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Posts Tagged ‘New Hampshire’

Baby cut from US mother found alive

Family photo via Boston Herald

A baby who was cut from her mother’s womb has been found alive two days after the woman’s body was discovered, US police have said.

A woman who claimed the baby was hers and a male companion have been arrested in New Hampshire, police said.

The girl was said to be in "fairly good health," according to Worcester police Sergeant Kerry Hazelhurst.

Her 23-year-old mother’s body was found in her apartment and she had apparently been dead for days, police said.

More to follow.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

U.S.: Baby cut from mom found alive

A baby cut from the womb of a slain Massachusetts woman was found alive in New Hampshire Wednesday night, police said. Julie A. Corey, the suspect in the killing of the pregnant woman, was taken into custody in Plymouth, N.H., where she was found with the baby and a male companion, The Boston Globe reported.

Deanna Neil: Take a Hike, Kids

A system of severe fines will do nothing but intimidate people from what we need to do so desperately: get outside.

July 28, 1907: Tupperware’s First Burp

1907: Earl S. Tupper, inventor of the famous Tupperware “burping” plastic kitchenware, is born. Baby Tupper may well have burped for the first time on this day.
The New Hampshire native grew up on farms in Massachusetts. Tupper developed a business selling his parents’ produce door-to-door, but scraped through high school, barely graduating.
On the other hand, [...]

Paul Helmke: NRA Defeated In Key Gun Violence Prevention Vote: Elections Have Consequences

Today’s vote is proof that hard work, and elections, have real-life consequences that can help save lives.

Obama seems to have eclectic tastes when it comes to choice of drinks

Unlike some of his predecessors, U.S. President Barack Obama has appears to have eclectic tastes, when it comes to the choice of drinks.
While Franklin D. Roosevelt had a thing for martinis, Richard Nixon loved Chateau Margaux and Lyndon Johnson preferred scotch, Obama choices are varied.
Rather than sticking to one signature drink, he has been [...]

Greg Mitchell: Cronkite’s 1968 Dissent on Vietnam Helped Save Thousands of Lives

I probably missed the late Walter Cronkite’s most important TV news moment: his famous February 1968 commentary after returning from Vietnam in which he cast strong doubt on our mission there and its chances for success.

Packet of cigarettes leaves US man $23 quadrillion in debt

Smoker (generic)

A man in the United States popped out to his local petrol station to buy a pack of cigarettes – only to find his card charged $23,148,855,308,184,500.

That is $23 quadrillion (£14 quadrillion) – many times the US national debt.

"I thought somebody had bought Europe with my credit card," said Josh Muszynski, from New Hampshire.

He says his appeals to his bank first met with little understanding, though it eventually corrected the error.

It also waived the usual $15 overdraft fee.

"It was all back to normal," Mr Muszynski told his local television station, WMUR. "They reversed the negative balance fee, which was nice."

Debt crisis

His nightmare began when he checked his online bank account a few hours after buying the cigarettes.

He thought he would be a couple of hundred dollars in the black. But his overdraft had pushed him into the red – by an amount equivalent to many times the entire US national debt.

"It is a lot of money in the negative," he said. "Something I could never, ever, afford to pay back.

"My children could not afford it, grandchildren, nothing like that."

In panic, Mr Muszynski rushed back to the petrol station, but they were unable to help. He says he then spent two hours on the phone with the Bank of America.

Eventually, it assured him it would be fixed – and the next morning, it had been.

But no-one has yet explained to Mr Muszynski how such a astonishing error could have been made. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Jarrett Murphy: Bloomberg Passes Up Food Stamp Funds

This year, when the federal stimulus package offered a waiver to every state and county so that the unemployed could get food stamps until mid-2010, the Bloomberg administration said, “No thanks.”

US Church drops gay bishops ban

The Right Reverend Gene Robinson at St Mary"s Church

Bishops of the Anglican Church in the United States have voted to overturn a three-year moratorium on the election of gay bishops.

The decision seems likely to lead to the Episcopal Church’s eventual exit from the worldwide Anglican Communion.

The Communion has been fighting to avoid disintegration since the Episcopal Church ordained the openly gay bishop Gene Robinson in 2003.

The decision is expected to be confirmed in the next few days.

Archbishop’s regret

The election of the Right Reverend Robinson as a bishop in the New Hampshire diocese created an apparently irreconcilable rift between liberal and traditional Anglicans.

Liberals believe the Bible should be reinterpreted in the light of contemporary wisdom.

Traditionalists insist that it unequivocally outlaws homosexuality.

"I regret the fact that there is no will to observe the moratorium in such a significant part of the church in North America"

Dr Rowan Williams
Archbishop of Canterbury

Rowan Williams

To avoid expulsion from the Communion, the Episcopal Church agreed a temporary ban on the ordination of gay bishops.

But, impatient for change, its General Convention meeting in Anaheim, California, voted on Monday to end the moratorium.

The Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams – who is head of the 70-million-strong worldwide Anglican Communion – said it "remained to be seen" whether the vote by the House of Deputies – made up of clergy and lay people – would be endorsed by the US Episcopal House of Bishops.

"I regret the fact that there is no will to observe the moratorium in such a significant part of the church in North America," he added.

The BBC’s religious affairs correspondent Robert Piggot said the drafters of the motion say it still leaves room for dioceses to exercise restraint, and keep in effect to a moratorium.

But, he said, if it does lead to the election of another gay bishop, the decision will make it all but impossible for the Communion to stay intact.

The crisis could intensify further as the Episcopal Church could be about to end a second moratorium, on the blessing of same-sex relationships in church services. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Episcopal church to affirm gay clergy

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention voted 99-45 for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” gays in committed lifelong relationships to the ministry

The Episcopal Church has moved toward affirming their acceptance of gays and lesbians for all roles in the ministry, despite pressure from fellow Anglicans worldwide for a decisive moratorium on consecrating another openly gay bishop.

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention in Anaheim, California, voted 99-45 with two abstentions for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” to ministry gays in committed lifelong relationships.

Lay and priest delegates to the meeting had comfortably approved a nearly identical statement, and were expected to adopt the latest version before the meeting ends on Friday.

Leaders of the Anglican Communion have been pushing Episcopalians to roll back their support for gays and lesbians since 2003, when the US denomination consecrated the first openly gay bishop, V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire. The Episcopal Church is the US Anglican body.

Robinson’s election brought the 77 million-member Anglican fellowship to the brink of schism. Last month, breakaway Episcopal conservatives and other like-minded traditionalists formed a rival national province called the Anglican Church in North America.

To calm tensions, the Episcopal General Convention three years ago passed a resolution that urged restraint by dioceses considering gay candidates for bishop. No other Episcopal bishops living openly with same-sex partners have been consecrated since then.

Drafters of the latest statement insisted that the resolution only acknowledges that the Episcopal Church ordains partnered gays and lesbians and is not a repeal of what was widely considered a moratorium on consecrating gay bishops.

“The constitution and canons of our church as currently written do not preclude gay and lesbian persons from participating,” in any part of the church, said the Reverend Gay Clark Jennings, on the committee that drafted the statement. “These people have responded to God’s call.”

However, the Episcopal gay advocacy group Integrity, said in a statement on Monday night that the declaration “effectively ends” the temporary prohibition on gays in ministry. Integrity called the vote “another step in the Episcopal Church’s ‘coming out’ process.”

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, who leads the Episcopal Church, was among the bishops who voted to approve the declaration. The statement also affirms the Episcopal Church’s commitment to participate in and help fund the Anglican Communion, the third-largest grouping of churches worldwide, behind the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Christian churches.

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the Anglican spiritual leader, had attended the Episcopal national meeting in Anaheim in its opening days last week. He said, “I hope and pray that there won’t be decisions in the coming days that could push us further apart.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Bush Releases White House, Camp David Guest Lists

WASHINGTON — Former President George W. Bush’s overnight guests shortly before he left office included Republican Sen. Judd Gregg, who spent the night at the Camp David presidential retreat just a few weeks before President Barack Obama …

Archbishop ‘regrets’ move to ordain gay bishops

The archbishop of Canterbury is bracing himself for fresh turmoil in the Anglican Communion ahead of a crucial vote that could overturn a ban on the ordination of gay bishops.

For five years Dr Rowan Williams has succeeded in avoiding an irrevocable schism in the world’s third-largest Christian denomination by persuading Anglican churches to refrain from appointing gay bishops, blessing same-sex unions and cross-border interventions.

A vote in the US Episcopal church could threaten the already fractious relationships in the Communion when its house of bishops decide later this week on a resolution declaring the ordination process open to “all individuals”.

At the General Synod meeting in York today, he told Church of England members: “I regret the fact there is no will to observe a significant part of the moratoria,” he added.

Williams had flown to Anaheim, California, last week for the US church’s triennial meeting. In a sermon given last Thursday, he told the congregation his visit was tinged with “hopes and anxieties”.

The crisis in the Anglican Communion was triggered mostly, but not solely, by the 2003 ordination of Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire. Robinson, a genial churchman well-regarded by his parishioners, is in a committed relationship with another man.

His appointment scandalised conservatives and their dissent culminated last year with the boycott of a flagship Anglican conference by hundreds of bishops.

Last week more than a thousand representatives from the Church of England supported the launch of a UK fellowship for congregations and clergy unhappy with the church’s vague position on the blessing of same-sex unions and the ordination of women and homosexual priests.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Your thoughts on same-sex marriage

New Hampshire is now the sixth state in the nation — alongside Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Iowa and Vermont — currently providing or soon to provide marriage benefits to gays and lesbians. Meanwhile, the issue continues to be hotly debated in other parts of the country, such as California, where Proposition 8, a ban on same-sex marriage was passed last year, and the Obama Administration has come under fire from some in the gay community for what they see as a lack of action on this issue.

 

We want to hear how the issue of same-sex marriage is affecting you. What do you think of the ruling? Do you think same-sex marriage should be allowed? Have you participated in rallies for or against the issue? Share your stories, photos and videos.

 

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