Jump to content

stu

Members
  • Posts

    29
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by stu

  1. Italian designer Giorgio Armani has stepped into the debate over super-thin models, lamenting a "lack of balance" over the issue -- but admitting he might be partly to blame. Guest editing Britain's Independent newspaper, Armani conceded that he had always used models "on the slender side", adding: "This was because the clothes I design and the sort of fabrics I use need to hang correctly on the body". "I do not feel responsible for setting a trend towards models who look anorexic ... unfortunately, there are a lot of young women who never accept that they are thin enough -- and this is an illness," he said. "In my view, all women want to look much slimmer than they are, and this encourages them to be very careful about what they eat." Organisers of this week's London Fashion Week have faced pressure to ban ultra-skinny models following restrictions imposed earlier this month at shows in Madrid. Organisers of the Spanish event placed restrictions on models with a body mass index of less than 18 and authorities in Milan are said to be considering a similar move. Supermodel Erin O'Connor also joined the debate, calling on designers to look at their attitudes to model sizes. "I can only speak from my own experience but the designers also have a responsibility to look at what's going on and accomodate slightly more to the individual," she told the Guardian newspaper. Armani is holding his first show in the British capital Thursday night as part of London Fashion Week and was editing the paper to raise awareness of "Product Red", an initiative to raise money to fight AIDS in Africa with corporate partners including Gap and American Express. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060921/en_af...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  2. Money, drink, [bleeped!], success -- Joe "Basic Instinct" Eszterhas has had and seen it all. But the burly, notorious author of some of Hollywood's biggest hits is still nursing one dream -- that one day the "schmucks with laptops (screenwriters) will be kicking [bleeped!]." If there is one thing that angers the reformed, now non-smoking, non-drinking, cancer survivor, it is the way fellow screenwriters are treated. "They have always been second-class citizens, at the bottom of the totem pole. That enraged me 30 years ago and it continues to do so. If you want to protect your own vision, you have to fight for it and I certainly got into enough fights in the course of 15 movies to feel like a grizzled ring veteran," Eszterhas told Reuters. Five years after quitting Hollywood for Ohio after a string of flops including "Showgirls" and "Sliver," and a bout of throat cancer, Eszterhas, 61, is back with a new movie and a gossipy survival guide for aspiring screenwriters. He is even enjoying a turnaround in the fortunes of "Showgirls," the 1995 Vegas stripper movie that was once savaged but is now enjoying recognition as a cult classic and could be reborn as a stage show. The screenwriter of "F.I.S.T." and "Flashdance" who dished the dirt on some of Hollywood's top stars in two previous books says he is now a "much kinder and gentler Joe" than in his rambunctious days as one of Hollywood's highest-paid screenwriters. But it doesn't stop him lacing his primer for screenwriters, "The Devil's Guide to Hollywood," with some hilarious and biting tales about the industry's elite. -- Director Martin Scorsese, Eszterhas says, is so paranoid that he puts a mirror on top of the monitor while he is filming so he can see who's standing watching behind him. -- Michael Douglas "in my experience is not brilliant and may very well, in some cases, be dumb. This is the guy who wanted to change the ending of 'Basic Instinct' because he said it wasn't redemptive." -- Sharon Stone was so disliked on movie sets that the crew on one of her early films urinated in a bathtub she was supposed to use in a scene. Eszterhas said he used anecdotes to illustrate how Hollywood works, adding "I have the same friends I always had. No one has ever said one word to me in complaint of anything I've ever written about Hollywood." GIVING ADVICE Along with the straight advice -- write what you know, never write the sequel, refuse to rewrite your script, don't live in Los Angeles -- Eszterhas provides the kind of insight that only a veteran with 15 movies to his name can supply. Don't work with a director who's just won an Oscar -- they'll be too petrified of falling short of the industry's high expectations to shoot it. Hide in the stall of the men's room of The Grille in Beverly Hills any weekday lunch hour and listen to the conversations and "you will have learned everything you need to know about Hollywood." "Children of Glory," Eszterhas's first movie since being diagnosed in 2001 with a malignant tumor that cost him 80 percent of his larynx, is an independent film about the short-lived 1956 Hungarian revolution. It focuses on an Olympic water polo match between the Soviet and Hungarian teams that took place while Soviet tanks moved in to crush the uprising. The story had a special resonance for Eszterhas, who is Hungarian, and the movie will have its premiere in Budapest on October 23 -- the 50th anniversary of the start of the Hungarian revolution. It's a lifetime away from the sexually charged movies that brought him fame. "I think it is possible that after my throat surgery and a difficult recovery I decided to do movies that were more serious," he said. "You never know after a serious illness like that how much time you have left." http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060921/people...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  3. HealthDay - THURSDAY, Sept. 21 (HealthDay News) -- The number of victims and hospitalizations in the nationwide E. coli outbreak rose starkly Wednesday as U.S. health officials presented the first "smoking-gun" evidence confirming that fresh spinach was indeed the cause.
  4. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton joined a chorus of critics of Bush administration proposals for the treatment of suspected terrorists, saying they would give broad approval to torture. "You don't need blanket advance approval for blanket torture," Clinton said in an interview with National Public Radio aired on Thursday. He said any decision to use harsh treatment in interrogating suspects should be subject to court review. President George W. Bush wants Congress to narrowly define prisoner protections under the Geneva Conventions and allow a program of CIA interrogations and detentions that critics have said amount to torture. The White House denies its interrogation program involves torture. The U.S. Supreme Court in June struck down Bush's original plan. Clinton said it was unwise to circumvent international standards on prisoner treatment, citing U.S. abuses at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, criticized treatment at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba and a secret CIA prison system outside the United States. "The president says he's just trying to get the rules clear about how far the CIA can go when they're when they whacking these people around in these secret prisons," Clinton said in NPR's "Morning Edition" interview, recorded on Wednesday. "If you go around passing laws that legitimize a violation of the Geneva Convention and institutionalize what happened at Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo, we're going to be in real trouble," he said. TWO EX-PRESIDENTS CRITICIZE Clinton was president during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and attacks on U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya and on the USS Cole, all linked to al Qaeda. Critics accused him of doing too little to contain a growing threat of terrorism. He was the second former Democratic U.S. president to criticize the policy by the Republican Bush this week. On Monday, former President Jimmy Carter told Reuters the Bush administration was condoning the torture of suspects and had tried to redefine torture "to make it convenient for them." Carter praised Republican Sens. John McCain of Arizona and John Warner of Virginia for trying to block the Bush policy on treatment of suspected terrorists. Bush's former secretary of state, Colin Powell, and William S. Cohen, who was secretary of defense under Clinton, also backed the stand of McCain, Warner and Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham (news, bio, voting record) of South Carolina. "I think it's important to support Senators McCain and Warner in this," Cohen said on Thursday. "We don't want to be seen as sanctioning torture. We're held to a higher standard and we don't want to put our troops at a higher risk." Clinton said that, even if there were circumstances where such treatment is necessary to prevent an imminent attack: "You don't make laws based on that. You don't sit there and say in general torture's fine if you're a terrorist suspect. For one thing, we know we have erred in who was a real suspect." http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060921/pl_nm/...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  5. Graduate business students in the United States and Canada are more likely to cheat on their work than their counterparts in other academic fields, the author of a research paper said on Wednesday. The study of 5,300 graduate students in the United States and Canada found that 56 percent of graduate business students admitted to cheating in the past year, with many saying they cheated because they believed it was an accepted practice in business. Following business students, 54 percent of graduate engineering students admitted to cheating, as did 50 percent of physical science students, 49 percent of medical and health-care students, 45 percent of law students, 43 percent of liberal arts students and 39 percent of social science and humanities students. "Students have reached the point where they're making their own rules," said lead author Donald McCabe, professor of management and global business at New Jersey's Rutgers University. "They'll challenge rules that professors have made, because they think they're stupid, basically, or inappropriate." McCabe said it's likely that more students cheat than admit to it. The study, published in the September issue of the Academy of Management Learning and Education, defined cheating as including copying the work of other students, plagiarizing and bringing prohibited notes into exams. McCabe said that in their survey comments, business school students described cheating as a necessary measure and the sort of practice they'd likely need to succeed in the professional world. "The typical comment is that what's important is getting the job done. How you get it done is less important," McCabe said. "You'll have business students saying all I'm doing is emulating the behavior I'll need when I get out in the real world." http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060921/od_nm/...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  6. Cameron Diaz filed a police report Wednesday accusing a photographer of assault with a deadly weapon for allegedly driving his car at her, police said. Diaz and her boyfriend, Justin Timberlake, were leaving a friend's home in Hollywood just after midnight Wednesday when a photographer who had been hiding in the bushes jumped out and tried to snap a picture of the pair, said police Officer April Harding. The couple chased the photographer "a short distance," she said. "The photographer got into his car and drove toward Diaz and Timberlake, causing Diaz to jump out of the car's way," Harding said. No one was immediately arrested and no suspects have been identified. "The investigation is in its initial stages," Harding said. A law that took effect this year holds photographers who engage in criminal behavior to get a picture liable for three times the damages they cause, plus loss of any profits the published photo might generate. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060921/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  7. A Turkish court has acquitted a prize-winning author of charges of insulting the nation in a book about the massacres of Armenians during World War I, saving the government from a fresh embarrassment in its bid to join the European Union. The acquittal of Elif Shafak came in the opening hearing of her trial Thursday, held in a cramped courtroom in central Istanbul under tight security in case of violence by nationalist protestors. The judges based their decision on a lack of evidence to prove that Shafak, 35, "denigrated the Turkish national identity" in remarks by fictional Armenian characters in her best-selling novel "The Bastard of Istanbul" or "Baba ve Pic" (The Father and the Bastard) in Turkish. The ruling came after the prosecutor assigned to the case also argued for her acquittal on the grounds that the alleged crime did not take place. Shafak, who gave birth to her first child last week, was not present in the hearing, which was followed by observers from the European Union and international rights activists. After the hearing, there were short-lived scuffles outside the courthouse between supporters of Shafak and the group of nationalist lawyers who instigated the charges against the author for challenging the official line on the Armenian massacres. Police immediately stepped in to prevent the incident from growing and detained two people, the NTV news channel reported. Shafak had faced up to three years in jail if convicted on the charges levelled under a controversial penal code article that has been used to prosecute a string of intellectuals for views considered dissident. The indictment was based on remarks by fictional Armenian characters in "The Bastard of Istanbul", originally written in English and released in Turkey in March 2006, becoming an instant bestseller. One of the book's characters speaks of "Turkish butchers" of a "genocide" while others talk about being "slaughtered like sheep". Shafak said after the hearing that she was happy with the outcome of her trial, but expressed concern over rising intolerance among nationalist circles. "I am very happy with the ruling, but I am concerned about what happened outside the courthouse," she told NTV. "I am concerned about an idea that has recently developed in Turkey, the idea that 'those who do not think like us are cooperating with the enemy'," she said, adding that a "culture of lynching" was emerging against dissident views. Shafak's trial was seen by the European Union as a test of freedom of expression in Turkey, which began membership talks with the bloc on October 4. The EU, which is set to issue next month a report on Turkey's progress in membership talks, has already urged Ankara to amend the infamous Article 301 of the penal code to guarantee freedom of expression and stop the persecution of intellectuals that has cast a pall on its membership bid. Shafak's novel moves between Istanbul and San Francisco as it tells the intertwined stories of four generations of Turkish women and an Armenian-American family, the descendants of survivors of the massacres. Armenians assert that up to 1.5 million of their people were slaughtered in what was a genocide between 1915 and 1917, as the Ottoman Empire, modern Turkey's predecessor, was falling apart. Categorically rejecting the genocide label, Turkey argues that 300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire. Much to Ankara's ire, the massacres have been recognised as a genocide by many countries. A taboo for many decades, the Armenian killings have only recently become the subject of a tentative public debate, often sending nationalist sentiment into a frenzy. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060921/wl_af...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  8. Italian forces ended their mission in Iraq on Thursday, handing over the southern province they patrol to Iraqis, while the United Nations said the country has become deadlier than ever. The force of 1,600 Italians will all be home within eight weeks, having turned over their base to Iraqis, British military spokesman Major Charlie Burbridge said. The Italians have been under British command in Iraq's mainly Shi'ite southern sector. "The Italians have been very successful here. The key to their success has been developing a good working relationship with the local governor and Iraqi authorities, making it possible to turn over security responsibility to Iraqi forces," Burbridge said. The province also includes a giant U.S. air base which will not be turned over, near ruins of the ancient city of Ur. A task force of 450 Australians will stay on that base as a rapid reaction team in case of a security emergency in the province. Dhi Qar is the second of Iraq's 15 non-Kurdish provinces to be turned over to Iraqi forces after the Japanese pulled out of mainly desert Muthanna province, also in the south, two months ago. "This is a great day in Iraq's history," Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said at a ceremony in the provincial capital Nassiriya. "Muthanna was first, now comes Dhi Qar to crown this victory, and other provinces will come to crown further victories until we reach our goal." Britain has also pulled out of its main base in a third province, Maysan, leaving British troops in the south largely confined to Basra, Iraq's second largest city. In both Maysan and Muthanna, the bases that were evacuated by the withdrawing foreign troops were promised for Iraqi forces, but were ransacked by looters within hours of the foreigners leaving. The withdrawal of the Italians means the two allies that invaded Iraq in 2003, the United States and Britain, are now the only big, rich countries with large forces left in Iraq. While other countries are pulling out, the United States has increased its own forces by thousands this year in an effort to stem a rapidly escalating spiral of violence. Washington is now focusing its effort on the capital Baghdad, moving forces from the rest of the country to do so. TORTURED TO DEATH The United Nations said in a report that 6,599 Iraqis had died violent deaths in the last two months, making the period the deadliest yet. Many of the victims were tortured to death by death squads and tortured, the report said. "Bodies found at the Medico-legal Institute often bear signs of severe torture including acid-induced injuries and burns caused by chemical substances, missing skin, broken bones, missing eyes, missing teeth and wounds caused by power drills or nails," it said. July was deadlier than August, which the Americans have said is a sign that their crackdown in Baghdad is working. But violence has already escalated again in September, with a surge in death squad killings in the capital and a series of bomb attacks in the north and west over the past several days. The latest, a massive car bomb attack on a tribal leader in Samarra, killed 10 and wounded 39 on Wednesday, according to police. On Thursday, gunmen in four cars attacked a police station in western Baghdad, killing six. U.S. commanders predict violence will get worse next week with the start of the Ramadan holy month, and they say attacks on U.S. troops have also surged in the last two weeks. Followers of radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr said U.S. forces had arrested one of Sadr's top aides, Salah al-Obeydi, at his home in the holy city of Najaf. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060921/wl_nm/...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  9. AP - Allen Snyder's garden gnome is apparently out of jail and now traveling the country. The 14-inch tall red-and-white statue disappeared from Snyder's Morgantown yard in the spring, and Snyder has since received three letters claiming to have been written by "Gnomey."
  10. Authorities on Thursday were still trying to identify a woman who was dragged to death behind a vehicle for more than a mile and left near a photograph of the man accused of killing her. The battered, disfigured body was discovered early Monday along a subdivision road north of Castle Rock, about 20 miles south of Denver. Preliminary autopsy results found that the woman suffered fatal head injuries and was strangled as she was dragged. Jose Luis Rubi-Nava, 36, was being held without bail on a charge of first-degree murder. Spokeswomen for the district attorney, the Douglas County sheriff and the coroner declined to comment Thursday. Rubi-Nava's public defender, Kathleen McGuire, did not immediately return a call. A judge sealed court documents and said he would consider McGuire's request for a gag order. In his only public statement since the arrest, Sheriff Dave Weaver did not say how the arrest was made or how the few known clues fit into the case. Among those clues is a widely circulated photograph found somewhere near the crime scene showing Rubi-Nava standing beside an unidentified woman, his right arm resting on her shoulder. Weaver said Wednesday he did not know whether the woman in the photo is the victim. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said they believe Rubi-Nava is an illegal immigrant from Mexico. Denver police confirmed Thursday they arrested Rubi-Nava on a traffic charge in April but released him. Police spokeswoman Virginia Quinones said the arresting officer suspected Rubi-Nava's identification may have been forged, but she said the department was not responsible for verifying a suspect's immigration status, and a new Colorado law directing police to cooperate with federal immigration officers was not yet in force. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060921/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  11. Republicans took a new crack at old border-security legislation Thursday as the House approved pre-election bills on deporting gang members, imprisoning tunnelers and empowering local police to arrest illegal immigrants. With no prospects this year for passing broader immigration changes favored by the Senate, House GOP leaders said taking action to seal the border was a matter of urgency. "We're running out of time in this Congress," said Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis. "The American people say border security first." But Sensenbrenner's Republican counterpart in the Senate, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, said, "I don't see how we can deal with the immigration issue on a piecemeal basis." There would be no motivation for the House to negotiate on the issue "if we take care of all of their priorities and none of the Senate's," he said. The House passed legislation last December that concentrated on border security and enforcement of laws banning employment of undocumented workers. The Senate in May passed a broader bill, generally endorsed by President Bush, that included provisions for a guest worker program and ways for the nation's estimated 12 million illegal immigrants to work toward legal status and eventual citizenship. There's been no progress in efforts to reconcile the two bills. The three border security bills the House took up Thursday were in large part already included in the bill passed last December. House leaders said one plan was to try to attach the bills to Homeland Security spending legislation that Congress must clear before the end of the session, an approach that Specter, also a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, appeared to dismiss. The Senate, meanwhile, was debating legislation passed by the House last week that would approve construction of a 700-mile fence stretching across one-third of the U.S.-Mexico border. Democrats said Thursday's votes were an attempt to cover up the failure to pass more comprehensive immigration changes. "It's political gamesmanship that forecasts an election" less than two months away, said Rep. John Conyers (news, bio, voting record) of Michigan, top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. Congressional Democratic leaders, seeking to capitalize on Hispanic opposition to the get-tough policy on illegal immigrants, on Thursday unveiled plans to enact immigration changes and improve education and health care for Hispanic families. "For too long this do-nothing Republican Congress has ignored, and in some cases worsened, the critical challenges facing Latinos," said Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid. The three House bills would: _Impose prison terms of up to 20 years for those who knowingly construct or finance an unauthorized tunnel under a U.S. border. People who permit the construction of such a tunnel could face 10 years in prison. Sensenbrenner said 50 tunnels, used to smuggle narcotics and illegal immigrants, have been discovered along the Mexican border since 1990, and 36 in the last five years. It passed 422-0. _Allow the Department of Homeland Security to hold illegal immigrants detained for crimes or as threats to national security beyond the current limit of six months, and set up expedited procedures for deporting these people. The bill also would make it easier to detain and deport illegal immigrants found to be part of criminal street gangs. It passed 328-95. The National Immigration Forum voiced opposition to the provision, saying it "gives the attorney general the ability to designate any group as a gang and then punish an individual for belonging to that group, regardless of whether the individual committed a crime." _Reaffirm the authority of state and local law enforcement to arrest, detain and transfer to federal custody illegal immigrants. It would ask the Justice Department to increase the number of attorneys prosecuting immigrant smuggling cases. It also would close loopholes that have led to "catch and release" policies in which illegal immigrants, mainly non-Mexicans, are released because they cannot be immediately deported. It passed 277-140. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060921/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  12. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. In a discovery sure to fuel an old debate about our evolutionary history, scientists have found a remarkably complete skeleton of a 3-year-old female from the ape-man species represented by "Lucy." The remains found in Africa are 3.3 million years old, making this the oldest known skeleton of such a youthful human ancestor. "It's a pretty unbelievable discovery... It's sensational," said Will Harcourt-Smith, a researcher at the American Museum of Natural History in New York who wasn't involved in the find. "It provides you with a wealth of information." For one thing, it gives new evidence for a contentious feud about whether this species, which walked upright, also climbed and moved through trees easily. The species is Australopithecus afarensis, which lived in Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. The most famous afarensis is Lucy, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974, a creature that lived about 100,000 years after the newfound specimen. The new find is reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany; Fred Spoor, professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London, and others. The skeleton was discovered in 2000 in northeastern Ethiopia. Scientists have spent five painstaking years removing the bones from sandstone, and the job will take years more to complete. Judging by how well it was preserved, the skeleton may have come from a body that was quickly buried by sediment in a flood, the researchers said. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime find," said Spoor. The skeleton has been nicknamed "Selam," which means "peace" in several Ethiopian languages. Most scientists believe afarensis stood upright and walked on two feet, but they argue about whether it had ape-like agility in trees. That climbing ability would require anatomical equipment like long arms, and afarensis had arms that dangled down to just above the knees. The question is whether such features indicate climbing ability or just evolutionary baggage. The loss of that ability would suggest crossing a threshold toward a more human existence. Spoor said so far, analysis of the new fossil hasn't settled the argument but does seem to indicate some climbing ability. While the lower body is very human-like, he said, the upper body is ape-like: _The shoulder blades resemble those of a gorilla rather than a modern human. _The neck seems short and thick like a great ape's, rather than the more slender version humans have to keep the head stable while running. _The organ of balance in the inner ear is more ape-like than human. _The fingers are very curved, which could indicate climbing ability, "but I'm cautious about that," Spoor said. Curved fingers have been noted for afarensis before, but their significance is in dispute. A big question is what the foot bones will show when their sandstone casing is removed, he said. Will there be a grasping big toe like the opposable thumb of a human hand? Such a chimp-like feature would argue for climbing ability, he said. Yet, to resolve the debate, scientists may have to find a way to inspect vanishingly small details of such old bones, to get clues to how those bones were used in life, he said. Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who didn't participate in the discovery, said in an interview that the fossil provides strong evidence of climbing ability. But he also agreed that it won't settle the debate among scientists, which he said "makes the Middle East look like a picnic." Overall, he wrote in a Nature commentary, the discovery provides "a veritable mine of information about a crucial stage in human evolutionary history." The fossil revealed just the second hyoid bone to be recovered from any human ancestor. This tiny bone, which attaches to the tongue muscles, is very chimp-like in the new specimen, Spoor said. While that doesn't directly reveal anything about language, it does suggest that whatever sounds the creature made "would appeal more to a chimpanzee mother than a human mother," Spoor said. The fossil find includes the complete skull, including an impression of the brain and the lower jaw, all the vertebrae from the neck to just below the torso, all the ribs, both shoulder blades and both collarbones, the right elbow and part of a hand, both knees and much of both shin and thigh bones. One foot is almost complete, providing the first time scientists have found an afarensis foot with the bones still positioned as they were in life, Spoor said. The work was funded by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, the Leakey Foundation and the Planck institute. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060921/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  13. Tiger Woods was outraged Wednesday at an Irish magazine and a tabloid that linked photos of his wife to various pornography sites, and his agent was studying the merits of a lawsuit. The publisher, Dubliner Media Limited, issued an apology saying it was a satire and didn't expect anyone to take it seriously. Woods was among those who did. "My wife, yes, she has been a model prior, and she did do some bikini photos," Woods said. "But to link her to porn Web sites and such is unacceptable, and I do not accept that at all. Neither does our team." The Dubliner magazine wrote in its September issue about Elin Nordegren, his Swedish wife of nearly two years. "Most American golfers are married to women who cannot keep their clothes on in public," the magazine wrote. "Is it too much to ask that they leave them at home for the Ryder Cup? Consider the evidence. Tiger Woods' wife can be found in a variety of sweaty poses on porn sites." The Irish Daily Star gave it front-page treatment Wednesday with the headline, "Tiger's Fury at Naked Pictures." Inside the tabloid, it reprinted photos of Nordegren in a bikini, along with a nude photo of a woman purported to be Nordegren. Woods vehemently denied it was his wife when it first came out three years ago. "The publisher and staff at The Dubliner acknowledge that the satirical article was inappropriate and wish to sincerely apologize to Tiger Woods, his wife, Elin Nordegren and other Ryder Cup players and their families for any offense they may have taken to it," said the statement. Mark Steinberg, his agent at IMG, said he was debating whether to pursue a lawsuit. "It's ridiculous," Steinberg said from IMG headquarters in Cleveland. "I can't say much now because of prejudice, because I'm not sure what we'll do in the future. Everyone knew it (the nude photo) wasn't her. It's plain as day. You can see it's not factual. It's kind of ironic they bring it up this week." It was the first topic Woods brought up at his news conference leading to the Ryder Cup, which starts Friday at The K Club. He was not scheduled to speak to reporters until Thursday, but asked to move the session to Wednesday. "I thought Tiger handled that extremely well," U.S. captain Tom Lehman said. "He dealt with it first thing today. He got it out of the way so that we all move on. I think the whole team understands his frustration. Nobody likes that. But it was kind of like, 'I want to say something ... and let's get back to the business of the Ryder Cup.'" Woods said his anger has nothing to do with the Irish people or the gallery that came to the golf course, even on Wednesday when the course was closed for three hours in the morning because of 40 mph wind and rain. "I know the media can be a little bit difficult at times, but when you ... it's hard to be very diplomatic about this when you have so much emotion involved, when my wife is involved in this," Woods said. "As I said, I don't want that to deter from the beauty of this event." Woods said making public his feelings was a matter of sticking up for his wife. "You do things for the people you love and you care about," Woods said. "My father got ridiculed for years, and I always felt for my father and my mother the same way. My wife, we're in it together. We're a team, and we do things as a team. And I care about her with all my heart." Phil Mickelson was asked how the U.S. team felt about the stories. "I don't think it shows too much about your profession," Mickelson replied, pausing for effect. "Other than that, I just heard about it recently." http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060921/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-
  14. AP - The government used prewar data to estimate the cost of caring for veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, contributing to a $3 billion budget shortfall at the Veterans Affairs Department since 2005, congressional investigators say.
  15. PC World - Firefox-based browser makes Web surfing more anonymous.
  16. AP - Britain's leading scientific academy has accused oil company Exxon Mobil Corp. of misleading the public about global warming and funding groups that undermine the scientific consensus on climate change.
  17. AP - Readers of Spa Finder publications and the Spafinder.com Web site have chosen Arizona's Miraval, Life in Balance as their "favorite spa" in North America.
×
×
  • Create New...