I can’t help but wonder what that solid, creative titan of a man would have thought of 21st century broadcast media (and some print media) before he passed on.
Posts Tagged ‘Arizona’
Jason Daley: Dear Sonia: Sotomayor’s Lost Year
In 1980, Sotomayor was in Michigan, dishing out a distinctive brand of saucy advice for the Port Huron Tribune-Undertaker.
Freeport: New Ambush Near World’s Largest Gold Mine, 2 Dead
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Gunmen fired Wednesday at vehicles operated by U.S. mining company Freeport in Indonesia’s impoverished Papua province, injuring two guards and a policeman in the latest attack on the world’s largest gold mine, polic…
Senate To Vote On Concealed Weapons Measure
WASHINGTON — Gun control and gun rights advocates are heading for another clash with a Senate vote on a measure that would allow people with concealed weapons permits to carry those hidden weapons into other states.
Backers, led by Sen….
Kelly Clarkson “All I Ever Wanted†Tour Dates
Kelly Clarkson will be hitting the road on her “All I Ever Wanted Tour” this fall, the platinum-selling American Idol announced Tuesday.
Supported by Aussie sister act The Veronicas and Parachute, Kelly’s fall tour kicks off Oct. 2 in Uncasville, Conn. The trek will make stops in 32 North American citiesbefore wrapping up in Hollywood, Fla. [...]
Strip Searches Pervasive Despite Huge Settlements
One sunny fall afternoon, a mother of seven answered a knock at her door to find a cluster of policemen waiting on the step. She wore pajamas because she had been asleep before heading to her job on the night shift at a New York hospital. The …
Gene variant linked to higher risk of common type of blood cancer
Scientists in California and Arizona have identified a gene variant that that they say nearly doubles the risk of a common type of blood cancer.
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) and at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) found that mutations in a gene called C6orf15, or STG, are linked to the [...]
Ian Welsh: Americans Lives vs. Insurance Company Profits: the real battle in healthcare reform
Lying about healthcare, indeed fear-mongering about healthcare, has ramped up as insurance companies attempt to keep their profits. Those profits are created by a system…
Andrew Kreig: Did DoJ Blackmail Siegelman Witness With Sex Scandal?
The top government witness in the 2006 federal conviction of former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman on corruption charges is providing new evidence that prosecutors failed…
Carl Pope: The Fierce Urgency of Never
Washington, D.C. — Barack Obama apparently got it wrong. It’s “never” rather than “now” that stirs the human soul. At least it stirs the soul…
Michael Phelps won ESPY Awards
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Phelps won a leading five ESPY Awards, including male athlete of the year, ending the five-year reign of Tiger Woods, who earned his record 22nd trophy Wednesday night.
The 14-time Olympic gold medalist also collected trophies for record-breaking performance, championship performance, and male Olympian while sharing the best moment award as [...]
Sharon L. Camp: New Arizona Law Restricts Access to a Range of Reproductive Health Services
Proponents of a new Arizona reproductive health law claim it helps inform women’s abortion decisions. However, this distortion of the informed consent process only hinders access to abortion services.
Bruce Nilles: Stopping Blackstone Coal
Last week when we hit the 100th coal-fired plant abandoned or prevented in the U.S., someone asked me, “What’s next?” My answer came quickly:…
This Just In
To train the next generation of professional journalists, Arizona State University built a state-of-the-art facility for its prestigious Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. There, student journalists write, shoot, edit, and broadcast their own stories on Mac computers using Final Cut Pro. “Among the most critical decisions we made,†says News Director Mark Lodato, “was choosing Final Cut Pro as our editing tool, and I don’t think we could be more pleased.â€
Indonesia deaths spotlight murky history of gold mine
Sotomayor faces Senate hearings
First Hispanic woman nominated to US supreme court appears before Senate for what may be a gruelling session
Sonia Sotomayor, a New York judge who beat a path from a childhood in a housing estate to become America’s first Hispanic supreme court nominee, today began a gruelling run of confirmation hearings in the US Senate.
A New York federal judge, Sotomayor, 55, is the first high court justice nominated by a Democrat in 15 years. She is President Barack Obama’s first opportunity to put his stamp on the court, although she would replace another liberal jurist and is thus not expected dramatically to alter the court’s political direction. She is widely expected to win confirmation and would be only the third woman to sit on the supreme court.
Sotomayor’s stellar academic credentials, years on the federal bench and status as a groundbreaking minority woman give Republican opponents little space to attack her qualifications or preparedness. Republicans instead questioned her impartiality, warning she would let personal biases and ethnic prejudices colour her opinions and that she would rule based on her personal values rather than the law.
“From what she has said, she appears to believe that her role is not constrained to objectively decide who wins based on the weight of the law but who, in her opinion, should win,” Arizona senator Jon Kyl said as Sotomayor sat stone-faced at the witness table. Senator Lindsey Graham, a senior Republican, said Sotomayor would be confirmed barring a “meltdown”.
But conservatives hope to weaken Obama politically by disparaging his first judicial nominee, with some outside the Republican party stoking vague fears of a Washington takeover by minorities with a dim view of whites.
Sotomayor today had her first opportunity to publicly rebut months allegations of judicial bias that followed her appointment in May.
“The task of a judge is not to make the law, it is to apply the law,” she said. “And it is clear, I believe, that my record in two courts reflects my rigorous commitment to interpreting the Constitution according to its terms … In each case I have heard, I have applied the law to the facts at hand.”
Obama’s Democratic allies, meanwhile, are playing up Sotomayor’s humble upbringing in the Bronx borough of New York, her studies at Princeton and Yale and her 17 years of experience on the federal bench – more than any sitting supreme court justice. “Hers is a success story in which all – all – Americans can take pride,” Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont said today. “Let’s be fair to her and to the American people by not misrepresenting her views.”
In the coming days, Republicans are expected to grill Sotomayor about her views on abortion, the death penalty, same-sex marriage, the role of international law in American jurisprudence, and racial issues. They have signalled they will focus on speeches and public remarks in which she has expressed pride in her ethnic background and statements they say portend she will pursue a personal liberal agenda from the bench.
British Airways jet evacuated
Passengers escape down emergency slides as flight BA288 prepares for take-off in Phoenix, Arizona
Hundreds of passengers have been evacuated from a British Airways jet after smoke filled the cabin just before take-off.
The Boeing 747 had been preparing to depart for Heathrow from Phoenix Airport in Arizona this morning when passengers reported an acrid smell. All on board escaped down the plane’s emergency slides.
A passenger on flight BA288, Corinne Casazza, said: “There was this really strong smell of fuel and I could hear people panicking behind me. They were upset and finding it hard to breathe because of the smell.
“People were coughing and choking and those with children were very worried and so they brought them to the front where they could breathe.
“We asked if we could open the doors but were told we couldn’t because we were still moving.
“There was a lot of pushing and shoving – everyone just wanted to get off the plane.”
Another passenger said the cabin filled with smoke and people had to cover their faces because of the smell.
“It was horrific – it smelt like rubber burning, or something like that,” she said.
No serious injuries were reported but about 15 people had minor cuts and bruises
A BA spokesman said: “The plane was being pushed back from the stand when there were reports of smoke. A decision was taken to evacuate the aircraft following the usual procedures.”
Fire crews found smoke in the cabin and in the cargo compartment, but no fire was discovered, said a spokeswoman for Phoenix fire department. Safety officials believed the smoke and smell were caused by an electrical problem.
BA has organised hotel rooms for the stranded passengers while engineers examine the plane.



