Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/55003
2B Daily News – Thursday, February 9, 2012 WORLD BRIEFING Santorum rejoices in in caucus sweep ALLEN, Texas (AP) — One day after Rick Santorum's startling breakthrough in the presi- dential race, his few aides decamped to distant states to start building campaign organizations from scratch. It was evidence of his challenge in con- verting sudden momen- tum into victories in the rush of contests ahead. ''We definitely are the campaign right now with the momentum, the enthu- siasm on the ground,'' the former Pennsylvania sen- ator said Wednesday, hours after capturing Republican caucuses in Minnesota and Colorado and a non-binding prima- ry in Missouri. ''We feel like going forward we're going to have the money we need to make the case we want.'' To replenish his cof- fers, Santorum arranged a weekend of fundraising events in California. He plans to start campaigning in Washington state on Monday, and then Ohio and Michigan in the fol- lowing days At the same time, aides conceded he was making little or no effort in the caucuses in Maine that end this weekend, and they are still working on plans for competing in primaries in Michigan and Arizona on Feb. 28, as well as the delegate- rich, 10-state Super Tues- day a week later. Romney's losses lay bare conservative doubts ATLANTA (AP) — Mitt Romney still can't seem to win over the bulk of the conservatives who make up the bedrock of the Republi- can Party. Despite primary vic- tories that have estab- lished him as the GOP presidential front-run- ner, his stunning trio of defeats this week laid bare the difficulties that still could undercut his path to the party's nomi- nation — and hamper him in the general elec- tion to follow. Not that he would acknowledge as much Wednesday. ''I don't think the base conservative changes its mind day to day,'' Romney told reporters, dismissing the notion that he's got a problem with the party's core supporters. ''The places where I cam- paigned actively, we got actually in some respects record support from the conservative base.'' Such denials aside, Tuesday's three-state caucus sweep by Rick Santorum illustrated the degree to which many conservative voters remain skeptical of Romney's commitment to the GOP base's prin- ciples, especially given what some of them see as his history of shifting priorities. And he hasn't been able to sell them on his main argument — that he's the most likely in the primary field to beat Democratic Presi- dent Barack Obama. EU threatens new sanctions on Syria BEIRUT (AP) — The European Union will impose harsher sanc- tions on Syria, a senior EU official said Wednesday, as Russia tried to broker talks between the vice presi- dent and the opposition house and the parent — the biological parent — whose name is Josh Powell will not let me in the door. What should I do? ... I could hear one of the kids crying, and he still wouldn't let me in.'' The social worker told the dispatcher she ''was one step in back of (the boys). He shut the door right in my face.'' GOP vows congressional action on to calm violence. Activists reported at least 50 killed in the regime's siege of the restive city of Homs. Russia, a close ally of Syria, and the West are pushing down starkly different paths in trying to deal with Syria's nearly 11 months of bloodshed. After block- ing a Western and Arab attempt to bring U.N. pressure on President Bashar Assad to step down, Russia has launched a bid to show it can resolve the tur- moil. Moscow is calling for a combination of reforms by the regime and negotiations, with- out calling for Assad to go. Its provisions are so far finding no traction with the opposition, which dismisses promises of reform as empty gestures, refuses any negotiations while violence continues and says Assad's removal is the only option in the crisis. Russian Prime Minis- ter Vladimir Putin said outside forces should let Syrians settle their con- flict ''independently.'' ''We should not act like a bull in a china shop,'' Putin said, according to the ITAR- TASS news agency. ''We have to give people a chance to make deci- sions about their destiny independently, to help, to give advice, to put limits somewhere so that the opposing sides would not have a chance to use arms, but not to interfere.'' Sheriff's office unhappy with dispatcher in Powell case SEATTLE (AP) — A 911 recording reveals a social worker's urgent attempts over more than six minutes to get a dis- patcher to send deputies after Josh Powell locked himself and his two sons in his home. The social worker tried repeatedly to relay the gravity of what was going on. Josh Powell was scheduled for a supervised visit with his sons Sunday, but he slammed the door in her face — then used a hatchet on his sons and torched the building in a gas-fueled inferno. All three were killed. In the first minutes of the 911 call, the woman laid out the situation. ''Something really weird has happened. The kids went into the birth control WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans vowed Wednesday to reverse President Barack Obama's new policy on birth control, lambast- ing the rule that reli- gious schools and hospi- tals provide employees with free contraceptives as an ''unambiguous attack on religious free- dom in our country.'' The White House pushed back in the face of a political firestorm, arguing that Obama was sensitive to the objec- tions and looking for a way to allay the con- cerns. Democratic women lawmakers put up a united front in defending the adminis- tration. ''Women's health care should not depend on who the boss is,'' said Illinois Rep. Jan Schakowsky. The fight over the administration mandate escalated as House Speaker John Boehner accused the administra- tion of violating First Amendment rights and undermining some of the country's most vital institutions, such as Catholic charities, schools and hospitals. He demanded that Obama rescind the poli- cy or else Congress will. ''This attack by the federal government on religious freedom in our country cannot stand, and will not stand,'' Boehner, a Catholic and Ohio Republican, said in a floor speech rare for the speaker. Investigators find 200 more photos in case of lewd teacher LOS ANGELES (AP) — Investigators said Wednesday they have found 200 additional photos they believe were taken by a former teacher who is accused of committing lewd acts on 23 children over a five-year period. The photos were found late last week at the same pharmacy where a photo lab tech- nician had first noticed odd pictures that led to Mark Berndt's arrest, said sheriff's Lt. Carlos Marquez. The recent discovery brings the total number of photos to roughly 600. Many of the photos involve children already identified by authori- ties, but there may be other potential victims, Marquez said. Berndt has been charged with lewd acts on children between 2005 and 2010. Some of the photos show chil- dren ages 6 to 10 blind- folded, their mouths taped and being fed a milky, white liquid authorities believe was semen. The new batch of photos depicts simi- lar poses, Marquez said. Berndt taught at Miramonte Elementary School, where the entire staff was replaced this week amid outrage from parents. UNDERWAY! VOTING IS Vote for your favorite Tehama County Businesses! Online Ballots Only at www.redbluffdailynews.com at random from all eligible ballots on March 1. Each will receive a $100 Shopping Spree at the Tehama County business of their choice! Five Lucky Voters will be selected Republicans want to deny tax credit to illegal immigrants WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans are look- ing to deny child tax cred- its to illegal immigrants — refund checks averag- ing $1,800 a family — in an effort that has roused anger among Hispanics and some Democratic lawmakers. The proposal, which would require people who claim the federal credit to have Social Security num- bers to prove they're legal workers, is being offered as a way to help pay for extending the Social Security tax cut for most American wage-earners. It would trim federal spending by about $10 billion over a decade. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada says the proposal unfairly goes after the children of poor Hispanic workers. Such kids often are U.S. citizens, even when their parents aren't, because they were born in this country. Says Leticia Miranda, senior policy adviser of the National Council of La Raza: ''People who are making close to the mini- mum wage and are raising children in this country — and we're asking them to pay for the payroll tax cut?'' She says, ''It's out- rageous and it's crazy.'' On the other side, Republicans and some Democrats say what's crazy is even having a debate over whether the government should be cutting checks to people who have sneaked into the country illegally. It's hard to imagine there isn't a healthy majority, even in the Democratic-con- trolled Senate, to stop the practice — if it's actually brought to a vote. Zapping brain with electricity improves learning NEW YORK (AP) — People learned better when a key part of their brains got mild zaps of electricity, a finding that may someday help Alzheimer's patients keep more of their mem- ories. In a small but tanta- lizing study, partici- pants played a video game in which they learned the locations of stores in a virtual city. They recalled the loca- tions better if they learned them while receiving a painless boost from tiny elec- trodes buried deep inside their brains. In the future, that strategy might help curb memory loss for people in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, suggested Dr. Itzhak Fried, a neurosurgeon at the University of Cali- fornia, Los Angeles. But he cautioned that the results were prelimi- nary. Using implanted electrodes to treat brain disease is hardly new. Such ''deep-brain stim- ulation'' has been used for about a decade for Parkinson's disease and some other disorders. Researchers are also testing it for depression. Some 80,000 or more people worldwide have had stimulation units implanted, mostly for Parkinson's. Navy Researchers seek clues to identity of 200-year-old shipwreck WESTERLY, R.I. (AP) — For two cen- turies it rested a mile from shore, shrouded by a treacherous reef from the pleasure boaters and beachgoers who haunt New England's southern coast. Now, researchers from the U.S. Navy are hoping to confirm what the men who discovered the wreck believe: that the sunken ship off the coast of Rhode Island is the USS Revenge, com- manded by Oliver Haz- ard Perry and lost on a stormy January day in 1811. ''The Revenge was forgotten, it became a footnote,'' said Charlie Buffum, a brewery owner from Stonington, Conn., who found the shipwreck while diving with friend Craig Harg- er. ''We are very confi- dent this is it.'' On Wednesday Buf- fum and Harger braved the raw weather of Block Island Sound to accompany the researchers as they sur- veyed the wreck site. The Navy — along with help from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution — is using high-tech sensor equip- ment to locate artifacts that might prove the ship's identity. If they're successful, they will illuminate a critical episode in the life of one of the nation's greatest naval officers. Perry is remembered as the Hero of Lake Erie for defeat- ing the British navy in the War of 1812. He was famous for reporting simply ''we have met the enemy and they are ours'' after the decisive Battle of Lake Erie in 1813. McCartney to debut songs on iTunes' streaming NEW YORK (AP) — Paul McCartney will debut the songs from his new album ''Kisses on the Bottom'' in a free live streaming perfor- mance on iTunes. The performance takes place at 10 p.m. EST Thursday from Capitol Studios in Los Angeles where much of the new album was recorded. ''Kisses on the Bot- tom'' features McCart- ney's interpretation of several beloved stan- dards like ''I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter,'' ''Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive'' and ''Bye Bye Blackbird,'' and has two new songs, ''My Valentine'' with Eric Clapton and ''Only Our Hearts'' with Stevie Wonder. The former Beatle recorded the album with the help of Diana Krall and her backing band.