Common Sense Junction
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Common Sense Junction
Foreign Newspaper Headlines
  1. Troops and police clash in Brazil

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 3:14 pm MST

    Brazilian troops clash with police striking over pay and conditions in the state of Bahia, as they try to remove them from the state assembly.

  2. Radical cleric, alleged bin Laden aide to be released on bail in U.K.

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 3:04 pm MST

    A U.K. judge has ordered the release of Abu Qatada, allegedly a former top aide to Osama bin Laden, despite government concerns he poses a security risk


  3. Radical cleric, alleged bin Laden aide to be released on bail in U.K.

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 3:04 pm MST

    A U.K. judge has ordered the release of Abu Qatada, allegedly a former top aide to Osama bin Laden, despite government concerns he poses a security risk

  4. Blasts rock north Nigeria cities

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:52 pm MST

    Explosions have hit a police station in the northern Nigerian city of Kano, scene of deadly attacks last month, and a market in Maiduguri to the west.

  5. Man killed by wasps helped save his nephew

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:49 pm MST

    The family of a man who died after being attacked by a swarm of wasps say his last words probably saved his nephew's life.And they have revealed that Morris Stretch, 62, died on his daughter's 41st birthday.Mr Stretch and his...

  6. Divided Auckland: NZ tax on rich among lowest in the world

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:48 pm MST

    A new book has found total tax rates on the incomes of rich New Zealanders are now the lowest in the developed world.New Zealand's top tax "wedge" of 33 per cent on incomes above $70,000 is lower than all 27 other high-income nations...

  7. Greece says lender talks 'tough'

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:44 pm MST

    Greece holds further talks with its international lenders, as the debate on more austerity measures continues.

  8. VIDEO: One-minute World News

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:38 pm MST

    Watch the latest news summary from BBC World News. International news updated 24 hours a day.

  9. Capello actions dismay PFA chief

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:37 pm MST

    Gordon Taylor, head of the Professional Footballers' Association, calls Fabio Capello's criticism of the FA's decision to oust John Terry as England captain "bizarre and disappointing".

  10. Byelection for Jack Layton's former riding delayed by administrative 'oversight'

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:31 pm MST

    An “administrative error” has prompted the federal government to push back the date of a byelection in Toronto-Danforth, a spokesperson in the Prime Minister’s Office said Monday


  11. Byelection for Jack Layton's former riding delayed by administrative 'oversight'

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:31 pm MST

    An “administrative error” has prompted the federal government to push back the date of a byelection in Toronto-Danforth, a spokesperson in the Prime Minister’s Office said Monday

  12. Obama: 'I deserve a second term'

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:28 pm MST

    President Barack Obama tells a US network that he deserves a second term in the White House, as a poll puts his approval rating above 50%.

  13. VIDEO: Perfect weather for ice wine makers

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:12 pm MST

    For Czech Republics ice wine makers freezing temperature is just right for harvesting grapes.

  14. Canada rejects calls to pull Syrian ambassador despite U.S. evacuation

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:57 pm MST

    'The U.S. as a sovereign nation makes decisions based on its situation,' wrote Rick Roth, a spokesman for John Baird, in an email. 'We make decisions based on ours'


  15. Canada rejects calls to pull Syrian ambassador despite U.S. evacuation

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:57 pm MST

    'The U.S. as a sovereign nation makes decisions based on its situation,' wrote Rick Roth, a spokesman for John Baird, in an email. 'We make decisions based on ours'

  16. Ian Paisley admitted to hospital

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:56 pm MST

    The former first minister and leader of the DUP, Ian Paisley, has been admitted to hospital.

  17. Woman who escaped Pickton with handcuff on arm was not ‘credible,’ inquiry hears

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:36 pm MST

    The woman, known to the inquiry as 'Ms. Anderson,' broke free from handcuffs at Pickton’s trailer on March 23, 1997 at 1:45 a.m., and escaped after a bloody knife fight with him

  18. Woman who escaped Pickton with handcuff on arm was not ‘credible,’ inquiry hears

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:36 pm MST

    The woman, known to the inquiry as 'Ms. Anderson,' broke free from handcuffs at Pickton’s trailer on March 23, 1997 at 1:45 a.m., and escaped after a bloody knife fight with him


  19. Brazil privatises airport running

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:32 pm MST

    The Brazilian government privatises operations at three airports as part of moves to upgrade transport links ahead of the World Cup.

  20. Children who are spanked more aggressive: study

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:29 pm MST

    In one study, designed to reduce difficult behaviour in children, researchers found that families that reduced their use of physical punishment saw a decline in aggression and anti-social behaviour in their children


  21. Children who are spanked more aggressive: study

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:29 pm MST

    In one study, designed to reduce difficult behaviour in children, researchers found that families that reduced their use of physical punishment saw a decline in aggression and anti-social behaviour in their children

  22. Mum saves baby on train tracks

    Herald Sun | National News | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:28 pm MST

    DRAMATIC FOOTAGE: THIS is the moment a desperate mother put her life on the line to save her baby son from being hit by a train.




  23. Radical cleric Qatada given bail

    BBC News - Home | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:22 pm MST

    Radical cleric Abu Qatada is granted bail following a hearing at the UK's Special Immigration Appeals Commission.

  24. Witnesses film on phones as mum swept away

    Herald Sun | National News | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:21 pm MST

    DISGUST after onlookers filmed as Darcy Sheahan and his mum were swept away in the floods.




  25. Victims of Norway massacre weep, ridicule Breivik as killer decries immigration's ‘cultural destruction’

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:15 pm MST

    Survivors and relatives of those killed in a Norwegian mass-murder rampage wept and ridiculed the smiling attacker in court Monday as he defended his acts by issuing a tirade against immigration


  26. Victims of Norway massacre weep, ridicule Breivik as killer decries immigration's ‘cultural destruction’

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 1:15 pm MST

    Survivors and relatives of those killed in a Norwegian mass-murder rampage wept and ridiculed the smiling attacker in court Monday as he defended his acts by issuing a tirade against immigration

  27. Toronto transit chief’s petition denounced as ‘coup’ by Rob Ford ally

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:49 pm MST

    TTC Chair Karen Stintz has submitted a petition with 24 signatures on it calling for a special meeting to resurrect part of the light rail plan known as Transit City, even as one Ford ally denounced her efforts as a “coup”


  28. Toronto transit chief’s petition denounced as ‘coup’ by Rob Ford ally

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:49 pm MST

    TTC Chair Karen Stintz has submitted a petition with 24 signatures on it calling for a special meeting to resurrect part of the light rail plan known as Transit City, even as one Ford ally denounced her efforts as a “coup”

  29. Obama hits back at Iran bank's 'deceptive practices,' imposes tough new sanctions

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:40 pm MST

    Barack Obama tightened sanctions on Iran another notch, targeting its central bank and giving U.S. banks new powers to freeze assets linked to the government

  30. Obama hits back at Iran bank's 'deceptive practices,' imposes tough new sanctions

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:40 pm MST

    Barack Obama tightened sanctions on Iran another notch, targeting its central bank and giving U.S. banks new powers to freeze assets linked to the government


  31. Canadian home prices rose in January: CREA

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:26 pm MST

    Canadian housing prices rose in January on a monthly basis for the first time in three months, according to a report from the Canadian Real Estate Association

  32. Canadian home prices rose in January: CREA

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:26 pm MST

    Canadian housing prices rose in January on a monthly basis for the first time in three months, according to a report from the Canadian Real Estate Association


  33. Cameron's coming battle over the ECHR

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:17 pm MST

    The coming release of Abu Qatada on bail is going to put bellows under the whole debate about the European Court of Human Rights. In his recent speech to the Council of Europe, David Cameron rightly protested about a situation with terror suspects in which ‘you cannot try them, you cannot detain them and you cannot deport them.’ We will now find out how quickly Cameron is prepared to act on this issue.

    If Cameron wants to makes changes to the Courts and the Convention, then he is going

  34. Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal given to 60 Canadians

    National Post - Top Stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:13 pm MST

    The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal – one of a series of national celebratory gestures to mark the 60th anniversary of the Queen’s ascent to the throne – was given to 60 Canadians Monday at Rideau Hall


  35. Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal given to 60 Canadians

    NPL Npindex top stories | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:13 pm MST

    The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal – one of a series of national celebratory gestures to mark the 60th anniversary of the Queen’s ascent to the throne – was given to 60 Canadians Monday at Rideau Hall

  36. Piri Weepu hits back at bottle advert ban

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 12:10 pm MST

    Piri Weepu has defended his decision to bottlefeed his daughter after footage of the All Black bottle-feeding her was cut from an anti-smoking advertisement.The two-second glimpse of the Rugby World Cup star feeding his 6-month-old...

  37. Gainsbourg refused to perform on-set sex act

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST



    Actress CHARLOTTE GAINSBOURG stood her ground against ANTICHRIST director LARS VON TRIER when he asked her to perform a sex act on a porn star for the film.




  38. Welch weeps as she announces marriage break-up on live TV

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST



    Actress DENISE WELCH broke down in tears on live TV on Monday (06Feb12) as she announced she's split from her actor husband TIM HEALY.




  39. Brook takes a swipe at Cowell's TV shows

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST



    Actress/model KELLY BROOK has taken a swipe at SIMON COWELL, insisting his TV shows such as THE X FACTOR are tacky.




  40. Mortenson caught acting bug while caring for elderly couple

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST



    LORD OF THE RINGS star VIGGO MORTENSEN felt compelled to be an actor after he had to transform into a different person while looking after a confused elderly couple in his early twenties.




  41. Radcliffe's Woman In Black is Hammer's highest grossing opening

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST



    DANIEL RADCLIFFE has helped give Hammer Film Productions its highest ever opening - his new movie THE WOMAN IN BLACK has gone in at number two at the U.S. box office.




  42. Offers of help overwhelm robbed French pair

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:55 am MST

    Two French tourists who had their van stolen outside an Auckland supermarket have been overwhelmed by the generosity of Kiwis wanting to help.The Herald has been inundated with phonecalls and emails from people from all over the...

  43. Joel thrills crowd with impromptu gig at bike show

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:54 am MST



    Music legend BILLY JOEL stunned revellers at a vintage motorcycle fair in Miami, Florida on Saturday (04Feb12) when he rode up on his bike and performed an impromptu show with a local band.




  44. Brown extends Aussie TV career with DWTS hosting gig

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:54 am MST



    Former SPICE GIRL MELANIE BROWN has boosted her Australian TV career after signing up to present the country's version of DANCING WITH THE STARS.




  45. Gallagher convinced Adele won't last

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:54 am MST



    NOEL GALLAGHER is convinced the adulation heaped on fellow star ADELE will be short-lived, insisting female singers have no "shelf life" in the music industry.




  46. Gaga founding social networking site

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:54 am MST



    LADY GAGA is launching her own social networking website exclusively for her fans.




  47. Migrants' hearts remain in China, study finds

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:50 am MST

    China's emergence as a world power is resulting in more Chinese New Zealanders feeling a greater sense of attachment to China than to New Zealand, a study has found.More than 94 per cent of Chinese permanent residents and more than...

  48. PM open to Treaty clause debate

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:40 am MST

    Prime Minister John Key has told iwi that the Government could yet agree to a Treaty of Waitangi clause in legislation on the partial sale of state assets.He emphasised that his Government would not dilute its Treaty obligations...

  49. Parliamentary rule changes to keep MPs on their toes

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:40 am MST

    A number of changes to the way Parliament is run will help ensure more integrity from MPs, less use of urgency and greater public scrutiny when Parliament sits again today.Changes to the standing orders adopted in November include...

  50. Public forces council to rethink toilet near plaque

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:35 am MST

    Public opposition has forced authorities to rethink plans for a public toilet and dog drinking-fountain in a prominent spot in Hamilton's Days Park.The City Council received 53 submissions over plans to build the toilet by the paths...

  51. Not much of a summer - but flies are having a field day

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:30 am MST

    Infestations of flies are plaguing householders as temperatures slowly start to climb.Mid-20C temperatures and moist conditions have caused a proliferation of household flies, which thrive and reproduce more quickly in a sticky...

  52. Tauranga gets triple cruise ship treat

    nzherald.co.nz - National | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:20 am MST

    Giant cruise ships carrying thousands of passengers are an increasingly familiar site in the Port of Tauranga.Eighty-two of the mega-ships are scheduled to visit the city this season, up from 54 last season. Next season, 92 are...

  53. From the archives: Britain's new Queen

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 11:07 am MST

    To mark the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II's ascension to the throne in 1952, here is the leader that appeared sixty years ago on our front cover. It was written under the editorship of Wilson Harris, who had been in the position nearly 20 years.

    Queen and Nation, 15 February 1952

    The slow days are dragging their sad length along to the climax, when the mortal remains of King George VI will be laid, where so many of his forbears have preceded him, in the historic St. George's Chapel

  54. Priest guilty of child sex offences

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 10:51 am MST

    A Roman Catholic priest has been found guilty of committing sexual offences against seven boys between 1975 and 1993.





  55. England humiliated as Pakistan secure series whitewash

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 10:05 am MST

    Kevin Pietersen

    England bowled out yet again as Pakistan win third and final Test in Dubai

    Match Report LAST UPDATED AT 17:05 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    ENGLAND'S cricketers, supposedly the best in the world, have suffered their first-ever series whitewash against Pakistan after losing the third and final Test in Dubai by 71 runs.

    After being set an improbable target of 324 to win the match and salvage some pride, England's batsmen once again failed to deliver and were bowled out for 252 with Pakistan's spinners once again wreaking havoc.

    The finger of blame for England's humiliation in the UAE has been pointed at the English middle order, who showed an astonishing inability to deal with spin. Between them Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell and Eoin Morgan managed a pathetic 200 runs in 18 innings at an average of just 11.11. They lost their wickets to spinners on 14 occasions.

    There was an element of hubris in the words of Ian Bell (51 runs in six innings) who told the BBC last week that learning to bat against spin was “the last piece of the jigsaw” for England.

    Sri Lankan bowling legend Muttiah Muralitharan, told The Daily Mail, that it was England's Achilles Heel. "On the subcontinent you have to learn to play spin very well," he said. "And in that department they are lacking."

    He has a point. The top three English batsmen scored just one fifty each – the next three, Pietersen, Bell and Morgan, didn't manage one between them.

    In fact, only wicket keeper Matt Prior averaged more than 30 runs across the entire series, prompting The Guardian to dig out a grim statistic which sums up the depth of the English malaise: "Only in two series have all the England batsmen failed to average more than 30 — in 1888 and 1935."

    The main beneficiaries of England's limitations were the Pakistani spinners. Saeed Ajmal was the tormentor-in-chief and he finished the campaign with a 24 wicket haul, Abdur Rehman was not far behind with 19. The closest England offered in reply was Monty Panesar's 14.    

    While it is perhaps too early to start talking about an overhaul of personnel, England now face a one-day series against Pakistan which offers plenty more opportunity for the Arabian Nightmare to continue. As The Daily Telegraph's Scyld Berry says: "Pakistan are perfectly capable of playing four spinners... and tormenting England further on the dry turning pitches of Dubai and Abu Dhabi."

    And after this tour ends England head to Sri Lanka, where the spinners will be licking their lips. · 



  56. Heart concerns for Rev Ian Paisley

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 10:00 am MST

    The Rev Ian Paisley is in intensive care tonight after suffering from acute heart problems.





  57. Network Rail bosses waive bonuses

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 10:00 am MST

    The chief executive and other directors of Network Rail became the latest top bosses to waive lucrative bonuses today when they decided to give the money to safety improvements instead.





  58. Hague condemns 'unacceptable' Syria

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 10:00 am MST

    Syria's ambassador in London was today summoned to the Foreign Office for rebuke over the "utterly unacceptable" violence being inflicted on civilians in the country as President Bashar Assad's regime cracks down on dissent.





  59. Clarkson injunction was terrifying says former wife

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:54 am MST

    Jeremy Clarkson's ex-wife said it was "terrifying" when she discovered the Top Gear star had taken out an injunction to stop her writing about their relationship.





  60. Case against Redknapp 'repugnant'

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:52 am MST

    The prosecution case at Harry Redknapp's tax evasion trial is "repugnant to all our basic instincts of fairness", a court heard today.





  61. Joey Barton to face no action over John Terry Twitter comments

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:34 am MST

    Footballer Joey Barton will not be prosecuted for posting a series of comments online about John Terry ahead of his trial for allegedly racially abusing Anton Ferdinand.





  62. On Obama’s watch

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:28 am MST

    On February 5th, President Obama provided his own Super Sunday show.  In some respects, it was almost as bizarre as Madonna’s performance at half time.

  63. Primary pupils 'not toilet trained'

    Daily Express :: News / Showbiz Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:26 am MST



    Rising numbers of children are starting school without being toilet trained, a survey of teachers has suggested.




  64. Mail editor knew of detective work

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:14 am MST

    The editor of the Daily Mail was aware the newspaper was using search agencies, but not the extent to which they were doing so, he told the inquiry into press standards today.





  65. UK continues £1bn India aid despite 'peanuts' jibe

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 9:10 am MST

    Britain intends to fulfil its commitments on aid to India, despite a minister from the emerging economic giant's government dismissing the £1 billion assistance as "peanuts", Downing Street said today.





  66. Harrison Ford could star in Ridley Scott's Blade Runner 2

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 8:43 am MST

    Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard in Blade Runner

    Speculation mounts that the film could be a sequel to 1982 cult classic

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 15:43 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    ANTICIPATION surrounding Ridley Scott's reboot of cult sci-fi film Blade Runner has been heightened by reports that Harrison Ford, the star of the original movie, is set to join the cast, prompting speculation that the project is not a remake but a sequel.

    News that Ford was in talks to sign up for the picture was broken on the Twitchfilm website. He played lead character Rick Deckard in Scott's 1982 movie of Philip K Dick's futuristic novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

    "While this is still very early stages and it is quite possible that things won't work out the obvious implication is that what we are looking at is not a reboot but a direct sequel to the original," reported Twitchfilm.

    Just six months ago producer Andrew Kosove told the LA Times: "In no way do I speak for Ridley Scott but if you're asking me will this movie have anything to do with Harrison Ford, the answer is no."

    Quite what this apparent volte face means is unclear, but The Guardian is not afraid to speculate on the idea that it will pick up where the last film left off.

    "Dick never wrote a sequel to the book, so Scott will probably be aiming to produce an original story," says the paper. "Three follow-up novels by Dick's friend, KW Jeter, were written between 1995 and 2000 to try to resolve some of the differences between Blade Runner and its source novel, but they were poorly received."

    Scott himself signed up for the Blade Runner 2 project almost a year ago, but details remain sketchy. It is not even known if it will be his next project after he finishes work on Prometheus, another much-anticipated sci-fi epic that has its origins in his 1979 classic Alien.

    Prometheus, starring Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender, is a kind of prequel set in the same universe as Alien although it doesn't feature the same characters or monsters. It is due out in June. · 



  67. Is Peta's bid to free killer whales in Tillikum's interest?

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 8:25 am MST

    Tillikum - killer whale

    Conservationist warns that move by animal rights group to free SeaWorld Five is a 'strategic error'

    First Post Linda Palermo LAST UPDATED AT 15:25 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    THE 'SeaWorld Five' get their day in court today, when lawyers for the animal rights group Peta attempt to argue that the group of killer whales held at two marine parks are being subjected to slavery, in breach of the 13th Amendment.

    Peta alleges that the killer whales - Tillikum, Katina, Corky, Kasatka and Ulises - "were forcibly taken from their families and natural habitats, are held captive at SeaWorld San Diego and SeaWorld Orlando... and forced to perform, all for [the] defendants' profit". The lawsuit hinges on whether the animals have rights under the 13th Amendment, which bans "slavery and involuntary servitude".

    SeaWorld said when the allegations were first publicised last year that they were "baseless and in many ways offensive". Now a leading British conservationist has warned Peta's lawsuit is a "strategic error" which could backfire and lead to worse suffering for captive animals.

    Philippa Brakes, senior biologist at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, agrees with Peta that incarcerating a large-brained mammal such as a killer whale "amounts to slavery", but says the legal bid to have them released would not necessarily be recognised by the public.

    Brakes told The Guardian that although the animals lead "hideous lives", few of those who have seen them in captivity are aware of their ordeals. She also cautioned about creating legal precedent with the move, which is being heard in court in America this week, for fear that if the case is lost then case law is enshrined against granting rights to "non-human persons".

    "I would love to be wrong, and that they find for the orcas in this case, but I doubt very much that's going to happen, and I think it's a strategic error," she said. Brakes instead believes that animal rights groups should look to show that creatures such as orcas should be seen not as equals to humans, but as "persons with rights".

    "It's more than court cases, it's really about changing people's attitudes and understanding," she said.

    Writing for The Week in November last year, Alexander Cockburn endorsed Tillikum and the SeaWorld Five in their bid for freedom, invoking hundreds of years of legal precedent in which the rights of animals - and their consciousness - were recognised in common law.

    Indeed Cockburn said it was only the dawn of capitalism that stripped animals of their rights: "They had been rendered, philosophically and literally, resources for guiltless exploitation, turned into objects of commerce, labour, food – and entertainment. Tillikum should get his day in court." · 



  68. Ian Paisley rushed to hospital

    - News RSS Feed | 6 Feb 2012 | 8:21 am MST

    The Rev Ian Paisley, the former Northern Ireland First Minister, has been admitted to hospital, it was revealed today





  69. We must be honest about honour killings

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 8:11 am MST

    White guilt has terrible consequences. This was made profoundly clear in Canada during the three month trial of Mohammad Shafia, his wife Tooba Yahya and their son Hamed. They were convicted a week ago of the first-degree murder of Zainab (19), Sahar (17) and Geeti Shafia (13), and 50-year-old Rona Amir. The three teens were Mohammad Shafia and Tooba Yahya’s daughters, Hamed’s sisters. Rona was Mohammad Shafia’s first wife. The four women had been drowned in their car in June, 2009. The killers had chosen a canal in Kingston — a university town

  70. Daniel Radcliffe turns on 'whipping boy' Nick Clegg

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 8:11 am MST

    Daniel Radcliffe

    Harry Potter actor says he has rejected Lib Dems and switched to 'genuinely left-wing' Miliband

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 15:11 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    HARRY POTTER actor Daniel Radcliffe has announced that he is no longer under the spell of the Lib Dems, who he supported at the last election, and has switched his allegiance to Ed Miliband and the Labour party.

    He described Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg as a "whipping boy" who had been "used" by the Tories and made too many sacrifices since forming a coalition government.

    But the 22-year-old sprinkled some magic on Miliband, whose leadership of the Labour party has come under fire in recent months, and said he was a fan. Radcliffe made the comments in an interview with gay lifestyle magazine Attitude.

    Asked if he was happy with Clegg and the Lib Dems, he said: "No, of course not.

    "I was initially supportive. For me it was good that the Lib Dems would be fighting our corner. But he has become a whipping boy and it seems to me that he has been totally used by the Tories - anything they don't want badly reflected on them they reflect on to him.

    "It's very unfortunate when you think how impressive he was in those pre-election debates. But he has made so many concessions."

    Of Miliband he said: "I really like him. He speaks for what I believe in. I think he's genuinely left-wing, and will act as such if he gets in."

    Perhaps in order to prove his own left-wing credentials, multi-millionaire Radcliffe insisted that those who earn more should pay more tax. "If you make a lot more money than most people, like I do, you should pay more tax and subsidise people who work just as hard as you, but don't earn as much," he said.

    Radcliffe, who also expressed disgust at the "homophobic" language of the Republican presidential hopefuls in the US, is not the first celebrity to abandon the party.

    "Colin Firth, another actor and A-list Hollywood star declared in December that he was ending his support for the Lib Dems," says The Guardian. "The party has also lost the support of Bella Freud, the fashion designer, and Kate Mosse, the author." · 



  71. After snowpocalypse, Britons ask: is there more to come?

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:56 am MST

    Man running in London snow

    Heavy snows brought transport chaos to much of the UK at the weekend. What do forecasters expect now?

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 14:56 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    FOLLOWING a weekend that brought temperatures as low as -8.6C (Church Fenton, North Yorkshire) and a blanket of snow up to five inches deep, freezing Britons are asking: what next?

    According to The Daily Telegraph, there is another month of snowpocalypse to come.

    "Biting temperatures, snow showers and overnight frosts could last until the end of February," says the newspaper, stretching the definition of 'news' as it reports typical February weather.

    The Guardian is more sanguine, saying "fears of further downfalls have receded" but anticipating low temperatures for the rest of the month in the south and east. The north and west, meanwhile, will experience "milder but more unsettled weather".

    The Daily Mail admits that no further snowfall is forecast until Saturday but warns that the ice hazard will continue with "bitterly cold" temperatures in eastern parts of the country for the next 10 days.

    While the snowfall did cause disruption, many people managed to enjoy the white stuff, with snowball fights, sledging, giant snowmen and even off-piste snowboarding and skiing.

    The Mail reports that a 55-year-old man was airlifted to hospital in North Yorkshire on Sunday afternoon when he "came off his sledge at high speed". He suffered spinal injuries – but his condition is not thought to be life-threatening.

    At least 64 schools were forced to remain closed today, mostly in the south east of England. Journeys on the London Underground were also disrupted, with passengers on a broken-down Tube forced to get out and walk. · 



  72. On Reagan’s Birthday, His Legacy Lives On

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:55 am MST

    Today marks President Ronald Reagan’s 101st birthday. Born in Tampico, Illinois, Reagan made his journey west to Iowa as a radio broadcaster, then on to California to take Hollywood by storm. He crossed America as a spokesman for General Electric, and then — after discovering the import of conservative values — entered the political arena, where he would ultimately lead his fellow citizens out of a wilderness of self-doubt, helping the country come to see that it could be morning in America once again.

  73. What Were They Thinking?

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:35 am MST

    It appears the Lying King, Obama, and the HHS dominatrix, Kathleen Sebelius, have finally pushed the envelope on abortion and reproductive issues within ObamaCare beyond acceptable limits of their Left-leaning Catholic allies. It is fantastic that the Catholic Bishops are taking a moral stand against the reproductive agenda of the Lying King and the dominatrix, but this issue should never have gotten to this point.  The allies find themselves in a very conflicted situation, a situation they helped to create.  In their rush to ram through the social justice injustice agenda within ObamaCare, the Left-leaning Catholic allies allowed themselves to be deceived on the abortion issue by the master manipulator in the White House.  The question is, with the documented track records of Obama and Sebelius, what were their Catholic allies thinking when they aligned themselves with these abortionistas? 

  74. 100 British MPs Revolt Over Wind Farm Subsidies

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:30 am MST

    David Cameron has been hit by a major protest by Conservative MPs over the Government’s backing for wind farms, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose. A total of 101 Tory MPs have written to the Prime Minister demanding that the £400 million-a-year subsidies paid to the “inefficient” onshore wind turbine industry are “dramatically cut”. The demands will be a headache for Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat Energy Secretary, who joined the Cabinet on Friday when Chris Huhne resigned after being charged with perverting the course of justice. The Tory MPs, including several of the party’s rising stars as well as former ministers, say it is wrong that hard-pressed consumers must pay for the expansion of onshore wind power. A Downing Street spokesman said: “The Government has commissioned a review of subsidy levels and we are proposing a cut for onshore wind subsidies to take into account the fact that costs are coming down.”—Patrick Hennessy, The Sunday Telegraph, 5 February 2012

  75. Sarkozy re-election bid hit by allegations of high living

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:13 am MST

    Nicolas Sarkozy

    French president accused of spending £10,000 a day on food and keeping 121 official vehicles

    First Post LAST UPDATED AT 14:13 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    Nicolas Sarkozy's troubled bid to be returned as French president in April and May's elections has suffered a fresh blow with the publication of a book that claims he is living the high life in the Elysee Palace while the rest of the country is enduring harsh austerity measures, according to The Sunday Times.

    Rene Dosiere, a Socialist MP, claims in L'Argent de l'Etat (The state's money) that Sarkozy maintains a fleet of 121 cars parked under his official residence and serves £160 bottles of wine to guests at lunch receptions. "Sarkozy ignores the most elementary principles of the separation between private and public accounts," Dosiere says.

    A recent example of Sarkozy's largesse at the expense of the state came last month when the president allegedly dispatched a jet used for presidential and government business to the Ukraine to return his DJ son Pierre, who had fallen ill in Odessa, to France. Sarkozy paid €7,632 towards this trip, but the French state was left with a €32,000 shortfall to make up.

    The presidential cars cost the French state £100,000 a year to insure, and a further £275,000 to fuel, although apparently Sarkozy is more likely to be found in the Airbus A330 which in 2008 he had fitted to his specifications. The cost of this was a staggering £215m, according to Dosiere: twice the officially declared figure.

    Dosiere's revelations will do nothing for Sarkozy's waning popularity among French voters, who remain on course to ditch him at the election. A pair of polls by LH2 and BVA over the last week show Francois Hollande, the Socialist challenger, stretching his lead over Sarkozy. Both give the left-winger 34 per cent of the first-round vote. (Holland maintains a massive 14 per cent lead in second round preferences, winning 57-43.)

    In fact, the most pressing task for the French president is to counter the threat to him from the right. In recent weeks, Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right Front National, has come within 2 per cent of Sarkozy in the polls, threatening to emulate the achievement of her father Jean Marie, who forced his way past the Socialist candidate Lionel Jospin into the second round of the 2002 presidential election.

    Le Pen Jr told The Sunday Times this weekend that France should withdraw from the euro and should return to the franc. "Our companies are not competitive because our currency is overvalued. We need a national currency that we can use as a monetary lever. We would have employment, growth and economic dynamism."

    To an electorate increasingly sick of excess at the Elysee, Le Pen's anti-establishment views and simple answers are gaining her a growing army of supporters. “We have never seen such an elevated level of support for a far-right candidate three months before a presidential election,” said Jean-Daniel Lévy, an analyst with Harris Interactive. · 



  76. Has Speaker Peter Slipper flipped his wig?

    Herald Sun | National News | 6 Feb 2012 | 7:01 am MST

    LIBERAL turncoat to take Parliament back to the future by wearing a plush Speaker's gown.




  77. The Olympics could break the internet, Britain is warned

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:46 am MST

    Olympic stadium

    Will people who work from home during the Olympics be able to get online?

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 14:03 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    OLYMPIC nay-sayers have another reason to feel smug this morning after reports over the weekend that the Games will not only cause transport chaos in London, but they will also "break" the internet.

    The latest piece of doom-mongering is contained in a report from the Cabinet Office designed to help businesses prepare for the Games, which are already predicted to cause havoc in the capital in a number of other ways.

    "It is possible that internet services may be slower during the Games or in very severe cases there may be drop outs due to an increased number of people accessing the internet," warns the report.

    It even talks about rationing access to the internet and says that providers "may introduce data caps during peak times". Phone services may also be affected it notes.

    To make matters worse the problems could undermine the government's efforts to encourage people to work from home during the Games, to try and lessen the strain on the transport network.

    But it now seems that Londoners are in a cleft stick. Those struggling into the office face huge delays on the Tube and trains, while those who stay at home might not be able to access the internet.

    "There's been a lot of discussion about traffic hotspots, but very little about potential internet traffic problems," one office manager told The Guardian. "The risk is that home workers are unable to work effectively due to over-capacity."

    The paper notes: "The government believes that encouraging businesses to allow staff to work from other offices or home, or at different times, is key to easing congestion in the capital this summer."

    The Daily Mail also carries the warning: "Britain faces an internet meltdown during the London 2012 Olympic Games."
     
    The timing of the government report could hardly have been better. This week thousands of civil servants are working from home as the government tests its plans to reduce pressure on the transport system during the Olympics. · 



  78. Camden council bring Robocop to crime-free estate

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:44 am MST

    Privacy campaigners slam talking CCTV they say belongs in a police state – or science fiction

    First Post LAST UPDATED AT 13:44 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    ROBOCOP HAS come to London, and civil liberties groups – and residents – are not happy about it. An automated talking CCTV camera which warns passers-by that a communal garden is a "restricted area" has been dubbed "police state" technology.

    Talking cameras first appeared in Middlesbrough in 2007 before spreading to other parts of the UK. They normally rely on a real person talking to alleged miscreants via a loudspeaker from the CCTV control centre.

    The new system, installed by Camden Council on the Walker House estate near St Pancras, is thought to be the first time an automated voice triggered by CCTV cameras has been used in this way.

    Local resident Jim Jepps was so outraged when he discovered that the mere act of walking through the communal garden by his block of flats triggered a robotic American voice to threaten him that he filmed it, posting the video on the internet.

    When Jepps nears the camera in the green space, the voice says: "Stop! This is a restricted area and your photograph is being taken. It will be sent for processing if you do not leave the area now."

    Clearly angry, Jepps adds his own commentary: "Absolutely outrageous. Camden council, you do not have the power to make my home a restricted area and tell me to leave it."

    Jepps is particularly angry because he says there is no problem with crime on the estate – and the latest home office figures show no crimes recorded there for a year.

    Councillor Roger Robinson told The Independent the cameras were a response to ten years of harassment and threats against residents. He
    said: "We don't want drug dealing and harassment.

    "People have been known to smash cars and steal motorbikes. We're entitled to do something."

    But Nick Pickles of pressure group Big Brother Watch told The Daily Telegraph: "This kind of technology may be acceptable in a police state or a science fiction film, but it is absolutely not in modern Britain."

    He added: "The idea that a Robocop recording will tackle antisocial behaviour and crime is as laughable as it is a total invasion of privacy."

     · 



  79. Girl's tragic call about mum's death

    Herald Sun | National News | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:40 am MST

    A FIVE-year-old girl made a harrowing triple-0 phone call to alert police to her mother's suspicious death at a Hunters Hill unit.




  80. Teenage intern who lost her virginity to JFK tells all

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:38 am MST

    John F Kennedy with his wife Jackie

    US president's 19-year-old mistress offers new insights with explosive autobiography

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 13:38 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    A FORMER mistress of John F Kennedy has published a book in which she reveals how she lost her virginity to the US President while working as a White House intern.

    Mimi Alford, described in the New York Post as having been "a slender, golden-haired 19-year-old debutante", tells of her 18-month affair, which only ended when JFK was assassinated in 1963, in Once Upon A Secret.

    Alford says she was just four days into her 1962 internship when she was spotted by the president while taking a swim in the White House pool. An invitation to an after-work party promptly arrived, and when she attended, she says she was plied with drinks while waiting for Kennedy (pictured above with his wife Jackie).

    When he got there, the president is said to have offered her a personal tour. She accepted, expecting the other guests to follow but, as the NY Post puts it: "They didn't. He took her to 'Mrs Kennedy's room'."

    The book then goes into a graphic account of Alford losing her virginity to Kennedy, who she called Mr President throughout their affair, replete with salacious snippets such as: "I could feel his breath on my neck. He put his hand on my shoulder... I finished unbuttoning my shirtdress and let it fall off my shoulders."

    The president, according to Alford, was keen to share his teenage conquest with his friends.

    One such story involves Kennedy's special assistant, Dave Powers, and yet more lunchtime swimming. Alford writes: "The president swam over and whispered in my ear. 'Mr. Powers looks a little tense... Would you take care of it?'... This was a challenge to give Dave Powers oral sex... I'm ashamed to say that I did... The president silently watched."

    Despite drawing the most attention, the sexual shenanigans are merely one part of Alford's story, which also touches on the President's feelings about the Cuban missile crisis – "I'd rather my children red than dead," he is said to have told his mistress – and his inconsolable grief at the death of his infant son. · 



  81. I'll deal with whoever is leader - Bob Brown

    Herald Sun | National News | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:25 am MST

    GREENS leader says he would reach a fresh arrangement with a new Labor leader should Julia Gillard be toppled.




  82. Is Greece about to default - or is this just brinkmanship?

    Featured Articles | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:09 am MST

    Protestors outside Greek parliament in Athens in 2011

    Ruling coalition must tell EU today if it accepts the painful reforms that go with £108bn rescue package

    One-Minute Read LAST UPDATED AT 13:09 ON Mon 6 Feb 2012

    GREECE'S COALITION leaders must tell the EU today whether they will accept the terms of a new £108bn bailout package after weeks of wrangling – and after failing to reach an accord on Sunday night as they had promised.

    If they accept it after today's talks, the bailout will be the country's second since 2010. It will accompany an agreement with the country's private creditors to accept deep losses on the bonds they hold.

    The rescue is conditional on the Greeks enacting unpopular austerity measures and the country's rulers are reluctant to be associated with them.

    Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and the leaders of the main parties emerged from discussions on Sunday night with Papademos saying they had made "limited progress".

    But two of those leaders sounded notes of scepticism. The far-right Popular Orthodox party's Giorgos Karatzaferis insisted he would not "contribute to a revolution that will humiliate us and ... burn Europe", and the conservative New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras said Greece was "unable to bear" the reforms.

    The alternative – allowing the country to effectively go bankrupt, entering default – is unthinkable. So is this down-to-the-wire wrangling just posturing?

    According to The Financial Times, the Greek politicians are guilty of brinkmanship because they "must be seen by voters to be putting up a fight" over the package, while having every intention of agreeing it.

    Rate strategists Rabobank aren't coy about the 'b' word either, telling Reuters that Greek brinkmanship could harm the global economy: "We continue to see the likelihood of a Greek messy default as remote ... [but] continued brinkmanship and a dose of pre-electoral posturing in Greece itself stands to prompt further market jitters."

    But the Greeks can only cry wolf for so long – if that's what they are doing – says Jacob Funk Kirkegaard of the fiscally conservative, Washington-based Peterson Institute.

    After March, he writes, when Germany is expected to approve a beefing-up of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) rescue fund, "a Greek default and possibly even voluntary exit from the euro area might be a risk worth contemplating". · 



  83. Chicks left to starve

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    A VICTORIAN poultry processor is likely to be charged with animal cruelty after 700,000 chicks were left to starve last weekend.




  84. Holden 'final' deal to Premier

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    THE South Australian government has received a "final" proposal from Holden on a deal to keep the carmaker operating in Australia




  85. Casino 'ignored' harassment complaints

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    STAFF at Sydney's Star casino warned the state's gambling authority about sexual harassment two months before its MD was sacked.




  86. Productivity boost can ward off famine

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    ONE of the world's leading agricultural economists is not convinced catastrophic famine lies ahead




  87. Bonython treasures under the hammer

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    Works by Boyd and Whiteley will go under the hammer when the eclectic collection of entrepreneur Kym Bonython is auctioned today.




  88. Assaults on NT teachers 'covered up'

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    SERIOUS assaults on teachers by students in NT schools happen every week and are routinely covered up, the education union says




  89. Crash linked to body in fridge

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    The partner of a woman whose body was found in a refrigerator, drove his motorcycle into a semi-trailer, possibly on purpose.




  90. Au pairs call for nanny status

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    Working mother of two Nicole Spicer says that without au pairs she would not have been able to continue working as a lawyer.




  91. Top officials admit dam strategy error

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    TWO senior water executives were of the view that Wivenhoe Dam was run in a strategy subsequently shown to be wrong.




  92. Crowning glory of Queen's reign

    The Australian | The Nation | 6 Feb 2012 | 6:00 am MST

    FOUR months ago, Queen Elizabeth II won a legion of new admirers during her 16th trip to Australia.




  93. Solitude and the City

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 5:51 am MST

    When one lives in New York – of the so called Tri-State area of cities and towns within the particular geography of New York State, New Jersey and Connecticut – masses of humanity each day move and engulf.

  94. An important intervention on energy policies, but will the Lib Dems pay attention?

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 5:48 am MST

    The economist Dieter Helm is one of the few policy thinkers respected on both sides of the coalition. Oliver Letwin is a long-standing friend of his and Clegg’s office views him as one of the best economic brains in the country. All of which makes Helm’s attack on Chris Huhne’s energy policies in The Times today as interesting as the anti-wind farm letter signed by a 101 Tory MPs.

    Helm argues that the policy of huge subsidies for renewables is a mistake and that shale gas is a

  95. Trip to “Cuban Paradise”


    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 4:10 am MST

    Recently the Washington Post dedicated three pages of its travel section to Cuba. Apparently, since April last year, the Treasury Department’s Office of Asset Control has issued “people-to-people” licenses to organizations such as the National Trust for Historic Preservation and tour operators such as Friendly Planet and Insight Cuba. The current administration has decided last year to reinstate licenses to touring companies for trips to the communist island previously boycotted for 50 years.

  96. The Hidden Agenda Behind the Media War on Komen

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 4:05 am MST

    When the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure made a decision to sever its ties with America’s number one seller of abortions, Planned Parenthood, the media went to war. The media coverage was slanted in such a way that “mainstream” reporters like Andrea Mitchell and Lisa Myers of NBC News were openly advocating for a point of view—pressuring Komen to reverse course and give in to Planned Parenthood.

  97. Not If, But When

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 4:05 am MST

    The Jewish sage, Hillel, said, “In a place where there are no men, strive to be a man.” This has been interpreted to mean that it is an obligation to stand against evil, even if other’s courage dissert them. One doesn’t have to be a historian, a military strategist, a biblical scholar or any other credentialed expert to know that the question of the destruction of Iran’s nuclear and missile capabilities is not one of if, but when?

  98. A Tale of Two Republican Parties

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 4:00 am MST

    There are two Republican parties. One is fairly liberal, it is hostile to the left but it also believes in stealing their thunder by adopting moderate versions of their policies.

  99. Diabolical American Propaganda Storm Fogs Republic as 2012 Race Ticks Down

    CanadaFreePress.Com | 6 Feb 2012 | 3:58 am MST

    All societies coexist with elements of propaganda, in one form or another. Most typically, politicians use propaganda in order to win over the credulous, while anathematizing their enemies. Yet, the level of propaganda now regularly encountered in the United States is truly staggering. For a recent example consider how Obama presents himself as godlike when in a 2008 speech he promised:

  100. Just in case you missed them...

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 3:49 am MST

    ...here are some posts made on Spectator.co.uk over the weekend:

    Fraser Nelson says the richest 1 per cent pay 28 per cent of the UK's income tax, so let's not scare them away.

    James Forsyth says Lords reform is going to dominate the next parliamentary session, but the government will have a tough time passing it.

    Jonathan Jones reports on two attacks on David Miliband, and finds that public opinion is split on Gove's school reforms.

    Daniel Korski thinks a massacre in Syria now

  101. Putin's end

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 6 Feb 2012 | 2:41 am MST

    This weekend, thousands of people defied the cold and the control in Moscow to show their dislike for Vladimir Putin and what Russia has become under his leadership: corrupt, energy-reliant, centralised, and uncompetitive. It is now a country that must win externally because it can't help but lose internally. ‘Post-BRIC’, as a new report has it.

    My guess is that Putin will ‘win’ the presidential election, and will ensure that a sufficient number of counter-protests make it look as if he has more support than he actually has. That's exactly the

  102. Scarlett Johansson is the woman in black

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    SCARLETT Johansson looked stunning in a tight black gown as she arrived at a film ceremony in Berlin to pick up an international actress award.




  103. Demi Moore's first step on road to recovery

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    HAS Demi Moore taken steps to address the sudden deterioration in her health?


  104. The Victorian Poisoner

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    AT 8am on March 24, 1873, a small, frail woman was taken from her cell at Durham prison and led across the chilly yard by two women wardens. Though declaring her innocence of the crime for which she had been convicted. Her destination was a gallows where her executioner William Calcraft and a small crowd of 50 onlookers were waiting for her.




  105. Tamara Ecclestone all smiles on Italian TV

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    TAMARA ECCLESTONE was all smiles while appearing on Italian TV programme the Chiambretti Sunday Show yesterday.


  106. Long Live The Queen

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    JOHN STAPLETON was just a schoolboy when Princess Elizabeth ascended the throne. Sixty years on to the day, he recalls how it was the start of a brave new world for the monarch and her nation.




  107. Skin's cold comfort

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    YOU know winter has truly arrived when your lips are chapped, your hands are cracked and your face is red and dry.




  108. Newsman Nicholas Owen selects his finest hour

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    HE'S about to release his autobiography, Days Like This, to coincide with his 65th birthday.


  109. How I shaped up the Shaolin way

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    IT IS 6am on a freezing cold winter morning. The sky is dark and the house quiet except for the muted panting of a seriously unfit woman. I am trying to follow a Shaolin disciple's elegant movements on an exercise DVD. To be honest I'd rather be in bed.




  110. Long Live The Qyeen

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    THE infant school in the pretty Pennine village of Diggle is not a natural venue for momentous announcements. So when on this day back in 1952 the headmaster Mr Farrar interrupted lessons I suspect that even as young children we realised something unusual was happening.




  111. What's happened to Billy Connolly's sense of humour?

    Daily Express :: Features Feed | 5 Feb 2012 | 5:00 pm MST



    HE'S A big hairy man with a brilliant mind, shambolic dress sense and, it appears, an increasingly short fuse. Twice in the past week Billy Connolly has stormed off stage during his current tour after being heckled by audience members.




  112. Don’t let’s be beastly to the bankers

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 5 Feb 2012 | 10:00 am MST

    The Twitter hashtag #BankerOutrage was launched by Radio Four yesterday summing up a very popular mood. It’s not unusual for bankers to be hated after crashes. After the South Sea Bubble burst in 1721, there were calls in the Lords for the bankers involved to be dumped in sacks filled with serpents and dropped in the Thames. But that was the immediate aftermath: what’s odd now is the timing. As we say in the leading article of this week’s Spectator, Hester had a bonus twice the size last year — and no

  113. The government will have to fight for Lords reform

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 5 Feb 2012 | 9:16 am MST

    House of Lords reform is one of those subjects that make most people’s eyes glaze over. But it is going to dominate the next parliamentary session.

    The Queen’s Speech will include a bill for elections in 2015 for 20 per cent of the seats in the Lords using a ‘Proportional Representation’ voting system. This bill will take an age to get through the Commons, where it has to start if the coalition is to use the Parliament Act to push it through, let alone the Lords.

    One of the things

  114. Storm in an Indian teacup

    The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum | 5 Feb 2012 | 7:19 am MST

    So, does India want the UK’s aid or not? If you believe the Indian finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee, the funds are unnecessary, ‘peanuts’ even. The Daily Telegraph reports that British ministers ‘begged’ the Indian government to take the money. The story is likely to garner attention, especially as aid to a growing power like India is a contentious proposition.

    But before taking the Indian Finance Minister's word — and the Telegraph's reporting — as truth, it is worth looking at a few facts. First, Mukherjee made the statement in 2010,

  115. Tony Clement involved in choosing G8 projects, documents show

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 9:53 am MST

    The federal New Democrats are charging that Conservative cabinet minister Tony Clement was involved in choosing which projects were selected for the multi-million dollar G8 legacy fund.

    Conservative cabinet minister Tony Clement was involved in which projects were selected for the multi-million dollar G8 legacy fund, according to documents obtained by the NDP.



  116. Concordia crews weigh fuel removal, two more bodies found

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 9:38 am MST

    Tourists take photos on Monday, using the grounded cruise ship Costa Concordia as a background.

    Salvage experts can begin pumping fuel from a capsized cruise ship as early as Tuesday to avert a possible environmental catastrophe and the ship is stable enough that search efforts for the missing can continue, Italian officials said.



  117. RIM’s new CEO Thorsten Heins already under fire

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 9:27 am MST

    Thorsten Heins made it clear he wants RIM to do a better job rolling out new products on time and improving communications with customers.

    Takeover talk resumed Monday as investors and analysts pondered whether the little-known Thorsten Heins had been appointed to lead a RIM turnaround or prepare it for sale.



  118. Man jailed 4 months for sexually assaulting wife

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 9:10 am MST

    A young academic has been sentenced to four months in jail for sexually assaulting his wife during rough sex despite his claim that, in their dominant-submissive sexual role playing, “no” frequently meant “yes.”



  119. Second Cup hit by SUV

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 8:51 am MST

    A collision on University Ave. this morning sent an SUV smashing into a Second Cup coffee shop.



  120. Montreal judge rejects Leon Mugesera’s bid to stay in Canada

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 8:32 am MST

    Leon Mugesera is shown in Montreal on Federal Court earlier this month in Montreal.

    A Quebec Superior Court judge has rejected Leon Mugesera’s latest bid to stay in Canada and delay the extradition to his native Rwanda, where he is wanted on charges of inciting genocide and crimes against humanity.



  121. Chinese astrologist predicts a lucky year for Thorsten Heins

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 8:31 am MST

    New RIM CEO Thorsten Heins, born in the Year of the Rooster, can look ahead to a lucky year, but must watch for legal conflicts, according to his Chinese horoscope.



  122. Federal crime bill to cost Ontario $1 billion

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 23 Jan 2012 | 7:42 am MST

    The new federal crime bill will cost Ontario $1 billion to beef up prisons in order to house new inmates, the province says.



  123. 50,000 federal jobs on the chopping block in Ottawa

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 22 Jan 2012 | 9:00 pm MST

    Looming budgets cuts could mean loss of services to aboriginal, seniors, low-income earners and vulnerable Canadians, think tank warns.



  124. Toronto Now: Ford brothers step on scale for second weigh-in

    Thestar.com - Home Page | 24 Oct 2011 | 5:36 am MDT

    Police said the woman sustained minor injuries to the head but is conscious and breathing.



  125. New detention centre on old Defence site

    Herald Sun | National News | 5 Apr 2011 | 1:39 am MDT

    By Malcolm Farr GOVERNMENT forced to open another mainland detention centre for asylum seekers, far away in Tasmania.




  126. I wouldn't get married - Michael Kirby

    Herald Sun | National News | 4 Apr 2011 | 8:26 pm MDT

    FORMER judge Michael Kirby says he longs for the day when gay marriage is legal but he and his partner probably wouldn't wed.




  127. Australia's wettest March on record

    Herald Sun | National News | 4 Apr 2011 | 5:18 pm MDT

    AUSTRALIA has recorded its wettest March in history with an average rainfall of more than 133mm.




  128. Qantas training strike-breakers

    Herald Sun | National News | 4 Apr 2011 | 3:26 pm MDT

    QANTAS has been preparing for industrial action by secretly training its managers in the US in ground-handling operations.




  129. Support for Gillard's Labor plunges again

    Herald Sun | National News | 4 Apr 2011 | 8:00 am MDT

    THE political rollercoaster has taken another sharp turn with Tony Abbott's Coalition back in front of Labor, the latest Newspoll reveals.






-- Finis --