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Show 2 BULLETIN Monday, July 23,2007 u At the All stories and photos from The Associated Press - Head Trip: Around the World In Forty Hats; All day @ Utah Museum of Fine Arts • Fold, Flap, Peep, Pull, Popl: All day @ Marriott Library, 1 st floor • Toadally Frogsl: All day @ Dumke Gallery, UMNH W - / ;-; '"-• • Revisiting Utah's Past: All day @ Utah Museum of Fine Arts ANKARA, Turkey—Turkey's Islamic-rooted ruling party won parliamentary elections by a wide margin Sunday, and the prime minister pledged to safeguard the country's secular traditions and do whatever the government deems necessary to fight separatist Kurdish rebels. With more than 99 percent of votes counted, television news channels were projecting that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan*s Justice and Development Party would win 341 of the 550 seats, down from 351 in the outgoing parliament. Erdogan, a devout Muslim, told supporters in his victory speech that he would preserve pluralistic democracy and work for national unity. "We will never make concessions over the values of people, the basic principles of our republic. This is our promise. We will embrace Turkey as a whole without discriminating," he said at a rally in the capital, Ankara. Ruling party supporters clapped, danced and waved flags depicting the party symbol, a light bulb, outside the party's office in Istanbul. In Ankara, hundreds whooped as they watched election results on a big TV screen set up outside party headquarters. "We are very happy," university student Reyhan Aksoy said. "God willing, great days await us." The election was called early to Tuesday • Pioneer Day Holiday - no school • Real Salt Lake vs. Boca Juniors: 8 p.m. @Rice-Eccles Stadium - Fold, Flap, Peep, Pull, Popl: All day @ Marriott Library, 1 st floor • Toadally Frogsl: All day @ Dumke Gallery, UMNH • Head Trip: Around the World in Forty Hats: All day @ Utah Museum of Fine Arts "^Wednesday • Molecular Probes Scientists: 10:30 a.m. to Z-30 p.m.@ Eccles Human Genetics Auditorium and Atrium • Guest Speaker Seminar: Michelle Turner, Neurobiology & Anatomy: 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.@ Eccles Human Genetics Auditorium and Atrium • Toadally Frogs!: All day @ Dumke Gallery, UMNH t-DAY WEATHER OUTLOOK 95/74 Partly Cloudy Tuesday A Turkish woman casts her ballot at a polling station in the southeastern city of Dtyarbakir on Sunday. defuse a showdown with the military-backed, secular establishment, which contended that Erdogan and his allies were plotting to scrap Turkey's secular traditions despite their openness to the West. Erdogan raised concern with his efforts as prime minister to make adultery a crime and appoint former Islamists to key positions. Critics also were troubled by his calls for the lifting of restrictions on the wearing of Islamic headscarves. Many government opponents constitute a traditional elite that has roots in state institutions such as the courts and the military- NEW YORK—It is the richest going-away party in history. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final volume of J.K. Rowling's all-conquering fantasy series, sold a mountainous 8.3 million copies in its first 24 hours on sale in the United States, according to Scholastic Inc. No other book, not even any of the six previous Potters, has been 84/72 Scattered T-Storms WWW.WEATHER .COM Corrections and Clarifications The policy of The Daily Utah Chronicle is to correct any error made as soon as possible. If you find something you would like clarified or find unfair, please contact the editor at 801-581-8317. so desired, so quickly. Deathly Hallows averaged more than 300,000 copies in sales per hour—more than 5,000 a minute. The $34.99 book, even allowing for discounts, generated far more revenue than the opening weekend of the latest Potter movie, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," which came out July 10. "The excitement, anticipation, and just plain 5the £feUr |Iork ®tmei3. 50 Was a fink 1 1 Padlocked fasteners 54 Humorist Shriner 6 Diet drink phraso 55 Exterminator's 11 Beaver's work 14 God to a Muslim Honeymooners' 17 Levy on consumer goods •iti la 1 Tsu.n' 1 -it 1 HjVO- Lai. Vi Shovel user 57^ 28 ••42^ CVIla alar rail! Quimby (Beverly Cleary DOWN heroine) 2 32 Most common throw with two dice tii ton 3 Woman's 33 "Moo" maker 37 Starts of 17-and 4 Globetrotter's 29-Down, impolitely 39 Rockers 40 Red-tag events 41 Explorer de Le6n 42 Popular candy bar 44 Stuck out 45 Source ol a licoricetike 55~ m • 1 26 5 Okfles group 6 Jovi ••35^ document 55-Across, and 11- and 38 Knotty wood 53~ 5i~~ undergarment 36 Cut and paste, say 47 Race of rodeo gear 46 Fountain treat 49 Have the flu, maybe 35 II _ _ ___ •__ ••5^ 156 I •• 1 43 (jfi 51 52 55^ | 63 1 loliever's suffix 44 Tie wilh a clasp 45 Home products seller 7 CasslnJ of fashion 6 Op. 29 Morphine, e.g. (footnote abbr.) 30 Convened anew 9 College professors, e.g. 46 Artless < 47 Reduces to bits 10 Dictionary 32 'Rabbit food" 49 Going 11 Activity on a strip 34 Years back 61 Dryasdust 12 Actress Anouk 35 Lawn intruder (bickering) 52 Scent detector. 37 Unaided sight 18 Post-H message 38 Guiding light 23 Pistol, e.g. 53 Secluded valley 40 Increase in verticality 56 60's protest grp. 41 Young seal 57 Pro-Second Amendment grp. 25 Aardvark's morsel 3 do ku 3 8^ 1 1 9 7 3 2 5 4 7 6 9 2 9 6 5 1 9 7 2 5 4 • 8 1 ., . . 7 WWW (ifl \lV\l tfl n Cn fOHt TIP CO YY\ vv vv ^ . u u n y w u u i i n u \ji u u t * u u i l1 1 _ Doesnts ?end everything 28 High hair style SU 4 34 co-delendant in 1920's crime Mother-ol-pearl © Puzz les by Pap pocom 9 wmss- _ 27 Leopold's Na Na 13 Othello's people flavoring _L_ _ IP ••49 46 Homecomino attendee, for Deathly Hallows was designed to break records, released Saturday with a first printing of 12 million in the U.S. alone, although Scholastic spokeswoman Kyle Good acknowledged that some stores already were out of copies. **Our distribution strategy was clearly right on target in order to sell 8.3 million copies in 24 hours," she told The Associated Press. "We are working with retailers to move additional copies to the places they are needed most in the coming days and weeks." Harrington claims British Open title CARNOUSTIE, Scotland—Anywhere else, Padraig Harrington might have walked off the 18th green knowing his two shots that found the bottom of Barry Burn for double bogey had cost him the British Open. Not at Carnoustie, where calamity can strike at any second and did during Sunday's final round. One shot crashed off the stone wall of the burn and ricocheted 50 yards across the wrong fairway and outof-bounds. Another bounced across a tiny bridge until it plunged over the side on the last hop. Still another looked like a hole-in-one until it smacked the base of the pin and caromed 18 feet away. The final hour was golf theater at its best. In a nail-biter that stirred memories of Jean Van de Velde's famous collapse in 1999, Harrington delivered the fitting finish to a day that kept everyone guessing. He took a two-shot lead to the final hole of a playoff, and 1rnBH -U-LJ ^^•47^ | tennis 31 Dizzying designs — 44 43T R ^ 1 Mandlikova of ••26 it PPT • 1 M \ | T3 p i • 2S^ T2 • ^H [39 Elizabeth _•_ ft ^ • n 1 1 |_| 36 63 Cosmetician 9 ^•^^ homes 26 Makes sale 30 ••2I 'M fi5 Hatch tolas' 24 Chopped liver spread vt fi8 old manl* 21 Web address ender _| •• 60 Striker's demand 8 ^Hit> 2^ ^ H ^M ^HS4~~ Gorme 61 -So's 20 Rock concert Wasters / ik) 59 Songstress 16 Brazilian hot spot 4 3 17 Abbr. 15 Ralph's wife on T h e i •14 work 58 Street Grosser hysteria that came over the entire country this weekend was a bit like the Beatles' first visit to the U.S.," Scholastic president Lisa Holton said in a statement Sunday. "This weekend kids and adults alike are sitting on buses, in the park, on airplanes and in restaurants reading Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. The conversations the readers have been waiting to have for io years have just begun." The numbers are astonishing, but not shocking. BAGHDAD—The United , States and Iran have set a date for ambassador-level talks in Baghdad on the deteriorating security situation in Iraq—the first such meeting since late May, U.S. and Iraqi officials said Sunday. The two sides will sit down together on Tuesday, according to Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari and U.S. Embassy spokesman Philip Reeker, amid U.S. allegations that Tehran is supporting violent Shiite militias in the country. Zebari told The Associated Press by telephone that the discussions would be at the ambassadorial level and would focus on the situation in Iraq, not U.S.Iran tensions. Iraq's fragile government has been pressing for another meeting between the two nations with the greatest influence over its future, and Iran has repeatedly signaled its willingness to sit down. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said last week that Washington also was ready to hold new talks with Iran on the security situation in Iraq. The May 28 meeting marked a break in a 27-year diplomatic freeze between the U.S. and Iran and was expected to have been followed within a month by a second encounter. But following that meeting, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other U.S. officials said Iran had not scaled back what the United States claims is a concerted effort to arm militants and harm U.S. troops. Tensions also have risen over Tehran's detention of four Iranian-American scholars and activists charged with endangering national security. The U.S. has demanded their release, saying the charges against them are false. At the same time, Iran has called for the release offiveIranians detained in Iraq, who the United States has said are members of Iran's elite Quds Forceaccused of arming and training Iraqi militants. Iran says the five are diplomats in Iraq with permission of the government. Edited by Will Shortz Crossword ACROSS guardians of the secular legacy of national founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. But they have more of an authoritarian background and less of a reformist record than the government. Although the ruling party's success has been touted as proof that Islam and democracy can coexist, the new government is likely to face persistent tension over the role of Islam in society. "Democracy has passed a very important test," Erdogan said. "Whoever you have voted for...We respect your choices. We regard your differences as part of our pluralist democracy." Harry Potter finale breaks records 89/73 Scattered T-Storms Wednesday Iran, U.S. to meet about Iraq Turkey's ruling party easily wins election Monday Monday www.dailyutahchronicle.com -.THE DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE CONTACT INFORMATION Editorial Editor in Chief • m.piper@chwnicle.utah.edu Press contact • press@chronide.utah.edu Editorial letters • ietters@chronide.utah.edu Business General Manager • j.sorensen@chronide.utah.edu Director of Advertising • tMurtado@chtonidtutah.edu still had to sweat out a 3-foot bogey putt to beat Sergio Garcia. "I know it was only a short putt, but the*emotions of it," Harrington said. "I couldn't believe it as it was rolling in from right in the middle of the hole, and I'm thinking, 'The Open champion.' A huge amount of it was genuine shock." It was equally shocking to Garcia. He was poised to capture his first major championship until he blew a three-shot lead in the final round. Harrington gave him one more chance with that double bogey on the 18th hole in regulation. Needing a par to win, Garcia hit into a bunker and missed a io-foot par putt. "Now, if Sergio parred the last and I did lose, I think I would have struggled to come back out and be a competitive golfer," Harrington said. "It meant that much to me. But I never let it sink into me that I had just thrown away the Open champion- Advertising 801 581.7041 ship." He became the first Irishman in 60 years with his name on the claret jug, and Harrington ended Europe's eight-year drought in the majors. The victory moved him up to No. 6 in the world, part of the elite. All because of a double bogey on the 72nd hole. Harrington looked as though he might get the break of a lifetime when his tee shot dribbled across the bridge, a yard away from safety until it dove over the railing. After taking a penalty drop, he hung his head when his 5-iron bounced into the burn. It was a sick feeling, the same one Van de Velde surely felt when he hit into the same stream. Harrington gave no thought to removing his shoes and stepping, into the burn. Instead, he figured out how to get up and down for double bogey. He pitched to 5 feet behind the hole and made perhaps the biggest putt of the round. News 801 581.NEWS Fax 801 581.FAXX EDITOR IN CHIEF Matthew Piper ASST. NEWS EDITOR Rochelle McConkle PAGE DESIGNER KelllTompklns ADVERTISING MANAGER Cynthia R o b i d o u x MANAGING EDITOR Becca Krahenbuhl A&E EDITOR Danny Letz COPY EDITOR Chris Bellamy ADVERTISING DESIGNER Erin Sine DIRECTOR OF PRESENTATION Eric Geerllngs ASST. 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