With Nuclear Rebirth Come New Worries


By GEORGE JAHN
Associated Press Writer


VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Global warming and rocketing oil prices are making nuclear power fashionable, drawing a once demonized industry out of the shadows of the Chernobyl disaster as a potential shining knight of clean energy.
Britain is the latest to recommit itself to the energy source, with its government announcing support Thursday for the construction of new nuclear power plants. Nuclear power plants produce around 20 percent of Britain's electricity, but all but one are due to close by 2023.
However, some countries hopping on the nuclear bandwagon have abysmal industrial safety records and corrupt ways that give many pause for thought.


China has 11 nuclear plants and plans to bring more than 30 others online by 2020. And a Massachusetts Institute of Technology report projects that it may need to add as many as 200 reactors by 2050.
Of the more than 100 nuclear reactors now being built, planned or on order, about half are in China, India and other developing nations. Argentina, Brazil and South Africa plan to expand existing programs; and Vietnam, Thailand, Egypt and Turkey are among the countries considering building their first reactors.
The concerns are hardly limited to developing countries. Japan's nuclear power industry has yet to recover from revelations five years ago of dozens of cases of false reporting on the inspections of nuclear reactor cracks.
The Swedish operators of a German reactor came under fire last summer for delays in informing the public about a fire at the plant. And a potentially disastrous partial breakdown of a Bulgarian nuclear plant's emergency shutdown mechanism in 2006 went unreported for two months until whistle-blowers made it public.
Nuclear transparency will be an even greater problem for countries such as China that have tight government controls on information. Those who mistrust the current nuclear revival are still haunted by the 1986 meltdown of the Chernobyl reactor and the Soviet Union's attempts to hide the full extent of the catastrophe. Further back in the collective memory is the partial meltdown at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania in 1979.
The revival, the International Atomic Energy Agency projects, means that nuclear energy could nearly double within two decades to 691 gigawatts - 13.3 percent of all electricity generated.
"We are facing a nuclear renaissance," Anne Lauvergeon, CEO of the French nuclear energy firm Areva, told an energy conference. "Nuclear's not the devil any more. The devil is coal."
Philippe Jamet, director of nuclear installation safety at the International Atomic Energy Agency, describes the industry's record as "second to none." Still, he says that countries new to or still learning about nuclear power "have to move down the learning curve, and they will learn from (their) mistakes."
The Vienna-based IAEA, a U.N. body, was set up in 1957 in large part to limit such trial and error, providing quality controls and expertise to countries with nuclear programs and overseeing pacts binding them to high safety standards.
But the agency is already stretched with monitoring Iran and North Korea over their suspected nuclear arms programs, and IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei says his organization cannot be the main guarantor of safety. The primary responsibility, he says, rests with the operators of a nuclear facility and their government.
Developing nations insist they are ready for the challenge. But worries persist that bad habits of the past could reflect on nuclear operational safety.
In China, for instance, thousands die annually in the world's most dangerous coal mines and thousands more in fires, explosions and other accidents often blamed on insufficient safety equipment and workers ignoring safety rules.
Chinese state media on Saturday reported that nearly 3,800 people died in mine accidents last year. While that is about 20 percent less than in 2006, it still leaves China's mines the world's deadliest.
A Finnish study published in 2005 said India's annual industrial fatality rate is 11.4 people per 100,000 workers and the accident rate 8,700 per 100,000 workers. Overall, Asian nations excluding China and India have an average industrial accident fatality rate of 21.5 per 100,000 and an accident rate of over 16,000 per 100,000 workers, says the report, by the Tampere University of Technology in Finland. The study lists a fatality rate of 5.2 people per 100,000 for the United states and 3 per 100,000 for France.
Countries with nuclear power are obligated to report all incidents to the IAEA. But the study said most Asian governments vastly underreport industrial accidents to the U.N.'s International Labor Organization - fewer than 1 percent in China's case.
Separately, China and India shared 70th place in the 2006 Corruption Perceptions Index, published by the Transparency International think tank that ranked 163 nations, with the least corrupt first and the most last. Vietnam occupied the 111th spot, and Indonesia - which, like Hanoi, wants to build a nuclear reactor - came in 130th.
"Are there special concerns about the developing world? The answer is definitely yes," said Carl Thayer, a Southeast Asia expert with the Australian Defence Force Academy.
Corrupt officials in licensing and supervisory agencies in the region could undermine the best of IAEA guidelines and oversight, Thayer said.
"There could be a dropping of standards, and that affects all aspects of the nuclear industry, from buying the material, to processing applications to building and running the plant."
Issues of national pride may also come up.
A Vienna-based diplomat whose portfolio includes nuclear issues told the AP that in the 1990s the Canadian government offered India troubleshooting information for its reactors, but the Indians "did not want to know about it." The diplomat, who demanded anonymity in exchange for discussing confidential information, said: "It reflected the attitude that national pride is more important than safety."
The AP's efforts to obtain Indian official comment were unsuccessful.
Permanent storage of radioactive waste - which can remain toxic for tens of thousands of years - is another major problem, as is shutting nuclear plants that are no longer safe.
In China, permanent dump sites are not expected to be operational before 2040, according to a report by the U.S. Department of Energy. So for now, China - like India - stores the waste in temporary sites, usually close to reactors, where it is more vulnerable to theft and poses a greater environmental danger.
Nuclear proponents say new generations of reactors now on the drawing board come with better fail-safe mechanisms and fewer moving parts. But even some of these supporters are skeptical about creating the foolproof reactor.
Hans-Holger Rogner, head of the IAEA's planning and economic studies section, says he is "suspicious when people say the next (reactor) generation will be safer than the one we have."

Read More......

Humphries to rest after operation



Last Updated: Monday, 14 January 2008, 15:32 GMT

Barry Humphries created Dame Edna in the 1950s
Entertainer Barry Humphries is to take a six-month break from live performing following appendix surgery.
The 73-year-old, best known for his alter ego Dame Edna Everage, has been forced to cancel his only UK date, scheduled for Glasgow in March.

The performer, who was made a CBE last year, has also shelved a tour of North America on medical grounds.


A spokesman for Humphries said he would continue to make appearances, but live shows have been "put on the back foot".

Lavish shows

But he denied reports that complications would force the Australian entertainer to undergo further surgery.

An operation to remove his appendix was carried out last month.

Humphries was due to top the bill at the Glasgow International Comedy Festival in March, which would have marked his first appearance in Scotland for a decade.

Festival co-ordinator Linda Allan said organisers were "extremely disappointed" that Humphries' visit has been cancelled.

In a statement on the comedy festival's website, Humphries, writing in the guise of Dame Edna, said the doctor told her there was "a little feminine procedure I needed that could not wait".

Dame Edna has been a TV fixture for decades, and is best known for her catchphrases including "hello possums!" and her silent, downtrodden New Zealand bridesmaid Madge Allsop.

Humphries has a reputation for lavish stage shows, in which he appears as both Dame Edna and other characters, including foul-mouthed Australian cultural attache Sir Les Paterson.

In 2000 he won a Tony Award in the US for a theatrical production of Dame Edna: The Royal Tour.

Read More......

Aguilera gives birth to baby boy


Last Updated: Monday, 14 January 2008, 08:14 GMT

Aguilera gives birth to baby boy
Christina Aguilera made the announcement on her website
Pop star Christina Aguilera has given birth to her first child, a son named Max Liron.
The 27-year-old and music executive husband Jordan Bratman, said the 6lb 2oz (2.8kg) child is "a beautiful, healthy baby boy".

The four-time Grammy award-winning singer added on her website that their son's arrival was "a very joyful and special day for Jordan and I".

Aguilera's record label RCA added that both mother and son were doing well.

'Amazing'

The performer, who discovered her pregnancy towards the end of her Back To Basics tour last year, said in a November interview that she wanted to become a working mother, balancing motherhood with her career.

She also told Glamour magazine that her husband had been "so supportive and amazing" during the pregnancy".

The couple married in 2005.

Aguilera is famed for a string of chart hits including Beautiful and Ain't No Other Man.

Read More......

Entertainers Named in Steroid Report

PATCHOGUE, N.Y., Jan. 13, 2008

Mary J. Blige, 50 Cent, Timbaland and Others Mentioned in Investigation
A number of entertainers were named in connection with an Albany-based steroid investigation, but are not part of an ongoing criminal probe, according to a published report.

The Times Union of Albany cited unnamed sources in a Sunday report that R&B music star Mary J. Blige, rap musicians 50 Cent, Timbaland and Wyclef Jean, and award-winning author and producer Tyler Perry may have received or used performance-enhancing drugs.

Albany District Attorney P. David Soares launched an investigation into steroid trafficking last year. Law enforcement officials have said evidence does not indicate that the celebrities broke the law. Officials are focusing on the doctors, pharmacists and clinics that provide the drugs.


Ken Sunshine, a spokesman for Tyler Perry, declined comment. Calls to representatives for the musicians were not immediately returned Sunday.

Soares has declined to comment on or confirm the identities of the stars mentioned in the report. His multistate investigation has focused on Signature Pharmacy of Orlando, Fla. So far, 10 defendants have pleaded guilty, and some professional athletes have been linked to the probe in news reports.

Soares has said Signature was at the center of a web of businesses and doctors that illegally wrote prescriptions for steroids. The investigation gained national attention almost a year ago when authorities raided Signature. The company's owners and the pharmacy's operators are awaiting trial in Albany on related charges.

Records shared with the Times Union, and information from several cooperating witnesses on Long Island, indicate the celebrities received prescribed human growth hormone, or steroids. In some cases, aliases were used for their delivery.

Former Sen. George Mitchell released his report last month on performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.

The report said former Mets clubhouse attendant Kirk Radomski provided steroids and human growth hormone, linked to several prominent players.

Radomski pleaded guilty last year to charges that he dealt steroids to players for a decade.

Hearings are set to begin this month in Congress on the Mitchell Report.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., introduced legislation that would make possession of human growth hormone illegal without a current, valid prescription.

Read More......

Spears due in court for major hearing


By LINDA DEUTSCH, AP Special Correspondent
Mon Jan 14, 5:26 AM ET

LOS ANGELES - Britney Spears' best chance of regaining visitation rights with her two sons is in court — but whether she'll be there is anyone's guess.

Spears is scheduled to appear Monday morning for what an attorney described Sunday as "the most significant hearing in the case so far" in the pop star's effort to regain visitation rights.

But Spears has had trouble making recent court dates: On Dec. 12, she called in sick for a court-ordered deposition, then arrived nearly two hours late on its rescheduled date, Jan. 3.

"I don't know if she will be there" on Monday, Kevin Federline attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan told The Associated Press. "You can't phone this one in."

Police and emergency medical technicians who were summoned to her home the night of Jan. 3 in a standoff involving her refusal to return the boys to ex-husband Federline will testify Monday, probably behind closed doors, Kaplan said.

If Spears comes to court, Kaplan said she would be expected to testify. "She will have the opportunity to persuade the court that she can have some visitation under monitored conditions," he said.

Phone and e-mail messages requesting comment from Spears' attorneys Sunday afternoon were not immediately returned.

Kaplan said he knew it was only a temporary measure when he obtained emergency court orders two weeks ago granting sole physical and legal custody to Federline.

Police were called by a court appointed monitor on Jan. 3 when Spears refused to hand over Jayden James, 1, and Sean Preston, 2, to Federline's security guard. She locked herself in a room with one of the boys.

Spears was taken to a hospital in an ambulance chased by photographers and was placed on an involuntary hold on grounds she was a danger to herself or others. Spears left Cedars-Sinai Medical Center a day and half later.

The day after the incident, Kaplan presented papers to Commissioner Scott Gordon, who awarded sole legal and physical custody of the boys to Federline and suspended Spears' visitation rights.

Kaplan said if visitation is restored, it would be under more restrictions than those originally imposed by Gordon.

Read More......

Dodi not 'the one' for Diana, who yearned for ex, inquest hears


LONDON (AFP) - Princess Diana did not consider Dodi Fayed as "the one" she would marry, and was still yearning for a former boyfriend she had planned to wed, her former butler said Monday.

Paul Burrell told the inquest into her death that Diana had wanted to marry Pakistani heart surgeon Hasnat Khan, with whom she split shortly before her brief relationship with Fayed ended in tragedy in a car crash in August 1997.

In eagerly-awaited testimony, Burrell said Diana's relationship with Fayed was "exciting" for the princess, who had divorced from Prince Charles in 1996.



"It was very fresh, new and exciting," he told the High Court in London, packed for one of the most high-profile witnesses since the six-month inquest into the deaths of Diana and Fayed opened in October.

But asked by lawyer Ian Burnett: "By that stage had you any sense from the princess that... to use a hackneyed phrase that has appeared in so many media reports, Dodi was 'the one'?" he replied: "No, I didn't have that impression."

Fayed and driver Henri Paul were killed instantly in the Paris car crash, while Diana died from internal injuries a few hours later.

Fayed's father Mohammed Al Fayed, the owner of plush London department store Harrods, claims they were killed by a British establishment conspiracy to prevent Diana marrying a Muslim and having his child.

Burrell also denied that a ring Fayed bought shortly before their doomed last evening together signified there were wedding plans. "It wasn't an engagement ring, it was a friendship band," he said.

The former butler said Diana had been much more serious about Khan.

"The princess seriously contemplated marriage with Khan. She asked me if it was possible to arrange a private marriage between them. Plans were being made in Kensington Palace for Hasnat to have his own rooms," he said.

Their relationship ended in mid-July 1997, and she headed off for a holiday with Fayed in the south of France. But "the princess was still burning a candle for Doctor Khan," said Burrell.

Rosa Monckton, a close friend of Diana's, suggested that the princess had been "deeply upset and hurt" when Khan broke off the relationship they had tried hard to keep secret in mid-1997.

"She was very much in love with him... She hoped that they would be able to have a future together... She wanted to marry him," she testified last month.

There has been speculation that Khan, who began a two-year romance with the princess in 1995, would give evidence either in person or via videolink to the inquest in London, which is seeking to determine exactly how and why Diana died.

Khan, 48 -- reported to have been nicknamed "Mister Wonderful" by the princess -- said at the weekend that he did not plan to give evidence.

"I will act on my lawyer's advice. I will do exactly what the law requires. If the lawyers told me I had to go, I would go, definitely. I don't have anything to add," he told The Mail on Sunday newspaper from his home in Pakistan.

Read More......

Scotch Purists Beware


By JONATHAN MILES
Published: January 13, 2008

THE first time I visited the restaurant Shorty’s.32, acting on a tip about a new single-malt Scotch cocktail, the bartender turned me down. No such drink on the menu, he claimed.


Hiroko Masuike for The New York Times
ALL DRESSED UP A single malt in a cocktail may turn some heads.
Had I, like a fisherman late for the mayfly hatch, already missed it? No, he assured me. He’d been manning the bar at Shorty’s, a dark and diminutive American bistro on the upper fringe of SoHo, since its opening in October and never once had he mixed a Scotch drink.



“Most people,” he said, gesturing to a companion of mine down the bar nursing a bourbon on the rocks, “drink their Scotch that way.”

Indeed they do. As a Scottish proverb says: “There are two things a Highlander likes naked, and one of them is malt whiskey.” But we New Yorkers are islanders, not Highlanders, and adulteration befits us. Case in point: the Sweet Solera, the single-malt cocktail I was hunting (prematurely, as it turned out) on my first trip to Shorty’s. It’s listed on the chalkboard menu now, a new but secure addition. And, unless you really are a Highlander, it’s worth seeking out.

A mixture of Glenfiddich 15-Year-Old Solera Reserve, Lillet Rouge, and a winsome dash of caramel syrup, and bespangled with a maraschino cherry, the Sweet Solera is a cousin to a Rob Roy, meaning it’s kin to a Manhattan. That is to say, it comes from a good family. While the root beer-y sweetness of the Lillet Rouge and caramel blunt the rugged, smoky edges of the Scotch, the peatiness still comes rumbling through. It takes more than a cherry to tame a single malt.

Yet Scotch connoisseurs might reasonably ask: Why even try? “Single malts have such a specific flavor profile, so it’s difficult to argue why you would want to mess with that,” said Charlotte Voisey, a “brand ambassador” at William Grant & Sons, Glenfiddich’s parent company. Ms. Voisey is adept at making that argument, however — Shorty’s Sweet Solera happens to be her creation. She chose a single malt rather than a blended, because, she said, it brings a “very pure and singular flavor” to the drink.

“Certainly, eyebrows have been raised,” she admitted. “But a cocktail, in and of itself, isn’t a means of disguising the base flavor. It’s a means of showcasing that flavor and exploring how else it can be enjoyed.”

It’s also a means of cracking the perception that single-malt Scotches are designed for rich old men to sip, neat or on the rocks, after a round of golf or a corporate merger or both, a stereotype Ms. Voisey is eager to dispel. “Cocktails are supposed to be fun,” she said.

Even — raised, white-tufted eyebrows aside — single-malt cocktails.

SWEET SOLERA Adapted From Shorty’s.32

1 1/4ounces Glenfiddich Solera Reserve Scotch

¾ ounce Lillet Rouge

½ ounce Monin caramel syrup

1 maraschino cherry, for garnish.

Stir all liquid ingredients with ice and strain into chilled cocktail glass or an ice-filled rocks glass. Garnish with the cherry.

Yield: 1 serving

Read More......

Globes Can't Atone for Lack of Ceremony


by Natalie Finn
Sun, 13 Jan 2008 08:24:53 PM PST
RECOMMENDED (0)
COMMENTS (8)
TEXT SIZE + A | -A
If the Golden Globes are handed out, but no one is there to collect them, did it ever really happen?
We're still trying to figure that out. What we do know is that on Sunday night, in lieu of a glitzy, boozy affair, we got a bizarrely sedate half-hour 65th Annual Golden Globes news conference.
No stars were on hand to collect their prizes in an evening where the wealth was spread around.
Atonement was named Best Motion Picture, Drama, one of two wins for the film, set in World War II-era London and France, while Sweeney Todd also scored two trophies—Best Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy, and Best Actor in a Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy, and Johnny Depp's killer performance. (Get the full list of winners.)


Joel and Ethan Coen's No Country for Old Men notched two wins, as well, including Best Screenplay honors for the fraternal filmmakers and a Best Supporting Actor trophy for Javier Bardem, who was also a loquacious winner at the Critics' Choice Awards last week.
"It is a great honor to have been recognized with this award in a time when there are so many outstanding performances in this category," Bardem said, graciously offering up an acceptance speech in the form of a statement Sunday night.
"I would like to thank the Coens for their trust and for allowing me to be part of their creative process in this incredible project. I want to share this award with Josh Brolin, Tommy Lee Jones and Kelly McDonald and thank Scott Rudin, Miramax and Paramount Vantage."
Brooklyn-born artist Julian Schnabel beat out, among others, the Coen brothers and Tim Burton to capture the Best Director prize for the French-language The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, the winner for Best Foreign-Language Film.
Brits Daniel Day-Lewis and Julie Christie further cemented their status as Oscar frontrunners, winning for Best Actor and Actress in a Motion Picture, Drama, for their respective roles as a power-mad oilman in There Will Be Blood and an Alzheimer's patient in Away from Her. This was Christie's first Globe nomination since 1976, when she was up for acting in Shampoo.
But it's Cate Blanchett's win for Best Supporting Actress for one of the seven takes on Bob Dylan in I'm Not There that really summed up the theme of the evening.
Considering no one was there and all.
This should have been a night for raucous celebration, made even more so by the Globes' usual wine-with-dinner approach at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, but there was very little to applaud, thanks to, as The Insider's Lara Spencer put it, the elephant in the room.
The Hollywood writers' strike is now entering its 11th week, and the Writers Guild of America adamantly refused to throw the Globes a bone and allow union scribes to pen material for the telecast. The Screen Actors Guild, in turn, threw its support behind the writers, after which the HFPA scrapped the ceremony once it was known that none of the 72 acting nominees would be willing to cross a WGA picket line.
So, instead of the likes of Julia Roberts, George Clooney, Tom Hanks, Sally Field, Steve Carell, Amy Adams and America Ferrera, awards were passed out by members of the entertainment journalism community, including Spencer, E! News' Giuliana Rancic, Entertainment Tonight's Mary Hart and Inside Edition's Jim Moret, all doing their best to liven up the decidedly subdued affair.
"I just want you all to know, all of us presenting the awards tonight are not major movie stars, in case you didn't notice," Spencer said, trying to lighten the moment as she announced a handful of the evening's winners, including Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder, whose "Guaranteed" from Into the Wild was named Best Original Song, and Glenn Close, who was rightly named Best Actress in a Drama Series for her scene-chewing turn as litigator Patty Hewes in FX's Damages.
Meanwhile, as befitting a celebration that was really no laughing matter, music beat out comedy by a mile in the theoretically more lighthearted film categories.
Burton may have been snubbed, but Sweeney Todd beat out indie darling Juno and the hit song-and-dancer Hairspray for Best Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy, honors, and Depp's performance as the Demon Barber of Fleet Street won him his first Golden Globe in eight tries.
Marion Cotillard's embodiment of French torch singer Edith Piaf in the often downbeat La Vie en Rose earned her the trophy for Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy.
Despite the lack of fanfare, at least the Globes could still be counted on to recognize some of the edgier work being done on TV these days, the selection of a period epic for Best Film notwithstanding.
Basic cable network AMC joined the ranks of FX and TNT as Mad Men, about the cutthroat world of the Madison Avenue advertising business circa 1960, was named Best Series, Drama, and star Jon Hamm was named Best Actor for his work as the ever-slick Don Draper.
The recently departed Extras won for Best Comedy Series, meaning Ricky Gervais has now produced and starred in two sitcoms that both won this top honor and signed off after two beloved seasons—The Office, of course, being the other one.
The joke was also on Tina Fey, who has said repeatedly that she considers herself a writer rather than an actress yet still earned the title Best Actress in a Comedy Series for 30 Rock, the NBC sitcom's sole win.
Four-time nominee Jeremy Piven finally picked up (not literally, of course) his first win for Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries or TV Movie for his still great work as über-agent Ari Gold in Entourage, helping to make HBO the most honored network of the night with six wins.
The HBO movie Longford was actually the biggest winner of the night with three awards, including Best Miniseries or TV Movie.
The telepic's kudos also included Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries or TV Movie for new mom Samantha Morton and Best Actor in a Miniseries or TV Movie for Jim Broadbent, who played the titular English politician.
Yet another first-time winner was Queen Latifah, named Best Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie for her role as an HIV-positive activist in HBO's Life Support.
"I am so thrilled," she said in a thank-you statement. "I wish I could be with you tonight to celebrate." (So do we, Queen Latifah, so do we.)
"Life Support is such an important film which addresses such important issues, and I'm so proud to be recognized for my work in it. I only hope the film helps in our fight against AIDS and HIV."
Though HBO continued to dominate the premium cable scene, Californication star David Duchovny took one for the Showtime team, winning Best Actor in a Comedy Series for his turn as an oversexed writer who's having trouble putting pen to paper—and not because there's a strike.
While the WGA opted not to picket the Globes after the HFPA quashed NBC's planned exclusive coverage and opened it up to all news outlets, a small group of nonwriting entertainment-industry workers were gathered outside the venue earlier in the day, expressing their increasing disgruntlement with the strike.
"Rest assured that next year the Golden Globes will be back bigger and better than ever," HFPA president Jorge Camara promised in wrapping up the admittedly lackluster news conference.
Mary Hart had the write, er, right idea.
"Yes, I yearn for the days of Jack Nicholson mooning the Golden Globes, Christine Lahti getting locked in the bathroom. But we have that for next year," the ET anchor said.

Read More......