Fair Proxy Web

Archive for March 16th, 2008

Henrique brace keeps Bordeaux in touch

posted by admin in cnn, news

PARIS, France — Brazilian defender Henrique scored twice to help keep alive Bordeaux’s title hopes with a 3-0 home victory over struggling Strasbourg on Sunday.

Henrique, who was his side’s matchwinner when they won the League Cup final against Lyon a year ago, struck after 28 and 42 minutes.

Argentine striker Fernando Cavenaghi scored his 10th goal in 10 league outings to make it 3-0 15 minutes from time.

Bordeaux stay second in the table, trailing leaders Lyon by six points with nine matches to go.

Henrique headed in Alejandro Alonso’s corner kick to put Bordeaux in front and his second strike came in almost identical fashion.

Cavenaghi snapped up a poor Strasbourg clearance to add the third goal. E-mail to a friend

found here.

Scientists fight to save the last Java gibbons

posted by admin in cnn, news

CNN’s Arwa Damon visited a national park in East Java, part of Indonesia, on March 7, and reports on her experience with scientists working to save the habitat of the endangered gibbon species.

EAST JAVA, Indonesia — Primatologist Dr. Jatna Supriatna scans the treetops in a national park on the island of Java, looking for gibbons. This area is home to about 150 of the remaining 4,000 Java gibbons. These highly acrobatic creatures are easy prey on the ground and live well above it in the jungle canopy.

They like the trees here, the fruit from the trees, so sometimes they are here, Supriatna says softly, as we trek through the natural beauty with midday light streaming through the foliage.

This is keystone to the gibbons. You can’t kill the trees he continues emphatically, pointing out the dainty figs that are a staple part of the gibbons’ diet.

But that’s exactly what’s going on. Indonesia has the shameful distinction of holding the highest deforestation title in the 2008 Guinness Book of World Records, destroying an estimated 300 soccer fields of forest every hour.

According to the World Wildlife Fund, these shy and elusive creatures are the most endangered of all ape species.

They don’t have any too big a natural enemy, but encroachment, Supriatna explains.

Through the foliage we can see the electrical towers from the human communities, slowly eating away at what’s left of this protected land.

Baby gibbons are also subject to illegal poaching because they are considered cute pets and, according to Supriatna, selling for thousands of dollars on the black market.

They kill the mother because they want to have the baby, Supriatna says. So if they kill the mother there is no chance for survival of the population, of the gibbon.

In a project run by Conservation International, primatologists are trying to rehabilitate gibbons they saved from people’s homes. UuUu, a 7-year-old female is tranquilized and gently moved to the introduction cage.

Because gibbons live in family groups, her only chance of survival in the wild is with a mate. As she sits hunched over in a corner, drooling and smacking her lips from the effect of the drugs, in the neighboring cage, Kiss Kiss, a male, emits low whimpers, a visible sign of his agitation.

UuUu slowly shakes off the drugs and groggily clambers on the fencing.

They will spend at least a week watching each other, Supriatna explains laughing. Not like humans. They have to invest a lot in the pairing because when they are in nature they have to find the right guy for the female because their entire life they will be there. It’s not like they can choose one and just move to the other.

For this species, there are no one night stands. And Kiss Kiss can attest to just how picky female gibbons can be. He was already rejected by a female he spent six months with.

In the five years since this project began, there have only been three successful couplings, between the 16 gibbons at the center. So far no couples have been introduced back into the wild. Not only do the primatologists have to get the pairs to mate, but they also have to teach them vital lessons about their diet. For these gibbons that were snatched from the wild, nature can be poisonous.

This makes preserving those already there even more important. Gibbons are a vital part of this already fragile ecosystem, crucial to seed distribution and the health of the ecosystem. Supriatna warns that changing the balance of nature will cause disasters.

In the distance, as the afternoon rains start to roll in, we can hear the gibbon’s melodic song. Supriatna’s picks out the male-female duet.

Listen, the female [is] usually singing a little bit longer and louder.

The haunting melody gets louder, but the gibbon pair it’s coming from isn’t close enough for us to see. But its easy to imagine them deftly swinging through the canopy. And the realization sets in, that the gibbon song, like the nature we hear it in, risks being a thing of the past.
found here.

Swedish woman murdered on Thai beach

posted by admin in cnn, news

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Police investigating the murder of a Swedish tourist in Thailand said Sunday the woman was taking a walk on the beach when she was attacked and stabbed in the neck.

The woman, identified as 27-year-old Hanna Charlotta Backlund, was found dead Saturday on the island of Phuket, one of Thailand’s most popular tourist destinations.

Police Lt. Gen. Sakchai Limcharoen said the woman and a friend were camping out in a tent on the grounds of a hotel on Mai Khao beach, on the northern tip of Phuket.

On Saturday afternoon, Backlund asked her travel companion to join her for a walk on the beach but the friend stayed back at the hotel, Sakchai said. When Backlund failed to return, the friend went looking for her and found her body in the sand.

Initial investigations indicate that she was followed from her hotel and attacked.

She fought back, Sakchai said. The attacker or attackers stabbed her.

Backlund was stabbed in the neck, and had apparent knife wounds on her body and her left hand, Sakchai said.

Police said they feared any clues left in the sand had been washed away by waves.

The Swedish Embassy was closed for the weekend and could not immediately be reached for comment.

Swedish Foreign Ministry spokesman Tobias Nilsson confirmed Backlund’s identity but declined to discuss other details. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

found here.

Founder of ‘air taxi’ service flies to success

posted by admin in cnn, news

(CNN) — Like a lot of kids, Aaron Sohacki’s dad took him to watch airplanes take off and land at the airport.

Like some kids, his love for watching planes turned into a love of flying, and he got his pilot’s license before his driver’s license.

Uniquely, his love for flying turned into a passion for running a business that flies other people.

Ever since I could remember, I’ve been passionate about aviation, said Sohacki. At 21, he started ImagineAir. It’s a regional company that lets regular folks fly privately.

Sohacki describes ImagineAir as, a new form of transportation that allows people to get all the benefits of private air travel — the time savings and convenience — but at a price point that’s a little bit closer to commercial aviation. Watch the CNN.com Live interview

Along the way, he has flown some not-so-regular people like one of his first clients, the former mayor of Augusta, Georgia, who needed to fly to have dinner with Rudy Giuliani.

The charter service takes people 300-500 miles from the headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia. Considered a new version of a taxi service, the air taxi often costs less than commercial travel.

Now age 24, the CEO still flies customers and often gets asked, Are you even old enough to fly this plane? E-mail to a friend

found here.

Olympics chief rejects boycott over Tibet

posted by admin in cnn, news

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts (AP) — The president of the International Olympic Committee rejected the idea of boycotting the Summer Games in Beijing over China’s crackdown in Tibet, saying it would only hurt athletes.

We believe that the boycott doesn’t solve anything, Jacques Rogge told reporters Saturday on this Caribbean island.

Demonstrations against Chinese rule in Tibet on Friday — the most violent riots there in nearly two decades — left at least 10 protesters dead, according to official Chinese reports.

China ordered tourists out of Tibet’s capital and troops patrolled the streets on Saturday.

On a six-day tour of the Caribbean, Rogge expressed condolences for the victims and said he hopes calm will be restored immediately. He declined to say whether the committee would change its stance if violence continues or more people are killed. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

found here.

Recent Posts
Recent Comments
About Us
admin: Was edinburgh report pages search viagra viagra lung disease . canada viagra prescrip...
admin: Was find viagra viagra price canada . viagra inhancers wellbutron viagra , history ab...
relay: I have to say that I'm very upset with the entire protest against the torch relay thi...
David Schneider: I think that the world leaders should not tell China what to do. The U.S. has The Ari...
Skeptic: If Dalai Lama thinks a vacant Tibet is a good thing, he can have the moon. Most pe...

My name is Izabel Potrito. You are reading my Fair Proxy blog where I'll share latest news in USA and world. My thoughts to make this country a better place.

Close
E-mail It