Thursday, June 23, 2005


The Designing Rooster Posted by Hello

Justice.  Posted by Hello

Balance of Power Posted by Hello

Abramoff and DeLay Posted by Hello

Morning Papers - It's Origins

Rooster "Crowing"

"Okeydoke"


History . . .

June 23 . . .

1668,
Giambattista Vico, philosopher of history

1888,
Anna Akhmatova, poet

1894,
Alfred Kinsey, sex researcher

1912,
Alan Turing, mathematician

1927,
Bob Fosse, choreographer and director

1940, Wilma Glodean Rudolph, American
track-and-field athlete, who was the first American woman to win three track-and-field gold medals at a single Olympic Games. Born in Saint Bethlehem, Tennessee, Rudolph was educated at Tennessee State University. Although she contracted double pneumonia, polio, and scarlet fever at the age of 4 and could not walk normally until the age of 11, she became an outstanding basketball player in high school and competed in the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, winning a bronze medal in the 4 x 100-meter relay race. At the 1960 Olympics in Rome, she won the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes and ran the anchor (last) leg on the winning 4 x 100-meter relay team. In 1961 she won the James E. Sullivan Memorial Award, given annually by the Amateur Athletic Union of the United States (AAU) to the nation's top amateur athlete. Rudolph retired from competitive sports that same year and later became a teacher and coach.

1943,
James Levine, conductor and pianist

1611, The mutinous crew of English explorer Henry Hudson, after a harsh winter with their ship frozen in Hudson Bay, puts Hudson and eight others adrift in a small boat. They are never seen again.

1845, The Congress of the Republic of Texas agrees to join the United States, following the wishes of the republic's leading figure, Sam Houston.

1848, During a year of revolution throughout Europe, French working-class radicals clash with government forces in the first of the June Days, in which thousands of workmen are killed.

1868, Christopher Latham Sholes received a patent for his "Type-Writer."

1888, abolitionist Frederick Douglass received one vote from the Kentucky delegation at the Republican convention in Chicago, effectively making him the first black candidate nominated for U.S. president. (The nomination went to Benjamin Harrison.)

1892, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago nominated former President Cleveland on the first ballot.

1917: After Boston pitcher Babe Ruth is ejected for arguing the base on balls given to the first game's first batter, reliever Ernie Shore retires 27 straight men and is credited with a perfect game.

1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York on the first round-the-world flight in a single-engine plane.

1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was established.

1947, Despite the veto of President Harry Truman, the U.S. Congress passes the Taft-Hartley Act, which significantly restricts the ability of labor unions to organize.

1961, The Antarctic Treaty (signed December 1, 1959) comes into effect. It pledges the 12 signatory nations to nonpolitical, scientific investigation of the continent and bars any military activity.

1967, President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin held the first of two meetings in Glassboro, N.J.

1969, Warren E. Burger was sworn in as chief U.S. justice by the man he was succeeding, Earl Warren.

1985, all 329 people aboard an Air- India Boeing 747 were killed when the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland, apparently because of a bomb.

1994, The Nigerian military regime led by Sani Abacha arrests Moshood Abiola after he declares himself president of the country. Abiola was the apparent winner of the suspended presidential election in 1993.


Missing in Action

1966
BELKNAP HARRY JOHN JONAS RIDGE NC
1966
NYMAN LAWRENCE F. ABERDEEN WA
1968
BOOTH JAMES E. ROSEVILLE CA "DEAD, VIETNAM COURIER"
1968
CASEY DONALD F. CHATTANOOGA TN "DEAD, VIETNAM COURIER"
1969
CONDIT WILLIAM H. JR. WORTHINGTON OH REMAINS ID'D 06/24/98
1969
REED TERRY MICHAEL RANDOLPH AFB TX REMAINS ID'D 06/24/98
1969
SAGE LELAND C. WAUKEGAN IL
1970
PHILLIPS ROBERT P. SYLVANIA OH
1970
PEDERSON JOE P. SEASIDE CA
1970
ROZO JAMES M. BUFFALO NY

June 22 . . .

1903, Carl Hubbell, baseball pitcher

1906, Billy Wilder, American motion-picture director, writer, and producer, whose best films—usually comedies—employ his distinctive dialogue to elucidate a darkly satirical view of human nature. Born Samuel Wilder in Vienna, Austria, he later moved to Berlin, Germany, where he worked first as a journalist and then as a screenwriter. Wilder left Germany after Adolf Hitler's rise to power in 1933, and in 1934 he immigrated to the United States, later becoming a U.S. citizen. Beginning in 1937, Wilder found his initial niche in
Hollywood, California, as a screenwriter. From 1938 he teamed with American screenwriter Charles Brackett, with whom he was to carry on a long and successful collaboration until 1950. Together they wrote such memorably sophisticated screenplays as those for Midnight (1939), Ninotchka (1939), Arise, My Love (1940), Hold Back the Dawn (1941), and Ball of Fire (1941). Although the screenplays were well received, Wilder was increasingly dissatisfied with the way they were directed, so, following in the footsteps of American director Preston Sturges (who had also begun as a writer), he succeeded in persuading the studio to let him direct his own scripts.

1909,
Katherine Dunham, dancer and choreographer

1933, Dianne Feinstein, U.S. senator

1947,
Jerry Rawlings, Ghanaian president

1949,
Meryl Streep, actor

1611, English explorer Henry Hudson, his son and several other people were set adrift in present-day Hudson Bay by mutineers.

1870, Congress created the Department of Justice.

1938: Two years after Adolf Hitler took German boxer Max Schmeling's defeat of American Joe Louis as a sign of Nazi superiority, Louis defeats Schmeling in their rematch by knocking him out in the first round.

1938, heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis knocked out Max Schmeling in the first round of their rematch at Yankee Stadium.

1940, during World War II, Adolf Hitler gained a stunning victory as France was forced to sign an armistice eight days after German forces overran Paris.

1941: Breaking the nonaggression pact signed by the two countries in 1939, Germany invades the Soviet Union, sending over 3 million troops across the border.

1944, President Roosevelt signed the Readjustment Act of 1944, more popularly known as the "GI Bill of Rights," which provides tuition, low-interest mortgages, and other benefits to veterans.

1945, the World War II battle for Okinawa officially ended; 12,520 Americans and 110,000 Japanese were killed in the 81-day campaign.

1970, President Nixon signed a measure lowering the voting age to 18.

1977: Former attorney general John Mitchell begins serving his sentence for his role in the Watergate break-in and cover-up, becoming the first U.S. attorney general to go to prison.

1978: The U.S. astronomer James W. Christy discovers that the planet Pluto has a moon more than half its diameter, which he names Charon.

Missing in Action

1966
SMITH WARREN P. JR. PASADENA TX
1967
PIRIE JAMES GLENN TUSCALOOSA AL 02/18/73 RELEASED BY DRV DECEASED 05/09/98
1969
ENGELHARD ERIC CARL BELLBROOK OH 04/01/74 REMAINS RECOVERED
1969
ROBERSON JOHN W. MALAKOFF TX
1969
SEAGROVES MICHAEL ANTHONY CHICAGO IL 04/01/74 REMAINS RECOVERED
1970
EARLE JOHN S. WESTFIELD MA
1970
GUMBERT ROBERT W. JR. NEW RICHMOND OH
1971
STROHLEIN MADISON A. PHILADELPHIA PA INDICATIONS OF SHOOTOUT WITH NVA

continued . . .

June 7, 2005. Iris farm near Route 72, Traverse City, Iris. Posted by Hello

June 19, 2005. Making Hay. The Val Netherlands at Sunset. Posted by Hello

Morning Papers - continued...

The Guardian

THE BUSH/BLAIR rhetoric cannot even be supported by their own intelligence.

Baghdad bombings kill 38
Agencies
Thursday June 23, 2005
A wounded man is rushed to hospital in Baghdad. Photograph: Sabah Arar/AFP/Getty

At least 38 people were killed in eight Baghdad car bombings over a 12-hour period, police said today.
Three of the blasts happened at dawn, killing 15 people in a central Baghdad shopping district. The explosions, in the Karrada area, targeted a Shia mosque, a police patrol, and a public bath house.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1512831,00.html

Iraq creating new breed of jihadists, says CIA
Ewen MacAskill, Duncan Campbell and Richard Norton-Taylor
Thursday June 23, 2005
The Guardian
The war in Iraq is creating a new breed of Islamic jihadists who could go on to destabilise other countries, according to a CIA report.
The CIA believes Iraq to be potentially worse than Afghanistan, which produced thousands of jihadists in the 1980s and 1990s. Many of the recruits to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida had fought in Afghanistan.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1512597,00.html

Blinded by the light at the end of the tunnel
The American public is increasingly disillusioned by the Iraq war, and Bush's triumphalism only makes things worse
Sidney Blumenthal
Thursday June 23, 2005
The Guardian
On June 21, network news reported that the Pentagon had claimed that 47 enemy operatives had been killed in Operation Spear in western Iraq. Last month, the Pentagon declared 125 had been killed in Operation Matador, near the Syrian border. "We don't do body counts on other people," Donald Rumsfeld, the secretary of defence, stated in November 2003.

...Bush's Iraq syndrome is a reinvention of Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam syndrome. In December 1967, Walt Rostow, LBJ's national security adviser, famously declared about the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese: "Their casualties are going up at a rate they cannot sustain ... I see light at the end of the tunnel." The official invitation to the New Year's Eve party at the US embassy in Saigon read: "Come see the light at the end of the tunnel." The Tet offensive struck a month later.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1512412,00.html

The story of Africa through the lives of 10 children born in 2005
Will the world keep its promises to them? And what can you do?
June 21 2005: The United Nations has set ambitious goals for development - poverty, health and education - by 2015. If these mean anything, Africa's children will be leading better lives. The decisions made by the G8 leaders in Gleneagles next month will shape the life chances of a generation.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/hearafrica05/10babies/0,16105,1511167,00.html

The Boston Globe

Rumsfeld rejects notion Iraq war is a 'quagmire'
By Will Dunham June 23, 2005
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Thursday rejected a senator's assertion the Iraq war had become a quagmire, but warned Iraq's government not to delay political developments such as drafting a constitution.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2005/06/23/rumsfeld_rejects_notion_iraq_war_is_a_quagmire/

French luxury store apologizes to Oprah

Television talk show host Oprah Winfrey addresses reporters as part of the Television Critics Association Press Tour on Jan. 23, 2005, in the Universal City section of Los Angeles. The luxury store Hermes has apologized to Winfrey for turning her away from one of its Paris boutiques on June 14, 2005, saying it was closed for a public relations event when she came knocking. (AP Photo/Ric Francis)
June 23, 2005
PARIS --The luxury store Hermes has apologized to Oprah Winfrey for turning her away from one of its Paris boutiques last week, saying it was closed for a public relations event when she came knocking.

http://www.boston.com/ae/celebrity/articles/2005/06/23/french_luxury_store_apologizes_to_oprah/

Romney says wife's health key factor as he weighs future
By Theo Emery, Associated Press Writer June 23, 2005
BOSTON --Gov. Mitt Romney, who's acknowledged that he's considering a presidential run, said his wife's health is a key factor as he decides his political future.
"Any reversal of her good health would almost certainly mean getting out of public office. I wouldn't run for another campaign, almost certainly," Romney said Thursday in an interview with The Associated Press.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/06/23/romney_says_wifes_health_key_factor_as_he_weighs_future/

Hospitals cut costs for uninsured
2 networks plan discounts of 15-50%
By Liz Kowalczyk, Globe Staff June 23, 2005
Two of the state's largest hospital networks, Partners HealthCare and UMass Memorial Health Care, will no longer routinely charge uninsured patients full ''sticker price" for medical care, but instead will offer 15 to 50 percent discounts, in some cases as much as the mark-downs large health insurers receive.

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2005/06/23/hospitals_cut_costs_for_uninsured/

Greenspan, Snow warn against China sanction
By Glenn Somerville June 23, 2005
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Trade sanctions against China won't protect U.S. jobs, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Thursday, and he joined with Treasury Secretary John Snow in saying sanctions might backfire.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2005/06/23/greenspan_snow_warn_on_china_sanction_1119545030/

Jerusalem to ban annual gay pride parade

An Israeli soldier holds a rainbow-colored flag as hundreds of people participate in a gay pride parade in downtown Jerusalem in this photo from Thursday June 3, 2004. Jerusalem City Hall on Thursday, June 23, 2005 announced it would not allow the planned annual gay pride parade to go ahead next week, saying the march would offend many of the holy city's residents and set off unrest. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
By Gavin Rabinowitz, Associated Press Writer June 23, 2005
JERUSALEM --Jerusalem officials said Thursday they will ban the annual gay pride parade set for next week, claiming the march would offend many of the holy city's residents.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2005/06/23/jerusalem_to_ban_annual_gay_pride_parade/

The Arab News

Riyadh Pledges $1bn for Iraq Reconstruction
Abdullah Mustafa, Arab News

BRUSSELS, 23 June 2005 — Saudi Arabia yesterday emphasized its vision of an independent and unified Iraq and said it would extend $1 billion in the form of soft loans for the reconstruction of the war-torn country.
Addressing an international conference here, attended by over 80 governments and international institutions, Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal said Riyadh was also ready to write off part of Iraq’s debt burden.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65795&d=23&m=6&y=2005


Israel Revives Assassination Policy
Hisham Abu Taha, Arab News

JERUSALEM, 23 June 2005 — Israel has resumed an assassination policy against Islamic Jihad militants, as Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas tried to rally international support yesterday after coming away with no tangible results from a summit with Israel Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Abbas called American Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Egypt President Hosni Mubarak and Jordan King Abdallah soon after the summit, as the Palestinians voiced exasperation over the Israeli premier’s hard-line attitude.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65796&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

US Was Big Spender in Days Before Iraq Handover
Reuters

WASHINGTON, 23 June 2005 — The United States handed out nearly $20 billion of Iraq’s funds, with a rush to spend billions in the final days before transferring power to the Iraqis nearly a year ago, a report said on Tuesday.
The report, by Democratic Rep. Henry Waxman of California, said in the week before the hand-over on June 28, 2004, the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority ordered the urgent delivery of more than $4 billion in Iraqi funds from the US Federal Reserve in New York.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65807&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

Iraqi Militants Release Filipino Accountant After 7 Months in Captivity
Julie Javellana-Santos, Arab News

MANILA, 23 June 2005 — Filipino accountant Roberto Tarongoy has finally been released after more than half a year as a captive of a militant group in Iraq.
Tarongoy was interviewed live over a national news program while at the Philippine Embassy in Iraq waiting for his flight to Manila.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65792&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

US Designs to Reshape ME ‘No Longer Secret’: Syria
Agence France Presse

DAMASCUS/BEIRUT, 23 June 2005 — Syria’s state-run radio yesterday lashed out at US accusations of Syrian involvement in a Lebanese politician’s murder and said Washington’s designs to reshape the Middle East were no longer a secret. “The American-Israeli objective is no longer a secret,” said Damascus Radio. “All the countries and peoples, Arabs and foreigners, have found out the scope of the plan drawn up for the region,” it said.
“The statements made by US officials, especially those of (Secretary of State) Condoleezza Rice making accusations against Syria ... no longer fool anyone,” the radio said in its daily commentary.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65797&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

Iran Moderates Fan ‘Extremist’ Fears to Swing Vote
Stuart Williams, Agence France Presse

TEHRAN, 23 June 2005 — The camp of moderate cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani made a last-ditch effort yesterday to sway undecided voters in Iran’s tense presidential election, saying his rival was a reactionary extremist bent on overturning reform. With the outcome of Friday’s vote too close to call, Rafsanjani and ultra-conservative Tehran Mayor Mahmood Ahmadinejad had one last day of legal campaigning to swing one of the most crucial elections in the Islamic republic’s history.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65817&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

Pakistan Denies Violating Bus Agreement
Agence France Presse

ISLAMABAD/SRINAGAR, 23 June 2005 — Islamabad yesterday dismissed New Delhi’s complaints that a visit by moderate separatists from Indian Kashmir to Pakistan violated a travel agreement on a new bus service across the Himalayan region.
“We saw the visit as part of the peace process between Pakistan and India,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Jalil Abbas Jilani said, rejecting Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s criticism.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65819&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

Mukhtaran Mai toGet Back Passport
Huma Aamir Malik, Arab News

ISLAMABAD, 23 June 2005 — Pakistan government has agreed to return passport to gang rape victim, Mukhtaran Mai, who won world acclaim for her pursuit of justice, sources said.
The government has already lifted a controversial ban on Mukhtaran leaving the country. Pakistan had slapped the travel ban on Mukhtaran, prompting fresh international outrage.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=65821&d=23&m=6&y=2005&pix=world.jpg&category=World

Crude Oil Rates

22 June 2005
$ per barrel

Brent
56.58

US Oil
58.09

Los Angeles Times

Ex-Klansman Gets 60 Years for 1964 Civil Rights Killings
Edgar Ray Killen, 80, gets the maximum penalty for the manslaughter of three men.
By Michael Muskal, Times Staff Writer
PHILADELPHIA, Miss. -- Edgar Ray Killen received the maximum sentence this morning, three consecutive 20-year terms, for the killings of three civil rights workers in 1964.
Wearing a yellow jail jumpsuit and sitting in a wheelchair, the 80-year-old former Ku Klux Klansman reacted without emotion as Circuit Judge Marcus Gordon effectively sentenced the preacher to spend the rest of his life in prison.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-062305killen_lat,0,47493.story?coll=la-home-headlines

Wildfires Destroy 7 Homes, Burn 3,000 Acres
By Susana Enriquez and Lance Pugmire, Times Staff Writers
MORONGO VALLEY, Calif. -- The wildfires in Southern California that have destroyed seven structures and blackened the California desert subsided today, with officials hopeful that the blazes can be curbed.
Using satellite imagery, officials scaled back earlier estimates and reported 3,022 acres burned.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-062305fires_lat,0,3264126.story?coll=la-home-headlines

Many in Brazil See Their Amazon as a Jungle of Foreign Intrigue
Suspicions run wild that 'hegemonic' powers like the U.S. have designs on the vast, rich region.
By Henry Chu, Times Staff Writer
BELEM, Brazil — Afghanistan was the first to fall. Iraq, with all that oil, was next. And Socorro Leite says she has a fair idea of what else lies in the sights of the American imperialists.
"Soon," she warns, "their target will be the Amazon."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-paranoia23jun23,0,3071305.story?coll=la-home-world

Anglicans May Target Firms Seen as Anti-Palestinian
A plan calls for churches to urge companies in their investment portfolios to end activities that support the Israeli occupation.
By Sarah Price Brown, Times Staff Writer
LONDON — The worldwide association of Anglican churches will consider a controversial report Friday that calls for companies in its investment portfolios to drop any business activity supporting the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories.
The Anglican Consultative Council, the association's policymaking body, will discuss at its 10-day meeting underway in Nottingham, England, whether to recommend the proposal to the Anglican Communion. The communion comprises 77 million members belonging to the Church of England, the U.S. Episcopal Church and three dozen related churches.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-anglicans23jun23,0,649940.story?coll=la-home-world

Vietnam News

Party leader addresses concerns
(23-06-2005)
Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh meets with resident of Cau Giay District, Ha Noi. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Xuan Tuan
HA NOI —The hardest but most necessary element in the struggle against corruption is teaching people how to prevent it, said Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh yesterday.
Raising awareness of corruption and graft will help avoid future corruption, bureaucracy, wastefulness and other negative phenomena, Manh told residents of Cau Giay District at a meeting organised by Ha Noi’s National Assembly delegation and the municipal Fatherland Front Committee.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=03POL230605

Talks, visit to US bodes well for bilateral co-operation: PM Khai
(23-06-2005)
PM Khai and US Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez witness the signing of a contract for Vietnam Airlines’ purchase of four Boeing Dreamliner aircraft. — VNA/VNS Photo The Thuan
WASHINGTON — Talks between Prime Minister Phan Van Khai and President George W Bush are a positive sign of increasing bilateral co-operation, the PM told a US business group on Tuesday.
The talks also mean a future of equitable relations, respect for each other and co-operation for mutual interests, Khai said at a meeting that gathered representatives from US business sectors.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=02POL230605

South set for transportation overhaul
(23-06-2005)
HCM CITY — A series of major transportation facilities will be built in the southern region between now and 2010, including Viet Nam’s first metro system, according to a plan revealed by Minister of Transport Dao Dinh Binh.
An underground rail network which will link Ben Thanh in downtown HCM City to the city of Bien Hoa in Dong Nai province is estimated to cost around US$620 million, which will be generated from various sources, including government bond issues, Binh said at a press briefing in HCM City.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=12ECO230605

Govt policy to offer insured patients more medical benefits
(23-06-2005)
Nurses taking care of patients in Hong Giang Commune in Luc Ngan District of northern Bac Giang Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Na.
HCM CITY — Insured Vietnamese patients currently pay 20 per cent of medical treatment costs, with the remainder paid by the Viet Nam Social Insurance Agency. But the Government’s newly-issued health insurance policy, which takes effect July 1, will change that.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=03POP230605

Drinking water projects keep rural people safe
(22-06-2005)
Ethnic minority women collect clean water from a tap in K’Lip B Village in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh
HA NOI — Over 40 million people residing in rural areas will have benefited by the end of this year from a national programme to supply safe drinking water, said National Centre for Safe Water and Rural Hygiene director Le Van Can.
Can said this result is the outcome of a national programme on rural water safety and hygiene, now in its seventh year.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=05SOC220605

Domestic tourism heats up the summer
(19-06-2005)
With prosperity comes leisure time, and more upscale Vietnamese are now shelling out the Dong for luxury vacations. Van Anh sits by the pool.
Ngo Thu Hang settles back in her armchair, gazing out at the white sandy beach of Sam Son in the central province of Thanh Hoa. Her husband and four-year-old son romp playfully at the water’s edge. Having arrived at Van Chai Resort a few days prior, the 38-year-old director of a private furniture design company says being close to the sea nourishes the imagination needed in her work.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=01SUN190605

New York Times

Greenspan: China Tariffs Won't Help U.S.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: June 23, 2005
Filed at 5:18 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned Congress on Thursday not to rush to impose punitive tariffs on imports from China, saying they would harm U.S. consumers and protect ''few if any American jobs.''
It marked Greenspan's most blunt assessment to date that currency-related legislation that has attracted support from two-thirds of the Senate would harm the U.S. economy by driving up prices for the Chinese products Americans crave.
He said a move toward protectionism in the world's largest economy could also unsettle global financial markets while doing little to protect jobs in this country.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Greenspan-China.html?hp&ex=1119585600&en=fca087b716eeefc5&ei=5094&partner=homepage

G.E. Revamps Businesses and Names 3 New Chiefs
By
JENNIFER BAYOT
Published: June 23, 2005
The
General Electric Company announced today that it would reorganize its 11 businesses into six broader units, in its largest sweep of changes since Jeffrey R. Immelt became chief executive in 2001.
The moves also reshuffled the next-to-highest tier of leadership at the company, bringing the appointment of three new vice chairmen as two executives announced their retirements as expected.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/23/business/23cnd-elec.html

World View of U.S. Improves Slightly, Except Among Muslims
By
BRIAN KNOWLTON
International Herald Tribune
Published: June 23, 2005
The anti-Americanism that surged through much of the world over the American-led war in Iraq shows modest signs of abating, although distinctly negative views persist in the Muslim world, according to a major new international opinion poll.
The snapshot of world opinions emerged from a Pew Global Attitudes Survey of nearly 17,000 people in the United States and 15 other countries: Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Pakistan, Poland, Russia, Spain and Turkey.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/23/international/23cnd-poll.html

Air Force Academy Staff Found Promoting Religion
By
LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Published: June 23, 2005
WASHINGTON, June 22 - An Air Force panel sent to investigate the religious climate at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs found evidence that officers and faculty members periodically used their positions to promote their Christian beliefs and failed to accommodate the religious needs of non-Christian cadets, its leader said Wednesday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/23/politics/23academy.html

Ford Plans to Cut 5% of Salaried Work Force
By
JEREMY W. PETERS
Published: June 22, 2005
DETROIT, June 21 - The Ford Motor Company said Tuesday that it would cut 5 percent, or about 1,700, of its white-collar jobs in North America. It also said it would no longer give bonuses to managers or make matching contributions to the 401(k) plans of salaried employees.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/automobiles/22ford.html

Haaretz

Jewish officials pleased by Klansman's conviction
By
Shlomo Shamir
NEW YORK - Senior Jewish officials in New York expressed satisfaction yesterday at this week's conviction of a one-time Ku Klux Klansman in the 1964 slayings of three civil rights workers in Mississippi.
The jury convicted Edgar Ray Killen of manslaughter Tuesday, dismissing the more serious charge of murder. Killen, who is 80 and uses a wheelchair, was found guilty of planning the killings, carrying them out and hiding the bodies. Sentencing is set for today.
Killen's conviction is an act of justice and a reversal of inequality that has particular resonance for Jews and blacks in the United States, said Rabbi Marc Schneier, president of the New York-based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, which runs programs on black-Jewish relations.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/591190.html

Right-wing activists holed up in Gush Katif hotel
By
Amos Harel and Yair Ettinger, Haaretz Correspondents
Right-wing activists residing in the Maoz Hayam Hotel, in Gush Katif, were holed up in the hotel on Thursday night, fearing that security forces would enter in the middle of the night and evacuate them from the site.
Military and police sources refused to confirm that an operation was planned for late Thursday night.
The fact that activists were residing in the hotel was raised in recent days in talks among the high echelons of the defense establishment, due to growing concerns regarding the assembly of activists and a violent incident that occurred near the hotel recently.

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/spages/591617.html

Mofaz: PA may get security control of Bethlehem next week
By
Amos Harel and Aluf Benn, Haaretz Correspondents
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz on Thursday told senior military officials to prepare for the likelihood that the West Bank city of Bethlehem will be transferred to Palestinian Authority security control next week.
"If things go as planned," Mofaz said, "we will also transfer Qalqilyah a week later."
Israel Defense Forces soldiers Thursday began evacuate outposts in the center of the West Bank city of Hebron, which were set up following the outbreak of the intifada in late 2000.

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/spages/591246.html

Steinitz wants Knesset okay for Egyptian troops on Gaza border
By Gideon Alon and
Amos Harel, Haareetz Correspondents
Senior lawmakers, including the head of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Yuval Steinitz, demanded Thursday that an agreement with Egypt for the deployment of 800 of its troops along the Gaza-Egypt border be approved by the Knesset.
The Egyptian policemen would be placed along the Philadelphi Route following Israel's unilateral withdrawal from Gaza in August.

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/spages/591602.html

continued . . .

Good, Condi, Real Good !! Posted by Hello

A wounded man is rushed to hospital in Baghdad. Is this actually benefitting that nation? I don't think so.
 Posted by Hello

Morning Papers - continued . . .

The Cheney Observer

UAL Union Asks For Pension Probe
Neil Weinberg, 06.22.05, 6:15 AM ET

NEW YORK - A union representing 16,000 airline ground workers is calling on the U.S. government to investigate possible wrongdoing in the management of United Airlines' pension fund.
The request came in a June 20 letter from the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association to U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao and Bradley Belt, executive director of the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp., the government body charged with taking over insolvent private pension plans--which has never conducted a forensic audit of any of the plans it has taken over.

http://www.forbes.com/2005/06/22/ual-pension-forensic-audit-cz_nw_0622ual.html?partner=daily_newsletter

Bechtel unhappy over Centre’s stance on Dabhol
SANJAY JOG
Posted online: Tuesday, June 21, 2005 at 0119 hours IST

MUMBAI, JUNE 20: Bechtel has fired yet another salvo against the Government of India (GoI) for taking a rigid stand on offering compensation for its claims in the Dabhol project.

“Bechtel, like GE, would prefer to arrive at a compromise, but GoI has failed to take the necessary steps to end. It will not even offer the barest acceptable compensation for our equity and contractor claims, net of tax. Despite our conciliatory proposals for dealing with creditors, GoI insists on denying us legal recourse for potential claims it created by the closure of the Dabhol power plant,” Bechtel’s spokesperson Marshall Jonathan told FE in an e-mail response.

http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=94376

Jeff Frederick and Tom DeLay
Filed under: Lowell @ 5:06 am
As usual,
Waldo Jaquith’s been doing some fine work over at
his blog. This time it’s about Republican Virginia House Delegate Jeff Frederick (R-Prince William) and his “mystery fundraiser” with House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-TX). Waldo’s digging deserves more attention, so I’m mentioning it here as well.
It turns out that the ethically- and legally-challenged DeLay held a fundraiser for
Frederick on April 19, but, according to Waldo, the State Board of Elections is missing one thing: “any evidence of the party.” Waldo concludes that “[e]ither Del. Frederick’s campaign is violating Virginia election law, or this was the lamest fundraiser ever. ” So which is it, Del. Frederick? Time to put in a call to Chris Piper over at the State Board of Elections’ compliance section?

http://www.raisingkaine.com/blog/?p=402

One Committee's Three Hours of Inquiry, in Surreal Time
By Dana Milbank
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A06
Yesterday's Senate hearing into superlobbyist Jack Abramoff's alleged defrauding of Indian tribes had something for everyone. There was the yoga instructor who took the Fifth. There was the lifeguard selected to run a think tank from a beach house at Rehoboth. And there was Exhibit 31, an e-mail from Abramoff to a rabbi friend.
"I hate to ask you for your help with something so silly but I've been nominated for membership in the Cosmos Club, which is a very distinguished club in Washington, DC, comprised of Nobel Prize winners, etc.," Abramoff wrote. "Problem for me is that most prospective members have received awards and I have received none. I was wondering if you thought it possible that I could put that I have received an award from Toward Tradition with a sufficiently academic title, perhaps something like Scholar of Talmudic Studies?"

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202100.html

Chinese Oil Producer Makes Bid For Unocal
CNOOC's Unsolicited Proposal Tops Price Accepted From Chevron
By Gary Gentile
Associated Press
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page D01
LOS ANGELES, June 22 -- China's third-largest oil producer made an unsolicited $18.5 billion bid Wednesday for oil-and-gas company Unocal Corp., which has already agreed to be acquired by Chevron Corp. for $16.6 billion.
Unocal acknowledged the offer from state-run CNOOC Ltd., an affiliate of China National Offshore Oil Corp., to buy the company for $67 a share in cash. Unocal, based in El Segundo, Calif., said it would evaluate the bid but that its board's previous recommendation to shareholders to accept the Chevron offer remained in place.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202309.html

Mail and Guardian

SA 'irritated' by UK call on Zimbabwe
Pretoria, South Africa
23 June 2005 01:48
A South African government spokesperson expressed irritation on Thursday at a so-called bogeyman approach being used to scare African countries, like children, into conforming with the West.
"I am really irritated by this 'kgokgo' approach", presidential spokesperson Bheki Khumalo said when approached for comment on a call by British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw for African action against Zimbabwe.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243688&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__national/

Zim army to rebuild after eviction sweep
Michael Hartnack Harare
23 June 2005 11:37
The Zimbabwean government is mobilising soldiers to build houses for the thousands of people it forced from their homes in an urban clean up campaign that has drawn condemnation at home and abroad, a spokesperson said on Thursday.
The announcement comes as Zimbabwe prepares for the visit of a special United Nations envoy coming to see the impact of Operation Murambatsvina, or Drive Out Trash, which the UN estimates has left up to 1,5-million people homeless. The political opposition, which has its base among the urban poor, says the four-week-old campaign is meant to punish its supporters.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243683&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/

Zimbabwe crackdown sparks violence
Harare
22 June 2005 02:07
The Zimbabwe government's campaign to clear the homes, businesses and even gardens of the poor from its cities has sparked more violence, a pro-government newspaper reported on Wednesday even as state radio claimed those displaced were being provided for.
The United Nations estimates up to 1,5-million people are homeless after police burned or demolished their shacks in what the government calls a “clean-up” campaign in the cities.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243638&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/

Zim extends crackdown to rural areas
Harare, Zimbabwe
17 June 2005 03:53
Zimbabwe has extended the destruction of informal homes and businesses from the cities to rural areas, police told state radio on Friday.
The government calls the campaign a cleanup effort, but critics at home and abroad say it is a violation of human rights and inspired by politics.
Police spokesperson Austin Chikwavara said his force has started tearing down shacks and kiosks found at major crossroads in Chirumanzu, Umvuma and Lalapanzi in the Midlands area, 200km – 300km south of the capital, Harare.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243383&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/

Civil society can be a powerful force for change
Yasmin Sooka: COMMENT
20 June 2005 10:24
South Africa’s richly plural civil society was forged in the struggle for liberation, but over the past five years its impact on policy and legislation has become less effective than it should be.
The African National Congress has made the shift from liberation movement to governing party, but civil society has not quite figured out how to move beyond its old, oppositional role.
During the 1990s organisations from human rights bodies and welfare groups to churches enjoyed an unprecedented level of access to government structures and to ministers, exchanging views and providing advice on the important issues. It was a heady period, and organisations revelled in their new role as partners in the reconstruction of our society.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243461&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/

Capitalism: A curse, not cure
David Masondo: COMMENT
17 June 2005 08:59
The 1976 June uprising opened the floodgates for popular struggles, which ultimately made racial capitalism unprofitable. In response to this, Zac de Beer, the then-director of Anglo American, said: “We all understand how years of apartheid have caused many blacks to reject the economic and political system … We dare not allow the baby of free enterprise to be thrown out with the bath water of apartheid.”
De Beer’s response was a call for reform and defence of capitalism as a system run by capitalists or entrepreneurs who, like parasites, prey on the working class. His vision was of a post-apartheid rainbow parasitism in which the race, gender and age of parasites must be reformed. From this perspective, the process of “transformation” is meant to incorporate women and black people in the capitalist structures of production, distribution and consumption.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243344&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/

Time to say 'never again'
Fikile-Ntsikelelo Moya: COMMENT
17 June 2005 08:59
Who stops blacks from taking their children to the Hector Pieterson Memorial? (Photograph: Paul Botes)
The El Al aircraft veered east around northern Sudan. Instead of flying over the Egyptian airspace, it flew over the Red Sea.
On board was a group of 250 South Africans of Jewish ancestry en route to Tel Aviv, where they would catch a connecting flight to Poland. There, they would commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation from the Auschwitz death camp of Jews, Poles, homosexuals and gypsies by the Allied forces.
About 4 000 years after Moses led the Israelites out of Egyptian bondage, and 60 years after the descendants of Moses’s flock suffered at the hands of the Nazis, the pilgrims were not taking a chance with their survival.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243332&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/

What the hell happened?
Charles Lewis: COMMENT
17 June 2005 08:59
It wasn’t supposed to happen in the new South Africa, the country of Nelson Mandela that in the 1990s came to symbolise hope, resilience and the “long walk to freedom”, an indelible inspiration to the entire world.
No, it wasn’t supposed to happen anymore, preventing a newspaper from publishing a story about potential lawbreaking by the powers that be, about the government, its ruling political party and a favoured company.
Specifically, the journalists had discovered that, just before the general elections last year, substantial taxpayer funds from state-owned oil company PetroSA apparently went to the African National Congress by way of a private company called Imvume Management.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=243318&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/

St. Petersburg Times

Eminent Domaine. Good-bye Florida shorelines. Owning property is a 'short term' investment or for a sincere 'homestead' but speculation for long term gains is all too questionable. This directly attacks the Conservation Groups that purchase lands in perpetuity to protect precious lands from environmental demise. What is to protect the parks from financial attack as well. This plays right into the political agenda of Bush via the Interior Department. There will not be any need for the EPA unless there is legislation from the Federal Government to reverse this decision protecting the investment of THE AMERICAN DREAM. I don't see an option. This is a move toward a communistic and overbearing federal authority. Property rights is one of the promises of what was an emerging democracy in Russia. That very right has been removed from every citizen in the USA with this decision. The 'Real Estate' bubble just burst, especially to low income areas which are usually minorities and single women with families !! Local authorities can pass bills as well to protect property owners as well as state legislatures. I strongly suggest that is done and soon. Ever hear of 'Emergency Session?'

Gulf oil back on Senate's reserve list
By WES ALLISON and ANITA KUMAR
Published June 22, 2005
WASHINGTON - With oil prices nearing $60 a barrel, the good will toward Florida finally ran dry.
After agreeing last week to maintain the existing moratorium on oil and gas drilling off Florida's shores, the U.S. Senate on Tuesday moved forward with conducting an inventory of energy reserves in all U.S. waters, including the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
By a vote of 52-44, the Senate rejected an amendment sponsored by Florida's senators that would have deleted the inventory from the comprehensive energy bill now moving through the Senate.

http://www.sptimes.com/2005/06/22/Worldandnation/Gulf_oil_back_on_Sena.shtml

Just as with Elizabeth Dole. It is easy to take an 'empty' stand against Big Oil for political favoritism among constituents when the politician knows no matter the stand they take will make no difference when there is a majority otherwise. If a legislature wants to exploit the shores of Florida and the Governor's Veto will be overridden why would he side with a legislature when taking 'the popular environmental' view insures a better outcome in an election. When a politician takes a stand I want to know what they have know besides vote to STOP a dangerous trend in a legislative body. ACTION to stop a runaway legislature is more important than the political posturing for voters. Jeb Bush has wrongly pursued an expensive investigation in the Schivo Case. What then has he done in Florida and otherwise within his own family circle to stop this counterproductive trend?

Bush stresses his commitment against oil drilling
He says critics have misunderstood his comments about a 100-mile buffer.
By WES ALLISON and JONI JAMES
Published June 17, 2005
WASHINGTON - The way Gov. Jeb Bush has been referring to protecting Florida from offshore drilling has prompted some legislators to question his commitment to keeping drilling rigs as far off the state's shores as possible.
As lawmakers battle congressional attempts to open the state's waters to more oil and gas exploration, the governor has made several statements about the importance of maintaining "a 100-mile buffer" around Florida's coast.

http://www.sptimes.com/2005/06/17/State/Bush_stresses_his_com.shtml

Michael Moore Today

THE BUSH DYNASTY IS NOT TO CRUMBLE !!

Anti-Bush protester on trial for convention actions
By Daryl Khan /
Newsday
In her opening statements in jury room 5 of Manhattan Criminal Court Tuesday, Assistant District Attorney Jessica Troy said: "This is not a case about politics."
However, everything about the case suggested otherwise.
On one side of the courtroom sat protester June Brashares, 41, who unfurled an anti-Bush banner during his acceptance speech. Brashares is on trial for kicking two political operatives who dragged her out of Madison Square Garden, injuring one.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3096

Rumsfeld in Congress hot seat over Iraq
AFP
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and top military officers will face a tough Congressional hearing amid mounting doubts among lawmakers and the public over the US presence in Iraq.
With even Republican loyalists now increasingly questioning US policy in Iraq, the Senate Armed Forces Commission will seek get its first chance in four months to grill Rumsfeld and his senior generals.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3090

Lobbyist May Have Cost Tribe Millions
By Adam Nossiter /
Associated Press
Though far removed from Washington, the Coushatta Indian tribe quickly learned the cost of influence in the Capitol: "Wire all funds. Professional Services. $3,405,000.00," one of the tribe's lobbyists, now under investigation, wrote the Coushattas in 2002.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3086

DeLay uses Houston to make point about Iraq news coverage
Houston Chronicle
WASHINGTON - When House Majority Leader Tom DeLay sat down with reporters on Tuesday on Capitol Hill, he was asked to assess President Bush's campaign in Iraq and to respond to criticism that the military mission is not going well and the White House needs to develop an exit strategy.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3085

G8 'still sells arms to regimes'
BBC
Countries from the G8 group of wealthy nations have been accused of continuing to sell arms to regimes using them to abuse human rights.
The claim comes in a report published by the Control Arms Campaign - a group made up of organisations including Oxfam and Amnesty International.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3091

Halliburton Scores A Juicy New Contract
AP reports the Bush White House has just handed Halliburton a brand-new contract - worth up to $1 billion - to support U.S. troops in the Balkans.
A Halliburton spokesperson said “This decision is an endorsement of the best-in-class support that KBR provides to the U.S. military worldwide.”
Remember the last time Halliburton was given a contract in the Balkans?

http://thinkprogress.org/2005/06/22/halliburton-scores-a-juicy-new-contract/

Reporters Press McClellan on Secret CIA Report on Iraq
By E&P Staff /
Editor & Publisher
NEW YORK At the daily White House press briefing Wednesday, reporters raised with Press Secretary Scott McClellan a bombshell story from Iraq carried earlier Wednesday in The New York Times and wire services, based on a CIA report. Essentially, the questions at the White House boiled down to: Has the invasion and occupation of Iraq actually created more terrorists than it has crushed, and also given them much-needed experience in killing Americans and others?

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=3097

continued . . .

June 21, 2005. Colorado Springs, Colorado. When the hail started to fall in Colorado there was no place for the melting ice to runoff. The ice blocked drain sewers and house gutters after they were knocked loose from the house. So what accompanied not only a foot of ice was a flood buiding as the ice melted after being exposed to summertime heat. The 'mess' of this event will be significant yet I don't recall anyone calling a state of emergency. Posted by Hello

June 21, 2005. The First Day of Summer in Danville, Virginia found Colorado was not the only area of the country with hail falling. It must have been great to be a pedestrian in this.  Posted by Hello

THIS THE REGARD THE U.S.A. has for foot traffic. Foot Traffic includes bicycles and mopeds. THE CAR. IS GOD !!! Pedestrian crosses Rte. 7 between International Drive and Old Gallows Road in Tysons Corner. (Jahi Chikwendiu - Post) Posted by Hello

This is the degree of regard the USA has of PEDESTRIANS. Shameful !! Why is it the elderly are afraid of crossing a street? Run, don't walk: Pedestrians brave the traffic to cross Route 7, which at 170 feet wide makes for a risky dash. Posted by Hello

Morning Papers - concluding

The Washington Post

There cannot be Global Warming/Climate Change measures without limiting Greenhouse Gas Emissions. This legislation skirts the issue. It is empty legislation and will never achieve standards that will stop this hideous process in any significant way. I am outraged at the insignificance the distress the people of this country endure due to Climate Change only to be 'toyed' with in this gross example of pandering to Big Oil. I wnat to hear from the Union of Concerned Scientists regarding this and the urgency to bring Greenhouse Gases under control.

Senate Rejects Greenhouse Gas Limits
By Justin Blum
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A08
The Senate yesterday rejected a measure calling for mandatory limits on emissions linked to global warming, siding with the Bush administration's position that the restrictions would cost jobs, drive industry overseas and run up consumers' energy bills.
Voting 60 to 38, lawmakers rejected an amendment to a major energy bill that would have forced reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases to 2000 levels by 2010 and created an emissions trading program. Eleven Democrats joined Republicans in opposing the measure, and six Republicans voted with the Democrats to support it.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062200465.html

Exploring Inroads for Tysons Foot Traffic
Refashioning N.Va. Hub Into a Downtown Faces a Major Roadblock: Route 7
By Peter Whoriskey
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A01
Every once in a while, someone tries to cross Route 7 in Tysons Corner on foot.
It isn't easy. At 170 feet curb to curb, the suburban strip is far wider than the Champs-Elysees in Paris, Las Ramblas in Barcelona or Fifth Avenue in New York. Worse, crosswalk and "Walk/Don't Walk" signals, which engineers say would impede traffic, are deliberately scarce.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202097.html

House GOP Offers Plan For Social Security
Bush's Private Accounts Would Be Scaled Back
By Mike Allen and Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A01
After watching the Social Security debate from the sidelines, House Republican leaders yesterday embraced a new approach to Social Security restructuring that would add individual investment accounts to the program, but on a much smaller scale than the Bush administration favors.
The new accounts would be financed by the Social Security surplus -- the amount of payroll tax revenue not needed to pay current benefits. That money is now used to fund other government activities and is expected to run out after 2016 as the baby-boom generation retires.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062200406.html

I think this is great. As a party the Deomcrat need cohesive leadership. The stand Joe Biden has taken in regard to this issue is not a matter of politics but a matter of completely the record before a vote. That is what a Chief Executive is supposed to do before submitting a nominee. Guessing is not part of the voting 'deal' and a complete record does not automatically mean approval. It can expedite the process and that is what a busy legislature is looking for from the Executive Branch. Bush/Cheney are very remiss in their responsiblities and it is reflected everywhere.

Senate Democrat Offers Pledge on Bolton Vote
By Charles Babington
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; A04
The White House renewed its insistence yesterday that the Senate confirm John R. Bolton to be U.N. ambassador, but key senators said they see no evidence of a plan to make it happen.
With the Senate having voted twice to sustain a filibuster against Bolton, the Bush administration and congressional leaders appeared to assign each other the responsibility of breaking the three-month impasse. Several senators said they do not understand why President Bush is demanding Bolton's approval without presenting a strategy for picking up the handful of needed Democrats.
"I don't see anything happening," said Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.), a Democratic leader of the Bolton fight. "I think the train has left the station" in terms of finding a compromise.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062201336_pf.html

Is there no joy in Nomination Mudville Anywhere? That's odd.

Senator May Block Successor to Defense Policy Chief Feith
By Bradley GrahamWashington Post Staff WriterThursday, June 23, 2005; Page A25
The senior Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee has warned the Pentagon that he may block the nomination of a new defense policy chief unless documents involving the departing policy head -- Douglas J. Feith -- are turned over for review.
The action by Sen. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.) threatens to hold up another important presidential appointment as lawmakers remain deadlocked with the Bush administration over the nomination of John R. Bolton as ambassador to the United Nations. That dispute, too, involves Democratic requests for documents the White House has refused to surrender.


Hillary Clinton's Swift Boaters and can the 'Swift Boaters' come up with a plan for Biden?

Hillary Clinton Attacked by Man From Mars
By Tina Brown
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page C01
Maybe it's a secret fantasy of girl-on-girl action that makes Ed Klein obsess about Sen. Hillary Clinton's supposed lesbian ethos in his new book "The Truth About Hillary." It's hard to know what else he has to draw on. Yelling "lesbian" at powerful heterosexual women has always been the pathetic projection of the menaced male, but it's especially baffling in Klein's case. As the former editor of the New York Times Magazine, with some bestsellers behind him, Klein used to be a workmanlike scribe with glamour aspirations when he was flat-footing around in the Jackie O crypto-sphere. He's not the usual sniper in the Republican stage army, which is perhaps why such paid-up members as the New York Post's John Podhoretz have elected to play smart and trash the book, too. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that misogyny is a sure boomerang.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202301.html


INTOLERANCE? THAT IS an understatement. This is unquestionable bigotry and every offender should be expelled from the academy and now.

Intolerance Found at Air Force Academy
Military Report Criticizes Religious Climate but Does Not Cite Overt Bias
By Josh White
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A02
A military study of the religious climate at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs found several examples of religious intolerance, insensitivity and inappropriate proselytizing on the part of Air Force officers and cadets, but a report issued yesterday at the Pentagon concluded that the school is not overtly discriminatory and has made improvements in recent months.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062200598.html

Car Bombs Kill Dozens in Baghdad
Shiite Neighborhoods Targeted in Coordinated Attacks Over Two Days
By Andy Mosher
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, June 23, 2005; 6:44 AM
BAGHDAD, June 23 -- Seven car bombs killed more than three dozen people in Shiite Muslim neighborhoods of Baghdad over a 10-hour span on Wednesday night and Thursday morning in what appeared to be a new attempt to inflame Iraq's sectarian divisions.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/23/AR2005062300363.html

Evangelicals Building a Base in Iraq
Newcomers Raise Worry Among Traditional Church Leaders
By Caryle Murphy
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A01
BAGHDAD -- With arms outstretched, the congregation at National Evangelical Baptist Church belted out a praise hymn backed up by drums, electric guitar and keyboard. In the corner, slide images of Jesus filled a large screen. A simple white cross of wood adorned the stage, and worshipers sprinkled the pastor's Bible-based sermon with approving shouts of "Ameen!"

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202335.html?nav=hcmodule

Progress and Struggle For Vietnam's Catholics
As Restrictions Are Eased, Membership Grows
By Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A16
YEN KHANH, Vietnam -- As organ music filled the 115-year-old Catholic church, the Rev. Joseph Tran Van Khoa faced more than 1,000 worshipers and raised his arms. The overflow crowd began to sing.
Khoa, who once studied in secret to become a priest in this communist country, beamed.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202182.html?nav=hcmodule

Pharmaceuticals in Waterways Raise Concern
Effect on Wildlife, Humans Questioned
By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 23, 2005; Page A03
Academics, state officials and environmental advocates are starting to question whether massive amounts of discarded pharmaceuticals, which are often flushed down the drain, pose a threat to the nation's aquatic life and possibly to people.
In waterways from the Potomac to the Brazos River in Texas, researchers have found fish laden with estrogen and antidepressants, and many show evidence of major neurological or physiological changes.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062201988.html?nav=hcmodule

Feds Target Pot Dispensaries in California
By DON THOMPSON
The Associated Press
Wednesday, June 22, 2005; 11:27 PM
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Federal drug agents launched a crackdown on medical marijuana providers in California Wednesday, raiding more than 20 dispensaries and charging two people.
In San Francisco, drug agents searched three pot clubs and more than 20 homes and businesses, capping a two-year investigation into an alleged marijuana trafficking ring. Officials would not say how many people were arrested or give other details, pending a news conference Thursday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202461.html?nav=hcmodule

Unwanted pregnancies

Refugees-Kenya:Contraceptives - Both Needed And Scorned
Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)
June 20, 2005
Posted to the web June 20, 2005
Joyce Mulama
Nairobi
As the international community marks World Refugee Day, a Somali woman's tale of how she helped fellow refugees terminate pregnancies has highlighted the shortcomings of reproductive health care in refugee camps.
Mariam*, who lived at the Dadaab camp in northern Kenya from 1992 to 1998, discreetly performed abortions on girls and women.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200506201056.html
June 8, 2005
New Law Will Regulate Birthing Centers
May 31, 2005, 01:04 PM
(Muncie) -- A new law requires private birthing centers to be inspected and regulated by the Indiana State Health Department. Supporters say the law will give women with low-risk pregnancies more options for natural births.

http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=3411932&nav=0Ra7aTxe

New law requires inspection, regulation of birthing centers
Nurse midwives say it will show the public the facilities are safe.
From The Associated Press
MUNCIE — A new state law that requires private birthing centers to be inspected and regulated by state health officials could give women with low-risk pregnancies more options for natural births.
Certified nurse midwife Barb Bechtel said the law that takes effect July 1 will help her stay in business. She owns Indiana’s only free- standing birthing centers — Expectations Women’s Health and Child Bearing Center in Muncie and Nurse Midwives of Indianapolis.

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/fortwayne/news/local/11788589.htm

Wash. Times editorial mischaracterized Virginia "partial-birth" abortion law ruled unconstitutional

A June 7 Washington Times
editorial decried a ruling in the case of Richmond Medical Center v. Hicks, in which the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down a Virginia "partial-birth" abortion statute. The Times mischaracterized the content of the statute to emphasize supposed differences between it and a Nebraska "partial-birth" abortion law that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional in 2000. Though the Times claimed the Nebraska and Virginia statutes are dissimilar, they are in reality quite alike, and both were ruled unconstitutional for the same reason -- they failed to include an exception that permits the banned procedure when it is necessary to preserve the health of the pregnant woman.

http://mediamatters.org/items/200506080005

Infanticide in Virginia
What happens when a court constitutionalizes infanticide? We ask the question because a federal appeals court in Virginia appears to have done just that.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20050606-101058-5934r.htm

Morons in the News: Man gets life for giving girlfriend back-alley abortion
Posted by Frankie on Jun. 08, 2005
(18
comments from readers)
This happened in Texas. Surprise, surprise.
Go Orwell!
Students for an Orwellian Society, working to bring about the realization of Ingsoc, because 2005 is 21 years too late.
As reported in the U.K. Guardian:
17-year-old Erica Basoria was 4 months pregnant with twins, and regretted not getting an abortion when she could. So, when jogging and punching her own stomach didn't end the pregnancy, she asked her 19-year-old boyfriend (and father of the twins), Gerardo Flores, to step on her stomach while she kept hitting it.

http://web.morons.org/article.jsp?sectionid=1&id=6310

'Pro-voice' abortion counseling
Oakland talk line helps women deal with their decision after it's done
By Rebecca Vesely, STAFF WRITER
Nine months after having an abortion, Monica Lois began feeling intense grief.
A supporter of abortion rights, she didn't regret her decision to terminate her pregnancy when she was 25, but she found herself crying a lot. She was so distraught she nearly dropped out of California State University, East Bay, where she was getting her bachelor's
degree.
"Once these feelings started surfacing, I didn't know what to do with myself," Lois said. "I basically had a nervous breakdown."
Through the Internet, she found Exhale, an Oakland-based free talk line for women who have had abortions, and their partners. She called and spoke to a peer counselor.

http://www.insidebayarea.com/argus/localnews/ci_2792235

On your own: Freedom can backfire if you don't keep these things in mind
From Staff and Wire Reports
Ah, the freedom.
You can stay up until 4 a.m., eat pizza at every meal and buy what you want at the mall. You're out of the house, on your own and have the power to control your own destiny.
For some, the sudden independence after high school can be dizzying.
"It's a little bit of both excitement and nervousness," said Jeremy Babers. Babers is a graduating Fair Park High School senior who is heading to Loyola University in New Orleans in the fall. "I'm 18 years old now and have been in Shreveport all my life. So, I'm ready to experience new things. After 18 years, it's time. But at the same time, I'm kind of a momma's boy and I want to be close to home."

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050520/LIVING/505200301/1004

COMMENTARY: Celebrate the benefits of birth control
By JANET KUSCH La Crosse
.
June 7 marked the 40th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision in Griswold vs. Connecticut 1965, in which the court recognized the constitutional right of married couples to use contraception.
This anniversary gives pause to reflect on how access to contraception has benefited all. The National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association describe the following:
n The ability of women to control their fertility and avoid unintended pregnancy has led to a dramatic decline in maternal and infant mortality rates and has improved infant and maternal health.
In 1965, there were 31.6 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, in 2000, there were 9.8 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.
In 1965, 24.7 infants under one year died per 100,000 live births; in 2003 this figure has declined to 7 infant deaths per 100,000 live births.
n The ability for women to control their fertility has enabled them to achieve personal educational and professional goals critical to the nation's economic success. In 1965, 7 percent of women completed four or more years of college compared to 26 percent in 2004. In 1965, women age 16 and over constituted 39 percent of the work force compared to 59 percent in 2004. Since 1975, the number of women physicians has nearly tripled, from 9 percent to 25 percent and women are expected to account for more than one third of the medical work force by 2010.

http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2005/06/14/opinion/02commentary14.txt

Does Atkins Hinder Birth Control?
June 14, 2005
Dear eDiets:
Will the Atkins Nutritional Approach interfere with the effectiveness of birth control pills or will the pills hinder success on Atkins?
-- Name Withheld
There has been no research to evaluate the effect of any weight loss program on the efficacy of oral contraceptives. However, because birth control pills contain estrogen, they may impact your ability to lose weight on Atkins. Estrogen causes more fat to be stored in your tissues rather than being burned as energy. This increases insulin resistance, making weight loss more difficult.

http://www.ediets.com/news/article.cfm?cmi=1200548&cid=28

Birth Control Notification Bill Offers 5-Day Alert to Parents
(CNSNews.com) - Minors would have to provide their parents with five days notice before they could receive birth control drugs or devices at federally subsidized clinics, under terms of legislation introduced Tuesday by two congressional conservatives.
A top abortion rights advocate fired back, calling the bill's sponsors "anti-birth control zealots," who were just trying to "score points with the radical right."
U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, (R-Okla.), who is also a practicing obstetrician/gynecologist; and U.S. Rep. Todd Akin, (R-Mo.) are sponsors of the Parents Right to Know Act, which would affect Title X clinics that provide family planning services to low income individuals.

http://www.townhall.com/news/politics/200506/POL20050622a.shtml

When moms don't want babies, Safe Haven does
Posted: 06/20/2005 03:32 pm
Last Updated: 06/20/2005 05:07 pm
Indiana - An Indiana group that helps women with unwanted pregnancies wants to bring more attention to the state's Safe Haven Law.
The law allows women to drop off their newborn at a designated Safe Haven site but the Newborn Lifeline Network says the law may not have saved a single infant's life since it took effect.
It's been a law for five years in Indiana.
At least 15 Indiana newborns have been abandoned, injured or killed by their mothers since July 2000.

http://www.wndu.com/news/062005/news_42970.php

Assembly Passes Ban on Morning After Pill in Wisconsin
June 20, 2005 9:11 a.m. EST
Christina Ficara - All Headline News Staff Reporter
WASHINGTON (AHN) -A new bill bassed by the State Assembly, Thursday, could make Wisconsin the first state to ban the distribution of the morning-after pill on state college campuses. If it continues to approval by the state Senate, the restriction will be the first of its kind in the U.S.

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/cgi-bin/news/newsbrief.plx?id=2238546208&fa=1

Taking Aim at Student Sex

This should stop them from having sex.

The Wisconsin Assembly approved a
bill last week that would bar student health centers on all University of Wisconsin campuses from advertising, prescribing or dispensing an emergency contraception pill. The “morning after” pill, which is designed for women to take when condoms break or other forms of birth control somehow fail, provides a very high dose of progestin that prevents ovulation or fertilization, effectively ending any possibility of a pregnancy.

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/20/morning

NOBODY IS AKSING FOR his approval. If he is unable to help women who want a quality of life as they see then he should consider himself a man who victimizes women and not help them !!

Anti-abortion doctor, FDA adviser, stands firm in political storm

BY SARAH VOS
Knight Ridder Newspapers

LEXINGTON, Ky. - (KRT) - Until Dr. W. David Hager performed his first and only abortion, he believed that women had the right to choose.
But as he watched fetal tissue from a first-trimester pregnancy pass through a plastic tube sometime around January 1973, his views changed...

The doctor's role in helping to convince the FDA to reject a proposal to make Plan B, an emergency contraceptive, available over the counter and an allegation from his ex-wife that he sexually abused her during their marriage have put him at center stage in an ongoing political tug of war. Hager says the allegations of abuse are false and that an article in The Nation that publicized them was incomplete.

"He's been a target," said David Stevens, executive director of the Christian Medical Association, who has known Hager since college. "He's become the poster boy for the other side."

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/nation/11939335.htm

The Case Against Abstinence-Only Sex Education

'I started seeing girls my age getting pregnant, getting STDs,' says a former chastity pledger who advocates broader sex ed.
Interview with Shelby Knox

Shelby Knox grew up a Southern Baptist in the conservative town of Lubbock, Texas. Now almost 19, she is the subject of a P.O.V. documentary
The Education of Shelby Knox, which chronicles the controversy over sex education in her district's public schools.
When you were 15, you pledged abstinence in a
True Love Waits ceremony. When it comes to premarital sex and marriage, what do you want in terms of your own life?

For me, I think that when I find the person that I want to have sex with, I will, whether it’s before our wedding night or... the important thing is I have the education to protect myself.

http://www.beliefnet.com/story/168/story_16871_1.html

Half of young Americans to get sex diseases

Half of all young Americans will get a sexually transmitted disease by the age of 25, perhaps because they are ignorant about protection or embarrassed to ask for it, according to several reports. The reports, issued on Tuesday publicised by two non-profit sexual and youth health groups, said there were 9 million new cases of STD among teens and young adults aged 15 to 24 in 2000.

They said the U.S. government's policy of preferring abstinence-only education would only increase those rates.
"For the 27 million young Americans under the age of 25 who have had sex, the stakes are simply too high to talk only about abstinence," James Wagoner, president of Advocates for Youth, said in a statement.

"Given the prevalence of STDs, young people need all the facts -- including medically accurate information on condoms."
The reports, released jointly by Advocates for Youth -- a non-profit group advocating for sex education, and the sexual health-oriented Alan Guttmacher Institute, pull together information from several different publications.

They include a Centres for Disease Control and Prevention report in the latest issue of the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, and a University of North Carolina report based on interviews with teens and young adults.

"Approximately 18.9 million new cases of STD occurred in 2000, of which 9.1 million (48 percent) were among persons aged 15 to 24," the CDC report reads.

It said three diseases -- human papillomavirus or genital wart virus, a parasitic infection called trichomoniasis and chlamydia -- accounted for 88 percent of all new cases of STDs in 15- to 24-year-olds. Wart virus is the major cause of cervical cancer while chlamydia can cause infertility.

http://webnewswire.com/article436941.html

The New Zealand Herald

Whale burger on menu at Japanese fast food chain

23.06.05 4.00pm

TOKYO - With Japan under fire for plans to expand its whaling programme, a fast food chain is offering a new product aimed at using up stocks from past hunts -- whale burger.
The $4.94 (380 yen) slice of fried Minke whale in a bun went on sale on Thursday at Lucky Pierrot, a restaurant chain in the port city of Hakodate on Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332327

Japan rebuked over plan to kill more whales
NZ conservation minister Chris Carter (left) and Japanese delegate Joji Morishita at the IWC meeting. Pictures / Reuters
23.06.05 7.30am

ULSAN, South Korea - Japan's whaling ambitions were dealt a symbolic blow last night when the International Whaling Commission voted to urge Tokyo to cut its so-called "scientific research" whaling.
Although the vote puts more political pressure on Japan, it will be still able to expand its whaling as the "research" project is not regulated by commission rules. Critics say Japan's programme is a commercial hunt dressed up as data collection.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332251

Spain's senate rejects gay marriage law
23.06.05 12.20pm

MADRID - The upper house of Spain's parliament voted against a government proposal to legalise gay marriage, but the legislation remains likely to be made law despite outcry from Catholics.
The Senate defeated the bill when legislators from a Catalan Christian Democrat party joined the centre-right opposition Popular Party in opposing it.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332292

Spain arrests 186 in child pornography crackdown
23.06.05

MADRID - Spanish police have arrested 186 people throughout the country in a crackdown on the distribution of child pornography, the Interior Ministry said yesterday.
In two parallel operations, 650 officers searched 188 homes and found evidence of child pornography distribution across the Internet using "peer-to-peer" (P2P) software and a system of passwords.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332249

Australian Deputy PM quits, triggering government reshuffle
Trade Minister Mark Vaile is to become Australia's Deputy Prime Minister. Picture / Reuters
23.06.05 5.55pm

CANBERRA - Australian Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson resigned today, saying he had a prostate problem and had lost his passion for politics, forcing a reshuffle of the conservative government's senior ministries.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332335

White House won't criticise Israel assassinations
23.06.05 4.20pm

WASHINGTON - The White House declined to criticise Israel for resuming an assassination policy against Islamic Jihad militants and called on the Palestinian leadership to do more to combat "terrorist" groups attempting to derail peace efforts.
In a sign that a truce with Palestinians has deteriorated significantly, Israel has now resumed the policy of "targeted assassination" of militants it shelved in February.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332331

Hundreds of thousands flee as floods kill 80 in China
23.06.05 4.00pm

BEIJING - Heavy flooding across south China has killed 80 people, left 38 missing and forced almost 700,000 to evacuate their homes, the China Daily said.
And the worst may be to come with torrential rain forecast to pound south and Southeast China at least until the end of the week.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332329

Harassed Chinese protester fighting 'state machine'
Chen Yonglin is chasing political asylum. Picture / Reuters
23.06.05
By Nick Squires

SYDNEY - Chin Jin is a marked man. His home telephone is tapped, his mobile is monitored, and his computer is routinely hacked into and bombarded with strange viruses.
The harassment reached a peak three months ago when Chin, 48, who lives in Sydney, was organising a conference on promoting democracy in China.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332160

Kim tried to reach Bush over N-policy
23.06.05

WASHINGTON - North Korean leader Kim Jong Il attempted to engage President George W. Bush directly on the nuclear weapons issue three years ago but the Administration spurned the overture, say two American experts on Asia.
Writing in the Washington Post, former United States Ambassador to South Korea Donald Gregg and former journalist Don Oberdorfer expressed concern that Kim's November 2002 initiative was never pursued and urged Bush to respond positively to the overture Kim made last week.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332222

S spyplane crashes after Afghan mission
23.06.05 1.20pm

WASHINGTON - The pilot of a US Air Force U-2 spyplane was killed when the plane crashed in Southwest Asia after a reconnaissance mission over Afghanistan, the US military said.
"The aircraft had completed its mission and was returning to base when the crash occurred," Air Force Capt. David Small, a spokesman for the US Central Command Air Forces, or CENTAF, said by telephone from the Gulf region.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332303

Gunfire erupts as new Haiti ministers take office
23.06.05 2.20pm

HAITI - Heavy gunfire erupted near Haiti's presidential palace as interim president Boniface Alexandre delivered a speech at a ceremony to appoint four new cabinet members.
It was not clear if the gunmen fired directly on the palace, but the gunshots created panic outside the building in Port-au-Prince.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332309

Berlusconi's playboy quip irks Finland
23.06.05 3.20pm

ROME - Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi found himself in the diplomatic doghouse after saying he charmed Finland's woman president into giving up a bid to site the EU's new food agency there in favour of Italy.
"Our ambassador to Helsinki was called to (Finland's) Foreign Ministry," Italy's Foreign Ministry said, adding it appeared "tied to" Berlusconi's comments about the president.
The 68-year-old billionaire prime minister, who once worked as a cruise ship crooner, said on Tuesday he had persuaded Finnish President Tarja Halonen to give up her country's offer to site the European Union's new food safety agency there.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332287

Costs force closure of vaccine lab
23.06.05

Norway is closing the laboratories that did the work on which New Zealand's meningococcal B vaccine is based.
The Norwegian Institute of Public Health's internationally respected vaccine research group has been axed because it is too expensive to run.
The group developed the vaccine which has been used as the basis for New Zealand's $200 million immunisation programme.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10332148

concluding ...