Pet food tainted with the chemical melamine was found in feed rations on a California hog farm.

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Reuters:

Pet food tainted with the chemical melamine was found in
feed rations on a California hog farm and may show up on other U.S.
farms, state and federal officials said on Friday.[..]

California officials said Diamond Pet Foods sold pet
food to American Hog Co., which used it as a feed ingredient. Tests
found melamine in feed at the farm and in urine from the hogs.

Richard Breitmeyer, the state veterinarian, said it was “not uncommon” for pet food makers to sell scrap material to feedlots.

In the course of our investigation, we may find similar situations in other parts of the country,”
said Stephen Sundlof, head of the Center for Veterinary Medicine at the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, referring to sales of scrap pet
food.[..]

State and U.S. Agriculture Department officials said there was no
evidence that pork products from the farm entered the food supply but
that they were still tracking the whereabouts of all the hogs produced there since April 3. Some 126 of the hogs are known to have been slaughtered for meat

Crooks and Liars

IMUS STOOGE McGUIRK CANNED BY WFAN

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Imus Producer Bernard McGuirk Booted by WFAN-AM
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The executive producer for Don Imus’ show ‘Imus in the Morning’ was fired Thursday after-noon by WFAN-AM over his role in the “nappy headed ho’s” incident, CBS Radio spokeswoman Karen Mateo announced on Friday. Longtime Imus sidekick Bernard McGuirk actually started off the whole thing, being the first to name the Rutgers women “ho’s”.McGuirk, who joined WFAN in 1984, was an expected casualty of the Imus fallout. In addition to calling the Rutgers players in the NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship “hardcore ho’s,” the producer also characterized the Scarlet Knights’ losing match-up against the University of Tennessee’s Lady Vols as “the jigaboos versus the wannabes.”

The executive producer, derided by Imus as a “bald-headed stooge,” is well-known for his rightwing political leanings, and he was apparently responsible for booking the wide variety of politicians, journalists and other notables that made up the ‘Imus in the Morning’ prominent guest list. Bernard McGuirk joined the ‘Imus in the Morning Show’ as producer in 1987.The station hasn’t yet chosen a permanent replacement for Imus, whose show was nationally syndicated on 60 stations and drew approximately 2.5 million listeners a week.

After the release of Christian Science Monitor reporter, Jill Carroll, who was kidnapped in Iraq, McGuirk stated: “She strikes me as the kind of woman who would wear one of those suicide vests. You know, walk into the tent or try and sneak into the Green Zone.”

Meanwhile, it is still unknown how Imus is to settle his five-year, multi-million dollar contract, which was signed recently. The station hasn’t yet chosen a permanent replacement for Imus, whose show was nationally syndicated on 60 stations and drew approximately 2.5 million listeners a week. It’s unclear what kind of contract McGuirk was under.

According to the MSNBC website, McGuirk is married with two children and resides in Long Beach, N.Y.

Meanwhile, KCAA-AM, a small radio station airing east and south of Los Angeles, was sued by CBS Radio for running reruns of Imus, along with commentary from listeners about the controversy.

The CBS lawsuit is seeking a temporary restraining order as well as $150,000 per violation, according to AP. CBS Radio said in court filings that they asked 1,400-watt KCAA to stop and “have made it clear…that only a judicial decree will prevent them from persisting in their actions.”

On the other hand, the small radio station is saying they will run the show until April 27, in order to educate the public, and after that time, all Imus footage will be destroyed. A hearing in the federal lawsuit is set for Thursday. CBS declined to comment beyond its court filings.

PLANTING THE STEAL YOUR FACE FLAG ATOP THE GREAT EGYPTIAN PYRAMID

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Merry Prankster George Walker Plants a Steal your Face Flag on top of the Great Pyramid While Ken Kesey looks on. Both Men proudly weaing their official 1972 “Feild Trip – Oregon Dead” T-Shirts. Soundtrack is Fire on the Mountain from the Dead’s 1978 Egypt run. Stage footage of the Dead’s performance included + Ken Kesey contemplates training an Egyptian Olympic wrestling team.

The Pew News IQ Quiz

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What’s Your News IQ?

Take the Quiz

Pew News IQ TestTo find out, we invite you to take our short quiz about
prominent people and major events in the news — then see how you did
in comparison with 1,502 randomly sampled adults asked the same
questions in a recent national survey conducted by the Pew Research
Center.

You’ll also be able to compare your News IQ with the
average scores of men and women; with college graduates as well as
those who didn’t attend college; with people who are your age as well
as with younger and older Americans. Are you more news-savvy than the
average American? Here’s your chance to find out.

The online news quiz includes only some of the
knowledge questions asked in the national survey. To see all the
questions and find out more about the public’s News IQ, read the full summary of findings.

Pew News IQ

Olbermann Joins NBC Sunday Football

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  April 16,2007 | NEW YORK — Keith Olbermann will add a fifth voice to the studio on NBC’s Sunday-night football highlights show in the fall, the network said Monday.

Bob Costas anchors the show, with Cris Collingsworth and now Olbermann as co-hosts. With Jerome Bettis and Tiki Barber as analysts, the former NFL players will outnumber Costas and Olbermann by 3-to-2.

Olbermann, who first became known as a host on ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” has shuffled between news and sports during his career. His “Countdown” show on MSNBC has been hot lately, with Olbermann drawing attention for commetrick’s radio show.

Olbermann, who will keep his weekday work, said he expects the Sunday job to be rewarding and challenging.

“I hope I can hold up my end of the bargain,” he said.

Salon.com

Drumbeat of Shots, Broken by Pauses to Reload

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BLACKSBURG, Va., April 16 — The gunshots were so slow and steady that some students thought they came from a nearby construction site, until they saw the police officers with rifles pointed at Norris Hall, the engineering building at Virginia Tech.

Bang. Bang. Bang.

They went on and on, for what seemed like 10 or 15 or 20 minutes, an eternity with punctuation.

Bang. Bang. On the third floor of Norris Hall, Scott L. Hendricks, a professor, looked out the window of his office and saw students crawling away from the building.

Bang. Tiffany Otey’s accounting class crammed into an office and locked themselves in, crying in fright.

Every so often, the shots paused for a minute or so. That was the gunman, who was in the midst of the worst shooting rampage in American history, stopping to reload. When it was over, 33 people, including the gunman, were dead and at least 15 more were injured.

“I was terrified,” said Ms. Otey, a junior whose class met in the room above the one where much of the shooting took place.

One student finished the day’s assignment and tried to leave, but returned to tell the others that the hall was full of smoke and that there were police officers everywhere. The class decided to go into a room with a lock. Dr. Hendricks, an engineering and mechanics professor on the same floor, barricaded himself in his office, pushing a bookcase in front of the door. Some students on campus took refuge in the library, searching the Web to find out what was happening. No one knew.

“I was crying,” Ms. Otey said. “I was worried that the guy with the gun was going to come upstairs too.”

The violence began early in the morning in the west wing of Ambler Johnston, the largest dormitory at Virginia Tech, where two people were killed, officials said. But when the first class started two hours later, at 9:05 a.m., many on campus remained unaware of any danger.

“I woke up and I didn’t know anything was wrong,” said Sarah Ulmer, a freshman who lives in the east wing of the dorm. “I went to my first class and my teacher was talking about how some people weren’t coming because there was a gun threat at West A. J. and they were blocking it off. It was like, ‘Oh.’ ”

The school did not notify students by e-mail of the first shootings until 9:26 a.m., said Matt Dixon, who lives in the dorm. Mr. Dixon did not receive the e-mail message until he returned from his 9:05 class. When he left for that class, he said, a resident adviser told him not to use the central stairs, so he left another way.

On dry erase boards, advisers had written, “Stay in your rooms,” Mr. Dixon said.

Other students and faculty members said they had only a vague notion that there had been a shooting at the dorm. Several faculty members said they had reached campus during or just after the Norris Hall shooting and had gone unimpeded to their buildings.

Many were bewildered or angry that the campus had not been locked down earlier, after the first shooting.

“I am outraged at what happened today on the Virginia Tech campus,” wrote Huy That Ton, a member of the chemical engineering faculty, in an e-mail message. “Countless lives could have been saved if they had informed the student body of the first shooting. What was the security department thinking?!”

Campus officials said they believed the first incident was confined to a single building and was essentially a domestic dispute, and had no idea that the violence would spread elsewhere.

The police said they still did not know if the two shootings were the work of the same gunman.

The gunman in Norris Hall was described as a young Asian man with two pistols who calmly entered classrooms and shot professors and students. He peeked into the German class in Room 207, witnesses said, then pushed his way in.

Gene Cole, who works in Virginia Tech’s housekeeping services, told The Roanoke Times that he was on the second floor of Norris Hall on Monday morning and saw a person lying on a hallway floor. As Mr. Cole went up to the body, a man wearing a hat and holding a gun stepped into the hallway. “Someone stepped out of a classroom and started shooting at me,” he said. Mr. Cole fled down the corridor, then down a flight of steps to safety. “All I saw was blood in the hallways,” Mr. Cole said.

The gunman was described as methodical, squeezing the trigger almost rhythmically. “Sometimes there would be like a minute or so break in between them,” Ms. Otey said of the shots, “but for the most part it was one right after another.”

Elaine Goss of Waynesboro, Va., said she first spoke to her son, Alec Calhoun, a student, about 9:30 a.m., after he had leapt from a second-story classroom window as the gunman entered. “I couldn’t understand him. It was like gibberish,” Ms. Goss said. “It took a while to figure out shootings, lots of shootings, and that his whole class had jumped out the window.” He landed on his back, and “we made him go to the emergency room,” she said.

Two of his fellow engineering students were at the hospital with gunshot wounds, Ms. Goss said. “I think they were just wounded,” she said. “He’s counting on them being just wounded.”

As word spread of the shootings, there were first reports of one dead, then 20, then more than 30.

“Every time we turned our heads, the total just kept going up,” said Stuart Crowder, 22, a building and construction major, adding that the tension level on campus was still running high.

“Right now, I’m actually at a house where I can see the edge of campus, which is very close to the place where the incident actually happened,” Mr. Crowder said. “Probably every about 25 yards, there is an officer or some sort of guard right now with a large gun.”

Students, parents and professors jammed phone lines trying to check on loved ones and friends. There were frantic e-mail and text messages, clogged voice mails and busy signals. Kathryn Beard, an education professor at Virginia Tech whose daughter is a student there, said she became frantic when she was barred from entering. “The teacher in me was panicking, and the mother in me was panicking,” she said. “I can’t imagine something like this happening on my campus.”

Students theorized about how an outsider — many assumed it was an outsider — could have committed such violence on their campus.

“All we’ve seen is that patch of blood,” said Matthew Hall, a senior, indicating a red patch on the sidewalk in front of the building.

“It’s weird because this is like the safest place,” Mr. Hall said. “It’s the middle of nowhere,” added his roommate, Ryan Gatterdam.

Jessica Abraham, walking nearby, said anyone could pass for a student here by wearing a maroon cap. Maroon and orange are the school colors. “You always see the police here. It seems so safe,” Ms. Abraham said.

After the shots and fleeing, the SWAT teams and ambulances, the campus returned to a preternatural quiet, with students talking in small groups or consoling each other. Classes were canceled, and some students had their parents pick them up and take them home.