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San Francisco Chronicle, April 30, 2007
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April 30, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the
San Francisco Chronicle:
THE MAZE MELTDOWN HIGHWAY BUCKLES: Tanker overturns on I-880 connector, igniting thousands of gallons of gas --
key overpass collapses
By PATRICK HOGE, DEMIAN BULWA, PETER FIMRITE
Isaac Rodriguez rushed into the night from the Oakland sewage treatment plant where he works and found a blinding light -- a
curtain of fire engulfing the elevated freeway ramps nearby.
A
tanker truck carrying 8,600 gallons of gasoline had overturned at 3:41
a.m. and burst into flames on the 50-foot-high ramp connecting
westbound Interstate 80 to southbound Interstate 880. Within minutes,
the ramp above it -- connecting eastbound I-80 to eastbound I-580 --
collapsed in the 3,000-degree cauldron.
"It was massive," said
Rodriguez, a 53-year-old sanitation supervisor at the East Bay
Municipal Utility District wastewater treatment plant. "It looked like
a big slab of plastic because it was melted."
But it was no
big slab of plastic. The overpass was a critical component of one of
the Bay Area's busiest highway interchanges, the
MacArthur Maze. The network of connector ramps merges the East Bay's three major highways: Interstates 80, 580 and 880.
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The State, April 27, 2007
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April 27, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the Columbia, South Carolina newspaper,
The State:
Democrats spar in S.C.By AARON GOULD SHEININ
ORANGEBURG
-- The front-runners for the Democratic presidential nomination mostly
played it safe during Thursday's first-in-the-nation presidential
debate, allowing a couple of second-tier candidates -- Delaware Sen.
Joe Biden and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson -- to shine.
The war in Iraq and gun control dominated the debate, held at S.C. State University.
Thursday
night was the first time the eight candidates had appeared together on
stage. It is the kickoff to a weekend of events that has South Carolina
in the center of the presidential campaign universe.
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Nepszabadsag, April 26, 2007
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April 26, 2007:The Budapest, Hungary newspaper,
Nepszabadsag, reports on the funeral for former Russian president Boris Yeltsin.
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OC Post, April 25, 2007
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April 25, 2007: An excerpt from a story in the Santa Ana, California newspaper, the
OC Post:
Potentially habitable planet found By SETH BORENSTEIN
(Associated Press)
WASHINGTON
-- For the first time astronomers have discovered a planet outside our
solar system that is potentially habitable, with Earth-like
temperatures, a find researchers described Tuesday as a big step in the
search for "life in the universe."
The planet is just the right
size, might have water in liquid form, and in galactic terms is
relatively nearby at 120 trillion miles away. But the star it closely
orbits, known as a "red dwarf," is much smaller, dimmer and cooler than
our sun.
There's still a lot that is unknown about the new
planet, which could be deemed inhospitable to life once more is known
about it. And it's worth noting that scientists' requirements for
habitability count Mars in that category: a size relatively similar to
Earth's with temperatures that would permit liquid water. However, this
is the first outside our solar system that meets those standards.
"It's
a significant step on the way to finding possible life in the
universe," said University of Geneva astronomer Michel Mayor, one of 11
European scientists on the team that found the planet. "It's a nice
discovery. We still have a lot of questions."
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The New York Times, April 24, 2007
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April 24, 2007: Excerpts from two stories in
The New York Times:
David Halberstam, 73, Reporter and Author, DiesBy CLYDE HABERMAN
David
Halberstam, a Pulizer Prize-winning journalist and tireless author of
books on topics as varied as America’s military failings in Vietnam,
the deaths of firefighters at the World Trade Center and the
high-pressure world of professional basketball, was killed yesterday in
a car crash south of San Francisco. He was 73, and lived in Manhattan.
Mr.
Halberstam was a passenger in a car making a turn in Menlo Park,
Calif., when it was hit broadside by another car and knocked into a
third vehicle, said the San Mateo County coroner. He was pronounced
dead at the scene.
The man who was driving Mr. Halberstam, a
journalism student at the University of California at Berkeley, was
injured, as were the drivers of the other two vehicles. None of those
injuries were called serious.
Mr. Halberstam was killed doing
what he had done his entire adult life: reporting. He was on his way to
interview Y.A. Tittle, the former New York Giants quarterback, for a
book about the 1958 championship game between the Giants and the
Baltimore Colts, considered by many to be the greatest football game
ever played.
Tall, square-jawed and graced with an imposing
voice so deep that it seemed to begin at his ankles, Mr. Halberstam
came into his own as a journalist in the early 1960s covering the
nascent American war in South Vietnam for The New York Times.
Boris N. Yeltsin, Who Buried the U.S.S.R., Dies at 76By MARILYN BERGER
Boris
N. Yeltsin, the burly provincial politician who became a Soviet-era
reformer and later a towering figure of his time as the first freely
elected leader of Russia, presiding over the dissolution of the Soviet
Union and the demise of the Communist Party, died yesterday in Moscow.
He was 76.
His death, at a hospital, came at 3:45 p.m., the
Kremlin said, making the announcement without ceremony, a reflection of
the contradictory legacy of Mr. Yeltsin’s presidency in the view of
many Russians, including his successor, the current leader, President
Vladimir V. Putin.
Medical officials told Russian news
agencies that Mr. Yeltsin had died of heart failure after being
admitted to the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow. He had suffered
heart problems for years, undergoing surgery shortly after his disputed
re-election as Russian president in 1996.
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Le Figaro, April 23, 2007
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April 23, 2007:The Paris newspaper,
Le Figaro, reports on the first round of the French presidential election.
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The Roanoke Times, April 20, 2007
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April 20, 2007: The Roanoke Times:
Virginia Tech Shooting VictimsBy JOHN CRAMER
A Holocaust survivor. A Christian teenager.
Engineers and artists, animal lovers and bookworms.
Quiet scholars and quirky class clowns.
American natives and foreign nationals.
The victims of the massacre at Virginia Tech were a cross-section of the human condition.
They were as different
as the school's two trademarks -- the gaudy maroon and orange that
flash across the gridiron each autumn and the dignified Hokie limestone
that has formed the bedrock of the school for more than a century.
But
they were alike, too -- all going about their lives on what started as
another ordinary Monday, alike in their fate to be in the wrong place
at the wrong time when a gunman came along.
They were teenagers away from home for the first time, professors in the twilight of their careers.
Some
were Facebook devotees who shared their lives on the Internet; others
were devoted Bible readers whose inner thoughts were known best by God.
By God's grace and their own academic interests, they came from across the world and from across town to attend Virginia Tech.
Some came to spend four years getting a degree, others came to spend their entire careers.
In
the end, they shared a common fate: Lives cut short on a spring morning
when a cold wind filled with snowflakes and tree blossoms formed the
backdrop for the deadliest shooting rampage in the nation's history.
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Newsday, April 19, 2007
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April 19, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
Newsday:
Va. Tech stunned by images of gunmanBy JOHN RILEY
Virginia
Tech mass killer Seung-Hui Cho reached out from his grave to lament
that "this didn't have to happen" and warned that "I will no longer
run" in a bizarre multimedia package received by NBC News Wednesday
that he apparently mailed in the two-hour interval between two sets of
slayings that took 32 lives and his own on the college campus Monday.
"When
the time came, I did it. I had to," said an angry, sneering Cho, who
railed about the "debaucheries" of the rich and described the two
Columbine High School killers as "martyrs."
He also compared
himself to Jesus and flaunted two handguns in a variety of bad-dude
poses in a package that included an 1,800-word manifesto, 28 video and
audio clips, and 43 still pictures.
The words and images stunned
Virginia Tech students.
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The Virginian-Pilot, April 18, 2007
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April 18, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
The Virginian-Pilot:
Tech victims remembered at local and state vigilsBy JOHN-HENRY DOUCETTE and AARON APPLEGATE
BLACKSBURG
-- Thousands of Virginia Tech students stood in the center of campus
Tuesday evening holding candles in outstretched hands, bathing Drill
field in a light that grew stronger as dusk turned to night.
After
a half-hour vigil organized by student leaders, they had been told they
were free to go home, but the mourners stood silent and still.
After about 10 minutes, the students began to chant, "Let's go Hokies!" reaching a roar that echoed across the campus.
"Hokie
Nation is an attitude and a mentality and this put a face to it,
several thousand actually," Kacey Morasch, a 27-year-old graduate
student, said.
During the vigil, two buglers on opposite sides
of Drill field did a call-and-response version of Taps in a moving
tribute to the 32 victims of Monday's shootings.
Gov. Timothy M. Kaine and several university officials attended the event.
"I
want America and the world to see this outpouring on the Virginia Tech
Drill field this evening," Zenobia Hikes, vice president for student
affairs at Tech, told the students. "This is love. We will move on from
this but it will take the strength of each other to do it."
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The Charlotte Observer, April 18, 2007
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April 18, 2007: An excerpt from a
column in
The Charlotte Observer:
Strength, spirit summoned, but sorrow still too heavy to lift longBy TOMMY TOMLINSON
BLACKSBURG, Va. -- They cheered at the end of the service like it was a basketball game, like they could holler away the sorrow.
It even worked for a minute or two.
But then the service ended, and the
students at Virginia Tech walked back out into the world. And that's when Derek O'Dell broke down.
On
Monday he told his story again and again. How he was sitting in German
class in Norris Hall when a man with a gun walked in and opened fire.
Cho Seung-Hui killed 32, then himself. Derek was shot in the right arm.
You might have seen him on the news Monday night, his arm in a sling,
calm and strong.
But now it was Tuesday afternoon, just after
the memorial in Cassell Coliseum, and as Derek came out of the men's
room he could not hold back the tears.
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Collegiate Times, April 17, 2007
Image from newspaper's Web site
|
April 17, 2007: An excerpt from a story in Virginia Tech's newspaper, the
Collegiate Times:
Our Sorrow, Our ResolveSurreal.
For
an event that has touched so many lives and will define the year 2007
for generations, there are only a handful of individuals who were able
to directly influence yesterday's tragedy.
For most students,
whether isolated off campus or huddled in their residence halls,
responding to worried parents and concerned friends came in futile
sound bites.
As numbers continued to rise, totals became more
and more unbelievable to everyone around the country: The whole
situation was especially exasperating to all those here at Virginia
Tech.
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The Roanoke Times, April 17, 2007
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April 17, 2007: An excerpt from a story in
The Roanoke Times:
Panic, chaos grip campusPolice are searching for a link between two shooting incidents at Tech that left 33 dead.By DONNA ALVIS-BANKS
Time stopped in Blacksburg Monday.
For
two Virginia Tech students, it stopped shortly before 7:15 a.m. in the
West Ambler Johnston dormitory, one of the largest halls on campus with
895 residents. The unidentified students -- one male and one female --
were shot and killed by an unidentified gunman.
As events of the
day unfolded, time stood still for students and professors, for school
administrators and school janitors, for police officers and rescue
personnel, for parents far from Blacksburg and for ordinary residents
close to home.
In disbelief and horror, people around the nation
learned of the worst mass shooting in U.S. history as the national
media spread the news and descended on the small college town.
(WE HAVE COMPILED A SEPARATE SECTION WITH MANY MORE PAGE ONE EXAMPLES ABOUT THE VIRGINIA TECH SHOOTING.)_______________________________________________
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Los Angeles Times, April 16, 2007
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April 16, 2007: An excerpt from a story in the
Los Angeles Times:
Spirited win for Dodgers
With every player wearing No. 42, they look a lot like Robinson, stealing five bases in a 9-3 victory over Padres.By STEVE HENSON
That No. 42 for the Dodgers, he was all over the field.
Seemingly
channeling the spirit of Jackie Robinson on the 60th anniversary of his
breaking baseball's color barrier, the Dodgers defeated the San Diego
Padres, 9-3, Sunday with every player on the home team wearing his
number.
The Dodgers stole five bases -- their highest total in
eight years -- collected 13 hits and received a strong performance from
four pitchers in winning two of three in an early series against a
division rival expected to remain abreast of the Dodgers into September.
"Our
guys should remember it for the rest of their careers," said center
fielder Juan Pierre, one of three African American players on the
Dodgers. "Standing in the outfield and seeing all the infielders with
No. 42 on their backs, it was a special moment."
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The Telegraph, April 15, 2007
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April 15, 2007: An excerpt from a story in the Macon, Georgia newspaper,
The Telegraph:
No media circus greeted RobinsonBy JIM BECKER
(The Associated Press)
On
a chilly, gray, early spring day, a black man in a sparkling white
baseball uniform walked, alone, from the dugout onto the green grass of
Brooklyn's Ebbets Field.
It was April 15, 1947, and Jackie
Robinson was about to break the shameful color line in major league
baseball, a feat that would have a lasting impact on sports and society.
There was a feel of history in the air overlaid, perhaps oddly, by a sense of somewhat calculated nonchalance.
I
was standing by the batting cage along with a handful of other sports
reporters when Robinson strode onto the field with that slightly
pigeon-toed walk of the natural athlete.
About 10,000 of a crowd
that would swell to almost 26,000 at the tidy old park, many of them
black, had gathered well before game time. They made no special sound
when Robinson appeared. No cameras flashed. Television was in its
infancy, and there were no TV cameras on hand.
....Robinson had
agreed with Rickey to hold his fiery temper and natural competitiveness
in check, to endure the racial taunts from fans and opposing players.
When the wraps came off and he was free to argue with the umpires and
return with interest the foul bench jockeying, Robinson told me: "I can
hardly wait for an umpire to throw me out of a game." In other words,
to treat him like everybody else.
But there was, there is, no
way to treat Jackie Robinson like everybody else. His victory was his
victory. Alone. His defeat would have been our defeat. All of us. He
did not lose.
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The Herald-Sun, April 14, 2007
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April 14, 2007: An excerpt from a story in the Durham, North Carolina newspaper,
The Herald-Sun:
CHARGES STAND AGAINST NIFONG By WILLIAM F. WEST
RALEIGH
-- On Friday, Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong suffered his
second major setback of the week, this one at the hands of the N.C.
State Bar.
Nifong watched in silence as the State Bar rejected
his attorneys' motion to dismiss part of an ethics complaint against
him resulting from alleged misconduct in his failed sexual assault
prosecution of former Duke lacrosse players David Evans, Collin
Finnerty and Reade Seligmann.
The three men were declared innocent by Attorney General Roy Cooper on Wednesday.
Nifong's
attorney, Dudley Witt, failed to persuade the State Bar that Nifong
didn't commit pre-trial wrongdoing when Nifong withheld exculpatory DNA
results.
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Newsday, April 13, 2007
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April 13, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
Newsday:
CBS fires Don ImusBy VERNE GAY
Decisively
ending a torturous week for two of the least likely protagonists
imaginable -- a nearly all-black female basketball team from New Jersey
and a legendary shock jock from New Mexico -- CBS yesterday finally
pulled the plug on "Imus in the Morning" and its embattled host.
The news for
Don Imus
reportedly came in a single late-afternoon call from CBS chief
executive Les Moonves before Imus headed to a 2 1/2-hour meeting at the
governor's mansion in New Jersey with the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers.
An
official statement followed, which bluntly noted that a show that made
some $2.5 million in profit for CBS -- a figure that paled in
significance to the political and media clout it has wielded in New
York and Washington for more than 20 years -- "will cease broadcasting
... on a permanent basis."
That capped a day of heightened
drama, in which Imus lashed out on his radio show early yesterday at
his attackers, while the Rutgers team later appeared on "Oprah," and
civil rights leaders including Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton
met privately with Moonves.
Following that, Moonves said in a
statement, "In our meetings with concerned groups, there has been much
discussion of the effect language like this has on our young people,
particularly young women of color trying to make their way in this
society." He then noted, "that consideration has weighed most heavily
on our minds."
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The Indianapolis Star, April 12, 2007
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April 12, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
The Indianapolis Star:
American voice, Hoosier icon diesBy CHRISTOPHER LLOYD
Kurt
Vonnegut, the Indianapolis-born literary giant behind seminal
20th-century novels "Slaughterhouse-Five" and "Breakfast of Champions,"
died Wednesday evening at age 84.
Vonnegut, who often marveled
that he had lived so long despite his lifelong smoking habit, had
suffered brain injuries after a fall at his Manhattan home weeks ago,
said his wife, photographer Jill Krementz.
"He's the closest
thing we've had to Voltaire," Tom Wolfe, whose first book had a blurb
from Vonnegut, told Bloomberg News Service. "It's a sad day for the
literary world."
Vonnegut had been scheduled to speak in
Indianapolis on April 27 as part of the ongoing "Year of Vonnegut"
celebration honoring his life and work. Vonnegut's son Mark planned to
give the 2007 McFadden Memorial Lecture written by his father.
The
author's writing was distinctive for its combination of the satirical
and the fantastical, and leavened by a black humor that looked
disdainfully upon humankind's capacity for destruction.
"I will
say anything to be funny, often in the most horrible situations,"
Vonnegut, whose watery, heavy-lidded eyes and unruly hair made him seem
to be in existential pain, once told a gathering of psychiatrists.
Other notable novels include "Cat's Cradle," "The Sirens of Titan" and "God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater."
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The Star Ledger, April 11, 2007
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April 11, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the Newark, New Jersey newspaper,
The Star Ledger:
RUTGERS SQUAD SPEAKS OUTBy BRIDGET WENTWORTH and MARY JO PATTERSON
Ten
young women whose lives were disrupted when a man they did not know
maligned them on his national talk radio show last week stepped out of
the shadows yesterday to announce they will meet privately with Don
Imus, the show's host.
"I believe we can speak up for women,
not just African-American women, but all women," said Essence Carson, a
member of the Rutgers University women's basketball team which Imus
referred to collectively as "nappy-headed hos" during his "Imus in the
Morning" show a week ago today. "We have a lot to say."
For
days, the women had stood silently on the sidelines, as the storm
surrounding Imus' casual, ugly slur raged. Yesterday it was their turn
to talk.
Carson, her teammates and head coach C. Vivian
Stringer appeared at a news conference at the Rutgers Athletic Center
in Piscataway. Imus made his remarks on WFAN 660-AM the morning after
the Scarlet Knights lost to Tennessee in the championship game of the
women's NCAA tournament.
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AM New York, April 10, 2007
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April 10, 2007: An excerpt from an updated
story in
AM New York:
Imus Calls His Suspension 'Appropriate'By DAVID BAUDER
(The Associated Press)
NEW
YORK -- Radio host Don Imus, suspended for two weeks for calling the
Rutgers female basketball players "nappy-headed hos," called the
punishment appropriate Tuesday but stressed, "I am not a racist."
"What
I did was make a stupid, idiotic mistake in a comedy context," Imus
said on his show Tuesday morning, the final week before his suspension
starts.
Asked if he could clean up his act as he promised on
Monday, he said, "Well, perhaps I can't" but added "I have a history of
keeping my word."
The radio host also tried to shift some of the
focus from his own comments to the degrading of black women by black
men. He also said his staff had been trying to set up a meeting with
the Rutgers players so he could apologize, but he said he didn't expect
forgiveness.
Of the suspension by MSNBC and CBS Radio, Imus
said: "I think it's appropriate, and I am going to try to serve it with
some dignity."
Members of the Rutgers women's basketball team and coach C. Vivian Stringer planned to speak publicly about it later Tuesday.
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Jam-e-Jam, April 9, 2007
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April 9, 2007:Page One news from the Tehran, Iran newspaper,
Jam-e-Jam.
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The Augusta Chronicle, April 6, 2007
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April 6, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
The Augusta Chronicle:
Englishman, rookie lead after tough dayBy DAVID WESTIN
What would it be like to have a dry
Masters Tournament for a change?
It's
a likely scenario this week, one that will involve the color green,
which stands for even-and over-par scores on Augusta National Golf
Club's leaderboards.
Of the 96 starters in Thursday's first
round, 82 shot over-par rounds, and only Justin Rose and Masters rookie
Brett Wetterich, with 3-under-par 69s, broke 70.
On a day with
final-round-like firm greens and an unfavorable northwestern breeze,
Rose was the lone player to plot his way around the course without a
bogey. Wetterich had two bogeys, but led the field with five birdies at
the 7,445-yard course.
Two players -- David Howell and David Toms -- shot 70.
Augusta
resident Vaughn Taylor heads the group at 71, which includes Tim Clark,
Zach Johnson, Rich Beem and J.J. Henry, another Masters rookie.
Four-time champion Tiger Woods was 1-under for his round through 16 holes, but bogeyed his final two holes for 73.
Defending champion Phil Mickelson opened with 76, which matched his highest score in 54 previous rounds in the Masters.
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The Daily Telegraph, April 5, 2007
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April 5, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in London's newspaper,
The Daily Telegraph:
Hostages safely back on British soilBy THOMAS HARDING, GEORGE JONES and DAVID BLAIR
The 15 Royal Navy personnel captured by Iran last month have arrived back in Britain.
The
14 men and one woman disembarked from their British Airways flight at
Heathrow airport shortly after 12.20 pm, posing briefly for the waiting
cameras.
Back in their regulation British uniforms they then
boarded two RAF Sea Kings helicopters which were waiting to take them
to Royal Marines Base Chivenor, near Barnstaple, north Devon.
Once there, they will undergo medical checks, a full de-briefing and -- finally -- be reunited with their families.
The sailors and marines had boarded the flight from Teheran at about 6am London time.
Speaking outside Downing Street Tony Blair welcomed their safe return.
He
stressed again that no agreements had been made to secure the return of
the captives, but said lines of communication which had opened up with
Iran over the crisis should be pursued.
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The Advocate, April 5, 2007
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|
April 5, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the Baton Rouge newspaper,
The Advocate:
Ex-Grambling coach Robinson diesBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RUSTON (AP) -- Former Grambling coach
Eddie Robinson,
who created a football powerhouse at the small, black college in
northern Louisiana that turned out hundreds of NFL players, has died.
He was 88.
The soft-spoken coach spent nearly 60 years at
Grambling State University, where he set a standard for victories with
408 and nearly every season saw his top players drafted by NFL teams.
Doug
Williams, a Super Bowl MVP quarterback was one of them. Williams said
Robinson died shortly before midnight Tuesday. Robinson had been
admitted to Lincoln General Hospital on Tuesday afternoon.
"For
the Grambling family this is a very emotional time," Williams said
Wednesday. "But I'm thinking about Eddie Robinson the man, not in
today-time, but in the day and what he meant to me and to so many
people."
Robinson's career spanned 11 presidents, several wars
and the civil-rights movement. His older records are what people will
remember: In 57 years, Robinson compiled a 408-165-15 record. Until
John Gagliardi of St. John's, Minn., topped the victory mark four years
ago, Robinson was known as the winningest coach in all of college
football.
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Contra Costa Times, April 4, 2007
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April 4, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in California's
Contra Costa Times:
Journalist freed in deal with prosecutorsBy JOSH RICHMAN
Freelance
videographer and blogger Josh Wolf, who spent a record-setting seven
months in prison for refusing to comply with a subpoena, was freed
Tuesday after cutting a deal with prosecutors.
Wolf, 24, of San
Francisco, emerged from a federal prison in Dublin soon after U.S.
District Judge William Alsup vacated the contempt-of-court order
against him. He had been imprisoned 226 days for refusing to turn over
his videotape of a protest or testify before a grand jury.
Wolf,
who works full time as outreach director for Peralta Community College
District's cable television station in Oakland, has posted to his Web
site -- www.joshwolf.net -- all of the previously unreleased video
footage he shot of a G-8 Summit protest July 8, 2005, in San
Francisco's Mission District, at which a police officer was hurt and
someone might have tried to set a San Francisco police car on fire.
Swearing
in a new court document that he neither took part in nor could identify
those responsible for the car's damage or the officer's injury, Wolf
extracted a promise from prosecutors that they would not use the
existing subpoena to compel his testimony before a grand jury.
At
a news conference late Tuesday afternoon on the steps of San Francisco
City Hall, Wolf said the deal was "a good decision" because it freed
him from having to testify -- which he said was long the sticking point
with prosecutors.
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News Sentinel, April 4, 2007
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April 4, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the Knoxville
News Sentinel:
Seventh heaven: Lady Vols reclaim familiar place By DAN FLESER
CLEVELAND
-- After a night of hard-nosed, blue-collar work, Tuesday officially
went down in Tennessee women's basketball history as a banner day.
In
the build-up to UT's 59-46 victory over Rutgers before a crowd of
20,704 at Quicken Loans Arena, several Lady Vols struggled to explain
what winning a national championship would mean. In the joyous
aftermath, some still were struggling for clarity on the subject.
"I'm getting overwhelmed right now," point guard Shannon Bobbitt said. "I'm speechless."
No
problem since Bobbitt and all of her teammates had the requisite effort
down pat, parlaying gritty defense and dominant rebounding into the
salvation for the second-lowest scoring output by a championship team.
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Chicago Tribune, April 3, 2007
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April 3, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the
Chicago Tribune:
Zell lands TribuneEmployees to get majority stake in debt-heavy companyBy MICHAEL ONEAL
After
an epic corporate drama, Chicago's Tribune Co. will go private in a
transaction that puts the 159-year-old media conglomerate in the hands
of the city's most iconoclastic entrepreneur. The deal is a high-stakes
bet that a pillar of the nation's old-media establishment can propel
itself into the digital future.
Late Sunday, following a weekend
of heated negotiations, Tribune's board accepted a revised $34-a-share
proposal from Chicago real estate magnate Sam Zell to buy out the
company's public shares in a complex, $8.2 billion transaction
structured around an employee stock ownership plan, or ESOP.
To
help finance the deal, Tribune said it would sell the Chicago Cubs and
its 25 percent stake in local cable channel Comcast SportsNet Chicago
after the 2007 season. It will also take on $8.4 billion in new loans,
leaving the company with more than $13 billion in debt and the most
encumbered balance sheet in the newspaper industry.
That will
create plenty of risk at a time when the industry faces increasing
pressures from the Internet. But, after battling restive shareholders
for almost a year, Tribune's chief executive, Dennis FitzSimons, said
getting out of the public glare will help as the company attempts to
transform itself.
"Being private in the traditional media business right now is an advantage," he said.
The
matchup of Tribune and Zell couldn't be more improbable. The deal will
place a motorcycle riding, epithet slinging multibillionaire atop of
one of the most conservative, buttoned-down companies in America.
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Los Angeles Times, April 3, 2007
Newseum Image
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April 3, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the
Los Angeles Times:
Zell could be biggest winnerFor $315 million, the mogul gains virtual control of Tribune and a chance for big profit.By MICHAEL A. HILTZIK
Sam
Zell's taking effective control of Tribune Co. for a relatively modest
cash outlay makes him potentially the biggest winner in Monday's
pending sale of the Chicago media company.
The Chicago real
estate magnate would be in charge of a company valued Monday at $7.9
billion for an investment of as little as $315 million. That sum would
give him an option to buy 40% of Tribune's stock that could be
exercised at any time within 15 years of the completion of the deal.
But
financial analysts said Zell was unlikely to exercise the option but
instead would probably cash it out before its expiration. In the
meantime, as chairman, Zell would be calling the shots.
Whether
Tribune's employees win depends on whether the company's performance
continues to deteriorate as the newspaper and TV industries struggle.
All company contributions to employee pension plans would be funneled
through a new employee stock ownership plan, or ESOP, beginning next
year, after the deal is complete.
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The Gainesville Sun, April 3, 2007
Newseum Image
|
April 3, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in
The Gainesville Sun:
Gators claim second consecutive national titleBy PAT DOOLEY
ATLANTA -- More confetti. More nets. More trophies.
More history.
The Florida basketball team made the dream come true Monday night in the Georgia Dome.
The
Gators did what they set out to do back in April when the sophomores on
that team announced they were coming back to win a national title.
Consider it done.
Florida
beat Ohio State 84-75. The Buckeyes must be tired of seeing orange and
blue. The Gators also defeated Ohio State in the BCS title game in
football about three months ago.
In the last game of the college
basketball season and in the last game Florida's starting five would
play together, the Gators made sure their legacy would go far beyond
"best team ever at UF."
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 2, 2007
Newseum Image
|
April 2, 2007: An excerpt from a
story in the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Cards lose unceremoniouslyBy JOE STRAUSS
Perhaps
the Cardinals should have taken the hint when their team charter
bounced from air pocket to air pocket on the flight home from Memphis
on Saturday night. Drinks spilled, a flight attendant fell in an aisle
and several players became queasy from the 45-minute thrill ride home.
Chris
Carpenter, an uncomfortable flier, took an earlier flight Saturday
afternoon and missed the ordeal that made his teammates' plane look
like the scene of a food fight.
Unfortunately for Carpenter, he couldn't avoid turbulence Sunday.
The
New York Mets turned the Cardinals' flag-raising commemoration of their
2006 World Series win into a 6-1 setback in Major League Baseball's
season opener at Busch Stadium.
In an uncharacteristically
bumpy home start for Carpenter, the Mets scored the game's first five
runs, dodged a couple of potentially big innings, then rode six solid
innings from future 300-game winner Tom Glavine.