Tag Archives: netherlands

PSV vs Sampdoria highlights 1:1

Sampdoria player Daniele Mannini, left, and PSV Eindhoven player Erik Pieters fight for the ball during their first round group I Europe League soccer match at the Philips stadium in Eindhoven, Netherlands, Thursday, Sept.16, 2010. A last-gasp equaliser from Balazs Dzsudzsak secured a point for PSV in a 1-1 draw against Sampdoria in their Europa League Group I opener at Philips Stadion. Fabrizio Cacciatore#39;s header had given the visitors the lead but Dzsudzsak#39;s low shot from the edge of

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PSV vs Sampdoria highlights 1:1

Amsterdam Townhouse Has All The Green Gizmos But Is Gorgeous Too

photos by I See For You / Föllmi Photography via DailyTonic Suzanne Labarre at CoDesign is “smitten” with FARO Architecten ‘s Woonhuis Weijnen 2.0, a townhouse near Amsterdam. No wonder; it is one of those rare combinations of true green and great design…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Amsterdam Townhouse Has All The Green Gizmos But Is Gorgeous Too

Australian mother cuddles baby ‘back to life’

A premature baby has been brought “back to life” after his Australian mother, Kate Ogg, spent two hours touching, cuddling and holding the baby. The baby, Jamie, was born at 27 weeks and weighed 2 lb. Doctors fought to save his life but he was pronounced dead and given to his parents so they could say goodbye at a Sydney hospital. But his mother did not give up. She held baby Jamie against her and talked to him for a couple of hours. In what is being described as a “miracle,” the baby began to show some signs of life. Once the baby had been given some breast milk, fed to him by his mother's finger, Jamie began to breathe. His mother used a technique known as kangaroo care. Kangaroo care works through the principal of skin-to skin touch and the new mum has since appeared on television to state how important this could be for an ill baby. According to the Daily Mail, the new mum told an Australian TV show: “I took my gown off and arranged him on my chest with his head over my arm and just held him. He wasn't moving at all and we just started talking to him. We told him what his name was and that he had a sister. We told him the things we wanted to do with him throughout his life. I thought, “Oh my God, what's going on?” A short time later he opened his eyes. It was a miracle.” She added she told her mother that he was still alive. Then he held out his hand and grabbed her finger. “He opened his eyes and moved his head from side to side.” Kate Ogg is also a mother to Jamie's twin sister, Emily. added by: onemalefla

Two Men Arrested at Amsterdam’s Schiphol International Airport | May Have Been on a Test Run with Electronic Devices Attached to Bottles | Video | Photos

Source: 2 arrested at airport may have been on test run http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/08/30/netherlands.airport.arrests/index.htm… Dutch arrests may have been dry run, U.S. source says By the CNN Wire Staff August 30, 2010 10:20 p.m. EDT The arrestees had flown from the U.S. to the Netherlands, but luggage from one was on a different plane, an official said. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * NEW: Men in custody may have been testing security * NEW: The items included bottles with phones or watches attached * Arrests follow Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight * Dutch investigators keep lid on details (CNN) — Two men held in the Netherlands may have been trying to test U.S. airport security by putting bottles with electronic devices attached in checked baggage, a U.S. law enforcement source said Monday. The men were taken into custody after landing in Amsterdam on a flight from Chicago, Illinois, Dutch prosecutors said. Both men were being held at Amsterdam's Schiphol International Airport at the request of Dutch national police, airport spokesman Robert Kapel said. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said they were arrested after “suspicious items” in their luggage raised concern. “The items were not deemed to be dangerous in and of themselves, and as we share information with our international partners, Dutch authorities were notified of the suspicious items,” the U.S. agency said. “This matter continues to be under investigation.” Those items were an empty shampoo bottle with watches attached to it and an empty bottle of a stomach medicine with mobile phones attached, according to the U.S. law enforcement source, who has been briefed on the investigation. That has raised concern that the men may have been testing a future terrorist plot, the source said. Attempts to sneak liquid explosives aboard jetliners were at the heart of a 2006 plot broken up by British authorities. That case led U.S. authorities to ban all but small quantities of liquids from aircraft cabins. U.S. law enforcement officials told CNN that the checked bags contained knives and box cutters as well. Passengers have been banned from carrying those items on aircraft since the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. The source identified the men aboard United Airlines Flight 908, from Chicago, Illinois, to Amsterdam, as Ahmed Mohamed Nasser al-Soofi and Hezem al-Murisi. Al-Soofi began his trip by boarding a flight in Birmingham, Alabama, and al-Murisi originally flew from Memphis, Tennessee, the law enforcement source said. Another U.S. law enforcement official said both men were in the United States legally, but their countries of origin were not immediately known. That official said neither of the passengers were carrying items that are barred from aircraft, and federal air marshals were aboard the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight. However, the law enforcement source said al-Soofi was ticketed for a flight that went to Washington's Dulles International Airport, with continuing stops in Dubai and Yemen, while both he and al-Murisi were aboard the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight. Al-Soofi's luggage went aboard the Chicago-to-Washington flight without him, the source said, in what amounted to another violation of U.S. safety protocols. A U.S. government official said items in at least one of the bags were being examined by law enforcement authorities at Dulles on Monday night. The official said al-Soofi and al-Murisi were seated near each other on the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight, but were not seated next to each other. Authorities are still looking into whether the men were traveling together or simply had similar itineraries, the official said. CNN's Nic Robertson, Jeanne Meserve, Mike Ahlers and Susan Candiotti contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Olympic Gymnast to Teach Zoo Orangutans How to Swing

Photo via thirtyfootscrew Few animals are as adept at swinging through the treetops as our primate cousins – but sometimes even they could use a refresher course. After years of being limited to mostly terrestrial locomotion, a group of orangutans at a zoo in the Netherlands now have a chance to get their swing on thanks to a newly renovated enclosu… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Olympic Gymnast to Teach Zoo Orangutans How to Swing

Laura Dekker photo

Laura Dekker has encountered some strong wind – which forced Sunderland, the 16-year-old Southern California sailor, to call off her around-the-world trip in June – but Klarenbeek says the weather is “no problem.” Abby Sunderland wasn#39;t able to do it but Laura Dekker is hoping she#39;ll be the youngest person to solo circumnavigate the globe. The 14-year-old from the Netherlands left the southwestern tip of Spain on Saturday and “everything is going well,” manager Peter Klarenbeek tells the

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Laura Dekker photo

Replacing Steel with Bamboo, Dutch Designer Gives the Windmill a Makeover

All Images Courtesy of Gijsbert Koren We’ve seen people do a lot with windmills- from making them at home to wearing them . Now Dutch designer Gijsbert Koren has taken a step to make this age-old green technology even greener: replacing the windmill’s steel wings with ones

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Replacing Steel with Bamboo, Dutch Designer Gives the Windmill a Makeover

Five Benefits of Cycle Commuting

Photo: Richard Masoner, Flickr Cycle commuting is apparently safer than not cycling to work. A Danish study assessing the health status of 30,000 people over a 14 year period found that, with all other factors being equal, simply cycling to work lowered the risk of death by 40%. Studies have indicated that cyclists have at least 15% lower absenteeism than non-cyclist workers, with the higher the frequency and longer the distance cycled, the

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Five Benefits of Cycle Commuting

Iker Casillas girlfriend Sara Carbonero pictures

Television journalist Sara Carbonero, girlfriend of Spain#39;s goalkeeper Iker Casillas, interviews Casillas after the 2010 World Cup quarter-final soccer match against Paraguay at Ellis Park stadium in Johannesburg July 3, 2010. Spain goalkeeper Iker Casillas, right, warms up as his girlfriend, Spanish television broadcast journalist Sara Carbonero, foreground left, works from the sidelines before the World Cup final soccer match between the Netherlands and Spain at Soccer City in Johannesbur

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Iker Casillas girlfriend Sara Carbonero pictures

What Is Al-Shabaab Doing In Uganda?

Moments before twin bomb blasts tore through crowds of football fans. Photo: AFP/Getty Images Darren Foster is a producer for Vanguard. Just a few months ago, I sat down for a final dinner in Uganda with Vanguard correspondent Mariana van Zeller and producer Alex Simmons. We were joined by a couple of other foreign reporters who we had become friendly with while covering the country’s controversial anti-gay legislation. One of them, a French photojournalist who is based in Uganda, suggested the place: Ethiopian Village, a leafy outdoor restaurant that’s as popular for its food as for its giant projection screen. Expats—journalists, missionaries, NGO workers—along with Ugandans regularly gather at Ethiopian Village to watch big sporting events. And that was the scene last night when a large crowd gathered to watch the World Cup final between Spain and the Netherlands. The match was entering the final minutes of regular time when a bomb ripped through the packed restaurant. A near simultaneous explosion tore through a rugby field where large screens showing the match had drawn hundreds of spectators. At last count, 74 people were killed, and many more injured. While reporting in Uganda this kind of terrorism was the furthest thing from our mind. Kampala is a safe and peaceful city. But as early as last week, the leader of the Somali Islamist group, Al-Shabaab, threatened to launch an attack on Uganda, whose troops are part of the African Union peacekeeping force in Mogadishu. Also, lost in the bigger headline of New York Times reporter Jeffrey Gettleman’s recent story about child soldiers working for the US-backed government in Somalia was the fact that many of the government forces are trained in Uganda. The Ugandan military dismissed the threat from Al-Shabaab. They may have thought that Uganda was too far outside the scope of international terror. And while many are reporting that this is Al-Shabaab’s first strike outside of Somalia, that’s not entirely accurate. Al Shabab is a franchise of a global network. A network that put itself on the map with another coordinated bombing in East Africa. In 1998, al Qaeda simultaneously bombed the US embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania killing hundreds of people. Lawrence Wright reported in his excellent book on al Qaeda, The Looming Tower, that it was Osama bin Laden’s hope that the bombings would draw the US into Afghanistan, where he had recently moved al Qaeda. All bin Laden got were a few cruise missiles. But three years later, after the Sept. 11 attacks, he finally got his wish. Since then, Afghanistan and Iraq have largely defined the war on terror. But as the bombings in Kampala show, with terrorism the battlefield isn’t always so clear or obvious. added by: dmfoster