IN BRIEF
SEARCH TO RESUME TODAY
Body found on Mount Hood; two other climbers missing
The body of a climber was found Saturday on Mount Hood, but two other climbers were still missing after a daylong search, authorities said.
Detective Jim Strovink of the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said the climber who died was identified as Luke T. Gullberg, 26, of Des Moines, Wash. The two missing climbers were identified as Anthony Vietti, 24, of Longview, Wash., and Katti Nolan, 29, of Portland.
Strovink said all three climbers were experienced and well-equipped.
A search was set to resume shortly after dawn today for Vietti and Nolan. The three left Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood about 1 a.m. Friday and were reported missing when they failed to return Friday afternoon.
OPERATION GOES WRONG IN FRANCE
French rocker Hallyday in induced coma in Los Angeles
French rock legend Johnny Hallyday had a botched operation in France and is now in a medically induced coma in a Los Angeles hospital as he recovers from surgery to fix the damage, his producer said.
Hallyday, 66, is expected to recover, producer Jean-Claude Camus said.
Hallyday is France's biggest rock star, though he is little known outside Europe. Beyond his music, Belgian-born Hallyday, whose real name is Jean-Philippe Smet, is best known for his glitz, amorous affairs, Harley-Davidson motorcycles and a Frenchness as absolute as Elvis Presley's Americanness.
Hallyday had an operation overnight Wednesday to Thursday at Cedars Sinai hospital in Los Angeles to fix lingering back trouble from a Nov. 26 operation in Paris for a herniated disc.
French daily Le Figaro, citing Hallyday's press representatives, reported on its Web site that doctors plan to pull him out of the coma early next week.
