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4. Headline: Toronto is a Leading Lady in an Upcoming Film






Though the UK government pledged £60m in aid to Zimbabwe in 2009, the country is still in a period of fragile transition. Aid agencies last ear estimated more than 1.5 million orphans in the African country, many who are said to have lost their parents through HIV/Aids, malaria or cholera. The present Zimbabwe government still has the major problems with political violence and intimidation.
The National Drug Threat Assessment has issued a report estimating $40 billion in cash being moved across the Mexican border by drug gangs each year. Mexican gangs were active in every region of the US, it found. Heroin production doubled in 2008, and trade in marijuana, ecstasy and methamphetamine grew, despite the US funding for the war on drugs. Mexico has long been the main channel for illegal drugs smuggled into the US, but efforts to stop the trade on both sides has fallen short of effective.
More than 50,000 Roman Catholic nuns across the United States staunchly support US President Obama’a health-care bill, though debate about abortion coverage threatened to derail the bill completely. The nun’s have separated themselves from the States’ Roman Catholic bishops, who warn the new law would allow the funding of abortion. Nuns argue abortions would be covered by separate private policies.
2. Headline:U.S., Russia sign off on nuclear pact
In efforts to “reset” relations with Russia, U.S. President Barack Obama has agreed with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to sharp cuts in the nuclear arsenals of both nations. The pact, which reduces both sides’ arsenals by about a third, is replacing and expanding a 1991 treaty that expired in December. It is viewed as a gesture toward improved U.S.-Russian relations that have been badly frayed.
3. Headline: Allawi wins thin plurality in Iraq election
Iraq’s current Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has called for a recount after results indicate that a secular Shiite, Ayad Allawi, has won a narrow plurality in Iraq’s national election. Though Mr. Allawi’s Iraqiya party took 91 of the 325 seats (al-Maliki’s won 89 seats) in Iraq’s Council of Representatives, it is the religious Shia party, the third-place Iraqi National Alliance, that will likely determine if Allawi will form a government.










Shawn Graham, New Brunswick Premier, has pulled out of the unpopular plan to sell much of New Brunswick’s power generation to Hydro Quebec, costing the province $3.2 billion. Graham insists he initially believed in the deal, though it is speculated he is ridding himself of a political millstone before September provincial elections. Mr. Graham pulled the plug on the deal after meting with Quebec Premier Jean Charest. Hydro Quebec cited more risks than it was willing to take, and so New Brunswick Power will remain a New Brunswick-owned Crown corporation.
The Vatican has confirmed Pope Benedict XVI’s acceptance of Bishop John Magee’s resignation. The 73-year-old Irish Bishop, who served as secretary to Popes Paul VI, John Paul I and John Paul II, has been accused of mishandling child sex abuse complaints against priests in his diocese of Cloyne. Investigations have found that Magee appeared to have obstructed investigations about child sex abuse allegations against two priests since 1995. The Pope has apologized for decades of abuse, yet has taken no action against bishops blamed for cover-ups.
Britain’s Labour government has announced a 2010 budget that promises a £2.5 billion package to boost growth, higher taxes for high-income groups and less borrowing. Finance Chancellor Alistair Darling is confident England’s economy has improved under Labour government, saying “the recovery has begun, unemployment is falling and borrowing is better than expected.” However, the Conservatives argue the plan is too late and the economy is too fragile. Conservative leader David Cameron has responded, “[Labour government] are just going to carry on spending, carry on borrowing and carry on failing. The biggest risk to our recovery is five more years of this prime minister”.
58 Saudis and 55 foreigners have been arrested for planning to target oil facilities and security forces in Saudi Arabia. The groups have been linked to al-Queda, and specialized in targeting security personnel. The terrorist cells were formed in January 2009 by a merger between two regional offshoots of the Islamist militant network in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The group aims to topple the Yemeni government, Saudi monarchy, and establish an Islamic caliphate.
The Pope has accepted the resignation of Bishop John Magee, after his mishandling of allegations of sex abuse. The Irish bishop failed to act effectively to limit access to children by individuals who had a credible complaint of child sex abuse against them in his County Cork diocese. In 2008, the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland filed a report that Magee had not responded appropriately to abuse claims.
Rev. Lawrence C. Murphy worked at St. Johns School for the Deaf in Wisconsin from 1950 - 1974. In that time, Reverend Murphy molested approximately 200 boys. Top Vatican officials, choose not to defrock Rev. Lawrence C. Murphy. One of thousands of this type of case has been ignored and is currently being ignored by Vatican officials, including the future Pope Benedict XVI.
Beginning as a form of social art, text messaging mobs have become much more dangerous than group pillow fights and impromptu dance parties. Known as "Flash Mobs" young teenagers in the Philadelphia area have been using social media to join together and cause riots. Breaking into stores, bullying and physical violence have all occurred in what was described by a local as "A tsunami of kids". What once started out as an innocent social experiment, this problem is currently under investigation and is being taken very seriously.
A 17 year trend, Children reading levels are much lower than the should be. However, according to Mark Shiender, VP at the American Institute of Research, "The nation has done a really good job improving math skills. So why are the reading skills so low? According to English expert Susan Pimental the children are not be asked to read nearly enough. 