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US housing crisis solutions proposed in Congress

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Legislative and executive efforts appear in conflict to try to stem foreclosure crisis and real estate market woes

SACRAMENTO, CA (OBSNews.com) – May 12, 2008 – Democratic and Republican members of Congress passed their version of a housing rescue bill last week that would provide for up to $300 billion to purchase mortgages held by lending institutions.

The Bush administration has signaled opposition to the House measure and opposition to the bill is expected from the Senate panel that will consider the legislation.  The administration favors instead changes to the FHASecure program that offers help for borrowers faced with foreclosure as a result of onerous loan provisions for subprime adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs).

Last month the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) announced that the FHASecure program, a mortgage refinance program, would be expanded to all subprime ARM mortgage borrowers who were not more than 60 days late in payments (or 30 days late on payments more than twice in 12 months).  This offer was to be contingent on the borrower having at least 3% equity in the home.  For borrowers more than 90 days late in mortgage payments (or 30 days late three times or more in a 12 month time) the borrowers would need at least 10% equity in order to qualify

Sacramento real estate and foreclosure expert Patrick McGilvray, J.D., president of www.TheHomeBuyingCenter.com, commented, “we speak with hundreds of Americans every week who are trying to sell houses quickly in this market to a real estate investor.  They are the ones bearing the brunt of the housing crunch.  McGilvray added that it  is eassier to help prospective home buyers find good deals on foreclosure houses than it is to sell houses fast in today’s market.  “That’s just the market we’re in.  I’m not sure how much short-term help the government can provide the housing sector given the overall economic picture,” he added.

According to Roy Bernardi, the deputy secretary of HUD, which administers the FHA “The changes we have made with FHASecure will help us reach about 500,000 homeowners in total by the end of this year.”

S.F Denies Liability in Tiger Attack

Saturday, May 10th, 2008

By Lisa Fernandez
 

COURT FILING SAYS CITY IS BLAMELESS IN FATAL MAULING

San Francisco’s city attorney denies the city was in the wrong the day two San Jose brothers were mauled by a tiger at the zoo.

In a brief set of documents signed May 8, City Attorney Dennis Herrera and adjuster Joe Abad said there is “no indication of liability” by the city and county in the Christmas Day tiger attack that killed Carlos Sousa Jr. and injured Amritpal “Paul” and Kulbir Dhaliwal.

The Dhaliwal brothers on March 26 filed a claim for damages against San Francisco - a first step to a lawsuit.

Herrera instead referred the brothers to the San Francisco Zoological Society, the non-profit organization that runs the zoo, which is on city land.

City attorney spokesman Matt Dorsey said this “deny and refer” is routine, adding that the zoological society is insured. A zoo representative was unavailable for immediate comment.

No one was charged with a crime after the attack by a 250-pound Siberian tiger named Tatiana, but authorities said they believe the tiger was provoked. It is unknown how Tatiana escaped from the enclosure. Police shot and killed the tiger.

Dorsey said Sousa’s family has not filed a claim.

The Dhaliwals, represented by powerhouse attorneys Mark Geragos and Shepard Kopp, have six months to file a lawsuit. Neither attorney was available for comment.

In their claim, the Dhaliwals accused the public relations firm of Sam Singer, hired by the zoo, of making false statements about them after the
attack. The claim also states that San Francisco and the zoo should have been able to prevent the tiger’s escape.
At the time of the attack, the retaining wall in the tiger grotto was about four feet shorter than industry standards, and the zoo has spent $1.7 million on safety renovations since the attack. A national group that accredits zoos concluded in a report that poor training and short staffing added to the tragedy.

Since the tiger attack, Paul Dhaliwal has also been arrested on unrelated charges that he stole electronic equipment and video games at Target stores in San Leandro, Hayward and Livermore between March 24 and March 27.

MySpace Makes Data Portability Move

Friday, May 9th, 2008

 By Juan Carlos Perez

Responding to the momentum around data portability, MySpace has launched its own “Data Availability” effort with big-name partners Yahoo, eBay, Twitter, and fellow News Corp. unit Photobucket.

The initiative’s goal is to let MySpace members share their public profile data outside of the walls of the social-networking site.

“Today, MySpace no longer operates as an autonomous island on the Internet, by allowing the data that creates the engaging and collaborative experience that is MySpace to now be shared across all the sites our users visit,” said Chris DeWolfe, CEO and cofounder of MySpace, during a press conference.

Enter Information Only Once

As the popularity of social networks keeps rising and people set up multiple profiles in such sites, they are demanding the ability to carry their data, content and connections from one site to another, so that they don’t have to re-enter all that information again.

This is what the MySpace initiative aims to address, DeWolfe said. “Your personal online social profile will become your Internet address. Social activity isn’t about creating a walled garden. Socially dynamic Web destinations should be portable and allow users to import and export aspects of their platform,” he said.

The functionality will become available at some point in the coming weeks to both users and third-party sites. At the core will be privacy and security controls so that users retain tight control over what data they share and in which site.

“The initiative is founded first and foremost on allowing users to have comprehensive control over their own content and data. Users will have complete control over what information they share and who they share it with,” said MySpace Chief Operating Officer Amit Kapur.

Outside of MySpace

Data and content that users will be able to carry outside of MySpace will include public basic profile information, like their bios, interests, favorite music and movies, as well as their photos and videos.

Changes made to these elements on their MySpace profiles will be dynamically updated on the third-party sites. This also includes decisions to drop a site from their network of updates, which is key to privacy and security principles, MySpace officials said.

“Rather than populating new profiles and updating information across every Web site … users can now update their status on MySpace and dynamically share that information with the other sites they care about,” Kapur said.

MySpace will make this functionality available not only to large Web sites like the initial partners, but to sites of all sizes, including “mom-and-pop” ones with little technical know-how.

The main tool for MySpace members will be a control panel where they’ll be able to manage their “data availability” parameters. The granularity of the controls in this panel will increase over time. Meanwhile, MySpace will also release client-side and server-side tools based on open standards for third-party Web sites that want to participate.

Part of the initiative includes MySpace’s joining of the DataPortability Workgroup. Data availability is MySpace’s first step toward embracing all aspects of data portability, said Jim Benedetto, MySpace’s senior vice president of technology.

Asked whether Facebook would be welcome to participate in this initiative, DeWolfe said that the rival social network would indeed be able to participate, as well as any other site on the Web that’s interested.

Arkansas mom pregnant with 18th child

Friday, May 9th, 2008

When it comes to deserving moms for Mother’s Day, how do you beat Michelle Duggar? The seemingly perpetually pregnant mom in Arkansas is due to give birth to her 18th child next New Year’s Day.

Duggar has been been pregnant for more than 11 years of her life, and the family is in the process of filming another series for Discovery Health.

All the kids’ names start with J and range from Josh, who is 20, to Jennifer, who is 9 months old.

Colliding With Nature’s Best-Kept Secrets

Friday, May 9th, 2008

 

 By Elizabeth Landau

 

Visiting a particle accelerator is like a religious experience, at least for Nima Arkani-Hamed. Immense detectors surround the areas where inconceivably small particles slam into one another at super-high energies, collisions that may confirm Arkani-Hamed’s predictions about undiscovered properties of nature.

Arkani-Hamed is only in his mid-30s, but he has already distinguished himself as one of the leading thinkers in the field of particle physics.

His revolutionary ideas about the way the universe works will finally be put to the test later this year at Switzerland’s Large Hadron Collider, which, when completed, will be the world’s most powerful particle accelerator.

The accelerator, estimated to cost between $5 billion and $10 billion, could provide answers to questions physicists have had for decades. Thousands of scientists from around the world are collaborating on the project at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN.

If the results confirm any of Arkani-Hamed’s predictions, they would be the first extension of our notions of spacetime since Albert Einstein.

“We’re essentially guaranteed that there’s going to be something surprising,” Arkani-Hamed said of the Large Hadron Collider, which will operate inside a 17-mile circular tunnel.  

Regarded as a “gem,” Arkani-Hamed is “opening our minds and creating a new world of ideas that challenge deep-grained preconceptions about spacetime,” said Chris Tully, professor of physics at Princeton University, who is working on the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment at the Large Hadron Collider.

“From the point of view of the big experiments at the LHC, there is no amount of money or craftsmanship that would produce the kind of insight that comes from sharing LHC data with a true visionary like Nima Arkani-Hamed,” Tully said.

Formerly a professor at Harvard, Arkani-Hamed currently sits on the faculty at the prestigious Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where Einstein served from 1933 until his death in 1955.

“He was lured from Harvard to the IAS — I’m sure that’s considered quite a coup,” said Daniel Marlow, a physics professor at Princeton who is also collaborating on the CMS experiment.

Arkani-Hamed has had a hand in explaining how the world can operate according to Einstein’s theory of general relativity, which describes the universe on a very large scale, and at the same time follow quantum mechanics, laws that describe the universe on a scale smaller than the eye can see.

Some of the key mysteries that stem from these clashing theories include why gravity is so weak, relative to the other fundamental physical forces such as electromagnetism, and why the universe is so large. These issues come up because on an inconceivably small scale, the particles that make up our world seem to behave completely differently than one might imagine.

For example, if you are driving a car, your GPS tells you where you are, and your speedometer tells you how fast you are moving. But on the scale of particles like electrons, it is impossible to know both position and speed at once — the very act of trying to find out requires incredible amounts of energy.

If it takes so much energy just to try to pin down a particle, then, in theory, all particles should have temporary energy changes around them called “quantum fluctuations.” This energy translates into mass, since Einstein famously said that mass and energy are interchangeable through the equation E=mc2.

“It makes it extremely mysterious that the electron, or indeed, everything else that we know and love and are made of, isn’t incredibly more massive than it is,” Arkani-Hamed said.

A theory that has emerged in recent decades that claims to bring some relief to physics mysteries like these is called superstring theory, or string theory for short. While previously, scientists believed that the smallest, most indivisible building blocks of our world were particles, string theory says that the world is made of extremely small vibrating loops called strings.

In order for these strings to properly constitute our universe, they must vibrate in 11 dimensions, scientists say. Everyone observes three spatial dimensions and one for time, but theoretical models suggest at least seven others that we do not see.

Arkani-Hamed proposed, along with physicists Savas Dimopoulos and Gia Dvali, that some of these dimensions are larger than previously thought — specifically, as large as a millimeter. Physicists call this the ADD model, after the first initials of the authors’ last names. We haven’t seen these extra dimensions yet because gravity is the only force that can wander around them, Arkani-Hamed said.

String theory has come under attack because some say it can never be tested — the strings are supposed to be smaller than any particle ever detected, after all. But Arkani-Hamed says the Large Hadron Collider could potentially lead to the direct observation of strings, or at least indirect evidence of their existence.

In fact, by slamming particles into one another, the Large Hadron Collider may detect particles slipping in and out of the dimensions that Arkani-Hamed has worked on describing.

Particle collisions should begin at the Large Hadron Collider in August or September, according to the US/LHC Web site. Evidence of theories such as the ADD model could be discovered by 2009, Marlow said.

Data reflecting Arkani-Hamed’s work on large extra dimensions “would really provide the first confirmation in this very profound way we might think about nature,” Marlow said.

Arkani-Hamed always had a great love of the natural world as a child. Though his parents are also physicists, he considers it his “act of teenage rebellion to become one too,” as his mother wanted him to become a doctor.
He remembers being impressed around age 14 that Newton’s laws could enable him to calculate such things as the minimum speed that a space shuttle had to attain to escape the Earth’s gravitational field. He’d wondered whether scientists had reached the figure of 11 kilometers per second by trial and error, shooting things in the air until the right speed emerged, until he could calculate it himself.

“When I figured out how to do that for myself, I just thought it was just the coolest thing, that little old me, scratching away on my piece of paper, could figure this out,” he said. “From about 13 or 14, I knew that this is what I wanted to do.”

TV footage shows police beating suspects

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

By Joseph A. Slobodzian

Philadelphia police, in shock over Saturday’s murder of one of their own, are facing a probe over the violent beating of three shooting suspects by up to 15 officers - an arrest captured on video by a news helicopter hovering overhead.

The beating, Monday night in North Philadelphia, is seen on roughly one minute of an 11-minute video that Fox29 broadcast early yesterday and streamed over its Web site.

The three men beaten were suspects in a shooting unrelated to Saturday’s murder of Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski.

Mayor Nutter and Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey yesterday promised a full investigation of the incident, which the commissioner said might be related to the stress police personnel are under as they hunt for a fugitive in Liczbinski’s murder.

Ramsey said the officers in the Fox29 video would be taken off street duty as soon as they were identified.

Although police did not identify the suspects in the video, Center City lawyer D. Scott Perrine announced yesterday that he would represent all three at their bail hearings.

Perrine identified one suspect as long-standing client Dwayne Dyches, 24, and the others as Brian Hall and Pete Hopkins.

Perrine said they had been chased and apprehended without probable cause, and he called the beating “police conduct that should have stopped in the 1970s.”

“This was one of the most reprehensible displays of police brutality I have ever seen,” he said.

Perrine said all three had required hospital treatment. He said Dyches has a “baseball-size” lump and cut over one eye and was having difficulty moving one leg. “He had to have two officers helping him to walk out of the hospital,” Perrine said.

Police did not comment on the suspects’ conditions and injuries.

The video shows police cars chasing a gold sedan to a stop in the 3700 block of North Second Street, where about six to eight officers, with guns drawn, swarm over the sedan. As more officers race up to the car, one beats the passenger’s side with a baton.

All four doors are pulled open, and as each of the three men is pulled from the car, he is tossed to the street and surrounded by three to five officers. Three or four officers begin trying to handcuff the driver and can be seen delivering at least 13 kicks to his head and sides, as well as several punches.

The passenger pulled from the rear seat is kicked by four officers and struck four or five times by an officer who appears to be wielding a baton.

A canine officer stands nearby, restraining an excited police dog.

After the beating, the remaining 10 minutes of the video show officers rolling the suspects as they search their pockets, search the vehicle, and take them away in separate patrol vehicles. Lt. Frank Vanore, a police spokesman, said Nutter and Ramsey had viewed the Fox29 video at the studio and ordered an investigation.

“We realize that our officers are all under an excess of stress right now, but we still have to do our job in a professional manner,” Vanore said. “There’s really no excuse for this.”

In the meantime, he said, Ramsey has restricted police shifts to 12 hours and will encourage officers and their superiors to use department counseling services if they are have difficulty dealing with stress.

Vanore, however, maintained that all three suspects will be charged with participating in the shooting, which wounded three people Monday night at Fourth and Annsbury Streets in the Feltonville section of North Philadelphia.

Police had the three men and the gold 2000 Mercury Marquis in sight from the moment it arrived at the scene of the shooting until it was stopped about two miles away on North Second Street, Vanore said.

No weapon was found in the vehicle after the stop, Vanore said, but he added that a fourth man who arrived with the three others had fired at the crowd of people and then fled on foot.

John J. McNesby, president of Lodge 5 of the Fraternal Order of Police, said it was unclear how much the suspects had resisted officers.

“There’s always two sides to every video,” he said. “Let’s not rush to judgment. Right now we have police under fire in the city of Philadelphia, and we have to be prepared to handle it.”

McNesby also said the police believed the suspects were armed and had just been involved in a shooting. “It’s not like these three guys were coming home from church.”

Police said the shooting was apparently retaliation for a murder Sunday night in the same neighborhood. In that shooting, Andrew Coach, 20, Feltonville, died about an hour after being found in the 4500 block of North Fourth Street, shot in the abdomen.

75 students arrested in San Diego University drug bust

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

By ALLISON HOFFMAN

SAN DIEGO — Dozens of San Diego State University students were arrested after a sweeping drug investigation found that some fraternity members openly dealt drugs and one even sent a mass text message advertising cocaine, authorities said Tuesday.

Two kilograms of cocaine were seized, along with 350 Ecstasy pills, marijuana, psychedelic mushrooms, hash oil, methamphetamine, illicit prescription drugs, several guns and at least $60,000 in cash, authorities said.

Of the 96 people arrested, 75 were students. Eighteen of the students were arrested Tuesday when nine search warrants were executed at various locations including fraternities, said Jesse Rodriguez, San Diego County assistant district attorney.

The undercover probe, dubbed Operation Sudden Fall, was sparked by the cocaine overdose death of a student in May 2007, authorities said. As the investigation continued, another student, from Mesa College, died Feb. 26 of a cocaine overdose at an SDSU fraternity house, the DEA said.

Those arrested included a student who was about to receive a criminal justice degree and another who was to receive a master’s degree in homeland security. Some defendants were scheduled to appear in state court to face charges Tuesday.

During the probe investigators discovered that in some fraternities most members were aware of “organized drug dealing occurring from the fraternity houses by its members,” the Drug Enforcement Administration said in a news release.

“Undercover agents purchased cocaine from fraternity members and confirmed that a hierarchy existed for the purpose of selling drugs for money,” the DEA said.

The district attorney’s office said search warrants were served in San Diego and suburban La Mesa, including the Theta Chi fraternity house and several apartments.

A member of Theta Chi sent out a mass text message to his “faithful customers” stating that he and his “associates” would be unable to sell cocaine while they were in Las Vegas over one weekend, according to the DEA. The text promoted a cocaine “sale” and listed the reduced prices.

Theta Chi, founded in 1856, has 131 chapters in the U.S. and Canada and more than 161,000 initiates. A message left at the fraternity’s Indianapolis headquarters was not immediately returned.

University police and federal drug agents worked together in the investigation, making more than 130 undercover drug buys were made at locations including fraternity houses, student parking areas and dormitories, authorities said.

Shawn Collinsworth, executive director of the national office of Phi Kappa Psi, said he was told by two of the SDSU fraternity chapter’s leaders that four of its members were arrested. He added the fraternity is cooperating with the investigation.

“It isn’t behavior becoming of Phi Kappa Psi,” Collinsworth said.

San Diego State is one of the largest schools in California’s state university system with about 34,000 students. The campus has an active network of fraternities and sororities.

Myanmar cyclone toll climbs to nearly 22,500

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

 by Ed Cropley

YANGON, Burma—Myanmar’s military government raised its death toll from Cyclone Nargis on Tuesday to nearly 22,500 with a further 41,000 missing, nearly all of them from a massive storm surge that swept into the Irrawaddy delta.

The United Nations’ World Food Programme began doling out emergency rice in Yangon and the first batch of more than $10 million worth of foreign aid arrived from Thailand on Tuesday, but a lack of specialised equipment slowed distribution.

Despite the magnitude of the disaster — the most devastating cyclone to hit Asia since 1991, when 143,000 people died in Bangladesh — France said the ruling generals were still placing too many conditions on aid.

“The United Nations is asking the Burmese government to open its doors. The Burmese government replies: ‘Give us money, we’ll distribute it’. We can’t accept that,” Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told parliament.

Of the dead, only 671 were in the former capital, Yangon, and its outlying districts, state radio said. The rest were all in the vast swamplands of the delta.

“More deaths were caused by the tidal wave than the storm itself,” Minister for Relief and Resettlement Maung Maung Swe told a news conference in the rubble-strewn city of five million, where food and water supplies are running low.

“The wave was up to 12 feet (3.5 metres) high and it swept away and inundated half the houses in low-lying villages,” he said, giving the first detailed description of the weekend cyclone. “They did not have anywhere to flee.”

As many as 10,000 people died in one coastal town alone.

Information Minister Kyaw Hsan said the military were “doing their best”, but analysts said there could be fallout for the former Burma’s rulers, who pride themselves on their ability to cope with any challenge.

“The myth they have projected about being well-prepared has been totally blown away,” said analyst Aung Naing Oo, who fled to Thailand after a brutally crushed 1988 uprising. “This could have a tremendous political impact in the long term.”

U.S. President George W. Bush urged the regime to accept U.S. disaster experts who have so far have been kept out, and said the United States stood ready to “do a lot more” to help.

“The military junta must allow our disaster assessment teams into the country,” Bush told reporters, adding he was prepared to make U.S. naval assets available for search and rescue.

SEVERAL HUNDRED THOUSAND HOMELESS

Reflecting the scale of the crisis, the junta said it would postpone to May 24 a constitutional referendum in the worst-hit areas of Yangon and the sprawling delta.

However, state TV said the May 10 vote on the charter, part of the army’s much-criticised “roadmap to democracy”, would proceed as planned in the rest of the southeast Asian nation, which has been under army rule for the last 46 years.

Its political plans have been slammed by Western governments, especially after the bloody suppression of protests in September.

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The total left homeless by the 190 km (120 miles) per hour winds and storm surge is in the several hundred thousands, United Nations aid officials say.

The Information Minister said the government had sufficient stocks of rice despite damage to grain stored in the huge delta, known as the “rice bowl of Asia” 50 years ago when Burma was the world’s largest exporter.

But in the delta, even villages that managed to withstand the worst of the winds are running out of food and water.

“There’s not much food,” one woman at a pineapple stall in Hlaing Tha Yar, an hour’s drive west of Yangon, told Reuters. “The price of a cabbage is now 1,000 kyats instead of 250.”

In Yangon itself, people queued up for bottled water and there was still no electricity four days after the cyclone hit.

Prices of food, fuel and construction materials have skyrocketed, and most shops have sold out of candles and batteries. An egg costs three times what it did on Friday.

“MASSIVE, TERRIBLE”

The disaster drew a rare acceptance of a trickle of outside help from the diplomatically isolated generals, who spurned such approaches in the aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

Thailand flew in nine tonnes of food and medicine, the first foreign aid shipment, but a Reuters cameraman on the plane said supplies were unloaded by hand as no forklift trucks were available — a worrying sign of the army’s lack of vital kit.

Two Indian transport planes are due to fly in early on Wednesday and more are on standby, New Delhi said.

State media have made much of the army’s response, showing footage of soldiers manhandling tree trunks or top generals climbing into helicopters or greeting homeless storm victims in Buddhist temples.

Aid agency World Vision in Australia said it had been granted special visas to send in personnel to back up 600 staff in the impoverished Southeast Asian country.

“This is massive. It is not necessarily quite tsunami level, but in terms of impact of millions displaced, thousands dead, it is just terrible,” World Vision Australia head Tim Costello said.

Secrets Of Horror Incest Cellar Revealed

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

CNN

Austrian investigators Monday released more details about the elaborate underground cellar where Josef Fritzl kept his daughter imprisoned for 24 years, along with three of their children. Investigators believe Fritzl planned to build the cellar as early as 1978, shortly after, according to his daughter, he began raping her at age 11 or 12, said police spokesman Franz Polzer.

The 73-year-old Austrian began building the dungeon as part of an addition to his home that year, and simply added the hidden space — which was not recorded in any building plans — Polzer said. It took Fritzl until 1983 to finish the addition, Polzer said.

Investigators recently discovered another door to the dungeon prison, which was blocked by a 500-kilogram (1,100-pound) steel and concrete door that Fritzl probably stopped using when he later constructed an electronic door for a second entrance, Polzer said.

Fritzl, who police believe was the only one with access to the cellar, had to travel through an elaborate maze to get to the prison.

“You would have to open up a total of eight doors, and … (for the) last door which would go into this space (where the family was imprisoned), you would also have to use electronic opening apparatus,” Polzer said.

“We will have to find out perhaps later from now if perhaps there are other spaces we haven’t discovered yet, and perhaps maybe there is something else interesting.”

Fritzl was recently arrested and confessed to holding his daughter, Elisabeth, captive in the dungeon under the Fritzl home for decades, repeatedly raping her and fathering seven children — six of whom survived. Three of the children were adopted by Josef Fritzl and his wife after he concocted the ruse that Elisabeth had left the babies on their doorstep.

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The story of the family’s imprisonment began to unravel more than two weeks ago, when one of the children still in the dungeon, 19-year-old Kerstin Fritzl, fell seriously ill with convulsions.

The father agreed to take her to a hospital, the first time she was allowed out of the prison where she had spent her entire life with her mother and two brothers.

Dr. Albert Reiter, who is treating Kerstin, said Monday that while her condition is still “grave,” it “has improved somewhat.”

“She has become more stable, but despite that we have to continue to keep her under sedation and give her respiratory help,” Reiter said, noting it is not clear how long she will be kept under sedation.

Elisabeth and her two sons were reunited with her mother, Rosemarie, who police say knew nothing about the basement prison. They were also reunited with the three children that Josef had taken from Elisabeth. The reunited family is living in secluded quarters at a psychiatric clinic, where they are finding a daily routine and adjusting to sunlight — something the two boys had never seen — according to the clinic’s chief doctor.

“The mother and the smallest child have, in just the last couple of days, increased their sensitivity to light,” Dr. Berthold Kepplinger said. “So we have been able to equip them with protective sunglasses.”

Five-year-old Felix is “getting more and more lively,” Kepplinger said.

“He’s fascinated by everything that he sees around him — the fresh air, the light, and the food — all of these things are helping them,” he said. “Slowly the color of their skin is changing back to a more normal (shade).”

He also said the family members are still getting to know each other and live together as a family.

Kepplinger praised Elisabeth for having provided a daily living routine for her children during their captivity. He said the family is getting into a new routine in which the mother and the grandmother make breakfast for the family, and the children make their beds.

However, he said there is a noticeable difference between the pace of life of the children held in captivity and that of those who grew up in Fritzl’s home. He said the mother, Elisabeth, takes breaks and naps several times a day.

The health of the family members is satisfactory and hospital staff have been able to let more and more light into the rooms where the family is staying, Kepplinger said. Kepplinger said the children, after being confined to a small space their entire lives, are finding it increasingly easy to be in larger spaces.

Initially the dungeon where Fritzl held his daughter was only 35 square meters. In 1993, around the time Elisabeth was pregnant with her fourth child, Fritzl decided to add to the dungeon, building another room that increased the entire living space of the family to about 55 square meters.
On Wednesday or Thursday, prosecution authorities will attempt to question Fritzl — who is no longer talking to police following his initial confession, state prosecutor Gerhard Sedlacek said.

A warden at the St. Poelten jail, where Fritzl is being held, Fritzl appears to be doing well, but he is refusing to go on walks outside the building where he is detained

Hundreds gather to support Womens Empowerments 7th annual Celebration of Independence in Sacramento

Monday, May 5th, 2008

SACRAMENTO, California - OBSNews.com -May 2, 2008 – Women’s Empowerment (www.Womens-Empowerment.org), an organization devoted to “Ending Homelessness One Woman at a Time”, attracted over 500 celebrants to its 7th Annual Gala at The Grand event center in downtown Sacramento.

The event featured moving presentations from some of the 468 graduates of the Women’s Empowerment program as well as community leaders such as Bishop Quinn of the Sacramento Catholic Diocese, Dana Howard of Sacramento’s News10, and many more. The event raised more than $60,000 to support the programs that help women and their children transition from homelessness into stable jobs and safe housing situations.

Local philanthropist and Sacramento real estate developer Moe Mohanna donated the use of his venue, The Grand at 1215 J. Street, as well as all of the food and staffing to provide a first class banquet. The Executive Director of Women’s Empowerment, Lisa Culp, presented Mr. Mohanna an award for his support and said, “Moe’s involvement has meant the world to our organization, our graduates and their families.”

Culp added, “This event would not exist without Moe’s generous support. When we decided to hold our first Gala, he underwrote the entire cost of the banquet hall and dinner, and he has hosted the event ever since. Moe has taken his generosity and commitment even further, serving as a founding board member and teacher in our programs. He is a member of the Women’s Empowerment family, and we are grateful to him for holding us so close to his heart.”

Dana Howard, anchor of News 10, heaped on more heartfelt praise, “Moe didn’t just put out some average food, he put out the ‘company is coming over’ kind of spread.”

Musical entertainment was provided throughout the evening by Sammie award winning jazz vocalist and recording artist Vivian Lee. Another event highlight that brought the crowd to its feet was a heart-warming story told by a mother and daughter duo who were reunited after Women’s Empowerment helped the mother get clean and sober from drug addiction and obtain a job with the State of California.

For video of the event please visit: http://www.obsnews.com/women.htm



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