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U.S. House Defeats $162.5 Billion War Budget
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:12:34 (14 hours ago)
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An unusual coalition of antiwar Democrats and angry Republicans
in
the House Thursday torpedoed a $162.5 billion proposal to continue
funding
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan into next year, eliminating, for now,
the one part of the controversial bill that had seemed certain to pass.
Instead,
House members voted to demand troop withdrawals from Iraq, force the
Iraqi government to shoulder more war costs and greatly expand the
education benefits for returning veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan
conflict.
The surprise on war-funding left antiwar activists on
and off Capitol Hill exultant and Democratic leaders baffled. House
leaders had broken the war-funding bill into three separate measures,
the first to fund the wars, the second to impose strict military policy
measures opposed by President Bush, and the third to fund domestic
priorities, including expanded education benefits and flood control
work around New Orleans.
That legislative legerdemain became
the plan's undoing. Democratic leaders knew that many members of their
caucus, who have vowed not to approve another penny for the Iraq war,
would reject the supplemental appropriation for the conflicts, but they
expected Republicans to push it through. Instead, 131 House Republicans
voted "present" on the measure, incensed that House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-California) and a few of her lieutenants had drafted the war
bill largely in secret.
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U.K. Reveals Secret UFO Files
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:11:59 (14 hours ago)
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Aliens from outer space have been visiting Britain for years
and UFO sightings doubled after the film Close Encounters was released
in 1977, according to secret files collating reports by members of the
public.
The alien craft come in all shapes, sizes and colors but
their occupants are uniformly green, the Ministry of Defence files show.
The archives (at http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos)
are the first batch of a four-year release program of all the
ministry's UFO files from 1978 to the present day.
The ministry dismisses 90 per cent of the reports as having mundane
explanations and leave 10 per cent with a question mark and the
assurance they are no defense threat.
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China Appeals For Rescue Equipment
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:11:21 (14 hours ago)
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The Chinese government made an emergency appeal for cranes and
heavy
lifting equipment Thursday amid warnings that time is running out to
rescue survivors from Monday's huge earthquake.
As the state
media raised estimates of the final death toll to 50,000, troops,
emergency personnel and volunteers continued to find people alive,
trapped under collapsed buildings.
Dramatic footage broadcast by
the state-run China Central Television network showed a young woman
waving weakly from under slabs of concrete at the site of a devastated
hospital in Dujiangyan. She was eventually freed by rescue workers -
one of at least three people found alive three days after the 7.9
magnitude quake that churned up large swaths of Sichuan province in
southwest China.
Far more bodies than survivors are being
uncovered. The official death toll rose by almost a third Thursday to
19,509. About 30,000 others are believed to be buried under mountain
landslides and collapsed structures.
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Bush May Have Lost Wealth During Presidency
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Posted By: JWSmythe
2008-05-16 09:07:09 (15 hours ago)
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President Bush's
financial fortunes appear to have declined over the past seven years,
with his family assets dropping as low as $6.5 million, according to
disclosure forms released yesterday.
Bush and his wife, Laura, were worth at least $9 million and as much
as $24 million at the start of his term. The Bushes could still be
worth as much as $20 million now, according to the financial documents
filed with the Office of Government Ethics, which requires assets to be reported only within broad ranges
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Oil Above $127 For The First Time
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Posted By: JWSmythe
2008-05-16 08:52:36 (15 hours ago)
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Oil prices have hit a record high above $127 a barrel on fresh worries about global supplies.
US light sweet crude jumped to $127.43 a barrel, ignoring a forecast
from producers' cartel Opec this week that the world will need less oil
in 2008.
London Brent crude also climbed, touching $125.82 a barrel.
Prices have surged about 25% since January, lifted by
geopolitical worries and the weakening US dollar, which makes oil
cheaper for foreign buyers.
The latest price rise comes as US President George W Bush flies
into Saudi Arabia to urge the kingdom to pump more crude and help bring
prices down.
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China Warns Earthquake Death Toll May Reach 50,000
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 14:58:16 (1 days ago)
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China warned the death toll from this week's earthquake could soar to
50,000, while the government issued a public appeal today for rescue
equipment as it struggled to cope with the disaster.
More than 72 hours after the quake rattled central China, rescuers
appeared to shift from poring through downed buildings for survivors to
the grim duty of searching for bodies - with 10 million directly
affected by Monday's temblor.
At least 12,300 people remained buried and another 102,100 were injured
in Sichuan province, where the quake was centered, the vice governor
told reporters.
In Luoshui town - on the road to an industrial zone in Shifang city
where two chemical plants collapsed, burying hundreds of people -
troops used a mechanical shovel to dig a pit on a hilltop to bury the
dead.
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Bank Of England: Britain Heading Toward Recession
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:53:11 (2 days ago)
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Britain Prime Minister Gordon Brown's drive to recapture the political agenda with a
program of new laws to create "an opportunity-rich Britain" was badly
shaken Wednesday by a warning from the governor of the Bank of England
that the British economy is heading towards a recession.
"The nice decade
is behind us," Mervyn King declared in funereal tones, warning that the
economy was "traveling along a bumpy road" as he predicted rising
prices would put a squeeze on take-home pay for millions of workers.
"As
those price increases feed through to household bills, they will lead
to a squeeze on real take-home pay, which will slow consumer spending
and output growth, perhaps sharply," said the governor.
Unveiling
his draft legislative program of 18 bills offering people a greater
say over schools, policing and health services in their area, the prime
minister said Britain could avoid a recession. He even asked the public
to "judge and test" him on the basis of his stewardship of the economy.
Brown promised: "We will see Britain through this difficult
time. In the past we were first in and last out of a recession. In the
last 11 years we have avoided recession and we will emerge from this
world slowdown stronger and better, both as a country and a government."
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U.S. House Passes Farm Bill By A Veto-Proof Margin
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:52:36 (2 days ago)
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Ignoring a veto threat from President Bush, who says he wants to
sharply limit government subsidies to farmers at a time of near-record
commodity prices and soaring global demand for grain, the House on
Wednesday approved a five-year, $307 billion farm bill with a solid
bipartisan majority.
The House voted 318 to 106 - well
above the two-thirds needed to hand Bush the second veto override
of his presidency - with 100 Republicans joining the Democratic
majority in favor.
The Senate is expected to follow suit with
wide bipartisan support on Thursday, sending Bush a bill that he
described this week as bloated and expensive and said “resorts to a
variety of gimmicks.”
The bill includes a $10.3 billion
increase in spending on nutrition programs, including food stamps, that
supporters called “historic,” as well as increases for rural
development and land conservation programs.
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Republican Election Losses Stir Fall Fears
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:51:49 (2 days ago)
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The Republican defeat in a special Congressional contest in Mississippi sent waves of apprehension across an already troubled party Wednesday,
with some senior Republicans urging Congressional candidates to
distance themselves from President Bush to head off what could be heavy
losses in the fall.
The victory by Travis Childers, a conservative Democrat elected in a
once-steadfast Republican district on Tuesday, was the third defeat of
a Republican in a special Congressional race this year. In addition to
foreshadowing more losses for the party in November, the outcome
appeared to call into question the belief that Senator Barack Obama, of Illinois, could be a heavy liability for his party’s down-ticket candidates in conservative regions.
Republicans had sought to link Childers to Obama in an
advertising campaign there. Republican leaders said they were looking
to Senator John McCain, of Arizona, the likely Republican nominee, as a model whose independent
reputation appears to allow him to rise above party in a year when the
Republican label seems tarnished.
McCain’s advisers said the Mississippi race underlined his
intention to distance himself as much as possible from Congressional
Republicans. McCain has already been openly critical of some of
President Bush’s strategies.
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Fears For Brazil Rainforest As Environment Minister Quits
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:49:32 (2 days ago)
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Fears for the future of the world's biggest tropical rainforest
grew Wednesday, after the sudden resignation of Brazil's environment
minister, Marina Silva.
Environmentalists had seen Silva, 50, who
was born in the Brazilian Amazon, as an important ally in the fight
against the destruction of the country's rainforest, 20% of which they
believe has been destroyed.
In her resignation letter to Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva, the president, on Tuesday, Silva said her
decision was the result of difficulties she was facing in "pursuing the
federal environmental agenda". She said her efforts to protect the
environment had faced "growing resistance ... [from] important sectors
of the government and society". Two other top environmental officials,
including Bazileu Margarido, the president of Brazil's environmental
agency, Ibama, also resigned.
Sergio Leitao, the director of
public policy for Greenpeace in Brazil, said Silva had taken her
decision because of pressure from within the government to relax laws
outlawing bank loans to those who destroyed the rainforest.
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Astronomers Announce Discovery Of Youngest Supernova
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:48:06 (2 days ago)
[Read 117 times || 0 comments]
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Scientists Wednesday reported the discovery of the youngest supernova in
the Milky Way, ending a 50-year search for the exploded stars that
remain mysteriously difficult to spot in our galaxy.
The
supernova, given the obscure name of G1.9+0.3, was detected via
remnants from the powerful, element-rich blast it set off an estimated
140 years ago. The youngest previously known supernova, called
Cassiopeia A, was 330 years old.
Astronomers have scoured the
skies for supernovae since Cassiopeia surfaced in the 1950s. Only a
half-dozen of the stellar explosions have been noted in the last
millennium, but somewhere between 20 and 30 should be occurring in the
Milky Way based on galactic evidence. "It's clear that we've
not been getting our share [of supernovae] … this lack is a significant
puzzle," said North Carolina state university scientist Stephen Reynolds,
who aided in the search.
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Massive Search Effort Continues In China
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:38:48 (2 days ago)
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The death toll from Monday's deadly earthquake in central China rose
to almost 15,000 on Wednesday, with an estimated 40,000 more trapped
under rubble or missing, the official New China News Agency reported.
The
escalating casualty figures were released as soldiers, paramilitary
police and civilian rescue workers continued a massive effort to clear
debris from collapsed schools, hospitals and residences throughout
Sichuan province, the area hardest hit by the 7.9 magnitude tremor.
The
Associated Press reported that 2,000 Chinese soldiers rushed to repair
a dam badly cracked by the earthquake, and damage was reported in
hundreds of smaller dams as well.
In a news conference in the
provincial capital of Chengdu, Sichuan Vice Governor Li Chengyun
acknowledged that the latest figures of dead and missing were
incomplete, the news agency reported. It is expected that the toll will
rise as authorities continue clearing rubble in Mianyang and other
towns and move deeper into Wenchuan county, the quake's epicenter.
Roads into Wenchuan were severed by rocks and mudslides, according to
the news agency, and efforts to airlift supplies by helicopter have
been hampered by rain and fog.
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Aid Groups Say Myanmar Food Stolen By Military
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:38:09 (2 days ago)
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The directors of several relief organizations in Myanmar said
Wednesday that some of the international aid arriving into the country
for the victims of Cyclone Nargis was being stolen, diverted or warehoused by the country’s army.
The United States military’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center said there
was a possibility that “a significant tropical cyclone” - a second big
storm - would form within the next 24 hours and head across the
Irrawaddy Delta, the region that suffered most from the first storm
that struck on May 3.
In Yangon, the main commercial city, winds were already beginning to
whip up Wednesday evening, but it was unclear how strong the storm
would become.
Thailand’s prime minister, Samak Sundaravej, flew to Yangon on
Wednesday to persuade Myanmar’s leaders to allow more foreign aid
workers into the country. The members of the military junta told him
they were in control of the relief operations and had no need for
foreign experts, he told reporters after returning to Bangkok, the
Associated Press reported.
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Freddie Mac Reports Loss, Plans To Raise $5.5 Billion
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:37:19 (2 days ago)
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Freddie Mac, the giant mortgage funding company, Wednesday reported that rising
foreclosures and falling home prices contributed to $1.45 billion of
credit-related expenses during the first quarter, up 58.8 percent from
the previous quarter and 452.7 percent from the first three months of
last year.
However, a variety of accounting changes and other factors helped
Freddie Mac's bottom line. The McLean firm said it lost $151 million
(66 cents per share) during the three month period that ended March 31,
compared with losses of $2.45 billion during the previous quarter and
$133 million (35 cents) during the first quarter of 2007.
By one widely followed measure, Freddie Mac's financial condition
deteriorated sharply during the first quarter. The so-called fair value
of its assets, a snapshot of their value based on current estimates,
fell to a negative $5.2 billion on March 31 from a positive $12.6
billion on Dec. 31. That was despite changes in valuation methods that
increased the fair value by $4.6 billion. Freddie Mac said it plans to
raise $5.5 billion of capital in the near future by selling more common
and preferred stock. Issuing more common stock dilutes the value of
current investors' shares.
The company is required to maintain a minimum level of capital as a
cushion against losses. Freddie Mac could hold onto the added capital
or use it to expand its business.
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Rocket Hits As Bush Begins Israel Visit
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:36:46 (2 days ago)
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A rocket launched from Gaza struck a commercial center in southern
Israel on Wednesday, hours before President Bush, on a visit to Israel
to mark the 60th anniversary of its founding, was to address a major
peace conference here called “Facing Tomorrow.”
The rocket, which the police said was Iranian-made, crashed through
the roof of a health clinic in Ashkelon, about 10 miles north of the
Gaza Strip. It badly injured a woman and her 2-year-old daughter, both
in the head, as well as their doctor at the clinic. A fourth person was
also injured.
Maj. General Uriel Bar-Lev, police commander of
Israel’s southern district, said bomb experts determined the rocket’s
Iranian origin.
“It has Iranian fingerprints on it,” he said in
an interview outside the mall, crushed glass underfoot, after visiting
the third-floor clinic that took the hit.
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Bush Administration's Air Quality Rules Make It Easier To Build Power Plants Near National Parks
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:12:19 (14 hours ago)
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The Bush administration is on the verge of implementing new air
quality rules that would make it easier to build power plants near
national parks and wilderness areas, according to rank-and-file agency
scientists and park managers who oppose the plan.
The new
regulations, which are likely to be finalized sometime this summer,
rewrite a provision of the Clean Air Act that applies to "Class 1
areas," federal lands that currently have the highest level of
protection under the law. Opponents predict the changes will worsen
visibility at many of the nation's most prized tourist destinations,
including Virginia's Shenandoah, Colorado's Mesa Verde and North
Dakota's Theodore Roosevelt national parks.
Nearly a year ago,
with little fanfare, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed
changing the way the government measures air pollution near Class 1
areas on the grounds that the nation needed a more uniform way of
regulating emissions near protected areas.
Jeffrey R. Holmstead,
who now heads the environmental strategies group at the law firm of
Bracewelll & Giuliani, helped initiate the rule change while
leading EPA's air and radiation office. He said agency officials became
concerned that EPA's scientific staff was taking "the most conservative
approach" in predicting how much pollution new power plants would
produce.
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Documents Link Chavez To Guerrillas
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:11:43 (14 hours ago)
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President Hugo Chavez was facing serious allegations over
Venezuela's links to Colombian guerrillas last night after Interpol
bolstered the credibility of intercepted rebel documents.
The
international police organization announced that a two-month forensic
investigation of laptops seized in a raid by Colombian security forces
concluded they belonged to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC).
Leaks from the trove of 16,000 files and photographs have
suggested high-ranking Venezuelan officials plotted to help the Marxist
group to obtain weapons and funding for its decades-long insurgency
against the Colombian state.
Ronald Noble, Interpol secretary
general, said his experts had found "no alteration of the data by
Colombian officials". Internationally accepted methods for handling
computers were not always followed, he said, but Bogota had not
modified, altered or created files. Interpol said the amount of
information - 37,872 word documents and 210,880 photographs - was much
greater than previously thought.
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Burmese Junta Requests Aid To Rebuild Farms
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-16 10:11:02 (14 hours ago)
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Burma's military rulers are appealing for international funding to
get rice farmers in the cyclone-ravaged Irrawaddy Delta back to their
paddy fields, amid concerns about future food shortages if cultivators
miss the upcoming planting season.
The Burmese government's request for help in restoring farms in
the
disaster zone was made in closed-door meetings with relief officials in
Burma, aid sources said Thursday.
The request came as Burma's state television claimed overwhelming
public support for a controversial military-sponsored constitution in a
May 10 referendum. It reported that 92.4 percent of voters endorsed the
charter in areas that were not seriously affected by the storm. Polling
in the cyclone-hit section of the country - including the Irrawaddy
Delta and Rangoon, Burma's largest city - is scheduled for May 24.
The opposition National League for Democracy, the party of detained
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, promptly denounced the
results as fraudulent.
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Official Urged Fewer Diagnoses of PTSD
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Posted By: JWSmythe
2008-05-16 09:06:57 (15 hours ago)
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A psychologist who helps lead the post-traumatic stress disorder
program at a medical facility for veterans in Texas told staff members
to refrain from diagnosing PTSD because so many veterans were seeking
government disability payments for the condition.
"Given that we are having more and more compensation seeking
veterans, I'd like to suggest that you refrain from giving a diagnosis
of PTSD straight out," Norma Perez wrote in a March 20 e-mail to
mental-health specialists and social workers at the Department of Veterans Affairs'
Olin E. Teague Veterans' Center in Temple, Tex. Instead, she
recommended that they "consider a diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder."
VA staff members "really don't . . . have time to do the extensive testing that should be done to determine PTSD," Perez wrote.
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California Supreme Court Overturns Gay Marriage Ban
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 14:58:34 (1 days ago)
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The California Supreme Court ruled Thursday that same-sex couples should
be permitted to marry, rejecting state marriage laws as discriminatory.
The state high court's 4-3 ruling was unlikely to end the debate
over gay matrimony in California. A group has circulated petitions for
a November ballot initiative that would amend the state Constitution to
block same-sex marriage, while the Legislature has twice passed bills
to authorize gay marriage. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed both.
The long-awaited court opinion, written by Chief Justice Ronald M.
George, stemmed from San Francisco's highly publicized same-sex
weddings, which in 2004 helped spur a conservative backlash in a
presidential election year and a national dialogue over gay rights.
Several states have since passed constitutional amendments banning gay marriage. Today, 27 states have such amendments.
The reaction to Thursday's ruling outside the courthouse in San
Francisco was one of jubilation as couples, once denied marriage,
hugged, kissed, shouted and shook their fists at the sky. Holding up a
sign that says, "Life feels different when you're married," Helen
Pontac said she was beyond words.
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Bush's 'Appeasement' Remark Hits Nerve
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 14:58:02 (1 days ago)
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Addressing the Israeli parliament, President Bush set off a political
firestorm today with an apparent criticism of Sen. Barack Obama, the
Democratic presidential hopeful, over his position on negotiating with
some dictatorships.
Obama, who has pledged to talk to regimes in Iran, Cuba and North
Korea, promptly accused the Bush White House of launching "a false
political attack" for suggesting such outreach amounts to appeasing
dictators.
In a speech to Israel's Knesset marking the 60th anniversary of that
country's independence, Bush said, "Some seem to believe that we should
negotiate with the terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious
argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along."
Comparing "this foolish delusion" to the reaction of an American
senator to Adolf Hitler's rise in 1939, Bush said, "We have an
obligation to call this what it is - the false comfort of appeasement,
which has been repeatedly discredited by history."
Obama issued a statement calling it "sad" that Bush used the
speech to take a partisan shot. "George Bush knows that I have never
supported engagement with terrorists, and the president's extraordinary
politicization of foreign policy and the politics of fear do nothing to
secure the American people or our stalwart ally Israel," he said in a
statement.
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Chinese Soldiers Rush To Bolster Dams Weakened By Earthquake
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:52:58 (2 days ago)
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China mobilized 30,000 additional soldiers to the earthquake-shattered
expanses of the nation’s southwestern regions on Wednesday - not just
to help victims, but also to shore up weakened dams and other elements
of the infrastructure whose failure could compound the disaster.
Experts said that these dams were built around the well-recognized
Longmen Shan fault. They warned that such dams might have sustained
damage that could cause them to fail even weeks later.
Much depends on efforts to reduce the menacing pressure of water
behind the dam walls. Two thousand soldiers were sent to a dam just
three miles upriver from the devastated town of Dujiangyan, northwest
of the provincial capital of Chengdu, to inspect a structure that has
shown some cracks and is “in great danger,” according to
state-controlled China National Radio.
Dams and their electric generators are only the most visible
aspects of the infrastructure battered by the earthquake: The region
also is the site of the cities of Guangyuan and Mianyang, which are
home to plants that build Chinese nuclear arms and process plutonium
for the weapons. It is not clear whether the plants suffered damage.
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Major Study: World's Wildlife And Environment Already Hit By Global Warming
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:52:10 (2 days ago)
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Global warming is disrupting wildlife and the environment on every
continent, according to an unprecedented study that reveals the extent
to which climate change is already affecting the world's ecosystems.
Scientists
examined published reports dating back to 1970 and found that at least
90% of environmental damage and disruption around the world could be
explained by rising temperatures driven by human activity.
Big
falls in Antarctic penguin populations, fewer fish in African lakes,
shifts in American river flows and earlier flowering and bird
migrations in Europe are all likely to be driven by global warming, the
study found.
The team of experts, including members of the United Nation's
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) from America, Europe,
Australia and China, is the first to formally link some of the most
dramatic changes to the world's wildlife and habitats with
human-induced climate change.
In the study, which appears in
the journal Nature, researchers analyzed reports highlighting changes
in populations or behavior of 28,800 animal and plant species. They
examined a further 829 reports that focused on different environmental
effects, including surging rivers, retreating glaciers and shifting
forests, across the seven continents.
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Study: Sites In U.S. National Forests At Grave Risk
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:50:30 (2 days ago)
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Millions of historic sites, crumbling and collapsing in national
forests around the country, are in danger of being lost forever,
according to a study set to be released today by a prominent
preservation group.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation estimates that
only a small slice of about 2 million "cultural resources" that sit on
193 million acres managed by the U.S. Forest Service have been properly preserved.
Their deterioration has been accelerated by vandalism, theft, fire,
damage from off-road vehicles and other recreation, as well as oil and
gas extraction, mining, timber harvesting and grazing, the study found.
The resources include Native American archaeological sites, Civil
War battlefields, ranger stations, fire lookout towers, cabins and
camps built by the Civilian Conservation Corps.
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John Edwards Throws Support To Obama
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-15 03:48:36 (2 days ago)
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Former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards gave his long-sought endorsement to Sen. Barack Obama Wednesday night, calling on Democrats to unite behind him and turn their attention to the fall campaign.
"The reason I am here tonight," Edwards declared, "is the voters have made their choice, and so have I."
Edwards had been heavily courted by Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton since he quit the race three months ago. His decision to climb off the
fence with just five contests remaining is likely to yield limited
benefits, but it sends a strong signal that Edwards, at least, thinks
the nomination battle is over.
Appearing with Obama at a rally
here in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the former senator from North Carolina and 2004 Democratic vice
presidential nominee gave what sounded in places like a eulogy for
Clinton's candidacy, praising her tenacity and describing her as "made
of steel." But he emphasized that the party must now get behind Obama.
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Food Prices See Greatest Jump In Nearly 20 Years
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:39:03 (2 days ago)
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Rising global grain prices helped spark the largest increase in monthly
food costs in nearly 20 years, as consumers paid more in April for
cereals, baked goods, and the dairy, meat and other animal products
that rely on feedstocks, the government reported Wednesday.
Food prices have risen 6.1 percent in the past three months on a
seasonally adjusted annual basis. The one-month rise between March and
April of 0.9 percent was the biggest since January 1990, according to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The rise in prices covered all categories of food but was most
severe among such staple goods as grains and oils - goods where
inflation has touched off food riots in some less developed countries
and led to concerns about supply shortages.
The costs of cereal and bakery products increased 1.4 percent from
March to April and have risen nearly 20 percent in the past three
months on a seasonally adjusted basis. Prices for fats and oils jumped
more than 5 percent in April, on a seasonally adjusted annual basis,
and have increased more than 26 percent in the past three months.
Prices for sugars and sweets increased more than 10 percent during that
same period.
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Mississippi Republicans Regroup After Loss
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:38:27 (2 days ago)
[Read 138 times || 0 comments]
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House Republicans struggled to regroup Wednesday in the aftermath of a devastating election loss in
Mississippi, acknowledging that their party faced a significant
challenge in November after the loss of three Republican seats in
special elections this year.
“It was another wake-up call that we have to show Americans that we
can fix the problems here in Washington and fix the problems they deal
with every day,” said Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, the House
Republican leader.
Republicans said that the Democratic victor in Mississippi’s 1st
District, Travis Childers, successfully co-opted a conservative
Republican anti-tax, pro-gun, pro-life message.
“We know the message works,” said Representative Roy Blunt of
Missouri, the No. 2 Republican. “We’ve got to do a better job
connecting that with Republicans. And I personally think there’s a
substantial and adequate time to do that.”
Republicans were clearly demoralized by the loss and the prospect of
sinking deeper into the minority in November. No immediate
personnel shake-ups were announced even though Boehner hinted at
“changes that may be necessary to adopt to the environment we are living
in.”
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Burma (Myanmar) Rejects Large Scale Relief Effort
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:37:54 (2 days ago)
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A new storm is brewing off Burma coast.
The United States landed five more plane loads of relief supplies in
Burma Wednesday to help survivors of Tropical Cyclone Nargis, and
Burmese authorities agreed to let 160 Asian aid workers assist its
struggling relief effort, but the country's reclusive military rulers
continued to reject international appeals to send in large numbers of
foreign relief personnel and appeared to discount warnings of a second
wave of deaths from disease and starvation.
Thailand's Public
Health Ministry confirmed that it is sending 30 doctors, along with
medical supplies, on Friday to work in Burma for two weeks. U.N.
officials said Burmese authorities also have asked India, China and Bangladesh to send teams of experienced disaster relief personnel.
Adding
to the woes of the survivors, weather satellites spotted another
powerful storm brewing in the waters off Burma. Meteorologists said its
future path and strength are unclear, and there were conflicting
accounts about whether it could become another cyclone.
The news
came as five more U.S. military C-130 transport planes, carrying such
desperately needed supplies as water, mosquito nets, plastic sheets,
blankets and hygiene kits, flew into Burma's largest city, Rangoon,
Wednesday in an acceleration of U.S. assistance.
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Finally, U.S. Lists Polar Bear As Threatened Species
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:37:07 (2 days ago)
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The Interior Department declared the polar bear a threatened species
Wednesday, saying it must be protected because of the decline in Arctic
sea ice from global warming.
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne cited dramatic declines in sea
ice over the last three decades and projections of continued losses.
These declines, he told a news conference, mean the polar bear is a
species likely to be in danger of extinction in the near future.
Kempthorne also said, though, that it would be "inappropriate" to
use the protection of the bear to reduce greenhouse gases, or to
broadly address climate change.
Reflecting views recently expressed by President Bush, Kempthorne
said the Endangered Species Act was "never meant to regulate global
climate change."
He said the decision to list the bear includes administrative
actions aimed at limiting the impact of the decision on energy
development and other climate related activities.
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Arson Arrest In Florida Wildfires
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Posted By: Intellpuke
2008-05-14 17:36:06 (2 days ago)
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Authorities along Florida's Atlantic coast, where wildfires have
gutted dozens of homes and scorched thousands of acres, arrested a man
Wednesday who they said threw a glass bottle containing an accelerant
into the woods.
Authorities said Brian Crowder set a small blaze
that was quickly extinguished. They also planned to question the
31-year-old about larger wildfires that have found ample fuel in
developments in the region, where the state has not held controlled
burns to cut back vegetation.
A resident alerted police after
seeing Crowder throw an object from his car that sparked the fire, Palm
Bay Detective Ernie Diebel said. The object was a bottle containing a
flammable liquid, said Palm Bay Police Chief Bill Berger.
The
resident described a dark car, and officers stopped Crowder's vehicle
shortly afterward. Crowder got out of his car and fled, said Diebel.
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