Friday, May 05, 2006

The Rooster



"Cock-A-Doodle-Do"

"Okey-doke"
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Morning Papers - It's Origin



The Ruffled Feathers of the American Bald Eagle never affects it's gaze.

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May 4, 2006.

Austin, Texas

Photographer states :: ~9:00 PM CST 5/4/06 73MPH Gust clocked. We think a small tornado went through our neighborhood - most of the damage is localized. Barton Hills / Zilker Park Area

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May 3, 2006.

Matton, Illinois

Photographer states :: I have taken a big interest in storm clouds and chased these down before they were directly overhead.

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May 3, 2006.

Matton, Illinois

Photographer states :: I was taking photos of lightning about two weeks ago when what to my wondering eyes should appear, but this bolt of lightning striking a tree in our back yard. It was not until the next day that I realized it also knocked down our new fence.

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May 1, 2006.

Cleveland, Ohio.

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May 3, 2006.

The location of the persistent Russian Earthquakes. Since Mid - 2003 when the vortices expanded into more than just two there has been a persistent vortex over this region. "Hard Rock" Geologists laugh without end every time I remind them the earthquakes I have noted in a way that is different than pre-vortex, October 4, 2002 manifestation are underneath a chronic vortex 'air-water' interface.

You know, it wasn't long ago when "Hard Rock" geologists laughed at the idea of "Tectonic Plates" as well.

Hm?

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The Mercury News

Darfur rebel group agrees to make peace with Sudanese government
By Shashank Bengali
Knight Ridder Newspapers
NAIROBI, Kenya - Darfur's leading rebel group bowed to pressure from high-powered Western and African diplomats on Friday and accepted a peace agreement with the government of Sudan to end a bloody three-year war.
But analysts immediately raised doubts about whether the agreement would stop the fighting or end attacks on civilians by government-backed militias. The attacks have led to the deaths of more than 200,000 people in a campaign the United States has called genocide.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, who brokered three days of talks that ended with an all-night session, said the agreement should pave the way for a United Nations peacekeeping force to arrive as early as this fall to stabilize the devastated region. But even he tempered his celebration with caution.
"This can be a very important day of hope and opportunity for the poor people of Darfur, who have been suffering, but it is only a step," he told reporters at the negotiations in Abuja, Nigeria.
The U.N. Security Council has approved sending a peacekeeping mission to Sudan as early as Sept. 30, but the Sudanese government so far has opposed the idea. Sudanese representatives to the negotiations said, however, that they would allow the U.N. mission once a peace agreement was in place.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/world/14511868.htm


State probing Kaiser Permanente's kidney transplant program
PAUL ELIAS
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO - State regulators are investigating whether Kaiser Permanente mishandled a vast new kidney transplant program and put hundreds of patients' lives at risk, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Managed Health Care said Friday.
Kaiser failed to hold basic discussions with regulators on how to properly transfer up to 1,500 of its kidney patients from other programs to its new transplant center in San Francisco in 2004, the Los Angeles Times reported this week.
Paperwork errors and other administrative bungling stalled, and in some cases canceled, the processing of many patients waiting for transplants. Some patients were never told their transfers from other programs had not been processed.
The transfer for one patient, Ruben Porras, didn't come through until September - 10 months after he was put on inactive status by his previous program, the newspaper reported. Porras died less than a month later. His wife, Elizabeth Porras, said Kaiser had given her husband "a death sentence."

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/14512358.htm


Rep. Patrick Kennedy to enter drug rehab
ANDREW MIGA
WASHINGTON - Rep. Patrick Kennedy said Friday he was entering treatment for addiction to prescription pain drugs after a middle-of-the-night car crash near the Capitol that he said he had no memory of. "That's not how I want to live my life," he declared.
Kennedy, D-R.I., the son of Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, said he would seek immediate treatment at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
His one-car accident about 3 a.m. Thursday was the talk of the capital, with police saying he appeared to be intoxicated but Kennedy saying later that day that he had had nothing to drink.
For Kennedy, who said he has suffered from depression and pain-medication addiction for years, the trip to the Mayo Clinic was his second in less than five months. He went there over Christmas and said he returned to Congress "reinvigorated and healthy."

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/14503326.htm


Court: City must pay in vote backing gay unions
By John Woolfolk
Mercury News
San Jose's controversial attempt two years ago to recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere will cost city taxpayers more than $145,000, a judge has ruled.
Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Mary Jo Levinger ordered San Jose in a ruling two weeks ago to pay the legal costs of traditional marriage advocates who had sued to overturn the city council's March 2004 vote granting spousal benefits to ``married'' gay employees.
Assistant City Attorney Bill Hughes said San Jose hasn't decided whether to appeal the judge's award of legal fees.
In an 8-1 vote over passionate public opposition, the San Jose City Council became the first in the state to recognize gay marriages performed by San Francisco or other jurisdictions for purposes of extending spousal benefits to same-sex employees. Councilman Chuck Reed, now a mayoral candidate, was opposed. Two other council members who had indicated opposition, Forrest Williams and Pat Dando, were traveling and unavailable to vote that day.
The move came weeks after San Francisco inflamed the nation's cultural divide by issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
The California Supreme Court later that year nullified San Francisco's same-sex marriages, finding that city officials had overstepped their authority. State voters in 2000 overwhelmingly approved Proposition 22, the ``Defense of Marriage Act'' stating that only marriages between a man and a woman are valid in California.
The lawsuit seeking to overturn San Jose's vote was filed by the Proposition 22 Legal Defense & Education Fund, which seeks to enforce the initiative's provisions.
Judge Levinger in December ruled in the group's favor, but by then it was a largely symbolic victory. The city council earlier that year had ``clarified'' its 2004 vote stating the city wasn't attempting to judge ``the legality of same sex marriages in California.'' And state legislation this year extended spousal benefits to registered domestic partners.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/the_valley/14507543.htm



Rally against amnesty for illegal immigrants draws dozens
By Julie Patel
Mercury News
About 100 opponents to amnesty for illegal immigrants rallied today -- Cinco de Mayo -- in Santa Clara's Central Park.
The almost all white group, some dressed from head to toe in red, white and blue, waved American flags and held up signs that read ``Protect our borders,'' and ``Enforce our laws.''
Santa Clara tech worker Jill Easton said her concern with illegal immigration was economic. ``Because of all the illegal immigrants, our hospitals are broke and are schools are broken because we're pouring all this money out,'' she said.
The protest was fairly quiet, but drew attention from drivers who honked their horns and yelled at the group as they passed. Some cruised past the park with American flags flying out their windows. A few drove by with Mexican flags.
Although the jeers from the passersby drew protester responses, nothing incendiary followed.
Off to the side was a group of a half a dozen immigrant-rights supporters, one holding a Mexican flag, who expressed anger that the rally was being held on Cinco de Mayo.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/14512400.htm


Cassidy: What happens to the hats?
By Mike Cassidy
Now it's time for the big question.
The San Jose Sharks are back in town after a short break in their National Hockey League playoff run. But forget about who has the fleetest offense, the fiercest defense or the most powerful power play. The big question for Sharks fans? What do they do with all the hats?
You know, The Hats. The hats that rain down on the ice when a home-team player scores three goals in one game.
Three goals is a hat trick, a rare feat that requires giddy fans to litter with lids the ice rink at HP Pavilion. Why lay a perfectly good accessory at the skated feet of our local heroes?
Because it's hockey, a funny game with funny traditions.
But funny or not, when the Sharks take the ice Sunday against the Edmonton Oilers, plenty of fans will wait in blissful anticipation of another lid-flipping celebration.
It happened last week when Patrick Marleau poked in his third puck against the Nashville Predators (which, oddly, a shark is). Obliging fans all over the arena showered the ice with hats. A cracker-jack crew scooped them up and away.
And then?
``We do try and put them to good use,'' says Ken Arnold, a Sharks spokesman.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/columnists/dispatch/14507538.htm


CBS leaps into online television
AD-SUPPORTED `INNERTUBE' WILL SHOW ORIGINAL PROGRAMS, RERUNS
By Charlie McCollum
Mercury News
CBS took a major step forward in online television Thursday by launching ``innertube,'' an advertising-supported broadband entertainment channel that will include original programming and repeats of network shows.
While all of the networks have tested the water on alternative ways of delivering content -- online, iPod downloads, video on demand -- the CBS venture marks the first attempt to establish a Web-based channel. The network has already had some recent success with video on revamped versions of cbsnews.
com, its news site, and cbssportsline.com, which recently attracted millions of viewers with its real-time Webcasts of the NCAA basketball tournament.
``We want our content to be all the places our viewers are -- and they are certainly on the Internet,'' said Nancy Tellem, president of the CBS Paramount Network Television Group. ``Creatively, we want this platform to be a content playground where new talent and ideas are discovered, and to give our existing talent a chance to extend their energies to a new medium.''

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/columnists/14507570.htm


Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/

Ladies and Gentlemen,
Mr. Porter Goss...


Click Image for 'FAHRENHEIT 9/11' Outtake

"The New Head of the CIA doesn't know how to use a computer."


CIA Director Porter Goss Resigns
By Jennifer Loven /
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - CIA Director Porter Goss resigned unexpectedly Friday, leaving behind a spy agency still battling to recover from the scars of intelligence failures before America's worst terrorist attack and faulty information that formed the U.S. rationale for invading Iraq.
It was the latest move in a second-term shake-up of President Bush's team.
Making the announcement from the Oval Office, Bush called Goss' tenure one of transition.
"He has led ably," Bush said, Goss at his side. "He has a five-year plan to increase the analysts and operatives."
Goss said the trust, confidence and latitude that Bush placed in him "is something I could have never imagined."
"I believe the agency is on a very even keel, sailing well," Goss said. "I honestly believe that we have improved dramatically."
The president did not name a successor, but said that person would continue Goss' reforms.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=6740



Porter Goss resigns; is prostitution probe a factor?
Let the Hindenburg soar.
George W. Bush just announced that he has accepted the resignation of CIA Director Porter Goss. Goss, a former GOP congressman, has been on the job for less than two years, and neither he nor Bush gave any explanation for his departure.
The high-profile way in which Bush announced the news seems to suggest that there's nothing unseemly involved; you wouldn't expect the president to stand side by side with Goss and talk about their "very close, personal relationship" if he knew that a serious shoe were about to drop.
That said, there was a hasty, thrown-together quality to Bush's Oval Office remarks this afternoon, and the president clearly isn't ready to name a replacement for Goss yet. It's hard to think there isn't something going on behind the scenes here, especially after neither Bush nor Goss so much as mentioned a pretense -- more time with the family? -- for Goss' leaving.
So why the sudden move? Everyone is guessing now, but there's at least a whiff of scandal around Goss: As we
noted last week, there's speculation that Goss may have attended poker parties organized by defense contractors implicated in the Randy "Duke" Cunningham corruption probe. One of those contractors has said that he didn't just bribe Cunningham but hired prostitutes for him as well.
The CIA has
denied that Goss was a guest at the poker parties -- so far as we know, no one has asked about hookers yet -- but the timing of his resignation today is at least a little curious: TPMmuckraker reported yesterday that the Watergate Hotel, where some of the poker parties are said to have taken place, has received a number of subpoenas from federal investigators looking into the Cunningham case.
Meanwhile, keep an eye on Dusty Foggo, the man Goss installed in the No. 3 job at the CIA. As we've
reported previously, the CIA's inspector general is looking into Foggo's oversight of contracts at the agency; NBC says the investigation includes allegations that Foggo steered a $2.4 million contract to Brent Wilkes, one of the contractors implicated in the Cunningham case. Wilkes and Foggo have been pals since college, and Foggo made the scene at -- and even hosted some of -- the contractors' poker parties.
-- Tim Grieve
http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2006/05/05/goss/index.html



Santorum pushes for new rules, lives by old
The senator took flights sponsored by corporations while arguing against the perk.
By Carrie Budoff /
Philadelphia Inquirer
Speaking from the Senate floor, U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum (R., Pa.) urged his colleagues to curtail a popular perk: private corporate-sponsored flights at bargain rates for members of Congress.
"This is clearly a subsidy," he said March 8.
Two days earlier, he had taken a BellSouth plane from a runway near his home in Leesburg, Va., to fund-raising events in North Carolina and South Carolina. The jet ferried Santorum, two aides and Ward White, BellSouth's top Washington lobbyist.
Santorum paid $6,955 - first-class rates, as Senate rules require, but a fraction of what it costs to operate the plane.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/the06fix/index.php?id=21



The Family Business

Two years since his son's beheading in Iraq, Michael Berg runs for Congress.
By Alexandra Zendrian /
Philadelphia City Paper
Michael Berg's favorite song is "The Eve of Destruction" by The Turtles. The eve of Berg's personal destruction came in the spring 2004, when his son Nick went t Iraq for the second time. Nick, who took classes at Drexel University and th University of Pennsylvania, was an entrepreneur, and a risk-taking one at that. Hi company, Prometheus Towers Inc., was seeking contracts to build radio towers in war-torn country where big risk meant big profits.
But during this trip, something went terribly wrong. In late March, the U.S. military took Nick into custody. They were suspicious because he was an American alone in Iraq when there were few Americans alone in Iraq. While he was in custody, the FBI questioned Nick and ultimately released him. Soon, however, he would be captured by al-Qaida.
Then, on May 8, 2004, Nick's death would bring the war home to America like few casualties before: The military said it discovered his decapitated body on a Baghdad overpass. But to hear Michael tell it two years later, al-Qaida isn't to blame for his son's death. The president of the United States is.
"Another one of Bush's lies," says Berg of the official story of Nick's beheading. "Al-Qaida was not already in Iraq."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/the06fix/index.php?id=20



Ohio Struggles to Fix Voting Problems
By Connie Mabin /
Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Ohio's first election without punch card ballots was marred by a slew of problems with new voting machines, raising a crucial question: Can the state that decided the last presidential race get it together before November?
Election officials had trouble printing ballot receipts, finding lost votes and tabulating election results in Tuesday's primary. Some election workers were late or did not show up at all in Cleveland's Cuyahoga County, the state's largest. Others could not figure out how to turn on the machines.
"Ohio's quickly getting this reputation as most corrupt and maybe most incompetent," said Chris Link, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, which fielded dozens of complaints from voters.
Tuesday's primary was the first in which all 88 counties used either touch-screen machines or devices that scan ballots marked by voters.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/the06fix/index.php?id=17



3 U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq Bombing
By Sinan Salaheddin /
Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A roadside bomb killed three American soldiers south of Baghdad on Friday as U.S. and Iraqi forces swept through a city to the north where three insurgents had been killed the day before after firing on U.S troops.
The three Americans died in the attack shortly before noon in Babil province, the U.S. military said, giving few other details. However, Iraqi police said the blast targeted a military convoy near Mahaweel, 35 miles south of Baghdad.
In Samarra, 60 miles north of the capital, American and Iraqi forces imposed a daytime curfew and searched neighborhoods looking for insurgents a day after three militants were killed after they opened fire on U.S. soldiers, police said.
Samarra was the scene of the Feb. 22 explosion at a Shiite shrine that enflamed sectarian tensions. It triggered reprisal attacks on Sunnis, forced tens of thousands of Iraqis to flee their homes and pushed the country to the brink of civil war.
American officials are hoping the new national unity government of Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds will eventually reduce sectarian tensions and lure disaffected Sunni Arabs away from the insurgency so U.S. and other foreign troops can begin to go home.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=6743



Despite Upgrades, Humvee Deaths Up
(
CBS/AP) Coming on the heels of insurgent violence in Iraq on Wednesday, a new report says that despite stronger armor on over 50,000 Humvees and other military vehicles throughout Iraq and Afghanistan, roadside bombs have killed more U.S. troops this year based on Pentagon records.
Most are dying in their Humvees, USA Today reports, as insurgents plant more powerful bombs and use different triggering methods to evade U.S. countermeasures, experts tell the newspaper.
According to Pentagon casualty reports, 67 U.S. troops have died this year in roadside bomb attacks on their Humvees, and another 22 troops were killed when IEDs hit other military vehicles, including more heavily armored tanks and troop carriers.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=6728



Report blames top U.S. officials for alleged torture of detainees
By Matthew Schofield /
Knight Ridder
BERLIN - Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of detainees by U.S. forces is widespread and, in many cases, sanctioned by top government officials, Amnesty International charged Wednesday.
The allegations, contained in a 32,000-word report released in New York and London and posted on the human rights organization's Web site, are likely to influence a U.N. hearing on U.S. compliance with international torture agreements that begins Friday in Geneva. Amnesty International sent a copy of the report to the U.N. Committee Against Torture, which is holding the hearings.
"Although the U.S. government continues to assert its condemnation of torture and ill-treatment, these statements contradict what is happening in practice," said Curt Goering, the group's senior deputy executive director in the United States. "The U.S. government is not only failing to take steps to eradicate torture, it is actually creating a climate in which torture and other ill-treatment can flourish."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=6735



RNC Chairman Warns of Possible GOP Catastrophe
By Robert Novak /
Human Events Online
RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman met with Republican members of Congress this week to impress upon them just how bad the opinion polls are looking for them, and warning that they face a possible catastrophe in November.
This warning contributed to GOP determination to pass a tax reconciliation bill that will extend the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts beyond their current expiration dates at the end of the decade.
On Tuesday, Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and House Ways and Means Chairman Bill Thomas (R-Calif.) were supposed to meet with President Bush in the Oval office to discuss the tax bill, which, if passed, will be one of the most important Republican accomplishments of 2006 leading into the midterm elections. But Grassley bowed out, giving the excuse that he had constituents in town from Iowa. Even in the face of disaster, Republicans seem unable to get their act together.

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/the06fix/index.php?id=19



Condoleezza Rice Does Not Deserve a Boston College Honorary Degree
The following letter was signed by nearly 100 Boston College faculty:
We, the undersigned members of the faculty at Boston College, strongly disagree with the decision of the university's leadership to grant Condoleezza Rice an honorary Doctor of Laws degree and to invite her to address the 2006 commencement. On the levels of both moral principle and practical moral judgment, Secretary Rice's approach to international affairs is in fundamental conflict with Boston College's commitment to the values of the Catholic and Jesuit traditions and is inconsistent with the humanistic values that inspire the university's work.
As a matter of moral principle, Rice maintains that U.S. foreign policy should be based on U.S. national interest and not on what she calls the interests of an "illusory international community." This stands in disturbing contrast with the Catholic and humanistic conviction that all people are linked together in a single human family and that all nations in our interdependent world have a duty to protect "the common good of the entire human family."

http://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=641


Impeachment Project Gets a Boost

http://freewayblogger.blogspot.com/2006/03/impeachment-project-gets-boost.html


Exxpose Exxon

As one of the world's most profitable companies, ExxonMobil has the power to move the world toward a more sustainable energy future. Instead, ExxonMobil has acted consistently to move our country backward on energy policy by opposing efforts to stop global warming, lobbying to drill in America's most pristine wilderness areas, and failing to promote renewable energy and fuel efficiency.

http://www.exxposeexxon.com/


Pro-American = Anti-BushCo

By Cindy Sheehan
I (and every single other individual on this planet working for peace and justice) am often accused of being "anti-American" for dissenting against my feral government that has gone wild with lawlessness and greed; even though dissent from our government is as American as apple pie. Some people believe that if one is critical of the Bush criminal regime, then one is anti-American.
I steadfastly believe that to be anti-BushCo means being pro-American; pro-life; and most of all: pro-peace.
In a recent article in the Boston Globe (
Sun, April 30) the Bush regime is blamed for breaking or giving itself permission to break over 750 laws. George is the only sitting president to have admitted to breaking laws and for openly disdaining the constitution as an "old scrap of paper." How can we peaceniks be accused of being anti-American when the squatter in the Oval Office has no respect for the supreme law of the land? But of course, 9/11 changed the world and we are a nation "at war" so George thinks he can do whatever he wants even though he is the one who made us a nation at war with his lies and deceptions. I will stipulate that the constitution is a deeply flawed document, but the founders realized this and gave we future generations ways to amend it and one of the ways to amend it is not just "cuz the president says so." He may be the decider but he is not the amender.

Phttp://www.michaelmoore.com/mustread/index.php?id=640



U.S. MILITARY DEATHS IN IRAQ:

2414

U.S. MILITARY WOUNDED IN IRAQ:

17648

IRAQI CIVILIAN DEATHS (MINIMUM):

34711



The Boston Globe


2 in Congress rip Bush on bypassing of laws

Frank and Markey seek resolution that would halt practice
By Charlie Savage, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
WASHINGTON -- Two Massachusetts congressmen announced yesterday that they will sponsor a resolution to protest President Bush's assertions that he is not bound to obey more than 750 laws enacted over the past five years, saying that Congress must push back against the White House's expansive interpretation of executive authority.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/05/05/2_in_congress_rip_bush_on_bypassing_of_laws/



0 is the new 8
As waistlines grow, women's clothing sizes shrink incredibly
By Kate M. Jackson, Globe Correspondent May 5, 2006
Inside the dressing room at Ann Taylor, Wendy Chao found herself at a loss.
''I tried on a size 0 skirt and it was too big," said Chao, a 30-year-old graduate student of molecular biology at Harvard University. ''To me, a size 0 is antimatter; it's something devoid of any physical reality."
Chao was already mystified by how she'd shrunk from a size 8 in high school to a size 2 today, despite gaining 15 pounds in the interim. But now at size 0, she realized something curious was afoot.
''As far as I can see, size means nothing," she said. ''I am different sizes at different stores, but they're all remarkably smaller than what I wore as a scrawny teenager. In my closet, I have everything from a size 0 to a size 12." She added that a size 8 skirt she bought from Ann Taylor in 2000 is ''identical in cut" to the size 0 she bought at the store late last year.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/05/05/0_is_the_new_8/


Thriving after surviving

Matz has contender, years after living through plane crash
By Mark Blaudschun, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- The questions have come steadily all week, and Michael Matz has heard them before. He politely, but persistently, deflects them.
Not the time, nor the place, he says quietly.
Matz this week has gone about his business of training a prime contender, Barbaro, for tomorrow's 132d Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs.
For most of his brethren, training a Derby contender would be a career highlight, something to be savored and talked about for years -- especially if Barbaro, the third betting choice in the morning line behind Brother Derek and Lawyer Ron, makes his way to the winner's circle.
But for Matz, it would merely be another stop in a life's journey that has included appearances in three Olympics as a member of the US equestrian team, and the honor of carrying the American flag in the closing ceremonies of the 1996 Atlanta Games, in which the team won a silver medal.

http://www.boston.com/sports/other_sports/horse_racing/articles/2006/05/05/thriving_after_surviving/



Big Dig probe expanding
6 managers at concrete firm facing fraud charges
By Raja Mishra and Shelley Murphy, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
A widening Big Dig investigation will examine a range of companies' construction practices, authorities said yesterday, as they announced federal fraud charges against managers at the region's biggest concrete supplier in allegedly delivering inferior concrete that was used in tunnels, ramps, and roadways.
Six managers from Aggregate Industries NE Inc. were indicted in federal court on charges of running a conspiracy that delivered 5,000 truckloads of tainted concrete -- 1.2 percent of the concrete used on the entire project -- to the Big Dig over nine years. The managers used a web of falsified documents to cover up their ploy, federal prosecutors said.
US Attorney Michael J. Sullivan said the investigation is in the early stages and did not rule out further indictments.
''I think we've just scratched the surface," Sullivan said, adding that other companies would face scrutiny now. ''I'm not confident that everybody else followed all the specifications and all the rules."

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/05/05/big_dig_probe_expanding/



Subpar material could add to woes on tunnel project
By Michael Levenson, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
The use of 5,000 truckloads of diluted, old concrete in the Big Dig could cause its tunnels and roadways to crack and crumble, several independent engineers said yesterday, even as state and federal officials sought to reassure drivers that the massive highway project is safe.
Concrete has to be mixed and poured precisely and quickly for the material to endure, according to civil engineers.
But prosecutors say that Aggregate Industries NE Inc., the main supplier of concrete to the Big Dig, violated the project's specifications.
State and federal officials said the faulty concrete does not have to be replaced immediately, although it could pose long-term maintenance problems.
Aggregate is accused of waiting well beyond the required maximum 90 minutes to pour the material and in other instances of mixing old, hardening batches with fresh concrete. Prosecutors also say that workers diluted concrete with extra water to make it appear fresh. Engineers said that such dilution could weaken the concrete and cause it to disintegrate eventually.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/05/05/subpar_material_could_add_to_woes_on_tunnel_project/


Rep. Kennedy in 3 a.m. crash near Capitol
Says he didn't use alcohol, medicine disoriented him
WASHINGTON -- Representative Patrick J. Kennedy was involved in a car accident near the US Capitol at about 3 a.m. yesterday, reportedly nearly colliding head-on with a Capitol Police car before hitting a security barrier near the US Capitol.
In a statement released around 6 p.m., Kennedy, a Rhode Island Democrat, said he had not been drinking. ''I was involved in a traffic incident last night at First and C St., SE, near the Capitol. I consumed no alcohol prior to the incident," he said. ''I will fully cooperate with the Capitol Police in whatever investigation they choose to undertake."
Three hours after that statement, Kennedy, the youngest son of Senator Edward M. Kennedy and his first wife, Joan, released another saying he had taken sleep medication and a prescription antinausea drug that can cause drowsiness. Kennedy said the attending physician for Congress had prescribed Phenergan on Tuesday to treat gastroenteritis.
He said he returned to his Capitol Hill home on Wednesday evening after a series of votes in Congress and took prescribed amounts of Phenergan and Ambien, another prescribed drug that he occasionally takes to fall asleep.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/05/05/rep_kennedy_in_3_am_crash_near_capitol/



CIA health questioned as Goss quits
By David Morgan May 5, 2006
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The abrupt resignation of CIA Director Porter Goss raises disturbing questions about the U.S. flagship intelligence agency's health, amid growing concerns about a nuclear Iran, turmoil in Iraq and the al Qaeda threat.
More than four years after the September 11 attacks, critics of the Bush administration, including Democrats in Congress, also warned that problems at the CIA had parallels elsewhere in the 16-agency U.S. intelligence community including at the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.
Goss' departure capped months of unhappiness over his leadership of the CIA and efforts to rebuild the agency's key clandestine and analytical operations for the war on terrorism, analysts and former intelligence officers said.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/05/05/cia_health_questioned_as_goss_quits/



Star entrepreneur staged attack on himself, DA says
By Brian MacQuarrie, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
CAMBRIDGE -- Former MIT professor John J. Donovan Sr., who amassed a $100 million fortune as a businessman, executive mentor, and consultant, once proclaimed of his talents: ''I tell the future." Yesterday, Middlesex District Attorney Martha Coakley said Donovan told a lie to Cambridge police and charged him with filing a false police report after he allegedly staged his own shooting.
Donovan is accused of falsely claiming that two men attacked him on the night of Dec. 16 as he left his Cambridge company and then telling investigators that he believed his son James orchestrated the shooting. Instead, law enforcement officials say, Donovan, 64, of Hamilton, carefully composed the crime scene -- in which a car window was shattered by a bullet and spent .22-caliber cartridges were scattered in the parking lot -- to make it appear that he had been targeted for murder by his family.
The indictment on the single misdemeanor charge has a maximum penalty of one year in jail, Coakley said. But the indictment seems likely to further damage Donovan's controversial reputation.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/05/05/star_entrepreneur_staged_attack_on_himself_da_says/



Mild winter raises Lyme disease risk, doctors say
By Raja Mishra, Globe Staff May 5, 2006
Lyme disease season has begun on Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard, and Cape Cod, and physicians and health officials there and in other affected areas of Massachusetts are preparing for a possible heavier-than-usual onslaught of disease-carrying ticks.
The region had one of the warmest winters in recent history, with more ticks than usual likely to have survived and reproduced. Some specialists have warned that New England will face a heavy Lyme disease season.
Other physicians and specialists say that if the next few weeks bring considerable amounts of the moisture and precipitation that ticks thrive in, the Lyme-disease season could be nasty.
''If it's moist and cloudy and foggy in the next few weeks, we're going to have a ton of ticks," said Dr. Timothy Lepore, medical director of Nantucket Cottage Hospital, located in one of the state's Lyme-disease hot spots. ''But if it's dry, that may not be the case."
The National Weather Service forecast rain for today, but sun or partial clouds for the next six days.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/05/mild_winter_raises_lyme_disease_risk_doctors_say/



Boy, 3, dies after falling into tank
Taunton family had just moved in
TAUNTON -- A 3-year-old boy whose family moved into their home on Sunday, died yesterday after falling into a septic tank in his backyard, police said.
Emergency personnel found the body of Jason Cambronero after his mother, Jana, frantically called police to say that her son was missing.
Officials responded to the Richmond Street home about 3:30 p.m. and searched for 25 minutes until Officer Shawn Silvia thought to check the sewage drain, authorities said.
Officer William Rutherford, who remained at the scene last night, said he then stepped on the cover of the tank, causing it to open. The officers looked in and saw the boy.
''It's a sad tragedy, I don't really know what else to say," said Rutherford, who has been on the Taunton police force for 18 years and has two children, ages 10 and 14. ''A lot of times, parents call and their kids are hiding underneath the bed. You never expect this. You feel for the parents."

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/05/boy_3_dies_after_falling_into_tank/


Cheney criticizes Russia in speech
Faults limits on rights, using gas as 'blackmail'
By Paul Richter and David Holley, Los Angeles Times May 5, 2006
WASHINGTON -- Vice President Dick Cheney, in the toughest critique of Russia yet delivered by the Bush administration, accused the government of Vladimir Putin yesterday of rolling back human rights and using the country's oil and gas reserves as ''tools of intimidation or blackmail."
Cheney told East European leaders in Lithuania that the Russian government had ''unfairly and improperly restricted the rights of her people" and had taken other actions that may adversely affect relations with other countries.
The remarks, which drew swift denunciations from some Russian politicians, are likely to increase tensions in the run-up to a July summit of leading industrial nations that will be hosted by Russia in St. Petersburg. Cheney's criticism also could complicate the Bush administration's effort to win Russian cooperation in its effort to persuade Iran to halt its controversial uranium enrichment program.

http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2006/05/05/cheney_criticizes_russia_in_speech/

continued …

Cheney has no regrets over Iraq invasion



May 5, 2006.

"Cheney the sore loser." THE KING of Open Market Competition holds a grudge against Russia in every speech he made. The Open Market Principle ONLY applies when Cheney personally profits from it.

Caption
Riot act: United States Vice-President Dick Cheney delivers a speech to Baltic leaders during a summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Thursday. In one of Washington's sharpest rebukes to Moscow, Cheney accused Russia of using blackmail and intimidation in its energy policy towards Europe.


From "The Guardian"

Three years into the war that has come to define the legacy of the Bush administration Dick Cheney, the vice-president, has said he has no regrets about the decision to invade Iraq.


Mr Cheney's refusal to admit to doubts about going to war highlights his isolation from an administration which has demonstrated a degree of candour about Iraq, as well as the rest of the country where only 37% approve of the White House's handling of the conflict. Mr Cheney has even less support; his approval ratings have dipped below 20%. But in an interview to appear in June's Vanity Fair magazine, he remained a picture of certitude.


Posted by Picasa

Morning Papers - continued ...

The Cheney Observer



Karl Rove’s playbook stolen
By Andy Prutsok
Friday, May 5, 2006 11:12 AM CDT
There’s a column I’ve been kicking around in my head for some time about the similarities between the present Suffolk administration and the administration of President of George Bush.
When one looks closely at the management style of the city he or she can come to only one conclusion: They have stolen Karl Rove’s playbook, or downloaded it from machiavelli.com.
The similarities are many:
1. There is no correct opinion but your own. Not only do you not listen to anyone else, but you belittle their opinion. Anyone who thinks differently is some kind of crackpot (Any liberal pundit or politician).
2. If the critic wears a suit instead of a flannel shirt or t-shirt and appears to otherwise be a reasonable, intelligent person with an honest difference of opinion who just wants to exercise his free speech rights, use every instrument of government at your disposal to marginalize and destroy him, try to get him fired from his job, threaten him with court proceedings or destroy his business (i.e. Paul O’Neil, Richard Clark, Gen. Shinseki, John Kerry, Joe Wilson).
3. Burn every bridge you cross.
4. Never admit a mistake.

http://www.suffolknewsherald.com/articles/2006/05/05/virtual_suffolk_-_editors_blog/0827blog.txt


House OKs lobbying bill Democrats call a 'sham'
By DOUGLAS TURNER
News Washington Bureau Chief
5/4/2006
WASHINGTON - The House on Wednesday narrowly passed a bill to revise laws that control lobbyists, with Republicans claiming it sets high standards for integrity and Democrats and outside reform groups calling it a "sham."
Rep. Louise M. Slaughter of Fairport, who led the Democratic floor attack on the GOP leadership bill, charged that the bill - passed 217-213 - is an "insultingly weak lobbying "reform' bill instead of a much stronger Democratic proposal."
"This Republican-conspired bill is an insult to every reform-minded American," said Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo.
The bill was co-sponsored by Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds, R-Clarence. Reynolds also voted for a failed Republican-backed amendment that would decriminalize violations of the lobbying laws. That amendment was defeated 320-108, with more than half the Republicans voting against it.
The basic bill calls for ethics training for congressional staff and for lobbyists. It would require quarterly lobbying reports instead of every six months, Internet access to lobbying reports and denying pensions to those involved in felony violations. It also mandates pre-approval by the ethics committees of privately funded trips, and calls for disclosure of employment history and more information on special appropriations called "earmarks."

http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20060504/1014784.asp



Texas Republicans Boost Rep. Tom DeLay's Legal Fund After He Decides Not to Seek Off

By SUZANNE GAMBOA
WASHINGTON May 1, 2006 (AP)— Rep. Tom DeLay raised more money to pay legal fees after abandoning any effort to return as majority leader than he did in the immediate months following his indictment in Texas last year on money laundering charges.
DeLay, R-Texas, received lots of help in boosting his legal defense fund from Texas financiers of Republican causes, corporations and fellow members of Congress. But he spent as much as he raised during the first three months of 2006.
DeLay, a 22-year veteran, announced earlier this month that he is resigning by mid-June.
He raised $314,435 between January and March while awaiting trial on the Texas charges and spent $312,465, most of it on legal fees. In the previous three months, he raised $182,000 and spent $239,000.

http://www.abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=1911671


Even without DeLay, all eyes on Dist. 22 race
By KRISTEN MACK
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
THE race for the 22nd Congressional District, once billed as a showcase political event, has faded from the national radar along with incumbent Tom DeLay, who decided to leave Congress.
But locally, the district is abuzz with politics. Without DeLay on the ballot, the suburban Houston seat will be open in a year when the House is closely divided. The 22nd leans Republican, but Nick Lampson, who lost a Southeast Texas congressional seat in redistricting engineered by DeLay, is mounting a well-funded Democratic bid.
DeLay, R-Sugar Land, the former House majority leader, announced less than a month after he won the March 7 GOP primary for a 12th term that he would resign.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/mack/3842191.html



That's Not Reform
Lobbying bill won't change Washington's ways
12:00 AM CDT on Friday, May 5, 2006
Whatever else you may call the lobbying bill that the U.S House signed off on Wednesday, the word "reform" won't be among your answers. Despite the rise and fall of Tom DeLay and the handcuffs around the quid-pro-quo king, Jack Abramoff, the House passed a measure that doesn't really clean up Washington.
Here's why:
• The measure fails to stop the insider practice of legislators tucking away an interest group's spending request within the fine print of a bill. Representatives would have to disclose when they slip in an "earmark," but that's like letting the world know you're about to sin. It's the sinning itself that needs to stop.
• The legislation also doesn't curtail the ease with which lawmakers and their aides cash in. The Senate's ethics bill requires them to wait two years before they can lobby their pals on Capitol Hill. The House bill keeps the status quo, which is a one-year waiting period before legislators morph into finely tailored lobbyists.
Think about this moment the next time you read about an ex-aide or a former legislator getting in trouble for fixing a deal on Capitol Hill with old friends. The House had the chance to put some distance between cozy relationships, but it didn't.
• The House suspended the practice of private groups paying the travel costs of lawmakers until new guidelines are written. There's still no guarantee that the lobby can't put money into a foundation, which then can whisk a representative or senator to Florida for a round of schmoozing. Legislators should go see the world, but it should be on the dime of the government or their campaign treasury.
We're sorry to announce that all North Texas Republican legislators voted for the bill. The Democrats rightly opposed it.
Since the Senate's ethics bill wasn't much better, the House and Senate should just let their lame attempts at reforming Washington die. Then they could start over after the fall elections. Maybe then, the voice of the people will have worked its way into Washington's ear.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/editorials/stories/DN-lobby_05edi.ART.State.Edition1.dc3ae03.html



Independents Try to Shake Up Texas Race
Staff and agencies
05 May, 2006
By MICHAEL GRACZYK, Associated Press Writer 22 minutes ago
AUSTIN, Texas - In a small, windowless room in an industrial part of town, with rock music softly thumping in the background and two mirrored disco balls spinning overhead, Kelley Lowes is working for a man who hopes to be Texas‘ first independent governor since Sam Houston, and its first ever named Kinky.
Lowes is painstakingly typing and double-checking names from handwritten petitions for Friedman, logging long hours before Thursday‘s deadline.
Friedman‘s first name alone — no one calls him by his birth name, Richard — is enough to make this an unusual race. It will be even more so if he and Strayhorn, mother of outgoing White House press secretary Scott McClellan, join Perry and Democratic former congressman Chris Bell on the ballot.

http://www.localnewsleader.com/elytimes/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=184381



Mission Overshadowed

"My Year In Iraq"
The Struggle to Build a Future of Hope
By Ambassador L. Paul Bremer III with Malcolm McConnell
Simon & Schuster. 417p $27
Baghdad is burning when Paul Bremer arrives in May 2003. It is still burning when he leaves 14 months later. The fires of looters have been replaced by attacks from an insurgency that intensified during his tour of duty as head of the Coalition Provisional Authority. Things get so hot in the land Bremer hoped to democratize that he has to transfer sovereignty to the Iraqi interim government two days ahead of schedule and scurry out of the country. After he allows the press to photograph him boarding a C-130 transport, Bremer, the top U.S. diplomat in Iraq, sneaks out the plane’s cargo door and sprints across the tarmac to a Chinook helicopter for transport to a government jet, which then whisks him off to Jordan.

http://www.americamagazine.org/BookReview.cfm?articleTypeID=31&textID=4789&issueID=572



BTL:Special Prosecutor Seeking to Indict Karl Rove in CIA Leak Case
Interview with Jason Leopold, investigative reporter, conducted by Between the Lines' Scott Harris
Special Prosecutor Seeking to Indict Karl Rove in CIA Leak Case
Interview with Jason Leopold, investigative reporter, conducted by Scott Harris
President Bush's senior counselor Karl Rove testified for three-and-a-half hours before a federal grand jury on April 26. The political strategist's appearance was part of the continuing investigation by special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald into who in the White House leaked the name of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame, in an effort to discredit her husband Joseph Wilson, who challenged the president's rationale for the Iraq war.
Just one week before he made his fifth appearance before the grand jury, Rove lost his position as Bush's chief policy coordinator in a White House shakeup. Sources close to the investigation have told reporters that Fitzgerald is now seeking an indictment of Rove for perjury committed in previous grand jury testimony and for lying to FBI investigators. Rove withdrew his original denials that he had no conversations with reporters concerning the identity of Valerie Plame after he learned that Time magazine's Matt Cooper would testify that Rove was a source for his Time story on Plame.
In early April, Fitzgerald filed court documents revealing that indicted former chief of staff to Vice President Lewis Libby testified that Dick Cheney had told him that President Bush personally authorized the release of classified intelligence in July 2003 to refute critics of his administration's justification for war. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with investigative reporter Jason Leopold, who explains why he believes special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is now seeking the indictment of Karl Rove.

http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/05/1821052.php



Port security gets backing
(Tri-City Herald (Kennewick, WA) (KRT) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) May 3--WASHINGTON -- A far-reaching port security bill sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., that eventually could lead to screening of all cargo containers headed to the United States was approved by the Senate Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday.
The measure also would increase funding for port security by more than 300 percent, create a new federal maritime security agency within the Department of Homeland Security and streamline the movement of cargo for importers such as Starbucks, Nike and REI who agree to abide by tougher security procedures.

http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2006/05/03/1636928.htm



Immigration Rallies Fuel Resolve of Port Truckers
Many drivers take heart as they push for better compensation and shorter working hours.
By Ronald D. White, Times Staff Writer
May 4, 2006
For some of the thousands of truckers who normally roll through Southern California's ports, staying away from work Monday was more than a statement about their views on U.S. immigration policy. It was an attempt to kick-start changes in working conditions that many complain are dismal.
The port drivers — predominantly Latinos — acted individually in deciding to join Monday's rallies for immigrant rights.
But after returning to their rigs, the notoriously fragmented group marveled at what they had managed to do collectively.
They had forced a vast warehouse and distribution network and the nation's largest seaport complex to work furiously over the weekend to make up for deliveries that wouldn't be made Monday. They helped ensure that many businesses would close or not function as normal.
"It gave me the positive thinking and encouragement I needed to be able to continue with this movement. Obviously, there is a problem and we need to do something about it," trucker Salvador Abrica said.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-truckers4may04,1,6774444.story?coll=la-headlines-business&track=crosspromo



Extensive customs upgrades for SA’s ports

CUSTOMS facilities at the country’s points of entry and exit are undergoing a major upgrade for quicker identification of high-risk goods and the reduction of customs delays, South African Revenue Service (SARS) commissioner Pravin Gordhan said yesterday.
The initiative could help SA become a preferred channel for exports to international markets, and could give South African exporters a competitive advantage.
Gordhan said the organisation is to receive assistance to develop SA’s capacity from the UK, the US and countries in the European Union.
“SA has historically had weak customs arrangements. We are building from a low base, both in terms of infrastructure and personnel development,” he said.
Gordhan did not put a time- frame on when the initiative would be completed, and said it was a “multiyear process”.

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A194566


Ghana to have free ports in five years
The development of the ports is part of a project to have cost effective transit trade facilities and make way for a free port.
The Minister for Trade and Industry, Alan Kyerematen, announced the Project at the third trade forum on Government's Trade Sector Support Programme, held in the Ghanaian capital, Accra and attended by individual and corporate actors in trade.
Mr Kyerematen mentioned 26 different projects under the Programme, and said the purpose of making Ghana a free port country was to make "it the Dubai and Thailand" of West Africa.
The Minister said it was important to promote Ghana outside, and added that small and m0edium scale enterprises, which contributed more than 90 per cent of the enterprise base in Ghana, would continue to fare below expectation if their products were not given the needed patronage.
He said the desire of traders in Ghana to concentrate on the distribution of imported goods, fuelled by the general negative Ghanaian attitude of lower patronage of home made goods, was a disincentive to local manufacturers although most of the imported goods that had flooded the market were of doubtful quality.

http://www.myjoyonline.com/businessarticle.asp?p=4&a=24431



Maritime association lauds ports reforms

Kinika Mpi • Thursday, May 4, 2006
The Nigeria Merchant Navy Officers and Water Transport Senior Staff Association (MN/WT/OA) zonal chairman, Engr. Bob Yousou, has commended the on-going ports reform programmes of the federal government.
He described the reform programmes as a major economic breakthrough that is geared towards efficiency and economic development of the nation as well as improving the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the country.
Making the commendation while briefing newsmen in Port Harcourt, Engr. Yousou, pointed out that, with the ports reform, seafarers and dockworkers will benefit immensely in the process, adding that, their productivity overtime will improve as service delivery will be effectively and efficiently discharged.

http://www.thetidenews.com/article.aspx?qrDate=05/04/2006&qrTitle=Maritime%20association%20lauds%20ports%20reforms&qrColumn=BUSINESS



Ege Liman Isletmeleri A.S.: Ege Ports privatization not cancelled
It is reported that the annulment decisions given by Aydın First Administrative Court and the 6th Department of the Council of State regarding Kuşadası Port, the operating right of which belongs to Ege Port A.Ş. are related with the administrative proceedings within the framework of the regulation which has been previously cancelled and it is not right to give the image as if the “Ege Ports privatization is cancelled.”
A statement issued by Ege Liman İşletmeleri A.Ş. (Ege Ports) said: “The operating rights of Kuşadası Port, which is Turkey’s second biggest passenger port, were purchased from the Privatization Administration for a 30-year period.”
The statement noted that the port hosts nearly 350,000 European and American tourists every year and said: “Ege Ports acted in line with the laws in all proceedings. Ege Ports made the necessary applications to the related bodies for the preparation of the zone plans within the framework of the regulation concerning the implementation of the Shore Law. The basic aim of Ege Ports is to invest in the projects that will carry the port to the international standards. Therefore, investments worth USD 20 million have been made to date together with the partnership of the Global Investment Holding and the Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCCL).

http://www.thenewanatolian.com/tna-6061.html



Ports' off-peak cargo program grows, but pollution is still issue
By Donna Littlejohn
DAILY BREEZE
Cargo movements during nighttime, or off-peak, hours continue to grow at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, but Los Angeles harbor commissioners said Wednesday the expanded hours still won't address many of the problems facing the ports, including growing pollution.
About 33 percent of the twin ports' cargo -- and more than 10,000 trucks -- moved during night hours from August to December 2005, Pier Pass Director Bruce Wargo told commissioners during a presentation at their regular meeting.
The forecast for 2006 indicates that as much as 38 percent of all cargo movements will be during off-peak hours.
The program is credited with reducing daytime traffic congestion and pollution. A truck traveling a distance of 10 miles at 5 mph, for example, produces 90 percent more pollution than a truck going 55 mph. A truck idling at a terminal gate spews out a quarter of a pound of pollution every hour.
But those benefits could evaporate quickly, warned commission Vice President Jerilyn Lopez Mendoza, as the ports continue to grow. In the next year alone, Mendoza said, the port is expected to grow 10 percent to 12 percent.

http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/articles/2742716.html



Baltic Sea ports - a threatened cultural heritage

Many of the old, historic ports in the Baltic Sea are in the process of losing their original function with the result that an important maritime cultural heritage is disappearing. Stavanger Maritime Museum will make an effort to stop this trend with the exhibition ’Historic Ports’ which will tour museums, schools and libraries in the Nordic countries, the Baltic States, Poland and Germany.
Stavanger Museum acts as co-ordinator for a partnership with the Baltic Sea Heritage Co-operation which was established in 1997 by the ministers of culture in the Baltic Sea States.
The Nordic Cultural Fund has just granted 60,000 Danish kroner for the production the exhibition.

http://www.norden.org/webb/news/news.asp?id=6131&lang=6



Protecting Ports

Thursday, May 04, 2006 - Bangor Daily News
<< Back
Checking the background of U.S. port workers, as the Bush administration announced last week it would begin doing five years after promising such reviews, is a positive, if belated, step. Such reviews will be more useful if they are coupled with legislation sponsored by Sen. Susan Collins that requires tracking and inspection of cargo entering the country, not just the people handling it.
Ensuring the 400,000 people who work at U.S. ports are not on terrorist watch lists and providing tamper-resistant identification cards to the 750,000 workers - including truck drivers - who have easy access to shipping containers will diminish the risk of an attack on American ports. A larger problem, however, is that the large majority of goods consumed in the United States come through its ports, though only about 6 percent of it is screened.
Shipping containers have been used to illegally transport weapons, drugs and people - a bomb could be next. Working to ensure cargo containers headed to the United State don't contain bombs or their components is just as important as ensuring longshoremen don't have ties to terrorist groups.
Improved cargo screening is a cornerstone of Sen. Collins' legislation. The bill, co-sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, has five parts: standards for cargo security; higher standards that give shippers preferred treatment under a voluntary program called GreenLane, which tracks their cargo from factory until it reaches the United States; protocols for restarting port operations after an attack; $400 million for security grants for ports; and deadlines and accountability for the Department of Homeland Security to ensure port security occurs.

http://www.bangornews.com/news/templates/?a=133258



House Approves Cargo Screening at Ports

Thursday May 4, 2006 10:46 PM
AP Photo NYET572
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House overwhelmingly approved legislation Thursday to try and stop nuclear weapons from being smuggled into the country by screening all cargo for radiological materials at seaports. Yet the technology will not be available, the Bush administration said.
The 421-2 vote capped months of election-year debate in Congress over how to make the 140 U.S. seaports less vulnerable to terrorist threats without curbing commerce.
The bill ``will improve the safety of the American people and the security of our global supply chain,'' said Rep. Dan Lungren, R-Calif. He said it ``ensures our shores are our last line of defense, not our first.''
The Homeland Security Department currently opens for inspections 6 percent of the 11 million cargo containers that enter U.S. seaports annually. Those containers are considered high-risk, said department spokeswoman Leah Yoon, for reasons such as the security of the originating port or a shipper's history.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-5799943,00.html



Argentina's Exporters Worried About Beef Stuck At Ports
BUENOS AIRES (Dow Jones)--Argentine exporters are growing increasingly worried about the fate of at least 7,000 metric tons of beef exports that are being held by customs officials at local ports, said Pablo Kiryluk, a spokesman for the Argentine Beef Consortium, which represents Argentina's leading beef exporters.
"There are about 350 containers beef that are stuck in Buenos Aires and Santa Fe, waiting to be shipped to Europe," he said. "Each container has 20-22 tons of beef but they can't be shipped because (Argentine) President (Nestor) Kirchner has made a decision to prevent them from being exported."
The containers, which have been stuck for almost three weeks, hold about $55 million of processed, frozen and fresh beef, Kiryluk said. "There is no law that is stopping the meat from being shipped," he said. "It's not even legal to hold the beef, so this is quite problematic. The consequences are terrible for the beef industry."

http://www.cattlenetwork.com/content.asp?contentid=34497



N.C. Ports Face Challenges Trying To Balance Security, Efficiency
POSTED: 7:47 pm EDT May 4, 2006
UPDATED: 8:46 pm EDT May 4, 2006
WILMINGTON, N.C. -- Massive ocean vessels from all over the world dock at the Wilmington Port each and every day -- most stacked with thousands of metal containers.
Each is supposed to be filled with foreign commercial goods, such as frozen poultry, furniture and clothing. But because of the sheer volume of containers received each day, the port must go on educated faith that the containers coming into North Carolina do not hold a security threat.
Ports are the most vulnerable link for Homeland Security. By most international estimates, only about 5 percent of shipped goods are actually inspected.
Red flags were raised after the Bush administration, this year, floated a plan to have a foreign-owned company run six U.S. ports. That plan was put on hold, and U.S. legislators are currently working to pass measures to tighten security at ports.
Still, the efforts pose the question for North Carolinians: how secure are the state's two ports -- one in Wilmington and the other in Morehead City?
North Carolina Ports Authority Security Chief Doug Campen said it is a delicate balancing act -- speeding the flow of imports and exports, yet providing adequate safety filters.

http://www.wral.com/news/9163664/detail.html



Waiting for their ships to come in
Nova Scotia ports of call hope for another good cruise season
By TOM PETERS Business Reporter
Retail outlets and restaurants in Halifax and Sydney are gearing up for another lucrative cruise season, which will leave several millions of tourist dollars in the two provincial ports.
For the second consecutive year, Holland America Line’s 1,266-passenger Maasdam will begin the season in Halifax on Tuesday and then sail to Cape Breton, arriving in Sydney on Wednesday morning.
The number of vessel calls has declined from last year as cruise lines have repositioned some vessels to popular Baltic and Mediterranean destinations. But local ports spokespeople say even though lines have shifted some itineraries, the number of passengers visiting Nova Scotia should be about the same as last year as vessels are getting larger.
Catherine McGrail, manager, marketing and cruise development, Halifax Port Authority, said Thursday that Halifax will handle about 90 calls this year, down from 106 in 2005, but will entertain about the same number of passengers, 185,000, and about 80,000 crew. In total, they are expected to spend about $23 million.

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Business/501440.html



Dubai Ports World eyes Gwadar in Pakistan

Chairman of Dubai Ports World, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, who met President Pervez Musharraf on Thursday, expressed a strong hope for management of facilities at the strategic Gwadar deep sea port and development of infrastructure in the southern port city and elsewhere in the country.
"Gwadar deep sea port is a viable project as it has a major role in serving as a corridor for energy, cargo and services between Central Asia, the Gulf and other surrounding regions," he told reporters.
Sulayem described the President's response to DP World's interest as very encouraging and hoped for conclusion of a deal in this respect "very soon."
"Gwadar has all the natural advantages that you will not have anywhere else," he stated.
During the meeting, Musharraf informed the UAE business leader that the government would facilitate foreign investment in the country and assured that their business would enjoy legal protection. "An enabling environment has been put in place to attract both foreign and local investment, which will enjoy an equal playing field," he said.
The Pakistani leader vowed to make Pakistan a hub of regional trade and added that the country is set to serve as a commerce and energy corridor between the Middle East, Central Asia, South Asia and the fast-growing Western parts of China.

http://english.alarabonline.org/display.asp?fname=2006%5C05%5C05-05%5Czbusinessz%5C979.htm&dismode=x&ts=05/05/2006%2009:41:10%20%C3%95



GADFLY: What They Knew and When They Knew It
BY
MARTY AUSSENBERG MAY 4, 2006
It now seems beyond question that, at the very least, Karl Rove will be indicted for perjury, false statements and/or obstruction of justice in what's come to be known as "Plamegate" (the outing of a CIA agent to extract revenge against her husband, Ambassador Wilson, for challenging the President's assertion that Saddam was buying nuclear materials from Africa). The corporate media and the blogosphere are
abuzz, speculating on the timing of Rove's indictment, and laying the foundation for such an indictment
I have been on record for some time as being convinced that the real crime involved in Plamegate isn't lying about it (though that, of course, is a crime), but
the revelation of Valerie Plame's identity itself. For several months the pundits have been pooh-poohing the entire investigation, suggesting that since no crime was committed by outing Plame's identity, no foul was committed either, and that it's a feeble fallback on Patrick Fitzgerald's part to go after people for lying about something that wasn't a crime in the first place.
We now know, however, thanks to the reporting of David Shuster on MSNBC, not only that Plame was a covert operative, but that she was
working on issues involving Iran's nuclear weapons program., a fact to which even the somnolent Congress has awakened, with Senator Frank Lautenberg requesting a damage assessment from the CIA regarding the effect of the Plame outing on our Iran-related intelligence efforts.

http://memphisflyer.com/memphis/Content?oid=oid%3A15508



Corporate Bond Sales May Hit Record as $600 Billion Comes Due
May 1 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. companies may sell more debt than ever this year as the economy expands, the Federal Reserve signals it may stop raising interest rates and more than $600 billion of bonds mature.
Borrowers have sold about $290 billion of bonds since the end of December, 22 percent more than the record pace of 2001, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Companies will sell about $700 billion of bonds to refinance maturing debt and finance mergers and spinoffs, according to Banc of America Securities LLC analysts. Borrowers sold $667 billion last year and a record $676 billion in 2001.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke made bonds more attractive for companies last week when he said the central bank may slow the pace of rate increases. The average yield on investment-grade corporate debt fell 6 basis points to 5.92 percent. Embarq Corp., a local phone company being spun off from Sprint Nextel Corp., and HealthSouth Corp., the largest provider of physical rehabilitation services, are among dozens of companies planning sales.
``It's a good time to borrow,'' said Bruce Gross, chief financial officer of Lennar Corp., the third-biggest U.S. homebuilder by market value. Miami-based Lennar sold $500 million of five- and 10-year debt on April 19, shaving 10 basis points off its borrowing costs from its last sale in March.
Investment-grade sales exceeded $53 billion last month, a record for April, Olivera Radakovic, a New York-based Banc of America analyst, wrote in an April 27 report. Companies sold an average of $59 billion of bonds in May since 2001, Bloomberg data show.
Rising Yields

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=a9iIP6SLdcJY&refer=top_world_news



Bush Approves Sale of US Military Parts Suppliers to UAE Government
by Chip Yost
Dubai International Capital LLC (which is owned by the UAE) lists both the Carlyle Group and Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR) as co-investments.
Outgoing White House Press Secretary Scott "Scottie" McClellan announced Friday that George W. Bush approved the sale of 9 US defense-related production plants to
Dubai International Capital, owned by the government of the United Arab Emirates, in a $1.24 billion takeover of the British firm Doncasters Group Ltd. Among the plants sold is the sole supplier of turbine fan parts for the US military's Abrams tank fans.
Since "...the plants make turbine blades for tanks and aircraft, the deal was reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., which sent it on to Bush for a decision, a step used only when the potential security risks or political considerations are particularly acute," according to
CBS' Market Watch. "...One official who was briefed on the Doncasters transaction said there would be provisions in the agreement protecting American military secrets. But it was unclear whether that would satisfy Congressional objections."

http://baltimorechronicle.com/2006/050106Chip.shtml


South Korea to win Pyrrhic victory over foreign funds
martedì, 2 maggio 2006 10.04
By Kim Yeon-hee and Alison Tudor
SEOUL/TOKYO (Reuters) - A nationalist backlash against tax-free windfall profits made by foreign investment funds in South Korea has put multibillion-dollar deals on hold and may stymie investment in Asia's fourth-biggest economy.
Mounting resentment has boiled over into raids, indictments and a raft of new tax laws and the onslaught could intensify in the run-up to the presidential election in December 2007.
"International investors are getting concerned about the tax and regulatory environment in Korea. In the long run, this may not be good for long-term direct investment in Korea," said Vincent Chan, managing director for North Asia at venture capital firm JAFCO Asia, which has an office in South Korea.
South Korea used to be a happy hunting ground for foreign buyout funds such as Newbridge Capital, Lone Star and the Carlyle Group, which snapped up distressed assets at fire-sale prices in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.
Since then the economy has recovered, companies are cash-rich and the stock market is trading at record highs, making the South Koreans more independent-minded and rendering deals more expensive and hard to come by for buyout funds.
The mood change has culminated in the delay of Kookmin Bank's $6.6 billion (3.6 billion pound) purchase of Korea Exchange Bank from U.S. fund Lone Star while Korean prosecutors investigate the fund's 2003 purchase of KEB for possible tax and currency law violations.
Lone Star had looked set to more than quadruple its $1.2 billion investment in a 50.5 percent stake in KEB.

http://www.borsaitaliana.reuters.it/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=fundsNewsUK&storyID=2006-05-02T080432Z_01_NOA228936_RTRUKOC_0_ANALYSIS-KOREA-FUNDS.xml&archived=False



Dunking Distressed Debt
Liz Moyer, 05.02.06, 6:00 AM ET
New York -
There may be signs of distress among distressed debt investors, driven by a lack of opportunities as fund managers scramble for new investment choices.
Hedge funds soaked up $24 billion in investments during the first quarter of 2006, according to Hedge Fund Research in Chicago, bringing the industry total to $1.18 trillion. Investments flowed into funds on the strength of equity markets and the red-hot commodities and energy markets.
But distressed debt funds are another story. Despite a wave of new entrants--mostly big private-equity funds--into the sector and despite perceptions that distressed debt markets are a good bet right now, research from Standard & Poor's indicates just the opposite.
Distressed bonds--the lowest rung of speculative-grade, or junk, bonds--eased in April to 4.4% of all junk bonds, a drop from 5.5% in March and 5.7% in February, according to monthly tracking by S&P. This ratio is "noticeably" lower than last year (6.2%) and 2004 (7%), despite the overhang of General Motors (nyse:
GM - news - people ), which has been sinking deeper into junk territory in the last year amid accounting hiccups and poor performance in its North American division.

http://www.forbes.com/personalfinance/funds/2006/05/01/distressed-debt-hedge-funds-cx_lm_0502debt.html


Alliances in Brambles bid
Robert Clow
May 03, 2006
A HANDFUL of trade and private equity alliances have emerged as prime contenders to secure Brambles's much coveted Cleanaway and Industrial Services businesses, which have been put on the market for upwards of $1.5 billion.
Investment bank UBS has whittled down dozens of hopeful bidders to a shortlist that is thought to include private equity firm CHAMP and Transpacific; European waste management company SITA; CCMP Capital Asia and defence contractor Tenix; CVC and Ironbridge; and legendary buyout firm KKR.
Some bidders want to buy both businesses but others are seeking just one. A Brambles spokesman declined to comment on the sales process, which is now in its final phase.
The auction started out with more than 30 bidders. With UBS providing a $900 million financing package, the ultimate price for the two assets is predicted to come close to $1.6 billion. Transpacific has trumpeted its interest in the Brambles assets - possibly as a way to scare other bidders off - but the growing list of alliances suggests it will not have a clear run at the prized assets.
Though it is entirely possible that some of these alliances will splinter as the bidding intensifies and judgments on value diverge.
Many of Australia's best-known private equity firms have already fallen by the wayside. Newbridge Capital and its aggressive US parent Texas Pacific Group appear to have decided to focus on their recent Myer acquisition. Another powerful regional firm, the US-based Carlyle Group, has also failed to make it to the second round.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19008648-643,00.html



MMG given nod in $1.2bn deal
May 03 11:34
AAP
Macquarie Bank's media investment fund has been given the all-clear to acquire cable TV and broadband provider Taiwan Broadband Communications (TBC) for almost $1.2 billion.
Macquarie Media Group (MMG) says it has received all necessary regulatory approvals for its $1.19 billion acquisition of the Carlyle Group's interest in TBC.
The deal will be undertaken by a consortium made up of MMG and its parent company, Macquarie Bank.
MMG, which listed in March, says the remaining conditions are expected to be satisfied in "coming days" and the acquisition is expected to be settled in the next week.
The fund has also raised its distribution guidance for the half year to June 30 to a range of 11.5¢ to 12¢ per stapled security, compared with 11¢ to 11.3¢ range forecast in its prospectus.

http://afr.com/articles/2006/05/03/1146335776011.html



New Management Team, Led by Tom O'Malley, to Assume Senior Management of Petroplus, European Refiner

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 3, 2006--Petroplus International B.V. ("Petroplus") announced today that the supervisory... About Petroplus:
Petroplus International B. V. (Petroplus) was established in 1993 and has since developed into a leading player in the European refining market. Petroplus owns refineries in Antwerp, Belgium; Cressier, Switzerland and Teesside, United Kingdom. In addition, Petroplus recently announced the acquisition of the Belgian Refining Corporation, whose principle asset is a 120,000 barrel per day refinery in Antwerp, Belgium. This acquisition will result in an increase in Petroplus's refining capacity to 355,000 barrels per day.
Petroplus is currently a wholly owned subsidiary of RIVR Acquisitions B.V. RIVR will continue to develop its fast-growing 4Gas LNG terminalling and LNG marketing business which will be formally separated from and managed independently of Petroplus going forward. RIVR Acquisitions B.V., the parent company of Petroplus International B.V., is owned by funds and entities affiliated with Riverstone Holdings, The Carlyle Group, and Company management.
About Riverstone Holdings LLC and The Carlyle Group:
Riverstone Holdings LLC and The Carlyle Group are the co-general partners of Carlyle/Riverstone Global Energy and Power Funds. Riverstone, a New York-based energy and power focused private equity firm founded in 2000, has over $6.0 billion under management. Riverstone conducts buyout and growth capital investments in the midstream, upstream, power and oilfield service sectors of the energy industry. To date, the firm has committed more than $2.4 billion to 21 investments across each of these four sectors. The Carlyle Group is a global private equity firm with $39 billion under management. Carlyle invests in buyouts, venture & growth capital, real estate and leveraged finance in North America, Europe and Asia. Since 1987, the firm has invested $18.1 billion of equity in 463 transactions.
www.carlyle.com.

http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20060503005776&newsLang=en



Cadbury Schweppes eyes more US bottler deals
Wed May 3, 2006 3:13pm ET
"As we execute this roll up strategy the independent bottling businesses that had been purchasing raw materials on their own, putting in their own IT systems ... it becomes possible to leverage the size and scale of the bottlers combined," Cassagne said.
The purchase from private equity firm Carlyle Group would boost Americas Beverages underlying annual revenue to about $5 billion from $3 billion, and strengthen the company's route to market in about 23 states in the United States, to match bigger rivals Coca-Cola Co. (KO.N:
Quote, Profile, Research) and PepsiCo Inc. (PEP.N: Quote, Profile,

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=reutersEdge&storyID=2006-05-03T191335Z_01_N03241556_RTRUKOC_0_US-FOOD-CADBURYSCHWEPPES-INTERVIEW.xml



UPDATE 2-Univision profit up, overshadowed by possible sale
Thursday 4 May 2006, 6:58pm EST
(Recasts, adds executive comments, analyst, byline)
By Michele Gershberg
NEW YORK, May 4 (Reuters) - Univision Communications Inc. (UVN.N:
Quote, Profile, Research) on Thursday said quarterly profit rose, with revenue bolstered by strong ratings for the No. 1 U.S. Spanish-language broadcaster as it pursues a sale of the company.
Los Angeles-based Univision put itself on the block in February, drawing interest from the world's largest media companies, as well as Mexican programming partner Televisa (TLEVISACPO.MX:
Quote, Profile, Research) and private equity firms...
Among the private equity investors said to be mulling a Univision bid are a group, including Providence Equity Partners, Madison Dearborn Partners, Carlyle Group and Venezuela's Cisneros family.

http://today.reuters.com/business/newsArticle.aspx?type=media&storyID=nN04414464



N.J. senators push for cargo screening
Thursday, May 4, 2006
By RAJU CHEBIUM and DEBORAH BARFIELD BERRY
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON
Democrats and Republicans in Congress were united this winter in condemning the Bush administration's approval of a state-run Arab company's bid to operate some shipping terminals in six U.S. ports, but that unity has evaporated.
They can't agree on how best to strengthen the nation's 361 ports against terrorist attacks, and the main sticking point is a Democratic proposal to scan all of the approximately 11 million cargo containers that arrive in this country each year.
The leading proponents of full-scale screening are New Jersey's two senators, but they're having trouble pushing their port-security proposals through the Republican-controlled Congress.
"Four-and-a-half years after September 11, we still do not know what's in 95 percent of the containers entering this country," Sen. Bob Menendez, D-Hoboken, said. "In far too many areas, we're not doing enough to protect citizens from a threat we know exists. And nowhere is that concern more urgent (than) at our ports."
Menendez wants to add $183 million to a spending bill the Senate is debating to help reach the goal of 100 percent scanning. His spokesman, Matthew Miller, said it isn't clear whether Republicans would allow Menendez to do that.
New Jersey's senior senator, Democrat Frank Lautenberg, D-Cliffside Park, had better luck.
He was able to get his proposal to scan all incoming containers through the Senate Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday. But Lautenberg had to water down his original proposal, which called for the Department of Homeland Security to stick to specific timetables. Instead, the measure that passed tells the agency to do 100 percent scanning as soon as practical.

http://www.courierpostonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060504/NEWS01/605040377/1006


Aborting take-off
Published: May 5 2006 03:00 Last updated: May 5 2006 03:00
Pure self-interest might, hopefully, have persuaded the forces of conservatism in the US airline industry and their friends in Congress to agree to reduce some of the disincentives to European investment in their sector. For the prize for removing some of these disincentives is a historic open skiesaccord with the European Union that confers disproportionate advantage on US carriers. Yet, amid the national security backlash provoked by the Dubai Ports World affair, the Bush administration has retreated from its plan diluting rules on domestic control of US airlines and risks scuppering protracted negotiations for the first ever common transatlantic aviation zone.
The catalyst for such a common arrangement is the need to replace individual EU countries' bilateral agreements with the US that were ruled illegal under EU law a few years ago. In contrast to the UK, which restricts traffic from its prized Heathrow hub, most EU countries have open skies arrangements with the US that do not limit frequency of flights. The general aim is to create a common transatlantic aviation zone on this model. But there is one feature that the negotiations would not change - that US carriers can carry traffic within the EU (by hopping from one country to another), while EU carriers cannot do the same within the US.
To balance this market disadvantage, the Europeans have been seeking a modest investment concession in the US rule that not only bars foreigners from holding more than 25 per cent of the equity voting rights in a US carrier but also prevents them exercising "actual control" over any aspect of its operation. Knowing it had no chance of getting Congress to repeal the rule outright, the US Department of Transportation suggested reinterpreting it administratively. This way foreigners in an open skies deal with the US could exercise some commercial influence over a US carrier in which they had a stake, while leaving all security issues to US shareholders and directors.

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/999dc0c2-dbd3-11da-98a8-0000779e2340.html



Drug Industry, Sen. Frist and the White House Conspired to Obtain Broad Liability Shield for Lawsuits Related to Pandemic Illnesses
Public Citizen Report Reveals Behind-the-Scenes Lobbying; Language Inserted Into Bill Without Lawmakers’ Knowledge
WASHINGTON, May 4, 2006 – Drug industry lobbyists conspired with the White House and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) last year to craft a sweeping liability provision that shields the industry from lawsuits over products used to treat pandemic illnesses, even in cases of gross negligence or gross recklessness, according to a report issued today by Public Citizen.
The report,
Willful Misconduct: How Bill Frist and the Drug Lobby Covertly Bagged a Liability Shield, relies on internal documents and e-mails of the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) to illustrate the degree to which Frist’s office deferred to drug industry demands and describes Frist’s sleight of hand in securing passage of the provision. It underscores the
the enormous power of the drug industry and its lobbyists to steer a highly controversial provision into law.

http://www.pharmalive.com/News/index.cfm?articleid=337863&categoryid=27


Willful Misconduct

http://www.citizen.org/documents/050406PandemicFinal_1.pdf


Bill Frist's Plan For $100 Gas Rebate Is Reportedly DOA In Congress (UPDATED)
File
this one in the Yet Another Political Prescription From Majority Leader Bill Frist that proved to be the wrong one.
Can the Republicans sue him for political malpractice yet?
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist's proposal last week to offer consumers $100 rebates for high gasoline prices is ``dead,'' according to several House and Senate leaders.
House Majority Leader John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, said the idea of a $100 rebate is ``insulting'' to consumers. Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said the plan was ``dead before it was offered.''
"Insulting...." "....dead before it was offered..."?
Wait: are they talking about a gas rebate or the administration's proposal for social security reform?

http://www.themoderatevoice.com/posts/1146629534.shtml



Mail show thousands returned to New Orleans area in last 3 months
5/4/2006, 4:15 p.m. CT
The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — About 13,000 households in the New Orleans area have stopped having mail forwarded elsewhere since Jan. 1, figures from the U.S. Postal Service show.

http://www.nola.com/newsflash/louisiana/index.ssf?/base/news-24/114677785697590.xml&storylist=louisiana



FEMA Abruptly Abandons Long-Term Recovery Office In New Orleans
On September 15, President Bush stood in downtown New Orleans and pledged, “Throughout the area hit by the hurricane,
we will do what it takes, we will stay as long as it takes, to help citizens rebuild their communities and their lives.”
Today, nearly eight months later, “Housing remains in very short supply, only a handful of public schools have reopened and many neighborhoods resemble ghost towns.” But according to WWL-TV, FEMA
is choosing to abandon New Orleans anyway:
The Federal Emergency Management Agency office charged with helping New Orleans devise a blueprint to rebuild destroyed houses, schools and neighborhoods after Hurricane Katrina is being closed and nearly all its workers reassigned. …
FEMA says it’s closing the long-term recovery office because local officials have failed to begin planning the recovery adequately. …
City officials are angered by the move, saying New Orleans is again being abandoned by the federal government. “We can’t plan on a paper napkin,” said New Orleans Deputy Mayor Greg Meffert.
Two points emphasizing just how outrageous this move is:
1) FEMA was partly responsible for the delays in developing city plans. FEMA says it is leaving because it’s tired of waiting for a plan from city officials. But “[o]ne major hold-up was the late release of FEMA’s flood elevation advisories,” WWL reports, “which offer guidelines on how high homeowners should raise their homes to qualify for flood insurance.” The advisories
were issued last week, months late.
2) FEMA had promised to fund city planning efforts. New Orleans officials say they need federal help to pay for the planning efforts, and the former director of the FEMA’s recovery office “made a verbal promise to city officials to fund the effort.” In fact, “[s]everal employees of the disbanded office agreed [that the city needs federal assistance], saying that at the beginning the office worked closely with city officials, helping implement their plans.” Now that promise has been broken.

http://thinkprogress.org/2006/05/04/katrina-recovery/



In New Orleans, Pleas to Focus on Pumps

Staff and agencies
04 May, 2006
By BRETT MARTEL, Associated Press Writer 2 minutes ago
NEW ORLEANS - Drilling what resembles rows of bullet holes through old wooden floors and plaster walls, Matt and Maureen McBride were able to air-dry their flooded, 1920s bungalow-style house in the city‘s historic Broadmoor neighborhood.
But the McBrides and other residents of low-lying neighborhoods fear all their rebuilding efforts could be for nothing if the city‘s massive system of pumping stations and drainage canals is not up to the job for the next hurricane season, just five weeks away.
New Orleans is guarded by a network of levees that defend against rising seas and storm surges. The pumps and canals are also critical in a storm by helping to channel excess rainfall out of the city‘s saucer-shaped landscape.

http://www.newsone.ca/westfallweeklynews/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=184094



Ex-official guilty of spying from Cheney's office
Thu May 4, 2006 5:52pm ET
By Christine Kearney
NEWARK, New Jersey (Reuters) - A Philippine-born former White House official pleaded guilty on Thursday to charges that he took top secret documents from Vice President Dick Cheney's office and turned them over to Philippine opposition figures.
Leandro Aragoncillo, 47, faces 15 to 20 years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines for his plea on conspiracy, transmission and retention of national defense information and unauthorized use of a computer.
Aragoncillo, a U.S. citizen and former Marine, worked in the White House as administration chief of the security detail assigned to the Vice President from 1999 to 2002 where he held a top security clearance. He later took a job as an intelligence analyst with the FBI in New Jersey.
He admitted in court to passing on documents classified as top secret, secret and confidential that included information relating to terrorist threats against U.S. government interests and military personnel in the Philippines.
Prosecutors called his guilty admission a "plea agreement" but refused to say if he would testify against another defendant in the case, Michael Ray Aquino, a former senior Philippine police intelligence officer accused of taking documents from Aragoncillo.

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=domesticNews&storyID=2006-05-04T215156Z_01_N04272023_RTRUKOC_0_US-PHILIPPINES-USA-ESPIONAGE.xml&archived=False


Pombo hopes for lift from Cheney
May 22 event with vice president set
Hank Shaw
Capitol Bureau Chief
Published Thursday, May 4, 2006
Vice President Dick Cheney to help Pombo's campaign.
Credit: AP
SACRAMENTO - Vice President Dick Cheney will help stoke Rep. Richard Pombo's buck-raking efforts at a Stockton fund-raiser later this month.
Pombo, a Tracy Republican, is seeking an eighth term in Congress but faces his toughest re-election bid since 1992, when he was first elected.
Two Republicans are challenging Pombo in the June 6 primary: retired Tracy farmer Tom Benigno and former Bay Area Rep. Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey.
McCloskey, a 78-year-old who challenged President Nixon in the 1972 presidential primary, has been generating national headlines for his campaign.
Nevertheless, Pombo enjoys a comfortable fund-raising lead over McCloskey. Pombo has about $1.1 million in his campaign account as of March 31; McCloskey has about $176,000. Benigno has $1,000.

http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060504/NEWS01/605040333/1001

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