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This quote's for you....
"I am a deeply superficial person."
- Andy Warhol
It sounds like you are having way to much fun:)ha
OMG, I am so addicted top my iPOD Touch that it isn't even funny anymore.
I now have the LIVE POKER app installed on it, and I am at risk of seeing the battery drained before the day is out or I get home to charge it. I will need a mobile charger soon ... better yet an instant charger!!!
lol
Great story ... thanks for sharing!
A WASTED DAY
In the faint light of the attic, an old man, tall and stooped, bent his great frame and made his way to a stack of boxes that sat near one of the little half-windows. Brushing aside a wisp of cobwebs, he tilted the top box toward the light and began to carefully lift out one old photograph album after another. Eyes once bright but now dim searched longingly for the source that had drawn him here.
It began with the fond recollection of the love of his life, long gone, and somewhere in these albums was a photo of her he hoped to rediscover. Silent as a mouse, he patiently opened the long buried treasures and soon was lost in a sea of memories. Although his world had not stopped spinning when his wife left it, the past was more alive in his heart than his present aloneness.
Setting aside one of the dusty albums, he pulled from the box what appeared to be a journal from his grown son's childhood. He could not recall ever having seen it before, or that his son had ever kept a journal. Why did Elizabeth always save the children's old junk? he wondered, shaking his white head.
Opening the yellowed pages, he glanced over a short reading, and his lips curved in an unconscious smile. Even his eyes brightened as he read the words that spoke clear and sweet to his soul. It was the voice of the little boy who had grown up far too fast in this very house, and whose voice had grown fainter and fainter over the years. In the utter silence of the attic, the words of a guileless six-year-old worked their magic and carried the old man back to a time almost totally forgotten.
Entry after entry stirred a sentimental hunger in his heart like the longing a gardener feels in the winter for the fragrance of spring flowers. But it was accompanied by the painful memory that his son's simple recollections of those days were far different from his own. But how different?
Reminded that he had kept a daily journal of his business activities over the years, he closed his son's journal and turned to leave, having forgotten the cherished photo that originally triggered his search. Hunched over to keep from bumping his head on the rafters, the old man stepped to the wooden stairway and made his descent, then headed down a carpeted stairway that led to the den.
Opening a glass cabinet door, he reached in and pulled out an old business journal. Turning, he sat down at his desk and placed the two journals beside each other. His was leather-bound and engraved neatly with his name in gold, while his son's was tattered and the name "Jimmy" had been nearly scuffed from its surface. He ran a long skinny finger over the letters, as though he could restore what had been worn way with time and use.
As he opened his journal, the old man's eyes fell upon an inscription that stood out because it was so brief in comparison to other days. In his own neat handwriting were these words:
Wasted the whole day fishing with Jimmy. Didn't catch a thing.
With a deep sigh and a shaking hand, he took Jimmy's journal and found the boy's entry for the same day, June 4. Large scrawling letters, pressed deeply into the paper, read:
Went fishing with my dad. Best day of my life.
Harper taking political battle to airwaves
1 hour, 42 minutes ago
By Martin O'Hanlon, The Canadian Press
OTTAWA - Stephen Harper is taking to the airwaves in an effort to turn the public tide against the opposition coalition and justify his bid to hold on to power.
The prime minister was to address the country Wednesday night as he faces an imminent opposition threat to bring down his minority Conservative government next week.
The Liberal-NDP coalition, backed by the Bloc Quebecois, asked for equal TV time to respond.
Gov. Gen. Michaelle Jean was to return from Europe on Wednesday afternoon and Harper was expected to ask her to suspend Parliament until late January to put off the crucial confidence vote.
Without such a delay, the opposition is prepared to defeat the government on Monday and then ask Jean to hand power to the coalition.
But a suspension of Parliament would limit the power of Harper's government to routine housekeeping matters and preclude any major spending at a time of economic crisis.
The Tories say the opposition move is an assault on democracy and national unity and they vow to take all legal steps to block it. They turned up the rhetoric Wednesday, going so far as to talk of treason.
Ontario Conservative Bob Dechert accused the Liberals of trying to destroy the country by aligning with the separatist Bloc. He said it's "tantamount to treason."
"They're getting into bed with the separatists," he said. "They've actually written a deal giving the separatists a veto over every decision of the Canadian government. That is as close to treason and sedition as I can imagine."
The Tory outrage comes despite that fact that Harper signed a letter with the Bloc in 2004 advising the Governor General to consider letting the opposition govern should the Liberal government of Paul Martin fall.
And despite the Tory anger, the coalition arrangement is legal and legitimate under the parliamentary system.
"This is part of our democratic system," Jean said Tuesday in Prague.
The opposition parties together won just over 54 per of the popular vote in the Oct. 14 federal election.
Liberal MP John McKay said the inflamed language from the Tories makes it clear that this Parliament will not work under any circumstances.
He said the government must fall - either next week or next month.
"We have to. Have to," he said. "The die is cast, there is no turning back on this decision."
The Tories have fired up their formidable campaign machine for an all-out blitz against the opposition. The barrage includes radio ads, rallies, and urging supporters to swamp MPs, talk shows and media with calls and e-mails.
The coalition was preparing a counterattack. The Canadian Labour Congress, which is organizing rallies in support of the coalition, says it has radio spots ready to go.
Rallies were being organized across the country by supporters on both sides of the bitter parliamentary meltdown.
Jean, who must decide whether to allow Parliament to prorogue or let the opposition take over, has been working closely with her advisers and constitutional experts, said an official.
There is precedent for the vice-regal refusing to dissolve Parliament in the face of a confidence crisis - the King-Byng affair of 1926. But the question of refusing prorogation is uncharted territory.
The coalition would be first change of government without an election since 1926.
Under the opposition pact, Dion would serve as prime minister until spring when he is to be replaced as Liberal leader. The deal calls for the coalition to survive at least 18 months.
Harper precipitated the crisis last Thursday with the provocative economic update that contained no stimulus package, killed public financing for federal political parties, and banned public sector unions from striking for two years.
Desperate back-peddling by the government over the weekend in the face of the coalition talks did nothing.
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
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"It took me fifteen years to discover that I had no talent for writing,
but I couldn't give it up because by that time I was too famous."
--Robert Benchley
December 1, 2008, 4:48 pm
Obama’s ‘Dream Team’
By Michael Falcone
Barack Obama in May, 2008. (Photo:Doug Mills/The New York Times)
Besides their impressive resumes and political star-power, a few of President-elect Barack Obama’s top cabinet choices have something else in common — hoop dreams.
Though these days Eric H. Holder Jr., Susan E. Rice and Gen. James L. Jones, may be more comfortable handling policy memos than shooting free throws, at one point they were very much at home on the court.
And as the basketball-loving president-elect assembles his so-called team of rivals, it appears he may have – coincidentally — put together a pretty competitive group of players.
As a teenager, Mr. Holder, the president-elect’s nominee for Attorney General, was co-captain of the basketball team, the Peglegs, at Stuyvesant High School in New York. And he stayed on top of his game as an undergraduate and a law student at Columbia University. In an interview with The New York Times that was published Monday, he trash-talked his new boss a bit, saying of Mr. Obama and basketball skills, “I don’t know if he’s ready for my New York game.”
Ms. Rice, who long-ago traded the thrill of hitting a three-pointer for scoring big on the world stage, was a star player at National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C., where she also excelled in her studies. Her athleticism reportedly earned her the nickname, Spo, short for Sportin’. She’ll be the Obama administration’s ambassador to the United Nations.
And along with the announcement of Mr. Holder’s and Ms. Rice’s cabinet positions on Monday, Mr. Obama also called General Jones up from the bench to be his national security adviser. At 6-foot-4, Mr. Jones was a forward for the Georgetown Hoyas during his college years.
Though they may scrupulously avoid mixing metaphors in their new jobs — a Bush-era reference to a “slam dunk” comes to mind — their talents on the court, might earn them the distinction as the White House’s first “team of dribblers.”
Nearly superstitious, Mr. Obama became well known for playing hoops on the day of almost every primary contest. While that season may be past him, the White House carries its own series of quarterly tests, long before the next election cycle.
And, as everyone learned during the six-week lead-up to the Pennsylvania primary in May, Mr. Obama doesn’t excel at another sport — bowling. So the incoming Obama team may find, as the president-elect suggested long ago in Indiana, that the bowling alley in the White House might well become a victim of renovations to make way for a hoop court.
Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company Privacy Policy NYTimes.com 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY
"I hate victims who respect their executioners."
--Jean-Paul Sartre
GG cuts short European trip in face of political crisis
1 hour, 54 minutes ago
By The Canadian Press
OTTAWA - Gov. Gen. Michaelle Jean is cutting short a European trip and returning to Canada on Wednesday in the face of a political crisis that could bring down the government next week.
Jean's secretary, Sheila-Marie Cook, confirms the Governor General decided to return to Ottawa after the three opposition parties announced an agreement to form a coalition government should the Conservative minority fall to a confidence vote next Monday.
Jean has been on a state visit to central Europe since Nov. 24. A spokeswoman said she is returning of her own accord and not at the request of the prime minister.
She has been working closely with her own advisers and constitutional experts, said the official.
Flanked by his NDP and Bloc Quebecois counterparts, Liberal Leader Stephane Dion announced Monday that he had informed Jean of a formal, governing entente between the opposition, and called on her to let him govern.
"I have respectfully recommended to Her Excellency that she should, at her first opportunity, exercise her constitutional authority and invite the leader of the Official Opposition to form a new government with the support of the two other opposition parties," said Dion.
The minority government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper is expected to fall next week when the House of Commons votes on last Thursday's economic update - unless Harper manages a last-minute tactical manoeuvre.
The opposition say the mini-budget presented by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty was driven by Conservative ideology and contained no stimulus package for the ailing economy.
The document would have slashed government spending, banned public-service strikes and cut off nearly $30 million in funding to federal political parties.
Flaherty has promised to present a full budget Jan. 27, but the opposition leaders say that's too late.
The Conservatives hinted Monday that something might be in the works, such as asking Jean to prorogue, or end, the present Commons session and call a new session for the end of January.
That would delay the non-confidence vote and give Harper two months breathing space.
"We will use all legal means to resist this undemocratic seizure of power," Harper told Tories gathered behind closed doors for their annual Christmas party at an Ottawa hotel.
"My friends, such an illegitimate government would be a catastrophe, for our democracy, our unity and our economy, especially at a time of global instability."
The coalition would be first change of government without an election since 1926.
Under the opposition pact, Dion - a leader his own party was ready to jettison after losing the federal election Oct. 14 - would serve as prime minister until spring when he is to be replaced as Liberal leader.
The coalition pact includes a multibillion-dollar stimulus package for the troubled economy, including support for the auto and forestry sectors.
Any doubt of the seriousness of the unlikely opposition alliance was dispelled by the ashen features of Conservative MPs in the House of Commons.
"I think he's about to play the biggest political game in Canadian history," an embattled Harper told the daily Commons question period.
The 77 Liberal MPs and 37 New Democrats - backed by 49 members of the Bloc Quebecois - reached a deal Monday to form a coalition for at least 18 months.
"Canadians elected 308 members of Parliament in October, not just Stephen Harper," Dion said after signing the deal with NDP Leader Jack Layton and Bloc chief Gilles Duceppe.
"We are ready to form a new government that will address the best interests of the people instead of plunging Canadians into another election."
In an open letter to Canadians, the three leaders wrote:
"Since the recent federal election, it has become clear that the government headed by Mr. Harper has no plan, no competence and no will to effectively address this (economic) crisis.
"Therefore, the majority of Parliament has lost confidence in Mr. Harper's government, and is resolved to form a new government that will effectively, prudently, promptly and competently address these critical economic times."
It appears Harper's government has few options to keep this "three-headed Frankenstein monster" - in the words of one Tory MP - from coming to life.
Harper told the Commons that Canadians will question "overturning the results of an election a few weeks later in order to form a coalition nobody voted for and everybody denied."
It was total about-face for Harper who advised the Governor General in 2004 to let him govern - supported by the separatist Bloc - should the minority government of Liberal Paul Martin fall.
Harper precipitated the crisis last Thursday with the provocative economic update. Desperate back-peddling over the weekend in the face of the coalition talks did nothing.
"Conservatives have given in on a few points but nothing can restore the confidence that Stephen Harper has violated," Duceppe said Monday.
Others agreed that Harper has so poisoned the confidence of Parliament that any death-bed conversions he might offer now are worthless.
The key to breaking the logjam after weekend talks was an internal agreement Monday by Liberal MPs to hold their noses and keep Dion as interim leader - and thus prime-minister-in-waiting - until he can be replaced at a scheduled leadership convention in May.
The agreement between the Liberals and the NDP is to last until June 2011. The Bloc has agreed to support the arrangement until June 2010, at which point their support could be extended.
The Governor General's role becomes pivotal in the coming days.
There is a precedent - the King-Byng affair of 1926 - for the vice-regal refusing to dissolve Parliament in the face of a confidence crisis.
Constitutional experts suggest the current Governor General similarly may be reluctant to permit prorogation when it is such an obvious dodge of a clear lack of Commons confidence in the government. But Jean is working in uncharted waters, with no precedents to rely on.
The opposition parties represent just over 54 per of the popular vote in the Oct. 14 federal election.
A 24-member coalition cabinet would have six New Democrats and 18 Liberals, according to the deal.
Duceppe said the Bloc would not join the coalition government nor have any ministers in cabinet. It would be free to vote as it wished on non-monetary measures.
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
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Communications mogul Ted Rogers dies
By Jamie Sturgeon and John GreenwoodDecember 2, 2008 7:51 AM
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Photograph by : Peter Redman/Financial Post
TORONTO - Rogers Communications Inc. said Tuesday that Ted Rogers, the founder and chief executive of the largest wireless carrier in the country has died. He was 75.
"It is with great sadness that the board of directors of Rogers announces the death of our colleague, leader and friend," the company said in a news release.
Rogers, who had a history of heart ailments, "saw his health weaken over the past few years," the company said, adding the CEO "suffered from congestive heart failure." He was surrounded by family and friends when he died at his home in Toronto.
Rogers founded the company in 1960 when he acquired a radio station as well as CFTO, the first private television station in Toronto. Rogers Communications has grown to become one of the largest and one of the most diversified telecommunications companies in North America.
Rogers was awarded the Order of Canada in 1990.
The company said Mr. Rogers' successor as chief executive would be addressed by the board of directors, which intends to form a special committee to lead a search considering internal and external candidates. In the meantime, chairman Alan Horn will continue to serve as acting chief executive and lead the company.
Over the last 30 years, telecom mogul Ted Rogers spent a good deal of his time fending off critics who accused him of mortgaging his company's future on an untried and untested vision of the future.
Earlier this year, Rogers scored perhaps the biggest victory of his career after Rogers Communications Inc. posted one of its most successful quarters ever, largely on the back of technology that he anticipated long before anyone else.
But instead of taking the opportunity to remind naysayers of the fact, the plain-spoken billionaire merely observed on a conference call with analysts that Rogers, once a byword for over-leverage, was now a defensive play for investors looking for shelter from the economic storm.
Rogers on Tuesday died at home after a long battle with heart disease. He was 75.
Regarded as one of Canada's shrewdest business minds, he built Rogers Communications into a media conglomerate boasting assets in broadcast, cable television, wireless and print. The former upstart is now, among other things, Canada's largest cable and wireless provider, largely because of his foresight and confidence.
"I remember an industry event where he spoke at 20 years ago," says a former Rogers executive. "He was telling people they're going to have these little cellular devices and people will watch videos on them. People though he was loopy, that he'd been reading too many Dick Tracy books.
"But this was the kind of stuff he saw. He realized what was coming long before anyone else."
Back in the early 1980s, Rogers saw an opportunity in the emergence of mobile phones and moved quickly to launch Rogers Cantel.
Over the years, he built his slice of the cellular market, buying up smaller companies and doing deals with much bigger competitors, often outmanoeuvring them.
"Once I saw and believed in (the possibilities of wireless 3/8), I was committed because I knew it was crazy being tethered to the wall with a wire on your telephone," he wrote in his 2008 autobiography Relentless.
Meanwhile, Rogers' debt load grew, much to the alarm of shareholders and even Rogers himself, who has conceded that he sometimes bet the farm when he shouldn't have.
But his instinct paid off, sometimes because of luck, but more often because he saw where the industry was headed. He understood that while cable and media could generate steady revenue, wireless was where the growth was.
Born in 1933, the son of a radio station owner, he launched his first company shortly after graduating from law school at the University of Toronto. By the mid 1960s, he was building Toronto radio station CHFI into one of Canada's biggest and most successful FM broadcasters.
By the 1970s, Rogers was putting down the foundations of what was to become his cable empire, building a reputation for providing more choice for viewers, sometimes forcibly. It took the cable business a while to recover from the "negative" billing fiasco of the 1990s.
In the following decades he moved into cellular, broadcast and publishing. With each new industry he acted quickly to achieve a broad footprint and strong competitive position.
In 2000 he made his move into professional sports, buying the Toronto Blue Jays, then the SkyDome, which he renamed the Rogers Centre.
Critics accuse him of micromanaging his company. Indeed, senior management ranks at the company have had considerable turnover. But he made no apologies for ensuring things happened the way he wanted them to.
In his autobiography, he talks about his drive to succeed: "All my life, almost from birth I have been battling poor health ... I've learned never to give up. I am a hands-on, detail-oriented manager fighting the odds, whether in business or health, always believing and hoping that the best is yet to come."
Recalls the former executive: "Some people say he micromanages, but really he's just impatient, always wanting to get things done the way he wants them. He believes that if he doesn't decide the future, someone else will."
© Copyright (c) CanWest News Service
http://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/www.ottawacitizen.com/roger-ted-1202.jpg
roger-ted-1202.jpg
Photograph by : Peter Redman/Financial Post
Canada's opposition agrees to coalition outline
2 hours, 2 minutes ago
By Randall Palmer and David Ljunggren
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's three opposition parties have reached a tentative deal to defeat the minority Conservative government and then put together a coalition, a senior politician said on Monday.
The deal was struck late on Sunday at the end of three days of talks between the opposition Liberals and New Democrats, who insist the government must go because it has failed to tackle the effects of the global financial crisis.
"A very constructive, positive agreement has been reached between the Liberal Party of Canada and the New Democratic Party that will bring stimulus to the economy, which is badly needed," said former New Democrat leader Ed Broadbent, who took part in the talks.
"There are going to be a lot of jobs, a protection of pensions and I think we can look forward to a very constructive period," he told reporters, saying the deal included aid for the suffering auto and forestry sectors.
Media reports said the deal would let the government rule for 2-1/2 years. Broadbent did not address that point.
Parliament is due to hold a confidence vote on Dec 8 and if the government loses, the opposition parties are likely to get their chance to run the country.
Whether the proposed coalition could last anywhere near 2-1/2 years is in some doubt, since the Liberals and New Democrats would have to rely on the separatist Bloc Quebecois for support.
The chaos has knocked down the value of the Canadian dollar and there is potential for more uncertainty. The New Democrats, who favor a stronger government role in the economy, campaigned on a promise to roll back C$50 billion in corporate tax cuts -- a stance the Liberals oppose.
The Conservatives, who won a strengthened minority in the October 14 election, say the Liberals and New Democrats are trying to subvert democracy.
"What this is all about is the opposition wanting to take power without an election. They don't want to earn the right to govern, they just want to take it," federal Transport Minister John Baird told CTV television on Monday.
The Liberals and New Democrats have a total of 114 seats in the 308-seat Parliament. The Conservatives have 143.
The opposition is also furious that Ottawa said last week it would scrap public financing for political parties.
Such a move would cripple the opposition parties, which rely much more on public financing than the Conservatives. The government withdrew the proposal on Saturday but the opposition say they can no longer trust Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Media reports said the new government would have 24 ministers, of whom 18 would be Liberals and six New Democrats. The Liberals have governed Canada longer than any other party while the New Democrats have never been in power federally.
One potential sticking point is who would lead a coalition government. The Liberals have more parliamentary seats, so leader Stephane Dion would in theory be the leading candidate.
Dion, though, led the Liberals to such a bad defeat in the October 14 election that he will step down after the party chooses a new chief next May. A move to make him prime minister so soon after such a crushing loss is bound to be controversial.
Most Liberal legislators support ex-Harvard academic Michael Ignatieff, the front-runner in the leadership race, raising the prospect that they might try to force Dion to step down early. Under party rules Dion is not obliged to quit until the May leadership convention.
Bob Rae, the other main leadership contender, said he had held talks with Dion and Ignatieff on Sunday on the need to maintain party unity and discipline.
"The notion that somehow any internal issues in the party would be allowed to interfere with a successful transition to a new government, that notion is false," he told CTV.
(Reporting by Randall Palmer and David Ljunggren; editing by Peter Galloway)
Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
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Bloc-NDP-Grit government a coalition for Canada: Layton
Sun Nov 30, 10:54 PM
By Bruce Cheadle, The Canadian Press
OTTAWA - A budding coalition between New Democrats, the separatist Bloc Quebecois and Liberals is an exercise in nation building, NDP Leader Jack Layton told his caucus in a conference call covertly recorded by the government.
Layton's national unity musings were secretly recorded Saturday by the Conservatives. They held the tape for a day and then had an official from the Prime Minister's Office deliver it to various media on Sunday.
"The 'Coalition for Canada,' I love the idea - (but it) could be a deal-breaker for the Bloc," Layton is heard saying to laughter.
"'The Coalition for Canada and Quebec?"' he adds, to more laughter.
Layton, however, appears deadly serious when he pitches the coalition as a potentially unifying force in federal politics.
"Nothing could be better for our country than to have the 50 (BQ) members out of 75 who've been elected in Quebec actually helping to make Canada a better place. We just approach it on that basis and say, 'We're willing to make that happen. Here are the things we're going to be investing in and transforming together.'
"If they're willing to work with us, we're willing to accept that offer."
The NDP said Sunday it may pursue criminal charges after the Conservatives covertly listened in, taped and distributed audio of Saturday's closed-door strategy session.
There no wiretap crime under the Criminal Code of Canada if someone is invited to participate in a conference call and then releases the recording publicly.
A spokesman for Prime Minister Stephen Harper said an unnamed Conservative had been "invited" to participate on the call.
"Maybe the invitation was meant for the Bloc, and they accidentally invited us," said Dimitri Soudas.
"We were invited. When you get invited somewhere you have the opportunity to choose to participate or not participate."
Two disparate segments of the recording totalling about 15 minutes were delivered Sunday. The senior PMO official distributing the recordings suggested more will be revealed later this week.
The Conservative take is that Layton's comments show he began conspiring with the Bloc for months to bring down Canada's elected government - long before last week's economic update that precipitated the current crisis of confidence in the Harper minority government.
The recording is more ambiguous.
In a discussion over concerns that the Bloquistes will be "offside" on issues, Layton said that's already been taken into account and strategies have been developed to avoid policy conflict.
"I actually believe they're the least of our problems," he said.
"This whole thing wouldn't have happened if the moves hadn't of been made with the Bloc to lock them in early because you couldn't put three people together in three hours.
"The first part was done a long time ago. I won't go into details."
Layton suggests reluctant Liberals may be a bigger problem, and he exhorts his MPs to organize public rallies this Thursday and not wait for other coalition partners to do the work.
"Chances are there are a bunch of Liberals in the other ridings on whom we want pressure placed," he's heard saying.
As far back as 2004, it's known that Layton, Duceppe and Stephen Harper - then the leader of the Opposition - held a "close consultation" on what would happen if they could defeat the Liberal minority of Paul Martin.
The three leaders co-signed a letter to then governor general Adrienne Clarkson asking her to "consider all your options" if the Liberal government fell.
And during last year's raucous parliamentary session, the Bloc and NDP regularly voted non-confidence in the Conservatives while the Liberals abstained or supported the minority government.
NDP MP Thomas Mulcair said the Tories are panicking and desperate to change the channel on their economic management.
The recording, he said, is a breach of parliamentary rules. NDP lawyers are examining if the tapes break the Criminal Code.
As for the substance of the call, Mulcair said the talks with the Bloc were perfectly normal consultations between parties in a minority government. They began only after the government's economic update was delivered last Thursday, he said.
Layton is heard downplaying the policy questions that could plague a coalition of such disparate party interests, saying everyone will have to curb their wish list.
"What we really want is just to get Harper out and get this new group in because it's going to be a hell of a lot better for everything we believe in. Correct? Correct!"
And he warned his caucus not to be defensive because the coalition represents the majority of Canadian voters.
"You can see where Harper's going here," said Layton.
"He's going to say its the socialists and the separatists and the opportunists getting together. Those are their talking points and so we just need to push back."
Layton ridiculed the Conservatives over the issue Sunday night at an Ontario NDP event in Toronto.
"It's entirely possible the Conservative party is recording what I'm saying here right now," Layton told the partisan audience. "Here's what I have to say to the Conservative party tuned in: 'good riddance to you!' "
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
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Liberals propose non-confidence motion, governing coalition
57 minutes ago
By The Canadian Press
OTTAWA - The Liberal Opposition plans to introduce a motion in the House of Commons on Monday declaring non-confidence in the minority Conservative government and proposing a governing coalition.
The motion comes as emissaries from the Liberals, New Democrats and Bloc Quebecois hold talks about forming a new government should Prime Minister Stephen Harper's minority fall.
But Harper could still avert the immediate defeat of his weeks-old government through procedural tactics.
The Liberal motion, which has the approval of the NDP and Bloc Quebecois, reads:
"In light of the government's failure to recognize the seriousness of Canada's economic situation and its failure in particular to present any credible plan to stimulate the Canadian economy and to help workers and businesses in hard-pressed sectors such as manufacturing, the automotive industry and forestry, this House has lost confidence in this government and is of the opinion that a viable alternative government can be formed within the present House of Commons."
A source says the opposition parties have agreed that Liberal Leader Stephane Dion would lead the government for the next few months.
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
Restaurateur tracks down bill dodgers on Facebook
By Reuters staff
An Australian restaurateur left holding a hefty unpaid bill when five young diners bolted used the popular social network website Facebook to track them down -- and they got their just desserts.
Peter Leary from seafood restaurant Seagrass on Melbourne's Southbank was fuming when the diners ate their way through the menu, pairing oysters, trout and red emperor with some expensive wines, slipped out for a cigarette -- and never returned.
But Leary, left with an unpaid bill of A$520 ($340), remembered one of the diners asking about a former waitress, whom he then contacted and she suggested they check through some contacts on Facebook.
"We searched a few names and there in front of us his face came up," Leary told Reuters, referring to one of the diners.
"He was pictured with his girlfriend who was the only girl in the group. We also knew where he worked, at a nearby restaurant, which was handy. It'd been clear they were in the trade."
Leary contacted the manager of the other restaurant, where both the man and his girlfriend worked, and explained the situation.
Within hours the diner returned to apologize and paid the bill -- and left a generous tip for the staff.
Leary said the fellow restaurateur called him later to inform him that both the man and his girlfriend had been sacked.
"On this occasion I guess you could say that being on Facebook backfired for them," said Leary, who has no intention of taking the matter any further or contacting the police.
Facebook, which began in 2004 as a socialising site for students at Harvard University, has seen its growth zoom to 90 million members from 24 million a little over a year ago, overtaking rival MySpace to become the world's largest online social network.
Chretien, Broadbent brokering possible coalition
52 minutes ago
By The Canadian Press
OTTAWA - Former Liberal prime minister Jean Chretien and one-time NDP leader Ed Broadbent met on Parliament Hill on Friday to discuss the possibility of a coalition government.
A senior NDP official told The Canadian Press the talks began Thursday soon after Finance Minister Jim Flaherty delivered an economic update that threatened to bankrupt the opposition parties.
The official said NDP Leader Jack Layton asked Broadbent to call Chretien with the idea that the two elder statesmen could finesse a deal to defeat the minority Conservative government and form a coalition with support from the Bloc Quebecois.
The NDP and the Liberals together don't command a majority of the Commons seats.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says the two former leaders spoke at least four times.
The opposition parties all say Flaherty's mini-budget, which puts strict limits on federal spending, bans public-sector strikes through 2011, and denies federal parties $30 million in annual funding, is ideologically driven and offers no stimulus package to deal with the economic crisis.
It also contains a potentially lethal poison pill - a vow to scrap public subsidies for political parties that would financially cripple every party except the Tories.
Flaherty insisted the party financing changes are part of the fiscal framework and will be considered a matter of confidence in the Commons. He said an accompanying bill will be put to a vote Monday.
The government's hard line set off another round of political chicken just five weeks after the Oct. 14 election returned Prime Minister Stephen Harper to power with a strengthened minority
The Liberals are taking the prospect of a coalition so seriously that some MPs are privately discussing ways to dump Stephane Dion as leader without waiting for their party's scheduled May 2 leadership vote.
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
Copyright 2008 © Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Why Time Stands Still for Watchmakers
By ANDREW ADAM NEWMAN
THE Ulysse Nardin wristwatch in an ad in the most recent Sunday edition of The New York Times is unlike 22 of the 24 watches featured in that issue’s ads, but chances are that didn’t register with most readers. For horologists, however, whose scrutiny of watches tends toward the Talmudic, it’s a lapel grabber: all the other watches — from brands like Rolex, TAG Heuer and Gucci — are set at 10:10, but Ulysse Nardin’s watch is set at 8:19. (The only other exception is an Oris wristwatch, one of four featured in an ad by the retailer Tourneau, which is set at 8:03.)
In a recent check of the 100 top-selling men’s dress watches on Amazon.com, which included models from 20 brands, all but three watches were set to 10:10. To be watch-shopping online and first notice that every model arrayed on the screen is set to an identical time can feel like crossing over into the Twilight Zone.
But the explanation turns out to be a simple matter of aesthetics.
Because brand names generally are centered on the upper half of a watch, hands positioned at 10 and 2 “frame the brand and logo,” said Andrew Block, executive vice president at Tourneau, the watch retailer, which has 51 stores worldwide. “It’s almost like an unwritten rule that everyone understands to photograph a watch a 10:10.”
•
In previous eras, the more popular time in ads was 8:20, which shared the attributes of being symmetrical and not overshadowing logos, but hands pointing down struck some as, well, a downer.
“It has the aesthetic of the smiley face to be 10 past 10, so we try whenever possible to opt for that,” Susanne Hurni, head of Ulysse Nardin’s advertising and marketing, said from the company headquarters in Le Locle, Switzerland. She says the company occasionally makes exceptions, as it does for models now advertised in publications including The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, when watches have secondary dials and windows — for the day of the week, calendar day and year — that would be obscured by the hands at 10 and 2.
Klaus Peter Mager, a spokesman for Swatch, said his 25-year-old company, based in Biel, Switzerland, has always photographed watches primarily at 10:10, because “they’re smiling instead of a sad man’s face.” About 30 percent of the more than 400 models Swatch introduces yearly are photographed set at different times so that the hands don’t obscure functions, he said.
But Timex never deviates, even if that means the hands block features, said Adam Gurian, president of Timex, which is based in Middlebury, Conn. The company has an official time, 10:09:36, at which every watch — even digital models — is photographed for marketing purposes. Having the second hand at 36 tends to accommodate secondary language — like “Indiglo,” its dial-lighting technology — which appears centered at the bottom of watches.
To preserve batteries, the company ships many watches turned off at 10:09:36, which lends synchronicity to Timex displays in store windows.
At Rolex, watches are always photographed at 10:10:31, and for models that list the day of the week and calendar day, it is always Monday the 28th. A survey of hundreds of vintage wristwatch print ads posted online — in galleries at Adclassix.com, at the watch enthusiast site TimeZone.com, and on eBay — indicates that 10:10 was not always the norm. Watches in the 1920s and 1930s were almost exclusively set at 8:20.
The Hamilton Watch Company was among the first to clock in at 10:10; that time is favored in ads dating at least as far back as 1926. Rolex began consistently setting watches in ads at 10:10 in the early 1940s. Timex appears to have begun the transition in 1953, when its Ben Hogan model showed 8:20 while the Marlin model was set to 10:10.
Linda Kaplan Thaler, chief executive of the Kaplan Thaler Group, a New York advertising agency, learned about the 10:10 rule when her firm worked on a campaign for Rolex several years ago, and was drawn to the notion that it was like a smile.
“In advertising we would never expect someone to look at a watch and say, ‘The watch is smiling,’ but it’s just a feeling you get,” said Ms. Kaplan Thaler, co-author, with Robin Koval, of “The Power of Nice,” which features a big smile on its cover. The watch theme, she added, is typical of “subconscious cues that are used in print ads.”
•
Watchmakers are, naturally, fretting over how to sell watches to a generation that is in the habit of consulting their phones for the time, so it is perhaps fitting that the most-hyped phone has its own time-related intrigue. Many bloggers have wondered why the time on the iPhone in commercials, with few exceptions, reads 9:42 a.m., even when the capability being highlighted on the phone — like watching the “Pirates of Penzance” and being compelled to order calamari from a seafood restaurant — might seem atypical behavior over the day’s first cup of coffee.
The most popular theory is that it was 9:42 a.m. Pacific Time when Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone at a MacWorld conference in 2007, a fact confirmed by live blogs from the conference, but two press officers from Apple did not return calls seeking an explanation.
Watch companies, meanwhile, have the unenviable task of creating ads that will be dissected by aficionados, who are by nature obsessed with precision. Ms. Hurni of Ulysse Nardin learned this painfully more than a decade ago, when preparing a watch with day, month and year features for a shoot. Ms. Hurni always sets the calendar date as much as a year ahead, ensuring that the ad will not look dated, but after she set the watch in an ad several months ahead to Sunday, March 19, 1996, some customers sent calendars to the company’s Swiss headquarters to underscore that March 19 would actually fall on a Tuesday.
That makes sense to Michael Sandler, the general manager of TimeZone.com, who several years ago noticed that an out-of-focus model in the background of a Patek Phillipe ad was wearing her watch upside down, a slip-up he doubts was recognized by nonhorologists.
“Watch geeks are interesting people,” Mr. Sandler said. “They’ll pick up on weird stuff like that from an ad.”
"The secret of sucess is to get up early, work late and strike oil."
--J. D. Rockefeller
Smoking is very dangerous
Jilted lover accidentally blows up building
Wed Nov 12, 2:00 PM
BERLIN (Reuters) - A German charged with murder for causing a gas explosion that destroyed half an apartment building and killed his neighbor, told a court Wednesday he was only trying to kill himself because he was lovesick.
The 22-year old on trial in Moenchengladbach, western Germany, said he had opened the natural gas taps in his apartment intending to commit suicide after his girlfriend broke up with him by phone.
When the 17-year old later arrived to pick her belongings up from his flat, she unwittingly lit a cigarette which ignited the gas and blew up half of the building, injuring 15 people and killing a 45-year old neighbor.
The 22-year-old man and his ex-girlfriend survived the blast. Ralf Wolters, a court spokesman, said the man said he did not realize there was a risk of explosion.
Wolters said the 22-year-old was charged with murder, attempted murder and grievous bodily harm.
(Reporting by Josie Cox; Editing by Matthew Jones)
When one door closes, another one opens up.
This cartoon is just too damned funny!
"Happiness does not depend on outward things, but on the way we see them."
--Count Leo Tolstoy
Barack Obama says one of his top priorities once he becomes president is closing down Guantanamo Bay. To make sure it closes, he’s going to turn it into a bank.
Hit the beach and forget the sunscreen,
Skin Cancer Vaccine Could Be Available Soon
Professor Ian Frazer, the brilliant Australian scientist who created a vaccine for cervical cancer, wasn't prepared to stop there: he's just announced that he's on the verge of curing skin cancer, too.
Professor Frazer has developed a new vaccine that, in animal testing, has been proven to be effective in preventing skin cancer. Human trials are set to start next year, and the scientist predicts that the vaccine could be released within five to ten years, and would likely be given to children between the ages of 10 and 12 to block them from getting skin cancer in their later years.
Skin cancer is a serious problem in Professor Frazer's native Australia: more than 380,000 are diagnosed with the disease, which kills 1,600 people each year. He believes that developing his new vaccine is "an important challenge with a very major health benefit if it works," he told Australia's Sunday Telegraph.
Like Prof. Frazer's cervical cancer vaccine, the new skin cancer vaccine targets a cancer-causing skin infection called papillomavirus. "We know it causes at least five per cent of all cancers globally so one in 20 of the cancers that people get is caused by papillomavirus," he said. "It's a huge issue."
Assuming the vaccine works on humans, that doesn't give you free reign to sit out in the sun for hours at a time—the vaccine only targets certain types of skin cancer, and does nothing to prevent nasty sunburns. But if all goes well, people in sun-loving countries like Australia will have a little less to worry about when they go sunbathing.
Don't worry we have our own serious problems too!
In divorce cases they now subpoena EZ pass account records to track the wayward spouse.
Want to trade countries?
Murder Suspect Has Witness: A MetroCard
By BENJAMIN WEISER
When Jason Jones was arrested in a fatal shooting in the Bronx in May, he told the police that he had been nowhere near the scene. He said he had left work, ridden the bus with some co-workers and cashed his paycheck, and later had taken a subway to see his girlfriend.
Federal prosecutors charged Mr. Jones and his older brother, Corey, in the shooting, saying they had killed the victim because he had been a government witness in drug and gun cases. Both men could face the death penalty if the government decides to seek it.
But in recent weeks, the case has taken an extraordinary turn — because of Jason Jones’s MetroCard.
Months after the arrests, a retired detective working for Mr. Jones’s lawyers drove to a city jail located on a barge moored in the East River in the South Bronx, where Mr. Jones had been held after his arrest, and retrieved his wallet. The MetroCard was still inside.
Mr. Jones’s lawyers then asked New York City Transit to use the card to trace his movements the night of the shooting. The results supported his account, showing that the card had been used on a bus, and later on a subway roughly five miles from the shooting, just as he had described.
With that, and a photograph snapped of Mr. Jones, 26, as he cashed his paycheck, his lawyers argued that it was impossible for him to have committed the crime. Both brothers have been released on bond for now, an unusual step in a federal murder case, while prosecutors say they are continuing to investigate.
Mr. Jones’s turn of fortune might not have been possible before the modern era, where the plastic MetroCards, along with E-ZPass and surveillance cameras, have become ubiquitous.
Critics have said that the devices, for all their convenience, have ushered in an era of Big Brother, but they have nonetheless become useful in legal proceedings, whether to prove or undermine an alibi, find a missing person or even track a cheating spouse.
The MetroCard, used when boarding New York City buses and entering subway stations, has a magnetic strip that records the amount of money or time left on the card. Centralized computers also store data on where and when the cards are used, retrieving the information from buses and subway turnstiles.
The transit agency said that it receives requests from time to time to trace card information from the police, prosecutors and defense lawyers, but that it does not follow up on how those cases turn out.
In at least one instance, a MetroCard helped lead to a conviction. In 2002, on Staten Island, a man was found guilty of murdering his ex-girlfriend after the police used his MetroCard to prove that he was not on a bus when the killing occurred, as he claimed, but had in fact boarded it shortly afterward.
“Electronic evidence has become almost as important as DNA evidence,” said James B. Dowd, the retired detective who recovered the MetroCard from jailhouse storage.
The Jones brothers were arrested after a witness identified them as being involved in the murder of a man shortly after midnight on May 24, at Ogden Avenue and West 165th Street in the High Bridge section of the Bronx.
The witness, who has not been identified, said Corey Jones was arguing with the man and accused him of being a “snitch.” A short time later, the witness said, Corey handed Jason a gun, and Jason fired shots, killing the man. A call to 911 was made at 12:21 a.m., records show.
The Jones brothers already had a spotted past. Corey had convictions in two drug cases, Jason in a drug case and for stealing a car.
But both brothers have denied any involvement in the shooting, and Jason Jones said in an interview that when he was taken for questioning, he made it clear to the police that he could not have been involved.
“I told them they had the wrong person,” he said. “I was not there.”
During the interrogation, he said, it occurred to him that he had used his MetroCard on the bus and the subway, and he asked the police to check it. A detective took the card briefly, and then gave it back to him, and there was no further discussion about the card, he said.
The MetroCard came up again when Mr. Jones’s own lawyers debriefed him.
“Jason, from the outset, had a very good memory of where he had been,” George R. Goltzer, one of his lawyers, recalled.
The lawyers asked Mr. Dowd, the private investigator, to check out Jason Jones’s story.
Mr. Dowd drove to a manufacturing plant in Yonkers, where Mr. Jones had a temporary job as a forklift operator. A printout of his hours showed that on May 23, the night of the killing, he had punched out at 11:01 p.m.
Mr. Jones had said that he and several co-workers then boarded a No. 20 Bee-Line bus near Central Park Avenue and Tuckahoe Road and rode into the Bronx, where they stopped at a check-cashing outlet, Pay-O-Matic, near Montefiore Medical Center.
When Mr. Dowd visited Pay-O-Matic, he learned not only that it had a copy of Mr. Jones’s check, but that it took photographs of customers.
“Everything was time stamped,” Mr. Dowd recalled. A photograph shows Mr. Jones cashing his check at 11:39 p.m.
Mr. Dowd said Pay-O-Matic also had a photo of one of Mr. Jones’s co-workers cashing a check, in which Mr. Jones was visible in the background. That further corroborated his story that he had had been with his co-workers that night.
But Mr. Dowd still needed one more piece of evidence — the MetroCard.
Mr. Jones said that after cashing the check, he and his co-workers had walked to a friend’s apartment for a drink, and that he had then entered the 205th Street station on the D Line, less than a mile from the check-cashing outlet and about five miles from the shooting scene. He rode the train to 182nd Street to visit his girlfriend, he said, stayed with her until about 2 a.m., and then took a subway home.
After the investigator retrieved the MetroCard from the jail, Frederick H. Cohn, Mr. Jones’s other lawyer, called New York City Transit and asked to have the card’s history traced. “I said, ‘Well, how long is this going to take?’ ” Mr. Cohn recalled.
He said the employee said it would take three months. “She said, ‘We’re very busy. We’ve got all these requests.’ ”
Mr. Cohn said he pleaded: “We’ve got a guy who’s sitting in jail, and this is critical evidence.”
The request came back within days. Using the serial number of Mr. Jones’s seven-day unlimited MetroCard, the transit agency was able to report that Mr. Jones’s card had been used three times that night — on the No. 20 bus (the Bee-Line, the Westchester County bus system, accepts MetroCards) at 11:12 p.m.; at the 205th Street station at 12:30 a.m.; and at the 182nd-183rd Street station at 2 a.m. — all as he had said.
Mr. Jones’s lawyers say it would have physically impossible for him to commit the crime and be where his MetroCard was used. They say the card was in his possession the whole time.
Once presented with the new information, prosecutors agreed that Mr. Jones could be released on bond.
But they objected strenuously when lawyers for his brother made a similar request. The prosecutors said that their witness might have been wrong about Jason, but had correctly identified Corey.
The judge, Victor Marrero of Federal District Court in Manhattan, earlier had refused to grant bail to Corey Jones, even after several witnesses said he had been with them at the time of the shooting. But, in a hearing last month, Judge Marrero suggested the new information could not be ignored.
“It seems somewhat implausible,” he said, that the government’s witness saw the event and was “right about one and mistaken about the other.”
The judge granted Corey Jones bail. Prosecutors have not dropped the charges, and said in court last month that their investigation was continuing. They declined to comment about the case outside court.
In his ruling, Judge Marrero paraphrased a saying about change by the Greek philosopher Heraclitus. The judge wrote: “The river now flowing by is not the same river that passed by yesterday.”
Texas grand jury indicts Cheney, Gonzales of crime
Tue Nov 18, 10:57 PM
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A grand jury in South Texas indicted U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney and former attorney General Alberto Gonzales on Tuesday for "organized criminal activity" related to alleged abuse of inmates in private prisons.
The indictment has not been seen by a judge, who could dismiss it.
The grand jury in Willacy County, in the Rio Grande Valley near the U.S.-Mexico border, said Cheney is "profiteering from depriving human beings of their liberty," according to a copy of the indictment obtained by Reuters.
The indictment cites a "money trail" of Cheney's ownership in prison-related enterprises including the Vanguard Group, which owns an interest in private prisons in south Texas.
Former attorney general Gonzales used his position to "stop the investigations as to the wrong doings" into assaults in county prisons, the indictment said.
Cheney's office declined comment. "We have not received any indictments. I can't comment on something we have not received," said Cheney's spokeswoman Megan Mitchell.
The indictment, overseen by county District Attorney Juan Guerra, cites the case of Gregorio De La Rosa, who died on April 26, 2001, inside a private prison in Willacy County.
The grand jury wrote it made its decision "with great sadness," but said they had no other choice but to indict Cheney and Gonzales "because we love our country."
Texas is the home state of U.S. President George W. Bush.
Bush and his Republican administration, which first took office in January 2001, leave the White House on January 20 after the November presidential elections won by Democrat Barack Obama. Gonzales was attorney general from 2005 to 2007.
(Reporting by Chris Baltimore and JoAnne Allen, Editing by Frances Kerry)
Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
Copyright 2008 © Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
It is also a tracking device. The Secret Service may frown on that ability.
http://www.accutracking.com/
Saudi super-tanker taken to Somali pirate lair
1 hour, 33 minutes ago
MOGADISHU (AFP) - A hijacked Saudi super-tanker, carrying 100 million dollars of oil, anchored Tuesday off a notorious Somali pirate port as sea gangs struck again and seized a Hong Kong cargo ship.
The biggest act of piracy yet by the marauding Somali bandits has stunned the international community. The Saudi Arabian foreign minister called piracy a growing "disease" and experts said few ships are now safe in the Indian Ocean.
Bile Mohamoud Qabowsade, an advisor to the president of Somalia's breakaway state of Puntland, said the Sirius Star was now at the pirate lair of Harardhere, some 300 kilometres (180 miles) north of Mogadishu.
"We have been receiving some information and we now know that the ship is anchored near Harardhere," Qabowsade told AFP.
The super-tanker with its crew of 25 -- 19 from the Philippines, two from Britain, two from Poland, one Croatian and one Saudi -- and loaded to capacity with two million barrels of oil was seized on Saturday, according to the US Navy.
"All 25 crew members on board are believed to be safe," said Vela International, a subsidiary of Saudi oil giant Saudi Aramco and operators of the ship.
"At this time, Vela is awaiting further contact from the pirates in control of the vessel," the company said in a statement.
But international security fears were heightened when a Hong Kong cargo ship was hijacked in the Gulf of Aden near the Yemen coast.
The China Maritime Search and Rescue Centre said the freighter, The Delight, with 25 crew, was carrying 36,000 tonnes of wheat to Bandar Abbas in Iran when attacked, China's Xinhua state news agency reported.
The Chinese government had earlier condemned the hijacking of a Chinese fishing boat off the Somalia coast and said it is working to rescue the 24 crew -- 15 Chinese, four Vietnamese, three Filipinos, one Japanese and one from Taiwan.
The Sirius Star, the size of three soccer fields and three times the weight of a US aircraft carrier, is the largest ship ever seized by pirates and the hijacking was the farthest out to sea that Somali bandits struck.
Its cargo has been estimated to be worth 100 million dollars at current crude prices.
Maritime security experts said the pirates had approached the tanker from the stern in speedboats and thrown grapnel hooks tied to rope ladders, most likely boarding unopposed as the ship cruised on auto-pilot with nobody keeping watch on the bridge.
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal slammed the attack. "Obviously this is a very dangerous thing ... Piracy, like terrorism, is a disease," the prince said in Athens.
Admiral Michael Mullen, head of the US military as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he was "stunned" by the reach of the Somali pirates.
"They're very well armed. Tactically, they are very good," he said.
The majority of attacks have taken place in the Gulf of Aden over the past year, around the tip of Somalia which juts into the Indian Ocean and commands access to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.
The group which seized the Sirius Star operates further south -- out of Hobyo and Harardhere -- and has been more aggressive. It made another spectacular catch in September with a Ukrainian cargo laden with combat tanks for southern Sudan, which is still held.
Experts expect the attack on the Sirius Star to spur shipping companies to strengthen security or change routes to sail around the Cape of Good Hope.
The pirates have taken security experts by surprise with their latest strike.
"It puts a huge ring around Somalia where it isn't safe for international shipping," said Roger Middleton, consultant researcher for London-based think-tank Chatham House.
Bahrain-based US Navy Fifth fleet spokesman Nathan Christensen underscored the difficulty of patrolling the vast areas of the Indian Ocean. "We patrol an area of 2.5 million square miles, from Pakistan to Kenya ... We can't be everywhere at once," Christensen said.
NATO is considering extending its anti-piracy operation off Somalia beyond next month, alliance spokesman James Appathurai told reporters in Brussels.
Four ships from Britain, Greece, Italy and Turkey form a NATO patrol in the waters, with two protecting UN food aid convoys to the strife-torn Horn of Africa country.
NATO's operation ends in mid-December when a bigger European Union mission is set to take over but NATO is considering "complementary" action to the EU mission, Appathurai said.
The International Maritime Bureau has reported that 90 vessels have been attacked since January. Of those, 38 were hijacked while pirates still hold 16 vessels with more than 250 crew as hostages.
Somalia, a largely lawless state, has not had an effective government since the 1991 ouster of President Mohamed Siad Barre.
Copyright © 2008 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AFP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Agence France Presse.
Copyright 2008 © Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Lance Armstrong says he fears for his safety at Tour de France
Tue Nov 18, 9:35 AM
By The Associated Press
LONDON - Lance Armstrong fears he could be attacked by spectators if he returns to the Tour de France next year.
The seven-time Tour champion, who is making a comeback after three years in retirement, said in an interview in The Guardian on Tuesday that he is concerned about his safety.
"I don't want to enter an unsafe situation but you see this stuff coming out of France," said the American rider, who has many critics in France. "There're some aggressive, angry emotions. If you believe what you read, my personal safety could be in jeopardy.
"Cycling is a sport of the open road and spectators are lining the road. I try to believe that people, even if they don't like me, will let the race unfold."
Armstrong, 37, was asked if he specifically fears a physical attack.
"Yeah. There're directors of French teams that have encouraged people to take to the streets ... elbow to elbow. It's very emotional and tense," he said.
It's unclear why Armstrong is worried about his safety now, given that attacks on riders are extremely rare. Organizers have in recent years taken additional steps to protect riders from spectators, including increased use of crowd barriers.
The Tour has its own police force to guard the route and ensure safety, and French police paid particular attention to Armstrong's safety when he was riding.
Armstrong announced his comeback in September and joined the Astana team. He is reunited with Astana team leader Johanna Bruyneel, who teamed with Armstrong for all seven Tour de France wins from 1999 to 2005.
Armstrong plans to meet with Tour officials before deciding whether to compete in the 2009 Tour.
Previously, he had expressed doubts over trying for win another Tour title because of the problems he might encounter with French organizers, journalists and fans.
Armstrong is scheduled to race the Giro d'Italia for the first time. The 100th anniversary edition of the Giro is scheduled for May 9-31. The Tour de France starts July 4.
Armstrong said in the Guardian interview that he is in better shape at this stage of the season than in past years.
"I'm much better physically now," he said at his home in Austin, Texas. "And mentally there is no comparison. I'm far stronger and more motivated. The motivation of 2008 feels like the motivation of 1999. I was back from cancer then. I had the motivation of vengeance because nobody wanted me or believed in me."
Armstrong reiterated his denials of the doping allegations that have dogged him during his career.
"I understand people in France and in cycling might have that perception, but the reality is that there's nothing there," he said. "The level of scrutiny I've had throughout my career from the press and the anti-doping authorities is unmatched. I'm not afraid of anything. I've got nothing to hide. I won seven Tours through hard work.
"This next year won't be any different - even if people hate to hear that. I'm going to be focusing on every aspect of the bike, the team, the strategy, the training, the hard work, the sacrifice. There are no secrets. To the critics, I would say, believe it or not, there are exceptional athletes out there. Michael Phelps ... Paula Radcliffe."
Armstrong also restated his rejection of the French anti-doping agency's proposal that he agree to retest his 1999 urine samples to see whether the French newspaper L'Equipe was right when it reported they contained the banned substance EPO.
"I'm all for drug controls, but if the athlete cannot defend himself, what kind of kangaroo court is that?" he said.
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press
"Freedom of the press, freedom of association, the inviolability of
domicile, and all the rest of the rights of man are respected so long as
no one tries to use them against the privileged class. On the day they
are launched against the privileged they are overthrown."
--Prince Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921) Russian prince, author, called "The
Anarchist Prince"
Obama may have to bury his beloved BlackBerry
Sun Nov 16, 8:20 PM
By Seth Borenstein, The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Before he ran for president, Barack Obama quit smoking.
Now that he's won the job, he may have to break another addiction: checking his BlackBerry for email.
The president's email can be subpoenaed by Congress and courts and may be subject to public records laws, so if a president doesn't want his e-mail public, he shouldn't email, experts said. And there may be security issues about carrying around trackable cellphones.
Obama transition officials haven't made a decision on what the new president will or will not carry but those who have been there say it's unlikely he'll carry his BlackBerry and he may be in for some withdrawal pains.
"Definitely he's going to feel an electronic detoxing," said Reed Dickens, former assistant press secretary to President George W. Bush.
Dickens jokes he is so addicted to his BlackBerry he checks his device before opening his right eye.
Obama has often been seen avidly checking his email on his hand-held equipment. This past summer, news cameras recorded him checking his BlackBerry while watching his daughter's soccer game, only to have Michelle Obama slap at his hands, prompting him to return the device to its holster.
Actress Scarlett Johansson said she has had frequent email exchanges with him during his campaign travels, something the Obama campaign downplayed.
"This is a decision president-elect Obama will have to face," said former Bush press secretary Scott McClellan, who added Obama's legal advisers will probably recommend against an emailing president.
"While he has pledged an open and transparent government, I doubt the president-elect is interested in subjecting his own personal communications to that standard," McClellan wrote in an email interview.
He added: "He will have to think very hard about whether he wants to make his own words that subject to open records by having his own email and his own BlackBerry."
There is presidential precedent for an email blackout. Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton didn't email while in office.
"It's all discoverable; it creates a trail that might end up in congressional investigators' hands," said Clinton press secretary Mike McCurry.
If you want to delete White House email, you get a stern warning about archiving presidential records, he said.
A few days before Bush took office in 2001, he sent an email to a few dozen close friends saying he would no longer use email: "Since I do not want my private conversations looked at by those out to embarrass, the only course of action is not to correspond in cyberspace. This saddens me."
Bush was unhappy about losing his email and mostly used the phone to talk with friends, McClellan wrote, adding: "I am sure the president looks forward to being able to communicate with them via email again come Jan. 20, 2009."
The Bush White House has been battling courts about lapses in email archives at the White House.
Before 2001, Bush was an active emailer but that was before the now ubiquitous BlackBerry with email and text-message functions was released in 2002. Users who constantly check their devices often call themselves crackberry addicts. A Canadian government agency asked its workers to live by a "BlackBerry blackout" on nights and weekends "in order to achieve work/life quality here."
"I think Obama is the first president who is addicted to the BlackBerry like the rest of us and there's a lot of presidential records and archive rules on what gets stored and what doesn't," said former Clinton press secretary Joe Lockhart.
Quitting BlackBerry use is not something some political types - such as McClellan - or tech-geeks like thinking about.
Benjamin Nugent, author of the book "American Nerd," said the president-elect is such a techie and has nerd qualities. So cutting off the BlackBerry could be painful.
"It'll be interesting if we could see the torment on his face. For me it would be hell."
But it actually could be good for the president-elect, said psychology professor Lawrence Welkowitz of Keene State University in New Hampshire.
"It might be a completely freeing thing for him, so that he can free himself to think and act," said Welkowitz, who doesn't carry a BlackBerry.
But even if Obama isn't packing a BlackBerry or cellphone, he'll have plenty of aides within arm's reach who do, experts said. Often a president uses the equipment of personal assistants.
And there is the chance Obama may buck the past and keep his BlackBerry tethered to his belt.
"He's the president," McCurry said.
"If he wants to carry the BlackBerry, he's entitled."
"Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal."
- Albert Camus
I think they should break up and both get a life!hahha
MAFIABOY
Started reading this book, a recent release, about a 15-year old hacker that was hunted down by the CIA, RCMP and FBI.
After about 30 pages I just couldn't take it anymore, as I found him arrogant and irritating. I must be old school or something.
http://www.nationalpost.com/todays_paper/story.html?id=854375
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'Mafiaboy' Sentenced to 8 Months
Wired News Report Email 09.13.01
"Mafiaboy," the Canadian teenager who launched a denial-of-service attack that paralyzed many of the Internet's major sites for one week in February 2000, will be spending the next eight months in a youth detention center.
Judge Gilled Ouellet, who presided over the trial in Quebec's Youth Court, handed down the ruling on Wednesday.
Ouellet said that the 17-yeat-old had committed a criminal act when he attacked Yahoo, eBay and Amazon and other major Internet sites.
"This is a grave matter. This attack weakened the entire electronic communication system," Ouellet told the court. "And the motivation was undeniable, this adolescent had a criminal intent."
Prosecutor Louis Miville-Deschenes said that he hoped the sentence would send "a strong message to the hacker world."
Mafiaboy will also serve one year of probation after his release from the detention center. During his probation he will be allowed to attend school and have a part-time job.
He was also ordered by Ouellet to donate $250 to charity.
Mafiaboy's real name has not been released by the court, due to the Canadian law that protects the identity of offenders under 18 years of age.
Defense lawyer Yan Romanowski said that his client was shocked and saddened by his sentence and is considering an appeal.
"He hoped the judge had understood that he had had his lesson and that detention was not a proper remedy in these circumstances," Romanowski said.
"Detention is too much as far as I am concerned," Romanowski added.
The maximum sentence Mafiaboy could have received was two years in detention. Prosecutor Louis Miville-Deschenes had asked the court to sentence Mafiaboy to one year of detention.
"We think it is a reasonable ruling. It sends a strong message to hackers that they will get caught if they do things like that," Miville-Deschenes told reporters after court was dismissed.
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