Thursday, 11 September 2008

News

Obama defends lipstick joke

Barack Obama has spent the past 24 hours defending himself against charges of sexism after comparing his Republican rival John McCain's promise of change to putting "lipstick on a pig". On Tuesday Obama said his rival was still pursuing the policies of the Bush administration despite presenting himself as an... [continued]

McCain and Obama attend 9/11 ceremony

Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain are set to bury their political differences when they attend a service near Ground Zero in New York today, to remember those who died in the September 11 attacks seven years ago today. In a joint statement, the two rivals vowed to come... [continued]

Barristers snub £91 hourly rate

A boycott by barristers over their hourly pay rates is threatening to delay the start of several major court cases, including the Rhys Jones murder trial in Liverpool. The trials are under threat because barristers are refusing to work for a minimum of £70 an hour for a junior barrister... [continued]

Zimbabwe allows foreign currency

Robert Mugabe, who has consistently blamed Zimbabwe's financial woes on the actions of foreign businesspeople, has finally acknowledged the need for foreign currency to bolster his country's battered economy. The Zimbabwe dollar remains the legal tender but around 250 wholesalers and 1,000 retailers are to be licensed to accept foreign... [continued]

Seven face bomb plot retrial

Seven British men accused of plotting to blow up passenger planes over the Atlantic with liquid bombs could face a retrial. Abdulla Ahmed Ali, Assad Sarwar and Tanvir Hussain were found guilty of conspiracy to murder after a five month trial but the jury was unable to return verdicts... [continued]

Scientists fire up Big Bang machine

The world's biggest physics experiment got underway this morning, as scientists attempt to recreate the Universe's first moments after the Big Bang. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a 27km-long circular tunnel which runs under the French-Swiss border. After 14 years of work by 10,000 scientists, at around 8am engineers... [continued]