Tuesday, January 29, 2013

In the news, Monday, January 28, 2013


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SUN 27      INDEX      TUE 29
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from The Spokesman-Review

Boy Scouts reconsidering ban on gays

World mourns Holocaust victims
Pope, other leaders call for resolve against tyranny, hatred

Israel may attack Syrian weapons

Morsi declares emergency
Troops deployed to Egyptian cities

Murray unveils online budget tool as GOP digs in

Reform could bring legal status to millions of illegal immigrants
Senators agree on overhaul proposal

Idaho may revive voter-rejected teacher contract limits

Blaze kills 233 people in Brazil nightclub
Band’s pyrotechnic device believed to have started it

Vietnam War reporter Karnow dies at 87
Book on Philippines won Pulitzer prize

Boise pastor gets 8 years in Iran prison

Idaho Capitol intrusion shocks lawmakers
Video shows man with gun inspecting desks, waste bin in Boise

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In brief:  From Wire Reports

787 probe shifts to monitor system

TOKYO – The joint U.S. and Japanese investigation into the Boeing 787’s battery problems has moved from the battery-maker to the manufacturer of a monitoring system.

Transport ministry official Shigeru Takano said today the probe into battery-maker GS Yuasa was over for now as no evidence was found it was the source of the problem.

Ministry officials said they would be inspecting Kanto Aircraft Instrument Co. as part of the ongoing investigation.

It makes a system that monitors voltage, charging and temperature of the lithium-ion batteries.

All Boeing 787s are grounded after one of the jets made an emergency landing in Japan earlier this month when its main battery overheated.


Britons warned of threat in Somalia

LONDON – British citizens should immediately leave the breakaway Somaliland region of Somalia because of a specific threat to Westerners, British diplomats said Sunday.

In a statement emailed to reporters, Britain’s Foreign Office did not go into any further detail about the nature of the threat but noted that “kidnapping for financial or political gain, motivated by criminality or terrorism” is an issue throughout Somalia.

Somalia has endured years of civil war, and Britain – along with the United States and a host of other countries – has long advised against all travel to the Horn of Africa nation.

Sunday’s travel warning applies specifically to the northwest territory of Somaliland, which declared its independence from Somalia in 1991 and has since been a haven of relative peace amid the chaos and bloodshed of the country’s south.


Inmates moved after deadly riot

CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan authorities finished evacuating more than 2,000 inmates on Sunday from a prison where the government said 58 people were killed in one of the deadliest prison clashes in the nation’s history.

More than two days after the bloodshed, Penitentiary Service Minister Iris Varela released an official death toll and said 46 wounded victims remained hospitalized.

She said the evacuation of Uribana prison in the city of Barquisimeto was completed on Sunday morning. Inmates were loaded aboard buses and driven to other prisons.

Varela said that the violence erupted on Friday when groups of armed inmates began firing shots at National Guard troops who were attempting to carry out an inspection.

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Leonard Pitts Jr.: The ties that separate us

1930s: This postcard shows traffic on Sunset Hill, the
western entrance to Spokane proper. During this era,
traffic from Seattle followed what is now Highway 2.
Then and Now photos: Sunset Highway
Businessman’s ‘religion’ led to paved thoroughfare

Rock Doc: DNA may hold key to mental illness
E. Kirsten Peters





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from The Times of Israel

Israel to demand apology for ‘anti-Semitic’ Netanyahu cartoon
The Sunday Times ‘crossed a red line,’ says Ambassador to UK Daniel Taub; Knesset Speaker Rivlin lodges complaint with British counterpart

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