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Sport
Monday, August 3, 2009
Sauber working on team rescue deal
Former team principal Peter Sauber is believed to be working alongside BMW motorsport director Mario Theissen to evaluate a rescue package for the BMW Sauber Formula 1 team, following the German manufacturer’s decision to withdraw from the sport at the end of the season.
Bp/doc
Peter Sauber
‘Lucky’ Massa eager to return to racing Felipe Massa says he understands how severe his Hungaroring accident was, but remains determined to race again at the earliest opportunity. The Ferrari driver is set to be released from hospital in Budapest tomorrow as he continues to recover from the head injuries he sustained when he was struck by a spring that had detached from Rubens Barrichello’s car in qualifying last Saturday. “I know I’m lucky to be alive - I don’t remember anything about the accident but I will race again,” Massa told the News of the World. He added that he had been extremely confused when he was woken from the induced coma he had been
placed in following his surgery, but that when he heard how the Hungarian Grand Prix had unfolded he was confident he could have won. “When I woke up I didn’t know why I was in hospital, so I was asking ‘why am I here?’” Massa said. “I was pulling all the tubes and Eduardo, my brother, tried to stop me - so we had a fight. The accident was so unlucky but I know I’m lucky to be alive. I don’t remember anything of what happened. “It was my race, so when I awoke from the coma I couldn’t believe it when they told me Lewis [Hamilton] had won and Kimi [Raikkonen] was second.” Massa was visited in hospital yesterday by his friend and former
team-mate Michael Schumacher, who is making a surprise Formula 1 comeback to deputise for him at Ferrari while he recovers. Schumacher said he had been pleasantly surprised by how quickly Massa’s condition had improved. “It was good to finally see Felipe, I feel better now,” said Schumacher. “Although I’ve been constantly in contact with him through Nicolas and Jean [Todt] and I always knew everything, it’s always better to see things with your own eyes.” “I’m surprised by how good his condition is, considering that the accident happened last week. We’ve been together and spoke a bit about everything. I feel really relieved now.”
(AP Photo/MTI, Zsolt Szigetvary)
Luiz Antonio Massa, left, and Eduardo “Dudu” Massa, father and brother of the Ferrari team’s Brazilian Formula One driver Felipe Massa, flash a thumb-up gesture outsidethe Honved Hospital in Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday, Aug. 1, 2009. Massa is recovering from a life-saving surgery in the hospital after he crashed and suffered serious injuries during the time trial of the Formula One Hungarian Grand Prix on the Hungaroring circuit, outside Budapest last Saturday, July 25, 2009.
A spokesman for Sauber told AUTOSPORT that the 65-year-old Swiss was looking at all possibilities to ‘achieve a positive outcome’ for the team. Sauber, who sold the team in 2005 to BMW following more than 25 years as a racing car constructor in F1 and sports prototypes, told a hastily convened press briefing in Switzerland that he had vowed to do all he could to save the jobs of his former employees. “I will do everything humanly possible,” Sauber was quoted on Bild’s website as saying. “I can’t do wonders and I certainly do not want to be team boss on the pitwall again. “The problem is that time is short and we need to find a solution quickly.” Citing a similar situation to the one faced by Honda, where Ross Brawn and Nick Fry brought together a financial deal to safe-keep what became the Brawn GP team, Sauber said the final decision remained with
BMW’s board of directors. “I’ve told all my people that I will use all my contacts, but I can’t guarantee anything. I am an advisor to BMW but ultimately only they can decide how to drive it forward.” Sauber told the press conference that offers of investment had already been received for a potential rescue package and that he had forwarded these to BMW. “The best solution would be a Ross Brawn-type solution at Honda,” he said. “You need at least ten years to amass a team which can produce a F1 car to the level required and if we let this team fall apart the chances are that Switzerland will never again have such an opportunity.” Sauber, who retains a 20 per cent shareholding in the team, remained confident a solution could be found to keep the Hinwil-based squad in F1, adding: “I must add that in my 17 years in F1 I have solved bigger problems.”
1 dead, 40 injured in Canada stage collapse
16 Pages Number 427 1st Year
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Monday, August 3, 2009
Balinese Hindus celebrated Sarawasti day PAGE 8
US, Asia lead tributes to former Philippines leader Aquino Agence France Presse
HONG KONG - The United States, Japan and Southeast Asia led international tributes to former Philippines president Corazon Aquino, who died Saturday after a battle with cancer.
Katie Holmes Hasn’t Been Offered ‘Sex And The City’ Role PAGE 12
People across the Catholic nation woke to the news early Saturday, as Aquino’s family announced the 76-year-old’s death and President Gloria Arroyo declared a 10-day period of mourning. President Barack Obama described her as a historic figure who helped restore democracy to her country. Obama “was deeply saddened” by news of Aquino’s death, read a statement late Friday from White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. Aquino “played a crucial role in Philippines history”, moving the country to democratic rule through her non-violent “People Power” movement over 20 years ago. “Her courage, determination, and moral leadership are an inspiration to us all and exemplify the best in the Filipino nation. On behalf of the American people, the President extends his deepest condolences to the Aquino family and the nation of the Philippines,” the statement read. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed Aquino as an inspiration. “Cory Aquino was beloved by her nation and admired by the world for her extraordinary courage after the assassination of her husband, and later, during her service as president,” Clinton said in a statement. “She helped bring democracy back to the Philippines after many years of authoritarian rule with a faith in her country and its people that never wavered.” Aquino was propelled into the political spotlight in 1986, leading millions of Filipinos in protests against Ferdinand Marcos, who jailed thousands of dissidents during his brutal 20-year regime. Arroyo, in the United States on an official visit, said: “Aquino led a revolution that restored democracy and the rule of law to our nation at a time of great peril.” Continued on page 6
AP Photo/Aaron Favila, Pool
Filipino Bishop Angel Lagdameo, left, offers prayers to the late Philippine President Corazon Aquino at the La Salle school gym in suburban Mandaluyong, east of Manila, Philippines on Sunday Aug. 2, 2009. Aquino, who swept away a dictator and then sustained democracy by fighting off seven coup attempts in six years, has died, her family said. She was 76.
Karachi building collapse toll rises to 24: police
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Pakistani rescue workers search for bodies trapped in the rubble of a five-storey building which collapsed in Karachi, Pakistan on, Saturday, Aug. 1, 2009. A government official says a five-storey building collapsd in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi and has killed at least 16 people, almost all of them women and children.
KARACHI - The death toll from a building collapse in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi rose to 24 as rescue workers pulled out more bodies from the rubble, officials said Sunday. The five-storey building in the port city’s densely populated Khajoor Bazaar area collapsed late Friday, trapping dozens of people in the debris. Police on Saturday said 13 bodies had been recovered. “Rescue workers have recovered six more bodies, another five dead bodies are still trapped in the
rubble,” police official Irfan Meao told AFP by telephone. Eight others were injured in the incident. He said 11 of the dead were women while a child also died in the incident. “We are investigating the cause; the building may have been damaged because of last month’s heavy monsoon rain,” local government official Dilawar Khan told AFP. Last month Karachi’s first torrential rains of the monsoon season killed at least 26 people, mostly women and children, and injured hundreds. Karachi, with a population of 14 million people, is the economic of hub of Pakistan.