admin - Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg marries longtime girlfriend (n/20/2012)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Facebook founder and CEO mark Zuckerberg updated his status to “married” on Saturday.

Zuckerberg and 27-year-old Priscilla Chan tied the knot at a small ceremony at his Palo Alto, Calif., home, capping a busy week for the couple, according to a guest authorized to speak for the couple. The person spoke only on the condition of anonymity.

Zuckerberg took his company public in one of the most anticipated stock offerings in Wall Street history Friday. And Chan graduated from medical school at the University of California, San Francisco, on Monday, the same day Zuckerberg turned 28, the person said.

The couple met at Harvard and have been together for more than nine years, the person said.

Zuckerberg designed the ring featuring “a very simple ruby,” according to the person.

The ceremony took place in Zuckerberg’s backyard before fewer than 100 guests, including Facebook’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.

The guests all thought they were coming to celebrate Chan’s graduation but were told after they arrived that the event was in fact a wedding.

“Everybody was shocked,” the guest said.

Rather than his trademark hoodie, Zuckerberg wore a suit for the ceremony, while his bride wore a traditional wedding dress.

Food was served family-style and included dishes from the couple’s favorite Palo Alto sushi restaurant. The two had been planning the marriage for months but were waiting until Chan had graduated to hold the wedding, the guest said.

The timing wasn’t tied to the IPO, since the date the company planned to go public was a “moving target,” the guest said.

Even after the IPO, Zuckerberg remains Facebook’s single largest shareholder, with 503.6 million shares. And he controls the company with 56 percent of its voting stock.

The site, which was born in a dorm room eight years ago, has grown into a worldwide network of almost a billion people.

Zuckerberg founded Facebook at Harvard in 2004.

He was selected as Time’s Person of the Year in 2010, at age 26.

Zuckerberg grew up in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.

Copyright 2012 The associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

admin - Arizona election official vows to keep Obama off the ballot because of birth certificate (n/20/2012)

WASHINGTON, may 19, 2012 — They’re back. just when you thought the political waters were safe, back come the birther sharks circling their favorite prey, President Barack Obama. once again it’s Arizona, home of the king of birthers, Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County.

Pandering to the birther phenomena, Arizona’s secretary of state Ken Bennett, a Republican and governor wannabe, said that he will keep Obama off the state’s election ballot come November unless Hawaii guarantees that Obama was born there.

In a radio interview with KFYI’s conservative talk host, Mike Broomhead, Bennett said, “I believe the president was born in Hawaii — or at least I hope he was. my responsibility as secretary of state is to make sure that the ballots in Arizona are correct and that those people whose names are on the ballot have met the qualifications of the office they are seeking.”

Bennett admits to being inspired to follow the birther trail – what most of us would call the birther conspiracy – by Sheriff Arpaio. Back in March the sheriff released what he said was proof that Obama was not born in Hawaii and that in fact Obama’s long form birth certificate released in April 2011 is a computer generated forgery.

However, the Sheriff has not pursued legal action, just press conferences. Bennett says he received over 1200 emails from people wanting something done about the birth certificate issue. so he has joined the birthers by trying to keep the President off the ballot and thus deny Obama the potential of Arizona’s 11 electoral votes.

Bennett says he has contacted Hawaiian officials, demanding they supply him with “verification in lieu of a certified copy of a birth certificate.”

So far, he told Broomhead, Hawaii has not complied and even requested proof that 1) Bennett is who he said he is and 2) Arizona’s law makes such verification a requirement to be on the ballot.

Broomhead asked Bennett in the interview, “If they won’t comply, if they refuse to comply with this, will you remove the president from the ballot? Will you exclude him from the ballot?”

“That’s possible,” Bennett said. “or the other option would be I would ask all of candidates, including the president, maybe to submit a certified copy of their birth certificate. But I don’t want to do that.” 

What makes all of this even more interesting is that just last year, Republican Governor Jan Brewer, who is known for her public fight with the President and is certainly not a big fan of his, had said birtherism is a “huge distraction” and vetoed Arizona House bill 2177, aka the Birther bill. The bill would have allowed Arizona’s secretary of state to decide whether the qualifications of candidates passed muster and then decide if they could be on the ballot.

Brewer, who was Arizona’s secretary of state in 2008 when Obama first ran for president, told CNN last year that birtherism is “just something I believe is leading our country down the path of destruction and it just is not serving any good purpose.”

Perhaps Gov. Brewer needs to have a chat with the current secretary, who obviously is courting the birther vote. Talking to Sheriff Arpaio is probably a waste of time, because he is on a vendetta to take down the President. why, you naively ask?

The U.S. Justice Dept. charged in December 2011 that Sheriff Arpaio had engaged in “a pattern or practice of misconduct that violates the Constitution and federal law.” Currently a federal grand jury is investigating his office for abuse of power. Specifically, the Justice Dept. charges:

“We find that MCSO deputies, detention officers, supervisory staff, and command staff, including Sheriff Arpaio, have engaged in a widespread pattern or practice of law enforcement and jail activities that discriminate against Latinos. This discrimination flows directly from a culture of bias and institutional deficiencies that result in the discriminatory treatment of Latinos.”

Arpaio loves to strut his stuff as the toughest sheriff in the West, though most law enforcement folks view him as a bully who sees himself as the Law. so birtherism has been a perfect way for him to strike back. And now Bennett has joined the birthers in their paranoia that Obama is not an American but a Kenyan. it makes for great electioneering. And it illustrates beautifully what Gov. Brewer decried when she vetoed bill 2177.

Plus Bennett appears to be going beyond Arizona law since there is no requirement for candidates to provide a certified birth certificate. But it appeals to the 6 in 10 Arizona voters who supported the Birther bill. 

We may have thought that with Donald Trump out of the presidential primary and the release of the long form of Obama’s birth certificate last spring, this nonsense would have disappeared for good. however, don’t ever underestimate the American public. There are still 41% of Americans who either do not believe Obama is a bona fide American and thus would have no right to be president of the United States or are not sure. among Republicans that number jumps to a shocking 72%.

The birther movement would be funny if it weren’t so dangerous. There is a rampant paranoia loose in America, threatening to unravel the very fabric of what makes us American. Gov. Brewer had it right when she said birtherism is leading this country down the path to destruction.

Birthers are just a symptom of that paranoia and there are plenty of people out there ready to exploit Americans’ fear of the Other, because when you come right down to it, that is what birtherism is all about: The biracial man in the White House is not one of us and he tricked us to become President.

To contact Catherine Poe, see above. Her work appears in Ad Lib at the Communities @ WashingtonTimes.com. she can also be heard on Democrats for America’s Future. she is also a contributor to broadcast, print and online media.

This article is the copyrighted property of the writer and Communities @ WashingtonTimes.com. Written permission must be obtained before reprint in online or print media. REPRINTING TWTC CONTENT WITHOUT PERMISSION AND/OR PAYMENT IS THEFT AND PUNISHABLE BY LAW.

admin - Zardari arrives in Chicago for NATO summit (n/20/2012)

Islamabad, May 20 — Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has arrived in Chicago to attend a key NATO summit starting Sunday.

Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar and Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbass Jilani are accompanying him, Geo TV reported Sunday.

US President Barack Obama will host the two-day summit that will focus on plans to hand over security control to Afghan forces and withdrawal of foreign combat troops by 2014.

The coalition has urged Pakistan to back efforts to stabilize Afghanistan and hoped Islamabad will lift a six-month blockade of NATO supply trucks to Afghanistan.

It was put in place after a NATO air raid on two Pakistani border posts in November last year killed 26 Pakistani soldiers.

NATO has also urged Pakistan to do more to prevent Afghan insurgents from taking shelter in the country.

This article was distributed through the NewsCred Smartwire. Original article © IANS / Daily News 2012

Alabama’s Governor Signs Controversial Immigration Law

Two days after sending the state’s controversial immigration bill back to lawmakers for revisions, Alabama’s governor signed the bill into law without any of his proposed changes made.

Gov. Robert Bentley signed HB 658 into law on Friday, claiming that Alabama’s legislature “did not have the appetite” to make anymore changes to the bill at this time.

“In an effort to remove the distraction of immigration from the other business of the special session, I decided to sign House Bill 658 and allow the progress made in the legislation to move forward,” Bentley said in a statement.  ”We can now also move forward on the other business of the special session.”

Bentley, a Republican, had previously argued that the state legislature should remove a provision in Alabama’s immigration law that requires school officials to ask students about the legal status of their parents. he called a special session of the state’s legislature to address the immigration issue along with state budget and redistricting.

The bottom line is there are too many positive aspects of House Bill 658 for it to go unsigned. I don’t want to lose the progress we have made

- Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley

“I still have concerns about the school provision in the original law,” Bentley said in a statement Friday.  ”That provision is currently enjoined by a federal court, so it is not currently in effect, and we can re-address this issue if the need arises.  I also still disagree with certain aspects of the new provision in House Bill 658 that called for expending state funds to create a public database with the names of illegal immigrants.”

Bentley appears to be concerned that the revised measure tramples on constitutional rights.

Alabama Sen. Scott Beason, the sponsor of the 2011 law and its 2012 revisions, said that he “couldn’t be more pleased” with Bentley’s decision to sign HB 658. Beason views the signing as another victory, as he was successful in getting lawmakers to approve limited changes to state’s law pending the outcome of the Supreme Court ruling on Arizona’s SB 1070 immigration law.

“Now we’re set to hear from the Supreme Court on Arizona,” Beason said, according to AL.com.

Some activists are threatening to take civil action against the state for alleged unconstitutional provisions in the immigration law.

“This so-called “reform” bill is nothing more than window dressing – apparently aimed at appeasing the state’s business leaders even though the majority of small businesses and the state’s farmers will continue to suffer,” wrote Mary Bauer, the legal director of Southern Poverty Law Center, in a press release last week. “And, in some areas, the bill actually makes the original law much worse.”

“And, given the added unconstitutional provisions it will create, the Southern Poverty Law Center will be forced to file more lawsuits against the state of Alabama,” Bauer added.

Despite his own misgivings about the law, Bentley believes that the immigration law is a good thing for Alabama and that is has made progress within the state.

“The bottom line is there are too many positive aspects of House Bill 658 for it to go unsigned. I don’t want to lose the progress we have made,” Bentley said.  ”This bill reduces burdens on legal residents as they conduct government transactions.  the bill also reduces burdens on businesses while still holding them accountable to hire legal workers.  These changes make this a stronger bill.”

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admin - Deadly helicopter crash caused by bird (n/19/2012)

Thomas Heitmann — Facebook Jeffrey Bland — Facebook memorial page

The AH-1W Cobra attack helicopter collided about 1 p.m. on Sept. 19 with a female red-tailed hawk, according to the report for the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing. It was released to U-T San Diego Thursday through a federal records request.

The hawk, which probably weighed about 3 pounds and had a wingspan of about 4 feet, hit the top of the helicopter and damaged the pitch change link. within one second of impact with the bird, vibrations in the main rotor caused the rotor and top of the transmission to separate from the aircraft, the report states.

“The bird-aircraft strike event was likely unavoidable,” because drastic maneuvers to avoid the bird also could have caused a crash, investigators concluded. once the helicopter collided with the hawk, “the bird-aircraft strike was not recoverable.”

Bland, 37, of Champaign, Ill., was an instructor pilot with the squadron who was subsequently promoted to the rank of major. He was survived by his wife Heather and baby daughter Aliana, now 15 months old, among other relatives.

“We were very shocked that something like that could happen,” his mother Janet Bland said. “We know it happens to jets, with birds getting into the engines. but we never thought about a bird bringing down a helicopter.”

When Heitmann was a boy his father took him to the local air show almost every year. “This was a childhood dream for him, to fly. and he got to do that through the Marines. He always told me, ‘Dad, I don’t care what I fly as long as I’m flying,’” Thomas Frank Heitmann said shortly after his son’s death.

Investigators recommended that the Marine aircraft group work with Naval Air Systems Command to study the feasibility of redesigning the AH-1W transmission fairings and the pitch change links, to make the aircraft less vulnerable to bird strikes.

The commanding officer of Marine Aircraft Group-39 took exception to an opinion in the report that its tracking of emergency procedures and simulations may have contributed to the crash. the investigation report also concluded that “no aircrew of any experience level would have been able to survive an event of this type,” the commanding officer noted in January.

The FAA calculated that there were 9,474 bird-to-aircraft strikes in 2009, according to the most recent available data. Over a 20-year period ending in 2009, the FAA received reports of almost 100,000 bird strikes and 24 related human fatalities.

gretel.kovach@uniontrib.com; (619) 293-1293; Facebook page: UT Military; Twitter @gckovach

admin - Alabama Gets Strict Immigration Law as Governor Relents (n/19/2012)

May 19, 2012 1:04 pm By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON / The new York Times

Only a day after calling a special session and urging the Alabama Legislature to make more changes to the state's immigration enforcement law than the modest ones they had passed, Gov. Robert Bentley on Friday signed the bill into law anyway.

The governor's decision was arguably the quickest of several reversals that have taken place in recent weeks as politicians in Montgomery, the capital, debated the need for changes to Alabama's immigration enforcement law, considered the strictest and most sweeping in the country.

The Legislature had seemed poised just weeks earlier to pass a bill that would make a number of changes to the original law that were intended to address complaints by business groups, local law enforcement officials and legal Alabama residents.

But in the last few days of the session, which ended Wednesday, another version of the bill gained steam, one that preserved more of the original law and also added some controversial provisions, like one requiring the state to publish the name of every illegal immigrant who appears in court for a violation of state law.

After that bill was passed, Governor Bentley added the immigration law to the list of topics lawmakers were to consider during a special session that began on Thursday. Declining to sign the bill that was passed, mr. Bentley specifically recommended that they revisit the new provision concerning illegal immigrants in court and a provision from the original law, currently barred by a federal court, that required schools to ascertain the immigration status of enrolling students.

Lawmakers immediately responded by filing bills nearly identical to the one that passed the day before, only now requiring the state to publish photographs of immigrants in court in addition to their names.

Saying that he still had concerns about the law, Governor Bentley acknowledged in a statement that “the Legislature did not have the appetite for addressing further revisions at this time.”

admin - Arizona Goes Birther: Secretary Of State Says It’s ‘Possible’ Obama Won’t Be On Ballot (n/19/2012)

Nick R. Martin May 18, 2012, 10:53 AM

The man in charge of running Arizona’s elections has gone to the birthers. Secretary of State Ken Bennett now says he’s not convinced Barack Obama was really born in the United States and so he is threatening to keep the president off the ballot in November.

Bennett’s comments came in an interview late Thursday with conservative radio talk show host Mike Broomhead on Phoenix station KFYI.

Bennett said he was following the lead of the state’s eccentric Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a fellow Republican who ordered an investigation into the president’s birth certificate last year and concluded the document released by the White House is a forgery. Bennett said he is now trying to get verification from state officials in Hawaii that the certificate is authentic.

In doing so, Bennett caved to a fringe group of activists and writers who believe in a conspiracy theory that just never seems to die no matter how much proof they get. Hawaiian officials have said time and again that Obama was born there in 1961, yet the theory persists.

Bennett, the state’s No. 2 elected official just below Gov. Jan Brewer (R), said his investigation isn’t personal. He said the reason he started looking into it is because he got more than 1,200 emails asking him to do so after Arpaio’s investigation came out.

“I’m not a birther. I believe the president was born in Hawaii — or at least I hope he was,” Bennett said on the show. “But my responsibility as secretary of state is to make sure the ballots in Arizona are correct and that those people whose names are on the ballot have met the qualifications for the office they are seeking.”

Bennett’s newfound birtherism also breaks with Brewer, who led the secretary of state’s office in 2008 when Obama last appeared on the Arizona ballot. Brewer said last year that despite her disagreements with Obama, she is fully convinced the president is eligible for office and believes the birth certificate issue is a “huge distraction.”

“It’s just something I believe is leading our country down a path of destruction and it just is not serving any good purpose,” she told CNN’s John King.

Meanwhile, Bennett is hoping to take Brewer’s job when she becomes term limited in two years. The Arizona Capitol Times reported (paywall) earlier this week that he is already collecting signatures to get on the 2014 ballot for governor.

On Thursday, Bennett said he sent his request to Hawaii officials eight weeks ago but has yet to get the proof he was hoping for. He said he didn’t want another copy of the birth certificate. He wants Hawaii to give him what he described as “a verification in lieu of a certified copy of a birth certificate.”

In the weeks since then, Bennett said, Hawaii officials have forced him to provide proof that he is who he says he is. they asked him to send them copies of the Arizona laws that prove the secretary of state really is the person in charge of handling the ballots. Admittedly, Bennett said they told him they were “tired of all the requests.” But he is continuing anyway.

Broomhead, the radio host, pressed Bennett on what he would do if he didn’t get the right response back from Hawaii.

“if they won’t comply, if they refuse to comply with this, will you remove the president from the ballot?” Broomhead asked. “Will you exclude him from the ballot?”

“That’s possible,” Bennett said. “or the other option would be I would ask all of candidates, including the president, maybe to submit a certified copy of their birth certificate. But I don’t want to do that.”

Listen to the whole interview from KFYI:

admin - EPA warns major mining would pose a threat to Alaska salmon (n/19/2012)

WASHINGTON — Large-scale mining operations in Alaska’s Bristol Bay region would harm habitat for wild salmon, the Environmental Protection Agency concluded in a draft assessment Friday, but agency officials said they had not decided whether they would move to block a proposal for a major gold and copper mine.

The Nushagak and Kvichak watersheds produce nearly half the world’s sockeye salmon. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., tribal leaders, environmentalists and salmon-fishing operators have lobbied the EPA to invoke the Clean Water Act, which includes provisions protecting fishery areas, to block the mining project.

Northern Dynasty Minerals, a Canadian company, this week announced it would spend roughly $107 million to prepare its Pebble Mine project for permitting by the end of the year. The firm will produce a detailed description of the project, which could produce more than 80 billion pounds of copper, 107 million ounces of gold and 5.6 billion pounds of molybdenum.

The company and its subsidiary, Pebble Limited Partnership, estimate the mine also could produce 2,000 jobs during construction and 1,000 jobs later.

EPA regional administrator Dennis McLerran said Friday that large-scale mining is likely “to have adverse impact on the productivity and sustainability of the salmon fishery” in Bristol Bay, primarily through destruction of habitat. he described the draft as “a scientific document” and not “a regulatory decision,” emphasizing it was an analysis of the potential impact of a hypothetical scenario, rather than of a specific project.

He noted that besides Pebble, “at least seven mine proposals are in advanced stages of exploration and development.”

The study estimated that a large-scale mine “would likely result in the direct loss” of 54 to 87.9 miles of streams and 3.9 to 6.7 square miles of wetlands. Water withdrawals for mine operations “would significantly diminish habitat quality” in an additional 1.2 to 6.2 miles of streams, it added.

While a breach of dams containing mine tailings is highly unlikely, the report said, other “potential accidents” include acid, metal and other contaminants.

John Shively, chief executive of the Pebble Limited Partnership, questioned the study’s integrity, given that it was conducted in one year.

“We’ve been studying a small part of these two watersheds for eight years,” he said, adding the company had spent $120 million on scientific studies.

Sharon Leighow, spokeswoman for Alaska Republican Gov. Sean Parnell, said the governor “will work to ensure any new development fully protects the resource values of the area” but believes “the EPA has clearly overreached with this unprecedented process. without a specific proposal, the EPA cannot evaluate the potential impacts or risks from the project.”

However, many fishing operators and Bristol Bay residents say any mining operation could jeopardize the area’s average annual run of 37.5 million sockeye salmon. The EPA estimated Bristol Bay’s wild-salmon fishery and other ecological resources generate $480 million in annual revenue and provide at least 14,000 full-time and part-time jobs.

Cantwell, the first U.S. senator to encourage use of the Clean Water Act to halt the project, has noted the issue also is crucial to Washington state’s economy. Bristol Bay provides more than $100 million a year for its commercial fisheries.

“Nearly 1,000 Washingtonians hold commercial fishing permits in Bristol Bay, supporting thousands more fishery jobs in my state,” Cantwell wrote in a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson last fall.

In a statement Friday, Cantwell said, “This draft report validates the concerns of the Alaska and Washington fishing fleets that the proposed Pebble Mine could have devastating impacts to the Pacific Northwest’s maritime economy.”

Elizabeth Dubovsky, salmon-outreach director for Trout Unlimited’s Alaska program, said she was confident the analysis would lead the Obama administration to block mining operations.

“This is not about being anti-mining,” Dubovsky said. “This is about recognizing that some places are not appropriate for these sorts of industrial activities.”

Information from Seattle Times archives is included in this report.

admin - The Associated Press: Student killed, 7 hurt in blast near Italy school (n/19/2012)

Student killed, 7 hurt in blast near Italy school

(AP)–11 minutes ago 

ROME (AP) — A bomb exploded outside a high school in southern Italy named after a slain anti-Mafia prosecutor as students arrived for class Saturday, killing a teenage girl and wounding several other classmates, officials said.

The device went off a few minutes before 8 a.m. in the Adriatic port town of Brindisi just as students milled outside, chatting and getting ready for class at the Morvillo-Falcone vocational institute. the school is named after the slain anti-Mafia prosecutor Giovanni Falcone and his wife, Francesca Morvillo, a judge who was also killed in the 1992 bombing in Sicily by Cosa Nostra.

One of the wounded students, a girl who was walking alongside the victim outside the school in Brindisi, was reported in critical condition after surgery. Officials said at least seven students were injured, but some news reports put the figure at 10.

Brindisi’s Perrino hospital, where the wounded were taken, declined to give out information by phone.

Dr. Paola Ciannamea, a Perrino physician who helped treat the injured at the hsopital, told reporters there that one of the injured was a teenage girl who was in grave but stable condition after surgery. she added that plastic surgery was still being performed on some of the other injured, who suffered burns in the blast.

An unidentified hospital official, briefing reporters there, said the critically injured student was in stable condition after surgery and that several of the injured students had suffered burns and is undergoing plastic surgery.

There were no immediate claims of responsibility.

Italy has been marking the 20th anniversary of the Sicilian highway attack, but it was unclear if there was an organized crime link to Saturday’s explosion.

In Brindisi, local civil protection agency official Fabiano Amati said a female student died of her wounds after being taken to a hospital and at least seven other students were hospitalized.

Sky TG24TV said the victim was a 16-year-old girl.

Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri, in charge of domestic security, said she was “struck” by the fact that the school was named after the slain hero and his wife, but she cautioned that investigators at that point “have no elements” to blame the school attack on organized crime.

“It’s not the usual (method) for the Mafia,” she told Sky in a phone interview. the Sicilian-based Cosa Nostra usually targets specific figures, such as judges, prosecutors, turncoats or rival mobsters in attacks, and not civilian targets such as schools.

“The big problem now is to get intelligence” on the attack, said Cancellieri. she added that she had spoken by phone with Italian Premier Mario Monti, in the United States for the G-8 summit.

Outside the school, textbooks, their pages flipping in a breeze, notebooks and a backpack littered the street near where the bomb exploded. At the sound of the blast, students already inside the building ran outside of the school to see what happened.

Officials initially said the device was in a trash bin outside the Morvillo-Falcone school, but later ANSA, reporting from Brindisi, said the device, consisting of three cooking-gas canisters, a detonator and possibly a timer, had been placed on a low wall ringing the school. the wall was damaged and charred from the blast.

Public high schools in Italy hold classes on Saturday mornings.

A school official, Valeria Vitale, told Sky that most of the pupils were females. the school specializes in training for jobs in fashion and social services, she said.

The bombing also follows a number of attacks against Italian officials and government or public buildings by a group of anarchists, which prompted authorities to assign bodyguards for 550 individuals and deploy 16,000 law enforcement officers nationwide.

Minister Cancellieri indicated that after the school blast, authorities’ sense of what could be a possible target had been tested.

“Anything now could be a ‘sensitive’ target,” she said.

Austerity measures, spending cuts and new and higher taxes, all part of economist Monti’s plan to save Italy from succumbing to the debt crisis roiling Greece, have angered many citizens, and social tensions have ratcheted up.

“The economic crisis doesn’t help,” Cancellieri said, referring to the tensions.

Brindisi is a lively port town in Puglia, the region in the southeastern “heel” of the Italian boot-shaped peninsula. An organized crime syndicate known as the Sacred United Crown, has been traditionally active there, but crackdowns have been widely considered by authorities to have lessened the organization’s power in the region.

Copyright © 2012 the Associated Press. all rights reserved.

admin - Bomb attack outside Italian school kills teenage girl and wounds seven (n/19/2012)

The blast went off around 7:45 am (0545 GMT) on Saturday as students were arriving at the Francesca Morvillo Falcone vocational school.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, but the school is named after the wife of a famous anti-Mafia judge, Giovanni Falcone, who was blown up by the mob almost exactly 20 years ago.

The prosecutor, his wife and their three bodyguards were killed on May 23 1992, when the Sicilian Mafia planted half a tonne of explosives on the road between Palermo’s airport and the city centre. As one of the most audacious challenges by the Sicilian mob to the power of the Italian state, it ultimately backfired, prompting a massive crackdown against their activities that eventually cost them their dominance against the rival Neapolitan and Calabrian gangs.

Saturday morning’s bombing took place as students were entering the school in the Adriatic port.

Two students are reported to be in a critical condition.

The attack spread panic among pupils, and the force of the blast shattered windows in the school and surrounding buildings.

An official at the Civil Protection Authority said it was unclear if one or two devices had exploded in the incident, but said: “Given the effect of the explosion, it appears that this was something quite powerful.”

The bomb, or bombs, appeared to have been left outside the school, either in rubbish bins or backpacks.

Anti-mafia investigators are reported to be on their way to the scene, although the country has also seen a wave of bombings liinked to protests over the austerity crisis.

Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri announced plans several days ago to step up security around sensitive targets including official buildings after a series of threats against tax officials.

Italy’s main tax and fine collection agency, Equitalia, has been targeted by a series of small explosive devices amid a growing wave of public anger over the high taxes imposed to shore up public finances and combat the economic crisis.

The head of Ansaldo Nucleare, a nuclear engineering company owned by defence technology group Finmeccanica, was shot in the leg in an attack claimed by an anarchist group, adding to concerns that extremist groups may try to exploit the public anger.

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