Monday, May 31, 2010

Al-Qaeda leader 'killed'


Mr Yazid, also known as Sheikh Said al-Masri, died along with his wife and three children, Islamist websites said, quoting a statement from al-Qaeda.U.S officials say they believe he was killed recently in the tribal areas of Pakistan in an American drone attack.Al-Qaeda's operational commander in Afghanistan, he is believed to have had a hand in everything from finances to operational planning.A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was "strong reason" to believe that Mr Yazid was killed in Pakistan's tribal areas in the past two weeks.Mr Yazid's last public statement was released on 4 May, eulogising the two top al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq - Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayub al-Masri - who were killed in April.

source by-news.bbc

Germany in crisis after surprise

Germany in crisis after surprise resignation of President Horst Köhler.The President read a short televised statement announcing that he was going immediately because he had been so misunderstood over military operations abroad. On a trip last week to meet German troops in Afghanistan he had declared that a country such as Germany, dependent on exports and free trade, must be prepared to use military force.The country, he said, had to act “to protect our interests, for example, free-trade routes, or to prevent regional instability which might certainly have a negative effect on our trade, jobs and earnings”. “Köhler has said something openly that has been obvious from the beginning,” said Klaus Ernst, head of the Left party. “German soldiers are risking life and limb in Afghanistan to defend the [exports] of big economic interests.”

The President tried to correct his statements but it was clear that he had opened a debate about Afghanistan which could embarrass the Government.

“The criticism [of me] has gone so far that people are accusing me of supporting unconstitutional army operations,” Mr Köhler, 67, said. “There is absolutely no basis for such criticism.” Chancellor is under criticism across Europe for her hesitant leadership in the eurozone crisis. “Everything is falling apart,” said the former head of the Greens, Joschka Fischer. However, it is the Afghan war that is having the most troubling effect. The first Cabinet casualty of Ms Merkel’s centre-right coalition was Franz Joseph Jung, who had been slow to apologise for civilian casualties caused by a German-ordered attack in Kunduz province.On his visit President Köhler, a former head of the International Monetary Fund, asked soldiers what they thought would happen next in Afghanistan. The soldiers stared at their boots. Annoyed, the President turned to a US soldier who replied promptly: “I think we can win this one, Sir!” The President approved. “That’s the answer I wanted to hear.”
“It was an honour to serve Germany as President,” he said, and turned abruptly from the cameras.
source by-timesonline.

Gaza aid ship seized by Israeli

U.S. ambassador aboard a Gaza aid ship seized by Israeli commandos is on his way home, his wife said Monday evening.Md., a Washington suburb, was among activists in the flotilla trying to get humanitarian aid to Gaza, Ann Peck said in a phone interview with The Associated Press.

She said she received a brief e-mail from Israel's foreign ministry on Monday informing her that her husband was fine and headed home. The e-mail said he would likely arrive Tuesday, didn't have a cell phone with him and would call from a New York airport when he landed, she said, adding that it didn't say which airport.

She seemed to take the situation, including numerous phone calls from news organizations, in stride."He gets himself into these messes, and the phone is going to ring," she joked.Ann Peck said that as of Monday evening she hadn't spoken with U.S. officials, nor was she able to talk to her husband, a former U.S. ambassador to Mauritania."Knowing him I doubt there are regrets," she said. "I think he was really hopeful of it making a difference."

Jean Meadors, wife of Joe Meadors, 63, of Corpus Christi, Texas, a Navy veteran also on board a seized ship, said Monday evening that she believed he was safe, "but I'd like to hear that from him."

She said his exact status, whether under arrest, detention or otherwise, was unclear.

Joe Meadors was serving aboard the U.S. Navy intelligence ship USS Liberty that was attacked by Israeli forces in 1967, killing 34 crew members.

"He hasn't had much luck with the Israelis," Jean Meadows said.

Israeli commandos on Monday rappelled down to the aid flotilla, which was trying to thwart a Gaza blockade.

source by-chron.com

Ship clash leaves Israel

Israel could pay a heavy price including damage to peace efforts with the Palestinians over the killing of 10 international activists on a Turkish ship trying to break a blockade of Gaza. Islamist Hamas's rival for Palestinian loyalties, secular president Mahmoud Abbas, was quick to condemn the naval attack as a "massacre" an ill omen for the U.S.-mediated negotiations with Israel on which he embarked three weeks ago.
Barack Obama will have to balance relations with Turkey and other Muslim allies of the United States against Washington's ties with Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, on a visit to Canada when the Israeli raid took place, canceled a planned White House meeting with Obama on Tuesday and would leave later on Monday for home, Israeli officials said.
Netanyahu's White House invitation was widely seen in Israel as an attempt by Obama to mend fences and shore up U.S. Jewish support for Democratic candidates in a November mid-term election after a frosty Oval office meeting in March.
Oussama Safa of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies predicted Obama might "ante up the pressure against the Israelis" to accommodate Palestinian demands though the Netanyahu government has said the Gaza blockade will remain.
Turkey, a non-permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, said it would seek a resolution against Israel a poke in the eye for Israel and the United States, which would prefer to see the Council sanction Iran for its nuclear programme.
"I see all the looks that I'm getting," Ben-Eliezer told Israel's Army Radio by telephone.Hamas government head Ismail Haniyeh said of the activists: "You were heroes, whether you reached (Gaza) or not."
"The difference is that this time foreigners are involved, which means a much wider impact," Shai told Israel Radio.
source by-reuters.com

We need raid 'facts' ASAP:Obama


President Barak Obama meeting with the prime minister, presses for IDF flotilla-raid details, expresses "deep regret at loss of life."Obama spoke by telephone with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu Monday after the latter cancelled a planned Oval Office meeting scheduled for Tuesday. Their 15-minute conversation, Obama conveyed his understanding for Netanyahu’s decision to return immediately to Israel from Canada and not stop in Washington following the deadly clash between the IDF and activists trying to break the Gaza blockade earlier in the day.


source by jpost.com

Pakistan lifts Facebook ban


Pakistan banned Facebook on 19 May but said it would continue to block individual pages containing "blasphemous" content.online competition that invited people around the world to submit drawings of the prophet Muhammad. Muslims consider all depictions of Muhammad as heretical.Yesterday Bangladesh also banned Facebook, saying it would lift the restriction only when the offending material was removed.
Najibullah Malik, the Pakistani official orchestrating the censorship, said Facebook had removed all "sacrilegious material" from its website and promised that "nothing of this sort will happen in the future". Afternoon a Facebook page entitled "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!" was still online.Facebook critics say some drawings on the Muhammad page are so offensive to Muslims that they constitute hate material. They point out that the site has previously censored sensitive material in Pakistan, including blocking a lawyer who tried to set up a satirical page entitled Taliban Times.Pakistan already bans a wide variety of websites with political or human rights content including those run by Baloch or Sindh nationalists, and videos of Pakistani soldiers beating civilians. Pornography, however, is freely available.

E.C.B. Says, Europe’s Banks at Risk From Slower Growth.



European Central Bank said Monday in a report that catalogued in sometimes alarming detail the problems facing the region’s financial institutions. E.C.B. expressed particular concern about banks’ need to refinance some €800 billion, or $980 billion, in long-term debt by the end of 2012. Borrowing costs could rise as the banks compete with governments in the bond market “making it challenging to roll over a sizeable amount of maturing bonds by the end of 2012,” the report said.
“The financial markets remain fragile and especially the developments in recent weeks have shown the necessity of heightened alertness,” Axel Weber, president of the German Bundesbank and a member of the E.C.B.’s governing council, said Monday in a speech in Mainz, Germany.
“It is possible that the short-term impact will not be as severe as seems to be expected at the moment,” said Mr. Papademos, whose term ended Monday.
European banks will need to set aside an estimated €123 billion in 2010 for bad loans, the report said, in addition to the €238 billion they set aside from 2007 to 2009. However, the sum for 2010 was lower than earlier estimates. Banks also benefited from a rebound in securities markets, the report said.
While profitability of larger banks has improved, their shares are likely to fall in the near future, the E.C.B. report said, citing an analysis of options that investors use to bet on the direction of stock prices.“The continued reliance of some smaller or medium-sized euro area banks on central bank refinancing continues to be a cause for concern,” the report said.

“The tensions in the sovereign bond markets spilled over to other market segments, such as the foreign exchange market and equity markets,” the E.C.B. president, Jean-Claude Trichet, said Monday in a speech in Vienna. “Trading volumes and liquidity became erratic, and volatility spiked.”

“In view of these exceptional circumstances prevailing in the financial markets, we decided that exceptional intervention was necessary,” Mr. Trichet said. He said that the E.C.B. could only do so much to restore stability to the financial system. Euro governments must ultimately craft a system for disciplining countries that violate treaty limits on debt and deficits.

“I call on euro area governments in particular to work actively together to reach agreement on a quantum leap of the effectiveness of their collegial surveillance,” Mr. Trichet said.

source by nytimes.com


Cameroon bus accident

45 people were killed in a bus accident overnight in Cameroon, media reports said Monday.The accident occurred in Etoundou village.There were altogether 60 passengers in the bus.

Gaza aid flotilla



10 people were killed when the six-strong flotilla of boats was intercepted in international waters. At least three Scots are understood to have been on an aid ship which was stormed by Israeli commandos as it sailed towards Gaza.
Scotland's Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Israel's actions had been "rightly condemned around the world".

The Israeli government has said its forces were shot at and attacked with weapons when they boarded the ship overnight.

Ms Sturgeon called on Israel to lift its blockade of Gaza, and expressed her "deep sadness" at the loss of life on the flotilla. "My primary concern is for the safety of the Scots that are on board. The Israeli government must provide immediate reassurance of their current situation and well-being."This use of violence against a humanitarian convoy carrying medicine and other aid is being rightly condemned across the world and demonstrates the increasing need for Israel to lift the blockade."The blockade of Gaza is causing untold suffering to ordinary Palestinians who want to go about their everyday lives in peace and must be brought to an end."

Ms Sturgeon said she had heard reports that at least three Scots were involved.Scots believed to have been on the vessel when it was boarded was journalist and documentary maker Hassan Ghani, 24, a former Stirling University student from Glasgow.

Scottish Palestinian Forum secretary Alison Phillips said: "I know Theresa McDermott personally from my own involvement and met her in the Scottish Parliament only last month.

"This morning's attack on the flotilla took place in international waters and was thus a grave violation of both international maritime and humanitarian law.

"I ask that the Israeli ambassador be summoned to the Foreign Office to explain these actions."

Israel had repeatedly said the boats would not be allowed to reach Gaza.


source by bbc news, you tube

Saturday, May 29, 2010

China's and Koreas to avoid clashes


China's Wen urges Koreas to avoid clashes.China's Premier Wen Jiabao said,"urgent" need to avoid clashes and ease tensions following the sinking of a South Korean warship.
Wen, speaking after a summit with the Japanese and South Korean leaders, gave no indication that China is ready to join them in blaming North Korea for the incident.

"The urgent task now is to defuse the impact of the Cheonan incident, change the tense situation and avoid clashes," he told a press conference.

"China will actively communicate with relevant parties and lead the situation to help promote peace and stability in the region, which fits our common and long-term interests best."

South Korea announced reprisals against the North after international investigators reported on May 20 that a North Korean submarine fired a torpedo to sink the Cheonan with the loss of 46 lives.

South Korea's President Lee Myung-Bak, at a joint press conference with Wen.

apanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama, said he expects "wise cooperation" by the neighbouring countries in handling the disaster.whose country Friday announced new sanctions on the North over the incident, said the three leaders agreed "that this is a serious issue related to peace and stability in Northeast Asia".

source by google.com/hostednews.

BP's top kill



The most ambitious bid yet to stop the worst oil spill in U.S. history ended in failure. BP was unable to overwhelm the gusher of crude with heavy fluids and junk. President Obama called the setback "as enraging as it is heartbreaking."
The company determined the "top kill" had failed after it spent three days pumping heavy drilling mud into the crippled well 5,000 feet underwater.It's the latest in a series of failures to stop the crude that's fouling marshland and beaches, as estimates of how much oil is leaking grow more dire.
U.S. history — exceeding even the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster — and has dumped between 18 million and 40 million gallons into the Gulf, according to government estimates.
BP PLC Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said,"This scares everybody, the fact that we can't make this well stop flowing, the fact that we haven't succeeded so far,"
President Barack Obama .visited the Gulf Coast to see the damage firsthand. Obama said,"It is as enraging as it is heartbreaking, and we will not relent until this leak is contained, until the waters and shores are cleaned up, and until the people unjustly victimized by this manmade disaster are made whole."
In the latest try, BP engineers pumped more than 1.2 million gallons of heavy drilling mud into the well and also shot in assorted junk, including metal pieces and rubber balls.
The hope was that the mud force-fed into the well would overwhelm the upward flow of oil and natural gas. But Suttles said most of the mud escaped out of the damaged pipe that's leaking the oil, called a riser.

"If they can't get that valve on, things will get much worse," said Philip W. Johnson, an engineering professor at the University of Alabama.

Johnson said he thinks BP can succeed with the valve, but added: "It's a scary proposition."

"They are going to destroy south Louisiana. We are dying a slow death here," said Billy Nungesser, the parish president. "We don't have time to wait while they try solutions. Hurricane season starts on Tuesday."

source by news.yahoo.com

Military Option in Pakistan


The U.S. military is developing plans for a unilateral attack on the Pakistani Taliban in the event of a successful terrorist strike in the United States that can be traced to them, The Washington Post reports.
The military would focus on air and missile strikes but also could use small teams of U.S. Special Operations troops currently along the border with Afghanistan, the Post said.
A senior U.S. official told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Pakistan already has been told that it has only weeks to show real progress in a crackdown against the Taliban.
At the same, the Obama administration is working to improve ties with Pakistani intelligence officials to head off attacks by militant groups, the Post reported.

Officials quoted by the Post and the AP requested anonymity because of the sensitivity surrounding U.S. military and intelligence activities in Pakistan.

source by Foxnews.com

Friday, May 28, 2010

Attackers Strike Sect Mosques in Pakistan

Turkey silent on nuclear stockpile

Nuclear treaty conference


The 189 member nations of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty on Friday adopted a detailed plan of small steps down a long road toward nuclear disarmament, including a sharply debated proposal to move toward banning doomsday arms from the Middle East-U.S.The 28-page final declaration was approved by consensus on the last day of the monthlong conference, convened every five years to review and advance the objectives of the 40-year-old NPT.The United States, Russia, Britain, France and China — commit to speed up arms reductions, take other steps to diminish the importance of atomic weapons, and report back on progress by 2014.
"on the establishment of a Middle East zone free of nuclear weapons and all other weapons of mass destruction."The final document also calls for convening a conference in 2012.
James Jones said in a statement late Friday that the U.S. has "serious reservations" about the conference and "deplores" the decision to single out Israel in the Mideast section of the document.He said, the 2012 conference United States will ensure that it will only takes place "if and when all countries feel confident that they can attend." Jones said, "Because of (the) gratuitous way that Israel has been singled out, the prospect for a conference in 2012 that involves all key states in the region is now in doubt,"
Iran and Syria had dissented loudly on various points in the final hours, but no objections were raised in the concluding session.After the declaration's approval, Iran's chief delegate Ali Asghar joined with the others in hearty applause beneath the U.N. General Assembly hall's soaring dome.
"All eyes the world over are watching us," the conference president, Libran Cabactulan of the Philippines, said before gaveling the final document into the record.
"All eyes the world over are watching us," the conference president, Libran Cabactulan of the Philippines, said before gaveling the final document into the record.
The decision was "an important step forward towards the realization of the goals and objectives of the treaty," Egypt's Maged Abedelaziz said afterward, speaking for the 118-nation Nonaligned Movement of mainly developing countries."The final document this conference adopted today advances President Obama's vision" of a world without nuclear weapons, U.S. Undersecretary of State Ellen Tauscher told the assembled delegates.
The last NPT conference, in 2005, failed to adopt a consensus declaration, in part because U.S. President George W. Bush had withdrawn U.S. backing for such nonproliferation steps as ratifying the treaty banning all nuclear tests. President Barack Obama's support for an array of arms-control measures improved the cooperative atmosphere at the 2010 conference.But in the final draft the five weapons states committed to "accelerate concrete progress" toward reducing their atomic weaponry, and to report on progress in 2014 in preparation for the 2015 NPT review session.
Cubathe nuclear powers did not accept a firmer timetable, saying it had done "all we could to set a timetable with 2025 as the deadline for the total elimination of nuclear weapons."
It doesn't obligate four nations that are not members of the treaty — India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea, all of which have or are suspected of having nuclear arsenals.
On the Middle East, Arab states and Israel's allies had been at odds over wording in the plan to convene a conference in 2012 to begin a process to turn the region into a zone free of nuclear and other mass-destruction weapons.
Iran demanded that this NPT session insist Israel join the treaty before a 2012 conference. Egypt's Abdelaziz told reporters the Arab position was softer — that Israel's accession to the treaty would come as "part of the process" begun in 2012.

Although the Israelis apparently had acquiesced to U.S. urging that they take part in such a 2012 discussion, they objected to participating under terms in which they were the only nation mentioned in this way, diplomats said.

In the end, the singling out of Israel remained in the text, and Tauscher said that would "seriously jeopardize" U.S. efforts to persuade the Israelis to attend 2012 talks.
Besides Israel's attendance, other important details of a 2012 Mideast conference remain to be worked out, such as whether the talks are meant as the start of formal negotiations on a treaty.
The final document did not single Iran out by name as a member nation that has been found to be in noncompliance with U.N. nuclear safeguards agreements.
Iranians did not block final agreement, Tauscher complained, "We note that Iran has done nothing to enhance the international community's confidence in it by its performance in this review conference."
Iran's Soltanieh said the Americans should "think twice" before making such statements, that "this was not the right reaction to a positive response, positive measure by our delegation joining the consensus.""limited measures" of the final document were "a step forward" toward global disarmament, he said.

India train derailment killing

Obama says oil leak is his top priority

Bengal train derailment: 90 dead.


Mumbai-bound Gyaneshwari Express derailed in West Bengal's West Midnapore district.At least 90 passengers were killed and 200 injured.The incident occurred at 1:30 am on Friday when the train was running between Khemasoli and Sardiya stations, about 135 km from Kolkata.The tragedy has been compounded by the fact that out of the 90 dead bodies, only 11 have been identified so far. It's hence been a long and traumatic wait for relatives of the victims and information from the railway's helpline is sketchy.
Scores of anxious relatives are waiting at the Kurla station in Mumbai, the train's final destination, for some news of their families.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

mind isn't so good now: Yankees


The New York Yankees finally got a decent start from a pitcher they've been skipping in the rotation, then struggled to score any runs for him. At least their troubles are limited to the field.
The season isn't two months old, the sweltering summer months still a few weeks off, and already tempers are flaring as both New York teams try to get their legs under them.
"It was exciting — Subway Series, big series. It was fun," said rookie Kevin Russo, who drove in both of the Yankees' runs in their 2-1 win Friday night.
The Yankees avoided a season-high fourth straight loss thanks to some strong pitching — for a pleasant change — by Javier Vazquez, and an error by Mets second baseman Alex Cora that helped set up Russo's decisive hit in the seventh inning. They remain four games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East.
The Mets are in even worse shape in the NL East, where they dropped seven games out of first place after their 10th loss in 13 games.
Another season of high expectations has been reduced to the all-too-familiar story lines of injuries decimating the roster and a manager forced to constantly answer questions about his future. This time, the pressure is ramping up on GM Omar Minaya, too.
Maine said that he had not been told he was headed to the disabled list, but a couple hours later — just before the first pitch against the Yankees — it was announced that he was put on the DL. On top of that, reliever Elmer Dessens was already on his way from Triple-A Buffalo and would arrive in plenty of time to pitch against the Yankees.

"We're better than we've been, absolutely," the Mets' Jason Bay said. "At some point, I think you have to look at yourself, and I think we all have."

Back on the field, timing and injuries meant the always anticipated Subway Series opener didn't feature stars like CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett or Johan Santana on the mound.

No sir. Not for the record crowd of 41,382 that turned out at Citi Field.

The Mets trotted out 35-year-old Hisanori Takahashi, their best reliever, who hadn't started a game since he was pitching for the Yomiuri Giants. Meanwhile, the Yankees gave Vazquez his second start in 21 days — after skipping his turn twice.
The Mets only managed two walks through the first four innings against Vazquez, who left the game with a bruised finger. One of those runners was stranded after a pair of strikeouts and the other was cut down trying to steal. When the Mets finally got a hit, Angel Pagan's bloop in the fifth, Rod Barajas promptly grounded into an inning-ending double play.

"We know we have the offense," Pagan said, "we just have to find a way."

The Yankees weren't a whole lot better, putting runners on second and third with less than two out in the third and fourth innings and getting nothing out of it. Alex Rodriguez gave them another chance with a bloop double in the sixth, but Takahashi made Robinson Cano look like a fool on a pitch in the dirt, and the strikeout ended yet another threat.
Even when the Yankees finally scored, they needed some help to do it.
Nick Swisher had singled to lead off the seventh and Francisco Cervelli followed with a groundball to second base that Cora threw into center field while trying to start a double play. Russo promptly delivered a two-run double, dooming the Mets to another loss.

"I just threw it away," Cora said. "I'm thinking two instead of one, and next time I need to get the one. I'm not going to make excuses. I just need to execute."

The Yankees finally did. The Mets are still trying.

'international order':Obama


President Obama on Saturday pledged to shape a new "international order" as part of a national security strategy that emphasizes the president's belief in global institutions and America's role in promoting Democratic values around the world.
Speaking to the graduating class at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point- the ninth wartime commencement in a row, he said -- the commander-in-chief who is leading two foreign wars expressed his faith in cooperation and partnerships to confront the economic, military and environmental challenges of the future.
"The international order we seek is one that can resolve the challenges of our times,'" he said in prepared remarks. "Countering violent extremism and insurgency; stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and securing nuclear materials; combating a changing climate and sustaining global growth; helping countries feed themselves and care for their sick; preventing conflict and healing its wounds."
Obama said the U.S. will pursue a strategy of "national renewal and global leadership."
And yet, even as he calls for global cooperation, Obama has intensified America's own war in Afghanistan. And his administration has repeatedly confronted the dangers of Islamic terrorism on U.S. soil, including unsuccessful attempts to down an airliner and to explode a car bomb in New York's Times Square.
To the men and women in the hall, many of whom are headed to Afghanistan because of the expansion of the war he announced here six months ago, Obama pledged "the full support of a proud and grateful nation."

The president expressed confidence in the military's ability to succeed in Afghanistan, but warned of a "tough fight" ahead as the U.S. helps the Afghan people to rebuild its civil institutions and its security system so they can battle the Taliban and other extremists on their own.
"We have brought hope to the Afghan people; now we must see that their country does not fall prey to our common enemies," he said. "There will be difficult days ahead. But we will adapt, we will persist, and I have no doubt that together with our Afghan and international partners, we will succeed in Afghanistan."
In Iraq, he said, the U.S. is "poised" to end its combat operations this summer, leaving behind "an Iraq that provides no safe-haven to terrorists; a democratic Iraq that is sovereign, stable, and self-reliant."

But he said civilians must answer the call of service as well, by securing America's economic future, educating its children and confronting the challenges of poverty and climate change. He said the country must always pursue what he called the "universal rights" rooted in the Constitution.

"We will promote these values above all by living them -- through our fidelity to the rule of law and our Constitution, even when it's hard; and through our commitment to forever pursue a more perfect union," he said.
To the cadets themselves, he praised their pursuit of being "soldier-scholars" and praising the records of academic excellence the class of 2010 has set. He also took note of the fact that the class's top two graduates this year are both women, reflecting, he said, the "indispensable role" that women play in the modern military.
As they become commissioned officers in the U.S. army, Obama told the graduates of West Point that the country owes them a debt of graditude.
"Here in the quiet of these hills, you have come together to prepare for the most difficult tests of our time'" Obama said. "You signed up knowing your service would send you into harm's way, and did so long after the first drums of war were sounded. In you we see the commitment of our country, and timeless virtues that have served our nation well."

Pac-Man hits 30 without losing


The fact that Namco's Pac-Man has been around for 30 years can make you feel ancient.
Pac-Man is one of the few early games to have survived the novelty of the arcade era. The addictive video offering with that minimalist chomping circle has been tweaked and remade repeatedly; there have been more than 50 versions of the landmark maze game. More than 10 billion games of Pac-Man have been played worldwide. Back in the day, Namco licensed nearly 294,000 arcade editions of the original, and its success spawned numerous ancillary cottage industries. The awful, funky rock of a song called "Pac-Man Fever," for instance, didn't stop the song from climbing quickly to No. 9 on the Billboard charts. It went gold in March 1982 and eventually sold 2.5 million copies.
How exactly did Pac-Man mania happen here and throughout the world? When Pac-Man was introduced, there still weren't that many arcade games from which to choose. After the success of Pong and Space Invaders, there was a constant, frantic search for the hot new game. But the demand for something new and creative outpaced the supply of what was new and creative.
Then came Namco. Before it made games, Namco was a small Tokyo company, founded in 1955 and offering electronic rocking-horse kiddie rides at department stores. When arcade games hit the back rooms of bars in the '70s, Namco successfully riffed on the Space Invaders theme with Galaxian, which featured dive-bombing alien ships instead of the marching, menacing, slowly descending aliens of Space Invaders.
But in 1979, young Namco designer Toru Iwatani was given the green light to make a different kind of game, one that used pastel colors and would appeal first to females. Iwatani was fresh out of school, and although he didn't have the chops of Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto, he and the creator of Mario shared a common goal. They worked hard to impress their bosses to climb the corporate ladder and become company men. Iwatani called his team's creation Puckman. The name was changed to Pac-Man when marketers realized that American teens would probably replace the P in Puckman with an F.
In 1980, Namco released eight arcade inventions. Strangely, the company didn't initially think Pac-Man was going to be the standout. At conventions where Namco's games were previewed, men raved about a racing game called Rally-X. Iwatani's game, with its sweetness and more subtle colors, took time to win people over
But when Pac-Man became a worldwide phenomenon, Iwatani missed out on royalties. Today,Iwatani, however, generally was satisfied to be a company man and was promoted to head of game R&D at Namco.
And Pac-Man's success continued. Atari, which acquired the licenses to Namco games in 1978, decided to move on its Pac-Man license in late 1981. Even though the Atari version had problems that included an annoying onscreen flicker, the game sold 7 million copies. Yet it was considered unsuccessful because Atari, in one of many fits of hubris that would culminate in its eventual downfall, made 12 million game cartridges.
Even today, Pac-Man remains the most recognizable video game character in the United States. It's still Namco's biggest hit. According to the Guinness World Records 2010 Gamer's Edition, 94 percent of Americans can identify the hungry yellow sphere, edging Nintendo's ubiquitous Mario the Plumber by 1 percent.
Why does the fast-paced little bugger still thrive for Xbox Live Arcade, the iPhone and the iPad? It's the simplicity. Games were stripped down to their essence in the golden age of the arcade -- but they were intentionally difficult to win. The reason was completely monetary. You didn't need a manual to figure out Pac-Man, like you do with shooters such as Halo 3 or Call of Duty: Modern Warfare.

You were required to follow three simple rules: Navigate the maze. Eat dots. Avoid ghosts. You needed quick reflexes and a fear/hatred of those ghosts to succeed. It's the same today for the iPad and Xbox Live Arcade.
Even more than Pong, Pac-Man attracted the elusive female gamer in the early days of the arcade. While the Entertainment Software Association says that today 43 percent of online gamers are women who play casual games, in the 1980s, girls and women didn't care much about most games, presumably because the games involved shooting. Canyon Bomber, Death Race and Galaxian involved shooting something. Pac-Man wasn't about guns.

ex-EPA chief head oil spill panel


WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency chief on the job during the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska in 1989 and a former Florida senator will lead the presidential commission investigating the Gulf of Mexico disaster.
President Barack Obama on Saturday announced the appointments of William K. Reilly, EPA administrator under Republican President George H.W. Bush, and Bob Graham, a Democrat who also was Florida governor, as the panel's heads.
Obama intends to name five others to the commission, which will examine issues such as what caused the spill, the safety of offshore drilling and operations at the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that grants drilling rights. A report is due in six months.
"I can't think of two people who will bring greater experience or better judgment to the task at hand," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.
The Gulf oil spill began April 20 when BP's Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded off the Louisiana coast, killing 11 workers and rupturing an underwater pipe. Since then, at least 210,000 gallons of oil a day have been spewing into the Gulf, threatening beaches, marshes, fisheries and wildlife along the coast.
A month after the explosion, residents, elected officials and environmental groups are becoming frustrated with BP PLC's failure to cap the well. They have called for the government to take charge. BP was leasing the rig and is responsible for the cleanup. The government is signing off on the company's efforts to cap the pipe, but one Republican senator said more needs to be done.
Sen. David Vitter, R-La., said many Louisianians are frustrated that Democrats who run Congress have been holding hearings while the uncapped well continues to sully Gulf Coast waters.
"The time for committee hearings is for after the well has been capped, not before," Vitter said in the weekly Republican message.
Vitter said the focus should be on stopping the oil flow and protecting the coastline. He said coastal communities also are in desperate need of more containment booms, the barriers designed to stop oil from reaching the coast.
Vitter also promoted a bill that would raise the limit on a company's liability for an oil spill and direct work on technologies that can be used to cap similar oil leaks deep underwater.

Oil panel will not interfere with Justice probe:Barack Obama


President Barack Obama said the oil spill commission he formally unveiled on Saturday must ensure that it does not disrupt "any ongoing or anticipated civil or criminal investigation" arising from the disaster.
Obama, in his executive order establishing the commission, made his first reference to the possibility of a criminal probe into the accident in the Gulf of Mexico, but did not say such an investigation was under way.
Attorney General Eric Holder said on May 3 that the Justice Department was part of the investigation into the BP Plc oil spill, though a U.S. official at the time said it was not a criminal probe.

Plane crash in India


NEW DELHI -- An Air India Express plane overshot a table-top runway in southern India and tumbled off a cliff into a heavily wooded hilly area, killing 158 people, officials said.

The Boeing 737 from Dubai carried 160 passengers and six crew members when it crashed outside the city of Mangalore at 6:30 a.m. It then caught fire, hampering immediate rescue attempts from people in the neighboring village of Manapur.

Television images showed charred bodies being pulled out of the wreckage as firefighters worked to douse the flames. In one case, a child's limp, burned body was extricated from the smoldering plane by a policeman, who carried the child up a hill as other rescuers offered to pull him up. Eight passengers were rescued and taken to local hospitals for treatment, Air India director Anup Srivastava said in a statement. "We are setting up helplines and contacting relatives," he said.

All the passengers were Indian and, of them, there were 105 men, 32 women, 19 children and four infants, Srivastava told an afternoon news conference. The plane also carried two pilots and four cabin crew members.

Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel said three survivors suffered major injuries, three escaped with minor injuries and one passenger was unhurt. By Saturday afternoon, 146 bodies had been recovered.

Patel described the pilot of the doomed flight, Zlatko Glusica, as seasoned and experienced, with about 2,700 hours flying a Boeing 737 and 10,000 hours in the cockpit. Patel added that Glusica, a British citizen, also was familiar with Mangalore airport and runway, having flown in and out several times.

"Because the spillover area is very limited on the runway, (the plane) went over the cliff," Patel told reporters in Mangalore. A team has been set up to investigate the causes of the crash. Aviation officials said the black box and voice recorder had not yet been recovered.

The aircraft was acquired in 2007 and was without any "history of defects or any malfunction," Patel said. Weather conditions at the time of the crash were relatively normal with calm winds, and visibility was adequate, he said. "There was no rain at the time of the incident. The runway was also dry," he said, adding that everything about the flight appeared to be normal, except for the touchdown.

"It all happened in just a few seconds," one survivor, Abdul Totuttur, said by telephone from the K.S. Hegde Hospital. "By the grace of Allah, I have survived. Fortunately I was on a window seat, 19 A of the flight."

Totuttur is a manager of a sporting goods shop in Dubai and was returning home to visit family for a 10-day break. He described his escape: "The right wing was on the ground, but the left wing of the plane was up in the air. Then I saw the plane break into two in the middle. I had very little time. But I jumped out, about eight feet. I had two other people (with me) who did the same.

"It was all black," Totuttur said. "I could hear people trapped inside screaming helplessly. I walked on fire for some time. I limped and fell and picked myself up again. When I turned back and looked, there was a loud explosion and smoldering fire."