Melting glaciers force Italy, Swiss to redraw border

Glaciers in the Alps near the Matterhorn are receding, forcing the border to be redrawn.
Melting glaciers in the Alps may prompt Italy and Switzerland to redraw their borders near the Matterhorn, according to parliamentary draft legislation being readied in Rome.

Franco Narducci of Italy’s opposition Democratic Party is preparing a bill to redefine the frontier with neighboring Switzerland, his office said Wednesday. Narducci is a member of the foreign affairs panel in Italy’s lower Chamber of Deputies. Foreign Minister Franco Frattini has authorized the bill. Switzerland also has cooperated with Italy on the matter. The Italian Military Geographic Institute says climate change is responsible for the Alpine glaciers melting. “This draft law is born out the necessity to revise and verify the frontiers given the changes in climate and atmosphere,” Narducci said. “The 1941 convention between Italy and Switzerland established as criteria [for border revisions] the ridge [crest] of the glaciers. Following the withdrawal of the glaciers in the Alps, a new criterion has been proposed so that the new border coincides with the rock.” The border change only affects uninhabited mountaintop terrain. The deputy excludes the possibility of any family having to change citizenship. The border between Italy and Switzerland was fixed 1861, when Italy became a nation, but it has been occasionally modified, the Military Geographic Institute said. The border was last modified in the 1970s when the Switzerland-Italy highway was built at the Brogeda crossing. The bill is expected to become law by the end of April, Narducci said. Unlike Switzerland, Italy can change its border only with new laws approved by parliament. Narducci said the same negotiation will be proposed to France and Austria “Once upon a time, the border line demarcation between two nations was synonymous to war and bloodshed,” he said. “Instead , today we proceed with photograms.”

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Obama’s Other War: Fighting Mexico’s Drug Lords

Obamas Other War: Fighting Mexicos Drug Lords

The convenient and long-standing tradition south of the border is for Mexico to blame its problems on the U.S. It can often be justified when the matter is the drug-trafficking violence now terrorizing much of Mexico, which is powered in large part by the insatiable gringo demand for drugs, the relentless flow of high-powered weapons from the U.S. and the just-as-chronic laundering of drug cash north of the border. As Washington hyperventilates over the threat of Mexico’s narco-carnage spilling into the U.S., it can’t ignore America’s role in its neighbor’s trafficking tragedy.

At the same time, Mexican officialdom has always used American myopia as an excuse to blow off its own epic failings. The most glaring, of course, is Mexico’s police corruption and lack of rule of law, which has given the drug cartels free rein and too often turned Mexican law enforcement into narco-collaborators. Perhaps the only way to shame Mexican politicians into owning up to that national sin — and finally doing something about it — is for the U.S. to confront its own shortcomings.

Washington will have at least started that process when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in Mexico today for a two-day visit. In response to growing fears both in Washington and along the border that Mexican drug violence is spilling over to U.S. soil — Attorney General Eric Holder recently called the cartels a “national security threat” — the Obama Administration on Tuesday unveiled a border-security plan that will put more than 500 federal agents in border states. More significantly, the plan calls for stronger measures to reduce U.S. narco-demand, cut off weapons-smuggling into Mexico and lasso more of the billions of dollars heading to the drug cartels. “This is a supply issue and it’s a demand issue,” said Janet Napolitano, Homeland Security Secretary and former Arizona governor. Clinton’s seemingly surprised Mexican counterpart, Foreign Relations Secretary Patricia Espinosa, conceded the plan was “consistent with our bilateral relation in fighting organized crime.”

That should grease the skids for President Obama’s visit to Mexico on April 16, after which he will attend the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad. Only time will tell if the U.S. gesture can prod Mexico to take its police-reform obligations more seriously.

But along the border at least, the plan is being largely applauded by law-enforcement officials who feel their region was neglected during both the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush presidencies. “This was a long time coming,” says Richard Wiles, the Democratic sheriff of El Paso County, Texas, which sits across the Rio Grande from Juárez, Mexico — a city that has seen almost 2,000 drug-related murders since the start of 2008, with many of the victims being police officers, not to mention the epidemic of kidnappings and extortion. Says Wiles: “It’s a shame that it took so many killings in our sister city to give these issues the national attention they’re getting now.”

Border sheriffs like Wiles are particularly gratified to see Washington sending 100 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents to help intercept the deluge of assault rifles, automatic pistols and grenades moving south. Until now, the El Paso sector had only seven ATF agents. The Obama plan will also place more federal antidrug and immigration and customs agents along the 2,000-mile-long frontier. Those cops, moreover, will be equipped with new X-ray technologies to detect contraband cash as well as guns.

The plan’s goal is to dampen U.S. demand for illicit drugs by beefing up programs like drug courts that waive sentences in exchange for mandatory rehab. In addition, it doubles the number of joint local, state and federal border-enforcement security teams and ratchets up intelligence resources to track Mexico’s increasingly chaotic mix of drug organizations, at least three of which are fighting for control of Juárez. “Adding resources to fight the weapons flow, the bulk currency shipments, and strengthen intelligence are all welcome moves,” says John Bailey, an expert on Mexican drug-trafficking at Georgetown University. “The question is whether the Americans are now putting some kind of long-term policy in place,” which was often missing from previous Administrations.

Although the cartel violence has largely left U.S. border towns like El Paso untouched — mainly, say analysts, because the Mexican narcos don’t want to provoke Washington into even more severe crackdowns on their lucrative trafficking corridors there — local police say it has begun to leapfrog the border into Sunbelt cities like Phoenix and Tucson in Arizona and even Atlanta. That has set off political alarm bells in Washington, where earlier this year the Pentagon issued a hyperbolic report that called Mexico a “failed state” along with the likes of Pakistan. Nevertheless, says Bailey, “the general feeling is that the Vandals are at the gate, and we’ve got to repress them. It’s reached a level of moral panic, and it’s an issue where the Republicans feel they can hold the Democrats’ feet to the fire.”

Indeed, many Republicans, like Texas Governor Rick Perry, think the Obama plan should go further. Perry wants to add 1,000 National Guard soldiers to patrol his state’s border, and he said on Tuesday that even more border-patrol agents should be sent as well. The White House, however, seems cool to the idea of militarizing the border, especially since potential gringo military intervention is one of the key concerns Mexicans have about the Merida Initiative, a bilateral antidrug plan that began last year and is supposed to funnel almost $1.5 billion in U.S. aid to Mexico over three years.

The Merida project was designed to support Mexican President Felipe Calderón’s two-year-old offensive against the cartels, which has had to rely on the Mexican military, given the corruption and incompetence of most Mexican police forces. Seven thousand troops now patrol Juárez. The Merida Initiative does steer resources to Mexico’s fledgling police- and judicial-reform efforts, including sorely needed police retraining, but critics say it should do more in that area, since professionalized cops are the long-term solution to the crisis. Then again, that responsibility is Mexico City’s, not Washington’s. Clinton and Obama can now go south of the border and say the gringos have at least begun to do their part.

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N. Korea positions ‘missile’ on launch pad


North Korea has positioned what is believed to be a long-range ballistic missile on its launch pad, a U.S. counter-proliferation official said on Wednesday.

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It’s ‘True’: Spandau Ballet to reform

Spandau ballet, pictured aboard HMS Belfast, on Wednesday.
"Why do I find it hard to write the next line?" If you recognize the lyric then brace yourself for some good news.

Twenty years since their acrimonious split, Spandau Ballet — the pin-up boys who helped shaped the sound of 1980s glam pop — have announced the first dates of what band members say will be a full world tour. The fronted by Tony Hadley-fronted band, who enjoyed worldwide success with hits such as “True” and “Gold,” will launch their comeback in Dublin, Ireland, on October 13 before playing seven dates across the UK. Wednesday’s announcement took place onboard HMS Belfast, a retired Royal Navy moored in the Thames that was the scene of a key early gig by the band in 1980 that launched them on the road to global stardom. “It is impossible to stress too highly how achingly fashionable Spandau Ballet were in the winter of 1979 and the summer of 1980,” GQ magazine editor Dylan Jones writes in a biography of the band. Formed at a London school in 1979, Spandau Ballet went on to sell 25 million records worldwide, emerging out of the post-punk “New Romantic” music scene. Along with fellow British band Duran Duran, their sound, style and attitude came to define an era dominated by ostentatious glamour, gold lame suits and big hair. “Not only did their albums sell by the millions, but their look and style impacted on the fashion world and beyond,” said a press release, summing up the band’s influence on the decade. “They created their own style, combining creativity with entrepreneurship and the ‘can do’ spirit of early 80s youth at a time of crisis and upheaval eerily reminiscent of 2009. Spandau Ballet are both commercially and culturally enormous.” Following the band’s split in 1989, several members including Hadley unsuccessfully sued main songwriter Gary Kemp for a larger share of songwriting royalties. Since then, Hadley has appeared in the London production of the hit musical “Chicago” and also won an 80s revivalist reality TV show “Reborn in the USA.” Several other members of the band have carved out moderately successful acting careers.

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Report: Israel’s phosphorus shell use in Gaza ‘evidence of war crimes’

Human Rights Watch says Israel used white phosphorus shells over populated areas in Gaza.
The Israeli military’s firing of white phosphorus shells over densely populated areas during the Gaza offensive "was indiscriminate and is evidence of war crimes," Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report on Wednesday.

“In Gaza, the Israeli military didn’t just use white phosphorus in open areas as a screen for its troops,” said Fred Abrahams, a HRW senior emergencies researcher. “It fired white phosphorus repeatedly over densely populated areas, even when its troops weren’t in the area and safer smoke shells were available. As a result, civilians needlessly suffered and died.” Entitled “Rain of Fire: Israel’s Unlawful Use of White Phosphorus in Gaza,” the 71-page report provides “witness accounts” and “presents ballistics evidence, photographs, and satellite imagery, as well as documents from the Israeli military and government.” HRW is an independent international organization dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. The group urged that Israel and the United States investigate the attacks. Israel should prosecute those who carried them out and the U.S. government, which supplied Israel, should look into the issue. HRW said white phosphorous was a chemical substance dispersed in artillery shells, bombs and rockets, used primarily to obscure military operations.

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“(While) it is not considered a chemical weapon and is not banned per se, it ignites and burns on contact with oxygen and creates a smokescreen at night or during the day to mask the visual movement of troops. “It also interferes with infra-red optics and weapon-tracking systems, thus protecting military forces from guided weapons such as anti-tank missiles. When WP comes into contact with people or objects, though, it creates an intense and persistent burn. It can also be used as a weapon against military targets,” the group said. Israel says it is looking into the claims, but it has publicly maintained that the use of the substance was in keeping with international law. The Israel Defense Forces told HRW in February that an internal inquiry into the use of the substance was being done by Israel’s Southern Command. “Past IDF investigations into allegations of wrongdoing suggest that this inquiry will be neither thorough nor impartial,” Abrahams said. “That’s why an international investigation is required into serious laws of war violations by all parties.” HRW said “the report documents a pattern or policy of white phosphorus use” that had to have the approval of senior military officers. “For the needless civilian deaths caused by white phosphorus, senior commanders should be held to account,” Abrahams said. The report said white phosphorus munitions aren’t illegal when deployed properly in open areas, but it determined that the IDF repeatedly used them “unlawfully over populated neighborhoods, killing and wounding civilians and damaging civilian structures, including a school, a market, a humanitarian aid warehouse and a hospital. ” “First, the repeated use of air-burst white phosphorus in populated areas until the last days of the operation reveals a pattern or policy of conduct rather than incidental or accidental usage. Second, the IDF was well aware of the effects of white phosphorus and the dangers it poses to civilians. Third, the IDF failed to use safer available alternatives for smokescreens,” the report said. A medical report prepared during the recent hostilities by the Israeli Health Ministry said that white phosphorus “can cause serious injury and death when it comes into contact with the skin, is inhaled or is swallowed.” The report said that the IDF could have used a non-lethal smoke shells produced by an Israeli company if it wanted to provide a “smokescreen” for its troops. Israel launched the offensive in late December to take on militants from Hamas, who had been shelling southern Israeli communities for months from Gaza. The offensive, called Operation Cast Lead, was launched December 27 and ended January 17 with a cease-fire. Of the 1,453 people estimated killed in the conflict, 1,440 were Palestinian, including 431 children and 114 women, a U.N. report recently said. The 13 Israelis killed included three civilians and six soldiers killed by Hamas, and four soldiers killed by friendly fire, it said. HRW also said it found no evidence that the Hamas militants Israel was targeting in Gaza were using human shields “in the vicinity at the time of the attacks.” Israel has said Hamas militants used civilians as human shields and fought from civilian locations, HRW points out. “In some areas Palestinian fighters appear to have been present, but this does not justify the indiscriminate use of white phosphorus in a populated area.”

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Banker’s home attacked as pension fury grows

A recovery vehicle removes a Mercedes from the Edinburgh home of Fred Goodwin.
A warning of more attacks on UK bankers was made on Wednesday after the home of former Royal Bank of Scotland boss Fred Goodwin was vandalized.

Windows were smashed in Goodwin’s house in the Scottish capital Edinburgh and those of a Mercedes-Benz limousine parked outside. It is not known if anyone was at home at the time. Goodwin — dubbed “Fred the Shred” by the media for his ruthless cost-cutting — and his family have not been living in the house since it was revealed that the 50-year-old Goodwin was receiving an annual pension of $1 million (£700,000) for life. A statement issued to media organizations including the Press Association after the attack said: “We are angry that rich people, like him, are paying themselves a huge amount of money and living in luxury, while ordinary people are made unemployed, destitute and homeless. “Bank bosses should be jailed. This is just the beginning.” No group was named in the message and it did not explicitly claim responsibility for the attack. Goodwin took early retirement after RBS nearly collapsed amid the economic crisis and was later part-nationalized. On the same day as the size of his pension was revealed RBS announced a UK record loss of $34.6 billion (£24.1 billion) for 2008. Politicians and commentators have expressed fury about the deal and excessive bonuses being given by bailed-out banks. Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, head of the Treasury, urged Goodwin to give up his pension. He refused, saying he had already given up a number of contractual rights which had cost him a lot of money. Watch consternation at Goodwin’s £16 million pension fund »

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The statement warning of more attacks on bankers came days after AIG sent a memo to employees giving them security advice as fury grows in the U.S. over millions paid out in bonuses by the bailed-out U.S. insurance giant. Employees were warned not to wear the company logo, to travel in pairs and park in well-lit places, and to phone security if they notice anyone “spending an inordinate amount of time near an AIG facility.” AIG employees have received death threats since the company handed out $165 million (£115 million) in bonuses and security at AIG offices has been increased. And last month British police warned that officers were preparing for a “summer of rage” as protests mount across Europe against the economic crisis.

David Hartshorn, who heads the Metropolitan Police’s public order branch, said growing unemployment, failing companies and the recession could spark a “mass protest.” Hartshorn said the G-20 economic summit starting next week could lead to unrest as leaders of the world’s richest nations head to London.

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Behind the scenes: Ed Henry’s take on exchange with Obama

CNN's Ed Henry says he had several provocative questions prepared in advance of the news conference.
The most amazing part of the exchange to me is that I didn’t go into the East Room intending to ask President Obama about AIG.

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The most amazing part of the exchange to me is that I didn’t go into the East Room intending to ask President Obama about AIG. After frantic preparation for the prime-time newser with several colleagues, especially lead CNN White House producer Tim McCaughan, I had several provocative questions in my pocket. But none of them had much to do with the financial crisis because I assumed several of my colleagues would exhaust the topic of AIG before my turn came up. At the first presser in February, I was about the 10th reporter the president called on. The economy had been chewed over so I went with a “sidebar” question about whether Obama, given his push for transparency, would overturn the policy at Dover Air Force Base preventing media coverage of coffins returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. It was a surprise line of inquiry. The president made news by saying the policy was under review — and a few weeks later he overturned it. I was heading into this event with the same strategy: make news on something unexpected (I won’t tell you which topics I was working on cause it would ruin the surprise for a future presser or interview with the president). But on Tuesday night, as I sat in the front row nervously reviewing my hypothetical questions written out in longhand (decidedly old school), I kept thinking back to a conversation I had with Wolf Blitzer Saturday night at the Gridiron dinner.

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He said that when he was CNN’s Senior White House correspondent, he liked following up on a question the president had ducked earlier in the newser. Watch: Was Obama dodging the question » When you press a second time, you may be surprised with the second answer. And then rather than call on me 10th, the president called on me at about sixth. Still early, so nobody had asked AIG yet. Plus my “sidebar” question now seemed off-point so early in a newser focused on the economic pain in the nation. The pressure was on now because the president had called on me. Someone handed me a microphone, millions were watching, and it’s scary to think about changing topic in a split second because you might get flustered and screw up. But it’s fun to gamble and like any good quarterback (though I was never athletic enough to actually play the position), I decided to call an audible. So I went hard on the AIG question, and took Wolf’s advice and followed on a couple of colleagues who got pushback from the president when they asked about how his budget numbers do not seem to add up. The president, like any good politician, decided to pick and choose what to answer. So he swatted away the budget question and ignored the AIG stuff. So I waited patiently and then decided to pounce with a sharp follow-up. From just a few feet away, I could see in his body language that the normally calm and cool president was perturbed. But it’s in moments like that we sometimes find out what’s really on a president’s mind. In this case, he’s not happy about the scrutiny on AIG. So he did slap me down a bit. Anderson Cooper said later half-jokingly that yours truly was “nursing his wounds.” Even more comical to the reaction to me was the flood of e-mail I got from Democratic and Republican sources. Invariably, my Democratic friends tweaked along the lines of “how’d you like the smackdown” because they were pleased the president pushed back. But my Republican friends hailed me by saying essentially, “Thanks for doing your job — he never answered the question.”

So the exchange was a great political Rorschach: Each party saw their own talking points in the reflection of the back-and-forth. What do I think I’ve got no hard feelings toward the president and I assume he feels the same, but I can’t worry about that. I was doing my job — and he was doing his.

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Suspected drug lord arrested in Mexico

Suspected drug kingpin Hector Huerta Rios faces members of the press Wednesday in Mexico City.
The Mexican army has arrested a top drug cartel chief and four of his bodyguards, the government announced Wednesday.

Hector Huerta Rios, also known as “La Burra” or “El Junior,” was arrested Tuesday in the city of San Pedro Garza Garcia in Nuevo Leon state, along Mexico’s border with the United States. The state-run Notimex news agency reported the announcement, citing a news conference held by the secretary of national defense and the attorney general’s office. Huerta was flown to Mexico City on Tuesday night to face federal charges. Federal officials showed the four suspects to the media in a news conference Wednesday. Video footage on CNN affiliate Televisa shows Huerta flanked on each side by two other suspects. He is looking straight ahead, a solemn countenance on his mustachioed face. Hooded soldiers are stationed to the sides and behind the suspects. Huerta is a suspect in the September 2006 shooting death of Marcelo Garza y Garza, the head of the State Agency of Investigations, news reports said. News of Huerta’s capture made the front pages of El Porvenir, La Prensa and El Milenio newspapers. Huerta’s arrest came one day after Mexican authorities announced rewards of up to $2 million for information leading to the capture of top cartel operatives.

Huerta, considered by authorities as the principal operator for the Sinaloa cartel in northern Mexico, was on the government’s list. The reward for his capture was 15 million pesos ($1 million). His arrest resulted from intelligence operations though, and not from a tip, so officials will not pay a reward, El Porvenir reported, citing a military official. During the arrest, officials confiscated 12 cars and four weapons, one of them gold-plated, El Milenio reported. Huerta’s capture was the third major arrest announced in the past week. Mexican authorities announced the arrest last week of Sigifredo Najera Talamantes, a drug trafficking suspect accused of attacking a U.S. consulate and killing Mexican soldiers. Talamantes, also known as “El Canicon,” also is suspected of attacks on a television station in Monterrey in Nuevo Leon, Notimex said. The Mexican military also arrested the son of a top drug cartel lieutenant last week. Authorities on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border blame drug cartels for a surge in violence in the region. About 6,500 people died last year in the drug war in Mexico, Mexican President Felipe Calderon said this month.

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On Tuesday, the Mexican attorney general’s office said 10,475 people were killed since Calderon took office in December 2006. Nearly 10 percent of those were police. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will visit Mexico on Wednesday for two days of meetings with top officials, with the drug war heading the list of topics to be discussed. Clinton will make clear the United States is committed to working with Mexico and helping it come out of the drug war stronger, aides said. The Obama administration announced Tuesday it is sending hundreds of extra federal agents and crime-fighting equipment to the border with Mexico. The plan, developed by the departments of Justice and Homeland Security, calls for doubling the number of border security task force teams as well as moving other federal agents, equipment and resources to the border.

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River threatens historic flooding in North Dakota

A Fargo resident surveys sandbags Tuesday outside his home, located about 15 feet from the Red River.
More than 1,000 volunteers rushed to fill sandbags early Wednesday as many in North Dakota tried to protect themselves from historic floods that are expected to swamp the area.

At 3:30 a.m., hundreds of volunteers were packed into individual sandbagging centers, an organizer said. “There have been so many volunteers that we had to turn people away,” said Ryan McEwan, a supervisor at one volunteer coordinating center. “It is very busy. They are filling sandbags as fast as they can.” Fargo city officials estimated that as many as 10,000 volunteers have come forward since Sunday to aid in a sandbagging effort that has taken over North Dakota State University’s central arena, the Fargodome, and to help build levees along the now closely watched Red River. See a map of the affected area » That river posed the greatest risk of about eight rivers in the state that were at flood levels, emergency officials said. The fear is that the Red River could overtake all previous records. As of Wednesday morning, the Red River ran at about 33 feet — 15 feet above flood stage. A record level of 41.1 feet was set in April 1997. That level could be surpassed Friday, Cecily Fong of the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services said Tuesday.

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Residents race to fill sandbags

More than 1,000 people were evacuated from an area near Bismarck on Tuesday night as the Missouri River flooded, Rick Robinson of the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services said Wednesday. Recent rain and blizzard conditions have swollen the rivers. Gov. John Hoeven received word late Tuesday that North Dakota had received a presidential disaster declaration. “We’ve had a severe winter and are experiencing significant flooding across the state, so we are grateful to receive this federal assistance as we continue the flood fight and recovery effort,” Hoeven said. Under the declaration, the federal government will cover 75 percent of the costs. “We’re concerned about the rise of the river and how fast it’s coming up, so our concern is that we’re going to hit 41 feet,” Fargo Deputy Mayor Tim Mahoney said Tuesday, adding that the way the levees are set up, they would protect against overflow up to 38 feet. Officials are guessing the Red River, which runs through the eastern parts of North and South Dakota, and western Minnesota, could crest in Fargo — North Dakota’s largest city, with about 99,200 residents — anytime Friday or Saturday and that the water may linger at its crest height. The city has canceled all trials scheduled in Fargo Municipal Court through April 2 because of the expected flooding to allow police officers to be available for possible emergencies, according to the city’s Web site. As of late Tuesday, Fargo residents and out-of-town volunteers had filled more than 1 million sandbags out of the needed 2 million. Mahoney said he hoped that, with the 24-hour sandbagging effort at the Fargodome, that goal will be met by Thursday. Another factor threatening efforts is the possibility of freezing temperatures, because sandbags freeze together and then aren’t individually stackable.

Despite the stress, volunteers have been working around the clock. “You got old people, young people — all helping out,” Mahoney said. “It’s heartwarming to see how many people are here.”

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Where ‘Undo Send’ and other Gmail ideas are born

At Google's Gmail Labs work area, employees' e-mail ideas are made into reality.
Most of us have done it.

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