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Sport
Monday, July 27, 2009
Full probe launched into Massa accident
Macau ex-minister chosen to lead gambling hub
16 Pages Number 422 1st Year
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Monday, July 27, 2009 In this photo taken on Saturday, July 25, 2009, a truck hang on the collapsed Chediguan Bridge in Wenchuan county, southwest China’s Sichuan Province. A landslide in China’s southwest killed several people early Saturday and damaged the bridge that is a key link for reconstruction in areas hit by a devastating earthquake last year, a state news agency said.
Sanglah hospital treats 20 Swine Flu sufferers, 31 suspects PAGE 8
Agence France Presse
BUDAPEST - A full investigation into the causes and repercussions of Ferrari driver Felipe Massa’s dreadful freak accident during qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix was launched on Sunday. The investigation will be conducted by the sport’s ruling body, the International Motoring Federation, with the Brawn GP team. Massa suffered skull and eye injuries, as well as brain concussion, when he was struck on the head by a spring that broke loose from compatriot Rubens Barrichello’s Brawn GP car. The debris hit Massa’s helmet just above his left eye at around 275 kph. It knocked him unconscious and caused him to crash into a tyre barrier at Turn Four of the Hungaroring circuit. Massa was reported to be stable in hospital here on Sunday morning, his Ferrari team said, and he will have a further scan later in the day. The accident came just six days after Briton Henry Surtees, 18, the son of former world champion John Surtees, was killed after being hit on the head by a wheel from another car that crashed during a Formula Two race at Brands Hatch in England. Massa, one of the sport’s most popular drivers, was examined first at the circuit medical centre and then airlifted to the AEK Hospital in Budapest where they carried out surgery and put him into an induced coma. Doctors at the hospital were said to be encouraged by his condition overnight, and reported that he had suffered no further complications.
Barrichello, a fellow-native of Sao Paulo and a close friend of Massa, visited Massa at the hospital on Saturday evening. Massa’s father, mother and pregnant wife were flying to Hungary from Brazil. Barrichello’s car suffered a rear suspension failure in Turn Three. The spring came off the car and bounced on the track until Massa’s Ferrari collected it four seconds later. Massa’s carbon-fibre helmet absorbed most of the energy from the spring and appeared to save his life. The incident brought back memories of the fatal accident that claimed the life of Ayrton Senna during the San Marino Grand Prix at Imola in 1994 when a piece of debris penetrated his racing helmet. Since then massive safety advances in Formula One have seen helmets improved - the latest generation are said to be twice as strong as their predecessors - and the sides of cockpits raised and strengthened. The drivers now also wear head and neck restraint devices to protect them from high G-forces in major accidents. Ross Brawn, boss of the Brawn team, said he would do all he could to find out exactly what had happened, but warned against knee-jerk reactions. A close friend of both drivers, having been in charge of them previously at Ferrari where Massa succeeded Barrichello as team-mate to German Michael Schumacher, he said a proper study was required.
AP Photo/MTI,Tamas Kovacs
Brazilian Formula One driver Felipe Massa of Scuderia Ferrari is carried out of his car after his accident during the qualifying session at the Hungaroring race track in Mogyorod near Budapest, Hungary, Saturday, July 25, 2009. The Formula One Grand Prix of Hungary will take place on 26 July 2009. “We need to keep a perspective on it - from what’s been seen last weekend and this, we need to have a proper study to see if we need to do anything,” he said. “You can have covers or canopies but you have to be able to get at the driver and extract him (from the car) if there is an accident. And you don’t want anything that collapses down on a driver. “In the history of F1 it is a fairly rare occurrence, but we must take it seriously and see what we can do. We must make sure we don’t do something that makes the situation worse.” McLaren boss Martin Whitmarsh said the Surtees and Massa crashes should act as a safety wake-up call similar to that which followed Imola in 1994 when Senna and Roland Ratzenberger were killed. “Inevitably we all become complacent if we’re not confronted with a serious accident,” he said. “Obviously ’94 was a massive wake-up call for all of us in Formula One at the time. “It led to everyone, the FIA, teams, contributing to a lot of big steps forward in safety and I think we have to go again. For everyone involved we’ve got to make sure we do everything we can.”
Directors, actors geek out with fans at Comic-Con PAGE 12
Heavy rains kill 10 people in central China
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Associated Press
BEIJING - Heavy rains in central China have triggered landslides and floods that left 10 people dead and forced more than 110,000 others to flee their homes, a state news broadcaster said Sunday.
‘I dropped Facebook because of too many friends’: Bill Gates
The rains swept across five cities in Hunan province on Friday and Saturday, and in one badly hit area sent waves of mud tumbling onto a road, a river and several homes, China Central Television
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said in its midday bulletin. The broadcaster said 10 people died in Hongjiang, a district in the city of Huaihua. Continued on page 6
Agence France-Presse
NEW DELHI - Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates said he was forced to give up on the social networking phenomenon Facebook after too many people wanted to be his friend. Gates, the billionaire computer geek-turned-philanthropist who was honoured Saturday by India for his charity work, told an audience in New Delhi he had tried out Facebook but ended up with “10,000 people wanting to be my friends”. Gates, who remains Microsoft chairman, said he had trouble figuring out whether he “knew this person, did I not know this person”.
Continued on page 6
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speaks at a function organized by the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM) in New Delhi, India, Friday, July 24, 2009. AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi