2009年4月6日星期一

Yahoo! News: U.S. News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: U.S. News

Letter said to be from NY killer forecast slayings (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 04:12 PM PDT

The casket of Roberta King is carried from Temple Concord in Binghamton, N.Y., Monday, April 6, 2009.  King was killed in Friday's shooting at the American Civic Association in Binghamton.  (AP Photo/Mike Groll)AP - The man who opened fire in an immigrant center, killing 13 people before taking his own life, felt he was persecuted by police, couldn't accept his "poor life" and was intent on killing himself and at least two other people, according to a letter mailed to a television station the day of the massacre.


VA patient tests positive for HIV after mistakes (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 04:14 PM PDT

AP - A Veterans Affairs patient who was among thousands treated with unsterilized equipment has tested positive for HIV, the first such case reported since the department warned veterans they could have been exposed to infectious diseases.

NYC's archbishop Cardinal Egan to get pacemaker (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 02:45 PM PDT

In this March 17, 2009 file photo, Cardinal Edward Egan responds to questions during a news interview before the St. Patrick's Day Parade in New York. Egan, the archbishop of New York, is scheduled to undergo surgery Monday morning April 6, 2009, to receive a pacemaker. New York Archdiocese spokesman Joe Zwilling said Sunday evening April 5, 2009, that the surgery scheduled for Monday morning would be temporarily delayed until Egan could regain his strength.  (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File)AP - Cardinal Edward Egan began Holy Week in a hospital and preparing to receive a pacemaker as a sudden illness threatened to keep him from celebrating Good Friday and Easter Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral before retiring next week.


Experts: Loss, revenge often drive mass murders (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 03:03 PM PDT

In this Aug. 1, 1966 file photo, smoke rises from the sniper's gun as he fired from the tower of the University of Texas administration building  in Austin, Texas, on crowds below.  Police identified the slayer of at least 16 persons as Charles J. Whitman, 24, a student at the university. As long as there have been repeating firearms, there have been mass killings. But even experts who study these multiple murders have been stunned by the recent rash -- seven in the past month, three in the past week alone. (AP Photo/File)AP - Mass murderers are as different as their killing field — be it a nursing home or a suburban home — and as diverse as their reasons for killing — whether it's spousal betrayal or the loss of a job.


Neb. family that had been missing now in custody (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 03:01 PM PDT

This undated file photo provided by the Knox County, Nebraska, Sheriff's Office shows the Schades, a Creighton, Neb., family last seen March 20, 2009. Pictured clockwise from the top are Matt Schade, Rowena Schade, 8-year-old Sean and 11-year-old Devon. The Knox County, Neb., sheriff says the couple missing with their children for more than two weeks has turned themselves in, Monday April 6, 2009. (AP Photo/Knox County Sheriff's Office, File)AP - A couple who disappeared with their children, leading to a search of the South Dakota wilderness, turned themselves in to authorities near their Nebraska home on Monday, a sheriff said.


Demjanjuk to appeal, seeking to avoid deportation (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 03:09 PM PDT

Suspected Nazi guard John Demjanjuk, seen here in 1992, will fight to the bitter end against a ruling to extradite him to Germany to be tried for alleged complicity in the murder of thousands of Jews during World War II, his lawyer said Monday.(AFP/File/Patrick Baz)AP - A U.S. immigration judge in Virginia on Monday revoked John Demjanjuk's stay of deportation. Demjanjuk plans to appeal the decision, which would clear the way for him to be sent to Germany nearly three decades after officials first alleged he was a guard at a Nazi death camp.


Report: No ethical misconduct by engineers (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 02:38 PM PDT

AP - A professional conduct committee found no wrongdoing after looking into allegations that members of the American Society of Civil Engineers colluded with the Army Corps of Engineers to cover up problems with levees after Hurricane Katrina.

Parishes ask Vatican for mediation over closings (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:44 PM PDT

AP - The leader of a Boston-based Roman Catholic advocacy group is in Rome to deliver a letter to the Vatican asking that bishops be instructed to enter promptly into mediation with 31 parishes that have closed or are slated to close.

NY court upholds sentence of abortion doc's killer (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:35 PM PDT

Spain's Equality Minister Bibiana Aido answers a question during a news conference on the government's plans to liberalise Spain's abortion law in Madrid March 30, 2009. REUTERS/Susana Vera (SPAIN POLITICS SOCIETY HEALTH)AP - The life prison sentence given to a militant abortion opponent was appropriate despite his claims that he only meant to injure rather than kill a doctor, a federal appeals court said Monday.


Egyptian student arrested by immigration officials (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:29 PM PDT

AP - An Egyptian college student acquitted of federal explosives charges was unexpectedly arrested by immigration officials Monday.

Casey Anthony largely stoic before remains found (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 03:00 PM PDT

AP - A Florida woman accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter rarely showed emotion in jail but became unhinged after she found out a toddler's remains had been found near her family's home, according to interviews with jail staff released Monday.

Among 4-year-olds, 1 in 5 obese, study finds (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 02:49 PM PDT

Chart compares rates of childhood obesity for five ethnic groupsAP - A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese.


As Iraq rape trial begins, attorneys attack law (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:18 PM PDT

This photo provided by the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office, shows Steven Dale Green in a booking mug shot at the Mecklenburg County jail in Charlotte, N.C., July 3, 2006. Jury selection has begun in Kentucky for the trial of the former Fort Campbell soldier charged with crimes that include killing a family in Iraq and raping a teenage girl who was among those killed. (AP Photo/Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office)AP - The first former Army soldier to be charged as a civilian under a 2000 law that allows him to be prosecuted for alleged crimes committed overseas faces a trial of his peers — in a federal courtroom in Kentucky.


Ecuador seeks return of Florida death row inmate (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:07 PM PDT

Francisco Serrano, son of Nelson Serrano, who was convicted in Florida of  first degree murder in 2007, speaks at a news conference Monday, April 6, 2009 in Miami. Ecuador's government is asking for the return of Nelson Serrano from Florida's death row because they say he shouldn't have been taken from the South American country. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)AP - Ecuador's government demanded on Monday the return of a man on Florida's death row for killing four people and said he should have never been taken from the South American country, calling it a "kidnapping."


Missouri tries to shed reputation as 'puppy mill' (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 12:12 PM PDT

A bright yellow sign reading 'puppies' still beckons the visitor to a now-shuttered puppy breeding facility Tuesday, March 24, 2009, in Seneca, Mo. In February rescuers found more than 200 dogs living in their own excrement, crammed into weather-exposed single cages and hutches, many of them contaminated and hairless at the facility.  Missouri is the 'puppy mill' capital of America, home to more than 4,000 shoddy and inhumane dog-breeding businesses, by one estimate. But now the state is trying to shed its reputation, with the chief of the Agriculture Department pledging to do more to crack down on bad breeders.(AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)AP - When authorities raided J.B.'s Precious Puppies, they discovered more than 200 dogs standing in their own excrement, crammed three and four to a cage. Some were so sickly they were missing clumps of hair. The skeletal remains of puppies and adult dogs were found inside pet-food bags.


Fawcett treated for cancer's spread to liver (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 03:01 PM PDT

Farrah Fawcett arrives for the  MTV Video Music Awards in Miami in this Aug. 29, 2004, file photo. A representative for Fawcett says she has checked into a Los Angeles hospital. Craig Nevius tells People magazine that the 62-year-old 'Charlie's Angels' star, who was diagnosed with anal cancer in 2006, was hospitalized because of a blood clot that was likely a side effect of treatment she recently had in Germany. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)AP - Farrah Fawcett is being treated for anal cancer that has spread to her liver and has been hospitalized for a complication from a routine treatment, a producer who worked with the actress and her doctor said Monday.


A look at victims of the Binghamton, NY, shootings (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 08:52 AM PDT

In this undated photo released by CNPq on Monday, April 6, 2009, Almir Olimpio Alves poses for a photo in Brazil. Alves, a 43-year-old mathematics professor in northeastern Brazil, died in Binghamton, N.Y. on Friday when a gunman killed 13 people before taking his own life at an immigrant center where immigrants were taking English class. Alvez was doing postdoctoral work at Binghamton University. (AP Photo/Curriculus Lattes,CNPq)AP - A look at some of the victims in the April 3 shootings at the American Civic Association, an immigrant aid center, in Binghamton, N.Y.


Arctic sea ice thinnest ever going into spring (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 01:19 PM PDT

This image shows Markham Fiord, in August 2008, after the Markham Ice Shelf broke away. AP - The Arctic is treading on thinner ice than ever before. Researchers say that as spring begins, more than 90 percent of the sea ice in the Arctic is only 1 or 2 years old. That makes it thinner and more vulnerable than at anytime in the past three decades, according to researchers with NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado.


Mich. baby found safe at home with mother's body (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 09:36 AM PDT

AP - A 1-year-old boy whose mother apparently died days before has been found with her body in their apartment in the Detroit area.

Fargo, ND, students hit books after flood break (AP)

Posted: 06 Apr 2009 09:38 AM PDT

Noof Ali watches her father Amar Hussein, talk about leaving Iraq and settling in the United State, in their Fargo, N.D., apartment Tuesday, March 31, 2009. Battered by a flood and a blizzard, Fargo residents are quick to credit friends, family and faith for getting them through. For Fargo's newest arrivals, refugees from Iraq, Somalia, Serbia, and other hard-hit places, the web of support can be far more frail.(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)AP - Students returned to school Monday after more than two weeks off during which thousands of them contributed to round-the-clock sandbagging efforts to protect their city from potentially devasting flooding.


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