USA - Fifteen obstetrics-gynecology practices out of 105 polled by the Sun Sentinel said they have set weight limits for new patients. Some of the doctors said the main reason was their exam tables or other equipment can't handle people over a certain weight, but at least six said heavy women run a higher risk of complications.
USA - Record flooding has caused authorities to close the Mississippi River at the port in Natchez because barge traffic could put more pressure on the levees. Coast Guard Petty Officer Bill Colclough said the port was closed Monday, leaving two vessels waiting to head north and one waiting to go south.
UK - Britain should prepare for a drought this summer and crops have already been "irreversibly" damaged by this year's warm weather, the Environment Secretary disclosed last night. Caroline Spelman said that water companies' drought preparations are being reviewed as several areas of the country are already "water stressed".
EUROPE - Europe's leaders are still opposing a Greek debt restructuring, and they are exacerbating the euro crisis as a result. The Greek economy is at risk of collapse and resistance to further loans for the troubled nation is mounting. The continent urgently needs a new bailout plan.
DUBLIN, SOUTHERN IRELAND - A homemade bomb was found in the luggage compartment of a bus in Ireland on Tuesday and blown up by the army in a controlled detonation, the military said, hours before the first state visit by the Queen.
UK - Four goats have been cruelly slaughtered in a village, raising fears of 'satanic rituals'. The animals were killed within a few days of each other, either with their heads twisted backwards or their throats cut.
UK - David Cameron's push for an early British withdrawal from Afghanistan has caused alarm in the US, raising fears for the Special Relationship. The Daily Telegraph last week revealed that David Cameron has ordered British commanders to draw up plans to start pulling hundreds of British troops out of Afghanistan within weeks.
UK - British scientist Stephen Hawking has branded heaven a "fairy story" for people afraid of the dark, in his latest dismissal of the concepts underpinning the world's religions.
USA - Thousands have evacuated the US state of Louisiana after floodgates were opened on Saturday to relieve pressure from the swollen Mississippi River. More floodgates are to be opened in the coming days to help save more populated areas like Baton Rouge and New Orleans. The man-made floods will damage thousands of homes and hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland.
UK - A plan to enshrine in law a promise to spend 0.7% of gross national income on overseas aid has been challenged by Defence Secretary Liam Fox. In a letter leaked to the Times, Dr Fox said he "cannot support the proposal in its current form".
USA - The US government is expected to hit the $14.294 trillion debt ceiling Monday, setting in motion an uncertain, 11-week political scramble to avoid a default. The Treasury Department said Monday it will stop issuing and reinvesting government securities in certain government pension plans, part of a series of steps designed to delay a default until August 2.
WASHINGTON, USA - When Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner claimed Social Security payments were threatened by a refusal by Congress to raise the debt limit, he was "flat-out lying," says the organizer of a campaign to freeze the nation's borrowing at $14.3 trillion. In a letter to Senator Michael Bennet, Democrat for Colorado, disclosed over the weekend, Geithner claimed freezing the debt limit would result in less revenue for Social Security, according to the letter.
USA - A New York man spent his entire $140,000 life savings advertising his prediction that the world will end May 21, the New York Post reported Friday. Robert Fitzpatrick, a 60-year-old Staten Island resident, said he spent at least that sum on 1,000 subway-car placards and ads on bus kiosks and subway cars.
EUROPE - It was recently learned that a secret meeting took place last week, attended by the Eurozone's key finance ministers and officials from Athens, Greece. The sole topic was the options available to Greece now that it is clear that last year's financial bailout was inadequate and, ultimately, unsuccessful in resolving their fiscal woes.
NEW YORK, USA - The arrest of International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn on sexual assault accusations in New York throws into disarray not only the IMF's leadership but also its central role in the financial rescue of several struggling European nations, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.