of the worst US oil spill ever, engineers were to start a series of pressure and integrity tests around midday (1700 GMT) to see if the huge cap, weighing some 75 tonnes, has indeed choked off the leak.

2 French lawmakers approve full veil ban

by Dave Clark, AFP

55 mins ago

PARIS (AFP) – French lawmakers voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to ban the wearing of face-covering veils in public spaces, as Europe toughens its approach to integrating Muslim immigrant communities.

On the eve of Bastille Day, when France celebrates the birth of what was to become a staunchly secular republic, the 577-seat National Assembly lower house voted by 335 votes to one for a total ban.

The bill will now go to the Senate in September, but opponents of the total ban say if it was overturned by the judges of the Constitutional Council, France’s highest legal body, it would hand a victory to the fundamentalists.

3 ‘Abducted’ Iran scientist surfaces in US

by Shaun Tandon, AFP

33 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – An Iranian scientist who Tehran claims was abducted by US forces surfaced in Washington Tuesday, as the State Department said he had been in the United States “for some time” and was free to leave.

It was the latest twist in a bizarre saga tied to international pressure over Tehran’s controversial nuclear program, which Iran says is for peaceful purpose, but many nations fear masks a weapons drive.

Iran claims US agents kidnapped Shahram Amiri after he arrived in Saudi Arabia for a pilgrimage last year, but US news network ABC reported in March that he had defected and was working with the Central Intelligence Agency.

4 Sarkozy rejects scandal, pushes pension reform

by Roland Lloyd Parry

Tue Jul 13, 12:06 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy fought to put a campaign funding scandal behind him Tuesday, ending his labour minister’s double role as party treasurer and pushing on with major pensions reform.

Sarkozy went on television to calm an uproar over alleged illegal donations from L’Oreal billionaire Liliane Bettencourt which has overshadowed a crunch pensions bill, key to his reform plans before a possible 2012 re-election bid.

The man at the centre of the scandal, Labour Minister Eric Woerth, said Tuesday he would give up his role as treasurer of the ruling UMP party, which has fuelled allegations of a conflict of interest in the government.

5 Casar wins Tour 9th stage, Schleck in yellow

by Justin Davis, AFP

Tue Jul 13, 1:10 pm ET

SAINT-JEAN-DE-MAURIENNE, France (AFP) – Andy Schleck took possession of the Tour de France yellow jersey in dramatic fashion Tuesday after an epic day of racing that virtually ended Cadel Evans’s victory hopes.

Luxemburger Schleck, the Saxo Bank climbing specialist who finished runner-up to Alberto Contador in 2009, now leads what appears to be a two-man race with a 41sec lead on the Spaniard.

Frenchman Sandy Casar took the stage honours after a thrilling 204km ninth stage from Morzine which included the gruelling 25.5km ascension over the Col de la Madeleine, the fourth and last climb of the race.

6 Defeated Dutch honoured at home with sea of orange

by Nicolas Delaunay, AFP

46 mins ago

AMSTERDAM (AFP) – Thousands of fans turned the canals of Amsterdam into a sea of orange Tuesday, honking vuvuzelas and throwing confetti at the Dutch football team after its nailbiting World Cup defeat to Spain.

The team, casual in shorts and T-shirts, floated along the seven-kilometre (over four-mile) route on a river boat decorated with orange flowers, sipping beer and making toasts in the direction of the adoring crowds who waved flags, danced and chanted “Holland, Holland” to pumping music.

Supporters, numbering more than 500,000 according to police, lined the city streets and canals vying to get a glimpse of their heroes, many jumping in the water despite having been warned of health hazards.

7 World Cup winners Spain return home to rapturous welcome

by Daniel Silva, AFP

Mon Jul 12, 5:23 pm ET

MADRID (AFP) – Spain’s victorious World Cup squad returned to a heroes’ welcome in Madrid on Monday with hundreds of thousands of fans cheering the team as they paraded through the capital’s streets on an open top bus.

People chanted “Campeones! Campeones! Campeones!” and waved red and gold Spanish flags at the players as the black bus crawled along a roughly eight-kilometre (five-mile) route through the city’s main thoroughfares amid scorching temperatures.

Fans waved at the players from balconies while others climbed on trees to get a better view of the 23-man squad which won the World Cup for the first time in Spain’s history with a 1-0 extra-time defeat of the Netherlands on Sunday.

8 Rogue Afghan soldier kills three British Gurkhas

by Waheedullah Massoud, AFP

Tue Jul 13, 11:12 am ET

KABUL (AFP) – A renegade Afghan soldier remains at large after killing three British army Gurkha troops in a “suspected premeditated attack” on Tuesday, officials said, pledging a full investigation.

The killer was still on the run, but “strenuous efforts” were being made to find him, they said, voicing determination the deadly assault would not damage trust between foreign forces and the Afghan counterparts they are training.

Britain’s Defence Secretary Liam Fox called it a “despicable and cowardly act”, but insisted it would not deter British troops from their training mission.

9 BP gets set to test new cap to stop oil flow

By Kristen Hays, Reuters

Tue Jul 13, 1:16 pm ET

HOUSTON (Reuters) – BP Plc prepared on Tuesday to test a new cap on its runaway well in an effort to finally arrest the flow of oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico for the last 12 weeks.

The tests, due to last between six and 48 hours, will begin later on Tuesday on BP’s newly installed “capping stack”, which has a better seal than the last cap placed on the well and aims to stop oil from spewing out of the failed blowout preventer.

Regardless of the test results, BP should be able to contain the flow from the ruptured well with oil-siphoning vessels by mid-July, said retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, the top U.S. official overseeing the oil spill.

10 Vanished Iranian scientist turns up in Washington

By Arshad Mohammed and Hossein Jaseb, Reuters

2 hrs 55 mins ago

WASHINGTON/TEHRAN (Reuters) – An Iranian nuclear scientist who vanished more than a year ago mysteriously turned up in Washington on Tuesday saying he had been kidnapped but the United States denied that he was held against his will.

Iran, which is locked in a standoff with the West over its suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons, has repeatedly accused the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency of abducting Shahram Amiri, who worked for Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization.

Amiri, who went missing during a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia more than a year ago, appeared at the Iranian interests section of the Pakistani embassy, which represents Iran because Tehran and Washington have no diplomatic relations.

11 Crist leads 3-way Senate race in Florida

By John Whitesides, Reuters

Tue Jul 13, 12:56 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Florida Governor Charlie Crist holds a narrow edge over Republican Marco Rubio in a three-way Senate race dominated by economic worries, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday.

Crist, who left the Republican Party to run as an independent after Rubio mounted a primary challenge against him, leads Rubio 35 percent to 28 percent. Democrat Kendrick Meek trails with 17 percent less than four months before the November election for the open Senate seat.

Crist holds a similar 34 to 29 percent edge over Rubio in a three-way race against Democrat Jeff Greene, who is locked in a tough party primary fight with Meek. The Florida primary will be held August 24.

12 Uganda finds suicide vest, makes several arrests

By Jeremy Clarke and Elias Biryabarema, Reuters

2 hrs 12 mins ago

KAMPALA (Reuters) – Ugandan police have found an unexploded suicide vest and arrested six of the more than 20 Somalis and Ugandans suspected of planning twin bombings that killed 76 soccer fans on Sunday, an intelligence source said.

Somali al Shabaab Islamists linked to al Qaeda said on Monday they had carried out the attacks on a crowded restaurant and a rugby club in the capital Uganda while fans watched the World Cup final on television.

An official from the group said on Tuesday there had been no suicide bombers involved in the attack on Uganda, which has peacekeepers in Somalia.

13 New obesity drug works, but FDA has safety worries

By Susan Heavey, Reuters

30 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The first potential new prescription weight-loss pill in more than a decade works, according to FDA staff who also flagged safety concerns that Wall Street deemed benign enough to bet the drug will ultimately hit pharmacy shelves.

The review from U.S. Food and Drug Administration staff on Tuesday, contained in documents released ahead of an FDA advisory panel meeting later this week, sent drugmaker Vivus’ shares up as much as 19.7 percent.

“The topics the FDA raised are in line with what we expected,” Leerink Swann analyst Steve Yoo told Reuters. He said “the likelihood of a positive panel vote has increased, which in turn increases the likelihood of approval.”

14 Obama faces big political headwinds as polls weigh

By Steve Holland, Reuters

5 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama is facing the stiffest political headwinds he has experienced since taking office 18 months ago as Americans sour on his handling of the U.S. economy.

Two opinion polls published on Tuesday painted a grim picture as the U.S. economy emerges from the financial crisis and its worst downturn since the 1930s.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll showed 54 percent of those surveyed disapproved of Obama’s economic stewardship. A CBS News survey had similar results with only 40 percent approving of Obama on the issue.

15 French lawmakers vote to ban burqa in public

By Victoria Bryan, Reuters

Tue Jul 13, 1:28 pm ET

PARIS (Reuters) – Muslim women could be fined for wearing full-length veils in public in France under a bill approved overwhelmingly on Tuesday by the lower house of parliament.

The legislation, which still has to be vetted by the Constitutional Council, France’s highest constitutional authority, and approved by the Senate, could make France the second European country to criminalize wearing the burqa or niqab.

France is home to Europe’s largest Muslim minority, with about 5 million Muslims, but it is thought that only about 2,000 women wear the full-length veil.

16 New BP cap set for slow tests of how it holds oil

By TOM BREEN and HARRY R. WEBER, Associated Press Writers

3 mins ago

NEW ORLEANS – With a tight new cap freshly installed on its leaking well in the Gulf of Mexico, BP planned gradual tests starting Tuesday to see if the device can stop oil from pouring into the sea for the first time in nearly three months.

The cap would be just a temporary solution, but it offers the best hope yet for cutting off the crude that has fouled the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon rig leased by BP exploded April 20, killing 11 workers.

Engineers will slowly shut down three valves that let oil flow through the 75-ton capping device to see if it can withstand the pressure of the erupting crude and to watch if leaks spring up elsewhere in the well. National Incident Commander Thad Allen said the process of closing the valves, one by one, would start later Tuesday.

17 Baby animals in oil spill face uncertain future

By JANET McCONNAUGHEY, Associated Press Writer

Mon Jul 12, 4:25 pm ET

FORT JACKSON, La. – The smallest victims are the biggest challenge for crews rescuing birds fouled with oil from the Gulf of Mexico spill.

There’s no way to know how many chicks have been killed by the oil, or starved because their parents were rescued or died struggling in a slick.

“There are plenty of oiled babies out there,” said Rebecca Dmytryk of the International Bird Rescue Research Center, one of the groups working to clean oiled animals.

18 Major banking bill faces final vote this week

By JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press Writer

5 mins ago

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama on Tuesday secured the 60 votes he needs in the Senate to pass a sweeping overhaul of financial regulations, all but ensuring that he soon will sign into law one of the top initiatives of his presidency.

With the votes in hand to overcome Republican delaying tactics, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Tuesday he hoped for final passage on Thursday. The House already has passed the bill.

“This reform is good for families, it is good for businesses, it’s good for the entire economy,” Obama said as he prodded the Senate to act quickly.

19 Defector do-over? Missing Iranian wants to go home

By ROBERT BURNS and ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press Writers

1 min ago

WASHINGTON – An Iranian scientist sought refuge in the Pakistani Embassy compound and asked to go home, an apparent defection gone wrong that could embarrass the U.S. and its efforts to gather intelligence on Tehran’s suspected nuclear weapons program.

Iran – and at one point, scientist Shahram Amiri – claimed the CIA had kidnapped him; the U.S. said Tuesday that nothing of the sort happened. Amiri disappeared while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia in June 2009, surfacing in videos but otherwise out of sight until the latest bizarre twist in the case.

“Mr. Amiri has been in the United States of his own free will and he is free to go,” Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. It was the first time the Obama administration publicly acknowledged Amiri was in the U.S.

20 Another cadmium jewelry recall – 137K Tween pieces

By JEFF DONN, Associated Press Writer

32 mins ago

About 137,000 pieces of imported children’s jewelry sold at two stores popular with preteen girls – Justice and Limited Too – were recalled Tuesday for high levels of cadmium, the latest in a series of recalls involving the toxic metal.

The voluntary recall, announced by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, was the sixth callback since The Associated Press first released findings of an investigation into cadmium in children’s jewelry.

The recalls, which started in January with children’s jewelry sold at Walmart stores, have included about 12 million “Shrek” movie-themed drinking glasses distributed by McDonald’s restaurants. The other recalls targeted at least 200,000 pieces of jewelry, mostly for children.

21 Trade gap widens as imports and exports both rise

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

Tue Jul 13, 1:27 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The trade deficit rose in May to an 18-month peak as rising imports offset another solid gain in U.S. exports. The surge in imports was a hopeful sign for the economic recovery because it suggested businesses are optimistic that U.S. consumers will spend more in coming months.

The trade gap grew 4.8 percent to $42.3 billion, the largest deficit since November 2008, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.

U.S. exports of goods and services rose 2.4 percent to $152.3 billion. It was the largest monthly total since September 2008, the month the financial crisis struck with force. Leading the strength in exports were heavy machinery, medical equipment, power generators and commercial planes.

22 French parliament approves ban on face veils

By ANGELA DOLAND, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 3 mins ago

PARIS – France’s lower house of parliament overwhelmingly approved a ban on wearing burqa-style Islamic veils Tuesday, part of a determined effort to define and protect French values that has disconcerted many in the country’s large Muslim community.

Proponents of the law say face-covering veils don’t square with the French ideal of women’s equality or its secular tradition. The bill is controversial abroad but popular in France, where its relatively few outspoken critics say conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy has resorted to xenophobia to attract far-right voters.

The ban on burqas and niqabs will go in September to the Senate, where it also is likely to pass. Its biggest hurdle will likely come after that, when France’s constitutional watchdog scrutinizes it. Some legal scholars say there is a chance it could be deemed unconstitutional.

23 NYC court tosses FCC’s fleeting expletives policy

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer

4 mins ago

NEW YORK – A federal appeals court on Tuesday tossed out a government policy that can lead to broadcasters being fined for allowing even a single curse word on live television, concluding that the rule was unconstitutionally vague and had a chilling effect on broadcasters.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan struck down the 2004 Federal Communications Commission policy, which said that profanity referring to sex or excrement is always indecent.

“By prohibiting all `patently offensive’ references to sex, sexual organs and excretion without giving adequate guidance as to what `patently offensive’ means, the FCC effectively chills speech, because broadcasters have no way of knowing what the FCC will find offensive,” the appeals court wrote.

24 AL reign: Can NL finally win All-Star game again?

By JANIE McCAULEY, AP Baseball Writer

Tue Jul 13, 7:24 am ET

ANAHEIM, Calif. – Ryan Howard is sick of all the talk about the American League’s dominance in the All-Star game.

The Phillies slugger knows all too well it’s been 13 years of AL bragging rights. And, no, that wacky 7-7 tie in 2002 did little to boost NL morale in baseball’s Midsummer Classic.

In this year of the pitcher, the National League is downright loaded, even for an All-Star game with the best of the best coming to Orange County on Tuesday night.

25 David Ortiz wins HR Derby with 11-homer final

By GREG BEACHAM, AP Sports Writer

Tue Jul 13, 6:34 am ET

ANAHEIM, Calif. – David Ortiz believes his power swing is all the way back. After a big finish in the Home Run Derby, Boston’s beloved slugger has a trophy to prove it.

Big Papi won his first derby title Monday night, hitting 11 homers in the final round to beat Florida’s Hanley Ramirez at Angel Stadium.

Showing plenty of potency in the fierce swing that once made him one of the majors’ most feared hitters, the Red Sox star put a relentless series of drives into the elevated stands above the right-field wall.

26 Lebanese general seeks court record in Hariri case

By ARTHUR MAX, Associated Press Writer

Tue Jul 13, 11:58 am ET

LEIDSCHENDAM, Netherlands – A former Lebanese army general asked an international court on Tuesday to release his secret case file in the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri to learn why he was jailed for nearly four years without charge.

The hearing by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon is the first since Maj. Gen. Jamil al-Sayyed, the former chief of general security, and three other pro-Syrian army officers were freed from a Lebanese jail for lack of evidence in April 2009.

Despite being limited to procedural issues, the hearing revived attention to a case that has been languishing. No other suspects are in custody and prosecutors won’t say how their investigation is progressing.

27 PROMISES, PROMISES: US fails to punish Sudan

By DESMOND BUTLER, Associated Press Writer

1 hr 30 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The words of the Obama administration were unequivocal: Sudan must do more to fight terror and improve human rights. If it did, it would be rewarded. If not, it would be punished.

Nine months later, problems with Sudan have grown worse. Yet the administration has not clamped down. If anything, it has made small conciliatory gestures.

Activists say the backtracking sends a message that the United States is not serious about confronting Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, charged with genocide by an international court on Monday.

28 Haiti: Summer storm floods ‘safe’ refugee camp

By JONATHAN M. KATZ and MARKO ALVAREZ, Associated Press Writers

47 mins ago

CORAIL-CESSELESSE, Haiti – A summer storm ripped through tents and sent solar-powered streetlights crashing down at the government’s primary relocation camp for people left homeless by the January earthquake.

The storm damage on Monday, six months to the day after the disaster, intensified questions about why people were moved to the remote location from tent camps in the Haitian capital.

The Associated Press reported this week that area has been slated for major development by Haitian officials and businessmen, who are in ongoing negotiations with South Korean garment firms to build factories there.

29 Candidate was entrusted with vital military duties

By CHRISTOPHER WILLS, Associated Press Writer

20 mins ago

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – When the U.S. led an air campaign over Kosovo more than a decade ago, the Pentagon summoned a squadron of radar-jamming Prowler jets to help keep the skies safe for American bombers.

Lives depended on the unit, and the unit depended on its intelligence officer – Lt. Cmdr. Mark Kirk, who is now the Republican candidate to be Illinois’ next senator.

Since launching his campaign, Kirk has come under sharp criticism for exaggerating his military accomplishments, repeatedly choosing to emphasize the few “Top Gun” moments in a 21-year Reserve career that has been spent almost entirely focused on office work.

30 Restraining order sought for Nev. horse roundup

By SANDRA CHEREB, Associated Press Writer

28 mins ago

CARSON CITY, Nev. – People trying to stop wild horse roundups in northeast Nevada have renewed their legal opposition with a new lawsuit and a temporary restraining order request after seven horses herded by a helicopter died of dehydration and another broke its leg and was put down.

The latest document filed late Monday in U.S. District Court in Reno said the plaintiff agreed to “stop the presses” on the lawsuit if the Department of Interior would postpone the gather on the Owyhee complex in northern Elko County until mid-August, after most foals in the herd are born.

According to the motion from Reno attorney Gordon Cowan, a Justice Department lawyer refused.

31 Judge permits US trial of 1st Guantanamo detainee

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer

2 hrs 9 mins ago

NEW YORK – The first Guantanamo Bay detainee to be prosecuted in a civilian court was cleared for trial Tuesday by a judge who said a two-year interrogation and five-year detention were not grounds for dismissal because they served compelling national security interests.

Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani was interrogated by the CIA for important intelligence information, U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan wrote in a decision that rejected defense requests to toss out the indictment on the grounds that Ghailani was denied a speedy trial.

“No one denies that the agency’s purpose was to protect the United States from attack,” Kaplan wrote, noting that the government was not proposing to use any evidence – with one possible exception – gained from Ghailani’s interrogation.

32 GOP group challenges policy on gays in military

By JULIE WATSON, Associated Press Writer

1 min ago

RIVERSIDE, Calif. – President Barack Obama’s remarks that the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy weakens national security shows it should be declared unconstitutional, a lawyer for the nation’s largest Republican gay rights group told a federal judge Tuesday.

Attorney Dan Woods challenged the policy on gays in the military during his opening statement at the non-jury trial of a lawsuit filed by the Log Cabin Republicans.

The case has put the federal government in the awkward position of defending the policy that President Obama has said should be repealed.

33 ‘Scuse me? Hendrix bandmate sues over ’03 release

By DAVID PORTER, Associated Press Writer

Tue Jul 13, 8:45 am ET

LODI, N.J. – Lonnie Youngblood was a hotshot sax player on the New York club circuit in the mid-1960s when he crossed paths with Jimmy James, a young musician who was turning heads with his dazzling virtuosity on the electric guitar.

After briefly playing in Youngblood’s band, James went back to using his real last name and conquered the music world as Jimi Hendrix, while Youngblood fronted a series of rhythm and blues bands that toured with James Brown, Jackie Wilson and other ’60s legends.

The friendship between the two endured, though, and in 1969, at the peak of Hendrix’s popularity, the two men recorded several songs in a New York studio that became a coda to their relationship when Hendrix died in London the following year of a drug overdose.

Is This Site About Politics?

(10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

I was asked that very question late last night. The answer is yes, very much so. We are a very “hard”, left leaning blog but willing to entertain many points of view. Just be prepared to defend whatever you write. We are democratic in that sense.

We like people like Glen Greenwald, Sirota, digby, Jane Hamsher, Atrios and even occasionally, Armando (BigTentDemocrat).

We support sites like Corrente, Feministing and Think Progress among others.

We encourage you to read the sites that are to the right of us like Open Left, Booman Tribune and Balloon Juice for perspective.

We support our friends’ blogs, too. Edger’s Antemedius, RiaD’s Firefly Dreaming and davidseth’s The Dream Antilles.

We will be up dating our blog roll to reflect not just the views of the site but to include others that though they may not fit our mission to move the Overton Window left but are well written and thought provoking.

We want to hear what you think in diaries and in comments. Don’t be shy because we know you’re not. Speak up, be heard. We want to hear you

Poll Questions

Here’s the headline.

ABC News Poll: Confidence in President Obama Drops, GOP Congress Gains Support.

Accompanied by this poll, that poll and more spin.

Here’s the questions I wished they’d ask:

Why no confidence?

Is President Obama a strong leader?

On a scale of one to ten, ten being the highest, how hard did the President fight for universal health care and a public option?

On a scale of one to ten, ten being the highest, how hard did the President fight for ANYTHING?

I have more questions no one wants to read the answers to.

Why? Because they already know the answers.

Live Aid: 25 Years Later

It started off as a song, “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”, released that previous Christmas to raise money for relief of the famine in Ethiopia.

Band Aid was a British and Irish charity supergroup, founded in 1984 by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia by releasing the record “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” for the Christmas market that year. The single surpassed the hopes of the producers to become the Christmas number one on that release.

The record was released on November 29, 1984, and went straight to No. 1 in the UK singles chart, outselling all the other records in the chart put together. It became the fastest- selling single of all time in the UK, selling a million copies in the first week alone. It stayed at No. 1 for five weeks, selling over three million copies and becoming easily the biggest-selling single of all time in the UK.

It exploded into a concert that went around the world and raised £150 million (approx. $283.6 million).


1985: Live Aid makes millions for Africa

The Live Aid concert for the starving in Africa has raised triple the £10m expected.

And as the London event draws to a close at Wembley Stadium, Britain had contributed £1,100,000 to the global total of £30m.

Described as the Woodstock of the eighties, the world’s biggest rock festival was organised by Boomtown Rats singer Bob Geldof to raise money for famine relief in Africa.

Wembley was packed with a crowd of 72,000, andTV pictures, co-ordinated at BBC Television Centre, have been beamed to over 1.5 bn people in 160 countries in the biggest broadcast ever known.

 

Twenty five years later, we are still fighting starvation, malnutrition and access to clean water around the world. According to the Unites Nations World Food Program there are 1.02 billion people in the world who are undernourished, that is 1 of every 6th person on this planet. Hunger is the number one health risk, greater than AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria combined.

The numbers are staggering:

642 million people in Asia & the Pacific are hungry;

65% of the world’s hungry live in only 7 countries, India, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan and Ethiopia.

More than 60 percent of chronically hungry people are women.

Child Hunger, malnutrition and related diseases cause 60% of the 10.9 million children under five who die in developing countries each year.

Many of these deaths could be prevented with access to Vitamin A, Iron, Zinc and Iodine. Simple vitamins and minerals that are available in an adequate diet. Vitamin A deficiency alone accounts for the deaths of approximately 1 to 3 million children a year.

With the abundance of food in the world why are 1.02 billion people hungry? According to WFP there are several contributing factors:

Nature

Natural disasters such as floods, tropical storms and long periods of drought are on the increase — with calamitous consequences for food security in poor, developing countries.

Drought is now the single most common cause of food shortages in the world. In 2006, recurrent drought caused crop failures and heavy livestock losses in parts of Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya.

In many countries, climate change is exacerbating already adverse natural conditions.For example, poor farmers in Ethiopia or Guatemala traditionally deal with rain failure by selling off livestock to cover their losses and pay for food. But successive years of drought, increasingly common in the Horn of Africa and Central America, are exhausting their resources.

War

Since 1992, the proportion of short and long-term food crises that can be attributed to human causes has more than doubled, rising from 15 percent to more than 35 percent. All too often, these emergencies are triggered by conflicts.

From Asia to Africa to Latin America, fighting displaces millions of people from their homes, leading to some of the world’s worst hunger emergencies. Since 2004, conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan has uprooted more than a million people, precipitating a major food crisis — in an area that had generally enjoyed good rains and crops.

In war, food sometimes becomes a weapon. Soldiers will starve opponents into submission by seizing or destroying food and livestock and systematically wrecking local markets. Fields and water wells are often mined or contaminated, forcing farmers to abandon their land.

When conflict threw Central Africa into confusion in the 1990s, the proportion of hungry people rose from 53 percent to 58 percent. By comparision, malnutrition is on the retreat in more peaceful parts of Africa such as Ghana and Malawi.

Poverty Trap

In developing countries, farmers often cannot afford seed to plant the crops that would provide for their families. Craftsmen lack the means to pay for the tools to ply their trade. Others have no land or water or education to lay the foundations for a secure future.

The poverty-stricken do not have enough money to buy or produce enough food for themselves and their families. In turn, they tend to be weaker and cannot produce enough to buy more food.

In short, the poor are hungry and their hunger traps them in poverty.

Agricultural infrastructure

In the long-term, improved agricultural output offers the quickest fix for poverty and hunger.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) 2004 Food Insecurity Report, all the countries that are on track to reach the first Millennium Development Goal have something in common — significantly better than average agricultural growth.

Yet too many developing countries lack key agricultural infrastructure, such as enough roads, warehouses and irrigation. The results are high transport costs, lack of storage facilities and unreliable water supplies.

All conspire to limit agricultural yields and access to food.

But, although the majority of developing countries depend on agriculture, their governments economic planning often emphasises urban development.

Over-exploitation of environment

Poor farming practices, deforestation, overcropping and overgrazing are exhausting the Earth’s fertility and spreading the roots of hunger.

Increasingly, the world’s fertile farmland is under threat from erosion, salination and desertification.

What can we do?

Fill th Cup

Donate now to help WFP defeat hunger

With your support, the World Food Programme is fighting hunger every day, whether we’re saving lives in an emergency or providing schoolchildren with vital nourishment.

It takes just one dollar to fill four cups with nutritious school meals.

Working together, we can build a world without hunger.

Take Action: Starved for Attention

Sign the petition to rewrite starvation and malnutrition.

 

Drip, drip, drip

How do you make Dems care about the midterms?

Posted at 4:20 PM ET, 07/12/2010

The White House and Dems have made this case every which way: They’ve charged that Republicans will again rule as stooges of Big Oil and Wall Street. They’ve claimed that Republicans will rain a blizzard of subpoenas on the White House if they take control of Congress. They’ve framed the elections as a choice between the policies that got us into this mess and those that are getting us out of it. And so forth.

Yet rank and file Dems don’t appear to care that much. The latest polling shows that the “enthusiasm gap” remains the same, with Republicans far more excited about voting than Dems are. In other words, Dem scaremongering about the GOP takeover doesn’t yet appear to be revving up Dems to turn out this fall.

What if the only way to boost Dem enthusiasm isn’t to reveal how successful those awful Republicans were in rendering the Dems quasi-powerless, but to succeed in spite of this problem and do more to mitigate the crisis and the pain it’s caused?

Le Tour: Stage 9

Le.  Tour.  De.  France.

The uptempo singing and dancing is supposed to distract you from the fact that there are only 3 names you need to care about for the next 12 days rest of the Tour-

Evans, Schleck, and Contador.

Oh the announcers will try to get you hooked on Levi Leipheimer, but he’s almost as old as Lance and farther away from his dreams of glory.

Or, you know, busses.

127 Miles from Morzine-Avoriaz to Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne including 2 category 1s, a category 2, and a category ‘K’ that I suspect does not stand for ‘Kute Kuddly Kitty Kat’.

Especially if you’re stiff as a board.

On This Day in History: July 13

1985: Live Aid concert

On July 13, 1985, at Wembley Stadium in London, Prince Charles and Princess Diana officially open Live Aid, a worldwide rock concert organized to raise money for the relief of famine-stricken Africans. Continued at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia and at other arenas around the world, the 16-hour “superconcert” was globally linked by satellite to more than a billion viewers in 110 nations. In a triumph of technology and good will, the event raised more than $125 million in famine relief for Africa.

Live Aid was the brainchild of Bob Geldof, the singer of an Irish rock group called the Boomtown Rats. In 1984, Geldof traveled to Ethiopia after hearing news reports of a horrific famine that had killed hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians and threatened to kill millions more. After returning to London, he called Britain’s and Ireland’s top pop artists together to record a single to benefit Ethiopian famine relief. “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” was written by Geldof and Ultravox singer Midge Ure and performed by “Band Aid,” an ensemble that featured Culture Club, Duran Duran, Phil Collins, U2, Wham!, and others. It was the best-selling single in Britain to that date and raised more than $10 million.

1099 – The Crusaders launch their final assault on Jerusalem.

1534 – Ottoman armies capture Tabriz in northwestern Persia.

1174 – William I of Scotland, a key rebel  in the Revolt of 1173-1174, is captured at Alnwick by forces loyal to Henry II of England.

1558 – Battle of Gravelines: In France, Spanish forces led by Count Lamoral of Egmont defeat the French forces of Marshal Paul des Thermes at Gravelines.

1585 – A group of 108 English colonists, led by Sir Richard Grenville, reaches Roanoke Island, North Carolina.

1573 – Eighty Years’ War: The Siege of Haarlem ends after seven months.

1643 – English Civil War: Battle of Roundway Down – In England, Henry Wilmot, 1st Earl of Rochester, commanding the Royalist forces, wins a crushing victory over the Parliamentarian Sir William Waller.

1754 – George Washington surrenders Fort Necessity to the French, leaving them in control of the Ohio Valley.

1787 – The Continental Congress enacts the Northwest Ordinance establishing governing rules for the Northwest Territory. It also establishes procedures for the admission of new states and limits the expansion of slavery.

1794 – Battle of the Vosges between French forces and those of Prussia and Austria

1830 – The General Assembly’s Institution, now the Scottish Church College, one of the pioneering institutions that ushered the Bengal Renaissance, is founded by Alexander Duff and Raja Ram Mohan Roy, in Calcutta, India.

1854 – In the Battle of Guaymas, Mexico, General Jose Maria Yanez stops the French invasion led by Count Gaston de Raousset Boulbon.

1863 – New York Draft Riots: In New York City, opponents of conscription begin three days of rioting which will be later regarded as the worst in United States history.

1866  – The Great Eastern begins a two week voyage to complete a 12-year effort to lay telegraph cable across the Atlantic between Britain and the United States.

1878 – Treaty of Berlin: The European powers redraw the map of the Balkans. Serbia, Montenegro and Romania become completely independent of the Ottoman empire.

1919 – The British airship R34 lands in Norfolk, England, completing the first airship return journey across the Atlantic in 182 hours of flight.

1923 – The Hollywood Sign is officially dedicated in the hills above Hollywood, Los Angeles. It originally reads “Hollywoodland ” but the four last letters are dropped after renovation in 1949.

1941 – World War II: Montenegrins start popular uprising against the Axis Powers (Trinaestojulski ustanak).

1973 – Alexander Butterfield reveals the existence of the Nixon tapes to the special Senate committee investigating the Watergate break in.

1985 – The Live Aid benefit concert takes place in London and Philadelphia, as well as other venues such as Sydney and Moscow.

1985 – United States Vice President George H.W. Bush became the Acting President for the day when President Ronald Reagan underwent surgery to remove polyps from his colon.

1990 – An earthquake with its epicentre in Afghanistan resulted in the greatest number of fatalities in a mountaineering accident in High Asian mountains. An avalanche killed 43 climbers in Camp I on Pik Lenina.

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