Friday, September 30, 2005


The Rooster Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - It's Origins

Rooster “Crowing”

“Okeydoke”

History


1791 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart conducts the premiere of his singspeil The Magic Flute, just over two months before his death.

1921 Outfielder Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees hits his 60th home run of the season, breaking his own record and setting a mark that would last until 1961.

1946 Following World War II, the International Military Tribunal in Nürnberg, Germany, sentences 11 leaders of Nazi Germany, including Field Marshal Hermann Göring, to death for crimes during the war.

1949 The Berlin airlift, caused by the Soviet blockade of overland traffic to West Berlin, ends after more than 277,000 flights from Western nations, which supplied the city with food and fuel for nearly 11 months.

1955 Actor James Dean dies at the age of 24 in an automobile accident in California, having starred in only three motion pictures.

1972 Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Roberto Clemente collects the 3,000th and final hit of his career, three months before dying in a plane crash while on an earthquake relief mission.

Missing in Action

1965
CHESNUTT CHAMBLESS M. LITTLE ROCK AR PROB DEAD REMAINS RECOVERED 03/20/85
1965
CHWAN MICHAEL DANIEL BAYONE NJ PROB DEAD REMAINS RECOVERED 03/20/85
1965
KILLIAN MELVIN JOSEPH COUNCIL BLUFFS IA PROB DEAD REMAINS RECOVERED 03/20/85
1968
FIESZEL CLIFFORD W. LUBBOCK TX
1968
SMITH HOWARD H. OKLAHOMA CITY OK
1968
SPINELLI DOMENICK A. OAK HARBOR WA LISTED ON THE WALL AS OHIO
1968
VAN RENSELAAR LARRY J. LAS VEGAS NV COMPLETE REMAINS RETURNED 1989 FAMILY ACCEPTS 7/90
1971
BOND RONALD L. HADDONFIELD NJ
1971
DONOVAN MICHAEL L. NORTON KS

The Sydney Morning Herald

Climate change warning - this time it's personal
By Wendy Frew Environment Reporter
October 1, 2005
Eastern suburbs residents will be the first to be warned of how climate change threatens every aspect of their lives in what could be the largest environment campaign in decades.
In a project they hope to take nationwide at a cost of up to $2 million a year, Australia's main environment groups will next week start door-knocking in Sydney's east to talk about what predicted climate changes could mean for beaches and parks, health and hip pockets.
Supported by Greenpeace, WWF Australia, Climate Action Network Australia, the Nature Conservation Council of NSW and Environment Victoria, the Power to Change campaign will also include mail drops, street stalls and public meetings.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/climate-change-warning--this-time-its-personal/2005/09/30/1127804662703.html


Michael Moore Today

DeLay Faces Tough Road Back to Top
Indictment, Ethics Questions, Abramoff Case Are Obstacles
By Dan Balz /
Washington Post
For the first time in more than a decade, Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) arrived at work yesterday without a leadership title attached to his name. Sidelined from his post as majority leader by a criminal indictment in Texas, the man who accumulated extraordinary power on his way up the ladder faces a difficult and uncertain road back to those heights.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4332


SEC Opens Full Probe Into Frist Stock Sale
By Jonathan M. Katz /
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - While insiders at HCA Inc. (HCA) were selling millions of dollars of their own stock this year, they were also painting a sunny picture of the company's outlook for investors. Federal prosecutors and the Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating the sale of HCA stock by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., whose family founded the company that grew into the nation's largest for-profit health care chain.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4322


Condoleezza Rice: Civil Rights Struggle Didn't Affect Me
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Most people who were alive at the time would tell you they had a lot of feelings during the civil rights era. But not Condoleezza Rice.
The secretary of state said she was too young and too busy to feel much of an effect from the massive social changes during the 1960s. Rice said she was only 12 or 13 and that all she did "was play the piano and ice skate."
Rice said because of that, she didn't focus much on what she now calls "the counterculture."
Rice didn't give up a whole lot during the interview with Fox News Channel. Asked if she ever did drugs -- Rice didn't answer, urging her interviewer to go back to questions about foreign policy.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4341


Pentagon still not reimbursing troops who buy own body armor
By Lolita C. Baldor /
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Nearly a year after Congress demanded action, the Pentagon still hasn't figured out a way to reimburse U.S. troops for body armor and equipment they purchased to better protect themselves while serving in Iraq.
For Marine Sgt. Todd Bowers that extra equipment — a high-tech rifle scope bought by his father for $600 and a $100 pair of goggles — turned out to be a life-or-death purchase. And he has never been reimbursed.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4340


A Look at U.S. Military Deaths in Iraq
By The Associated Press Thu Sep 29, 8:23 PM ET
As of Thursday, Sept. 29, 2005, at least 1,933 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the
Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. At least 1,499 died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers. The figures include five military civilians.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/iraq_us_deaths


HUD chief foresees a 'whiter' Big Easy
By Brian DeBose /
Washington Times
A Bush Cabinet officer predicted this week that New Orleans likely will never again be a majority black city, and several black officials are outraged.
Alphonso R. Jackson, secretary of housing and urban development, during a visit with hurricane victims in Houston, said New Orleans would not reach its pre-Katrina population of "500,000 people for a long time," and "it's not going to be as black as it was for a long time, if ever again."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4349


Ex-secretary asked to apologize for linking crime, blacks
WASHINGTON (
AP) - The White House on Friday criticized former Education Secretary William Bennett for remarks linking the crime rate and the abortion of black babies.
"The president believes the comments were not appropriate," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said.
Bennett, on his radio show, Morning in America, was answering a caller's question when he took issue with the hypothesis put forth in a recent book that one reason crime is down is that abortion is up.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4348


Others deny DeLay didn't get chance to tell his side
By Janet Elliott /
Associated Press
AUSTIN - The day after U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay's grand jury indictment, his lawyer and the jury foreman on Thursday appeared to contradict the Texas politician's assertions that he was not given a chance to speak before the jury.
The foreman, William M. Gibson Jr., a retired state insurance investigator, said the Travis County grand jury waited until Wednesday, the final day of its term, to indict him because it was hoping he would accept jurors' invitation to testify.
DeLay said in interviews that the grand jury never asked him to testify.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4347


Uzbeks Stop Working With U.S. Against Terrorism
By Robin Wright /
Washington Post
After cutting off U.S. access to a key military base, Uzbekistan has also quietly terminated cooperation with Washington on counterterrorism, a move that could affect both countries' ability to deal with al Qaeda and its allies in Central Asia and neighboring Afghanistan, U.S. officials said.
The government of President Islam Karimov, one of the most authoritarian to emerge from the collapse of the Soviet Union, has made a broader strategic decision to move away from the 2002 agreement made with President Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and is cooling relations with Europe as well, the officials said.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4342


Housing for Storm's Evacuees Lagging Far Behind U.S. Goals
By Eric Lipton and Leslie Eaton /
New York Times
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 - After Hurricane Katrina left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, the Federal Emergency Management Agency signed contracts for more than $2 billion in temporary housing, including more than 120,000 trailers and mobile homes. But the agency has placed just 109 Louisiana families in those homes.
A month after the disaster, the federal government's temporary housing effort is stumbling.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/index.php?id=4336


The Seattle Post Intelligencer

Hurricane Otis strengthens, nears Baja
By IGNACIO MARTINEZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico -- Newly formed Hurricane Otis swept toward a sparsely populated stretch of Baja California on Friday, forcing dozens of people to evacuate low-lying neighborhoods in this western resort city.
Mayor Luis Armando Diaz led a contingent of police officers going door to door and asking residents to leave the outskirts of Cabo San Lucas, where many poor families live in flimsy shacks.
Only a few dozen people had left their homes, but authorities hoped to move out as many as 1,000 by late evening. Five shelters were opened.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/aplatin_story.asp?category=1102&slug=Mexico%20Hurricane%20Otis


Three die in medical helicopter crash
By ELIZABETH M. GILLESPIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
SEATTLE -- The pilot and two nurses aboard a medical transport helicopter were killed when the aircraft crashed into Puget Sound north of Seattle on a flight back to its base, authorities said Friday.
Remains of the three people were found Friday in the large debris field left by the Agusta A109/Mark II twin-engine helicopter when it plunged Thursday night into the sound off Edmonds, about eight miles north of here, said Airlift Northwest, the operator of the aircraft. No patient was aboard the helicopter.
The cause of the crash was not immediately known, authorities said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/aplocal_story.asp?category=6420&slug=WA%20Helicopter%20Crash


Judge gives feds deadline for salmon plan
By BRAD CAIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A federal judge Friday gave federal agencies one year to come up with a new plan to keep threatened and endangered salmon from getting killed by the government's hydroelectric dams on the Snake and Columbia rivers.
Federal officials had asked for two years. But U.S. District Judge James Redden went along with the one-year timetable sought by environmentalists, Indian tribes and fishermen.
"We're running out of time," the judge said. "This time we're going to do it."
Salmon are dwindling in the Columbia Basin because of the combined effects

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apus_story.asp?category=1110&slug=Salmon%20Dams


Statues of ancient goddesses discovered
By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ATHENS, Greece -- The life-sized marble statues of two ancient Greek goddesses have emerged during excavations of a 5,000-year-old town on the island of Crete, archaeologists said Friday.
The works, representing the goddesses Athena and Hera, date to between the second and fourth centuries - during the period of Roman rule in Greece - and originally decorated the Roman theater in the town of Gortyn, archaeologist Anna Micheli from the Italian School of Archaeology told The Associated Press.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apscience_story.asp?category=1501&slug=Greece%20Ancient%20Statues


U.S. millionaire prepares for blastoff
By MIKE ECKEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
U.S. astronaut William McArthur, center, Russian cosmonaut Valery Tokarev, right, and U.S. space tourist Gregory Olsen, left, wave after a news conference at Baikonur Cosmodrome, Friday, Sept. 30, 2005. The next U.S.-Russian space crew, including U.S. space tourist Gregory Olsen, will blast off to the International Space Station on Saturday, Oct. 1. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)
BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan -- U.S millionaire scientist Gregory Olsen, the world's third space tourist, bid farewell to his family Friday during final preparations for his flight to the international space station with a Russian-American crew.
The 60-year-old founder of an infrared-camera maker based in Princeton, N.J., reportedly paid $20 million for a seat on the Expedition 12 flight.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apscience_story.asp?category=1501&slug=Russia%20Space


Ranchers still waiting for disaster cash
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON -- Livestock producers around the country are still waiting for agricultural disaster payments Congress approved a year ago to help them deal with an ongoing drought.
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., and other senators are pressuring the Department of Agriculture to distribute money that Congress appropriated in an October 2004 spending bill. Baucus, who met with Deputy Agriculture Secretary Chuck Conner Friday to discuss the issue, said that only 13 percent of the checks have been distributed to qualified producers.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apus_story.asp?category=1110&slug=Livestock%20Drought


Ky. governor'ss ex-chief of staff charged
By MARK R. CHELLGREN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
FRANKFORT, Ky. -- A special grand jury examining alleged political hiring by Gov. Ernie Fletcher's administration on Friday indicted his former chief of staff and a representative of his local outreach office.
Daniel Groves, who resigned as chief of staff in the past month, and Vince Fields were each charged with three counts of violating state personnel laws to fill state jobs with Republicans.
The grand jury previously charged nine current and former members of Fletcher's administration, including high-ranking officials and the chairman of the state Republican Party.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apus_story.asp?category=1110&slug=Kentucky%20Politics


American accused in Afghan worker's death
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
KABUL, Afghanistan -- Guards for a U.S. security firm obstructed an investigation into whether one of its supervisors fatally shot his Afghan interpreter, an Afghan police chief said Friday.
Noor Ahmad, 37, was shot in the head Tuesday at the compound of his employer, U.S. Protection and Investigations, at Tut village in Farah province's Gulistan district, police and provincial officials said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apasia_story.asp?category=1104&slug=Afghan%20Shooting


U.S. views on North Korea prevail at U.N.
By GEORGE JAHN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
VIENNA, Austria -- The U.N. atomic watchdog agency took North Korea to task Friday for breaching the nuclear arms control treaty but welcomed its pledge to give up atomic weapons in a resolution that highlights U.S. priorities for future talks with Pyongyang.
China refrained from co-sponsoring the text in a reflection of its displeasure with a text focusing on Washington's priorities. Still, diplomats noted that the resolution was submitted to the 139-nation International Atomic Energy Agency's General Assembly only after Beijing indirectly signed off on it.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apasia_story.asp?category=1104&slug=Nuclear%20Agency%20NKorea


North Korean workers speak about nukes
By BURT HERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
DIAMOND MOUNTAIN, North Korea -- Parroting the official stance of their government, North Korean workers at this tourist resort insist their country should not give up its nuclear weapons until after it gets something from the United States.
The comments this week by North Korean workers at the Diamond Mountain tourist enclave, which South Koreans and foreigners can freely visit, embody the wide gap in perspective that remains between the North and the United States despite a breakthrough Sept. 19 agreement at six-nation arms talks in Beijing.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apasia_story.asp?category=1104&slug=NKorea%20Nuclear


Bush is imposing other religions on Saudi Arabia? What? Where does he get the nerve? That is not the USA. It's a sovereign nation. This is an outrage. Bush imposes religious standards but not child labor laws or environmental standards. Oh, my God.

Bush delays action against Saudi Arabia
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration has postponed punishing Saudi Arabia for restricting religious freedom, giving the U.S. ally six more months to show it has made progress in its treatment of religious minorities.
One year ago, the State Department declared that religious freedom was absent in the Arab kingdom. Under U.S. law, the Bush administration could have imposed sanctions such as trade restrictions - as it has done with some other countries.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apmideast_story.asp?category=1107&slug=Religious%20Freedom


Poll: Most New Yorkers would back Hillary
By MARC HUMBERT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ALBANY, N.Y. -- Over half of New York voters say they definitely will vote to re-elect Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton next year, and she holds big leads over all her potential Republican rivals, according to statewide poll released Friday.
The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion poll also found that a narrow majority of the state's voters do not want the former first lady to run for president in 2008.
The poll found 52 percent of registered voters said they would definitely vote to re-elect Clinton, while 32 percent said they would definitely vote against her.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apelection_story.asp?category=1132&slug=New%20York%20Senate


Mayor: NYC has flawed security structure
By SARA KUGLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
NEW YORK -- Mayor Michael Bloomberg wants the New York Police Department to take control of the city's bridges, tunnels and airports during disasters, saying Thursday the current multi-agency command structure is "backward."
Bloomberg said the NYPD is "the agency generally recognized as the most sophisticated counterterrorism force in the world," and should be calling the shots if a catastrophe strikes any of those targets.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apelection_story.asp?category=1135&slug=Mayor%27s%20Race%20Security


Russian ammo dump fire prompts evacuation
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSCOW -- A fire at a navy ammunition depot caused artillery shells to explode, forcing the evacuation of thousands in a remote eastern region Saturday, officials said.
Some 4,000 residents from five towns in the region of Kamchatka had to leave their homes, news agencies reported, quoting the local Emergency Situations Ministry.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apeurope_story.asp?category=1103&slug=Russia%20Ammo%20Fire


Rwandan pleads innocent to genocide charge
By SUKHDEV CHHATBAR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Rwanda genocide accused, Joseph Serugendo, right, talks to his lawyer Charles .Maruma, centre, and Consta Hometow, a court official, left, on Friday Sept. 30, 2005, before he pleaded innocent at the UN Court in Arusha,Tanzania. Joseph Serugendo, who was arrested in Libreville, Gabon on Sept. 16, who according to Prosecutor William Egbe was a key leader of the Interahamwe militia, an extremist Hutu force that led the genocide. No date has been set for Serugendo's trial.(AP Photo/ Sukhdev Chattbar)
ARUSHA, Tanzania -- A former technical director at a radio station that promoted Rwanda's 1994 genocide pleaded innocent Friday to five counts of genocide and crimes against humanity at the U.N. tribunal trying accused masterminds of the 100-day slaughter.
Joseph Serugendo, who was arrested in Libreville, Gabon, on Sept. 16, was also a leader of the Interahamwe militia, an extremist Hutu force that led the genocide, prosecutor William Egbe said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apafrica_story.asp?category=1105&slug=Rwanda%20UN%20Tribunal


U.S. insists no plans to invade Venezuela
By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
CARACAS, Venezuela -- The United States is not planning to invade Venezuela, the U.S. ambassador to Venezuela said Thursday, disputing claims by President Hugo Chavez.
Chavez has said his government has documents showing Washington has a "Plan Balboa" to invade his oil-producing countrywide with aircraft carriers and planes. He said Venezuela is preparing to repel any attack.
"No 'Plan Balboa' exists," Ambassador William Brownfield said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/aplatin_story.asp?category=1102&slug=Venezuela%20US


Eight dead, 12 missing in Amazon shipwreck
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A passenger boat arrives with survivors of a shipwreck on the Amazon River to Itacoatiara, in the Brazilian Amazon, on Friday, Sept. 30, 2005. An Amazon River passenger ship crashed into two barges and sank, leaving at least eight people dead and a dozen missing, Brazilian authorities said Friday. (AP Photo/Chico Batata, Diario do Amazonas)
SAO PAULO, Brazil -- An Amazon River passenger ship crashed into two barges and sank, leaving at least eight people dead and a dozen missing, Brazilian authorities said Friday.
The wooden ship was traveling on a remote stretch of the Amazon late Thursday night when it collided with the barges carrying commercial trucks, said Capt. Edlander Santos of the Brazilian navy. The ship was en route to the jungle city of Manaus, 1,700 miles northwest of Sao Paulo.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/aplatin_story.asp?category=1102&slug=Brazil%20Amazon%20Shipwreck

continued …

August 18. 2005. There was some attempt in August to fight the Idaho fires. Don't ask me why they just gave up to go to the Gulf Coast. Someone needs to put this into perspective. Posted by Picasa

September 30, 2005. Judith Miller and Arthur O. Sulzberger. Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - continued ...

Jerusalem Post

For a new Israeli common ground
By
YEHUDA GILAD
The disengagement from the Gaza Strip and northern Samaria initiated by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon exposed and exacerbated a deep schism in Israeli society. Nonetheless, if each side of this argument can employ the necessary responsibility and fairness to confront the heart of its own argument in the eye of the storm, and draw the necessary conclusions, there may be hope yet for renewed unity in Israel.
The disengagement plan sprang from the realization that the two elemental concepts touted by the Israeli right and left wing for the past few decades no longer hold water. The Left thought that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could be solved in our generation through a land-for-peace deal. At the same time, the Right's conviction that the popular Palestinian uprising could be suppressed by employing just a little more force, thereby enabling Israel to continue to rule over Judea, Samaria and Gaza, was also proven incorrect.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1127874074854


Peres: Labor will "have a hard time" supporting budget
By
GIL HOFFMAN, DANIEL KENNEMER AND JPOST.COM STAFF
As debate over support for this year's budget vote escalated, Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres warned that if the budget remained in its current format – designed by former finance minister Benyamin Netanyahu – Labor would "have a hard time" supporting it.
Peres is expected to meet Sunday with acting Finance Minister Ehud Olmert in order to discuss possible changes to the budget prior to the opening of the upcoming Knesset session.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1128046763326

Sharon pledges to concentrate on economy, society
By
DANIEL KENNEMER
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon intends to "concentrate special efforts" on the country's socio-economic issues in the coming years, he told the annual assembly of Israeli managers Thursday.
"Economic inequality in our country has been increasing for many years, and we are committed to addressing this. The government will dedicate great efforts to the struggle against poverty and to narrowing social disparities," he said, adding that "we have dedicated much funding to this in the 2006 budget."

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1127987659888


Riot victims' families to sue state for compensation
By
DAN IZENBERG AND JPOST STAFF
The families of 11 of the 13 protesters killed in the October 2000 riots demanded half a million shekels per family from the state.
Adi Michelin, the attorney representing the victims' families, told the Arab newspaper Kol al-Arab that the suit is based on the Or commission recommendation holding the state and the police responsible for the deaths of some of the rioters, Army Radio reported.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1127874076159


UK: Israeli offensive appropriate
By
HERB KEINON
Israel's response to the recent Kassam rocket attacks on Sderot has been measured and appropriate, Kim Howells, Britain's Minister of State for the Middle East, told The Jerusalem Post, disregarding Palestinian appeals for the world to rein in the IDF.
Howells, on a three-day visit to the region, hinted in an interview Wednesday night that financial aid to the Palestinian Authority might be withheld if the PA did not seriously begin tackling the terrorism in its midst.
"The Palestinians are receiving more aid per capita than any other people on the face of the earth, and we want to see some proper response," Howells said, hinting at a decrease of economic aid if the Palestinians don't fight terror.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1127987659873


NOW. ABOUT IRAN. ISRAEL HAS NEVER BEEN KNOWN TO BE THAT DIFFICULT.


Israel: Iran may be 6 months from bomb know-how
Tue Sep 20, 2005 2:16 AM BST
By Claudia Parsons
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Iran may be as little as six months away from completing the know-how to build a nuclear bomb, Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said on Monday.
"The question is not if they are going to hold that bomb in 2009 or 2010 or 2011, the question is when they will have the full knowledge," Shalom told a meeting of U.S. Jewish community leaders in New York.
"According to our people, security and intelligence, they are very, very close. It may be only six months before they will have that full knowledge."

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-09-20T011600Z_01_WRI004534_RTRUKOC_0_UK-NUCLEAR-IRAN-ISRAEL.xml


Who will strike first, Iran or Israel?
8/31/2005 8:12:00 AM GMT

...asked about a possible Iranian attack, Mofaz said: "We will know how to defend ourselves"

Israel and Iran traded significantly escalated threats of military attacks during recent months.
The dispute between the two states over nuclear activities has escalated, with Israeli officials threatening Iran with preemptive military strike if it didn’t give up its nuclear activities on one hand, and other officials in Tehran warning of striking back strongly if the country’s nuclear facilities were attacked on the other.
Recently, Gen.

http://www.aljazeera.com/cgi-bin/review/article_full_story.asp?service_ID=9440


'Israel will act against Iran's nuke programme'
September 30, 2005 20:29 IST
If Washington and its allies do not stop Iran's
nuclear programmes by force if necessary, Israel will, three Israeli legislators visiting the United States have warned.
"Israel will not live under the threat of an Iranian nuclear bomb. We feel we are obliged to warn our friends that Israel should not be pushed into a situation where we see no other solution but to act unilaterally against Iran," said Yosef Lapid, head of the Shinui Party.

http://in.rediff.com/news/2005/sep/30israel.htm


Arab states, Iran push for denunciation of Israel as nuclear threat
VIENNA (Agencies) - Arab states along with the Islamic Republic of Iran were pushing for a denunciation of Israel as a nuclear threat to the Middle East, on the final day Friday of a week-long conference of the watchdog UN atomic agency.
"This year we hope to get a little bit more," Egyptian ambassador Ramzy Ezzeldeiin Ramzy told AFP about an Arab drive to have the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) discuss "Israeli nuclear capabilities and threat," as proposed in a resolution by Oman.
According to the Mehr News agency the Iranian ambassador to Vienna stressed that Israel is the only nuclear power in the Middle East which the IAEA should decide about it.

http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=10/1/2005&Cat=4&Num=002


New York Times

Times Reporter Free From Jail; She Will Testify
By
DAVID JOHNSTON
and DOUGLAS JEHL
Published: September 30, 2005
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 - Judith Miller, the reporter for The New York Times who has been jailed since July 6 for refusing to testify in the C.I.A. leak case, was released on Thursday from a
Virginia detention center after she and her lawyers reached an agreement with a federal prosecutor in which she would testify before a grand jury investigating the case, the publisher and executive editor of the paper said.
Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
Ms. Miller was freed after spending more than 12 weeks in jail.
Ms. Miller was freed after spending more than 12 weeks in jail, during which she refused to cooperate with the inquiry. Her decision to testify was made after she had obtained what she described as a waiver offered "voluntarily and personally" by a source who said she was no longer bound by any pledge of confidentiality she had made to him. Ms. Miller said the source had made clear that he genuinely wanted her to testify.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/politics/30COURT.html?hp


Chronology: Judith Miller and the C.I.A. Leak Inquiry
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Published: September 30, 2005
Judith Miller, the reporter for The New York Times who was released from jail on Thursday, testified today before a grand jury investigating whether or not the identity of a Central Intelligence Agency operative, Valerie Wilson, was illegally disclosed. Following is a chronology of significant dates in the investigation.
FEBRUARY 2002
Having read a Defense Intelligence Agency report suggesting that
Niger had agreed to sell yellowcake uranium to Iraq, Vice President Dick Cheney asks for the C.I.A.'s analysis. In response to Mr. Cheney's query - and to questions from State and Defense Departments - the C.I.A. convenes a meeting of experts, including Joseph C. Wilson IV, a former ambassador to Gabon. Mr. Wilson's wife, a C.I.A. operative, introduces him at the meeting before stepping out.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/politics/30cnd-chron.html


New Orleans Putting Together Panel to Guide Reconstruction
By
GARY RIVLIN
Published: September 30, 2005
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 30 -Mayor C. Ray Nagin is expected to unveil this afternoon the 16-person commission that will advise him as this stricken city begins the long slog of renewal and reconstruction.
Kevork Djansezian/Associated Press
Mayor C. Ray Nagin addressing a ceremony today in the Algiers district of New Orleans.
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Construction crews worked to repair the levee along the Industrial Canal in New Orleans, which lies on the edge of the devastated Lower Ninth Ward District.
Mr. Nagin has scheduled a news conference for 2:30 p.m. Central time inside the heavily fortified Sheraton Hotel on Canal Street, a locale thick with clean-up crews and where beefy private security personnel armed with weapons guard the single entrance that is open.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/national/nationalspecial/30cnd-orleans.html?hp


Outbreak of Violence Kills More Than a Hundred Iraqis in 2 Days
By
SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: September 30, 2005
BAGHDAD,
Iraq, Sept. 30 - A car bomb detonated today near a fruit and vegetable market in Hilla, a Shiite town south of Baghdad, killing at least eight people and wounding 41, the second strike in two days of bloodletting that has left 110 people dead.
Akram Saleh/Getty Images
A car bomb detonated near a market in southern Iraq today, killing at least eight people, the latest in a string of attacks.
The bomb was remotely detonated about 10:15 a.m., in the al-Sharia market in central Hilla and tore into a crowded area of people shopping for food. The attack was almost identical to three others that took place just 16 hours before in Balad, north of Baghdad.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/international/middleeast/30cnd-iraq.html?hp&ex=1128139200&en=d05f8ca2e9e58ccc&ei=5094&partner=homepage>

School Bus Carrying About 50 Overturns in Bronx
By
MAREK FUCHS
Published: September 30, 2005
A full-length yellow school bus with nearly 50 passengers on board overturned in the Bronx late this morning, injuring an undetermined number of children. None of the injuries were currently thought to be serious, said a New York City Fire Department spokesman, who did not know what school the students were from.
A school bus carrying about 42 children overturned on a highway in the Bronx.
It appears that all of the children were wearing seatbelts, he added, and many walked out of the tipped over bus under their own power. A car with two adults in it was also involved in the accident, which occurred near 233rd St. on the southern portion of the Major Deegan Expressway shortly after 11 a.m. The bus lay on its side near the median afterward, its back end nearly abutting the median. The cause of the accident was not yet known.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/nyregion/30cnd-bus.html?hp&ex=1128139200&en=7e0cc00c5f638f17&ei=5094&partner=homepage


Housing for Storm's Evacuees Lagging Far Behind U.S. Goals
By
ERIC LIPTON and LESLIE EATON
Published: September 30, 2005
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 - After Hurricane Katrina left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, the Federal Emergency Management Agency signed contracts for more than $2 billion in temporary housing, including more than 120,000 trailers and mobile homes. But the agency has placed just 109
Louisiana families in those homes.
A month after the disaster, the federal government's temporary housing effort is stumbling.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/national/nationalspecial/30housing.html


New Jersey Chemical Leak Disrupts Morning Commute
By
JOHN HOLL
Published: September 30, 2005
JERSEY CITY, Sept. 30 - A chemical leak at a swimming pool chemical plant in Kearny, N.J., this morning snarled the morning commute by closing the Pulaski Skyway and had local officials warning of potential health risks to residents with respiratory problems.
The leak occurred around 8:30 a.m. when about 1,000 pounds of trichloroisocyanuric acid, a chlorinating agent and disinfectant used in swimming pools, began to decompose sending a plume of gas into the air, said Elaine Makatura, a spokeswoman for the
New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/nyregion/30cnd-chemical.html


Review Leads to Upheaval in Spy Satellite Programs
By
DOUGLAS JEHL
Published: September 30, 2005
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 - A high-level review led by John D. Negroponte, the new intelligence director, is stirring a major upheaval within the country's spy satellite programs, beginning with an overhaul of a $15 billion program plagued by delays and cost overruns.
In a terse announcement last week, the National Reconnaissance Office, responsible for developing and launching the devices, said only that a Boeing Company contract to provide the next generation of reconnaissance satellites, known as the Future Imagery Architecture, was being "restructured."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/politics/30satellite.html


2 Teams Identify Chinese Bat as SARS Virus Hiding Place
By
LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN
Published: September 30, 2005
The
SARS virus, which has killed 774 people worldwide, has long been known to come from an animal. Now two scientific teams have independently identified the Chinese horseshoe bat as that animal and as a hiding place for the virus in nature.
The bats apparently are healthy carriers of SARS, which caused severe economic losses, particularly in Asia, as it spread to
Canada and other countries. In Asia, many people eat bats or use bat feces in traditional medicine for asthma, kidney ailments and general malaise.
The Chinese horseshoe bat does not exist in the
United States.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/30/health/30sars.html


Teacher Says Board Effort on Evolution Was Resisted
By
LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Published: September 28, 2005
HARRISBURG, Pa., Sept. 27 - Science teachers at the high school in Dover repeatedly resisted the school board's efforts to force them to teach creationism on equal footing with evolution in biology class, according to a former teacher who is among those challenging the board in a landmark trial.
The conflict in Dover grew so heated that in public meetings board members called opponents "atheists," threatened to fire the science teachers and invoked Jesus' crucifixion as a reason to change the curriculum, two witnesses testified on Tuesday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/28/national/28evolution.html


Students Who Rush to Class, Then to Fires
By
MAREK FUCHS
Published: September 28, 2005
CLINTON, N.Y. - When Mike Stahl was a high school senior touring some of the best liberal arts colleges in the nation, he also visited the firehouse here to ask if it accepted college students as volunteers.
At the Clinton Fire Department, just down the hill from Hamilton College, he was told he would be more than welcome. That was when Hamilton vaulted to the top of his list of colleges.
Mr. Stahl, 21, now a senior at Hamilton who can often be found doing his schoolwork in the firehouse, was named the volunteer department's most dedicated member in the spring. He answered more than 200 calls in his junior year, including fires, car accidents and false alarms in Clinton, a village that is a 15-minute drive from Utica.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/28/nyregion/28firefighter.html


Firehouse.com

Summary of Fires Burning in Idaho
Fire:
Go to Incident Page
Fire is % contained and is no longer receiving live updates.

http://www.wildfires.nifc.gov/idaho/index.php

Wildland Firefighters Instead Provide Hurricane Help

JOHN MILLER
Associated Press Writer
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -- Normally this time of year, Martin Esparza and his team of 35 wildland firefighters from up and down the California coast would be on a blaze somewhere in the West.
The crew instead has spent three weeks in New Orleans, supporting city firefighters and rescue crews who need fresh water, food and showers in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
And Esparza was preparing to deploy again Monday in the aftermath of Hurricane Rita, which hit east Texas and the Louisiana coast Saturday with floods and high winds.

http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=4&id=44863


Idaho finds small planes a big help on wildfires
State has contracted more single-engine air tankers than any other

LEWISTON (AP) -- Idaho has contracted for seven single-engine air tankers to fight wildfires this season, more than any other state and one of the reasons fire managers believe they've been able to keep a lid on big blazes this year.
"Idaho, without a doubt, has the most aggressive initial attack of any state I've been involved in," Jeff Southern, chief pilot of Evergreen Flying Service, told the Lewiston Tribune. The Rayville, La.-based company, one of several with similar names, is flying four AT-802 single-engine air tankers in Idaho this year, augmenting three other single-engine planes on contract from Canada that also drop retardant on fires.

http://www.magicvalley.com/articles/2005/09/15/news_localstate/news_local_state.8.txt

Idaho finds small planes a big help on wildfires
07:55 AM MDT on Thursday, September 15, 2005
Associated Press
LEWISTON -- Idaho has contracted with more single-engine air tankers to fight wildfires this season than any other state.
Fire managers say the seven air tankers are partly the reason they've been able to keep a lid on big wildfires this year.
Jeff Southern is the chief pilot for Evergreen Flying Service.
He told the Lewiston Tribune that Idaho has the most aggressive initial attack of any state he's been involved in. Southern's company is flying four of the air tankers in Idaho this year.
Other states may hire one or two of the planes during the fire season, but they mainly rely on federally contracted large air tankers.
But Bob Burke, contracting officer for aviation with the Idaho Department of Lands, says those aging federal air tankers are being phased out.
And that makes it critical to have small tankers ready to fly on short notice.

http://www.ktvb.com/news/localnews/stories/ktvbn-sept1505-small_tankers.5d3771b5.html


FDNY Chaplain Resigns After Remarks About 9/11 Conspiracy Theory

MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- The fire department's new Muslim chaplain abruptly resigned Friday after saying in a published interview that he believes something other than al-Qaida hijackers brought down the World Trade Center.
''It became clear to him that he would have difficulty functioning as an FDNY chaplain,'' Fire Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta told reporters an hour before Imam Intikab Habib was to be officially sworn in. ''There has been no prior indication that he held those views.''
Habib, a 30-year-old Guyana native, told Newsday in an interview published Friday that he was skeptical of the official version of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, which killed 343 firefighters.
''I've heard professionals say that nowhere ever in history did a steel building come down with fire alone,'' he told the newspaper.
''It takes two or three weeks to demolish a building like that. But it was pulled down in a couple of hours,'' he said. ''Was it 19 hijackers who brought it down, or was it a conspiracy?''

http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=46&id=44937


New Zealand Herald


Antarctic rescuers give up on two lost in crevasse
30.09.05 10.20am
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Rescue workers on Thursday called off a 12-day search for two Argentine men whose snowmobile plunged into a deep ice crevasse in Antarctica, saying there was little hope of finding them alive.
The rescuers then shifted their efforts to trying to find two Chilean soldiers who went missing in a similar accident on Wednesday on the same Antarctic peninsula.
The two Argentines - a scientist and a naval officer - were travelling between research bases when their vehicle plummeted through snow cover into a crack at least 130 metres deep.
"The Antarctic community prioritises life, but in this case the chances of rescuing them alive are nil," said Sergio Policastro, a spokesman for Argentina's National Antarctic Board.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10347993



Birgit's NZ love affair ends in tragedy
01.10.05
By Nicola Boyes and Derek Cheng
It is easy to see why Birgit Brauer had long dreamed of visiting New Zealand. The sweeping landscape, from vibrant forests sprawling beneath mountain peaks and dropping to beautiful coastline, captivated the 28-year-old German.
With a pair of hiking boots, her packs on her back, all she needed was a ride on the open road to exploit this landscape.
Her dream ended 11 days ago under the towering redwoods in Lucy's Gully, near New Plymouth. Land wars were fought here. Lucy Stevens, the woman the gully is named after, is buried beneath its rich soil with her husband and son.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&ObjectID=10348093


Few gains in testing for cancer at age 40
01.10.05
By Rebecca Walsh
Extending New Zealand's breast cancer screening programme to women as young as 40 is not a "good choice" based on current evidence, say a group of public health doctors.
Dr Simon Baker, a public health doctor for the National Screening Unit, said an analysis of the latest research from a major trial in Britain showed the benefits of screening women from age 40 were less than previously thought.
But he said younger women were often the focus of media publicity and studies had shown they overestimated their risk of getting breast cancer and of dying from it.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348149


'Katrina? What about Matata?'
01.10.05
By Juliet Rowan
Matata residents say the Government has let them down by failing to provide funding to restore the small Bay of Plenty town, more than four months after it was almost destroyed by floods and landslides.
They said this week that they were being ignored while the Government handed out money to victims of overseas disasters such as Hurricane Katrina.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348148


Warmer winter means trout are likely to be 'huge'
01.10.05
By Juliet Rowan
Tall tales about the trout that got away could be fewer this year.
The trout fishing season begins today and Fish & Game New Zealand says anglers are likely to hook plenty of big ones after the warm winter.
Several thousand anglers are expected to converge on the Rotorua lakes, where 20 per cent of the country's trout are caught, and this year trout numbers and size are both well above average.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348142


'Too late' to stop river algae
01.10.05
By Anne Beston
It is almost certainly too late to eradicate the invasive algae that are threatening the South Island's world-renowned trout fisheries, says the project's leading scientist.
Cathy Kiljoy, a freshwater biologist with the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, has been studying didymo since it was discovered in the Mararoa and Waiau Rivers in Southland late last year.
But the discovery of the weed, commonly known as rock snot, in the Buller River near Westport and Otago's Hawea River meant it was now widespread.
"While it was contained in one catchment there was a chance we could have done something," she said. "Once it spread into two or more, the chances of being able to eradicate it become much less."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348076


Health guns fire on obesity front
01.10.05
By Geoff Cumming
Health agencies want the tactics used in the 30-year campaign against tobacco turned against junk food.
Groups battling obesity want the educational approach expanded with wide-ranging "environmental" initiatives.
Proposals include bans on junk-food adverts on children's TV or near schools; banning high-sugar and high-fat foods from school canteens; a better balance in TV food advertising, and maximum limits on sugar and fat content in food and drinks.
There is broad support for the Greens' call for a tax on high-sugar drinks, with the proceeds to be poured into nutrition programmes.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348158


Dolphin-for-sale hoax angers SPCA, DoC
01.10.05
By Angela Gregory
The hoax sale of a dolphin on the TradeMe website has angered the SPCA, which says it has never been inundated with so many complaints.
The "seller" from West Auckland claimed the dolphin was being kept in a domestic swimming pool after being accidentally caught in a net during a weekend fishing trip.
SPCA national chief executive Robyn McDonald said the hoax was an irresponsible attempt at self-promotion at the expense of New Zealand's international reputation as a nation that cares for animals.
She had received hundreds of concerned emails and telephone calls.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10348128


Predators are keystone species. They cannot be eliminated from an ecosystem but they can be controlled.

Great white fear prompts call to cull species
01.10.05
By Nick Squires
Jake Heron was preparing to catch the last wave of the day, in Port Lincoln, when the ocean's most feared predator struck without warning.
Erupting from the water beside him, the great white shark bit deep into his right arm and leg and knocked him off his surfboard.
"Terror is the only word I can think of to describe it," Heron, a 40-year-old lobster fisherman, said. "I was punching and kicking and screaming for help. I knew death was a distinct possibility."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10348081


French incredulous at idea of woman President
1.10.05
By John Lichfield
Michele Alliot-Marie says politics is not reserved for the boys.
If you were to put Jean-Marie Le Pen and Jacques Attali in a small room they would quarrel about almost everything.
The veteran far-right leader and the owlish former Mitterrand aide - now an all-purpose fixer and guru - come from opposite corners of the wrestling ring of French politics and life.
But the ultra-right nationalist and the socialist apparatchik do agree on one thing. Both say Segolene Royal will be the first woman to become President of the French Republic.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10348063


Oval Office out of reach for US women
1.10.05
By Jemima Lewis
The first woman President of the United States isn't even real, and she has still managed to put backs up.
Last week, America's chattering classes gathered around their television sets for the first episode of Commander-in-Chief, ABC's new political drama. It stars Geena Davis as Mackenzie Allen, a female Vice-President whose boss suddenly expires from an aneurism.
His dying wish is for Allen to resign, making way for a silver-haired, right-wing chauvinist played by Donald Sutherland, who is thought more likely to command the respect of world leaders, and especially those truculent Ay-rabs.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10348059


Army in chaos after triple car bombings
01.10.05
The United States commander in Iraq has revealed the Iraqi Army is in disarray as three car bombs killed more than 60 Iraqis and five US soldiers died in another blast.
The bombs tore through busy streets in Balad, a mixed Shiite and Sunni town north of Baghdad, killing more than 60 people and wounding dozens in the latest insurgent attack to strike Iraq.
Police sources said two went off about 10 minutes apart in the town, and targeted a busy market at dusk. A third bomb went off nearby half an hour later.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10348084


Schwarzenegger vetoes gay marriage bill
30.09.05 5.20pm
San Francisco - California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in a widely expected move vetoed a bill on Thursday that would have allowed gay couples to marry.
The Republican governor had earlier this month indicated he would veto the bill passed by California's Democrat-led legislature. The bill was the first of its kind approved by a state legislature.
Schwarzenegger said he would leave the contentious issue of same-sex marriage to voters and the courts.
"I do not believe the legislature can reverse an initiative approved by the people of California," he said in a written statement.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10348011


Thousands protest Indonesia fuel prices
30.09.05 8.20am
Thousands of students, truck drivers and labourers rallied across Indonesia against impending fuel price hikes, some blocking roads with burning tyres.
Police fired warning shots and beat protesters with batons after a crowd tried to storm a gas station.
The Government's decision to cut fuel subsidies could result in a 60 per cent rise in the price of petrol - from US25c per litre - diesel fuel and kerosene from Saturday.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10347935


Arrests after dismembered UK girl's body found
30.09.05 12.20pm
LONDON - Two people have been arrested after the body of a dismembered teenage girl, who detectives believe was abducted, was found on a south London estate, police said on Thursday.
The body of 15-year-old Rochelle Holness was discovered after police were called to the Milford Towers estate in Catford on Wednesday.
The alarm had been raised by ambulance crew who had gone to a flat on the estate to treat a man suffering from cuts.
A man and a woman, both aged 47, were arrested by officers who then later discovered Holness' dismembered body on an open area.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10347999


US eyes get squarer
01.10.05
American television viewing climbed again last season to a record household average of eight hours, 11 minutes a day, Nielsen Media Research has found.
The latest finding challenges perceptions that Americans are watching less TV.
Nielsen said the all-time high viewing level posted for the 2004-05 television season, which ended early last month, was up nearly 3 per cent from the previous year and 12.5 per cent from a decade ago.
Moreover, the average individual watched four hours and 32 minutes of television a day last season, the highest level in 15 years. The figures include in-home viewing levels for broadcast, cable and satellite television during all parts of the day.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10348112


NZ to give $5.3million for 2006 Fiji elections
30.09.05 2.00pm
Fiji's struggling electoral system will be bolstered by $5.3 million worth of New Zealand aid in a bid to ensure 2006's general election results are accurate.
New Zealand funding would be spent on training and technical support in the coming year, Aid Minister Marian Hobbs said when she announced the funding today.
A "fair, reliable and transparent" electoral system was essential to any country, she said.
"Letting all people, from all areas, have their say in a free and fair environment is the key to any election process and this funding is a good example of how New Zealand and Australia can combine their resources to support a Pacific country." she said.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10348008


Migrants die trying to break into Spanish enclave
30.09.05
By Emma Pinedo

MADRID - At least two African migrants died when hundreds tried to cross the razorwire barrier between Morocco and Spain's North African enclave of Ceuta yesterday -- the third such assault in as many days, officials said.
Up to 600 migrants equipped with makeshift ladders tried to scale the guarded border fence, Madrid's top official in Ceuta told Spanish state radio.
Authorities said the two killed had been either crushed in a stampede or had fallen, but gave no details. Other Spanish media quoted police sources saying six migrants had died but this could not be confirmed.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10347929


Typhoon fades away after killing 71
30.09.05 6.20am
Typhoon Damrey petered out after killing at least 71 people in a week-long sweep through East Asia.
Damrey was downgraded to a tropical depression. The storm killed 36 people in Vietnam, 16 in the Philippines, 16 in southern China and three in Thailand. Landslides triggered by heavy rains have also killed 51 in Nepal.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10347931

concluding ...