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Monday, January 24, 2011

State of the Union: Barack Obama to use address to rebrand himself in the centre

Polish President World News

State of the Union: Barack Obama to use address to rebrand himself in the centre


State of the Union: Barack Obama to use address to rebrand himself in the centre ~ Polish President World News
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Polish President World News

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State of the Union: Barack Obama to use address to rebrand himself in the centre

Barack Obama will use Tuesday's State of the Union address to cement himself in the political centre as he aims to capitalise on a series of unexpected recent political successes.

White House advisers have indicated that the speech will be used as a rebranding amid a revival in his fortunes that he hopes lead to his being re-elected next year.

The annual address on Tuesday night, which last year was watched by 48 million, will pull together the themes the US president has been developing over the past two months as he sought to rescue his presidency following what he described as a "shellacking" for Democrats in the November midterm elections.

Mr Obama will use his annual address to appeal for political unity as he concentrates on the tasks of job creation and "responsible" deficit reduction.

He outlined the main themes of his speech, which will be delivered to a Republican-controlled House of Representatives and a Democratic-controlled Senate, in a videotaped address to activists. He told supporters in his "Organising for America" group that his "number one focus is going to be making sure that we are competitive, and we are creating jobs not just now but well into the future."

With a battle looming over the federal budget and Republicans pushing for repeal of the Mr Obama's signature health care law, he will call for civility and bipartisanship. Republicans have said that deep cuts in the deficit are needed to restore economic growth.

"These are big challenges that are in front of us, but we're up to it, as long as we come together as a people – Republicans, Democrats, independents – as long as we focus on what binds us together as a people, as long as we're willing to find common ground even as we're having some very vigorous debates," Mr Obama said.

Mr Obama's popularity ratings have crept up above the 50 per cent threshold recently thanks to a number of political successes before the new year as well as his response to the recent mass shooting in Tucson, Arizona was widely praised.

Some of those connected to the Arizona tragedy, which left Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords gravely wounded, are likely to be guests of Michelle Obama, the First Lady, for the speech on Capitol Hill.

In a rare show of unity, some members of Congress will cross the aisle to sit with their opponents. Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, a liberal Democrat, will be beside Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, a conservative Republican.

"I think if Coburn and Schumer can sit next to each other, then probably just about everybody can," Mr Schumer told CBS News. "It's true it's symbolic, but let's not forget (that) oftentimes in history, symbols influence reality."

The speech comes as Mr Obama's prospective Republican opponents in the 2012 election begin stepping up their efforts. In a "straw poll" of Republican activists in New Hampshire, where the first primary will be held, Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who has not yet declared his candidacy, won with 35 per cent of the 276 ballots cast. Sarah Palin, the former Republican vice-presidential candidate, could only manage fourth place, with seven per cent.


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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Surrogate mother given right to keep baby

Polish President World News

Surrogate mother given right to keep baby


Surrogate mother given right to keep baby ~ Polish President World News
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Surrogate mother given right to keep baby

A Surrogate who agreed to carry a baby girl on behalf of a couple but had a change of heart about handing the child over has been granted the right to keep her by a judge.

The six-month-old child, known only as T, should remain with her birth mother because it is in her best interests, Mr Justice Baker said.

Explaining a ruling he made in a hearing last month, Mr Justice Baker said on Thursday the child's welfare "requires her to remain with her mother".

He said: "In my judgment, there is a clear attachment between mother and daughter. To remove her from her mother's care would cause a measure of harm. It is the mother who, I find, is better able to meet T's needs, in particular her emotional needs."

The judge said the risks of entering into a surrogacy agreement are "very considerable".

He added: "In particular, the natural process of carrying and giving birth to a baby creates an attachment which may be so strong that the surrogate mother finds herself unable to give up the child."

He said the mother met the couple, Mr and Mrs W, over the internet in 2009 and agreed informally that the mother would be inseminated by Mr W, and hand the baby over after the birth.

During the pregnancy, however, she changed her mind, and at T's birth refused to hand over the baby as agreed.

The mother has two older children.

Mr W is a chef and he and Mrs W were married in 2005.

After Mr and Mrs W were married, they tried to have a baby themselves, but their attempts resulted in a series of miscarriages, which led them to consider surrogacy.

It was agreed that the mother would act as a surrogate for the Ws, using Mr W's sperm, and she became pregnant, but at some point during the pregnancy, relations between the parties deteriorated.

The child was born on July 16, and Mrs W went to the hospital, but says she was made to feel unwelcome by the mother's friends and family members. Her husband began legal moves a week later, and another judge appointed a woman as the child's guardian.

Mr Justice Baker said: "At the date of the hearing before me, T was five months old. The evidence from the guardian is that she is thriving in her mother's care."

The judge said he did not believe that Mr and Mrs W or the mother had told him the whole truth about a number of matters. However he had formed the clear impression that each was devoted to the child.

He was concerned about the mother's behaviour, including that at one point she had adopted a false persona to elicit information from the Ws.

He also found she had falsified a document and lied to the court about it.

But he did not believe she had deliberately set out to deceive the Ws from the outset.

As for the Ws, the judge was concerned about their involvement with a woman known to them initially as D but more widely, including to the police and social services in Scotland, as CL.

Mrs W said she came across CL via an internet chat room. CL told her that she was a victim of domestic violence, and Mrs W felt sympathy for her and offered her refuge. CL stayed at the Ws' home for about a fortnight.

However the guardian had made some inquiries and there were allegations that she is a prostitute and surrogate parent.

The judge found that the Ws had misled the court about how they got in touch with CL and that Mrs W came across her via a surrogacy website.

"It was wholly irresponsible of the Ws to invite her into their home, and the fact that they have no awareness of this risk is alarming."

The judge also found Mrs W had told the mother that Mr W had been violent to her on one occasion, and that both Mr and Mrs W had concealed the truth about the incident to the court.

He was also concerned about their "startling lack of insight" as to the child's needs and the difficulties that might arise if she were to be moved to their care immediately at the end of the hearing, as they proposed.

The judge ordered a review hearing for next month to see how matters have progressed, and gave leave to the guardian to tell the local authority about the case. There will be "interim visiting contact" between the father and the child until the hearing, to be arranged by the guardian.


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Friday, January 21, 2011

David Cameron's judgment over Andy Coulson was deeply flawed

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David Cameron's judgment over Andy Coulson was deeply flawed


David Cameron's judgment over Andy Coulson was deeply flawed ~ Polish President World News
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Polish President World News

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David Cameron's judgment over Andy Coulson was deeply flawed

Why did the Prime Minister insist on having this deeply compromised man in the heart of Number 10, ask Simon Heffer.

Never mind what we think of Andy Coulson. What do we think now of Dave, who appointed him knowing his proximity to the phone-hacking scandal? Some of us said at the time that this was reckless. Let us suppose that, as he maintains, Mr Coulson knew nothing about the criminal enterprise going on when he edited the News of the World: did that not suggest he was deficient in some way?

I think Mr Coulson has much more explaining to do. I am amazed that Dave did not think this too, and that he, in the wake of what I know he was advised by very senior colleagues, persisted in having this deeply compromised man in the heart of Number 10. This is catastrophic for Dave, whose arrogance, lack of judgment and contempt for decent values are all exposed at a stroke by Coulson's scuttling off with his head held low.

Perhaps Dave should learn a lesson, show some humility, and wonder whether some of his other decisions might be equally suspect.

The logic of learning a language

Michael Gove says he has left the door open to making a foreign language compulsory once more at GCSE. Why stop there? Isn’t it better to do French or German than hairdressing, typing or media studies? Not only does it prevent one from projecting the image of the ignorant, boorish Brit abroad, it also teaches the student to be better at English by instructing him in the logic of grammar. The emphasis on science teaching now creates an intellectual imbalance; when my elder son took science GCSEs recently, they seemed to be mainly about the fetish of so-called climate change. The application and rigour needed to do well at languages are excellent mental disciplines and a valuable part of education. Pourquoi attendons-nous?

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Astronomer's guide to the solar system

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Astronomer's guide to the solar system


Astronomer's guide to the solar system ~ Polish President World News
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Astronomer's guide to the solar system

Dr Marek Kukula, Public Astronomer at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, takes readers on a hitch-hiker's guide to our solar system using this collection of photographs showing the best "tourist" attractions of our solar system. The collection of pictures has been put together as the Royal Observatory launches its 2011 Astronomy Photographer of the Year contest, for pictures captured by humans. For more information on the competition.

A full-disk extreme ultraviolet image of the Sun taken by the Solar Dynamics Observatory's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument, showing the temperatures of gases on the solar surface and in the solar atmosphere on March 30, 2010. Red gases are cooler (around 60,000 degrees Celsius), blue and green are warmer (more than 1 million degrees). A solar flare is seen at upper left.

Dr Kukula says: "Spacecraft like the Solar Dynamics Observatory allow us to 'see' wavelengths of light which would be invisible to human eyes. In the ultraviolet the Sun's familiar face appears dark, but now we can see that it's surrounded by wispy streamers of gas and blotched with bright regions of intense solar activity, each the size of the Earth."

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Tell-tale letdown: Poe visitor again a no-show

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Tell-tale letdown: Poe visitor again a no-show

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Polish President World News

Polish President World News

Tell-tale letdown: Poe visitor again a no-show

Dame Edna Everage - the Australian superstar/housewife with purple hair and a caustic wit - will unleash a string of loving, but scathing, put-downs at the Regent Theatre in Arlington on Saturday and Sunday.

But this Dame Edna is not the same Dame Edna that Boston audiences have grown to love. That Dame Edna was a character played by her creator, 76-year-old Australian comic Barry Humphries, who’s been doing Edna for more than half a century.

This Dame Edna is played by Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based Michael L. Walters. He’s a self-admitted - and Humphries-approved - fake.

“I would never pass myself off as Barry,” Walters said, on the phone from Sarasota, Fla., where he was performing last week. “It’s a tribute show. It has Barry’s blessing. He’s very flattered.

“This show,” Walters continued, “depends on the audience and their willingness to play along and delve into the fantasy world. They have to get past the notion that this is an impersonator of an impersonator and invest themselves in the notion that this is Dame Edna, here to have an audience with them.”

Walters began doing an Edna-esque character in dinner theater in the ’90s. He met Humphries 11 years ago in Tampa on Humphries’ first American tour and started working on his Edna act in 2001. He says it really began to take off four years ago.

The show is both scripted and unscripted. There’s video. There’s music. Walters, 39, sings both in Edna’s high, screechy voice and in his own classically trained voice. The plot, such as it is, hinges on the notion that Edna wants to buy the Regent Theatre.

“She wants a winter home where she can watch the elderly preserve themselves in the fridge rather than the oven,” Walters explained.

As with Humphries’ act, much of the show is interactive. Humphries’ Edna has called it “a conversation between two people, where one of them is a lot more interesting than the other.”

“There’s this almost gleeful sadomasochism,” Walters said, “where the audience says, ‘Oh God, I hope she doesn’t pick on me.’ And when she doesn’t, they’re a little disappointed. I have to get to know the people within my sight lines and read faces, see who is receptive to be spoken to. In this show, I’m trying to be open and inviting, but at the same time, sometimes I’ll give people the opportunity to be funny and then turn right around and slam-dunk them.”

Who is Dame Edna to Walters?

“This is someone who is consumed by her own celebrity,” he said. “This is a woman who, through her own megalomania, is blind to her own flaws. Therefore, the only people she can see fault in are the people before her. And she says the most godawful things.”

“A Royal Audience with Michael L. Walters as Dame Edna” at the Regent Theatre, Arlington, Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Tickets: $20-$25; 781-646-4849.

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Saturday, November 20, 2010

Beatles Songs trending again after iTunes store launch

Beatles Songs trending again after iTunes store launch

Beatles Songs
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Beatles Songs

Beatles Songs

Beatles Songs Parts 1

Beatles craze renewed after Steve Jobs and co start selling Beatles songs on iTunes.

According to Google’s raw data on top searches, Beatles songs are back on top 20. The English rock band turned worldwide iconic group is now one of the hottest artists selling songs on Apple’s digital stores.

Before the grand launch last Monday, Apple’s official website sported four clocks with different time zones. After 12 hours, the four members of the band once called “Johnny and the Moondogs” surfaced.

After 24 hours, all 17 albums of Beatles released by Apple have made it to top 100 albums chart. The top performing album in iTunes according to Apple’s data is “Abbey Road.”

Aside from raking in millions of dollars, Beatles songs are also in demand when it comes to TV shows. According to UK news organizations reports, UK’s hit reality show X-Factor featured Beatles songs. Talking about the timing.

Meanwhile, a report is claiming that “Hey Jude” is the most popular Beatles song in Britain outpacing its nearest rival, Let It Be, based on sales record of iTunes in the said country. ~ Beatles songs on iTunes

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Penn State Football Schedule 2010: Nittany Lions Lead Hoosiers in Fourth Quarter

Penn State Football Schedule 2010: Nittany Lions Lead Hoosiers in Fourth Quarter

Penn State Football
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penn state football

penn state football Parts 1

Penn State Football Schedule 2010: Nittany Lions Lead Hoosiers in Fourth Quarter.

The Penn State Nittany Lions have had a very interesting run this season as they started off in the top 25 in the AP and Coaches polls but then quickly dropped out of the rankings after losses to the Alabama Crimson Tide and the Iowa Hawkeyes.

They then went on to fall to the Illinois Fighting Illini in Week 6, but then they bounced back and won three straight games against Minnesota, Michigan and Northwestern.

The Lions stumbled last week against the Ohio State Buckeyes, but they seem to be redeeming themselves today as they lead the Indiana Hoosiers 34-24 at the end of the fourth quarter.

Penn State will then have to host the Michigan State Spartans to end their season, and that could be anyone's game.

The Nittany Lions may have not had the most stellar of seasons, but this is still a very young football team.

Next season, they will still have some serious strength at quarterback with Matthew McGloin (only a sophomore), and I expect the Nittany Lions to be one of the strongest teams in the Big Ten for the 2011-2012 season. ~ Penn State Football Schedule 2010

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Cookbook Watch: Americas Test Kitchen Healthy Family Cookbook'

Cookbook Watch: Americas Test Kitchen Healthy Family Cookbook'

Americas Test Kitchen
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Americas Test Kitchen

Americas Test Kitchen

Americas Test Kitchen Parts 1

You can't make a low-fat pie crust. It just won't work.

That's the sad conclusion that Jack Bishop came to during a two-year-long endeavor to put together "Healthy Family Cookbook," the first-ever healthy recipes cookbook to come out of Americas Test Kitchen.

"We haven't really tackled the subject in such a comprehensive way, but there's huge interest in this area, we always get people asking, 'Why can't you guys do more healthy recipes?' " says Bishop, who served as editorial director on the project and will be signing copies of the book Thursday night at Barnes & Noble in Santa Monica.

It took a team of 10 people more than two years to test and develop the recipes. Some dishes are inspired by other recipes from Americas Test Kitchen's archives, but all are original for the book, Bishop says. The team quickly found out that you can't just do the obvious -- slash the sugar or butter in half, eliminate the oil, or substitute whole wheat flour for white flour. The testing group also decided it would be cheating to simply scale back portion sizes. "We didn't take a biscuit recipe for 12, cut the portions in half, and then say 'Look, we cut the fat in these biscuits by 50%," Bishop said.

Before Bishop's team even got started, there were some philosophical issues to tackle. What does healthy really mean? Is it low-fat? Low-carb? High-protein? The Test Kitchen decided it was none of those things. Instead, they put together recipes that kept the calories in reasonable check and revolved around fresh fruits and vegetables and whole grains, or looked for ways to cut back the calories in fat in other dinnertime favorites, such as pizza

"This is not a diet book, it's not specifically tailored to one health issue, it's really an all-purpose cookbook," Bishop says. "These are recipes that had to taste good, first and foremost," and not be larded down with excess fat and calories.

Most entrees are in the 300 to 500 calorie range, many side dishes are 100 to 200 calories, and there are plenty of slim desserts clocking in at about 200 to 300 calories.

The resulting cookbook works on several different levels. There are amibitious multi-recipe dishes for the experienced cook looking to cut calories. The book is also a guide to whole grains and seasonal vegetables for the uninitiated looking to venture out. And it could also serve as a handy "starter" cookbook for kids heading off to college or their first apartment, or, perhaps newlyweds who are also new to the inside of a kitchen.

Bishop says testers quickly learned that no-fat can often mean no-flavor, but that using low-fat was often an acceptible substitute that tasters didn't even notice. In one creamy dip, for example, mayonnaise is replaced with low-fat sour cream, and some low-fat cottage cheese blended with boiling water (to eliminate the curds) for a velvety, tasty dish with a fraction of the calories. "And you really can't tell the difference," he says.

The big heartbreak, though, was pie dough. The testers simply could not find a way to make a lower-fat version. "We found that the simpler the recipe, the harder it can be to make it healthy, and pie dough has basically three ingredients: flour, sugar and a fat. What can you replace? It was a doomed endeavor." After more than 40 stabs at it, the team gave up. "No one really felt like the pie [dough] was worth publishing. Go with a crisp or a cobbler instead."

One happy discovery: Bishop says he remembers whole wheat pasta from back in the day, when it was gritty, sour and "just plain awful." The whole wheat pasta on the market today is not only good, it pairs better with "hearty, gutsier olive oil sauces" than traditional pastas, he said. The Test Kitchen's favorite: Bionaturae Organic 100% Whole-Wheat Spaghetti.

And one surprise: You can make a butter-free roux, if you toast and brown the flour first. That's what made the chicken pot pie recipe in the book a reality, Bishop says. "That was one of the recipes where we were really able to take out that fat, and still ended up with a beautiful, thickened sauce." ~ Americas Test Kitchen

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Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Polish President ~ The portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crash

The portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crash

The portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crashThe portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crash


The portrait of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, and his wife at the plane crash site in Smolensk, western Russia, Tuesday, April 13, 2010. Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and some of the country's most prominent military and civilian leaders died Saturday along with dozens of others when the presidential plane crashed as it came in for a landing in thick fog near Smolensk in western Russia.
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Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Polish President ~ The portrait of Polish President in Russia 2

The portrait of Polish President in Russia 2

Polish President The portrait of Polish President in Russia 2

Relatives of those who were killed in the aeroplane crash near Katyn, arrive at a Moscow morgue to identify friends and relatives, Monday, April 12, 2010. President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia, and his country held two minutes of silence in memory of those killed in Saturday's crash.


Polish President The portrait of Polish President in Russia 2

Russian national flag, foreground, and President's Colour, background, fly at half staff over the Moscow Kremlin on Monday, April 12, 2010, in respect for Polish President Kaczynski and others who died Saturday in a devastating plane crash near the western Russian city of Smolensk. President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia, and his country held two minutes of silence in memory of Polish late President Lech Kaczynski and other people killed Saturday.

Polish President The portrait of Polish President in Russia 2


A Jesus statue covered in a Polish national flag stands in front St. Cross down town Warsaw, Monday, April 12, 2010. Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and some of the country's highest military and civilian leaders died on Saturday, when the presidential plane crashed as it came in for a landing in dense fog in western Russia.
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Polish President ~ Poland mourns as president and wife lie in state

Poland mourns as president and wife lie in state


Poland mourns as president and wife lie in state



WARSAW Thousands of people threw flowers of mourning in a hearse slowly or joined an enormous viewing line at the Presidential Palace yesterday homage to the Polish President Lech Kaczynski and his wife as their bodies lay in state.

Kaczynski and his wife Maria Kaczynski were among 96 people were killed in a plane crash in western Russia. The researchers showed that human errors as the cause.

knelt down and prayed and wept before the coffin, mourners closed on its first two columns of the hall of the palace, where the president appoints and dismisses the government. The queue of proportion for more than a mile, but do not stop the pain.

"We will wait as long as it takes" said Alicja Marszalek, a retired telephone operator waiting with a friend. "We want to pay homage to them because they were wonderful people. He was a modest man, very well educated, intelligent and kind."

Polish television broadcast live images of mourners walking by the coffins. Many were families with children, parents, and grandparents. Each coffin was flanked by a pair of soldiers, standing crisp and stonelike.

Stanislaw Kracik, Krakow province governor, said the funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the 1,000-year-old cathedral — the main burial site of Polish monarchs since the 14th century.

The last Polish leader killed in office, General Wladyslaw Sikorski, the exiled World War II leader who perished in a mysterious plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943, is also interred there.

Leaders expected for the funeral include Russian President Dmitri Medvedev.

Kaczynska’s body, in a wooden casket draped with Poland’s white-and-red flag, was met by her only child, Marta, and by Jaroslaw Kaczynski, her brother-in-law who was also the twin of the late president.

Her daughter knelt by the casket and wept as a Polish honor guard stood by.

Kaczynska’s body was then ferried slowly to the Presidential Palace in the back of a black Mercedes-Benz hearse, just like her husband’s was on Sunday. Thousands of Warsaw residents lined the route, gently lobbing bouquets of tulips and roses on top of the hearse.

“I’m here because it’s such a tragedy for Poland,’’ said Maja Jelenicka, 63. “I’m in despair. I feel as if I’ve lost a close relative. Maria Kaczynska was a wonderful woman, kind, with a heart of gold.’’

Parliament held a special observance in memory of the president and the 18 lawmakers killed in the plane crash. In the assembly hall, framed portraits of the lawmakers and flowers bedecked their now-empty seats.

The names of the victims were read out, and Senate Speaker Bogdan Borusewicz, his voice breaking, declared the crash the “greatest tragedy in Poland’s postwar history.’’

Investigators have suggested that human error may have been to blame in Saturday’s crash that killed the Polish president and 95 others. The Tu-154 went down while trying to land in dense fog at Smolensk in western Russia. All aboard were killed, including Kaczynski and dozens of Polish political, military, and religious leaders.

They had been traveling in the Polish government-owned plane to attend a memorial in the nearby Katyn forest for thousands of Polish military officers executed 70 years ago by Josef Stalin’s secret police.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov said yesterday that there was no explosion or fire on the plane and that the engines were working normally.

The pilot had been warned of bad weather in Smolensk, and was advised by traffic controllers to land elsewhere — which would have delayed the Katyn observances. He was identified as Captain Arkadiusz Protasiuk, 36, and the co-pilot as Major Robert Grzywna, 36.

Traffic Controller Murawjew Anatoly, the Russian team in which the plan succeeded, the newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda that the team ignored his warnings about the deteriorating weather airport Smolensk.

Polish Prosecutor General Andrzej Seremet said Polish prosecutors were still reviewing data from the flight recorders and would discuss their findings tomorrow.

So far, 87 bodies have been recovered and 40 of them identified, he said.
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Monday, April 12, 2010

Polish President ~ The portrait of Polish Presiden in Russia

The portrait of Polish Presiden in Russia

Polish President The portrait of Polish Presiden in Russia

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev pays his respect at a portrait of President Lech Kaczynski and his wife Maria at the Polish Embassy in Moscow, Russia, Monday, April 12, 2010. President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia, and his country held two minutes silence in memory of those killed in the crash.


Polish President The portrait of Polish Presiden in Russia


Relatives of those who were killed in the aeroplane crash near Katyn, arrive at a Moscow morgue to identify friends and relatives, Monday, April 12, 2010. President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia, and his country held two minutes of silence in memory of those killed in Saturday's crash.


Polish President The portrait of Polish Presiden in Russia


Russian national flag, right, and President's Colour, background, fly at half staff over the Moscow Kremlin on Monday, April 12, 2010, in respect for Polish President Kaczynski and others who died Saturday in a devastating plane crash near the western Russian city of Smolensk. President Dmitry Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia, and his country held two minutes of silence in memory of Polish late President Lech Kaczynski and other people killed Saturday.
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