Britain’s Ministry of Defense Unveiled £ 14 Million Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle-UK Ministry of Defense unleashed Taranis its first ever high-tech unmanned combat air system vehicle, which will be flown in 2011. This represents the first funded UCAV program of UK Ministry of Defense.
Jul 16, 2010
Britain Unveils Prototype of New Unmanned Aircraft Taranis (photo) - Pravda.Ru
Britain’s Ministry of Defense Unveiled £ 14 Million Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle-UK Ministry of Defense unleashed Taranis its first ever high-tech unmanned combat air system vehicle, which will be flown in 2011. This represents the first funded UCAV program of UK Ministry of Defense.
Gaza aid ship unloads at Egyptian port
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: A Libyan-backed ship carrying aid for Gaza unloads at the Egyptian port of Al Arish
- The ship's captain is awaiting final approval to unload aid
- The ship attempted to break an Israeli naval blockade of Gaza, but was diverted
- Israeli soldiers killed nine activists aboard another aid ship in May
The vessel reached Egypt after sailing from Greece on Saturday with 2,000 tons of aid. It was the latest ship attempting to breach an Israeli naval blockade of the Palestinian territory of Gaza whose captain was persuaded to dock elsewhere instead.
The aid includes food, medicine, and construction materials to be taken from the port to the Gaza border about 25 miles (42 km) away.
Senate passes financial-reform bill
ASSOCIATED PRESS CLOSE: Sen. Christopher J. Dodd looks on as Sen. Harry Reid proclaims victory for the financial-reform bill on Capitol Hill on Thursday after winning over three Republicans.
NBC, CBS reject ad against ground zero mosque
STANDING THEIR GROUND: Protesters object to proposed construction of a mosque near ground zero. Three separate plans to build mosques in the city are being met with anger. (Associated Press)
Parents seek lessons with conservative slant
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS Tim Fairfield wears period clothing as he talks to children about the merits of free enterprise on the first night of a Vacation Liberty School in Georgetown, Ky., on Monday. "If we're going to take our country back, we've got to remember where we came from - not only as adults, but we need to teach our children," said Mr. Fairfield, one of the teachers.
Bikinis in Moscow: Europe wilts in heat wave
People have rest in Kolomenskoye park in Moscow, Thursday, July 15, 2010. A heat wave hit central
U.S. shifts control of last prison to Iraq
Associated Press Iraqi Minister of Justice Dara Noureddin speaks after the ceremony transferring the last U.S.-controlled prison to Iraqi authorities on Thursday in Baghdad. The shift marked a milestone in Iraq's push for complete sovereignty.
US gives up last Iraqi prison
Detainees seen at the US detention facility at Camp Cropper in Baghdad, Iraq in this file photo. Picture: AP
Grand affair at birthday banquet
(From Left) HRH Pengiran Anak Isteri Pengiran Anak Sarah, HRH Crown Prince Hj Al-Muhtadee Billah, His Majesty the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam, Her Majesty Raja Isteri Pengiran Anak Hjh Saleha, HRH Prince Mohamed Bolkiah, HRH Pengiran Anak Isteri Pengiran Anak Hjh Zariah, HRH Prince Hj Jefri Bolkiah, HRH Pengiran Anak Isteri Pengiran Norhayati. Picture: BT/Yusri Adanan
Satellite spots brightest super nova in the heavens
Friday, July 16, 2010
THE brightest explosion of a star ever seen temporarily blinded a satellite set up to watch such events, astronomers said on on Wednesday.
The gamma-ray burst and explosion of X-rays that followed came from a star that died five billion years ago, far beyond our own Milky Way galaxy, Nasa and British scientists said. It took this long for the radiation to reach the Swift orbiting observatory.
The bright X-ray burst blinded Swift on June 21, and the observatory's software ignored it as if it were an anomaly, the astronomers said.
"The intensity of these X-rays was unexpected and unprecedented," Neil Gehrels, Swift's principal investigator at Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland.
Gehrels said the burst, named GRB 100621A, is the brightest X-ray source that Swift has detected since it started looking for them in 2005.
"Just when we were beginning to think that we had seen everything that gamma-ray bursts could throw at us, this burst came along to challenge our assumptions about how powerful their X-ray emissions can be," Gehrels said.
"The burst was so bright when it first erupted that our data-analysis software shut down," said Phil Evans of Britain's University of Leicester, who discovered the burst when he was going through some recorded data from Swift.
"So many photons were bombarding the detector each second that it just couldn't count them quickly enough. It was like trying to use a rain gauge and a bucket to measure the flow rate of a tsunami." When a star explodes, radiation travels at the speed of light in all directions. Gamma rays reach Earth first, followed by X-rays. This particular one was 140 times brighter than the brightest continuous X-ray source in the sky — a nearby neutron star. Reuters
Brunei News
Malay Indian conman rips off 40 firms
Improve civil service: Brunei Sultan
Kulczyk Oil Ventures Spuds Second Brunei Exploration Well
Cook Islands, General News
Telecom OIA awaits ombudsman’s view
Snoppy looking for a home
Hundreds heading to Mangaia
Airvo already proving its worth
Atiu kai fundraiser to help with hostel
Super Fund reports a ‘fantastic’ year
Canada Day celebrations all go
Allpress gives keynote address
Mobility vehicle heading to Raro from Thames
Taking steps to safeguard culture
Locals undergo trauma training
Telecom OIA awaits ombudsman’s view
Snoppy looking for a home
Hundreds heading to Mangaia
Airvo already proving its worth
Atiu kai fundraiser to help with hostel
Super Fund reports a ‘fantastic’ year
Canada Day celebrations all go
Allpress gives keynote address
Mobility vehicle heading to Raro from Thames
Taking steps to safeguard culture
Locals undergo trauma training
Regional body starts work in Cooks
Ivaiti lists misconduct claims
CI Tours sending group to Mangaia
Youth back in prison
Childhood development vital
Tangi faces July 15 run-off
CIT upbeat despite smaller budget
Tourism job applicants put through exhaustive process
Technology researchers strengthen relationship
Cooks fisheries officers complete course
Panthers repel first challenge
Aroa and funds pour in for Aratoa
Calling Canadians
Obesity affects reproductive health
Early childhood educators gather
Run-off delay
Phone credit for all Aitutaki customers
‘Blackout’ possible today in Raro
Three more quit CI Tourism
Conference explores sexual issues
PND studied
Fire destroys tennis gear
Region’s media has new voice
Warm welcome for Sydney flight
Teen found unconscious
Southern Cross to chase eclipse
New party to announce reps this week
George and Glassie staying with CIP
Rotary names first woman president
Te Vaerua garage sale a success
Dame’s gift of memories given to the Cook Islands
Tourism’s sole NZ rep latest to quit
Short responds to Sholan’s implications
Beattie defends ‘impersonal’ complaint
Tourism awards 2011 set to go
Rotary confusion apology
SeaWeb signs on
Power loans expected to grow
Panthers ready to take on Warriors
Snoppy looking for a home
Hundreds heading to Mangaia
Airvo already proving its worth
Atiu kai fundraiser to help with hostel
Super Fund reports a ‘fantastic’ year
Canada Day celebrations all go
Allpress gives keynote address
Mobility vehicle heading to Raro from Thames
Taking steps to safeguard culture
Locals undergo trauma training
Telecom OIA awaits ombudsman’s view
Snoppy looking for a home
Hundreds heading to Mangaia
Airvo already proving its worth
Atiu kai fundraiser to help with hostel
Super Fund reports a ‘fantastic’ year
Canada Day celebrations all go
Allpress gives keynote address
Mobility vehicle heading to Raro from Thames
Taking steps to safeguard culture
Locals undergo trauma training
Regional body starts work in Cooks
Ivaiti lists misconduct claims
CI Tours sending group to Mangaia
Youth back in prison
Childhood development vital
Tangi faces July 15 run-off
CIT upbeat despite smaller budget
Tourism job applicants put through exhaustive process
Technology researchers strengthen relationship
Cooks fisheries officers complete course
Panthers repel first challenge
Aroa and funds pour in for Aratoa
Calling Canadians
Obesity affects reproductive health
Early childhood educators gather
Run-off delay
Phone credit for all Aitutaki customers
‘Blackout’ possible today in Raro
Three more quit CI Tourism
Conference explores sexual issues
PND studied
Fire destroys tennis gear
Region’s media has new voice
Warm welcome for Sydney flight
Teen found unconscious
Southern Cross to chase eclipse
New party to announce reps this week
George and Glassie staying with CIP
Rotary names first woman president
Te Vaerua garage sale a success
Dame’s gift of memories given to the Cook Islands
Tourism’s sole NZ rep latest to quit
Short responds to Sholan’s implications
Beattie defends ‘impersonal’ complaint
Tourism awards 2011 set to go
Rotary confusion apology
SeaWeb signs on
Power loans expected to grow
Panthers ready to take on Warriors
Cook Islands, Top Stories
Toa appeal confirmed
Debate over traditional medicine preservation
Vaka confirms Mangaia voyage
Beattie dispels flight rumours
New party from CIP fallout
Man jailed for rape
ON THE STREET
New Toa lawsuit against Triad
CIP plans injunction
John Henry picked for CIP Avatiu
Tests a success
Demos propose national seats
George fires at CIP executive
Helping keep Te Reo strong
Police investigate audit director
Call for further reform
Meyer to represent Cooks
CIP fighting defection rumours
$2.1m for illegal fishing
Debate over traditional medicine preservation
Vaka confirms Mangaia voyage
Beattie dispels flight rumours
New party from CIP fallout
Man jailed for rape
ON THE STREET
New Toa lawsuit against Triad
CIP plans injunction
John Henry picked for CIP Avatiu
Tests a success
Demos propose national seats
George fires at CIP executive
Helping keep Te Reo strong
Police investigate audit director
Call for further reform
Meyer to represent Cooks
CIP fighting defection rumours
$2.1m for illegal fishing
Sports, Cook Islands
Rugby action comes to town
Tennis players prepare for tourney
New U19 cricket league for women
Cricket umpires course a hit
Finals time at netball
U13 clash opens rugby weekend
Sports for NCEA credits
‘Historic’ netball finals clash
Rugby heavyweights meet today
Eels slip past Cowboys
Ace swimmers will be back for 2011 tri
Titikakeka Pearls reign supreme
Test and trial for under 19s
Samoa’s tennis stars ready for action
Tennis tourney off to top start
18 Optimists blessed for training
Tennis off to ace start
Basketball finals action
Women’s cricket the flavour of summer
Major boost for women’s cricket
Junior cricketers in training
Netball honours clubs and players
Slow start at Golden Oldies
Tennis players prepare for tourney
New U19 cricket league for women
Cricket umpires course a hit
Finals time at netball
U13 clash opens rugby weekend
Sports for NCEA credits
‘Historic’ netball finals clash
Rugby heavyweights meet today
Eels slip past Cowboys
Ace swimmers will be back for 2011 tri
Titikakeka Pearls reign supreme
Test and trial for under 19s
Samoa’s tennis stars ready for action
Tennis tourney off to top start
18 Optimists blessed for training
Tennis off to ace start
Basketball finals action
Women’s cricket the flavour of summer
Major boost for women’s cricket
Junior cricketers in training
Netball honours clubs and players
Slow start at Golden Oldies
Herman, Kenning triumph in Palm Grove tournament, Cook Islands
No suspension for Allsworth, Cook Islands
Wristbands for travellers, Cook Islands
First Sydney Cook Islands flight fully booked
The new direct flight from Sydney has taken off with a bang, according to Cook Islands Tourism (CIT) chief executive Carmel Beattie.
The first direct flight from Sydney lands in Rarotonga on Sunday and is fully booked and flights all the way through July have “strong bookings, Beattie said.
She said that there has been a good reaction to the first round of media advertising in Australia, with bookings going up from 77 people in the week before advertising, to 208 in the week after.
“There was an initial rush of bookings and they have been growing steadily ever since,” she said. “What we have to do now is maintain our presence in the marketplace.”
The media campaigns were run jointly with seven tourism partners including Infinity, Qantas Vacations, and Stella. The ads promoted package deals which started at around AUD$1000 for six nights. Beattie said that they plan to continue promotional work with the four top performing tourism partners.
Cook Islands public health conference
Dr Wame Baravilala, the keynote speaker at the 10th annual Cook Islands public health conference, delivered a stark warning about diet.
“We need to stop overeating our way to an early grave,” he said at yesterday’s opening at the national auditorium.
Guam talent’s dream turns to ‘reality’ show, Guam
by Sweet One Gilliam
YOUNG Lee, a native of Guam and graduate of John F. Kennedy High School, sought out his childhood dream to be in Hollywood. His dream has finally come to reality –through a reality television show.
Lee landed a part in the new reality TV series titled “K-Town,” to be produced by rapper and actor Tyrese Gibson.
The show is set to be an Asian alternative to MTV’s Jersey Shore.
According to Wikipedia, Jersey Shore is a reality television series on MTV that follows eight housemates in real world-type style while they live, work and party at the New Jersey Shore
Lee was cast long after he boxed up his belongings from Tamuning in 2003 when he attended Pacific Union College on the West Coast.
During Lee’s Guam 2005 summer vacation, he won the Star Quest, a competition in which he performed a hip-hop dance routine.
Lee later submitted a video reel of himself as part of his audition for the K-Town pilot which he mentions was shot last weekend.
Should the pilot of “K-Town” rate in appeal to an audience who will, “love it,” (as Paris Hilton would say) and be picked up by a network that will air the show, then Lee is on the way to representing Guam in the Hills of Hollywood.
YOUNG Lee, a native of Guam and graduate of John F. Kennedy High School, sought out his childhood dream to be in Hollywood. His dream has finally come to reality –through a reality television show.
Lee landed a part in the new reality TV series titled “K-Town,” to be produced by rapper and actor Tyrese Gibson.
The show is set to be an Asian alternative to MTV’s Jersey Shore.
According to Wikipedia, Jersey Shore is a reality television series on MTV that follows eight housemates in real world-type style while they live, work and party at the New Jersey Shore
Lee was cast long after he boxed up his belongings from Tamuning in 2003 when he attended Pacific Union College on the West Coast.
During Lee’s Guam 2005 summer vacation, he won the Star Quest, a competition in which he performed a hip-hop dance routine.
Lee later submitted a video reel of himself as part of his audition for the K-Town pilot which he mentions was shot last weekend.
Should the pilot of “K-Town” rate in appeal to an audience who will, “love it,” (as Paris Hilton would say) and be picked up by a network that will air the show, then Lee is on the way to representing Guam in the Hills of Hollywood.
New building codes now in place, Guam
CONTRACTORS will have to comply with new building codes now that Bill 433 has been enacted as Public Law 30-159.
The legislation amends Public Law 30-25 which was signed to adopt the 2009 International Building Code and enforce it immediately.
The code includes fuel gas, international mechanical, international plumbing, international property, international maintenance, international fire, and international energy conservation. All must be met with satisfactory results by the agencies implementing the IBC, the Department of Public Works and the Guam Fire Department.
Opposition to the law was raised by realtors and businesses and the author of the bill, Sen. Tom Ada, submitted Bill 433 to postpone the enactment of the law from June 30 to Oct. 1 of this year.
Concerns raised included the amount of money residents would have to pay in order to comply with the law, which would be thousands of dollars.
The new date gives agencies more time to complete the necessary tasks needed to implement the law and also have a public forum on the code.
faredchaWith this in mind, the law also orders public works and GFD to conduct a public forum so that residents can provide input, recommendations and concerns about the building code. The forum shall be conducted within 45 days after the enactment of the law.
The legislation amends Public Law 30-25 which was signed to adopt the 2009 International Building Code and enforce it immediately.
The code includes fuel gas, international mechanical, international plumbing, international property, international maintenance, international fire, and international energy conservation. All must be met with satisfactory results by the agencies implementing the IBC, the Department of Public Works and the Guam Fire Department.
Opposition to the law was raised by realtors and businesses and the author of the bill, Sen. Tom Ada, submitted Bill 433 to postpone the enactment of the law from June 30 to Oct. 1 of this year.
Concerns raised included the amount of money residents would have to pay in order to comply with the law, which would be thousands of dollars.
The new date gives agencies more time to complete the necessary tasks needed to implement the law and also have a public forum on the code.
faredchaWith this in mind, the law also orders public works and GFD to conduct a public forum so that residents can provide input, recommendations and concerns about the building code. The forum shall be conducted within 45 days after the enactment of the law.
Impact of new alcohol laws assessed, Guam
ALTHOUGH the impact of the two new laws that seek to curb underage and binge drinking on Guam has yet to be
Bar owner Techie Tagorda cards a customer at Tribbu Bar and Karaoke Lounge in Harmon. Mar-Vic Cagurangan
quantified in dollar terms, bar owners are starting to feel the measures’ effect on their business operations.
Not in Harmon, says Dededo mayor, Marianas
First troop buildup-related project kicks off, Guam
NAVFAC breaks ground for maiden construction related to military expansion
THE first phase of a $4 billion project related to the military buildup kicked off during a groundbreaking ceremony on Naval b...
“We Are Guam” campaign, Southern Marianas
GVB representatives, staff of the Asan mayor’s office, volunteers and residents stand for a group photo in front of the Asan-Maina mural, the tenth to be unveiled as part of the “We Are Guam” campaign.
Photo courtesy of Paul Blas
The CNMI thespians , Marianas
The CNMI thespians pose after staging Thornton Wilder’s “Pullman Car Hiawatha” at the Howell Theatre in Lincoln, Nebraska.
BP oil spill: Obama heads to court to restore block on deepwater drilling - Telegraph
Reuters
Obama administation heads to court to reinstate a block on deepwater oil drilling imposed in response to the BP oil spill. Oil cleanup workers outnumber tourists on the beach in Pensacola Beach, Florida.
Barack Obama: al-Qaeda sees Africans' lives as cheap - Telegraph
By Alex Spillius in Washington
A senior US official suggested Mr Obama was taking a direct swipe at the ideology and motives of al-Qaeda affiliates on the continent, which US intelligence agencies say are the extremist group's most active branches.
A senior US official suggested Mr Obama was taking a direct swipe at the ideology and motives of al-Qaeda affiliates on the continent, which US intelligence agencies say are the extremist group's most active branches.
"Al-Qaeda is a racist organisation that treats black Africans like cannon fodder and does not value human life," said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Barack Obama's relationship with Europe 'not living up to its potential' - Telegraph
Mr Barroso believes that the relationship with the White House and the EU has been affected by disagreements on how to tackle the global economic crisis, as well as climate change and trade reform.
In an interview with The Times, Mr Barroso said the US should reach out to Europe, calling on a "mutual" relationship.
Barack Obama praises Yemen's fight against al-Qa'eda - Telegraph
"President Obama applauded Yemen's determination to address the terrorist threat the Yemeni people face and recognized the sacrifices of Yemeni forces involved in this effort," the White House said.
Whale sighted in Derwent, Tasmania
The visiting whale provides a memorable sight for passengers on the ferry Emmalisa. Picture: LEIGH WINBURN. INSET: A crew member from the MV Bob Barker snapped this picture of a whale breaching.A WHALE has been spotted swimming in the River Derwent this morning, surfacing off Macquarie Wharf.
Michael Beasley, from the Sea Shepherd vessel MV Bob Barker, said the crew saw at least two whales performing shallow breaches approximately 150m from the wharf about 11am yesterday.
At least one of the whales was out again this morning.
Did you see the whale? Send your photos to us here.
North Korean health system in crisis
By staff writers/ Mercury
July 16, 2010 8:46am
SURGERY without anaesthetics and unsterilised needles illustrate the desperate state of North Korea's healthcare system.
Food shortages have persisted since the 1990s famine and some North Koreans survive partly on grass, tree roots and bark, the rights group says.
The communist state says healthcare is free for all, but Amnesty says many witnesses have told it they have been paying for all services since the 1990s.
Doctors are usually paid in cigarettes, alcohol or food for consultations and take cash for tests or surgery.
"If you don't have money, you die," the report quotes a 20-year-old woman refugee as saying.
The report, citing World Health Organisation figures, says the North spends less on healthcare than any other country - less than $US1 per person per year. Amnesty says its report is based on interviews with more than 40 North Koreans now living overseas and with health professionals in the country.
It paints a grim portrait of hospitals lacking anaesthetics and medicines, with unsterilised needles and bloodstained sheets.
A 24-year-old defector from northeastern Hamkyong Province told Amnesty that a doctor amputated his left leg from the calf down without administering anesthesia after his left ankle was crushed by a train when he fell from one of the carriages.
"Five medical assistants held my arms and legs down to keep me from moving. I was in so much pain that I screamed and fainted from pain," said the man, identified only by his family name, Hwang. "I woke up one week later in a hospital bed."
Doctors also often work without pay and have little or no medicine to dispense, and must reuse the scant medical supplies at their disposal, the report says.
The report quotes a 56-year-old woman from the northeastern city of Musan who had her appendix removed in 2001 without anaesthesia. "I was screaming so much from the pain, I thought I was going to die. They had tied my hands and legs to prevent me from moving," she said.
Amnesty says many people bypass doctors and go to the markets to buy medicine.
Catherine Baber, Amnesty's deputy Asia-Pacific director, said the North failed to provide for the most basic health and survival needs of its people - "especially worrying as North Korea fights a tuberculosis epidemic".
Quoting WHO figures, the report estimates that 5 per cent of the population of 24 million are infected with tuberculosis. Pyongyang has begun refusing US food aid despite a 2008 UN survey showing 9 million people do not get enough to eat.
July 16, 2010 8:46am
SURGERY without anaesthetics and unsterilised needles illustrate the desperate state of North Korea's healthcare system.
Food shortages have persisted since the 1990s famine and some North Koreans survive partly on grass, tree roots and bark, the rights group says.
The communist state says healthcare is free for all, but Amnesty says many witnesses have told it they have been paying for all services since the 1990s.
Doctors are usually paid in cigarettes, alcohol or food for consultations and take cash for tests or surgery.
"If you don't have money, you die," the report quotes a 20-year-old woman refugee as saying.
The report, citing World Health Organisation figures, says the North spends less on healthcare than any other country - less than $US1 per person per year. Amnesty says its report is based on interviews with more than 40 North Koreans now living overseas and with health professionals in the country.
It paints a grim portrait of hospitals lacking anaesthetics and medicines, with unsterilised needles and bloodstained sheets.
A 24-year-old defector from northeastern Hamkyong Province told Amnesty that a doctor amputated his left leg from the calf down without administering anesthesia after his left ankle was crushed by a train when he fell from one of the carriages.
"Five medical assistants held my arms and legs down to keep me from moving. I was in so much pain that I screamed and fainted from pain," said the man, identified only by his family name, Hwang. "I woke up one week later in a hospital bed."
Doctors also often work without pay and have little or no medicine to dispense, and must reuse the scant medical supplies at their disposal, the report says.
The report quotes a 56-year-old woman from the northeastern city of Musan who had her appendix removed in 2001 without anaesthesia. "I was screaming so much from the pain, I thought I was going to die. They had tied my hands and legs to prevent me from moving," she said.
Amnesty says many people bypass doctors and go to the markets to buy medicine.
Catherine Baber, Amnesty's deputy Asia-Pacific director, said the North failed to provide for the most basic health and survival needs of its people - "especially worrying as North Korea fights a tuberculosis epidemic".
Quoting WHO figures, the report estimates that 5 per cent of the population of 24 million are infected with tuberculosis. Pyongyang has begun refusing US food aid despite a 2008 UN survey showing 9 million people do not get enough to eat.
Jul 15, 2010
New stars and welcome returns for London Fashion Week - Telegraph
By Hilary Alexander, Fashion Director
The Swedish design powerhouse, Acne, and the NewGen hot talents, Holly Fulton, David Koma and Michael Van Der Ham, will all make their catwalk debuts at London Fashion Week in September.
The Swedish design powerhouse, Acne, and the NewGen hot talents, Holly Fulton, David Koma and Michael Van Der Ham, will all make their catwalk debuts at London Fashion Week in September.
Iranian scientist was 'paid $5 million by CIA' for nuclear secrets - Telegraph
Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent
Shahram Amiri arrives at Imam Khomini Airport with his wife and son Photo: AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Shahram Amiri, who arrived home in Iran today, gave unspecified intelligence in return for the money, the officials claimed.
Shahram Amiri, who arrived home in Iran today, gave unspecified intelligence in return for the money, the officials claimed.
Mr Amiri, who was greeted by his wife, seven-year-old son and government ministers on his return to Tehran airport, denied he knew any secrets or even that he was a nuclear scientist at all.
New Zealand woman sounds Welsh after suffering 'foreign accent syndrome' - Telegraph
Bronwyn Fox, 59, of Invercargill, in the southernmost region of the South Island, told the Telegraph on Tuesday that she has never been to Britain and does not have any British-born relatives.
Japan: 900 Second World War bombs found under restaurant - Telegraph
Construction workers on a road expansion project discovered the explosives with a metal detector and notified police, Kiyotaka Maedomari, a senior police official in Itoman city, said.
Indian rupee gets own currency symbol - Telegraph
Dean Nelson, in New Delhi
Gurpreet Singh shows his artwork depicting the new graphic symbol of Indian Rupee
Until now the rupee has been denoted by the abbreviation 'Rs' or INRs to distinguish it from neighbouring countries like Pakistan and Sri Lanka which also have rupees.
Gurpreet Singh shows his artwork depicting the new graphic symbol of Indian Rupee
Until now the rupee has been denoted by the abbreviation 'Rs' or INRs to distinguish it from neighbouring countries like Pakistan and Sri Lanka which also have rupees.
Ground Zero excavators find 18th century ship's hull - Telegraph
The vessel probably was used along with other debris to fill in land to extend lower Manhattan into the Hudson River, archeologists said.
Molly McDonald and A. Michael Pappalardo, archeologists, were at the site of the 9/11 terror attacks when workers uncovered the artifacts.
Palin Calls For New 'Revolution' At Tea Party
Sarah Palin has thrown down the gauntlet, calling for a populist "revolution" in America and criticising President Barack Obama's policies.
Mrs Palin has recently released a memoir Going Rogue: An American Life
Speaking to a crowd of 1,100 in Nashville, the former Republican vice-presidential candidate, said: "America is ready for another revolution.""
Mrs Palin has recently released a memoir Going Rogue: An American Life
Speaking to a crowd of 1,100 in Nashville, the former Republican vice-presidential candidate, said: "America is ready for another revolution.""
US Tea Party Link Obama To Hitler In Poster
Locals were outraged by the poster which went up last week in Mason, North Iowa
The sign was put up last week in the town of Mason, Iowa, by a local group of the right-wing Tea Party movement.
The sign was put up last week in the town of Mason, Iowa, by a local group of the right-wing Tea Party movement.
Gorillas 'Cheat' Like Children When Playing Tag, Portsmouth Uni Researchers Discover | Strange News | Sky News
Gorillas apparently playing tag in a German zoo (Pic: Portsmouth Uni)
When playing a game of tag, the apes would hit their playmates and then rush away in order to gain the advantage, researchers at the University of Portsmouth found.
Pakistan skittle Aussies Cricket - The Mercury - The Voice of Tasmania
Tasmanian Tim Paine trudges off Lords after making 7 runs in his Test debut against Pakistan. He batted for 52 minutes. Picture: AFP
BEN DORRIES | July 14, 2010 09.42am
PACEMAN Mohammad Asif rocked Australia as Pakistan took the honours on the first day of the first Test at Lord's today.
And Pakistan's other young quick, teenager Mohammad Aamer, was involved in a physical clash with Australian captain Ricky Ponting after dismissing him.
Australia struggled to 9-229 on a tense first day, with Mike Hussey unbeaten on 39 when bad light stopped play early.
Asif took 3-0 in seven balls with a triple strike that removed Simon Katich (80), Michael Clarke (47) and Marcus North (0).
Danish Kaneria (2-48) knocked over the lower-order, including bowling Mitchell Johnson with a big-turning legbreak that Shane Warne would have been proud of.
North's third-ball duck, bowled through a gaping hole between bat and pad, continued the pressure on the left-hander in the lead-up to next summer's Ashes series
BEN DORRIES | July 14, 2010 09.42am
PACEMAN Mohammad Asif rocked Australia as Pakistan took the honours on the first day of the first Test at Lord's today.
And Pakistan's other young quick, teenager Mohammad Aamer, was involved in a physical clash with Australian captain Ricky Ponting after dismissing him.
Australia struggled to 9-229 on a tense first day, with Mike Hussey unbeaten on 39 when bad light stopped play early.
Asif took 3-0 in seven balls with a triple strike that removed Simon Katich (80), Michael Clarke (47) and Marcus North (0).
Danish Kaneria (2-48) knocked over the lower-order, including bowling Mitchell Johnson with a big-turning legbreak that Shane Warne would have been proud of.
North's third-ball duck, bowled through a gaping hole between bat and pad, continued the pressure on the left-hander in the lead-up to next summer's Ashes series
Death toll from south China floods rises to 135
Heavy rainfall block the traffic in Jingdezhen, east China's Jiangxi Province, July 15, 2010. Jingdezhen receives an average rainfall of 120 millimeters on Thursday. (Xinhua/Zhang Wu)
BEIJING, July 15 (Xinhua) -- At least 135 people had been confirmed dead and 41 are missing, as some of the worst flooding in years continues in south China.
By 4 p.m. Thursday, close to 35.5 million people in 10 southern provinces and Chongqing Municipality had been affected by continuous rainstorms and floods since July 1, the Civil Affairs Ministry said in a notice on its website.
Russia, Germany hail outcome of summit
Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev (3rd R) and German Chancellor Angela Merkel (3rd L) arrive for session of the Russian-German forum "St. Petersburg Dialogue" in Urals city, Yekaterinburg, July 15, 2010. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
MOSCOW, July 15 (Xinhua) -- Russia and Germany concluded their 12th interstate consultations Thursday at the Urals city of Yekaterinburg, hailing closer ties and business-to-business cooperation.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed a broad range of issues during the consultations, including foreign policy, economy, culture, technology and innovation.
Both sides vowed to practically advance bilateral cooperation in all sectors, with governments, banks and high-tech enterprises from both countries inking cooperative agreements and memoranda of understanding.
At the joint press conference, both Medvedev and Merkel stressed the importance for the two countries of developing their strategic partnership.
Medvedev was positive about the meeting, saying cooperation would "develop in all directions."
He also welcomed German enterprises' participation in the hi-tech hub Skolkovo outside Moscow.
"We hope German businesses' role will be quite active in the large projects to be implemented in Skolkovo," said Medvedev, adding that Moscow had reached an agreement with Brussels on the implementation of a Partnership for Modernization initiative.
Editor: Fang Yang
MOSCOW, July 15 (Xinhua) -- Russia and Germany concluded their 12th interstate consultations Thursday at the Urals city of Yekaterinburg, hailing closer ties and business-to-business cooperation.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed a broad range of issues during the consultations, including foreign policy, economy, culture, technology and innovation.
Both sides vowed to practically advance bilateral cooperation in all sectors, with governments, banks and high-tech enterprises from both countries inking cooperative agreements and memoranda of understanding.
At the joint press conference, both Medvedev and Merkel stressed the importance for the two countries of developing their strategic partnership.
Medvedev was positive about the meeting, saying cooperation would "develop in all directions."
He also welcomed German enterprises' participation in the hi-tech hub Skolkovo outside Moscow.
"We hope German businesses' role will be quite active in the large projects to be implemented in Skolkovo," said Medvedev, adding that Moscow had reached an agreement with Brussels on the implementation of a Partnership for Modernization initiative.
Editor: Fang Yang
Libyan aid ship docks in Egypt's El-Arish port
EL-ARISH, Egypt, July 15 (Xinhua) -- The Gaza-bound Libyan aid ship docked in Egypt's El-Arish port around midday Thursday after it was prevented from sailing directly to the Gaza Strip.
Workers are prepared to unload some 2,000 tons of food and medical aid materials on the vessel which reached the port Wednesday night.
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