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Globes, July 31, 2006
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July 31, 2006:
Page One news from the Israeli business daily, Globes. The newspaper is published in Rishon, Le-Zion, Israel.
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Journal & Courier, July 31, 2006
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July 31, 2006: An excerpt from a
column in Lafayette - West Lafayette, Indiana's
Journal & Courier:
Welcome to your new newspaper
Today's Journal & Courier marks a new era in journalism in Lafayette.
Through nearly 200 years, the Journal & Courier and our
predecessors have worked to bring you the news and information you want
and need. The innovations have been plentiful -- from using motorized
vehicles in the early 20th century to deliver newspapers to the launch
in the 1990s of jconline.com.
But we've never been more excited about what the J&C has to offer. Our $24.1 million press project today.
It
allows us to deliver your news with more vibrant colors, with crisp
reproduction and in a new format that is easy to use. One thing that
won't change, however, is our commitment to provide thorough and fair
coverage of news that affects you and your community.
So welcome to your new newspaper, and thank you for making us a part of your lives each day.
Julie Doll, Executive Editor
Gary Suisman, President and Publisher
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Reading Eagle, July 28, 2006
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July 28, 2006: An excerpt from a story in Pennsylvania's
Reading Eagle:
Fans Stand By Landis
By Mike Urban
EPHRATA -- Friends and former neighbors of Tour de France Champion
Floyd Landis were sticking by their hero Thursday, reluctant to believe
he cheated despite news that he tested positive for a performance
enhancer during the race.
"I don't believe he did anything wrong," said Michael C. Farrington,
a friend of Landis and owner of Green Mountain Cyclery along Route 272
in Ephrata, where Landis bought his first bike. "He's a straight-up
guy. It's not his style."
Farrington's wife, Jennifer F., said she spoke with Landis by phone
Thursday. Landis, who was in France, assured her he did nothing wrong.
"He is absolutely distraught," Jennifer said.
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La Repubblica, July 27, 2006
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July 27, 2006: The Italian newspaper,
La Repubblica, reports
on the Mideast crisis conference held in Rome yesterday. International
leaders failed to agree on a cease-fire for the violence on the
Lebanon-Israel border.
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USA Today, July 26, 2006
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July 26, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
USA Today:
The battle for Baghdad, again
By RICK JERVIS and DAVID JACKSON
BAGHDAD -- The battle for Iraq's future has come down to this: Can
the country's U.S.-supported government control escalating violence in
the streets of its capital?
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki met
with President Bush on Tuesday at the White House, where they announced
a plan to dispatch more U.S. and Iraqi troops to Baghdad to try to
salvage a faltering security plan for Iraq's war-ravaged capital.
The leaders said an unspecified number of troops would be redeployed
to respond to a surge in violence that has killed more than 100
civilians a day since Bush's surprise visit to Baghdad six weeks ago,
when Maliki announced a security crackdown in Baghdad.
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San Francisco Chronicle, July 25, 2006
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July 25, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
San Francisco Chronicle:
Hot and bothered:
Too much summer in area known for fog
By C.W. NEVIUS
In the scorched outposts of the Central Valley, they have a name for this blistering weather -- they call it summer.
But around here we don't do hot. We are more used to fog and breezes
and temperatures that might creep up into the 90s. So, when this
happens, the usual conventions are thrown out the window.
As the temperatures climbed into the triple digits day after day,
the Bay Area wilted into grumpy disarray. The problem isn't the heat.
It is that we don't know what to do with such a long, sauna-like
stretch. _____________________________________________
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Intelligencer Journal, July 24, 2006
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July 24, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Lancaster, Pennsylvania newspaper, the
Intelligencer Journal:
Farmersville celebrates FloydBy P.J. REILLY
LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Paul and Arlene Landis didn't watch their
son, Floyd, on television Sunday morning as he rode triumphantly
through the streets of Paris, celebrating his victory in the Tour de
France.
That's because they were riding their bikes, too -- on their way
home from Sunday school and worship at Martindale Mennonite Church.
"Our neighbor taped it, so we're going to watch it later at a party at their house," Mr. Landis said Sunday afternoon.
The Landises, who don't own a television, already knew their son was the winner of the world's most prestigious cycling race.
"Someone told us Sunday is just ceremonial," Mrs. Landis said. "He won it on Saturday."
Floyd's hometown of Farmersville was buzzing with celebratory activities Sunday.
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The Boston Globe, July 21, 2006
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July 21, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
The Boston Globe:
Citing loose bolts, Romney closes eastbound tunnel
By MATT VISER and SCOTT ALLEN
Governor Mitt Romney yesterday ordered an immediate closure of the
eastbound Ted Williams Tunnel, a main route for bus traffic to Logan
International Airport, saying emergency repairs were necessary because
two bolts holding up a ceiling panel were loose.
Last week, in the aftermath of the ceiling collapse in the adjacent
Interstate 90 connector, Romney and Massachusetts Turnpike Authority
Chairman Matthew J. Amorello had separately assured the public that the
tunnel appeared to be safe, though its drop ceiling used epoxy-and-bolt
fasteners similar to those suspected of failing in the connector.
Inspectors from the Turnpike Authority had spotted the loose bolts
last week, but agency officials concluded they were not an immediate
concern, in part because the ceiling panels were lighter than in the
connector.
But after state highway department inspectors conducted another
visual inspection Tuesday and Wednesday, Romney reached a different
conclusion, saying in a news conference yesterday afternoon that two
loose bolts on a single panel posed "a very substantial threat to
public safety." One bolt had slipped out of the roof by an inch, the
other by half an inch.
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The Wichita Eagle, July 20, 2006
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July 20, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
Wichita (Kansas) Eagle:
Temperature boils to new high; today is forecast to be just as hot
By STAN FINGER
Roy Smith sighed as he settled into a chair in
the basement of St. John's Episcopal Church, happy to be out of the
searing afternoon heat.
"It's just a relief to be here," Smith said between bites of pizza.
He was one of more than 30 people taking advantage of a shelter set up
Wednesday for those without a house or air conditioning.
"I saw four ambulances go by as I was walking here," Smith said,
"and I didn't know if there'd been an accident or a homeless person had
died in this heat."
It was a fair question for a day that saw a record high temperature
of 109 for Wichita, topping by 2 degrees the mark set during the
legendary heat wave of 1980. No deaths were reported locally from the
heat on Wednesday, though at least seven people were treated at local
hospitals for heat-related illnesses.
The heat wave is blamed for at least 12 deaths nationwide, including a Coffeyville man who died earlier this week in Tulsa.
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Pedoman Rakyat, July 19, 2006
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July 19, 2006: The Makassar, Indonesia newspaper,
Pedoman Rakyat, reports on Indonesia's devastating tsunami that killed more than 530 people.
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Izvestia, July 18, 2006
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July 18, 2006: The Moscow, Russia newspaper,
Izvestia, reports on the end of the G8 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia.
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Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, July 17, 2006
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July 17, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Ontario, California newspaper, the
Inland Valley Daily Bulletin:
Cost of firefighting adds upBy NIKKI COBB, GINA TENORIO and JEFF HORWITZ
It was almost like commandeering Air Force One for forest fire duty.
For
the first time, state firefighting officials enlisted the aid of a
DC-10 jet that had been converted to an air tanker to fight the
estimated 82,000-acre wildfires wreaking havoc in San Bernardino
County's mountains and desert.
At a cost of $52,000 a day to rent the giant aircraft, officials have to weigh the price of the aircraft against potential loss.
The fires have already claimed one life, and a number of firefighters have collapsed and been hospitalized for heat exhaustion.
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An-Nahar, July 14, 2006
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July 14, 2006:
The Beirut, Lebanon newspaper, An-Nahar, reports on the escalating violence in the Middle East.
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Maariv, July 13, 2006
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July 13, 2006: The Tel-Aviv, Israel newspaper,
Maariv, reports on the Israeli military's attacks in south Lebanon.
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The Times of India, July 12, 2006
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July 12, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
The Times of India:
Mumbai Attacked
By Times News Network
Mumbai: Thirteen years after terror struck the most potent symbols
of India's financial capital in a series of 13 blasts which killed 257
people, it struck again, this time at Mumbai's very lifeline -- its overcrowded suburban Western Railway.
The horrors of March 12, 1993 came back to haunt Mumbai on Tuesday
evening when seven high-intensity bombs ripped through first-class
compartments of suburban trains headed towards the distant suburbs
between 6.24 pm and 6.34 pm. Two of the blasts occurred when the trains
were on platforms at Mahim and Borivli. At the time of going to press,
an estimated 172 people had died and another 460 were injured. The toll
is likely to rise.
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Newsday, July 11, 2006
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July 11, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
Newsday:
Probe focuses on doctor in building explosion
By HANA ALBERTS, JULIA NEYMAN, LUIS PEREZ, GRAHAM RAYMAN, KATIE THOMAS, JOHN VALENTI, and CHUCK BENNETT
An explosion, likely fueled by a gas leak, leveled a venerable
East-Side brownstone, showering the upscale block with glass shards and
filling the neighborhood with heavy, acrid smoke.
Investigators Monday were looking into whether the doctor who owned
the building, Nicholas Bartha, 66, turned on the gas and tried to kill
himself and destroy the building as a final, bitter salvo in a
long-running divorce battle. Paul Browne, a police department
spokesman, said the incident was being investigated as a crime.
Hours
before the blast, police sources said, Bartha e-mailed a 15-page,
single-spaced letter to his ex-wife and 20 others, blaming her for
hardships in his life, said a police official with knowledge of the
situation.
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La Stampa, July 10, 2006
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July 10, 2006: The Torino, Italy newspaper,
La Stampa, reports on their country's win over France in the
World Cup final.
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The Guardian, July 7, 2006
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July 7, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in London, England's newspaper,
The Guardian:
How London carried on
By JONATHAN FREEDLAND
Shortly after the second world war, a new poster appeared in tube
stations around the capital. It declared simply: "London Underground
carried on." It was a bald statement of fact - amazing as it seems,
tube trains had indeed run throughout the war - but it was also a
powerful statement of the "Blitz spirit", that now-cliched shorthand
for the values London - and Britain - most admires about itself. Those
four simple words expressed, in quiet and modest fashion, a pride in
the capital's quiet, reserved stoicism, in the dogged determination to
keep going - without making too much of a fuss.
....And yet the response to the
attacks of July 7 2005 tells
a different story. One year on, it seems an event that many thought
would mark a collective watershed has barely changed us. From our
habits of leisure and transport, to our attitudes to politics, to the
way we live with each other, the bombings have not had the impact many
expected. We could mark today's anniversary with another poster: London
carried on.
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The Korea Times, July 6, 2006
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July 6, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Korea Times:
Roh, Bush Stress Diplomatic Solution
By RYU JIN
President Roh Moo-hyun and U.S. President
George W. Bush Thursday discussed the North Korean missile issue and
agreed to make joint efforts along with other relevant nations for a
diplomatic solution, Chong Wa Dae announced.
"President Roh and President Bush held telephone talks between 7:50
a.m. and 8 a.m. and agreed to make joint diplomatic efforts to resolve
the North Korean missile issue," Roh's spokesman Jung Tae-ho said in a
press briefing.
....On Wednesday, North Korea test-fired at least seven missiles,
including a long-range Taepodong-2 weapon, in an apparent bid to pull
the United States into a direct negotiation rather than the six-party
talks involving four other nations.
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Florida Today, July 5, 2006
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July 5, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
Florida Today:
Astronauts on way to space station
By TODD HALVORSON
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Discovery's astronauts will inspect their
ship's heat shield today after an impressive Independence Day launch on
a mission marking NASA's second attempt to get a deadly foam-shedding
problem under control.
With sophisticated radar and more than 100 high-resolution cameras
tracking Discovery's climb into orbit, engineers spotted a flurry of
small foam fragments flying off the shuttle's redesigned external tank.
But NASA officials said Discovery was traveling too high and too
fast for the debris to do the type of serious damage that doomed
Columbia's crew during an ill-fated atmospheric reentry back in
February 2003.
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Niagara Gazette, July 4, 2006
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July 4, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in New York's
Niagara Gazette:
National pride finds home in local manBy CARLY PETERSON
Harvey Lettman wakes up each morning with the flag in the back of his mind.
The Town of Tonawanda resident's patriotism is rooted deep beneath
the laugh lines on his face and his casual, quick smile. Lettman's
patriotism is his confidence, which has grown and matured as he did.
"Every day I wake up and cherish that I live in America," he said.
"Some people don't realize they have everything here. I grew up
thinking that way and enjoying and appreciating life."
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El Quintanarroense, July 3, 2006
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July 3, 2006:
The Playa del Carmen, Mexico newspaper, El Quintanarroense, reports on Mexico's presidential election.