Short Takes: News From All Over
January 26, 2006
January 2006
Staff Utne.com
Whales Found to Speak in Dialects
By Bjorn Carey, LiveScience
It turns out humans aren't the only mammals who speak in tongues.
According to researchers at Oregon State University, whales have
regional dialects too. 'Blue whales off the Pacific Northwest sound
different than blue whales in the western Pacific Ocean, and these
sound different than those living off Antarctica,' Bjorn Carey
writes. 'And they all sound different than the blue whales living
near Chile.' But can they understand each other? 'We don't know if
they are part of a common 'language' that different populations of
whales use to communicate with each other,' says researcher David
Mellinger, 'or if they come from a confused juvenile who hasn't
completely learned the complexities of communicating.' -- Leif
Utne
http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/060103_whale_noises.html
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Bechtel, Bolivia Resolve Dispute: Company Drops Demand
Over Water Contract Canceling
By Paul Harris, San Francisco Chronicle
Just days before the presidential inauguration of Evo Morales,
populism in Bolivia scored another success. When massive protests
halted an effort to privatize the country's water industry, Bechtel
Corporation sued the Bolivian government for $25 million. Earlier
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changed course, withdrawing the claim it filed with the World Bank.
-- Bennett Gordon
http://tinyurl.com/8uew7
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Jan06/Schultz24.htm
Fair-Trade-Music-Network
By Staff, Fair-Trade-Music-Network
The times they are a-changin'. The idea of social responsibility is
taking hold in businesses everywhere, and the
Fair-Trade-Music-Network is bringing it to the music industry. The
group's Fair Trade Music label will signal to consumers that the
companies behind the music are committed to putting the power of
music back into artists' hands, while making it affordable for
consumers, too. The website needs some help with the English
translation (it's originally in German), but spreading the idea of
fair trade is music to my ears. (Thanks,
Interrupcion.)
-- Bennett Gordon
http://www.fair-trade-music.de/
Sierra Club Chronicles: 9-11 Forgotten
Heroes
By Staff, The Sierra Club
After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, many
firefighters, police officers, and construction workers risked
their lives in the call of duty. What they didn't realize was just
how much risk they were actually taking. While the EPA deemed the
air and water at Ground Zero safe, many of these workers have
fallen victim to a variety of respiratory illnesses. Four years
later, much of the general public has all but forgotten about their
plight. The Sierra Club teamed up with filmmaker Robert Greenwald
(of Outfoxed, and Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low
Price fame) and a variety of organizations, including the ACLU
and the Ford Foundation, to record the everyday struggles of the
'forgotten heroes.' The film follows four of these men as they
petition Congress for $125 million in aid promised to New York and
then rescinded (the money was restored after filming). The
documentary is the first of seven in the Sierra Club Chronicles
series giving voice to individuals fighting for community and
environmental justice. -- Bennett Gordon
http://www.sierraclubtv.org/