News in Brief
[27 June 2009]
[27 June 2009]
Sri Lanka—Authorities
have taken Chandrasiri Bandara, a popular astrologer, into custody to
investigate one of his predictions. Defying the polls the astrologer says that
changes in the alignment of the cosmic spheres on 8 October are bad news for
the present government, signifying hard times ahead with rising living costs.
(Economists have made similar predictions.) The prime minister, he predicted,
would become president, and the opposition leader prime minister. The Criminal
Investigations Department is looking into the basis for the prediction
according to police spokesman Ranjith Gunasekera. It is not clear exactly what
they are looking into—do they think he had political motives, or are they
merely suspicious of his astrological interpretation? The arrest is condemned
by the opposition. (BBC)
Los Angeles—Noted
Beatles collector Michael Jackson died Thursday of possibly natural causes. The
owner of such coveted Beatles memorabilia as the rights to the bulk of the
Lennon-McCartney catalog, Jackson has been the subject of much speculation
recently concerning the disposition of these much-coveted sentimental
treasures. One theory has it that he's left at least some of his collection to
ex-Beatle Paul McCartney. With the imminent re-release of the Beatles catalog
in listenable condition for the first time since the advent of the CD, fans are
concerned about the fate of these soon-to-be-lost tracks. Jackson's condition
is unchanged. (NY Daily News)
Stockholm, Sweden—The
Swedish Court of Appeals blandly ruled that Judge Tomas Norstöm, one of three
judges who presided over the recent Pirate Bay trial, had no conflict of
interest, despite his membership in two advocacy groups on the other side of
the issue, the Swedish Association for the Protection of Industrial Property
and the Swedish Copyright Association. "For a judge to back the principles
on which this legislation rests cannot be considered bias," appeals court
judge Anders Eka said, apparently with a straight face. Four men involved in
the operation of The Pirate Bay, which among other things makes it possible for
smaller artists to share their work with others via peer-to-peer networking,
were tried and convicted for copyright violations earlier this year, despite
the utter worthlessness of the legal claims against them. Backlash against the
verdict is considered responsible for electing a member of the Pirate Party to
the European Parliament. (ZDNet, BBC)
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