Pearce: Fans want home-grown coach
The News Review:
- Pearce: Fans want home-grown coach
- Farmer-owned meat store a home-grown success.
- Bush Delivers Speech on Renewable Fuel Sources
- Egypt prepares to pick up the pieces, again.
- The 30km-wide dead zone around the decommissioned plant hums with…
Pearce: Fans want home-grown coach
Telegraph.co.uk – Apr 25, 2006
There are suggestions Scolari, whose Brazil and Portugal teams beat England at the last two major tournaments, the 2002 World Cup and Euro 2004, could be offered the job within the next 48 hours. But Pearce, the Manchester City manager who was one of the early front-runners for the job, said he would be surprised by such an appointment.
Farmer-owned meat store a home-grown success.
Free with registration – The Gazette – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 25, 2006
A year into the operation of their meat store, the Allisons say they are still learning about retail. Marc Allison, 51, says his purpose for opening t.
Bush Delivers Speech on Renewable Fuel Sources
Washington Post – Apr 25, 2006
And ethanol’s good for drivers. Ethanol is home-grown. Ethanol will replace gasoline consumption. Ethanol’s good for the whole country.
Egypt prepares to pick up the pieces, again.
Free with registration – Global Agenda – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 25, 2006
–> COPYRIGHT 2006 Economist Newspaper Ltd. The impact of a bomb attack on the tourist resort of Dahab in Egypt on Monday April 24th, evidently by home-grown Islamic terrorists, may be profound. It appears to confirm that even stringent security measures often fail in the face of determined attackers. But most Egyptians have little sympathy for terrorists, while the tourist industry has proven, in the long term at least, resilient in the face of such violence IN A nightmare repeat of previous incidents, terrorist bombs have again struck tourists and locals in Egypt. Three near-simultaneous blasts, possibly set off by suicide bombers, destroyed crowded cafes and a grocery in the village of Dahab, a quiet resort on the Sinai coast known for its palm-fringed beach and relaxed ambience. Some 18 people are confirmed dead so far, among them at least four foreigners.
The 30km-wide dead zone around the decommissioned plant hums with…
Taipei Times – Apr 25, 2006
Around 320 remain today. RETURNEES
“I was born here, where else could I go?” said Maria Shulan, a sprightly 76-year-old from the village of Parishiv, located 17km southeast of the plant. She is one of 18 people left from the original 1,000 and lives on home-grown produce. Convinced the accident was divine punishment for blighting the land with the station, she dismisses health concerns. Here the Geiger counter shows the radiation level to be slightly above normal, reflecting the checkered nature of the contamination. In some places people are strongly advised to stay off the grass, which absorbs radioactivity, elsewhere it is clear because changing winds spared the area 20 years ago. Other returnees include Father Nikolai, the Orthodox priest in Chornobyl who ministers to the locals and the workers.