Saturday, March 31, 2007

New Low-Cost Vaccine for Africa

March 30, 2007

Britain

For the first time, Europe's largest drugs company, GSK, is starting the registration process for a vaccine from which it never expects to make money.

Syndey Voluntarily Dims for an Hour

March 31, 2007

Australia

Australia's largest city has dimmed for an hour as Sydney underwent a self-imposed partial blackout to raise awareness of global warming.

Palestinians Reclaim Gaza Farmland

March 31, 2007

Gaza, Palestine

Nearly 18 months after Israel completed its disengagement from illegal settlements in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian farmers and contractors have begun agricultural and academic projects to rehabilitate the area.

Iraqi Singer wins Arab 'Pop Idol'

Marh 31, 2007

Lebanon

An Iraqi singer has shot to stardom after winning an Arab version of Pop Idol in a glitzy Beirut final.

Friday, March 30, 2007

Astronaut to Run Marathon from Outerspace

March 30, 2007

Outerspace

US astronaut Sunita Williams is set to run the Boston Marathon ... in space.

Video Games Conquer Retirees

March 30, 2007

Mississippi, USA

For 133 years the School Sisters of Notre Dame have lived here in a thick forest just up the hill from the Tangipahoa River. In a modest but stately compound called St. Mary of the Pines, 52 retired members of this Roman Catholic order spend much of their time as the order’s members have since the 19th century. They read and garden, fish and sew. They pray five times a day.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Alzheimer's Vaccine Works on Mice, says Japanese Scientist

March 29, 2007

Japan

Scientists in Japan have developed an oral vaccine for Alzheimer's disease that has proved effective in mice, raising hopes that an effective treatment for humans can be found for the fatal condition, which affects millions.

Tallest Man finds Love after Hunting High and Low

March 29, 2007

Beijing

It will not be easy for them to always see eye to eye, but the world's tallest man has married a woman half his age and two-thirds his height after advertising for a wife around the world.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Mauritanians Vote for President

March 25, 2007

Mauritania

Mauritanians are voting in a run-off presidential poll after an inconclusive first round election two weeks ago. The two candidates are former cabinet minister Sidi Ould Sheikh Abdellahi and opposition figure Ahmed Ould Daddah.

Friday, March 23, 2007

FL Community College Checkmates Ivys

March 22, 2007

Florida, USA

Don't underestimate the grocery store deli worker, the security alarm salesman or the 34-year-old computer science student who anchor the Miami Dade College chess team. The community college undergrads have already faced Yale, Harvard, Dartmouth, Northwestern and beaten them all.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Pill Stops Cow Burps and Saves the Planet

March 21, 2007

Germany

Cut down on flying, sell the car and recycle your bottles. But if you really want to tackle global warming, you should stop your cow from burping.

Billionaire Rents Luxury Homes to Hawaii's Poor

March 21, 2007

Hawaii, USA

A Japanese billionaire has selected the first four of eight Hawaiian families that will get the chance to rent one of his multimillion-dollar homes in an exclusive Honolulu oceanside area for just $150 (£76) a month.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Sierra Leone Honors Africa Slave Campaigners

March 20, 2006

Sierra Leone

As the UK marks 200 years since it abolished the slave trade, Sierra Leone has decided to purge its capital, Freetown, of streets named after the British and replace them with the names of Africans who fought in the abolition movement.

Missing Boy Scout Found Alive

March 20, 2007

North Carolina, USA

A 12-year-old Boy Scout whose favorite book was about a youngster lost in the wilderness now has his own harrowing survival tale to tell after rescuers found him Tuesday, dehydrated and disoriented from four days in the wooded mountains of North Carolina.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Beirut Never Dies

March 14, 2007

Lebanon

"We have the bombs," jokes hip-hop MC and occasional graffiti artist RGB, aka Rajab Abdul Rahman (RGB refers to the root letters of his first name). He shakes the plastic bag he is holding in his hands so the spray cans inside clang and echo hollowly in an otherwise empty parking lot. RGB and his colleagues - 6K, Fish and Rat - empty the contents of the bag on the ground, distribute the cans, pull their scarves up to mask their faces and begin. Bands of silver and black paint spread across a bullet-scarred wall. Hours later, they step back to survey the night's labor. Boldly emblazoned across the wall are graffiti letters taller than their creators, proclaiming in capital letters: "Beirut Never Dies."

Friday, March 16, 2007

Not even Homelessness Deterred 9 yr old's Devotion to her School

March 16, 2007

Massachusetts, USA
Boston Globe

Brenda Tejeda Baez has endured a lot of chaos in her short life. By the time she was in third grade, she had lived in five different friends' apartments and two homeless shelters. Her mother is unemployed, and she rarely sees her father, who lives in the Dominican Republic. When she started kindergarten, she knew only Spanish. Yet, the 9-year-old girl, now a third grader, has refused to budge on the one constant in her life: attending the Louis Agassiz Elementary School in Jamaica Plain.Even when her family had to live for three months in a homeless shelter in Worcester, Brenda, her mother, and her little brother traveled more than an hour each way on public transportation from Worcester to Jamaica Plain to get to the Agassiz.

"In her mind, she started at this school, and in her mind, she needed to finish here," said her 27-year-old mother, Dolores Baez .

In her four years at the school, Brenda's determination has earned her top grades, second place in her school spelling bee and, yesterday, the first-ever Boston public schools "Absolutely Incredible Kid" prize.

Mayor Thomas M. Menino and school officials surprised the third-grader with the award, which honors students with unusual personal success stories. Nearly 100 students were nominated by Boston teachers, parents, and community leaders for the award, which was part of a national event sponsored by Camp Fire USA.

"She deserves so much for what she faces every day," her third-grade teacher, Barbara Feeney , wrote in her award nomination for Brenda.

Brenda, wearing a bright pink shirt and blue jeans, was characteristically composed as she accepted the honor in a school assembly, posed for pictures with the mayor, and received a gift bag of prizes, including a $200 gift card . Her mother greeted her daughter as she stepped onto the stage. As others made speeches about her, Brenda sat between the mayor and the School Committee chairwoman, crossed her ankles, and swung her legs back and forth.

"I'm really proud of the fact that despite the obstacles she's had to overcome, she's here. She's here every day and, from what I hear, a good student," said Michael G. Contompasis , superintendent of schools.

Speaking directly to Brenda, Contompasis said, "We're expecting big things out of you."

Brenda's mother, Dolores Baez , came to the Boston area in 2001 to join her daughter's father and brought then 4-year-old Brenda from the Dominican Republic to join them a year later. Baez and Brenda's father separated 3 1/2 years ago, and he returned to the Dominican Republic. Baez began shuffling her children from one friend's apartment to another.

When she first started school, Brenda struggled with English. But as her language skills progressed, she grew to love school.

"School is about learning, and learning is a special way to know what you're supposed to do," Brenda said yesterday. "And this is why I like school: You know lots of lessons and different things. You get to see . . . your friends. You go to special places, like school trips."

She would refuse to stay home when she was sick -- even one day when she had a dreadful cough.

"I said, 'Lie down, and stay in bed,' " her mother said, speaking as the school's principal, Alfredo Nuñez, translated. "She said, 'No, I'm going to school, and if I feel sick, that's why we have a nurse at school.' "

In January 2006, after roughly five years in five friends' apartments, the family was left homeless when the friend they were staying with gave up her apartment. Baez decided it was time to stop living with friends.

"I said, 'I can't keep doing this to my children,' " she said.

Baez applied for a room in a Boston shelter, but was assigned to one in Worcester. They could not refuse; they had nowhere else to go. Brenda insisted she would move to Worcester only if she could come back to the Agassiz each day.

"She would do everything I told her," her mother said. "That was the one thing she would not accept."

So every weekday morning for three months, the family woke at 5 a.m. in the single bedroom they shared, took a taxi to the train station, caught the 6 a.m. train to the Back Bay station, then took the subway and a bus to school, a trip lasting more than an hour. After Brenda got to school, Baez took her son to day care, then went to her English classes.

On the train home, Brenda would do her homework, always without being asked, her mother said. They arrived back at the shelter each night at 7 p.m.

When her mother complained that she was tired, that it would be much easier if she went to school in Worcester, Brenda balked.

"I guess it's because I have so many friends here," Brenda said in an interview in the principal's office yesterday, as she sat on her mother's lap. "I couldn't stay away."

To her mother's relief, the family was placed in a shelter in Dorchester last spring. Just a few weeks after relocating, Brenda's mother rushed her to the hospital with severe stomach pains. Soon, she had an emergency appendectomy.

But it happened right near school vacation, so she missed only two days of school.

"Wednesday and Thursday," Brenda said.

As hard as the last few years have been for Brenda and her family, their perseverance seems to be paying off.

Last year, Brenda was moved into a regular classroom with native English speakers. She reads above grade level, her teacher said. And Brenda said that last year, she began dreaming in English.

She adores reading, especially Cam Jansen mysteries (chapter books, of course). She has collected so many books -- free books from the shelters, books her mother has bought her -- that her mother says she is going to have to build Brenda her own bookcase.

But math is her favorite subject, and she has already learned the multiplication tables.

Feeney, her teacher, said Brenda is an all-around strong student and always ready to help others.

"If there's a student in the class who doesn't understand something, she's the first to volunteer to help," Feeney said.

Last December, a week before Christmas, Brenda and her family moved out of the shelter and into a publicly subsidized apartment -- right across the street from the Agassiz.

She is adamant about how she gets to school now: by herself.

"She's the best thing that's happened in my life," her mother said. "I ask God that she doesn't change."

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Tiger, Orangutan Babies Playmates at Zoo

February 28, 2007

Indonesia

Call them the odd couples. A pair of month-old Sumatran tiger twins have become inseparable playmates with a set of young orangutans, an unthinkable match in their natural jungle habitat in Indonesia's tropical rainforests.

Awards for Free-Speech Defenders

March 15, 2007

International

Five "defenders of free speech", including a blind Chinese lawyer and a jailed Egyptian blogger, have been honoured at a London awards ceremony.

Palestinian PM Unveils Unity Team

March 15, 2007

Palestine

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniya has unveiled a national unity cabinet after months of negotiations between his Hamas movement and Fatah.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Pole who saved WWII Jews Honored

March 14, 2007

Poland

A Polish woman who helped save the lives of 2,500 Jewish children during World War II has been honoured by Poland's parliament.

South Africa Unveils Plan to Fight HIV

March 14, 2007

South Africa

The government proposed a five-year plan Wednesday to halve the number of new HIV infections in South Africa, saying it had failed to persuade young people to change their sexual habits.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Saving Lebanon's War-Damaged Beach

December 5, 2006

Lebanon

With white plastic bags covering his trainers, Mokhtar Hasbini, 17, stood on the Ramlat al-Baida beach and surveyed the scene of destruction. Mokhtar was an early volunteer As Beirut's only public beach it would be normally crowded with pleasure-seekers. But instead the once-white sands were blackened by an oil slick.

Hamas Reverse on Schoolbook Ban

March 13, 2007

Palestine


Banning the book sparked fears of a religious clampdown in schools
The Hamas-run Palestinian education ministry has lifted a ban on a children's anthology of folktales following widespread public outcry.