India: Land of many cell phones, fewer toilets

I must admit that I found this article both informative and shocking. I realize there is poverty all over the world, but I had no idea that conditions in India were this bad! How can a country such as India, with a civilization dating back thousands of years, have a population the size of the entire United States population, roughly 300 million people, living in poverty; and what poverty!

It is beyond disgusting that a government would  have its people living under the conditions described in this article. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By RAVI NESSMAN, The Associated Press Ravi Nessman, The Associated Press Sun Oct 31, 12:02 am ET

MUMBAI, India – The Mumbai slum of Rafiq Nagar has no clean water for its shacks made of ripped tarp and bamboo. No garbage pickup along the rocky, pocked earth that serves as a road. No power except from haphazard cables strung overhead illegally.

And not a single toilet or latrine for its 10,000 people.

Yet nearly every destitute family in the slum has a cell phone. Some have three.

When U.S. President Barack Obama visits India Nov. 6, he will find a country of startlingly uneven development and perplexing disparities, where more people have cell phones than access to a toilet, according to the United Nations.

It is a country buoyed by a vibrant business world of call centers and software developers, but hamstrung by a bloated, corrupt government that has failed to deliver the barest of services.

Its estimated growth rate of 8.5 percent a year is among the highest in the world, but its roads are crumbling.

It offers cheap, world-class medical care to Western tourists at private hospitals, yet has some of the worst child mortality and maternal death rates outside sub-Saharan Africa.

And while tens of millions have benefited from India’s rise, many more remain mired in some of the worst poverty in the world.

Businessman Mukesh Ambani, the world’s fourth-richest person, is just finishing off a new $1 billion skyscraper-house in Mumbai with 27 floors and three helipads, touted as the most expensive home on earth. Yet farmers still live in shacks of mud and cow dung.

The cell phone frenzy bridges all worlds. Cell phones are sold amid the Calvin Klein and Clinique stores under the soaring atriums of India’s new malls, and in the crowded markets of its working-class neighborhoods. Bare shops in the slums sell pre-paid cards for as little as 20 cents next to packets of chewing tobacco, while street hawkers peddle car chargers at traffic lights.

The spartan Beecham’s in New Delhi’s Connaught Place, one of the country’s seemingly ubiquitous mobile phone dealers, is overrun with lunchtime customers of all classes looking for everything from a 35,000 rupee ($790) Blackberry Torch to a basic 1,150 rupee ($26) Nokia.

Store manager Sanjeev Malhotra adds to a decades-old — and still unfulfilled — Hindi campaign slogan promising food, clothing and shelter. “Roti, kapda, makaan” and “mobile,” he riffs, laughing. “Basic needs.”

There were more than 670 million cell phone connections in India by the end of August, a number that has been growing by close to 20 million a month, according to government figures.

Yet U.N. figures show that only 366 million Indians have access to a private toilet or latrine, leaving 665 million to defecate in the open.

“At least tap water and sewage disposal — how can we talk about any development without these two fundamental things? How can we talk about development without health and education?” says Anita Patil-Deshmukhl, executive director of PUKAR, an organization that conducts research and outreach in the slums of Mumbai.

India’s leaders say they are sympathetic to the problem.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an economist credited with unleashing India’s private sector by loosening government regulation, talks about growth that benefits the masses of poor people as well as a burgeoning middle class of about 300 million. He describes a roaring Maoist insurgency in the east — which feeds in large part on the poors’ discontent — as the country’s biggest internal security threat.

Sonia Gandhi, chief of the ruling Congress Party, has pushed laws guaranteeing a right to food and education, as well as a gargantuan rural jobs program for nearly 100 million people. But as many as 800 million Indians still live on less than $2 a day, even as Mumbai’s stock exchange sits near record highs.

Many fear the situation is unsustainable.

“Everybody understands the threat. Everybody recognizes that there is a gap, that this could be the thing that trips up this country,” says Anand Mahindra, vice chairman and managing director of the Mahindra & Mahindra manufacturing company.

Private companies have tried to fill that gap, and Tata sells a 749 rupee ($16) water purifier for the poor. Mafias provide water and electricity to slum dwellers at a cost far higher than what wealthy Indians pay for basic services.

“For every little thing, we have to pay,” says Nusrat Khan, a 35-year-old maid and single parent who raises her four children on less than 3,000 rupees ($67) a month and blames the government for her lack of access to water and a toilet.

The government is spending $350 million a year to build toilets in rural areas. Bindeshwar Pathak, the founder of the Sulabh Sanitation and Social Reform Movement, estimates the country needs about 120 million more latrines — likely the largest sanitation project in world history.

“Those in power, only they can change the situation,” says Pathak, who claims to have helped build a million low-cost latrines across India over the past 40 years. “India can achieve this — if it desires.”

In the slums of Mumbai, home to more than half the city’s population of 14 million, the yearning for toilets is so great that enterprising residents have built makeshift outhouses on their own.

In Annabhau Sathe Nagar, a raised latrine of corrugated tin empties into a river of sewage that children splash in and adults wade across. The slum in east Mumbai has about 50,000 residents and a single toilet building, with 10 pay toilets for men and eight for women — two of which are broken.

With the wait for those toilets up to an hour even at 5 a.m., and the two-rupee (4-cent) fee too expensive for many, most people either use a field or wait to use the toilets at work, says Santosh Thorat, 32, a community organizer. Nearly 60 percent have developed piles from regularly waiting to defecate, he says.

Conditions are far worse in Rafiq Nagar, a crowded, 15-year-old slum on the lip of a 110-acre garbage dump.

Most of the slum dwellers are rag pickers who sort through heaps of trash for scraps of plastic, glass, metal, even bones, anything they can sell to recyclers for cash. A pungent brew of ripe garbage and sewage blows through the trash-strewn streets, as choking smoke from wood fires rolls out the doorways of windowless huts. Children, half clothed in rags, play hopscotch next to a mysterious gray liquid that has gathered in stagnant puddles weeks after the last rainfall.

Just beside the shacks, men and women defecate in separate areas behind rolling hills of green foliage that have sprung up over the garbage. Children run through those hills, flying kites.

Khatija Sheikh, 20, splurges to use a pay toilet in another neighborhood 10 minutes away, but is never sure what condition it will be in.

“Sometimes it’s clean, sometimes it’s dirty. It’s totally dependent on the owner’s mood,” says Sheikh, whose two young children use the street. Her home is less than five feet from an elevated outhouse built by a neighbor that drops sewage next to her walls.

Since there are no water pipes or wells here, residents are forced to rely on the water mafia for water for cooking, washing clothes, bathing and drinking. The neighborhood is rife with skin infections, tuberculosis and other ailments.

A large blue barrel outside a home is filled with murky brown water, tiny white worms and an aluminum drinking cup. To fill up two jerry cans costs between 40 ($.90) and 50 ($1.10) rupees a day, about one-third of the average family’s earnings here.

“If the government would give us water, we would pay that money to the government,” said Suresh Pache, 41, a motorized rickshaw driver.

Instead, it has issued demolition notices throughout the slum, which sits illegally on government land. Pache, whose home was razed 10 times, jokes that the destruction is the only government service he can count on.

Yet the world of technology has embraced the slum dwellers with its cheap cell phones and cut-rate calling plans that charge a sliver of a penny a minute. Pache bought his first phone for 1,400 rupees ($31) four months ago. Since then, his wife, a rag picker, found two other broken models as she scoured the garbage dump, and he paid to have them repaired.

He speaks with fluency about the different plans offered by Tata, Reliance and Idea that cost him a total of 300 rupees ($6.70) a month. Now, when his rickshaw breaks down, he can alert his wife with a call. She uses her phone to tell the recyclers where she is in the dump so they can drive out to her, saving her the time and effort of dragging her bag of scraps to them.

Mohan Singh, a 58-year-old bicycle repairman, says his son uses their 2,000 rupee ($45) Orpat phone to play music and talk to relatives. Thorat, the community organizer, shows photographs of his neighborhood and videos of a pre-school he started on his Nokia camera phone, while his second phone rings in his pocket. Sushila Paten, who teaches at the pre-school, organizes a phone chain with her Samsung to instantly mobilize hundreds of people in the streets when violent thugs show up demanding “rent” from the squatters.

In fact, the spread of cell phones may end up bringing toilets.

R. Gopalakrishnan, executive director of Tata Sons, one of India’s most revered companies, says the rising aspirations of the poor, buttressed by their growing access to communications and information, will put tremendous pressure on the government to start delivering.

People already are starting to challenge local officials who for generations answered to no one, he says.

“I think there are very, very dramatic changes happening,” he says.

In Yemen, US hands are tied in al-Qaida fight

These terrorists are similar to rats; if their nest is disturbed they abandon it and move to another location, where they once again spread their filth and disease. And of course, the countries that these Muslim scum generally infiltrate are all toilet bowls where Islamic fundamentalism still prevails, poisoning people’s minds and rendering them useless for everything except hatred and violence; both by-products of religious fanaticism.

As Christopher Hitchens would say; religion poisons everything. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press Hamza Hendawi, Associated Press Sat Oct 30, 4:17 pm ET

SAN’A, Yemen – Corruption, an inefficient security force and an intoxicating plant that keeps most men in Yemen high for up to six hours a day all stand in the way of America’s battle against al-Qaida’s Yemen wing, which is believed responsible for a plot to mail bombs to the United States.

The plot to send parcels packed with explosives to two Chicago-area synagogues underlined the creativity of the Yemen-based militants as they try to penetrate the West’s anti-terror defenses, taking advantage of a culture of impunity at home as well as the relatively relaxed security on cargo flights. The terror network has in the past largely targeted commercial flights, including a failed Christmas Day attempt to blow up a passenger jet as it landed in Detroit.

“This is a whole new approach. We haven’t seen al-Qaida resort to this kind of tactic,” said Riad Kahwaji, head of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, a Dubai-based think tank. “On the Yemeni side, they’ll have a lot to answer for to regain their credibility.”

Yemeni authorities smarted at the criticism and announced they had arrested a woman and were searching for other al-Qaida linked suspects. Investigators also checked some two dozen other suspicious packages in the capital, San’a, and questioned cargo workers at the city’s international airport as well as employees of the local shipping companies contracted to work with FedEx and UPS.

“We guarantee the determination of Yemen in confronting and combating terrorism,” Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said Saturday at a press conference.

But life in San’a reflects some of the challenges faced by anyone trying to isolate and ultimately destroy a terror group that uses religion as both ideology and for recruitment.

Women in public wear flowing black robes and cover their heads except for a narrow slit for the eyes. Many of the men are bearded, a hallmark of piety, and in robes with an ornamental dagger tucked in a belt.

Many stores close during Islamic prayer times, which are announced by the shrieking voices of hundreds of muezzins echoing across the city.

Weapons are everywhere, with some estimates claiming that Yemenis hold about 50 million firearms ranging from city dwellers with AK-47 assault rifles to tribesmen in rural areas with rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine-guns and mortars that they use at will against security forces or in tribal feuds.

Cinemas in San’a, the capital, have signs outside them warning patrons against bringing in weapons into the auditorium.

Enter the United States, which has for nearly a year waged a war against al-Qaida militants who have been building up their presence in Yemen for several years. The insurgents find refuge with tribes in remote mountain ranges where the central government has little control and draw sympathy, or support in some cases, from a population of some 23 million known for its religious fundamentalism and disdain for America because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Some 50 elite U.S. military experts are in Yemen training its counterterrorism forces and Washington is giving $150 million in military assistance to Yemen this year for helicopters, planes and other equipment. A similar amount is given for humanitarian causes.

But there’s been little sign of progress as the government is torn between U.S. pressure to fight the militants and its need for support from the unruly tribes that harbor the extremists.

Security officials say most government forces deployed in provinces where al-Qaida militants are known to be hiding are there primarily to protect oil installations and show no willingness to fight. In some cases, said the officials, army commanders ignore known members of al-Qaida pretending to be tribesmen practicing at makeshift shooting ranges.

The officials, who agreed to discuss the level of readiness by the forces only in exchange for anonymity, said the troops also suffer from lack of discipline and conviction.

Many units, the officials said, are poorly equipped because most of the modern arms and hardware donated by the United States and other Western nations go to elite units led by the president’s close family members, which are primarily tasked with protecting Saleh’s 32-year rule against rivals — not fighting al-Qaida.

The country also faces an armed Shiite insurgency in the north, and the army suffered heavy casualties and saw dozens of soldiers captured during fighting there earlier this year because of the poor state of the armed forces.

The habit of chewing qat, a plant with a mild amphetamine-like stimulant, is another example of the challenges faced by Washington in Yemen.

An estimated 60 percent to 70 percent of Yemen’s adult males are thought to be qat users, which in effect means that they are high on the green leafy plant from 1 p.m. to early evening every day.

The military is no exception, and the security officials say that undermines discipline and renders soldiers unfit to perform combat duties for a big part of the day.

Military personnel are forbidden to chew qat while on duty, but the ban is widely ignored in barracks as well as security checkpoints in rural areas.

Many say things are done differently in Yemen and the United States should let the government fight al-Qaida in its own way.

“If left alone, we can deal with al-Qaida with sustained and patient police work,” said Abdul-Ghani al-Iryani, a political analyst from one of Yemen’s most powerful families. “The number of core al-Qaida fighters is small, but when you send an army to pursue 15 of them, they tend to double their number before the army leaves.”

Indonesia volcano spews searing ash after lull

Volcanoes are as beautiful as they are deadly…

It is incomprehensible that people actually build their homes on the slopes of a volcano, yet they do it in most parts of the world. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

Photography: Reuters

By SLAMET RIYADI, Associated Press Slamet Riyadi, Associated Press

MOUNT MERAPI, Indonesia – A deadly volcano in Indonesia spewed another searing cloud of ash down its slopes Sunday, prompting panic and chaos among thousands of villagers who had taken advantage of a lull in activity to rush home and check on their livestock.

Ash from the latest blast tumbled down the southern and eastern slopes of Mount Merapi, said Subandrio, an official with the volcano’s monitoring agency.

Panic quickly ensued among the thousands of villagers who had left government camps and rushed back to their homes. It was unclear if any were injured Sunday.

Mount Merapi began erupting on Tuesday, killing a total of 38 people and forcing more than 50,000 to flee. The crisis comes as the country also struggles to respond to a tsunami created by a 7.7-magnitude earthquake which hit remote islands and killed nearly 450.

Indonesia lies on the Pacific Ring of Fire, a series of fault lines in the Earth’s surface that is prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.

Death toll in suicide attack in Iraq raises to 26

More death and destruction resulting from members of the “peaceful” Islamic faith as yet another Muslim individual, made crazy by religion, blows himself up and takes another couple of dozen people with him.

The effect of this poison known as religion on the human brain is truly remarkable. TGO

Refer to brief story below. Source: Associated Press

BAGHDAD – An Iraqi health official says the death toll from a suicide bombing north of Baghdad has risen to 26.

Hussein Jaafar, the director of the hospital in Balad Ruz, said Saturday that five more people have died from injuries sustained in the blast.

The suicide bomber blew himself up inside a popular cafe Friday night, breaking what has been a period of relative calm in Iraq.

The neighborhood where the explosion occurred is home to many Shiites of Kurdish ethnicity.

The attack underscores the delicate nature of Iraq’s security gains and comes as the country is approaching its eighth month without a new government following inconclusive elections.

Al-Jazeera slams Morocco over suspension of service

I always think of it as amusing when reading a news article and finding the term: “Islamic terrorism,” as if there was any other type.” TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

Sat Oct 30, 4:16 am ET

DUBAI (AFP) – Al-Jazeera condemned on Saturday a decision by Morocco to suspend the pan-Arab television network’s operations in the northern African country, saying the move would not affect its editorial line.

Morocco’s government said Friday it suspended the Qatar-based satellite channel’s operations and withdrew accreditation for its staff after “numerous failures” that went against the “rules of serious and responsible journalism.”

“Al-Jazeera has denounced the suspension of the network’s operations in Morocco,” the network said on its English-language website, citing an Al-Jazeera statement.

“The closure of its bureau in the capital, Rabat, would not change the network’s editorial guidelines,” it said.

“Al-Jazeera assured that its coverage of Morocco was always based on professionalism, balance and accuracy, and said it would continue its coverage to serve the interests of viewers in line with journalistic values.”

Communications Minister Khalid Naciri said Friday that action was taken against Al-Jazeera because its “refusal to be objective and impartial systematically tarnishes Morocco’s image.

“We reproach this channel for ignoring the main principles and transmitting a caricature of Moroccan reality,” he told AFP.

A government official who declined to be named said the authorities took exception “to the way Al-Jazeera handles the issues of Islamists and Western Sahara.”

More than 2,000 Islamists have been arrested and sentenced in Morocco since the Casablanca bombings of May 16, 2003, when more than 40 people were killed in an attack by Islamist extremists.

A former Spanish colony, Western Sahara was annexed by Morocco after settlers withdrew in 1975. The move was violently opposed by separatist Polisario guerrillas until the United Nations brokered a ceasefire in 1991.

Indonesia disaster toll hits 377 as volcano erupts again

As deadly as volcanoes are, seeing one erupt from a relatively close distance must be an awesome sight.

The natural disasters in Indonesia; the earthquake and more recently the volcanic eruption are examples of why this region of the world is known as the Pacific “Ring of Fire.” The tsunami that struck the islands is a by-product of the earthquake. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Reuters

By Renjani Puspo Sari Renjani Puspo Sari

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s Mount Merapi erupted on Thursday for the second time in a week, blasting vast plumes of ash into the sky, as the death toll from the initial eruption and a tsunami that hit remote western islands reached 377.

There were no immediate reports of new casualties after Merapi’s second eruption. More than 40,000 people had fled or been evacuated from Merapi’s slopes earlier in the week, but many started to return after the volcano appeared to become calmer.

Officials said the death toll from a tsunami that hit the remote western Mentawai islands on Monday had reached at least 343. The tsunami was triggered on Monday by a 7.5 magnitude quake. A day later, Mount Merapi on the outskirts of Yogyakarta city on Java island erupted, killing at least 34.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who had been due to take part in a summit of Asian leaders in Hanoi from Thursday to Saturday, flew back to Indonesia after the twin disasters.

“The president was very moved when he met the victims of the tsunami and earthquake,” Yudhoyono’s spokesman, Julian Pasha, told Reuters, adding that the president planned to return to Hanoi before Saturday.

“He has issued instructions for all aid to continue to flow in without disruption.”

Parts of an early warning system installed after a huge 2004 tsunami killed more than 226,000 people had been stolen but overall the system still worked, said the head of the meteorological agency, Sri Woro Harijono.

“Yes, some of our sensors disappear because they are stolen, such as seismographs and solar cells,” she said. “But it is just one or three sensors out of 100. The system works fine.”

Local media reported that parts of the tsunami early warning system had not worked properly because they had been vandalized or removed, while Metro TV broadcast footage of villagers questioning the effectiveness of the warning system.

“This has also been reported to the Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology but we also need to make sure this information is verified properly,” said Pasha.

“We know that when the quake happened, within 10 minutes this enormous tsunami came. So maybe the speed with which it came meant that the early warning system didn’t work.”

Indonesia sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire” and is prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Mount Merapi killed 1,300 people in 1930.

In December 2004, a tsunami caused by an earthquake of more than 9 magnitude off Sumatra killed more than 226,000 people. It was the deadliest tsunami on record.

(Writing by Sunanda Creagh, editing by Andrew Marshall)

Will Favre’s record streak continue this week?

I can’t wait until the day Brett Favre retires for good. Fortunately, it’s almost a lock that this is the last year we’ll have to hear all the crap surrounding this clown. I’ve never known of another individual as needy for attention as this guy. He’s truly nauseating.

And yes, his playing streak will continue. Brett’s wimpy head coach will make sure of that, even though it’s probably not the best thing for the team. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By JON KRAWCZYNSKI, AP Sports Writer Jon Krawczynski, Ap Sports Writer Sat Oct 30, 3:32 am ET

MINNEAPOLIS – For the past 18 years, Brett Favre has been football’s iron man, playing like no other quarterback come physical pain, personal tragedy and — most recently — humiliating scandal.

Now, though, there’s an even chance the 41-year-old quarterback’s record-breaking run is over.

After 291 consecutive starts, Favre was listed as questionable Friday for the Vikings game Sunday against the New England Patriots with two fractures in his ankle. That means the odds are 50-50 he’ll play.

Leave it to Favre and there’s no question he’ll be on the field.

“This could easily be an injury where I could say, ‘I’m going to slip under the radar. See you later, easy out,’” Favre said. “People may think that. I want to play and I want to help this team win. I owe that to the guys and I owe that to myself.”

But it’s not up to him.

That decision rests with coach Brad Childress, and it’s an awfully big one to make.

He can play Favre. He can hope the three-time MVP can recapture some of the magic from last season that simply hasn’t been there through the first six games of 2010, and keep a streak intact that will always serve as the foundation of Favre’s legacy.

Or he can turn the offense over to Tarvaris Jackson, thereby ignoring the wishes of his captain and likely Hall of Famer, brushing aside history and turning a veteran team with fading Super Bowl aspirations over to a guy who has already failed twice at the job.

“I’m not losing any sleep over it,” Childress said on Friday.

Maybe not, but it’s the question of the week in the NFL.

And it’s unfolding against the backdrop of an ongoing league investigation into whether Favre sent inappropriate messages and lewd photos to a game hostess for the Jets when he played for New York, which has the potential to end Favre’s streak another way — by suspension, for violating the league’s personal conduct policy.

Still, Childress says he’ll start Favre “if it gives us the best chance to win.”

The quarterback’s left ankle was broken in last week’s loss to Green Bay, a heartbreaker that also earned him Childress’ wrath for a couple of interceptions which illustrated the bad side of his game — improvisations gone wrong.

Like he always has, though, Favre has bounced back, or at least tried to. He was in a walking boot for the first three days of the week and returned to practice in a limited role on Friday. He made some light tosses to Vikings receivers in the portion of practice that was open to the media.

“I’m willing to give it a try,” Favre said on Wednesday, in his only extended remarks of the week. “I think back to all of those times where I said, ‘I’m willing to give it a try.’”

Favre has played through countless injuries to keep his streak going and forge a reputation as one of the toughest guys to ever play the game.

With the Packers, Jets and now Vikings, he has started every game since Sept. 27, 1992, when the original President Bush was still in office and the original Browns were still in Cleveland. He’s played through a separated shoulder, concussions, a sprained knee, a broken thumb, torn biceps, addictions to painkillers and alcohol, the sudden death of his father and his wife being diagnosed with breast cancer. The league investigation, which Favre has refused to address publicly, started Oct. 8.

Through it all, Favre has led his team on the field. It’s a record that Favre cherishes above all of the other achievements on his resume.

“I would love to play for no other reason than I’m in this and committed to this team,” Favre said. “I would love to get us back on track and be a part of it and more than anything, function at a level that gives us a chance to win.”

But Childress has watched him limp around team headquarters this week and turn the ball over 14 times in the first six games, one of the biggest reasons the Vikings are two games under .500 this far into a season that began with such high expectations.

The coach has said all week that the streak will not play into the decision. The Vikings need to know that Favre can protect himself in the pocket and be assured that his injury will not affect his ability to run the offense.

The notion that Jackson gives the Vikings a better chance to win than one of the best to ever play the position would have seemed laughable at the beginning of the year. Since he was drafted in 2005, Jackson has been unable to grab hold of the starting job despite several opportunities to do so, essentially forcing the Vikings to bring in Favre in 2009 to take over a team that isn’t getting any younger.

Favre brought the Vikings to the NFC title game a year ago, a performance so impressive that Childress sent Jared Allen, Ryan Longwell and Steve Hutchinson to Favre’s home in August to convince the old man to give it one more try.

But he has not been the same quarterback he was last season. His 68.0 passer rating ranks 30th in the NFL and he’s already thrown 10 interceptions, three more than he did all of last season.

Childress and Favre haven’t always seen eye-to-eye on play-calling and clashed last season when Childress tried to pull Favre from a game against Carolina.

Then there was the moment of candor after the loss to Green Bay when Childress sharply criticized Favre’s decision-making on the interceptions. The coach was also fined $35,000 for criticizing the officiating in the game.

Childress attributed his remarks to “being aggravated. That’s it. You can snap every now and then. That does happen.”

Sitting at 2-4 heading into a daunting game against the Patriots (5-1), the urgency level is rising for a veteran team that is built to win now. The Vikings have made several gambles in an attempt to chase down an elusive first Super Bowl title, including urging Favre to return and trading for Randy Moss from New England.

This season has had a now-or-never feel from the start, most notably for Favre, the perennial waffler who has said this will be his last year.

Offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell, who has seen Favre play through numerous injuries during their time together in Green Bay and Minnesota, said he would be surprised if Favre did not play on Sunday.

“It’s going to take the sky to fall for him not to go out there,” added tight end Visanthe Shiancoe.

But when it comes down to it, it’s head coach’s call. Right, Brett?

“I think we have been able to talk about things,” Favre said. “Do we necessarily agree? No, I think that is part of it. I think both of our intentions are to win. We’ve got to get this on track. We know that. How we get there remains to be seen.”

___

AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell in Eden Prairie, Minn., contributed to this story.

LeBron’s debut in South Beach a win for Heat

If ever there was a “guaranteed” win, a sure-bet in a sporting event, last night’s home opener between the Orlando Magic and Miami Heat was it. There was practically no way that the Heat would lose this game at home after having lost to Boston earlier in the week.

In a radio interview yesterday Charles Barkley stated that for this “experiment” to be considered a success, the Miami Heat would need to win at least two NBA titles in the next five or six years, otherwise all the player moves; LeBron James and Chris Bosh going to Miami, would be a failure. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer Tim Reynolds, Ap Sports Writer Sat Oct 30, 3:49 am ET

MIAMI – For this home opener unlike any other, the Miami Heat deviated from the years-old script of having starters run onto the floor when their name was called.

Instead, in a darkened arena, each of the Heat first-stringers stood still as a spotlight shined upon them.

The message couldn’t have been less subtle: All eyes are on this team, and they showed why Friday night.

Dwyane Wade scored 26 points, LeBron James had 15 points and seven assists and the Heat scored the first 14 points of the second half to turn a close game into a surprisingly one-sided 96-70 victory over the Orlando Magic.

“This is what we envisioned,” James said.

The same couldn’t have been said in the Magic locker room. Orlando has owned this series, winning 15 of the past 20 games against Miami before Friday — before Wade, James and Bosh teamed up to form an instant title contender.

And the result was nothing short of shocking. The Heat held Orlando to its lowest point total since Dec. 2, 2005, and the 26-point margin matched Miami’s biggest ever against the Magic. The 30.4 percent shooting effort was Orlando’s worst since Nov. 3, 2003 — a span of 573 regular-season games.

“They came out, they threw an uppercut, and as a team we kind of went down,” Magic center Dwight Howard said.

Oh, this was a knockout, all right.

“The guys now can’t go back on this,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “They’ve shown me what we’re capable of defensively and I will hold them to this standard now in terms of the effort. The effort was great.”

When the Heat acquired James this summer, Magic president of basketball operations Otis Smith uttered a now-infamous-in-Miami line: “I was surprised that he went. I thought he was, I guess, more of a competitor.”

James was asked about Smith’s words postgame. He tried to keep a stoic look, and failed.

“We heard everything Orlando had to say about us in the offseason,” James said. “It’s not like it’s satisfying. I’m not relieved, because it’s a long season. But they know we’re here for the long haul. We know they’re going to be there also, but this is a different Miami Heat team. There’s only so many words to be said. At this point, the ball has to be thrown up now.”

It didn’t take long for the trio to provide their first highlight: Bosh grabbed the ball at one end, passed toward midcourt to James, who took one dribble and found Wade for an alley-oop dunk to help Miami take an early 22-13 lead.

“Off to the races,” Bosh said.

They were just getting started.

Howard scored all 19 of his points in the first half for Orlando, then fouled out midway through the fourth quarter. Reserve Ryan Anderson scored 12 for the Magic, who got 10 from Jameer Nelson.

Miami’s starters — with no points from Joel Anthony — outscored Orlando’s first five 59-37.

“Overall, I thought it was just a terrible offensive execution,” said Magic forward Rashard Lewis, who was 0 for 9 from the floor.

The first half was fairly back-and-forth with eight lead changes and seven ties, neither team taking control. That changed quickly coming out of intermission.

James hit a 3-pointer to open the second half, Wade connected on two more 3s within a 51-second span, and suddenly Miami’s lead was 60-45. Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy called timeout, and that didn’t change anything — James’ jumper about a minute later pushed the lead to 20.

And that, mind you, was against an Orlando team that cruised to a 29-point win over Washington on Thursday night. For a team with no shortage of offensive options, the Magic struggled against the Heat.

“I thought our passing was horrendous tonight,” Van Gundy said.

The shooting was worse.

Vince Carter played just 13 minutes, banging his head and hip on the floor while jostling for a rebound in the second quarter and finishing with four points. Orlando’s starting forwards — Lewis and former Heat starter Quentin Richardson — combined for four points and missed all 14 of their field-goal tries. J.J. Redick left for a few minutes in the first half after drawing a charge against James with the right side of his face, which was cut and puffy. Redick needed seven stitches.

It was over after the third quarter, Miami’s best period in all three games so far. The Heat have outscored foes 86-41 in that quarter through the season’s first week. And even though the outcome was decided, Wade, James and Bosh all played some in the fourth — not to send a message, but rather to work on continuity, Spoelstra said.

“It’s a good win,” Spoelstra said, “but we can’t get carried away.”

Terror plot thwarted as US-bound explosives seized

These smelly, Muslim towel-heads continue their efforts to kill innocent people in the United States. Fortunately we still have enough allies around the world to spoil these terrorist plots; yet it’s only a matter of time before one or more of these attempts succeed. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By EILEEN SULLIVAN and MATT APUZZO, Associated Press Eileen Sullivan And Matt Apuzzo, Associated Press Sat Oct 30, 2:26 am ET

WASHINGTON – Authorities on three continents thwarted multiple terrorist attacks aimed at the United States from Yemen on Friday, seizing two explosive packages addressed to Chicago-area synagogues and packed aboard cargo jets. The plot triggered worldwide fears that al-Qaida was launching a major new terror campaign.

President Barack Obama called the coordinated attacks a “credible terrorist threat,” and U.S. officials said they were increasingly confident that al-Qaida’s Yemen branch, the group responsible for the failed Detroit airliner bombing last Christmas, was responsible.

Parts of the plot might remain undetected, Obama’s counterterror chief warned. “The United States is not assuming that the attacks were disrupted and is remaining vigilant,” John Brennan said at the White House.

One of the packages was found aboard a cargo plane in Dubai, the other in England. Preliminary tests indicated the packages contained the powerful industrial explosive PETN, the same chemical used in the Christmas attack, U.S. officials said. The tests had not been confirmed.

In the U.S., cargo planes were searched up and down the Eastern Seaboard, and an Emirates Airlines passenger jet was escorted down the coast to New York by American fighter jets.

No explosives were found aboard those planes, though the investigation was continuing on at least two.

Obama’s sobering assessment, delivered from the White House podium, unfolded four days before national elections in which discussion of terrorism has played almost no role. The president went ahead with weekend campaign appearances.

The terrorist efforts “underscore the necessity of remaining vigilant against terrorism,” the president said. While he said both packages that contained explosives originated in Yemen, he did not explicitly assign blame to al-Qaida, which is active in that Arab country and long has made clear its goal of launching new attacks on the United States.

Authorities in Dubai intercepted one explosive device. The second package was aboard a plane searched in East Midlands, north of London, and officials said it contained a printer toner cartridge with wires and powder. Brennan said the devices were in packages about the size of a breadbox.

While Obama didn’t specifically accuse Yemen’s al-Qaida branch, Brennan called it the most active al-Qaida franchise and said anyone associated with the group was a subject of concern.

The radical U.S.-born Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who now is in hiding in Yemen, is believed to have helped inspire recent attacks including the Fort Hood shooting, the Times Square bombing attempt and the failed Detroit airliner bombing last Christmas Day. Another American hiding in Yemen, Samir Khan, has declared himself a traitor and has helped produce al-Qaida propaganda.

Most of the officials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the ongoing investigation.

Brennan later told reporters that the explosives “were in a form that was designed to try to carry out some type of attack,” but he provided no further details.

“The forensic analysis is under way,” he said, adding, “Clearly from the initial observation, the initial analysis that was done, the materials that were found in the device that was uncovered was intended to do harm.”

Intelligence personnel had been monitoring a suspected plot for days, officials said. The packages in England and Dubai were discovered after Saudi Arabian intelligence picked up information related to Yemen and passed it on to the U.S., one official said.

U.S. intelligence officials warned last month that terrorists hoped to mail chemical and biological materials as part of an attack on America and other Western countries using the mail. The alert came in a Sept. 23 bulletin from the Homeland Security Department and obtained by The Associated Press.

In the hours following the discoveries, Yemeni officials and Scotland Yard were investigating and the U.S. issued a 72-hour ban on all cargo from Yemen.

“As a precaution, DHS has taken a number of steps to enhance security,” the agency said in a statement. “Some of these security measures will be visible while others will not.”

U.S. authorities conducted searches of aircraft in Philadelphia, Newark, N.J., and New York City.

Since the failed Christmas bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner, Yemen has been a focus for U.S. counterterrorism officials. Before that attack, the U.S. regarded al-Qaida’s branch in Yemen as primarily a threat in the region, not to the United States.

The Yemen branch known as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has since become a leading source of terrorist propaganda and recruiting. Authorities believe about 300 al-Qaida members or cells operate in Yemen.

The Yemeni government has stepped up counterterrorism operations, with help from the U.S. military and intelligence officials. Mohammed Shayba, general-director of the state airline’s cargo department, said the government is conducting an investigation.

“Those in charge are in constant meetings and they are investigating and taking the issue seriously,” he told The Associated Press.

Another treasurer leaves O’Donnell campaign

How is it possible that in the United States of America, the most technologically advanced and most powerful country in the world, we can have complete flakes such as Christine O’Donnell running for a seat in the Senate? The aforementioned bimbo, along with pea-brain and fellow Republican Sarah Palin, are about as qualified for Senator and President respectively as I am to design the first manned spacecraft to land on Mars. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By BEN EVANS, Associated Press Ben Evans, Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del. – Delaware Republican Christine O’Donnell has parted ways with yet another campaign treasurer and appointed her campaign manager to the position, making him her fifth treasurer since launching her bid for Senate last year.

Campaign finance experts say the turnover is highly unusual and could raise questions at the Federal Election Commission about her financial reporting.

Campaign treasurers, which are required by the FEC, are legally responsible for the accuracy of spending and contribution reports. O’Donnell began with relatively small donations but has seen contributions pour in from around the country since winning the GOP primary last month.

“It doesn’t prove anything but it would certainly raise a red flag with the FEC,” said Brett Kappel, a Washington, D.C., campaign finance attorney. “Treasurers frequently quit when they think they’re going to be held personally liable for something.”

Kappel noted that a watchdog group filed a complaint against the campaign last month over O’Donnell’s use of campaign money to pay the rent on her home, which doubles as a campaign office. Two former staffers have also accused O’Donnell of using campaign money for personal expenses.

The latest O’Donnell treasurer to leave is Sandra Taylor, who began in August and lasted less than two months. Campaign manager Matt Moran is now listed as treasurer in reports filed in early October.

Taylor could not be reached, and O’Donnell’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

O’Donnell, who is making her third Senate run, has long struggled to keep treasurers. After losing two in 2009, she listed herself as treasurer until this summer, when Taylor took over.

Jan Baran, a campaign finance attorney and former general counsel to the Republican National Committee, said he couldn’t recall a campaign with so many treasurers in such a short period of time.

He said it doesn’t necessarily raise suspicion, but “it’s not a good sign that all the accounting and filing is likely in good order.” He said the most recent departure could simply be a result of the gusher of money coming in and the heavy workload.

O’Donnell is running against Democrat Chris Coons for the Senate seat long held by Vice President Joe Biden.

A statewide poll released Thursday from Fairleigh Dickinson University-PublicMind shows Coons holding a commanding 21-point lead, with 57 percent of likely voters saying they will vote for him compared to just 36 percent for O’Donnell. O’Donnell trailed by 17 points in a similar Fairleigh Dickinson poll released earlier this month.

O’Donnell, who had raised about $4 million by the end of September, has drawn criticism for her thin resume and spotty financial history, which includes a federal tax lien, a foreclosure action on her home and allegations of unpaid debts.

___

Online:

http://publicmind.fdu.edu

Church-state divide hits another GOP candidate

These Christian Bible-freaks don’t let up. They continue to question the separation between Church and State which our Founding Fathers were clearly in favor of, arguing that it is not spelled out in our Constitution. Here is what Thomas Jefferson, the main author of our Constitution, wrote with regard to this issue:

“Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should “make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof”, thus building a wall of separation between Church & State.”

Personally, my opinion is that if there is a movement toward tearing down the separation between Church and State, which no doubt there is, then let it be so; under one condition, and that is that RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS PAY TAXES JUST LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE!!! They can’t have it both ways. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

Wed Oct 27, 11:01 pm ET

DENVER – Colorado Republican Senate candidate Ken Buck has questioned the separation of government and religion, drawing criticism from Democrats who last week chided another tea party candidate for the same view.

Buck’s opponents have been circulating a clip of him from a 2009 GOP forum in which he won applause from a conservative crowd at Colorado Christian University when he said the Constitution doesn’t require church and state to be separate.

“I disagree strongly with the concept of separation of church and state. It was not written into the Constitution,” Buck said on the video. “While we have a Constitution that is very strong in the sense that we are not gonna have a religion that’s sanctioned by the government, it doesn’t mean that we need to have a separation between government and religion.”

Democrats spread the Buck video after Delaware Republican Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell was panned for questioning in a debate last week whether the separation of church and state is in the Constitution.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee this week called Buck’s remark “extreme” and “egregious.”

Democratic allies also spread a clip from Buck earlier this year in which he repeated his opposition to abortion rights. Buck said he believes the Supreme Court wrongly cited privacy rights in its Roe v. Wade abortion decision.

Buck clarified his church-and-state position Tuesday on CNN.

“I agree with the idea that there is a separation of church and state. That teachers should not be leading prayer, a particular kind of prayer in classrooms.

“What I have said is that I think the federal government and we as a society have come too far in trying to separate good organizations that perform good functions for people just based on the fact one has a religious association and one doesn’t,” Buck said.

Buck’s opponent, Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet, has defended his campaign’s reliance use of old Buck remarks, saying it’s fair to highlight Buck positions that are outside the mainstream.

Republicans are digging into Bennet’s past, too.

The GOP this week passed to reporters financial disclosure reports showing that Bennet, a former Denver Public Schools superintendent, owned stock in JP Morgan Chase, a firm involved in a 2008 financing deal to cover a $400 million gap in the school system’s pension fund.

Bennet supported the proposed deal to the Denver school board, which unanimously backed it in hopes of saving tens of millions of dollars in annual debt costs. A Bennet spokesman said Wednesday that the senator’s financial stake in JP Morgan Chase came in a fund Bennet didn’t control.

Bennet sold stock in JP Morgan Chase in January 2009.

___

Online:

http://bit.ly/cz7v2L

Canadian Muslims erect first minaret in Arctic

It’s only a matter of time before minarets dot the landscape of almost every country throughout the world as the Islamic population continues to escalate and Muslims leave their native lands seeking better economic opportunities. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

by Michel Comte Michel Comte Wed Oct 27, 9:34 pm ET

OTTAWA (AFP) – Canadian Muslims have erected the Arctic’s first minaret, atop a little yellow mosque which serves as spiritual home to the area’s fledgling Islamic community.

The prefabricated mosque arrived in Inuvik last month to serve a growing Muslim population in Canada’s far north, after traveling 4,000 kilometers (2,485 miles) over land and water.

The minaret — built locally and installed this week — has four levels and stands 30 feet (10 meters) off the ground.

“It’s really beautiful when we turn on the lights in the dark,” Amier Suliman, a mosque committee member, told AFP on Wednesday.

Only finishing touches — applying a second coat of paint inside, and hooking up bathroom plumbing — remain before the mosque’s grand opening next week.

“This is the first minaret to be erected in the Arctic,” Suliman said gleefully by telephone.

“Some will say it’s a new frontier for Islam,” he commented. “But for me what is significant is that Muslims here who once prayed on Fridays at a local Catholic church or in a trailer now have a proper place to worship, with a proper minaret.”

“Now we have a home to worship in our own hometown. That’s the most important for me.”

The number of Muslims in Inuvik, a town of 4,000 inhabitants in Canada’s Northwest Territories, has grown steadily in recent years to about 80 and they no longer fit in an old three-by-seven-meter (10-by-23-foot) caravan used until now for prayers.

The congregation could not afford to build a new mosque in the town, where prices for labor and materials are substantially higher than in southern parts of Canada, project coordinator Ahmad Alkhalaf said previously.

But they found a supplier of prefabricated buildings in Manitoba that said it could ship a structure to Inuvik for half the price of building a mosque from scratch on site.

A local Muslim charity — the Zubaidah Tallab Foundation of Thompson, Manitoba — also offered to pick up the costs for the 140-square meter (1,500-square foot) facility, Alkhalaf said.

And so, at the end of August the tiny yellow mosque’s voyage began on the back of truck, winding through the vast prairies and woods of Western Canada toward Hay River on the shores of Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories.

From there it was transferred onto a barge and floated down the McKenzie River to Inuvik, about 200 kilometers (124 miles) north of the Arctic Circle.

The worshippers — largely Sunni Muslim immigrants from Sudan, Lebanon and Egypt who moved to Canada’s far north in search of jobs and economic opportunities — are to hold an open house on November 5.

The facility will also double as a Muslim community center.

Foreclosure activity up across most US metro areas

People continue to lose their jobs and will eventually lose their homes, yet our government basically sits idly by and instead of helping the individual is helping the filthy-rich, criminal banks get even richer. Uncle Sam won’t even give unemployed workers a break as even unemployment benefits are taxed! The entire scenario is totally disgusting, and will only get worse. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

Photography: Reuters

By ALEX VEIGA, AP Real Estate Writer Alex Veiga, Ap Real Estate Writer

LOS ANGELES – The foreclosure crisis intensified across a majority of large U.S. metropolitan areas this summer, with Chicago and Seattle — cities outside of the states that have shouldered the worst of the housing downturn — seeing a sharp increase in foreclosure warnings.

California, Nevada, Florida and Arizona remain the nation’s foreclosure hotbeds, accounting for 19 of the top 20 metropolitan areas with the highest foreclosure rates between July and September, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

Those states saw housing values surge during the housing boom years. When the boom ended, values collapsed and foreclosures soared.

But the latest data show that many of the metro areas in those states saw a decline in the number of households receiving foreclosure-related filings, while many cities in other states saw a spike in foreclosure activity.

“The epidemic is spreading from the states at the ground zero of the foreclosure problems out into areas that hadn’t been previously affected,” said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac.

The trend is the latest sign that the nation’s foreclosure crisis is worsening as homeowners facing high unemployment, slow job growth and uncertainty about home prices continue to fall behind on their mortgage payments.

In all, 133 out of 206 metropolitan areas with at least 200,000 residents posted an annual increase in foreclosure activity in the three months ended Sept. 30, RealtyTrac said.

The firm tracks notices for defaults, scheduled home auctions and home repossessions — warnings that can lead up to a home eventually being lost to foreclosure.

Eleven out of the nation’s 20 largest metropolitan areas saw foreclosure activity increase in the third quarter compared to the same period last year.

The Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue metro area registered the sharpest annual increase — 71 percent. One in every 129 households received a foreclosure filing.

The Chicago-Naperville-Joliet metropolitan area posted the second-highest annual jump, a 35 percent increase. One in every 84 households received a foreclosure notice.

Among the other metro areas where foreclosure activity jumped by a large margin this summer were Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, up 26 percent; Detroit-Warren-Livonia, at nearly 23 percent; and, Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, up 20 percent.

Economic woes, such as unemployment or reduced income, continue to be the main catalysts for foreclosures this year. The U.S. unemployment rate hit 9.6 percent last month.

In the Seattle metro area, unemployment stood slightly lower at 8.5 percent in August and has been edging lower. It was 8.7 percent in August last year.

Still, many troubled homeowners have been unable to hang on. As a result, there’s been no letup in the inventory of foreclosed homes on the market this year, says John Bauer, an agent with ZipRealty in Seattle who represents lenders selling foreclosed properties.

“It has been on an upward trend curve ever since 2008,” Bauer said. “And not just the third quarter of this year, but the last 12 months, it’s been on a steady ascension.”

Chicago also had the third-highest number of homes repossessed by lenders during the quarter — 12,568 — behind the Phoenix metro area’s 14,317 and the Miami metro area’s 12,963, RealtyTrac said.

Banks have seized more than 816,000 homes through the first nine months of the year and are on pace to seize more than a million.

A controversy stemming from allegations that banks evicted people without reading foreclosure documents wasn’t a factor in the July-September quarter, Sharga said.

Lenders such as Bank of America and Ally Financial’s GMAC Mortgage initially halted foreclosure activity but have since resumed processing foreclosures.

Preliminary data from this month shows almost no change in foreclosure activity versus September, Sharga said.

“We’re not seeing what we might have anticipated in terms of a falloff,” he said.

The Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev., metropolitan area topped the list of metropolitan areas with the highest foreclosure rates in July-September with one in every 25 homes receiving a foreclosure warning — more than five times the national average. But foreclosure filings declined 20 percent from the same quarter last year.

“It’s not out of the woods yet, it’s just less bad than it was a year ago,” Sharga said.

Rounding out the rest of the top 10 metros with the highest foreclosure rate were Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; Modesto, Calif.; Stockton, Calif.; Merced, Calif.; Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif.; Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, Fla.; Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz.; Bakersfield, Calif.; and Vallejo-Fairfield, Calif.

Sheen leaves hospital after NYC hotel outburst

Not that this is “news,” being that the story is a day old, but Charlie Sheen once again gets into trouble with the law… But not really.

He presumably gets “high” on cocaine, presumably drinks himself silly, presumably hires a prostitute, presumably trashes his hotel room, and oh by the way, his ex-wife and children are staying in another room in the same hotel; yet people are OK with this.

It really is amusing how people not only accept but excuse certain behavior from “stars” 100% of the time, yet totally criticize others who are good 99.9% of the time but “misbehave” .1% of the time – my self included; it’s all about training. If a man gets home “late” from work every day after having a few cocktails and one day gets home early his partner (wife/girlfriend) will say: wow, you’re home early, and be happy! Yet if the same man is home from work early every day and one day gets home “late” and says he stopped for a few cocktails after work his partner will rip him a new ass, accuse him of cheating and not speak to him for three days. My friends, it’s all about conditioning, don’t forget that.

The moral of the story: be a bad boy (consistently) – you’ll be rewarded for it! TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Colleen Long, Associated Press Tue Oct 26, 7:27 pm ET

NEW YORK – Charlie Sheen was briefly hospitalized Tuesday after security at the Plaza Hotel called police to report he was disorderly and had broken furniture in his room, police said.

His publicist blamed an allergic reaction to medication, and said the actor was discharged Tuesday evening and on his way back to Los Angeles.

Sheen appeared highly intoxicated when officers arrived to his room around 1:30 a.m., and a woman with him said they had been out drinking and partying that night, according to a law enforcement official. She said he was yelling and tossing furniture when they returned to the room, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the encounter and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said hotel security reported Sheen was disorderly. The actor voluntarily went with authorities for a psychiatric evaluation.

“No arrests were made. It’s not a complaint. He’s being treated at a hospital,” Kelly said.

The publicist, Stan Rosenfield, said the 45-year-old had an adverse allergic reaction to some medication. “Everything else is speculation,” Rosenfield said.

It’s not clear who the woman in the hotel room was. Sheen was in New York on a family vacation. His ex-wife, actress Denise Richards, and their two children, Sam, 6, and Lola, 5, also were staying at the hotel in a different room, the official said.

Police haven’t received any complaints from the hotel about any possible damage. A message left with the historic hotel at the foot of Central Park wasn’t returned.

Sheen, the star of CBS’ “Two and a Half Men,” has had past problems with alcohol and drugs that have landed him in legal trouble.

In August, he pleaded guilty in Aspen, Colo., to misdemeanor third-degree assault after a Christmas Day altercation with his wife, Brooke Mueller Sheen. Prosecutors dropped more serious charges and he avoided jail time, instead sentenced to 30 days in a rehabilitation center, 30 days of probation and 36 hours of anger management.

Mueller Sheen, who is the mother of twins with Sheen, told police that the actor threatened to kill her and brandished a knife after she told him she wanted a divorce. Charlie Sheen said they argued but he denied threatening her, and he told police that he was upset by the divorce threat.

He previously went through a bitter divorce and custody battle with Richards. Her publicist said Tuesday she had no comment on Tuesday’s hotel encounter.

In December 1996, Sheen was charged with attacking a girlfriend at his Southern California home. He later pleaded no contest and was placed on two years of probation.

In 1998, his father, actor Martin Sheen, turned him in for violating parole after a cocaine overdose sent him to the hospital. He was ordered to undergo a rehabilitation program.

On “Two and a Half Men,” TV’s top-rated sitcom, Sheen plays a character named Charlie Harper, a freewheeling bachelor whose playboy lifestyle is complicated when his uptight brother and the brother’s son move in.

Sheen is also the star of films such as “Platoon,” “Wall Street” and “Hot Shots!”