Thursday, November 8, 2012

Presidential election: How soon will someone win so we can go to sleep? (+video)

Polls close in six Eastern states at 7 p.m. If the networks call Virginia quickly for Obama, it could be an early sign of victory. But don't expect speedy presidential election results in battleground Ohio, where provisional ballots could make for a long night.

By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / November 6, 2012

Classical studies major Omar Dyette, from Racine, Wis. (front r.), mans a table outside the polls at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio, on Tuesday. The polls in this closely watched battleground state close at 7:30 p.m.

Mark Duncan/AP

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When will someone win the presidential election so we can all go to sleep? That?s the question that lots of people asked us while we waited in line to vote Tuesday morning. We can?t answer that for sure, but it?s possible to pinpoint when the US public might begin to get hints as to how the 2012 vote will play out. Here?s a quick rundown so you can plan when to walk the dog/check kids? homework/make a burrito run to Chipotle.

Skip to next paragraph Peter Grier

Washington Editor

Peter Grier is The Christian Science Monitor's Washington editor. In this capacity, he helps direct coverage for the paper on most news events in the nation's capital.

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First, a technical note ? some states have split poll closings, with voting in different counties ending at different times. We?re ignoring that for the sake of simplicity.

That said, the first point at which something exciting can occur might be 7 p.m. That?s when the polls in six Eastern states close, with Virginia being the most important. Formerly solid red, Virginia has become much more of a swing state due to the fast growth of the D.C. suburbs in the northern part of the state. President Obama won there in 2008 by more than eight percentage points, but averages of major polls have the Old Dominion as a tossup in 2012.

Mitt Romney badly needs Virginia?s 13 electoral votes if he?s to put together the 270 he needs for victory. That means that if the networks call it quickly for Mr. Obama, it might be time to start plumping the bedroom pillows.

At 7:30 p.m., the polls close in Ohio. Do we even have to describe how important Ohio is to the calculations of both campaigns? It?s the state Obama has visited the most during the campaign, though there?s no truth to the rumor he?s had his middle name changed to ?Columbus." If Ohio is called quickly for one candidate or the other, it could be a great portent of victory; that?s unlikely to happen, though, given the closeness of state polls and the large number of provisional ballots that Ohio election officials expect to wade through.

North Carolina polls close at 7:30, too. That?s a state that Mr. Romney should win, perhaps easily.

Eight o'clock is when things will really start to happen. If Dan Rather were still a network anchor, this is the time when he?d produce a colorful saying, such as ?hang on to your armadillo and don?t forget the cheese dip, the hat?s really at the cleaners now!? Fifteen states ending voting at 8 EST, including Florida, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/7B0TuDaXqOw/Presidential-election-How-soon-will-someone-win-so-we-can-go-to-sleep-video

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

To Maryland voters: Thoughts about Question 7 (gambling expansion) (Powerlineblog)

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1 dead, 3 injured in North Carolina hospital fire

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) ? One patient was killed and three others suffered slight injuries in a fire at Durham Regional Hospital early Tuesday.

Firefighters were called to a report of an explosion on the sixth floor of the hospital in central North Carolina around 2:15 a.m., Durham Fire Department spokeswoman Sierra Jackson said. The firefighters discovered there had been no explosion and the fire had been extinguished by the hospital sprinkler system.

The cause of the fire was still under investigation, Jackson said.

Hospital officials were investigating exactly where the fire occurred and how, said Katie Galbraith, hospital chief of operations.

The hospital was operating normally several hours later. The waiting area showed no sign of the fire. Visitors entered and left, and doctors and other hospital employees went about their business, getting coffee and heading back to their work. The television provided the only background noise.

Other patients in the 30-bed long-term care unit, a separately licensed facility operating as Select Specialty Hospitals, were moved to other parts of the hospital.

Some other patients were moved because of flooding caused by the sprinklers.

"They are safe and they are being well cared for," Galbraith said.

The three slightly injured patients all had been on ventilators prior to the fire. They were taken to the emergency room to be checked for smoke inhalation and then sent to the intensive care unit.

The names of the victim and those injured were not immediately released.

Galbraith said the hospital staff practices for just such emergencies.

"Our focus is on making sure people are safe," she said. "They did exactly what they're trained to do."

Durham Regional is a 369-bed acute care hospital.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-11-06-Hospital%20Explosion/id-2570c01849884ca389de1759c0f717a1

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First Person: A Household Illustrates Wisconsin's Political Differences

Just days before Nov. 6, Yahoo! asked voters to reveal which candidate they're backing -- Barack Obama or Mitt Romney or another candidate -- and, briefly, why. Here are one voter's thoughts.

FIRST PERSON | On the last weekend before Election Day, while my unsuspecting partner slept, I sought revenge for a humor-filled and heated political debate. I painted his toenails blue and hid the nailpolish remover.

We live in Wisconsin. Our county is one of the worst counties in the state, featuring low education testing scores in the public school sector, one of the highest unemployment rates, crime rates and more. You could literally draw lines around rich and poor in this county. There is so much contempt, class warfare, public vs. private employment sectors, ethnic divide, and really a revolutionary civil divide.

We are a swing state for good reason. There is too much waste on both sides of the fence, and no one wants to pay for it. The rich blame the poor for being lazy and wanting handouts, and poor blame the rich for oppression, and the true middle struggles to skate by and survive.

My partner and I make up probably one of the most iconic representations of "swing state." And after this weekend we have the toenails to prove it!

My partner grew up poor, the eldest male in a family of seven. I grew up in upper middle class, the eldest female in a family of five. We're both raised Catholic, and he became atheist and I an agnostic in adulthood. Both of us are educated post-baccalaureate, but you can tell where the influences of childhood and what was in emphasis of "importance in politics" lies with in either of us, rooted deeply.

While neither of us is an official Democrat or Republican, and furthermore while the racketeering of these two parties exists and eliminates the other more reasonable options (i.e. independent, Green, and Libertarian) that both of us would rather choose, we claim opposing sides.

He is a Democrat, and I am a Republican. He voted early and I will vote on Election Day. And when both of us walked to the polls supporting our cause, the truth falls on more than where the arrow is drawn. Symbolically colored, our feet lead us to exercise our rights to vote, our ability to choose, and live our lives to the pursuit of our happiness -- regardless of which side of the political fence they may lie.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-person-household-illustrates-wisconsins-political-differences-002400253.html

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Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Egypt's Copts choose new pope for uncertain times

CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's ancient Coptic Christian church named a new pope on Sunday to spiritually guide the community through a time when many fear for their future with the rise of Islamists to power and deteriorating security after last year's uprising.

The death earlier this year of Pope Shenouda III, a familiar figure who led the church for 40 years, heightened the sense of insecurity felt by many Egyptian Christians. They will now look to Bishop Tawadros, who will be ordained Nov. 18 as Pope Tawadros II, to fill the void in leadership.

Tawadros, 60, was chosen in an elaborate Mass where a blindfolded boy drew the name of the next patriarch from a crystal chalice.

"The situation for us in Egypt is not stable," said 27 year-old Peter Nasser, a volunteer at the Mass. "We hope the incoming pope will make our problems known to the outside world," he added, voicing hopes that Tawadros will also raise the profile of Christians in this country.

Nasser accused the current government, led by President Mohammed Morsi of the Islamic fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, of discriminating against minorities. He claimed the new leadership does not work in the interest of all Egyptians.

But even under authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak, who ran Egypt for nearly three decades until he was ousted in February 2011, rights groups say police were lax in pursuing and punishing those who attacked Christians and few Copts were named to genuinely powerful posts in government.

Morsi, who was elected in Egypt's first free presidential race, has named a number of Christians as advisers and vowed to work closely with the community. But Christians are skeptical.

Morsi congratulated Tawadros and spoke of Egyptian "unity" and "brotherly love" between Copts and Muslims.

Copts, estimated at about 10 percent of the country's 83 million people, have long complained of discrimination by the Muslim majority state. Under both the old regime and the new Islamist leadership, violent clashes with Muslims have occasionally broken out, often sparked by church construction, land disputes or Muslim-Christian love affairs.

The newfound political power of Islamists in Egypt, who control the presidency and won parliamentary elections, has left many Christians feeling deeply uncomfortable.

Copts have faced sporadic, violent attacks by Muslim extremists. That has been compounded by deterioration in security and law enforcement since the uprising. In some cases, Coptic families or entire communities have had to flee their towns as a quick-fix solution to avoid more violence.

Yousef Sidhom, the editor of Egypt's main Coptic newspaper, said Copts are suffering from the increased lawlessness.

"There is great apprehension about what tomorrow holds for everyone," he said.

Another worry for Christians is that the new political powers are pressing for a stronger role for Islamic law in legislation. They are increasingly concerned about further marginalization and a possible curtailing of their rights of worship and expression.

Around Cairo St. Mark's Cathedral, where the colorful ceremony to select the new pope was held at midday, there was a heavy police presence.

"We will pray that God will choose the good shepherd," acting Pope Pachomios told the packed cathedral as he used red wax to seal a chalice with three names inside and then laid it on the altar during Mass.

There was a moment of silence before the name was drawn by a blindfolded boy. When the new pope was announced, thousands of worshippers erupted in applause, tears and prayer.

All three senior clerics whose names were in the chalice were considered consensus candidates who stayed out of disputes both within the church and with other groups, including Islamists. Several candidates were eliminated because they were considered either too conservative or too liberal.

We "will start by organizing the house from within," Tawadros told reporters after his win, speaking from the monastery complex of Wadi Natrun northwest of Cairo where he was praying. "It is a responsibility," he said. "Most important is ... that the church, as an institution, serves the community."

In a recent television interview, Tawadros said the youth-led uprising marked a turning point in the church's relations with younger generations.

Tawadros was formerly an aide to the acting Pope Pachomios and he was selected as pope on his 60th birthday, Egypt's state-run MENA news agency reported.

It said he was born Wagih Sahby Baqi Soleiman and had two sisters. Tawadros became a pharmacist who briefly managed a government-run pharmaceutical lab in Egypt until he went to a monastery in Wadi Natrun, northeast of Cairo, in 1986 where he studied religion for two years. He was ordained a priest in 1989.

The new pope will face tremendous challenges in navigating Egypt's changing political realities, where Islamists are now dominant and the liberal and secular groups behind last year's uprising are struggling. At the center of the political squabbling is the role of Islam in the new constitution, currently being drafted.

Christians, along with liberals and secularists, oppose demands by the Muslim Brotherhood and more conservative groups to enshrine a stricter adherence to Islamic law.

Violence is also but an ongoing concern.

Copts have faced attacks since the uprising, and disputes with their neighbors have sometimes flared into deadly clashes.

On New Year's Eve 2011, about a month before the uprising began, the bombing of a Mass in the Mediterranean coast city of Alexandria killed 21 people ? the worst attack against Copts in at least a decade. No one has been arrested.

In October 2011, soldiers drove armored vehicles into a crowd in Cairo protesting the failure of the military rulers who took over from Mubarak to protect Copts. Twenty-six people, mostly Copts, were killed.

The papal election comes during a shift in Christian attitudes about their relations to the state. For years, Christians largely relied on the church to secure protection for their rights through the former pope's close relationship with Mubarak.

But Shenouda had longstanding critics within the community who questioned why a cleric should act as an intermediary between them and the state. Others criticized him for not being tough enough with the former regime.

"I don't accept that the church continues representing the community, but it should continue the role of serving the community," said Sidhom, the newspaper editor.

Following the uprising and the pope's death, more Copts, particularly youths, have been emboldened to act outside the church to independently demand rights, better representation and freedom of worship.

Some critics of Shenouda's papal style hope the change will usher in a patriarch who is head of the church but not necessarily a political leader of the community.

Kirolos Zakaria, 20 year-old engineering student, said he wants the Christian community in Egypt to participate more in politics, but he does not want to see the pope involved.

The process of electing a new pope began weeks ago and on Monday, about 2,400 clergymen and church notables drew up a short list of three. The other two candidates were Bishop Raphael, 54, a one-time aide to Shenouda, and Father Raphael Ava Mina, the oldest among them at 70, a monk in a monastery near Alexandria.

There was controversy surrounding the selection process with congregants wanting to a bigger say in selecting papal nominees. Another issue the church is grappling with is strict rules that allow for divorce only in the case of adultery or conversion.

____

Additional reporting by Sarah El Deeb.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-copts-choose-pope-uncertain-times-173329046.html

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