Monday, October 10, 2005


My Rooster Posted by Picasa

Just for Fun. October 8, 2005. York, Maine. A lobster shack. No, they don't cook them at this lobster shack, they try an catch them. I thought it was a funny sight to see all those lobster traps hanging there empty.  Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - It's Origins

Rooster "Crowing"

"Okeydoke"

History


1871, The great Chicago fire is put out; it has destroyed nearly a third of central Chicago.

1886, The first tuxedo is worn at a dinner club in New York.

1899, Issac R. Johnson patents a bicycle frame.

1913, The Panama Canal, an American-built waterway connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, is completed with the explosion of the Gamboa Dike.

1917, Thelonious Sphere Monk, one of the creators of bebop or modern jazz composed music with irregular rhythms and jarring harmonies, is born in Rocky Mount, NC.

1927, “Porgy”, a play written by DuBose and Heyward, opens on Broadway featuring an all Black cast.

1930, Blind Lemon Jefferson, a country blues singer, dies in Chicago, IL.

1935, “Porgy and Bess”, a folk opera based on the play “Porgy”, opens on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre with music by Ira and George Gershwin.

1946, Dancer, singer, and actor Ben Vereen is born in Miami, FL

1973, After pleading no contest to tax evasion, Spiro Agnew becomes the first U.S. vice president to resign in disgrace.

Missing in Action

1965
DODD JOE L. 10/25/65 ESCAPED
1966
CONFER MICHAEL STEELE MC COOK NE ACFT EXPLODE NO TRACE PILOT
1968
HANDRAHAN EUGENE A. ST PAUL MN
1968
HERREID ROBERT D. AURORA IL
1969
MAXWELL CALVIN W. EDDY NM
1969
WEISNER FRANKLIN L. FORT BENNING GA
1970
GRAZIOSI FRANCIS G. ROCHESTER NY
1972
CLEARY PETER M. COLCHESTER CT
1972
LEONOR LEONARDO C. ASTORIA NY

October 9, 2005

1966
TANNER CHARLES N. COVINGTON TN 03/04/73 RELEASED BY DRV " ""NELS"" ALIVE AND WELL 98"
1966
TERRY ROSS R. LAKE JACKSON FL 03/04/73 RELEASED BY DRV ALIVE IN 98
1967
CLEMENTS JAMES A. QUEEN CITY TX 03/14/73 RELEASED BY DRV RIP 27 MARCH 97
1969
DRIVER DALLAS A. STEPHENS CITY VA
1969
GARBETT JIMMY R. LAKE CITY FL
1969
MOORE RAYMOND G. CINCINNATI OH
1969
SUYDAM JAMES L. PHILLIPSBURG NJ
1969
TURNER JAMES H. COLUMBUS OH

October 8, 2005

1963
DENTON MANUEL R. KERRVILLE TX ACFT CRASH AFT AIR COLLISION
1963
RITCHEY LUTHER E. JR. MANSFIELD OH ACFT CRASH AFT AIR COLLISION
1963
WADSWORTH DEAN AMICK CLARENDON TX ACFT BROKE UP CRASH EXPLODED REMAINS IDENTIFIED O4/16/99
1966
FELDHAUS JOHN ANTHONY LAWRENCEBURG TN
1966
WOMACK SAMMIE N. FARMVILLE VA 02/23/67 RELEASED ALIVE IN 98
1967
GUERRA RAUL A. LOS ANGELES CA CRASH SITE CONFIRMED NO RECOV POSS
1967
PINEAU ROLAND R. BERKLEY MI CRASH SITE CONFIRMED NO RECOV POSS
1967
ROGGOW NORMAN L. AURELIA IA CRASH SITE CONFIRMED NO RECOV POSS
1967
WOLFE DONALD F. HARDIN MT CRASH SITE CONFIRMED NO RECOV POSS
1967
ZISSU ANDREW G. NEW YORK NY CRASH SITE CONFIRMED NO RECOV POSS
1969
ALTIZER ALBERT H. SQUIRE WV
1969
WATKINS ROBERT J. JR. FORT MEADE MD
1970
OTT WILLIAM A. LIVERMORE CA
1970
SHAY DONALD E. JR. LINTHICUM HEIGHTS MD


The Times Picayune

New Orleans cops charged in taped beating
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Three New Orleans police officers are facing battery charges after investigators reviewed a videotape showing two patrolmen repeatedly punching a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication and a third officer assaulting an Associated Press Television News producer who helped capture the arrest on tape.
The assaults come as the department — long plagued by allegations of brutality and corruption — struggles with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the resignation last month of Police Superintendent Eddie Compass.

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breaking/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_localbreakingnews/archives/2005_10.html


FEMA isn't hiring La. companies, workers
Out-of-state firms get most of business
By Bill Walsh
Washington bureau
WASHINGTON - Less than a week after Hurricane Katrina swept through southeast Louisiana, a federal government purchasing agent came calling at Brian Bent's RV dealership in Metairie with a promising business proposal.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency was planning to house thousands of evacuees temporarily in travel trailers and the agency wanted to throw some of the business to local dealers.
Bent said he arranged to acquire 500 RVs and followed up with an e-mail to FEMA. As instructed, he wrote "LA vendor" in the subject line. He got no response. Then he called. And called. More than a month after Katrina, Bent said he still hasn't heard anything from the agency. In the meantime, FEMA has contracted for more than $700 million in travel trailers - with more than 99 percent of the business going to companies outside Louisiana.
Federal officials from President Bush on down have talked about the importance of hiring contractors in the hurricane disaster region to help boost an economy that was decimated by the storm. But, in large part, it hasn't happened. Instead, lucrative contracts for services readily available in Louisiana have gone to out-of-state firms with little or no competitive bidding involved.

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/tporleans/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_tporleans/archives/2005_10_10.html


Buggies return to Quarter chomping at bit to recover
Drivers find business is slow, but gratifying
By Coleman Warner
Staff writer
Telltale signs of Hurricane Katrina's recent visit were hard to miss in the Vieux Carre early Saturday afternoon. National Guard soldiers gathered near the Mint and workers on ladders tacked tarp sheets to a few roofs. The always-open Café du Monde was shuttered. Damaged awnings hung over sidewalks at crazy angles.
But the Quarter continued to recover. The rotting-garbage stench had faded and people tapped on laptop computers outside an espresso bar along Decatur Street. Doors of art shops were open wide, a young girl performed on her violin and, at Jackson Square's edge, an artist tried to interest a couple of state troopers - one from Louisiana, another from New York - in his oil-on-canvas pieces.
Then, a few yards away, came a familiar refrain: A buggy driver cajoling passers-by, offering a ride and breezy history lesson.
"Hey guys, want to go?"
"No, we're just walking."
"Have a great day!"
Business is a long far from good, but the mule buggies are on the streets. Their return prompted Quarter veterans to step onto second-floor balconies or out of their shops and applaud. A postcard symbol is back.
"It perks up your spirits to see the mules out there," said Dennis Gemelli, 56, one of a handful of drivers for Royal Carriages who returned to his buggy seat at midday Friday. "It's obviously been slow ... but it's gratifying. It's mainly relief workers, getting a historical perspective on the city they're helping to rebuild."

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/tporleans/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_tporleans/archives/2005_10_10.html


Jefferson schools on normal schedules
The Jefferson Parish public school system is reminding
parents and students that schools will operate under
their normal schedules Monday, despite an earlier plan
to start classes an hour earlier.
The plan, which called for the school day to begin an
hour earlier, was approved by the School Board on
Sept. 29 but scrapped last week by Superintendent
Diane Roussel. She said several board members noted a
strong public backlash to the revised school calendar,
under which high schools would have faced the earliest
start time at about 6:15 a.m. Because of the outcry,
Roussel and board members have backed off the plan.
The calendar was designed to make up for 24 days of
lost instructional time in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
Roussel said her staff is drafting several alternative
calendars, which the board will likely discuss at its
Thursday meeting. The meeting is set for noon in the
Jefferson Parish Council chambers, 200 Derbigny St.,
in Gretna.
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RTA extends transit routes
Six more transit lines - three on the east bank of Orleans Parish, and three in Algiers - return to service, the Regional Transit Authority said today.
Four bus lines - 5-Marigny-Bywater, 27-Louisiana, 32-Leonidas, and 101-Algiers Loop - began operation this morning. Two other lines - 103-Pace Boulevard and 106-Aurora Express - run Monday through Friday only, beginning Monday.
There a number of route changes from pre-Katrina service patterns:
* 5-Marigny-Bywater will use its pre-Katrina route from the end of the line on Poland Avenue as far in as Elysian Fields Avenue. However, above Elysian Fields, its route will be that of the still-suspended 55-Elysian Fields bus, running along Decatur Street in both directions through the French Quarter, and ending at Canal and Tchoupitoulas Streets.

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breakingtp/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_Times-Picayune/archives/2005_10_09.html


Buenos Aires Herald


‘Hot potato’ reaction to Chávez reactor
Venezuela’s request for a medium-strength reactor has been passed from one government office to another "like a hot potato," one diplomat was quoted as saying by the Clarín newspaper.
Venezuela’s state-owned oil firm PDVSA made the proposal in a meeting with Argentine officials in Buenos Aires in late August, saying it wanted to develop alternative energy sources in its Orinoco oil region, the newspaper said.
Officials were not immediately available to confirm the report on the request by Venezuela, the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter and a key energy supplier to the United States.
Despite President Néstor Kirchner’s close ties to Chávez, officials in his government are divided over the wisdom of selling nuclear technology to the firebrand Venezuelan, who Washington sees as a destabilizing force in the region, Clarín reported, citing unnamed Foreign Ministry sources.
Some officials are thought to fear that Chávez, a self-proclaimed revolutionary socialist, secretly aims to develop nuclear arms while others simply prefer not to irk Washington. Talks between the two countries are still in the preliminary stages.
Chávez announced last May his intentions to use nuclear power, saying his government could start talks with Iran as well as Argentina and Brazil.
Chávez’ anti-US rhetoric and alliance with Communist Cuba’s Fidel Castro has long riled Washington. His government also backed Iran, branded part of the "axis of evil" by US President George W. Bush, in its dispute with the US and Europe over its nuclear programme.

http://www.buenosairesherald.com/the_world/note.jsp?idContent=213749&hideIntro=true


Digging for survivors
Death toll in worst natural disaster in Pakistan’s history could hit 38,000.
Relief workers have yet to reach many remote villages and officials said the final death toll was likely to climb far above the 19,400 already known to have died in Pakistan.
Politicians in the worst-affected areas, Pakistan-held Kashmir and North West Frontier Province, said they expected a far higher tally — as many as 38,000.
Across the border in Indian-held Kashmir almost 700 people are known to have been killed.
It is the worst natural disaster in Pakistan and the strongest in South Asia for a century.
With Pakistan’s resources stretched beyond their limits, President Pervez Musharraf appealed for foreign aid to supply tents, blankets, transport helicopters and medicines.
"We’re trying to cope with these difficulties, there should not be any blame game," Musharraf said on state-run television, wearing his army fatigues.
Rescue teams and aid pledges poured into Pakistan from around the world.
"We are rushing against the clock here," said a spokeswoman for the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The US sent eight helicopters from a military base in Afghanistan, and teams from Turkey, China, Britain and Germany were on the ground. Australia, Japan, the Netherlands, Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were among others dispatching help.

http://www.buenosairesherald.com/the_world/note.jsp?idContent=213744&hideIntro=true


The Cheney Observer

THE TRUTH of Iraq is very hard to come by. But, once in a Blue Moon someone slips in an interview and I hate to do this to Wolf because his boss is going to be really, really angry but the truth is important. I didn't address this right away because I expected CNN to act honorably and bring the subject up without provocation. That didn't happen.

This is an interview between Wolf Blitzer and the Iraqi National Security Adviser, Mowaffak Al-Rubaie that took place on Sunday. This is directly from the transcript.

EXILES AND THE INNOCENT

We'll take a quick break. When we come back, we'll speak with Iraq's national security adviser, Mowaffak Al-Rubaie, about what's going on only days before that referendum on the Iraqi constitution. We'll be right back.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BLITZER: Welcome back to "LATE EDITION." Iraq faces another critical test next Saturday when the country holds a referendum on its draft constitution. The deadly insurgent attacks are overshadowing the push for political progress.

Just a short while ago I spoke with Dr. Mowaffak Al-Rubaie, Iraq's national security adviser.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BLITZER: Mowaffak Al-Rubaie, thanks very much for joining us from Baghdad.
Next Saturday, the referendum for the Iraqi constitution goes before the Iraqi people. In your mind, is it possible this referendum will be rejected?

MOWAFFAK AL-RUBAIE, IRAQI NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER: Well, theoretically it's possible to be rejected, but I think, I hope and I pray that the Iraqi people will say yes, yes, loud and clear for this constitution. Because it is a huge step toward building a new Iraq, and this is a milestone. We have to go through it. Otherwise, if the people of Iraq say no, God forbid, then it will delay the whole political process for another year or so.

BLITZER: As you know, as you know, many Sunnis.

AL-RUBAIE: So we need (inaudible).

BLITZER: Excuse me for interrupting, Dr. Al-Rubaie.
As you know, many Sunnis are objecting to it. If in three of the provinces there's a two-thirds majority against the constitution, then it's defeated. You were saying that you don't think that will happen, but it's theoretically possible. What will be the consequences of such a vote?

AL-RUBAIE: Number one, I don't think the overwhelming majority of the Sunni people, the ordinary people, in the three provinces in the west of the country -- I believe they are with the concept or the basic concept of this constitution.
Number two, those who are, if you like, the vocal people who are in opposition to the constitution, and they would like the Sunni voters to say no, I think they are not true representatives of the Sunnis.
So a lot of -- quite few political leaders, figures, political parties, groups, NGOs in the Sunni triangle are going to say yes next Saturday for our constitution.
Now, if it is turned down, the only thing that it will happen that probably the insurgents and the terrorists will consider it as a victory for them, because they managed to disrupt the political process. They would have managed to prevent people from going to ballot boxes and cast their vote and say yes to the constitution.
So it's going to be a victory to the Iraqi people next Saturday, when we will have a clear majority of yes votes to this constitution.

BLITZER: There was a letter that was reported, from the -- a number two in Al Qaida, Ayman al-Zawahiri, to the Al Qaida leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Among other things, al-Zawahiri said: "Iraq has become the place for the greatest battle of Islam in this era."
Do you believe this letter to be authentic?

AL-RUBAIE: I believe these people are the dark forces, the anti- Iraqi forces. They would not like the democracy in Iraq, and they are frightened of democracy in Iraq.
They want to bring us to Iraq a Taliban-style regime, like the one which used to be in Afghanistan, and the Iraqi people will not have this. And neither Zarqawi nor Zawahiri nor bin Laden will have any influence on our Iraqi citizen, which has determined -- and they are really determined to go to the ballot boxes and say yes or no. I would like them to say a big yes, clear yes to the constitution.

BLITZER: Do you believe that letter was authentic?

AL-RUBAIE: I haven't looked into Zawahiri's message very carefully, but this is the rhetoric they use, this is the language I expect them to use. And I believe they wanted to take on the civilized world on Iraqi soil, and this is at the expense of the Iraqi people, by the way.
And we in the Iraqi government and the Iraqi people, this is a historic moment for us, a historic challenge. And we will be up to the challenge of these people, of the terrorists and insurgents.
And we are so determined to proceed with our political process, and to move on to the next step, which is the general election in December this year.

BLITZER: As you know, it's been widely reported that the source of the intelligence information for the New York City transit terror threat came from someplace in Iraq.
What can you tell us about this threat? How credible, based on the information you have, was this threat to the New York subway system? AL-RUBAIE: Well, I'm sorry, I can't go into details of the intelligence and the passing of the information and how do we deal with that intelligence information. I wouldn't like to indulge myself in a public, sort of, discussion on this.

BLITZER: Well, without getting into any details, though, can you just tell us if you believe that the threat was credible, specific?

AL-RUBAIE: I think these people have -- see, terrorism has no boundaries, has no -- it doesn't have any nationality. It doesn't have any religion. It does not have any -- they don't respect -- this is beyond borders. We're talking about terrorism beyond borders.
This is a global war on terror. And it happens that Iraq is the front line of this war on terror, the global war on terror. And they can cross the borders to Europe, to America, to the Arab world.
And that's why our message to our neighbors -- we say to them and we keep on saying to them, especially Syria and Saudi, that they should do more of stopping these from crossing the borders to Iraq.
And Syria, in particular, should do more to stop these people because otherwise they get to Iraq, they get strength and they go back to Syria. Because if we force them and if we apply pressure on them here, they will go back to Syria, they will go back to Jordan, they will go back to Saudi Arabia or even Europe and America to do their evil work.

BLITZER: So does that mean that the threat, in your opinion, to New York City was credible?

AL-RUBAIE: Well, it may well be credible, Wolf, because, as I said, terrorism has no boundaries.

BLITZER: The insurgency seems to be getting more deadly, more lethal, more destructive. I'll put some numbers up on the screen.
This year, September 2005, there are 2,500 insurgent attacks. In March of 2005, only a few months earlier, there were 1,500. As far as IEDs, improvised explosive devices, in September of this year, there were 1,000. In September of last year there were 750 incidents.
Is this insurgency getting worse?

AL-RUBAIE: No, I don't think agree with that, Wolf. I'll tell you what: The number of attacks, if you like, are probably superficially -- if you look at it from a face value of it, probably it's going up. But the quality and the type of the operation in the attacks is getting less.
And we are getting much more effective in our counterterrorism. Our Iraqi security forces are getting bigger in size, more qualified, more serious and better equipped, as well. We are getting much more focused on the targets.
And also, we have the coordination between our intelligence agencies, the three intelligence agencies. We have a very good coordination system now in place for the flow of the intelligence and for the conversion of the intelligence into actionable intelligence.
And the percentage of those operations or those attacks on our security forces we're managing to abort more and more. We used to fail probably a quarter of it. Now, it's two-thirds of these attacks are not effective at all. One-third of these attacks they are applying on us is effective.
And the number of casualties also is getting lower and reduced because, if you see it from the, sort of, superficial look at it, you will see the civilian casualties are getting bigger, but not the Iraqi security forces or the multinational forces; that we're getting much better protected from these terrorist attacks.

And the number of casualties also is getting lower and reduced because, if you see it from the, sort of, superficial look at it, you will see the civilian casualties are getting bigger, but not the Iraqi security forces or the multinational forces; that we're getting much better protected from these terrorist attacks.


BLITZER: We are almost out of time, Dr. Al-Rubaie, so a quick question on Saddam Hussein. I thought his trial was supposed to begin this month. Will it begin this month?

AL-RUBAIE: Absolutely. We will have Saddam Hussein still scheduled to appear in the box on the 19th of October after the referendum.
And this is part of the psychological healing of this nation. This nation has been severely traumatized for 35 years. And part of the healing process and part of the national reconciliation and part of the national dialogue we need to see Saddam Hussein in the box and ask him about the crimes he has, and he has to answer these crimes he has committed in the last 35 years.

BLITZER: Mowaffak Al-Rubaie. Thanks very much for joining us from Baghdad. Appreciate it.
AL-RUBAIE: Thank you very much, Wolf, for having me.

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0510/09/le.01.html

This 'slip' by Mr. al-Rubaie shows a strategy by the USA military to protect whatever exists of the Iraqi National Security Forces. In other words, they are all abandoning ship to work at the local level, PERHAPS,l to protect their neighborhoods. But, at the Iraqi National Level they have been cut down left and right, if one recalls 50 soldiers, newly trained returning from Jordan about six months or so ago were slaughtered because they has no weapons to protect themselves or an escort to protect them. They were all gunned down on the road home to Baghdad. Over the past months there has been many attacks on the Iraqi Military so the number of unites in Iraq has been reduced to one through natural attrition as the soldiers left the service. This paragraph speaks to the fact the people in service to the National Iraqi Military are getting better at protecting themselves. He proudly reports that neither the Iraqi National Forces or Multinational Forces are experiencing casualties. That's good, but, that ain't all of it.

THAT isn't what really bothers me. What bothers me is that Mr. al-Rubaie reports there is a rising trend in civilian deaths. You follow this? The military is protecting itself but not the people of the hamlets of Iraq. The people are left STILL to protect themselves. Their militias are vital to their protection where they exist. Where they don't the people are sitting ducks and why bombers can get into mosques.

The only thing the USA military is doing is running 'raids' on neighborhoods where opposition forces are known to be. Well, after the New York City Subway fiasco we all know that is nothing to brag about.

The Opposition forces are winning this war. They are so virulent in Iraq that the USA Coalition and the Iraq Security Forces are only able to take care of themselves. Just the other day there were attacks into the Green Zone. When a military is stalemated like this and can't protect the people they are supposed to protect then it's over. The USA military has entered into a very precarious position in that there is a Shi'ite majority in the National Level in Iraq. When they perform sweeps through the streets of Iraq they are targeting Sunnis. The British are targeting Bathists. They are conducting ethnic cleansing in protection of the Shi'ites and Kurds who OBEY the precepts of government constructed by Bush/Blair.

I hope this makes an impression in that no matter what the USA military, Bush or Cheney say they are propagandizing their ideologies and NOT the truth or the reality of the citizens of Iraq. We need to leave. We are doing NO GOOD there. We are not even protecting the citizens there.

What I expected from CNN was not a cover up but a further investigation into that statement. As you will notice as soon as Mr. al-Rubaie said that statement a voice came over Wolf's earpiece and he was required to change the subject. Now that I have written this CNN will back track and attempt to cover their tracks as well as Mr. al-Rubaie's tracks. That is why I don't believe them all the time either. When I watch CNN it's with the knowledge of what I learned on the net and reading to know if they are doing a good job or not.

This is an incident from October 9, 2005 to validate the statement above by Mr. al-Rubaie and the noted increase in deaths of civilians.


Insurgents kill at least 12 Iraqis
By THOMAS WAGNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
In an undated picture made available by the US Army on Sunday Oct. 9, 2005, US soldiers from 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne along with an Iraqi Army soldier escort a suspected terrorist through Al Hakliniya, Iraq. The soldiers of the 504th PIR together with Iraqi Army soldiers removed dozens of insurgents from the city during the first few days of Operation River Gate. (AP Photo/ Sgt. Ryan S. Scranton, US Army)
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Insurgents using suicide car bombs, roadside bombs and drive-by shootings killed at least 12 Iraqis on Monday, most of them soldiers, in attacks launched five days before Iraq's important constitutional referendum, police said.
Five mortar shells also were fired at a hotel in the southern city of Hillah where a U.S. regional embassy office is based, with one round hitting the building and leaving a large hole in a wall, police said. No casualties were reported.
The latest attacks came as Shiite and Kurdish officials continued to negotiate with Sunni Arab leaders over last-minute additions to the constitution, trying to win Sunni support ahead of next weekend's referendum. U.S. officials were acting as mediators.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apmideast_story.asp?category=1107&slug=Iraq



CIA Leak: Karl Rove and the Case of the Missing E-mail
Newsweek
Oct. 17, 2005 issue - The White House's handling of a potentially crucial e-mail sent by senior aide Karl Rove two years ago set off a chain of events that has led special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to summon Rove for a fourth grand jury appearance this week. His return has created heightened concern among White House officials and their allies that Fitzgerald may be preparing to bring indictments when a federal grand jury that has been investigating the leak of a CIA agent's identity expires at the end of October. Robert Luskin, Rove's lawyer, tells NEWSWEEK that, in his last conversations with Fitzgerald, the prosecutor assured Luskin "he has not made any decisions."
But lawyers close to the case, who asked not to be identified because it's ongoing, say Fitzgerald appears to be focusing in part on discrepancies in testimony between Rove and Time reporter Matt Cooper about their conversation of July 11, 2003. In Cooper's account, Rove told him the wife of White House critic Joseph Wilson worked at the "agency" on WMD issues and was responsible for sending Wilson on a trip to Niger to check out claims that Iraq was trying to buy uranium. But Rove did not disclose this conversation to the FBI when he was first interviewed by agents in the fall of 2003—nor did he mention it during his first grand jury appearance, says one of the lawyers familiar with Rove's account. (He did not tell President George W. Bush about it either, assuring him that fall only that he was not part of any "scheme" to discredit Wilson by outing his wife, the lawyer says.) But after he testified, Luskin discovered an e-mail Rove had sent that same day—July 11—alerting deputy national-security adviser Stephen Hadley that he had just talked to Cooper, the lawyer says. In the e-mail, Rove said Cooper pushed him on whether the president was being hurt by the Niger controversy. "I didn't take the bait," Rove wrote Hadley, adding that he warned Cooper not to get "far out in front on this." After reviewing the e-mail, Rove then returned to the grand jury last year and reported the Cooper conversation. He testified that the talk was initially about "welfare reform"—a topic mentioned in the e-mail—and that Cooper then changed the subject. Cooper has written that he doesn't recall a discussion of welfare reform.
Why didn't the Rove e-mail surface earlier? The lawyer says it's because an electronic search conducted by the White House missed it because the right "search words" weren't used. (The White House and Fitzgerald both declined to comment.) But the e-mail isn't the only belatedly discovered document in the case. Fitzgerald has also summoned New York Times reporter Judith Miller back for questioning this week: a notebook was discovered in the paper's Washington bureau, reflecting a late June 2003 conversation with Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis (Scooter) Libby, about Wilson and his trip to Africa, says one of the lawyers. The notebook may also be significant because Wilson's identity was not yet public. A lawyer for the Times declined to comment.
—Michael Isikoff
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.
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© 2005 MSNBC.com

URL:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9630676/site/newsweek/

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9630676/site/newsweek/print/1/displaymode/1098/



Wednesday, January 1, 2003
Phillips defends Saudi donation
By Meg Murphy
Staff Writer
Phillips Academy is defending its decision to take $500,000 from a Saudi Arabian prince for scholarships -- money former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani refused to accept last year for disaster relief following the terrorist attacks.
Critics of Saudi Arabia say the school shouldn't have taken the money -- donated in former President George H.W. Bush's name -- because it is "tainted." They call the donation a public relations move by a kingdom that was home to 15 of the 19 terrorists who attacked New York and Washington Sept. 11, 2001.
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal donated the money in June, and the academy was happy to accept it, said Sharon A. Britton, director of communications at the academy.

http://www.eagletribune.com/news/stories/20030101/FP_003.htm


The articles are a little dated but they illustrate the struggle of people in countries where oil drilling rights were issued without regard to civilian rights.

Bush's Oil buddies are murdering Nigerians.

I DON'T BELIEVE THERE IS ANY REASON TO DOUBT THE NIGERIAN REFERRED TO AS MILITANTS ARE JUSTIFIED !!

Chevron paid agents who destroyed villages

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/12285441.htm [...]

COMPANY DENIES RESPONSIBILITY FOR NIGERIAN DEATHS OR INJURIES, SAYING IT PAID ONLY FOR GENERAL SECURITY SERVICES

By Elise Ackerman
Mercury News
The bodies of the dead Nigerian villagers had not yet grown cold when the Nigerian navy captain presented Chevron with a bill: 15,000 naira, or $165 for responding to ``attacks from Opia village against security agents.''
Within 24 hours Chevron paid up. It would be years before the San Ramon-based energy company would acknowledge the role it played in the destruction of Opia and another small village called Ikenyan in Nigeria's oil-rich delta in January 1999.
The receipt for the January 4 army raid, which left four villagers dead and nearly 70 missing and presumed dead, came to light only this summer as part of a federal lawsuit filed on behalf of the victims in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. It is being reported first on MercuryNews.com. The receipt also is among documents obtained by the Mercury News.


U.S. firm shuts second oil platform in Nigeria
Chevron takes precautions amid militia threats
Friday, September 23, 2005; Posted: 12:00 p.m. EDT (16:00 GMT)

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/africa/09/23/nigeria.oil.reut/

Ethnic militia leader Moujahid Dokubo-Asari waits for a court hearing in Lagos on Thursday.
PORT HARCOURT, Nigeria (Reuters) --Ethnic militants cut deeper into Nigerian oil supply on Friday when U.S.-based Chevron shut a second production platform as a safety precaution after an armed group stormed a nearby facility.
The militants have threatened to blow up oil platforms and pipelines across the world's eighth largest exporter after their leader was arrested on Tuesday, and Western oil companies have withdrawn dozens of workers from vulnerable areas.
Chevron shut the 20,000 barrel-per-day Robertkiri platform on Friday, bringing the total impact of the crisis to 28,400 barrels a day, or 1 percent of Nigeria's output.


Colombia probe fails to clear BP contractor. By Robert Corzine. Wednesday, March 18, 1998
One of British Petroleum's main security contractors in Colombia could face further investigation, after a year-long inquiry failed to clear Defence System Limited (DSL) of the UK of possibly overstepping its role in the country.
However, the investigation found little evidence to support other allegations, such as that BP handed over photographs of participants in local demonstrations to the security services.
A recently completed report from the public prosecutor's office said it was still unclear whether former members of Britain's Special Air Service Regiment - employed by DSL's Colombian subsidiary - had trained members of Colombia's national police in "lethal" operations.
The report said: "To date, this office does not have clear or complete judgment basis to discard or confirm the serious charges of involvement in training national police members. . . and what this means in a situation as serious as the one currently faced by the country." The prosecutor's concern stems from whether former SAS members instructed the police in full counter-insurgency techniques, or whether such training was confined to defensive tactics to protect BP's well sites.
BP requested the prosecutor's report after numerous allegations against its Colombian operations. These included complicity in the murder of local activists opposed to BP's operations in Casanare, where leftwing guerrilla groups have repeatedly attacked the company's Cusiana and Cupiagua oil fields. BP has invested about $2bn in Colombia.
The violence in the oil region has been compounded by the emergence of paramilitary groups - some linked to large landowners - which have targeted small-scale farmers and others allegedly sympathetic to guerrillas. But the report said it was "far-fetched" to believe BP was "secretly sponsoring these forms of violence against peasants and workers".
Although the prosecutor's office concluded there were no preliminary grounds on which to charge BP with criminal offences, it said the investigation could be reopened. BP said it was not clear whether the prosecutor's concern over some aspects of DSL reflected questions about the substance of operations, or whether it resulted from lack of co-operation by Colombian police and DSL staff.

http://www.flyingfish.org.uk/articles/rushdie/98-03-18ft.htm

Oil: A Bird's Eye View Of Rita's Fury
A Helicopter Ride Reveals Partly Flooded Refineries, Smashed Ships, And Blocked Waterways. The Industry's Recovery Will Take A Great Deal Of Time

From Platts Oilgram News
Seeing is believing. The Coast Guard invited Platts on a reconnaissance helicopter this week to observe the damage from Hurricane Rita, which came onshore Sept. 24 as a Category 3 hurricane near the Texas/Louisiana border.
From this four-hour flight, two stark realities emerged: The recovery of energy and shipping infrastructure from Beaumont/Port Arthur to southeastern Louisiana will take a great deal of time, and the Houston/Galveston area dodged a bullet.
The flight left U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Houston at Ellington Field and headed east from the Houston area to the Port of Beaumont. Along the way, the damage to trees and houses seemed to increase as we got closer to Rita's actual path last weekend. Even in Galveston Bay, a warehouse at a container-ship dock suffered some roof damage due to Rita.
PRIVATE VESSELS SMASHED. The visible damage to electricity transmission lines also worsened as the helicopter continued east, a sign that bringing power back to these affected regions will take some time, slowing the recovery process for oil, gas, and petrochemical infrastructure in the Beaumont/Port Arthur area.
The overflight for the Port of Beaumont began near the town's center, where Rita damaged the roofs of houses and larger buildings downtown. Shipyard buildings for smaller vessels were torn open, with little but smashed wood left of these privately owned ships.
The 12.5-million-barrel Sunoco (SUN) storage terminal in nearby Nederland, Tex., appeared flooded at most of the tanks.When asked for a comment, a Sunoco spokesman referenced the company's Sept. 26 statement as the most recent update.
STORAGE UNITS FLOODED. Sunoco said then that power was out at its Nederland terminal and it did not know when operations would resume. The company also reported that all storage tanks and dock facilities were found intact in initial assessments, but 10 tanks "suffered some structural damage with varying impacts on capacity." The Nederland terminal lies on the Sabine-Neches waterway between Beaumont and Port Arthur.
The Coast Guard helicopter then flew several times around ExxonMobil's (XOM) 348,500-barrel-per-day Beaumont refinery, where Rita's storm surge and heavy rains flooded much of the refinery grounds and nearby storage units. The refinery flared black smoke from several towers, and other refinery infrastructure appeared downed by the storm.
UNREADY FOR POWER. ExxonMobil reported on Sept. 27 that it was performing assessments at the Beaumont refinery, with priorities including the restoration of water and electricity to run the facilities. "We expect these assessments to be completed later this week, at which time we will have a better understanding of the startup schedule," ExxonMobil said.
Entergy (ETR) noted on Sept. 28 that it will take another day before it can restore power to ExxonMobil's Beaumont refinery. Of the seven refineries knocked off line by Rita in Entergy's territory, only one is ready to accept power again, according to an Entergy spokeswoman.
As the helicopter headed down the Sabine Pass waterway to nearby Port Arthur, Rita's impact on the crucial waterway looked evident. Several barges sank along the Sabine Pass, and barges as well as other watercraft were forced onshore by Rita's winds. The Sabine and Neches river waterways have reopened, but with restrictions.
OBSTRUCTED WATERWAY. From an aerial view, Total's (TOT) 240,000-barrel-per-day Port Arthur refinery was flaring black smoke and inundated with some flooding. There did not appear to be any major structural damage to the refinery, but the storm had downed power lines in the immediate area.
Total said on Sept. 26 that the refinery would remain down for an "extended period of time" but did not specify the damage sustained and declared force majeure on product deliveries.
The flight then headed east along the Gulf Coast Intracoastal Waterway [GICW] to Orange, Tex., near the Texas-Louisiana border. Several portions of the GICW remain closed in Texas and Louisiana due to obstructions. In between Port Arthur and Orange, a downed power line straddled the GICW.
"NUCLEAR WAR" ZONE. Rita's impact on the Port of Orange looked far more severe than that witnessed in Beaumont/Port Arthur. Rita's winds had gutted structures along the port, with barges and ships embanked along the shore.
Southeastern Louisiana appeared to bear the full force of Rita. In the small town of Holly Beach, La., the storm had ripped from their foundations homes along the shore, with no debris remaining. The town was gone. As one of the Coast Guard crew members commented, "It looks like a nuclear war happened here."
The trip ended in Cameron, La., a small town on the Calcasieu River waterway that connects the coast to Lake Charles, La. Rita's eye reportedly passed over Cameron, and the damage left behind indicated such a path. Some storage tanks along the Calcasieu River were crushed, and others lay in the river. The storm had destroyed docks along the Calcasieu and immersed cars and trucks in the river.
RIPPED FROM FOUNDATIONS. The Coast Guard reopened the Calcasieu River north of Cameron on Sept. 26, but the waterway from the coastline to Cameron remained closed due to lack of navigational aids and construction.
The town itself was still flooded severely, with few structures remaining except for the water tower. Homes and businesses had moved off their foundations and splintered into rubble.
The Coast Guard flight then turned west for the 50-minute trip back to Ellington Field. With the afternoon waning, the inside of the helicopter still felt the day's heat.
NEAR MISS. It will take considerable time for the oil and petrochemical hubs of Beaumont/Port Arthur and Orange to return to normal operations. Flooding and a lack of power prevent personnel from returning. Shipping obstructions -- not to mention smaller obstructions such as trees on roads and highways in this area of Texas -- will need to be cleared for vessel traffic to commence.
A bird's-eye view of the destruction Rita left behind in Louisiana is even more sobering. If Rita had continued on its originally forecasted path to hit near the Houston/Galveston area, the damage to critical Houston energy infrastructure would likely have devastated U.S. energy supplies.

http://www.ksat.com/money/5049148/detail.html

continued ...

October 9, 2005. Bursa, Turkey.  Posted by Picasa

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Morning Papers - continued

The Guardian

Breast cancer survival rates improve
Press Association
Monday October 10, 2005
Two in every three women who is diagnosed with breast cancer will survive for at least 20 years, researchers predicted today.
A Cancer Research UK study used statistics from the last 30 years to estimate that 64% of women newly diagnosed with breast cancer in England and Wales will live for at least 20 years - compared with 44% in the early 1990s.
More than seven out of 10 women (72%) are now predicted to survive for at least 10 years, compared with 54% diagnosed in the early 1990s.
Survival in women aged 50 to 69 - the age group in which breast cancer is most commonly diagnosed - was even better.
Among these women, 80% were estimated to live for at least 10 years while 72% survived to at least 20 years.

http://society.guardian.co.uk/health/news/0,8363,1588985,00.html


Coordinating the relief effort
Christian Aid's Dominic Nutt explains the problems facing aid workers as they race to help those affected by the south Asia earthquake
Monday October 10, 2005
The disaster that has hit the people of the Kashmir region will have a huge impact on friends and relatives back in the UK.
Many Muslims in Britain have strong Pakistani and Kashmiri connections, and UK charities, including Christian Aid and Islamic Relief, are launching a joint appeal for the victims of the earthquake.
In this month of Ramadan - a month of prayer and of charitable giving - Muslims in the UK will be the first in line to donate. And many others will want to do their bit, too.

http://society.guardian.co.uk/aid/comment/0,14178,1589022,00.html


Fathers to be offered six months leave
Patrick Wintour
Monday October 10, 2005
The Guardian
The government is to announce that fathers should have the right to six months' unpaid paternity leave independent of the decision of the female partner to take leave.
Ministers regard the move as central to making fathers feel more responsible for the upbringing of their children. They believe it also reflects the importance of parents being present in the crucial first stages of their child's life.

http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/story/0,1074,1588722,00.html


Blue Watch relive the bomb hell inside carriage 346A
It was a routine call-out - but within minutes firefighter Aaron Roche and his colleagues were plunged into the carnage of the 7 July bombings. For the first time, they tell their stories. By Mark Townsend
Sunday October 9, 2005
The Observer
He found her bolt upright, sitting still in some sort of private hell. For an hour she had remained, unblinking in the gloom, hemmed in by corpses on either side. The two people stared at one another, each wondering how they had stumbled across such carnage that mild summer's morning.
She was an ordinary commuter who found herself at the epicentre of Britain's deadliest terrorist attack. He was firefighter Aaron Roche, the first person to enter carriage 346A of the 8.51am Piccadilly Line service from King's Cross after the 7 July bombs went off.

http://society.guardian.co.uk/emergencyplanning/story/0,14501,1588747,00.html


Fire destroys Wallace and Gromit home
Staff and agencies
Monday October 10, 2005
Triumph and disaster: Aardman Animations has been destroyed by fire as news comes of international triumph for Wallace & Gromit's first feature
A fierce blaze at the warehouse of the animation company behind the Wallace and Gromit films has destroyed "the entire history" of the much-loved film-makers.
The roof of the Aardman Animations building in Silverthorne Lane, near Temple Meads station in Bristol, collapsed after fire tore through the Victorian building early today.
A spokesman for Aardman said the building housed all the props and sets from the company's history, which has scored a string of successes with its trademark "clay-mation" and gentle humour, beginning with the Morph cartoons on the BBC and going on to huge international success with Nick Park's Creature Comforts, the movie Chicken Run and the Wallace and Gromit films.

http://film.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,12589,1588867,00.html


Russia halts rocket launches after European satellite failure
Nick Paton Walsh in Moscow
Monday October 10, 2005
The Guardian
Russia's beleaguered space industry suffered another setback yesterday when officials suspended launches of a rocket system that had been used at the weekend in a failed attempt to put a European polar monitoring satellite into orbit.
State television said yesterday that Russia's space agency would not launch another Rokot missile until it had found out why a rocket crashed into the Atlantic. It was carrying the European Space Agency's Cryosat satellite, which monitors depletion of the polar ice-cap and gives vital clues on climate change. The £93m satellite was destroyed in the crash.

http://technology.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,16559,1588644,00.html


Investor's Business Daily

Stocks Finish Near Lows Amid Delphi News, Profit Warnings
BY KEN SHREVE
Posted 10/10/2005
It was more of the same Monday as early strength turned into weakness and stocks finished near their lows for the session. News of Delphi's bankruptcy and a few earnings warnings fueled negative sentiment.
As of 4:00 p.m. Eastern, the Dow slipped 54 points, or -0.5%, to 10,239; the S&P 500 gave up 9 points, or -0.7%, to 1187 and the Nasdaq lost 11 points, or -0.6, to 2079. It was the lowest close for the Dow and S&P 500 since May. Nasdaq volume came in around 1.4 billion shares, a 4% decline from Friday's level. NYSE volume totaled 1.6 billion shares, about equal with Friday's level.

http://www.investors.com/editorial/IBDArticles.asp?artsec=1


Rebels Want Drug Benefit Delay, But GOP Leaders Dismiss Idea
BY SEAN HIGGINS
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 10/7/2005
In the scramble to find offsets for the rising Gulf recovery costs, Republican budget hawks are targeting the new Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit.
The lawmakers say just postponing the benefit's rollout, set for Jan 1., for a year would reduce Medicare costs by at least $40 billion. That would go a long way toward stanching the government's flow of red ink.
They are facing determined opposition from their own leadership. Both the White House and congressional GOP leaders have said the benefit is off-limits and have reportedly chastised members for targeting it.
"We're hearing 'no change to the benefit. We don't want to revisit it at all,' " said Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., the idea's leading House advocate.

http://www.investors.com/editorial/IBDArticles.asp?artsec=16&issue=20051007


Server Chip Field Heats Up As Intel Set To Answer AMD
BY JAMES DETAR
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 10/7/2005
Intel's been leaving good money on the table in the network server chip market.
The world's No. 1 chipmaker plans to change that on Monday with the launch of Paxville, its first dual-core server chip.
The Paxville launch is a big deal for Intel (
INTC) in a couple of ways. First, Paxville marks Intel's entry into the dual-core server chip arena, where its main rival has already set up shop. Second, Paxville is a curtain-raiser for a string of dual-core chips that Intel plans to roll out in 2006.
There's added urgency for Intel with this rollout. Archrival Advanced Micro Devices (
AMD) has gained market share from Intel in servers this year because of its dual-core head start.

http://www.investors.com/editorial/IBDArticles.asp?artsec=17&artnum=1&issue=20051007


Hindustan Times

Quake victims loot supplies; toll could climb to 40,000
Agencies
Islamabad/Srinagar,
Grief gave way to anger as hungry victims of the devastating earthquake in Pakistan occupied Kashmir on Tuesday looted army vehicles carrying essential supplies and clashed with shopkeepers amid indications that the death toll in the worst-ever tragedy could climb to 40,000.
With time running out for finding survivors buried under rubble, the authorities were trying to rush rescue teams and relief to the devastated areas of PoK where alone 25,000 people are feared to have been killed in Saturday's earthquake.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1515327,0008.htm

Another casualty: Terror camps in Pak, PoK hit
(image placeholder)
Press Trust of India
(image placeholder)
New Delhi,
The earthquake on Saturday last is understood to have caused a massive damage to major terrorist outfits running training camps in Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir (PoK), security sources said in New Delhi on Monday.
According to central security agencies, the camps of terrorist outfits like Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Taiba, Tehrek-ul-Mujahideen (TuM), Hizbul Mujahideen and Al-Badar had been damaged to a great extent.
All these areas fall within a radius of 10 kilometres from the epicentre of weekend's tremor.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1515306,0008.htm

Peace bus service suspended indefinitely
Press Trust of India
Srinagar,
The Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus service has been suspended indefinitely in view of the earthquake that struck Jammu and Kashmir on Saturday, regional passport officer Ramalu said.
"The bus service has been suspended till further orders in view of the natural calamity that has struck Jammu and Kashmir," Ramalu said.
The suspension was temporary and should not be construed as cancellation.
The service would be resumed as soon as conditions permit the same, he added.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1515372,000900010002.htm


Quake rocks sub-continent
The magnitude
The quake occured at 9.20 am on Saturday, measured 7.6 on Richter scale.
While 755 people were killed in Jammu and Kashmir, Pak death toll is estimated at 40,000.
Epicentre in west Muzaffarabad in PoK, 95 km from Islamabad. 22 aftersocks on Saturday and 2 on Sunday morning.
Casualties
In J&K the toll is 755. 157 deaths recorded in Kupwara, 139 in Baramulla, six in Srinagar and 18 in Jammu. Dead included 39 soldiers.
Prime Minister announced an ex-gratia of Rs one lakh each to the next of the kin of those killed
In Pakistan the toll is estimated to cross 40,000. Initial reports said there were 17,115 fatalities in PoK alone. Those injured were 41,000. 250 students killed in a NWFP school
In Pakistan, 215 army personnel were killed, including seven officers, and 424 injured.
Over 90 Indian families in the Indian High Commission and that of the two journalists are safe in Islamabad.
UN sending emergency coordinators to Pakistan to prepare the world body's response to the earthquake.
Helpline: Control Room number of Home Ministry's Crisis Management team--011-23093563-6

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1515327,0008.htm


Britain flooded with trafficked women
VIJAY Dutt
CITIES IN Britain are turning into vice centres with criminal gangs flooding them with women trafficked for the sex trade. According to one report, over 1,000 women are being brought in every year, mostly from eastern Europe, by gangs and they literally "melt" away unnoticed.
Recently, 19 women, virtual prisoners of the sex traders, were rescued from a massage parlour in Birmingham. The police said criminal vice masters were making millions profiting from trafficked women in a growing illegal trade. MPs claimed the government was failing to curb the trade.
Senior police officials said cities were so flooded with sex-trafficked women that turf wars were breaking out between rival gangs as supply had started to outstrip demand.
Campaigners accuse the government of not doing enough to protect the women, some as young as 15, duped into coming to Britain on the false promise of jobs as nannies or waitresses only to be forced into sex and brutality.
Yet ministers have not signed a new European agreement, already supported by 15 states, aimed at combating human trafficking. An influential committee of MPs and peers are to debate whether to launch an inquiry into the government's failure to sign the convention.
MPs on the Joint Committee on Human Rights accused the government of failing to combat "an evil trade in human misery" by refusing to grant women rescued from trafficking the right to stay in Britain long enough to recover from their ordeal.
Evan Harris, the Liberal Democrat MP for Oxford West and Abingdon, and a committee member, was quoted as saying it was "disgraceful" the government was turning sex trafficking into an immigration issue.
Amnesty International said the women in volved are treated as illegal immigrants and deported home to face social stigma, poverty and even death threats from the criminals who brought them to Britain.

http://70.86.150.98/Hindustantimes/ArticleText.aspx?article=10_10_2005_015_007


Israeli, American share 2005 Economics Nobel prize
Matt Moore (AP)
Israeli and US citizen Robert J Aumann and American Thomas C Schelling won the 2005 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences on Monday for their work in game-theory analysis.
The pair won the prize "for having enhanced our understanding of conflict and cooperation through game-theory analysis," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
Aumann, 75, and Schelling, 84, have helped to "explain economic conflicts such as price wars and trade wars, as well as why some communities are more successful than others in managing common-pool resources," the academy said in its citation. "The repeated-games approach clarifies the raison d'etre of many institutions, ranging from merchant guilds and organised crime to wage negotiations and international trade agreements."

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1515043,001301370000.htm


The Boston Globe

Radar malfunction causes long delays at Logan
October 10, 2005
BOSTON --A malfunctioning radar system triggered long delays at Logan International Airport on Monday, according to a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman.
Many flights were delayed by more than four hours after the radar surveillance system at an FAA facility in Merrimack, N.H., malfunctioned around 7:30 a.m.
Air traffic controllers were seeing "false targets" on their radar scopes -- blips that the controllers knew did not represent planes in flight, said FAA spokeswoman Arlene Murray.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/10/10/radar_malfunction_causes_long_delays_at_logan/


New Hampshire declares emergency after flooding
October 10, 2005
BOSTON (Reuters) - The worst floods to hit southern New Hampshire in 25 years killed at least three people, forced 1,000 people to evacuate their homes and prompted the governor to declare a state of emergency, authorities said on Monday.
Flooding triggered by torrential rains over the weekend submerged a third of the city of Keene in up to 8 feet (2.4 metres) of water, while rivers in western Massachusetts and eastern Vermont swelled to dangerous levels, emergency officials said.
"This is a statewide flooding event," said New Hampshire Bureau of Emergency Management spokesman Jim Van Dungen.
New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch sent 500 National Guard members to worst-hit regions on Sunday. He also set up a Red Cross emergency shelter in Keene, although most evacuees

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/10/10/new_hampshire_declares_emergency_after_flooding/


Katrina leaves thousands of cars in its wake
City begins to tow waterlogged vehicles
By Martin Miller, October 10, 2005
NEW ORLEANS -- As electricity is slowly switched back on, and as drinkable water starts to flow again, the city is turning to another Herculean labor after Hurricane Katrina -- the removal and the scrapping of more than 200,000 waterlogged and abandoned cars.
The cars are strewn about the city, on freeway mediums, on side roads, in parking lots. They are stranded in front of homes and apartments, and in some areas, the middle of the street.
So far, the city has towed about 1,600 of them. At that rate, it will take about a decade to finish the job.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2005/10/10/katrina_leaves_thousands_of_cars_in_its_wake/


Google's rush to print
October 10, 2005
GOOGLE, FLUSH WITH resources, has a grand vision to catalog and offer snippets of every book in the New York Public Library and several university collections, including Harvard's. But this is a case of too ambitious and too quickly. The Google proposal probably runs afoul of US copyright law, and an incremental approach is better to insure maximum online access to the riches of great libraries.
Google would have no problem if it limited its new search engine, Google Print, to only those books published before 1923. But after that, most works are covered by copyright, and enough copyright holders objected to inclusion that the Authors Guild, a trade association for published writers, has filed suit. These people and companies have a legitimate interest in determining who may publish their books.

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2005/10/10/googles_rush_to_print/


Jerusalem Post

Security forces arrest 117 Hebron-area Hamas activists
By
MARGOT DUDKEVITCH
The Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) revealed on Monday that 117 Hamas activists belonging to three separate terror infrastructures in the Hebron area were arrested by security forces.
The activists were involved in many attacks, including the abduction and murder of
Sasson Nuriel, the suicide bomb attack in the Beersheba bus station in August, and a planned bombing of an air force helicopter at a training base in the Judean desert.
A senior Shin Bet official noted that the infrastructures continued to operate intensively despite the tahdiya called in February of this year. They were responsible for the deaths of six Israelis and the wounding of scores.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1128955347434&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull


Sharon-Abbas summit postponed
By
HERB KEINON AND JPOST STAFF
The summit between Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas scheduled for Tuesday was postponed until the end of the month, Israel Radio reported, after an inconclusive meeting between representatives of both men on Sunday.
According to a senior Palestinian spokesman the meeting was postponed until an unknown date, either the end of the month or the beginning of November, Army Radio reported.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1128864029000&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull


Israel eases restrictions for Ramadan
By
MARGOT DUDKEVITCH
In the framework of easing up restrictions on Palestinians living in the West Bank,
Israel carried out a number of steps as a gesture during the month of Ramadan.
Israel will permit 400 Palestinian worshipers aged 45 and upward to attend prayers at the Temple Mount each Friday of the Ramadan month, as well as 450 religious workers who will be permitted to travel to east Jerusalem, and an additional 100 religious workers who will be permitted to enter Israel.
Furthermore, 150 Christian teachers and 400 Muslim teachers will be allowed into east Jerusalem and Israel will also allow 150 Wakf workers from the West Bank to enter the Temple Mount.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1128864031543&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull


IDF warns Hamas may kidnap Israelis
By
MATTHEW GUTMAN
The IDF is certain that Hamas is trying to boost its terrorist capabilities in the West Bank, while at the same time have chosen to change their tactics in their fight against Israel, a senior intelligence official said Monday.
The group's strength on the Palestinian street has waned, largely due to their own missteps – including a deadly accident during a Gaza rally on September 23, the indiscriminate shelling of Israel which lead to this month's Operation First Rain, and the killing of PA security officers.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1128864030317&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull


Wichita Eagle


VA points way to drug savings
If you're a veteran with Veterans Affairs drug benefits, count yourself lucky. The VA offers some of the most affordable drug prices in the country for its patients.
And as reported by a new study, it achieves those remarkable savings primarily through the power of negotiation on bulk purchases.
Which raises anew the question: Why can't the new Medicare prescription drug program -- already seeing budget-busting cost overruns -- leverage its bulk purchasing power to achieve the same savings?

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/news/editorial/12861217.htm


New Orleans officers plead not guilty
MARY FOSTER
Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS - Three New Orleans police officers pleaded not guilty Monday to battery charges based on a videotape showing two patrolmen repeatedly punching a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication and a third officer grabbing and shoving an Associated Press Television News producer who helped capture the confrontation on tape.
After a brief hearing, at which trial was set for Jan. 11, the officers were released on bond. They quickly left in cars without commenting.
They were suspended without pay Sunday, police spokesman Marlon Defillo said. The police promised a criminal investigation.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12861377.htm


Flooding in east kills at least seven
DAVID TIRRELL-WYSOCKI
Associated Press
ALSTEAD, N.H. - Prolonged, heavy rain caused flooding from North Carolina to Maine over the weekend, forcing hundreds of people to evacuate, knocking out electricity, weakening dams and making roads impassable.
At least 10 people died in flooding or in rain-related crashes, including two young people killed in New Hampshire when a car apparently drove off a washed-out bridge into flood waters, officials said. At least one other person was seen being swept away in a swift-flowing river.
Gov. John Lynch returned from Europe to take charge of relief efforts in New Hampshire. He declared a state of emergency and called in 500 National Guard members for assistance.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12861494.htm


What did you think of the CBS movie, ""The Hunt for the BTK Killer," shown Sunday night?
It was great.


21 votes (4%)
It was OK.


117 votes (21%)
I have a mixed reaction.


78 votes (14%)
I didn't like it.


166 votes (30%)
I didn't watch.

169 votes (31%)

551 people have voted so far
Your vote was I didn't watch. on 10/10/2005 4:27 pm

http://forums.kansas.com/n/mb/message.asp?webtag=kr-kansas_news&tid=9908&vote=5&submit=Vote


Hearing: Will Rader get media?
BY TIM POTTER
The Wichita Eagle
Prosecutors are expected to argue at a Wednesday hearing that BTK serial killer Dennis Rader should be denied materials he could use in prison to feed his sexual fantasies.
The 3 p.m. court hearing will be held at El Dorado Correctional Facility, where Rader is being evaluated to determine where he will serve 10 consecutive life sentences -- one for each of his 10 victims from 1974 to 1991.
Sedgwick County District Judge Greg Waller is expected to hear arguments from prosecutors and defense lawyers, then make a recommendation about the conditions of Rader's imprisonment.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12861966.htm


Remains of 3 people found in apartment ruins
Associated Press
LAWRENCE - The remains of three people have been discovered in the ruins of an apartment complex that was destroyed by fire Friday, and no other residents are missing, fire officials said today.
The three victims were found Sunday in various locations throughout the three-story, block-long building in the Boardwalk Apartments complex, said Mark Bradford, interim chief of the Lawrence-Douglas County Fire & Medical department.
Bradford refused to release names, causes of death or other information about the victims. He said it could be several days before they are officially identified.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12867246.htm


State's flu response plan paints scary picture
A half-million Kansans could need medical care, and 2,500 could die during an influenza pandemic, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment estimates.
Businesses would stand nearly empty as sick employees stayed home; garbage collection and home meal delivery would stop; day cares would close.
That scenario is laid out in KDHE's Kansas Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan, released today in Topeka.
For more on this story, see Tuesday's Eagle.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12866672.htm


Students protest abortion protest
Kids object to church's use of grisly poster on campuses
BY CHRISTINA M. WOODS
The Wichita Eagle
Sunday, the protesters were protested. For three hours, a group organized by West High School students demonstrated outside Wichita's Spirit One Christian Center. The students were expressing their displeasure about the abortion protest the church supported earlier this week at the high school.
Church members responded Sunday with a counter-demonstration. In all, about 300 people were involved, though it was difficult to tell how many were on each side.
The demonstration was sparked by a graphic picture of an aborted fetus that appeared at the abortion protests at West High School and Wichita State University last week.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12863544.htm


Hungry Pakistanis wait for quake relief
SADAQAT JAN
Associated Press
MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan - Shopkeepers clashed with looters Monday, and hungry families huddled under tents while waiting for relief supplies after Pakistan's worst earthquake razed entire villages and buried roads in rubble. Death toll estimates ranged from 20,000 to 30,000.
British rescuers unearthed a man trapped in rubble for 54 hours, residents using their bare hands and crowbars freed two girls buried in a school for more than two days, and a woman and child were pulled to safety from a wrecked apartment building after 62 hours.

http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/12861431.htm


The Gulf News

Fourth Nobel win boosts Egypt's pride
By Ramadan Al Sherbini, Gulf News Report
Cairo: Hardly had the news been broken that Mohammad Al Baradei, the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, when his family's house in the fashionable quarter of Dokki in Cairo was swarmed with well-wishers.
"My son Mohammad has been brilliant since early childhood," said Al Baradei's mother Aida Ali, as her voice quavered with emotions. "This has been the opinion of all those who came to know him, including his kindergarten school teacher," she told Gulf News.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=185923


Living up to his name
By Adel Safty, Special to Gulf News
I argued in my previous article that the primacy of national interests over common interests was inimical to the spirit of the United Nations and was eroding its credibility.
Consider how the Bush administration and its combative ambassador to the UN, John Bolton, dealt with the world body in the negotiations that preceded the recent UN summit.
Since he came to New York, Bolton has been living up to his reputation of disdain. He is widely held responsible for diluting the summit's final document from a set of concrete commitments to vague general principles.
In his zeal to impose the current American view and to oppose any UN restriction on the US ability to use force, he disparaged the reform package document and demanded no less than 750 amendments to it. He threatened delegates with the use of his red pen and warned them against crossing "red lines".

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/OpinionNF.asp?ArticleID=186012


US envoy told to keep off Yemen's affairs
By Nasser Arrabyee, Gulf News Report
Sanaa:
The Yemeni Government yesterday said the US ambassador has no business interfering in the internal affairs of the country after he said "progress of democracy in Yemen has stalled".
"Yemen is an independent country and democracy in Yemen concerns the Yemeni people themselves and no one else," the official news agency Saba quoted an unidentified official as saying.
The official, termed as 'media responsible source', said the statements of US Ambassador Thomas Krajeski do not serve the "good relations between the friendly countries", and that such statements are considered an "interference in the internal affairs" of the country.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=185929


Talks on to swing Sunni support for Iraq charter
Agencies
Baghdad: With US mediation, Shiite and Kurdish officials negotiated with Sunni Arab leaders last minute additions to the constitution, trying to win Sunni support ahead of next weekend's crucial referendum.
But the sides remained far apart on Sunday over basic issues - including the federalism that Shiites and Kurds insist on - and copies of the constitution are already being passed out to the public.
Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani met with Sunni Arab leaders Saturday and Sunday trying to convince them on changes to the charter.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=186026


Iraq interior minister regrets his verbal assault on Saudis
Reuters
Baghdad: Iraq's outspoken interior minister was quoted yesterday as saying he hoped his verbal onslaught on Saudi Arabia would be a "passing summer cloud" and that ties between the two countries would remain strong.
Bayan Baqer Sulagh had last week referred to Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al Faisal as a "bedouin riding a camel" and slammed the kingdom's treatment of women and minority Shiites, forcing Sulagh to apologise.
"I hope these statements and what has been said and written will be a passing summer cloud ... ," Sulagh told Asharq Al Awsat newspaper.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=185897/


Abdullah and Mubarak to meet today
Agencies
Amman:
Jordan's King Abdullah II and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will meet in Cairo today to discuss ways for advancing peace efforts after Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip, officials said.
"The meeting is aimed at pushing the stalled peace talks ahead. Both Egypt and Jordan see an opportunity after Gaza to move further and expand peace moves to the West Bank," one palace official said.
Israel last month dismantled 21 Jewish colonies and pulled out its forces from the Gaza Strip after 38 years of occupation, reviving hopes of renewed peace talks after nearly five years of an uprising.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=185925


Majority of AU hostages freed by Darfur rebel group
Agencies
Khartoum : Darfur rebel dissidents have released 36 African Union hostages but are still holding two more in the western Sudanese region.
The rebel faction kidnapped a multi-national AU ceasefire monitoring team on Sunday and then the rescue team.
AU spokesperson Noureddine Mezni said on Monday that the military head of the AU mission had personally witnessed the release of 36 of the hostages.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=186025


Two AU troops and two civilians killed in Darfur
Reuters
Khartoum:
Two African Union peacekeepers and two civilian contractors were killed in an ambush in Sudan's troubled Darfur region on Saturday, the AU's first casualties of the conflict, the acting head of the mission said on Saturday.
"Two of our military were killed and three AU military were wounded, and two civilian personnel were killed," Jean Baptiste Natama, acting head of the AU mission in Sudan said, adding the ambush took place in South Darfur state.

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/RegionNF.asp?ArticleID=185926


The Philadelphia Inquirer

A struggle to find common ground on unfamiliar turf
By Jennifer Moroz
Inquirer Staff Writer
Second of three parts
Within minutes, three Border Patrol cars had 13-year-old Cindia and her mother, Marli, surrounded.
A smuggler had just led the pair and three other Brazilians across the Rio Grande.
The "coyote" had turned back, telling his charges to keep moving until they reached the road. Border Patrol will find you, he said. He knew U.S. detention centers couldn't hold all the illegal immigrants flowing into the country.
As the coyote said, Cindia and Marli were processed and, after providing a false U.S. address, released with a notice to appear in court. They would ignore the notice, and like hordes of others, become fugitives in the eyes of Immigration officials.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/12862105.htm


The American Debate
As Bush slips, GOP faces major shift in '08 vote
By Dick Polman
Inquirer Political Analyst
Back when President Bush was riding high - before the public turned sour on Iraq, before conservatives got mad about his lavish federal spending and his Harriet Miers nomination - it was widely assumed that the 2008 Republican presidential candidates would vie amongst themselves for the right to proudly carry their leader's torch.
But that's not happening.
The Republican hopefuls - as many as a dozen men who already are jockeying for advantage - don't want to be perceived as insiders and heirs to the Bush political establishment. On the contrary, most of them are trying to advertise their independence, to distance themselves from Bush on key issues, to appear as rebels fed up with the wicked ways of Washington.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/12862102.htm


Gay pride celebrated with little disruption
The 15th annual Outfest drew about 30 protesters to Center City, but there were few reported clashes.
By Natalie Pompilio
Inquirer Staff Writer
Despite fears that protests would mar the party, the 15th annual Outfest went off without any major problems yesterday as thousands crowded the streets of Philadelphia's "gayborhood" to celebrate gay pride.
Last year's city-sanctioned street festival was blemished when 11 members of Repent America, a local antihomosexual evangelical Christian group, were arrested for refusing to move from in front of a stage performance.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/12862133.htm


Jakarta Post

Scientists prepare to install tsunami warning system off Sumatra
ON BOARD THE SONNE, Indonesia (AP): A team of German and Indonesian scientists will set sail Tuesday for Sumatra island to install a tsunami warning system in the region worst hit by last year's Asian killer wave disaster.
The system involves sensors on the ocean floor and giant buoys on the surface of the sea that transmit information about earthquake activity to observation stations on the coast via satellite.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010150216&irec=2


Indonesia to test bird flu vaccines after graft scandal
JAKARTA (AFP): Indonesia will run tests its stock of bird flu vaccine after a corruption scandal involving production of sub-standard doses, an official said Monday.
Government auditors suspect that local companies assigned to make the vaccine produced doses of inferior quality to inflate profits, with the collusion of some ministry officials.
The disease has killed at least three Indonesians and 59 others elsewhere in Southeast Asia since 2003.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010142102&irec=3


Growing demand for LCD monitors in Asia-Pacific region
SINGAPORE (DPA): Sales of liquid crystal display (LCD) monitors in the Asia-Pacific region are forecast to overtake traditional computer monitors as early as the first quarter of 2006, International Data Corp (IDC) predicted on Monday.
"This is an impressive milestone that signals the impending demise of the CRT (cathode ray tube), because even rural areas of lesser-developed nations such as India and Indonesia are looking at converting to LCDs," The Business Times quoted ReubanTan, IDC's senior analyst for personal systems research, as saying.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010123923&irec=4


Australia to urge new counterterrorism measures in Indonesia
CANBERRA (AP): Australia's foreign minister, set to visit neighboring Indonesia Tuesday in the aftermath of the latest Bali bombings, said he will urge the country's government to bolster its counterterrorism capabilities.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Monday he would stop off on his way to Jakarta at the tourist island where 23 people, including four Australians, were killed by suicide bombers on Oct. 1.
Downer said he hoped to meet with Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as well as government ministers and Indonesia's police chief.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010115057&irec=5


Indonesian investors need education on mutual funds
Frank van Lerven, Jakarta
The Indonesian mutual funds industry is suddenly faced with a crisis in confidence. This time not caused by the stock market but by the fixed interest market, also knows as the "bond market" (obligasi).
It all started with the significant hikes in interest rates by Bank Indonesia over the last couple of months as it attempted to protect the rupiah and keep inflation in check in the wake of higher fuel prices. Simply said: A few months ago "money in the bank" would produce about 6 percent in interest, now we are looking at approximately 10 percent.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20051010.E02&irec=1


International cooperation vital for saving the heart of Borneo island
Siswo Pramono, The Hague
The three Bornean countries -- Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam -- should develop an integrated conservation policy in order to save the very large blocks of interconnected forests on the island of Borneo. Such a trilateral policy is critical to sustainable development in, and hence the prosperity of, the entire island.
Such an integrated policy, however, is not unprecedented. Through the Yaoundi Declaration of 1999, for instance, the central African states Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon committed themselves to conserve the incalculable natural riches of the Congo Basin forests. Borneo's forest, which is also very rich in biodiversity and natural resources, deserves the same protection.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20051010.E03&irec=2


Eliminating terrorism
Indonesia is one of the Muslim countries being targeted by terrorists due to its alliance with the U.S. We will never condone terrorism and instead should work hand-in-hand to make sure that there are no more acts of terror in Indonesia.
Instead of reactivating Indonesian Military (TNI) territorial commands, it would be better if the government arranged meetings with prominent Muslims and clerics to discuss how security agents could work accordingly in order to eliminate terrorism.
AZHAR ZULKIFLI, Aceh

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20051010.F06&irec=5


Malaysia's new coast guard to begin patrolling Malacca Strait
KUALA LUMPUR (AP): A new Malaysian coast guard with 72 vessels will begin patrolling the piracy-plagued Malacca Strait next month, the government said Monday.
More than 4,000 personnel will eventually be trained to work for the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency, which will begin surveillance on Nov. 30 along the busy shipping lane between peninsular Malaysia and Indonesia's Sumatra island, Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak said.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010172719&irec=0


Indonesia, East Timor may seek foreign funds for peace commission
DILI (AFP): Indonesia and its former territory East Timor may seek foreign funding for their Commission of Truth and Friendship investigating past bloodshed, East Timor's Foreign Minister Jose Ramos Horta said Monday.
Horta said that for the initial six months, the two countries have raised a total of US$1.5 million to fund the commission that was set up in August to investigate the 1999 violence surrounding East Timor's push for independence from Jakarta.
Horta said this was more than the commission itself had sought for the first six months, but after that there would be a review of whether it needs more cash.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillatestnews.asp?fileid=20051010171817&irec=1


They can run, but how long can they hide?
Endy M. Bayuni, Jakarta
The Oct. 1 bomb attacks in Bali exposed gross weaknesses in the capability of the National Police force and the National Intelligence Agency (BIN) in dealing with terrorism. They may be good in handling the matter after the fact -- our police seem to be quick off the mark in identifying the perpetrators and arresting some of them. But they fall short when it comes to anticipating or detecting the next attack.
Central to any success in the fight against terror will be the capture of the two Malaysians whose names have been connected with the first deadly bomb attacks in Bali in 2002 and with just about every major bombing that has occurred in Indonesia since then. It is thought that Azahari bin Husin and Noordin M. Top orchestrated the coordinated attacks on Oct. 1.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20051010.B06&irec=5


Ex-militant says Bali blasts aimed to discredit Islam
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
A former accomplice of Imam Samudra, who received the death sentence for his role in the 2002 Bali bombings, has confessed to taking part in acts of violence nationwide, but denied a role in the Oct. 1 blasts on the island.
Hadidi aka Abu Zahro, 40, told the Cilegon Police he was a victim of a grand scenario to label Muslim hard-liners as perpetrators of bomb attacks in the country.
Cilegon Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Agus Riansyah led the questioning of Hadidi on Saturday. The native of Banten was also shown pictures of three suspected suicide bombers of last weekend's attacks on two cafes and a restaurant on the tourist island, which left 23 people dead, including one victim who died in hospital on Saturday.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20051010.B07&irec=6

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