Thursday, June 01, 2006

Morning Papers - continued

Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/

"You Are Entering the Peace Port of Olympia;No Weapons Please."

Deputies guard port from anti-war crowd
Protesters, police face off after ship arrives for Iraq cargo
By Katherine Tam
The Olympian
OLYMPIA — Law enforcement officials armed with pepper spray and dressed in riot gear guarded the gate at the Port of Olympia Monday night, where about 150 activists gathered to protest a military ship that arrived to take equipment to Iraq. Protestors chanted “Out of Olympia, Out of Iraq” as they rocked the chain-link gate so hard that it looked like it might give way. At least three people tried to use wooden boards to pry the gate open.
Thurston County Sheriff’s deputies used a loudspeaker to warn the group to back off repeatedly before they deployed pepper spray at least four times in a one-hour period around 9:30 p.m. Dozens of people at the port plaza crouched over, dousing each other’s eyes with bottles of water and offering slices of onion to ease burning in the throat.

http://www.theolympian.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060530/NEWS/60530002


This is no little protest. It was 'days' long and not hours.

Photos

http://www.flickr.com/photos/94127337@N00/

And

Seventh Day of Port Protest

http://www.flickr.com/photos/94127337@N00/sets/72157594149559351/


And

http://community.theolympian.com/gallery/view_album.php?set_albumName=album432&page=1

And

http://community.theolympian.com/gallery/view_album.php?set_albumName=album432&page=2

And

Striker Brigade Blocked by Olympia Port Protest

http://www.flickr.com/photos/94127337@N00/sets/72157594144335213/


Oly in the News
Submitted by Norm on Tue, 05/30/2006 - 2:30pm.
I wasn't sure if anyone had done this but I thought I would share. If you hop onto google and click the news section and search for "port of olympia" you'll see that Oly is national news. Suppose we aren't on nightline but hey, it's a start right?

http://olyblog.net/


Port protests escalate
22 arrests made in demonstrations against military cargo ship
BY SCOTT GUTIERREZ
THE OLYMPIAN
OLYMPIA - Twenty-two people were arrested Tuesday in one of the most volatile confrontations yet between anti-war activists and police officers guarding a military cargo ship docked at the Port of Olympia.
The confrontations resulted in the most arrests in a single day since the demonstrations began a week ago against the Iraq-bound military shipments leaving from the port. Police used pepper spray several times on the 100 or so activists and advanced into the crowd later in the evening, trying to disperse it.
Olympia City Councilman TJ Johnson was among those shoved by state troopers trying to clear the area. In response, he stood face-to-face in front of the advancing officers until they fired several pepper-spray pellets to clear the area.

http://www.theolympian.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060531/NEWS/60531002



ON TO the complete two week collection of "Tom Tomorrow" at Michael Moore Dot Calm

http://www.michaelmoore.com/features/tomtomorrow/


Deadline is coming up on the Scholarship


http://www.michaelmoore.com/features/sanmarcos/sanmarcos-flyer.pdf


Sunday, May 28th to Friday, June 2nd:
Find Divine Peace at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site Help Stop the 700 Ton Bomb from Falling from the Sky MISSION ACCOMPLISHED


Nevada blast put on hold indefinitely

Residents fear 700 tons of explosives could kick up radiation
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The planned detonation of 700 tons of conventional explosives in the Nevada desert next month was postponed indefinitely Friday because of fears over the possible spread of radiation.
The detonation site for the blast, known as "Divine Strake," is at the Nevada Test Site, which is 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
The 1,375-square-mile swath of land in southern Nevada is where the United States tested many of its nuclear weapons before President George H.W. Bush signed a testing moratorium in 1992.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/05/26/nevada.bomb/index.html


Nevada blast plan implodes

Feds postpone test indefinitely to double-check the risks
WASHINGTON - Divine Strake, a massive explosives test originally planned for next month at the Nevada Test Site, has been put on hold.
The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) said Friday it was postponing the test - which entails detonation of 700 tons of explosives - so it can reassess the potential for radioactive contaminants left in the ground from earlier nuclear tests becoming airborne.
Darwin Morgan, a spokesman at the Nevada Test Site, said the agency plans to do additional sampling at the blast site to measure background radiation in the soil.

http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_3871339


Act NOW:
Help Save the Nation's Largest Urban Farm - South Central Farm Needs Your Help


Congresswoman Maxine Waters Joins Farmers at South Central Farm to Show Solidarity
INTERFAITH PRAYER VIGIL AT SOUTH CENTRAL FARM AT 11:OO AM
Sheriff’s Department statement heightens concern of police action at South Central Farm Encampment.
Clock In To Save the Farm
Day 3 of Encampment Kicks Off in South Central:11:00am Press Conference at the Farm

http://www.southcentralfarmers.com/


Bush, Blair regret mistakes, stay the course

Hopes for Iraq Pullback Fading
The worsening situation in the west means U.S. troops are likely to stay, officials say. Military sends backup but denies an offensive is coming.
By Louise Roug and Peter Spiegel /
Los Angeles Times
BAGHDAD — The Pentagon's hopes of making substantial reductions in U.S. troop levels in Iraq this year appear to be fading as a result of resurgent violence in the country, particularly in the Sunni Arab stronghold of Al Anbar province, military officials acknowledge.
Army Gen. George W. Casey, commander of U.S.-led forces in Iraq, said Tuesday that he was moving 1,500 "backup" troops from Kuwait to Al Anbar, the western region that includes the war-torn cities of Fallouja and Ramadi.
Publicly, Pentagon officials insisted Tuesday that the move was temporary and unrelated to Casey's much-delayed recommendation on overall troop levels, now expected to be made next month. But other officers have privately acknowledged that the worsening situation in Al Anbar — particularly in Ramadi, which U.S. officials say is now under insurgent control — is likely to prevent any significant drawdown this year.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7092



Ohio coin dealer pleads guilty to charges
By John Seewer /
Associated Press
TOLEDO, Ohio - A coin dealer and prominent GOP fundraiser at the center of an Ohio political scandal pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal charges he illegally funneled about $45,000 to President Bush's re-election campaign.
Tom Noe, once a powerful political figure who also raised money for Ohio Republicans, still is charged with embezzlement in an ill-fated $50 million coin investment that he managed for the state workers' compensation fund.
The investment scandal has been a major embarrassment for Ohio's ruling Republicans and given Democrats a better shot at winning state offices this year, including the governor's office, which has been under GOP control since 1991.
Investigators do not know whether Noe used money from the state coin fund for campaign contributions.
Noe was charged with exceeding federal campaign contribution limits, using others to make the contributions and causing the Bush campaign to submit a false campaign-finance statement.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7099


Activists win symbolic victory at Exxon meeting

By Deepa Babington /
Reuters
DALLAS - A majority of Exxon Mobil Corp. investors voted in favor of a proposal opposed by the oil company, as fury over fat CEO compensation helped give activists their first such victory in Exxon's history.
The victory is largely symbolic since Exxon is not required to adopt the proposal, which seeks election of Exxon directors by a majority vote.
Still, it is a huge win for shareholder activists who have long trained their guns on the world's largest public oil company with little success. It also underscores the angst among investors over a multimillion compensation package handed to former Exxon CEO Lee Raymond, who retired last year.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7097



Four Librarians Finally Break Silence in Records Case

By Alison Leigh Cowan /
New York Times
Four Connecticut librarians who had been barred from revealing that they had received a request for patrons' records from the federal government spoke out yesterday, expressing frustration about the sweeping powers given to law enforcement authorities by the USA Patriot Act.
The librarians took turns at the microphone at their lawyers' office and publicly identified themselves as the collective John Doe who had sued the United States attorney general after their organization received a confidential demand for patron records in a secret counterterrorism case. They had been ordered, under the threat of prosecution, not to talk about the request with anyone. The librarians, who all have leadership roles at a small consortium called Library Connection in Windsor, Conn., said they opposed allowing the government unchecked power to demand library records and were particularly incensed at having been subject to the open-ended nondisclosure order.
"I'm John Doe, and if I had told you before today that the F.B.I. was requesting library records, I could have gone to jail," said one of the four, Peter Chase, a librarian from Plainville who is on the executive committee of Library Connection's board.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7100



U.S. troops kill pregnant woman in Iraq

By Kim Gamel /
Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. forces killed two Iraqi women — one of them about to give birth — when the troops shot at a car that failed to stop at an observation post in a city north of Baghdad, Iraqi officials and relatives said Wednesday.
Nabiha Nisaif Jassim, 35, was being raced to the maternity hospital in Samarra by her brother when the shooting occurred Tuesday.
Jassim, the mother of two children, and her 57-year-old cousin, Saliha Mohammed Hassan, were killed by the U.S. forces, according to police Capt. Laith Mohammed and witnesses.
The U.S. military said coalition troops fired at a car after it entered a clearly marked prohibited area near an observation post but failed to stop despite repeated visual and auditory warnings.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7098



Files Contradict Account of Raid in Iraq

By Eric Schmitt and David S. Cloud /
New York Times
WASHINGTON — A military investigator uncovered evidence in February and March that contradicted repeated claims by marines that Iraqi civilians killed in Haditha last November were victims of a roadside bomb, according to a senior military official in Iraq.
Among the pieces of evidence that conflicted with the marines' story were death certificates that showed all the Iraqi victims had gunshot wounds, mostly to the head and chest, the official said.
The investigation, which was led by Col. Gregory Watt, an Army officer in Baghdad, also raised questions about whether the marines followed established rules for identifying hostile threats when they assaulted houses near the site of a bomb attack, which killed a fellow marine.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7093



"This is the first war that has become an issue rather than a national experience."

New veterans fear repeat of Vietnam
Groups working to educate public on Iraq returnees
By Bryan Bender /
Boston Globe
WASHINGTON -- There were no victory parades for Vietnam veterans. They were seen -- and often derided -- as the product of a failed policy. They struggled for decades for acceptance and many are still fighting for veterans benefits.
Now, with polls showing a steady decline in public support and average Americans increasingly tuning out the war in Iraq, a new generation of veterans are warning that they, too, are at risk of the same kind of indifference that confronted Vietnam-era veterans, many of whom suffered from homelessness and mental disabilities, and sometimes slipped through the cracks of the Department of Veterans Affairs .
``I am concerned about the idea that guys who served in Iraq are used goods and are not much worth to society," said Marine Corps Captain David Danelo , author of ``Blood Stripes: The Grunt's View of the War in Iraq."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7105



Anti-war protests target lawmakers

By Adam Leech /
Portsmouth Herald
PORTSMOUTH - "Robert Rooney of Nashua ... Randy Rosenberg of Berlin ... Richard Ferguson of Conway ..."
Local peace activists read the names of the 11 New Hampshire soldiers killed in Iraq since 2003, as well as hundreds of other U.S. soldiers and Iraqi civilians. And though their intended audience was not present, their message was clear.
"We’re here to demand an end to the Iraq War," said David Diamond of Seacoast Peace Response, in front of Sen. Judd Gregg’s office at Pease International Tradeport. "Not one more death. Not one more dollar."
The slogan is the rallying cry of New Hampshire Peace Action, which organized similar protests at all 14 congressional offices throughout the state Wednesday. They are demanding a clear exit strategy for the war and an open debate in the House about the war.
William Woodward of Durham started the day expecting to be arrested. And that’s what happened a few hours later when he and five other people were charged with criminal trespassing when they refused to leave Rep. Jeb Bradley’s Dover office until he indicated he will work with fellow congressmen to withdraw troops either immediately or by the end of the year.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=7104



Dear President Bush (City Lights Open Media) (Paperback)
by
Cindy Sheehan, Hart Viges, Howard Zinn (Foreword)

Book Description
In writings, speeches, and an interview conducted in the wake of the famous Camp Casey summer in Crawford, Texas, Cindy Sheehan embraces her personal transformation into America's most outspoken advocate for peace. From her trip to the World Social Forum in Venezuela to her ouster from the State of the Union address, Sheehan continues to speak out on topics such as civil disobedience, US foreign policy, New Orleans, military recruitment, her son Casey's death on his fifth day in Iraq, and soldiers who resist.
About the Author
Cindy Sheehan is the internationally known mom and peace advocate whose son, Casey, was killed in action in Baghdad, in April 2004. Since camping outside President Bush's home in August 2005, Cindy has been interviewed in major media outlets.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0872864545/sr=8-6/qid=1148412599/ref=pd_bbs_6/103-3106893-8727014?%5Fencoding=UTF8



Zoos

Photo in the News: Polar Bear Triplets Born in Zoo -- A First?
March 14, 2006—They say good things happen in threes, and for this polar bear mom good luck descended in one fell swoop.
The three cubs pictured above are believed to be the first set of polar bear triplets born in captivity. The trio made their public debut last Friday at the Ouwehands Zoo in the Netherlands (
see map) city of Rhenen.
In the wild, polar bears frequently give birth to more than one cub at a time, although triplets are far less common than twins. What's more, cubs compete for access to mother's milk. In a set of three, stronger siblings often force the runt of a litter to die of starvation within its first year.
Even in zoos, where food and care are plentiful, nearly half of the polar cubs born in captivity die. But Ouwehands Zoo officials seem to have luck on their side: All three cubs are healthy and are expected to survive into adulthood.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/03/0314_060314_polar_triplets.html


Zoo rock concerts 'won't hurt animals'

Taronga Park Zoo says adequate measures are in place to ensure animals are not distressed during music concerts in the zoo grounds.
The RSPCA has raised concerns about the potential impact on animals after loud rock-and-roll performances at the weekend.
A zoo spokesman says noise levels are monitored throughout the concerts and animals are kept away from the performance area in their night pens.
But RSPCA spokesman Mark Lawrie says some animals would find the music upsetting.
"Sharp, short sounds are more distressing for them. That's why it's really important that they have an environment in which they can cope," he said.
"Different animals appreciate different sounds of music and there's been some interesting research done.
"Dairy cows, for instance, prefer classical music and pigs like rock'n'roll.
"So the wart-hogs may be happy but the bison might not."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1591810.htm



Zoo visitors sing glories of wings
Web Posted: 03/15/2006 12:00 AM CST
Lisa Marie Gómez
Express-News Staff Writer
Squashed last year by a century-old red oak tree, the popular butterfly house at the San Antonio Zoo reopened to the public Tuesday, just in time for the Spring Break rush.
Hundreds of kids turned out under brilliant blue skies to see the rebuilt exhibit, called "Butterflies! Caterpillar Flight School," featuring 15 species of Asian butterflies.
"Oh, I think it's wonderful," said Barbara Flores, who brought her 9-year-old daughter and her daughter's friend to the zoo. "It's so fascinating, very educational, a pleasant surprise."
The 60-by-24-foot mesh-covered exhibit, 30 feet from floor to ceiling, is filled with lush plants including lantana, queen's wreath and Jamaican porterweed. Visitors get around on a meandering pathway made of pavers. The $48,000 for the reconstruction came from private companies, zoo visitors and other donors

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/metro/stories/MYSA031506.01B.Butterflies.1259dfb8.html



The big cats at the zoo have it easy
By LEON HALE
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
The other afternoon I visited the Houston Zoo for the first time in probably 30 years. Here's why:
When the zoo's male African lion died not long ago, I had a comment here about that animal's life. I felt it was sad that a magnificent lion had to spend all his years caged up.
For a long time I've had that attitude toward zoos. Maybe I was born that way. I'm just naturally opposed to captivity.
Anyway, that comment about the dead lion got me a letter from the folks at the Houston Zoo. They didn't fuss at me; they just invited me to come out and see the zoo's lions and tigers.
So I drove to Hermann Park and met Deborah Cannon, the zoo's CEO, and Hollie Colahan, curator of carnivores and primates. Brian Hill came along in a golf cart and gave us a ride to see the big cats. Hill is the zoo's director of public affairs.
We visited the tigers first.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/hale/3723455.html


Space center, zoo offer activities for children
Ray Parker
The Arizona Republic
Mar. 15, 2006 12:00 AM
Spring break has arrived.
Some families have plans to pack bags and fly off for some far-away fun.
For those staying in the Valley, there are plenty of activities for kids besides local parks and recreation camps.
The Challenger Space Center, 21170 N. 83rd Ave.
Details: (623) 322-2001 or AzChallenger.org.
Out of Africa Wildlife Park, 4020 N. Cherry Road, Camp Verde. Details: (928) 567-2839 or OutofAfricaPark.com.
The Riparian Institute, a 110-acre site east of Greenfield Road on Guadalupe Road in Gilbert, is offering a five-day kids camp. Students study fishing, birds, insects, wildlife and the ecology of desert and riparian areas. The camp will be from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Monday through Friday for kids ages 7 to 12. Cost is $75. Details: RiparianInstitute.org or (480) 503-6744.
The Phoenix Zoo, 455 N. Galvin Parkway, Phoenix. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day. Costs: Adults (ages 13 to 59) $14; seniors (ages 60 and older) $9; children (ages 3 to 12) $6; and ages 2 and younger are admitted free. Details: Phoenix Zoo.org.
Mother Nature's, 1663 E. Baseline Road, is open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Cost is $7 per child and $3 for adults. Tours are also available Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Details: MotherNatures Farm.com.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/0315edspringbreak0315.html



Fort Worth Zoo's Half-Price Day Snarls Traffic On I-30
POSTED: 1:34 pm CST March 15, 2006
UPDATED: 3:50 pm CST March 15, 2006
Email This Story Print This Story
FORT WORTH, Texas -- Half-price day at the Fort Worth Zoo has led to big crowds and big traffic backups on nearby streets and Interstate 30.
The zoo is packed with kids on spring break.
It expects 10,000 people Wednesday, which would break an attendance record.
Police called extra officers to help direct traffic near I-30 at University Drive.

http://www.nbc5i.com/news/8030979/detail.html


Zoos already working to protect rare species

If the H5N1 bird flu virus does spread to the United States, it could have repercussions not only for the poultry industry but for many bird populations already in decline.
Zoos, whose collections include many rare species, are worried. The Philadelphia Zoo, for instance, has three of the only 60 known Micronesian kingfishers left in the world.
"West Nile was scary," said Dominic Travis, an epidemiologist at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo. But "there's nothing that's really been like this."
He figures North American zoos will spend $2 million in the next three years simply for surveillance, including regularly testing animals for the flu.
The Philadelphia Zoo has already started moving away from chicken in many of its animal diets, just in case it has to be removed altogether at some point.
The great horned owl, for instance, is getting more mice. The new jaguar has switched altogether to beef. And an elderly jaguarundi, a cat whose digestive system might balk at too much of a change, is getting his chicken cooked.

http://www.timesleader.com/mld/timesleader/living/health/14108740.htm



Zoo visitors walk on the wild side
Fredericksburg Kia
5204 Jefferson Davis Hwy
Fredericksburg, VA 22408
By COLLETTE CAPRARA
For THE FREE LANCE-STAR
The lady with the huge blue wings and floppy antennae has a lot of fun, but she's quite serious about conserving our nation's butterflies.
Mona Miller, aka "The Butterfly Lady," is a member of the Washington Area Butterfly Club and will man a booth at Saturday's North American Wildlife Celebration at the National Zoo in Washington.
Miller and her son Alex will bring along learning tools such as magnifiers with butterfly wings inside them and "bug glasses" that function like kaleidoscopes to give youngsters an idea of how butterflies see.
Miller also will come equipped with a bevy of information about these winged wonders. She'll share facts about the amazing cross-country migration of Monarch butterflies who can travel up to 250 miles a day and fly 4,000 feet above the Earth, locking their wings to cruise once they enter the jet stream.

http://fredericksburg.com/News/FLS/2006/032006/03162006/175025


IDA ACTION ALERTS
1. Maine Protects Animal Victims of Domestic Violence
2. Cold-Blooded Killing of Canadian Seals Continues
3. Santa Cruz Island Pigs Need Your Help
CAMPAIGN NEWS & UPDATES
1. IDA Online: Fostering Community and Education
2. Two States Ban Hog-Dog Rodeos
3. IDA Radio Spot Featuring Bob Barker Airs in L.A.
IDA ACTION ALERTS
1. Maine Protects Animal Victims of Domestic Violence
New Law Includes Animal Companions in Court-Issued Protection Orders

http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/04/1816521.php


Haaretz



UN report claims spread of AIDS epidemic stabilized in 2005

By
Shlomo Shamir, Haaretz Correspondent
The spread of the AIDS epidemic appears to have stabilized in the last year as the number of those newly diagnosed with the disease is nearing the number of those who have died as a result of the illness, a UN report released Wednesday indicates.
The 630-page report, which was commissioned by UNAIDS - Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, notes that while an estimated 3.4 million to 6.2 million people were diagnosed with AIDS in 2005, the number of AIDS victims who died ranges from 2.4 million to 3.3 million.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/721468.html


Housing Minister promises thousands of new apartments within two years
By
Zvi Zrahiya, Haaretz Correspondent
The Housing Ministry plans to build tens of thousands of new rental housing units within the coming two years, Housing Minister Meir Sheetrit told the Knesset Finance Committee during a Tuesday debate on the state budget.
The new homes will be built by the private sector.
Sheetrit said tax breaks must be granted to entrepreneurs who build new homes for rent and will agree to lease the homes out for 25 years.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/721461.html



Defense Minister: Gaza raids against Qassam fire will go on

By
Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent, and Agencies
Defense Minister Amir Peretz vowed Tuesday that Israel Defense Forces operations against Qassam launch cells in the Gaza Strip would continue by air, sea, and land in order to prevent further rocket fire at Israel.
Earlier in the day, IDF troops killed at least seven armed Palestinians in a number of raids early Tuesday in the territories, with the intention of countering Qassam fire in Gaza and arresting wanted militants in the West Bank.
Special forces units, operating in a rare IDF ground operation deep inside the northern Strip, killed at least three members of an Islamic Jihad Qassam crew setting up to fire rockets into Israel in the pre-dawn hours.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/721085.html



Peretz: Government will remain intact for next four years
By
Moti Bassok, Amos Harel and Mazal Mualem, Haaretz Correspondents
Defense Minister Amir Peretz on Tuesday said the coalition would remain intact despite an earlier row with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert over cuts to defense spending.
The cabinet Tuesday approved the 2006 State Budget, but the seven Labor ministers abstained in the vote, amid the dispute between Olmert and Peretz.
Eighteen ministers voted in favor of the budget, while no ministers voted against. The budget must now be ratified by the Knesset.
Advertisement
Following the vote, Olmert invited Peretz to meet in an attempt to smooth over the dispute resulting from cuts to the defense budget. After their meeting Peretz said, "The coalition will hold its ground and the government will remain in power for four years.
"There is no reason to have confrontation between the defense budgets and the social budgets," he added.
As the cabinet convened Tuesday morning, Olmert and Finance Minister Abraham Hirchson brought a NIS 1 billion overall budget cut to the cabinet for approval Tuesday. The cut is aimed at financing coalition deals.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=721159&contrassID=1&subContrassID=0&sbSubContrassID=0



Jerusalem Summit

Humanitarian Regional Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict


http://www.jerusalemsummit.org/eng/hs_short_eng.htm


Iran snubs U.S. conditional talks, says won't give up enrichment
By
Shmuel Rosner and Aluf Benn, Haaretz Correspondents, and Agencies
President George W. Bush said Thursday that the standoff over Iran's suspected nuclear program is headed for the U.N. Security Council if Tehran continues to refuse to halt uranium enrichment.
"We'll see whether or not that is the firm position of their government," Bush said after a meeting with his Cabinet at the White House. "If they continue their obstinance, if they continue to say to the world 'We really don't care what your opinion is," then the world is going to act in concert."
Bush's statment came hours after Iran rejected a U.S. deal to restart talks in return for their agreement to stop enriching uranium.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/721902.html



Asylum for genocide refugees
By Haaretz Editorial
Under High Court of Justice orders, the state is expected, no later than the end of next week, to formulate a solution that will enable Sudanese refugees held in Israel under administrative detention to be brought before a judge. Some 180 refugees from Sudan, many survivors of the genocide taking place in the region of Darfur since 2003, crossed over into Israel during the past six months. It appears that the state and its officials are doing everything in their power to be rid of these refugees.
Originally, if the security forces caught anyone crossing the border illegally, "provided 24 hours had not passed since he crossed, and he did not manage to get further than 50 kilometers from the border," a so-called "rushed return" was put in effect, whereby the individual would be pushed back across the border into Egypt. The refugees that were not pushed back into Egypt were placed under arrest, under the law regulating entry into Israel. The law allowed the illegal aliens to bring their case before a judge within two weeks.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=722009&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y



EU lawmakers want to ban Ahmadinejad from World Cup

By News Agencies
A group of European Parliament members is seeking an indefinite EU travel ban on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who has called for Israel to be destroyed and questioned the Holocaust.
A group of 75 lawmakers from all major political groups in the EU assembly signed a petition, which was submitted Thursday to EU president Austria and FIFA, the governing body of world soccer, asking them to prevent Ahmadinejad from traveling to Germany to watch his team play in the June 9-July 9 World Cup and banning him from traveling to any of the other 24 EU member states.
"Ahmedinejad's likely visit to Europe would send a wrong signal to the Europeans and the international community and in particular to the suppressed people of Iran," the petition said.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/722252.html



Fatah votes to hold referendum regardless of Hamas consent

By Avi Issacharoff, Haaretz Correspondent, and Reuters
Fatah's central committee on Thursday afternoon ratified a motion calling for a referendum to be held throughout the Palestinian Authority regardless of whether it receives the consent of other Palestinian factions or not.
The militant group Hamas has consistently voiced its disapproval of the referendum, which in its current form implicitly recognizes the existence of Israel.
A Jenin-based spokesperson on behalf of the militant Islamic Jihad, however, announced that his group was willing to support the referendum as long as Israel promised to cease its attacks on its members.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=722245&contrassID=1&subContrassID=0&sbSubContrassID=0



Milk and cheese sales skyrocket on eve of Shavuot holiday

By Nofar Sinai
The sale of cheese and milk has skyrocketed in recent days, as Israelis prepared for the holiday of Shavuot, during which tradition stipulates that Jews consume dairy products.
"This year, sales of milk and cheeses jumped by about 300 percent," the deputy director for marketing at Tara Dairies, Harel Haiken, said Wednesday.
Haiken says sales of dairy products per capita have been on a constant upswing in recent years, with Israel in first place in the world in per capita consumption of white cheeses.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/722256.html



Seattle Post Intelligencer

Tanker Wars: Boeing challenged (Lots of graphics with this article)

The Boeing-made Air Force tanker could be replaced by a foreign company already living in America's backyard
By
JAMES WALLACE
P-I AEROSPACE REPORTER
MOBILE, Ala. -- Around the time Bill Boeing was incorporating his airplane manufacturing business in Seattle in 1916, another aviation pioneer was preparing to set up shop in this Alabama town on the Gulf Coast.

There are a series of articles.


THURSDAY
The New Contest: The Boeing Co. and the European Aeronautic Defense and Space Co. will battle to build refueling tankers for the U.S. Air Force. What lies ahead and what's at stake?

FRIDAY
The Southern Strategy: EADS is positioning itself as an American company that would provide good jobs in Southern states if it is awarded the Air Force tanker contract. Is the strategy working?
O.E. Williams, who had started an aviation school and airplane-making business in Pennsylvania and then moved it to Michigan, was looking at property in Mobile, where the weather would allow him and his students to fly more often. He settled on a 53-acre farm on what would later become part of the military's Brookley Field.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/272243_tankers01.html



Public Funding for NASCAR?


As NASCAR bid in Kitsap revs up, a rival emerges
Kent track's owners say it would need no public subsidy
By
JENNIFER LANGSTON
P-I REPORTER
As NASCAR track builders launched a new campaign Wednesday to rally support for a $345 million Kitsap County speedway, another racetrack expansion plan has been simmering that would require no public financing.
The owners of Pacific Raceways, a 45-year-old racetrack and drag strip southeast of Kent, are angling to expand their operations and upgrade a 2 1/4-mile racecourse to professional standards.
Their plans still have substantial hurdles to cross, such as county approval of a development plan that might need to accommodate some structures on slopes or sensitive areas.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/272343_racing01.html



Seattle funding to fight terror slashed
City gets a sliver of the millions it sought from feds
By
ANGELA GALLOWAY
P-I REPORTER
The federal government is cutting Seattle's share of anti-terrorism funding 22 percent this year -- providing only a fraction of what city officials said the region needed.
Seattle will receive $9.15 million in federal grants this fiscal year, the Department of Homeland Security announced Wednesday.
The city received $11.8 million last year and had requested $61.4 million for this year's efforts in the Seattle/Bellevue region.
Meanwhile, Washington state was awarded $32.2 million under a separate program Wednesday -- down 23 percent from last year's $41.9 million. The state had requested $43 million, officials said.
Reaction among local officials was sharply divided.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/272366_terror01.html



U.S. alleges discrimination against women at Les Schwab

P-I STAFF
Federal civil rights lawyers filed suit Wednesday against Les Schwab Tire Centers, claiming that the company discriminated against its female employees by failing to hire, train and promote women into management jobs.
The suit, filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in federal court in Seattle, cited the alleged discrimination against two female Les Schwab workers, Megan Morris and Jennifer Strange.
Morris and Strange, who worked in Les Schwab stores in Bellevue, SeaTac, Tacoma and Puyallup, were repeatedly denied desirable company jobs working in tire bays, and were denied promotion because of their gender, the EEOC suit charges.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/272349_lesschwab01.html



Drinking Liberally, thinking globally
Seattle chapter of liberal political junkies meets to talk strategy, gossip
By
GREGORY ROBERTS
P-I REPORTER
On the TV in a corner of the Montlake Ale House, the Clippers battled the Suns in a pro basketball playoff game. But on this Tuesday night, as on every Tuesday night, the barroom talk focused on a spectator sport of different sort: politics.
"There's, like, serious earthshaking results now," Nick Beaudrot said, staring at his laptop computer, perched on the table amid pints of beers and plates of nachos, as returns from the Pennsylvania primary streamed across the screen.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/272376_drinking01.html



Cargo ship leaves for Iraq amid anti-war cries
Protesters stage brief 'die-in' at Port of Olympia
By RACHEL LA CORTE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OLYMPIA -- A ship carrying military gear bound for Iraq pulled away from this Puget Sound port Wednesday evening after a week of protests in which more than three dozen people were arrested.
At least 100 protesters chanted "Stop that boat!" as the 950-foot cargo ship pulled away from a dock at the Port of Olympia.
The demonstrators also staged a brief "die-in" on the ground to illustrate their opposition to the war in Iraq. There were no immediate arrests, as protesters confined themselves to yelling at law enforcement personnel on hand.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/272338_warprotest01.html



Blue Moon for sale

Not in a Blue Moon would Seattle@Nite ever believe that the Blue Moon Tavern might be an endangered establishment in Seattle.
Certainly, it could never be seen as anything but a good neighbor on the corner of Northeast 45th and I-5, a beacon of Beat Generation mystique combined with Grateful Dead whimsy and basic barroom lunacy, the Blue Moon is as much a part of Seattle as the P-I Globe or the Space Needle or Dick's Drive-Ins to many longtime luminaries and true blue Seattleites.
Here's the header now that adorns the Blue Moon Web site:
"Sorry, We're open! That is the ironic greeting posted in the front windows of Seattle's Blue Moon Tavern. Since its founding in 1934, the Moon has become a beacon for generations of free-thinkers, radicals, and artists. Pulitzer Prize-winning poets and Dead Heads have bent their elbows at its bar, and, in the process, transformed the Moon into an unofficial cultural landmark."

http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/night/archives/103890.asp



Prince Albert says he's father to girl, 14

By JEFF WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
PALM DESERT, Calif. -- Monaco's Prince Albert II has acknowledged he is the father of a 14-year-old California girl, his lawyer said in an interview published Thursday in a French newspaper.
Jazmin Grace Rotolo is welcome in Monaco but she cannot take the throne and will not bear the Grimaldi family name, lawyer Thierry Lacoste was quoted as saying in Le Figaro.
French media reports have said Albert, 48, had a brief affair with the girl's mother, Tamara Rotolo, in 1991 when she vacationed on the Cote d'Azur. A 1992 Riverside County birth certificate identified the girl's father as Albert Alexandre Louis Pierre Grimaldi of Monaco.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1110AP_Monaco_Prince_Child.html



4 die in military helicopter crash in Ga.

By ELLIOTT MINOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
DOERUN, Ga. -- A military helicopter clipped a rural television tower and crashed Thursday morning, killing four soldiers on a training mission, officials said.
A fifth soldier aboard the MH-47 Chinook helicopter survived, said Lisa Eichhorn, a spokeswoman for Fort Rucker, Ala., home to an Army helicopter training school where the soldiers were headed.
The helicopter had left Hunter Army Airfield in Savannah and went down in rural Colquitt County just after 8 a.m., said sheriff's dispatcher Becky Perry.
As it flew past a television station's 1,000-foot-tall tower, it clipped a wire, said Deborah Owens, station manager of WFXL.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1110AP_Military_Helicopter_Crash.html



Army Corps: La. levees were poorly built

By CAIN BURDEAU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
NEW ORLEANS -- Louisiana's hurricane protection system was overwhelmed by Katrina because it was built disjointedly using outdated data, according to an Army Corps of Engineers report released Thursday.
"The system did not perform as a system," according to the report, released on the first day of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season. "The hurricane protection in New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana was a system in name only."
The 6,000-plus page document included details on engineering and design failures that led to the Aug. 29 storm surge overwhelming the city's outer levees and breaking through flood walls within New Orleans.
Katrina damaged 169 miles of the 350-mile hurricane system that protects New Orleans and was blamed for more than 1,570 deaths in Louisiana alone.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1110AP_Katrina_Corps_Report.html



Karzai condemns U.S. troops using gunfire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KABUL, Afghanistan -- President Hamid Karzai on Thursday condemned the use of gunfire by U.S. troops to suppress Afghans angered by a traffic accident involving a military truck that sparked the worst riots in the capital since the fall of the Taliban.
"The coalition opened fire, and we strongly condemn that," Karzai said in a national radio address.
Speaking in his native Pashto language, Karzai used formulations that left open whether the U.S. troops had fired into a crowd that had gathered at the scene of Monday's accident, or only over their heads.
Afghan authorities and the U.S. military are investigating.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1104AP_Afghan_Riot_Investigation.html


Analysis: Haditha echoes earlier stains
By TOM RAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON -- Some words are synonymous with military disgrace. Abu Ghraib. My Lai. And now, perhaps Haditha - the Iraqi town where two dozen unarmed Iraqi civilians allegedly were murdered by U.S. Marines.
Still under investigation, the episode could firm rising American opposition to the U.S. presence in Iraq, just as the 1968 My Lai killings helped turn the tide of public opinion against the Vietnam War.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1152AP_Haditha_Fallout.html



Copter believed found in Afghan mountains
By AMIR SHAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
KABUL, Afghanistan -- The wreckage of a helicopter that had been chartered by the Red Cross and disappeared over Afghanistan in January is believed to have been found atop a snowcapped mountain, a senior official said Thursday.
The Russian-made Mi-8 transport chopper disappeared after taking off from Pakistan, where it had been chartered by the International Committee of the Red Cross to ferry supplies to victims of a devastating earthquake in Pakistan in October.
It had seven people on board, employees of Turkmenistan Airlines, which operated the aircraft. No Red Cross staff were aboard.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1104AP_Afghan_Missing_Helicopter.html



Iraq launches own probe of Haditha deaths

By PATRICK QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The Iraqi government announced Thursday its own investigation into reports that U.S. Marines killed unarmed civilians last year, and the No. 2 general in Iraq ordered American commanders to hold ethical training on battlefield conduct.
The decision to begin an Iraqi inquiry into the killings was made at a Cabinet meeting, Adnan al-Kazimi, an adviser to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, told The Associated Press.
The investigation will be carried out by a special committee made up of the Justice and Human Rights ministries along with security officials, al-Kazimi said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1107AP_Iraq_US_Military.html



Bush promises to disclose Haditha findings
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON -- President Bush on Thursday promised to disclose the results of an investigation into reports that Marines killed unarmed civilians in Iraq. "The world will see the full and complete investigation," Bush said.
The U.S. military is conducting at least two investigations into the Nov. 19 killings of 24 people in Haditha, including women and children, following a bomb attack on a military convoy in which a Marine died. The Iraqi government is doing a separate investigation.
"If there is a wrongdoing, people will be held to account," Bush told reporters after a Cabinet meeting at the White House.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1151AP_Bush.html



Iraq wants to set rules on U.S. raids

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on Thursday denounced the alleged killings of Iraqi civilians by U.S. forces and said he asked a ministerial committee to hold talks with U.S. military to set ground rules for raids and detentions.
The move came in the wake of an investigation into allegations that U.S. Marines killed unarmed civilians in the western city of Haditha.
Al-Maliki said he had ordered the "national security ministerial committee to follow up on this issue with the multinational forces" and "to hold talks with the multinational forces to formulate ground rules for detentions and raids."

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1107AP_Iraq_Haditha.html



Guantanamo detainees join hunger strike
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- More Guantanamo Bay detainees protesting their indefinite confinement joined a hunger strike, raising the number of inmates refusing food to 89 from 75, the U.S. military said Thursday.
Six of the hunger strikers at the isolated U.S. naval base in southeast Cuba were being force-fed, said Navy Cmdr. Robert Durand.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1152AP_Guantanamo_Hunger_Strike.html



East Timor rebel leader demands PM quit

By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
DILI, East Timor -- A fired army commander whose rebellion triggered the recent violence in East Timor demanded Thursday that the prime minister resign and be tried for allegedly ordering troops to shoot civilians, saying this was the only way to end the fighting.
At least one person was reported killed in fighting in the capital of Dili, despite the presence of more than 2,000 foreign peacekeepers. Rioters set fire to shops and vehicles in one neighborhood, and several dozen Australian troops rushed to the scene.
Two high-profile ministers offered to take responsibility for the crisis by resigning.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1104AP_East_Timor_Violence.html



Violence hurts East Timor coffee industry
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DILI, East Timor -- East Timor's resurgent coffee industry, which supplies high-quality organic beans to companies such as Starbucks, has been badly hurt by a wave of violence in the capital, officials said Thursday.
Harvesting began in May and normally peaks in late June.
"But with all roads blocked, there's no way to transport the beans from inland to the processing factories," said Caetano Cristovao, director of coffee at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.
"Only small-scale farmers are picking and processing the beans either in small machines or drying them out in the sun," Cristovao said. Big factories are shut "because nobody is going to work," he said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1104AP_East_Timor_Coffee.html



Indonesia begins slaughtering poultry
By MARGIE MASON
AP MEDICAL WRITER
JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Officials slaughtered more than 1,000 poultry Thursday in an Indonesian village where preliminary tests showed a 15-year-old boy died from bird flu, as the country struggled with a sudden rise in deaths averaging one every 2 1/2 days last month.
About 1,300 chickens were killed within a half mile of the boy's house in the Tasikmalaya district of West Java province, said Budi Utama, head of the local animal and fisheries agency.
Indonesian tests on Wednesday found that the boy had contracted the virulent H5N1 bird flu virus, and officials were awaiting confirmation from a World Health Organization-sanctioned laboratory in Hong Kong.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/health/1500AP_Indonesia_Bird_Flu.html



Bush: Security Council could loom for Iran
By JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON -- President Bush said Thursday that the standoff over Iran's suspected nuclear program is headed for the U.N. Security Council if Tehran continues with uranium enrichment.
"We'll see whether or not that is the firm position of their government," Bush said after a meeting with his Cabinet at the White House. "If they continue their obstinance, if they continue to say to the world `We really don't care what your opinion is,' then the world is going to act in concert."
With Russian and Chinese support crucial to crafting a deal for Iran that also includes a threat of sanctions, Bush said that he "got a positive response" from Russian President Vladimir Putin during a conversation on Tuesday.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1151AP_Bush_Iran.html



U.S., others near deal on Iran incentives

By ANNE GEARAN
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER
VIENNA, Austria -- The United States and international partners are close to a deal that would offer Iran economic incentives if it gives up nuclear activities that could produce a bomb, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says.
Rice was meeting Thursday with foreign ministers from the European nations that led stalled talks with Iran last year and would help present any new deal, and also with representatives of Russia and China. Russian and Chinese support is crucial to attach the threat of United Nations sanctions or other punishment to the package of incentives.
At the White House, President Bush warned that the confrontation would end up at the U.N. Security Council if Iran continues to enrich uranium.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1107AP_Iran_Nuclear.html



Iran welcomes dialogue, rejects condition

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran's foreign minister on Thursday welcomed direct talks with Washington on his country's disputed nuclear program but rebuffed a U.S. proposal that Tehran must suspend uranium enrichment as a condition.
A prominent hard-liner, however, called the U.S. proposal as "blackmail" and urged the government to reject it.
Mottaki's statement was the country's first direct reaction to an announcement by the United States on Wednesday that it is willing to join other countries for face-to-face talks with Iran, as long as Tehran stops enriching uranium.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1107AP_Iran_US.html



Iran blames U.S. for high oil prices
By ALAN CLENDENNING
AP BUSINESS WRITER
CARACAS, Venezuela -- OPEC was poised to keep production steady Thursday as Iran blamed the United States for high oil prices, saying threats against its nuclear program are behind much of the fear and speculation in the market.
Ahead of Thursday's meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, member nations brushed off a bid to cut production by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who also lobbied for expanding the cartel's membership and praised Bolivia's recent nationalization of its natural gas industry.
On Wednesday evening, Iranian Oil Minister Sayed Kazem Vaziri Hamaneh said in an interview with the Venezuela-based television station Telesur that high oil prices are linked to "the United States' constant threats" against Iran. Earlier in the day, the U.S. had signaled a willingness to hold joint direct talks with Iran on its nuclear program if certain conditions were met, an offer Tehran soon dismissed.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1102AP_Venezuela_OPEC_Meeting.html



Ky. lieutenant gov. won't seek re-election
By JOE BIESK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Kentucky's lieutenant governor, a former corruption-fighting prosecutor, announced Wednesday he won't seek re-election with Gov. Ernie Fletcher, whose administration has been caught up in a state hiring scandal.
Lt. Gov. Steve Pence said he told Fletcher late Tuesday that he will not seek any office after his term expires next year.
Pence wouldn't say if the hiring investigation had weighed in his decision, but he said: "I believe it's held the commonwealth back more than anything on things that could have been done."
Fletcher, Kentucky's first Republican governor since 1971, is under indictment for allegedly breaking state law by rewarding political supporters with protected state jobs after he took office in 2003.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1134AP_Kentucky_Politics.html



Burns faces questions on ties to lobbyist
By MATT GOURAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
MILES CITY, Mont. -- The way Sen. Conrad Burns' re-election campaign is going, the folksy 71-year-old Republican might rather take a turn on a bronco than try to explain his links with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff back in Washington.
The "Eastern liberal press" is to blame for his troubles, says Burns. Some of his former aides worked for Abramoff and two current aides took a trip to the 2001 Super Bowl in the lobbyist's jet. The senator received about $150,000 in donations from Abramoff, his clients and his associates, which he has since returned or given to charity.
Montana voters, Burns says, "will make the right judgment call."

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1130AP_Burns_Rough_Ride.html



Biden's son runs for Del. attorney general

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DOVER, Del. -- Joseph R. "Beau" Biden III, son of Delaware's senior U.S. senator, kicked off his campaign for state attorney general Thursday.
Biden pledged not only to prosecute criminals, but also to prevent crimes such as identity theft and Internet stalking of children by sexual predators.
"I truly believe that this office has the potential to greatly improve the lives and well-being of the people of the state of Delaware," said Biden, 37, who served as a federal prosecutor in Philadelphia for five years.
Biden, a Democrat, will face Republican Ferris Wharton, 53, in the November election. Republicans are banking on Wharton's experience of more than 25 years as a prosecutor to offset Biden's name recognition.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1135AP_Biden_Attorney_General.html



FEC will not change rules on 527 groups

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON -- The Federal Election Commission will not adopt new rules governing the independent political groups that played a major role in the 2004 presidential campaign, freeing them to raise and spend unlimited sums of money during this year's midterm elections.
A federal judge had ordered the FEC to either write new rules or more fully explain its current policy for regulating 527 groups. The commission announced Wednesday that it will more fully explain the current policy, which is to deal with 527 groups on a case-by-case basis.
The groups, which are named after the section of the Internal Revenue Service code governing them, include America Coming Together and the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. ACT spent millions criticizing President Bush during the 2004 race, while the Swift Boat Veterans spent millions challenging the Vietnam War military record of his Democratic opponent, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1130AP_FEC_Rules.html



N.C. House votes to ban video poker
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RALEIGH, N.C. -- The state House voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to ban video poker machines, legislation its speaker had thwarted for years until questions arose about campaign contributions he had received from the industry.
The measure now heads to the Senate, which since 2000 has approved the ban five times. The bills always died in the House, where Speaker Jim Black argued that the industry generated thousands of jobs.
His campaign took in $167,000 in contributions from the industry during the 2002 and 2004 election cycles, according to Democracy North Carolina, a group that advocates campaign finance changes.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1135AP_Video_Poker.html



Columbus letter to go on sale in London

By SARAH BALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
LONDON -- A contemporary copy of a letter Christopher Columbus wrote while returning from the New World is up for sale this month, its price tag set at $900,000.
The eight-page document, known as the "Epistola Christofori Colum" or the "Columbus Letter," is a Latin translation of a letter the explorer wrote to his royal Spanish sponsors, Ferdinand and Isabella of Aragon and Castille, on his return voyage.
Pope Alexander VI ordered the translation, which was printed in Rome on April 29, 1493, six weeks after the new hero returned home to Spain.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1103AP_Columbus_Letter.html



U.N. council cuts Ethiopia, Eritrea forces

By TAREK EL-TABLAWY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
UNITED NATIONS -- The Security Council cut the number of peacekeepers deployed in Eritrea and Ethiopia by at least one-third Wednesday night while extending the U.N. mission's mandate for another four months.
A unanimously passed resolution reduced the force from 3,500 to 2,300. The United States sought a cutback because Ethiopia and Eritrea made no progress in resuming talks on the demarcation of their border.
The talks in London earlier in May were aimed at breaking the deadlock between the two countries and the international Boundary Commission, which is charged with marking the border between the Horn of Africa nations.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1105AP_UN_Ethiopia_Eritrea.html



EU adopts new rules on children's medicine
By JAN SLIVA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
BRUSSELS, Belgium -- The European Union is offering drug makers extended patents as an incentive to produce children's versions of drugs for diseases such as cancer, AIDS or psychiatric disorders.
New regulations approved by the EU Parliament Thursday encourage pharmaceutical companies to develop pediatric drugs that don't have the undesirable side-effects of medicines for adults and which can be administered in smaller doses.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/health/1500AP_EU_Children_Medicine.html



CBS: Wounded reporter 'awake and alert'
By DAVID RISING
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
BERLIN -- CBS correspondent Kimberly Dozier, seriously injured by a car bomb in Iraq, was "awake and alert" at a U.S. military hospital in Germany on Thursday but remained in critical condition, the network said.
The 39-year-old journalist was flown to the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center after being wounded in the head and lower body Monday.
Her two British colleagues, cameraman Paul Douglas and soundman James Brolan, were both killed in the attack, along with a U.S. soldier and an Iraqi translator.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1103AP_Journalist_Wounded.html



British deputy says attacks aimed at Blair
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONDON -- Britain's embattled deputy prime minister suggested in an interview published Thursday that his critics are really targeting Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, under pressure following his admission of an affair with a staff member and questions about his contribution to government, was quoted by The Guardian as suggesting that his opponents hoped to force Blair to retire.
"At the moment, I am the shield they are battering," he was quoted as saying.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1103AP_Britain_Politics.html


Sweden OKs law to take Liberia's Taylor

By KARL RITTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- Swedish lawmakers have approved a law that makes it possible for the Scandinavian country to imprison former Liberian President Charles Taylor if he is convicted of war crimes by a U.N.-backed tribunal, government officials said Thursday.
The decision by the Swedish Parliament could remove a major obstacle that has stalled the former African warlord's trial in Sierra Leone. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Nina Ersman said Sweden had not yet officially decided whether it would accept a request to take in Taylor. Such a step would need final approval from the government.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1105AP_Sweden_Taylor.html



Ancient scroll may yield religious secrets
By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ATHENS, Greece -- A collection of charred scraps kept in a Greek museum's storerooms are all that remains of what archaeologists say is Europe's oldest surviving book - which may hold a key to understanding early monotheistic beliefs.
More than four decades after the Derveni papyrus was found in a 2,400-year-old nobleman's grave in northern Greece, researchers said Thursday they are close to uncovering new text - through high-tech digital analysis - from the blackened fragments left after the manuscript was burnt on its owner's funeral pyre.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1501AP_Greece_Ancient_Scroll.htm



Columbus letter to go on sale in London
By SARAH BALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
LONDON -- A contemporary copy of a letter Christopher Columbus wrote while returning from the New World is up for sale this month, its price tag set at $900,000.
The eight-page document, known as the "Epistola Christofori Colum" or the "Columbus Letter," is a Latin translation of a letter the explorer wrote to his royal Spanish sponsors, Ferdinand and Isabella of Aragon and Castille, on his return voyage.
Pope Alexander VI ordered the translation, which was printed in Rome on April 29, 1493, six weeks after the new hero returned home to Spain.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1103AP_Columbus_Letter.html

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