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[PHOTOS] Volcanic eruption in Iceland

A member of the German Air Traffic Control center crisis management group points at a map showing the current air traffic in the sky over Germany near Frankfurt on Tuesday, April 20. The Eurocontrol air traffic agency in Brussels said it expects 55 to 60 percent of flights over Europe to go ahead Tuesday, a marked improvement over the last few days. By midmorning, 10,000 of Europe's 27,500 daily flights were scheduled to go. A passenger waits at Bilbao airport in northern Spain on April 18, after all flights were canceled due to the ash.

[BUSINESS NEWS] on Wall Street

Crocodile tears on Wall Street In the spirit of the original tea party, activists should be demanding accountability from Wall Street BY  BILL MOYERS ,  MICHAEL WINSHIP With all due respect, we can only wish those Tea Party activists who gathered in Washington and other cities this week weren’t so single-minded about just who’s responsible for all their troubles, real and imagined. They’re up in arms, so to speak, against Big Government, especially the Obama administration. If they thought this through, they’d be joining forces with other grassroots Americans who in the coming weeks will be demonstrating in Washington and other cities against High Finance, taking on Wall Street and the country’s biggest banks. The original Tea Party, remember, wasn’t directed just against the British redcoats. Colonial patriots also took aim at the East India Company. That was the joint-stock enterprise originally chartered by the first Queen Elizabeth. Over the years, the government granted...

[GOOD NEWS] 9 Ways to Do Good With 5 Minutes or $25

9 Ways to Do Good With 5 Minutes or $25 http://mashable.com/2010/04/17/social-good-micro-lending/

[MEDIA] 20 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed

20 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed http://mashable.com/2010/04/17/social-media-resources-recap-5/

[INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS] Stuck in 1915

Stuck in 1915 How Turkey and Armenia blew their big chance at peace. BY THOMAS DE WAAL   |   APRIL 15, 2010 Not many borders are closed in our globalized world, but the frontier between Armenia and Turkey is still a dead zone where the railroad stops. The closed border is a strange anomaly in the new Europe that stems from two old tragedies: the still unresolved conflict of the early 1990s between Armenia and Turkey's ally Azerbaijan, and the catastrophe of 1915 when the entire Armenian population of eastern Anatolia was deported or killed in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire. People on both sides of this closed border want it open. Last month I flew between the Armenian capital of Yerevan and Istanbul -- the two countries do at least have an air connection. The standard look of the Armenian businessmen packing the plane was slightly menacing at first. They all had dark leather jackets and hair cut short to the scalp, concealing a cheerful friendliness toward Turks. The...

[NEWS] Volcanic eruption in Iceland

A farmer took this picture of the Eyjafjöll volcano shortly after its most recent eruption.  http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2010/04/16/2273156.aspx

[NEWS] Fire in the Sky

http://photo.newsweek.com/2010/4/largest-volcano-eruptions.html Volcanic eruption grounds thousands of fliers across Europe By Anthony Faiola and Karla Adam Washington Post Foreign Service Saturday, April 17, 2010; A01  LONDON -- With a monstrous cloud of volcanic ash closing down airports from  Britain  to Finland to Austria on Friday, much of Europe was confronting a bizarre question: What do you do in a world without air travel? Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, returning from Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, was managing matters from his iPad in Madrid. European royals, who had planned to attend the queen of Denmark's 70th birthday party in Copenhagen, sent their apologies. And tens of thousands of ordinary would-be passengers turned to videoconferencing or made a mad dash for trains and ferries. Plumes of  ash from an Icelandic volcano  have spread across 12 nations. As of Friday, 17,000 flights -- more than double the number Thur...