- Columbus, Ohio  
- Columbus, Ohio  
---- WEEKLY HEADLINE NEWS -- --SEPTEMBER 29, 2008------WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate agreed to vote on Wednesday night on a new version of the $700 billion bailout package for Wall Street that will include a big increase in the amount of bank deposits protected by the government's insurance program, a Senate aide said on Tuesday ------ SEPTEMBER 18, 2008 -----Obama mocks McCain's call to fire SEC chairman -- By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent - ESPANOLA, N.M. - Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama promised new ideas Thursday to calm America's financial meltdown and help struggling families avoid mortgage foreclosure, saying that "this is not a time for fear, it's not a time for panic." Obama also heaped criticism and sarcasm on Republican rival John McCain and mocked his promise to fire the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission if elected president. "I think that's all fine and good but here's what I think," Obama said. "In the next 47 days you can fire the whole trickle-down, on-your-own, look-the-other way crowd in Washington who has led us down this disastrous path. "Don't just get rid of one guy. Get rid of this administration," he said. "Get rid of this philosophy. Get rid of the do-nothing approach to our economic problem and put somebody in there who's going to fight for you." Obama came up with yet another way to poke fun at McCain for his comment Monday that the fundamentals of the economy were strong. "This comment was so out of touch that even George Bush's White House couldn't agree with it when they were asked about it. They had to distance themselves from John McCain." President Bush has used the same language many times but his press secretary would not repeat the line Wednesday in the face of historic financial turbulence. With the economy rocketing to the front of the campaign agenda, Obama said he would unveil new proposals Friday in Florida. Senior members of his economic team were flying to Miami to meet with Obama before his announcement. He said the ideas grew out of talks with former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and others. Obama had been discussing various proposals with economic advisers in conference calls and individual calls this week, aides said. Obama's stop in northern New Mexico's Rio Arriba County was aimed at energizing the Hispanic vote, which is crucial for his hopes of carrying this state. New Mexico voted for George Bush in 2004 but Democrat John Kerry got 65 percent of the vote in Rio Arriba. The county is about 73 percent Hispanic and 12 percent Native American, according to the 2000 Census. --------- Jobless numbers overwhelm Florida state unemployment system By Sara Kennedy | Bradenton Herald With Florida's unemployment rate the highest it's been in 13 years, the sheer volume of people using the unemployment compensation system has led to slowdowns. Vladimir Volynsky, 59, of Parrish, a personal banker/ teller who was laid off from First Priority Bank Jan. 31, says he could not get through to the state Agency for Workforce Innovation in Tallahassee, which handles worker's compensation matters. He was trying to certify his claim as he is required to do periodically. It took him almost all day Tuesday to accomplish it on the state's Internet Web site, www.fluidnow.com. He also tried the agency phone number (800) 204-2418 but got a busy signal each time or heard a message saying the call could not go through. State officials say they have instituted a number of fixes, such as more phone lines and computer servers to speed things up. "With increased demands, we have been pro-active in enhancing our systems to ensure the best service for our customers," said Robby Cunningham, the agency's communications director.----------- SEPTEMBER 17, 20008 --- ---- GOP group behind negative Obama poll --- By Ben Smith - A Republican group is taking responsibility for a poll that has roiled the Jewish community by asking sharply negative questions about Senator Barack Obama. The Republican Jewish Coalition, which is launching a campaign against Obama on behalf of Senator John McCain, sponsored the poll to "understand why Barack Obama continues to have a problem among Jewish voters," the group's executive director, Matt Brooks, told Politico. The poll asked voters their response to negative statements about Obama, including reported praise for him from a leader of the Palestinian terror group Hamas and a friendship early in his career with a pro-Palestinian university professor. Some Jewish Democrats who received the poll – including a New Republic writer who lives in Michigan – were outraged by the poll, describing it in interviews as "ugly" and disturbing. A group that supports Obama, the Jewish Council for Education and Research even staged a protest outside the Manhattan call center from which the calls originated Tuesday. "If the RJC is responsible for these calls, which are designed to frighten Jews and sow mistrust, they have forfeited their place at the Jewish table," said the co-executive director of the group, Mik Moore. "It is incumbent upon the McCain campaign to speak out forcefully against this and ongoing efforts by his supporters to scare Jews into supporting his candidacy." --- SEPTEMBER 6, 2008 --- Obama: McCain focused on biography over economy----- DURYEA, Pa. – Democrat Barack Obama called Republican rival John McCain's acceptance speech the final piece of an out-of-touch convention that focused on its nominee's biography instead of the struggles of the middle class. "If you watched the Republican National Convention over the last three days, you wouldn't know that we have the highest unemployment in five years because they didn't say a thing about what is going on with the middle class," Obama told workers at a specialty glass factory. "They spent a lot of time talking about John McCain's biography, which we all honor," the Illinois senator said. "They talked about me a lot, in less than respectful terms. What they didn't talk about is you and what you're seeing in your lives and what you're going through, or what your friends or your neighbors are going through." Obama pointed out that the nation's unemployment rate zoomed to a five-year high of 6.1 percent in August, according to a government jobs report issued Friday. ------- By STEPHEN GRAHAM, Associated Press Writer --- Bhutto widower elected Pakistani president---- ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – The widower of slain former leader Benazir Bhutto will succeed Pervez Musharraf as president of Pakistan after winning a landslide election victory Saturday. Unofficial results announced after separate votes in the federal and provincial assemblies showed Asif Ali Zardari winning an overwhelming majority. Pro-Zardari lawmakers, some in tears, shouted "Long live Bhutto!" as the figures came in. The couple's two jubilant but tearful daughters, one carrying a portrait of their late mother, smiled and hugged friends in the gallery of the National Assembly. But Saturday also brought a brutal reminder of the threats to the nuclear-armed nation's stability, when a suicide car bomber killed at least 13 people and wounded dozens near the northwestern city of Peshawar. ...... By JEFFREY COLLINS and KEVIN MAURER, Associated Press Writer --- Hanna blows onshore near North-South Carolina line ---- MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. – Tropical Storm Hanna sailed easily over the beaches of Carolinas' coast early Saturday, blowing hard and dumping rain but apparently causing little damage at the start of its speedy run north to New England. Emergency officials were already looking past Hanna to powerful Hurricane Ike, several hundred miles out in the Atlantic. With Category 3 winds of near 115 mph, Ike could approach southern Florida by Monday, as Hanna spins away from Canada over the North Atlantic....... --------SEPTEMBER 3 2008 -----ST. PAUL (Reuters) - Sarah Palin touted her small-town roots and swiped at Democrat Barack Obama during a highly anticipated speech to the Republican convention on Wednesday, ridiculing her critics as "the Washington elite" who did not understand everyday life in America. In her public debut in the spotlight, John McCain's choice for vice president portrayed herself as a Washington outsider and came out swinging against Obama and members of the news media who have raised questions about her qualifications.-----Obama Discusses Economy In Eastern Ohio By Associated Press NEW PHILADELPHIA -- Barack Obama took a swipe at Republicans on Wednesday while talking about jobs in eastern Ohio. The Democratic presidential nominee criticized the GOP for not discussing the economy Tuesday night at the Republican National Convention. "All these speakers came up. You did not hear a single word about the economy. Now think about it: Not once did people mention the hardships that folks are going through," Obama said at a Kent State University branch campus in New Philadelphia. "Not once did they mention what are we going to do about keeping jobs here in Ohio." Obama promised to cut taxes and raise the minimum wage. It was one of two stops scheduled in Ohio's Appalachian region.-----AUGUST 29 2008 ---- HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe on Friday handed the country's only Olympic medalist in Beijing a $100,000 cash reward for her performance at the games. Swimmer Kirsty Coventry smashed the world record to win gold in the women's 200 meters backstroke. She also captured three silver medals ----Obama delivers a superb acceptance speech at DNC convention in Denver ---- JUNEAU, Alaska - In two short years, Sarah Palin moved from small-town mayor with a taste for mooseburgers to the governor's office and now — making history — to John McCain's side as the first female running mate on a Republican presidential ticket. ---- ST. PAUL - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama begins airing an ad Saturday that responds to rival John McCain's selection of a running mate, carefully avoiding any direct criticism of Sarah Palin, the Alaska governor whom McCain chose for the GOP ticket. Obama's campaign promptly created the spot in advance of next week's Republican National Convention. The ad, called "No Change," sought to sustain the theme that Obama and Democrats worked to cultivate at their own convention this week — that McCain represents a continuation of the policies of an unpopular President Bush. ---- Gas prices up as Gustav threatens Gulf refineries NEW YORK - Retail gas prices swung higher Friday — the first increase in 43 days — as analysts warned that a direct hit on U.S. energy infrastructure by Hurricane Gustav could send pump prices hurtling toward $5 a gallon. ---- WEEKLY HEADLINE NEWS ---- AUGUST 19, 2008 --- NATO freezes Russian ties over Georgia By Mark John and Francois Murphy BRUSSELS (Reuters) - NATO agreed after U.S. pressure on Tuesday to freeze regular contacts with Russia until Moscow had withdrawn its troops from Georgia in line with a peace deal. The alliance also agreed to upgrade contacts with Tbilisi but stopped short of accelerating its efforts to join NATO, an ambition which had enraged Russia even before the two-week-old conflict over Georgia's breakaway South Ossetia region. "We have determined that we cannot continue with business as usual," the 26 NATO states said in a joint declaration issued after emergency talks in Brussels. ---- Russian soldiers take prisoners in Georgia port By BELA SZANDELSZKY, Associated Press Writer POTI, Georgia - Russian soldiers took about 20 Georgians in military uniform prisoner at a key Black Sea port in western Georgia on Tuesday, blindfolding them and holding them at gunpoint, and commandeered American Humvees awaiting shipment back to the United States. ---- Taliban kill 10 French troops, raid US base By AMIR SHAH, Associated Press Writer SUROBI, Afghanistan - Insurgents ambushed a group of elite French soldiers as they climbed a mountain pass, killing 10 troops in a militant ---- Fire breaks out in Egypt's parliament CAIRO, Egypt - Fire ravaged a 19th century palace used by the upper house of Egypt's parliament Tuesday, with flames bursting through windows as helicopters scooped water from the Nile River to douse the blaze. ---- WEEKLY HEADLINE NEWS ---- AUGUST 8, 2008 ---China strides onto Olympic stage --- BEIJING (Reuters) - American swimmer Michael Phelps became the most successful Olympian of all time by winning two more Beijing gold medals on Wednesday to take his career tally to an unprecedented 11 victories. The mighty Phelps overtook an elite group including Mark Spitz and Carl Lewis who had won nine golds by breaking his own world record in the men's 200 meters butterfly. BEIJING - Once-reclusive China commandeered the world stage Friday, celebrating its first-time role as Olympic host with a stunning display of pyrotechnics and pageantry — topped by the unworldly sight of a flying gymnast, traversing the heights of the stadium to light the flame and begin the Summer Games. ..... WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former U.S. Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards has admitted to having had an extramarital affair with a woman he met in a New York City bar in 2006, ABC News reported on Friday ..... Shiite militia to become religious, cultural body --- BAGHDAD - Anti-U.S. Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr ordered most of his militiamen Friday to lay down their arms, and his spokesman said the young cleric might call off all resistance if the Americans accept a timetable to leave Iraq. In the north, a car bomb exploded Friday evening in a crowded market in the city of Tal Afar, killing at least 21 people and wounding 72, police said. Tensions have been rising among ethnic groups throughout the north because of a dispute over control of the oil-rich area around Kirkuk — claimed by Arabs, Turkomen and Kurds ..... WASHINGTON - Vice President Dick Cheney, a conservative favorite , will join President Bush in addressing delegates on the opening night of the Republican National Convention, the White House said Friday. ..... NBA champion Celtics to open season against Cavaliers --- NEW YORK (AFP) - American Greg Oden's debut and the Boston Celtics banner raising ceremony will highlight the opening day of the 2008-09 National Basketball Association season, the league announced Wednesday .... Clinton says she wants Obama to win White House --- LAS VEGAS - Hillary Rodham Clinton told an exuberant crowd Friday she wants Barack Obama to win the White House, even though he dashed her own presidential dreams — and she wants her supporters to vote that way, too "Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Sen. Obama than Sen. McCain," Clinton told her cheering audience in the Las Vegas suburb of Henderson. "Remember who we were fighting for in my campaign." ..... WEEKLY HEADLINE NEWS AUGUST 8 2008 ......COLUMBUS, OHIO .....----McCain campaign to return 50K in donations -- AP - John McCain's campaign said Thursday it is returning $50,000 in contributions solicited by a foreign citizen. The move follows the disclosure that the money was being raised by a Jordanian man who is a business partner of prominent Florida Republican Harry Sargeant III, who has collected hundreds of thousands of dollars for McCain .... CHICAGO - Party officials say former President Clinton will deliver a speech on the third night of the Democratic National Convention before an address by the as-yet-to-be-named running mate for Barack Obama. .... BEIJING (Reuters) - President George W. Bush wasted no time on Friday raising the touchy issues of religious freedom and free speech in China, hours before he was to attend the opening ceremonies of the 2008 Summer Olympics. .... White supremacists hope Obama win prompts backlash -- AP - They're not exactly rooting for Barack Obama, but prominent white supremacists anticipate a boost to their cause if he becomes the first black president. His election, they say, would trigger a backlash — whites rising up, a revolution of sorts — that they think is long overdue. .... One of the Democratic Party's leading electoral street fighters, New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, said that Barack Obama should respond to John McCain's personal attacks with an equally personal slap. ..... McCain campaign to return money raised by foreign national -- John McCain's campaign is returning about $50,000 raised by a Jordanian man, some of which came from individuals who were not even supporters of the GOP nominee. ..... MIAMI - A man who authorities said was keeping weapons and military-style gear in his hotel room and car appeared in court Thursday on charges he threatened to assassinate Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. Raymond Hunter Geisel, 22, was arrested by the Secret Service on Saturday in Miami and was ordered held at Miami's downtown detention center without bail Thursday by a federal magistrate. ..... TBILISI, Georgia - Government troops launched a major military offensive Friday to regain control over the breakaway province of South Ossetia and the president accused Russia, which has close ties to the separatists, of bombing Georgian territory. .... BAGHDAD - Iraq and the U.S. are near an agreement on all American combat troops leaving Iraq by October 2010, with the last soldiers out three years after that, two Iraqi officials told The Associated Press on Thursday. U.S. officials, however, insisted no dates had been agreed---WEEKLY HEADLINE NEWS----U.S. athletes wear face masks - - Aug 5 - As athletes from all over the world arrive in Beijing ahead of the start of the Olympics some members of the U.S. cycling team arrive wearing anti-pollution masks. A U.S. team official said members of the cycling squad were wearing the respiratory masks but declined further comment. .... Obama shifts on energy issues - - Aug 4 - Barack Obama proposed tapping the strategic oil reserves to help lower gas prices, a reversal of a stance he made just weeks ago. The emergency reserve created in the 1970s holds about 700 million barrels of crude stored in Texas and Louisiana. .... Morgan Freeman injured in accident - - Oscar Winner Morgan Freeman is critically ill in hospital after the car he was driving overturned several times. Morgan Freeman was born in Memphis but spent much of his childhood in Mississippi and has opened a music club in the state. .... Bush faces S. Korea balancing act - - President Bush faces a balancing act as he heads to South Korea to press on a North Korea nuclear deal while sidestepping other issues. The six-party nuclear talks have been complicated by South Korea's anger at the North for the death of a tourist who apparently walked into a restricted zone. .... Bush arrives in Seoul, anti-U.S. protest fizzles. SEOUL (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush arrived in South Korea on Tuesday for talks focused on communist North Korea and was greeted by a minor protest aimed mostly at his host instead of a big anti-U.S. rally that had been expected. ...... Olsen seeks immunity for Ledger questioning: source Mary-Kate Olsen will not speak to federal investigators about actor Heath Ledger's death unless she is granted immunity from prosecution, a law enforcement source told Reuters on Monday. ......
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Israel accuses NKorea of Mideast proliferation

By GEORGE JAHN, Associated Press Writer
VIENNA, Austria - Israel accused North Korea on Saturday of covertly supplying at least half a dozen Mideast countries with nuclear technology or conventional arms. The allegation was made at an International Atomic Energy Agency meeting in Vienna where world powers urged the North to stop reactivating its nuclear weapons program. "The Middle East remans on the receiving end of the DPRK's reckless activities," Israeli delegate David Danieli told the meeting, referring to North Korea by its acronym. "At least half a dozen countries in the region ... have become eager recipients" of the North's black market supplies of conventional arms or nuclear technology, he said — mostly "through black market and covert network channels." While he did not name any of the suspected countries, he appeared to be referring in part to Iran and Syria, which are both under IAEA investigation, and Libya, which scrapped its rudimentary weapons program after revealing it in 2003. U.S. officials have said that North Korea's customer list for missiles or related components going back to the mid-1980s also include Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen. The Israeli accusations came the day after U.S. chief nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill returned from North Korea where he had hoped to salvage a disarmament pact. The North recently reversed a process to dismantle its nuclear facilities as it agreed to do under the pact. The State Department said Friday that the communist nation was continuing work to restore those facilities even after Hill's visit. According to U.S. officials and outside experts, North Korea has sold its military goods to at least 18 countries, mainly in Africa and the Middle East and in mostly covert transactions. North Korea's catalog has included ballistic missiles and related components, conventional weapons such as mobile rocket launchers, and nuclear technology. U.S. government officials have said that A.Q. Khan — the Pakistani scientist who confessed in 2004 to running an illegal nuclear market — had close connections with North Korea, trading in equipment, facilitating international deals for components and swapping nuclear know-how. In 2004 then-CIA Director George Tenet testified before Congress that North Korea had shown a willingness "to sell complete systems and components" for missile programs that have allowed other governments to acquire longer-range missiles. Concerns about Iran focus on its refusal to scrap a secretly developed uranium enrichment program that could be retooled to produce fissile warhead material. Tehran is also suspected of hiding past efforts to develop a nuclear weapons program and of basing its Shahab-3 missile on a North Korean model. Iranian officials say the missile has a range of 1,250 miles — enabling a strike on Israel and most of the Middle East. U.S. and other intelligence says Tehran has studied modifying Shahabs to carry a nuclear warhead — something Iran denies. Rejecting any suggestion of North Korean aid, Iran's chief IAEA delegate Ali Ashgar Soltanieh told The Associated Press that Iran's nuclear and missile programs were developed "without the help of any other country." Syria surfaced on the IAEA's radar screen after Israeli warplanes last year destroyed what the U.S. says was a partially built reactor of North Korean design that — when completed — was meant to produce plutonium. Both Syria and Iran — which is under U.N. sanctions for its nuclear defiance — deny having weapons ambitions. Diplomats have told The Associated Press that the IAEA has been forwarded intelligence that outlines years of extensive cooperation between the Syrians and teams of visiting North Korean nuclear officials. North Korea tested a nuclear device in an underground explosion in 2006. The North is believed by experts to have produced enough weapons-grade plutonium to make as many as 10 nuclear bombs before agreeing to dismantle its weapons program early last year. North Korea had been disabling its nuclear facilities at its Yongbyon complex but abruptly stopped in mid-August, citing Washington's refusal to remove it from a list of state sponsors of terrorism. The disarmament process snagged over Washington's request that the North agree to a verification system to account for its nuclear arsenal as a condition for removing the country from the terrorism list. In Vienna, Russia, China, Japan and South Korea urged the North to honor its pledge to disarm and the 145-nation IAEA general conference then passed a resolution expressing the same sentiments. The disarmament pact was agreed between six countries — North and South Korea, the U.S., Japan, China and Russia. ...MORE
 

Turks, Kurdish rebels in worst clashes in 8 months

By SELCAN HACAOGLU, Associated Press Writer
ANKARA, Turkey - The Turkish army clashed with Kurdish rebels in southeastern Turkey and northern Iraq in their deadliest battle in eight months, and the government vowed Saturday to fight the rebels at full force. Fifteen soldiers and at least 23 insurgents were killed, the military said Saturday. Twenty more soldiers were wounded, the government said. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan returned early to Ankara from an official visit to Turkmenistan to lead an emergency security meeting, and President Abdullah Gul canceled a planned visit to France on Sunday. "Whatever the cost, the fight will go on full force," Gul told reporters before meeting with the chief of the military. Outraged Turks demonstrated in the streets in several cities, politicians denounced the rebels, and images of grieving families of fallen soldiers covered the Web sites of almost all newspapers. The Iraqi government, the European Union, NATO and the U.S. Embassy in Ankara all condemned the rebels and supported Turkey. Iraq also called on Ankara to show restraint in its response. The fighting Friday was the deadliest since February, when Turkey staged a weeklong ground offensive against guerrillas based in northern Iraq and claimed to have killed hundreds of them. The military did not say whether Turkish soldiers crossed the border into Iraq on Friday, but said rebels attacked soldiers near a military outpost in Aktutun, Turkey, about 6 miles (10 kilometers) north of the Iraqi border, and Turkish warplanes, helicopters and artillery units pounded insurgent positions in northern Iraq. Turkey's Foreign Ministry called the attack with heavy weaponry from northern Iraq was "a grave situation," and called again on Iraq to capture the Kurdish rebels and work to prevent future attacks. "We expect Iraq to fulfill its responsibilities," the ministry said. Iraq's presidential council then said it would continue efforts with Turkey to prevent any more such aggression and end "the illegitimate presence of the gunmen on Iraqi territory." Iraqi President Jalal Talabani had telephoned Gul earlier Saturday and suggested resuming security talks, Turkey's presidential palace said. Gul told Talabani that Turkey expected Iraq to "immediately take necessary measures to stop these international terrorist acts against Turkish soil," the palace said. Rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, have been fighting for autonomy since 1994 from bases in predominantly Kurdish southeastern Turkey and northern Iraq. Brig. Gen. Metin Gurak, a military spokesman, said that Turkish forces on Friday were reacting to Kurdish rebel movements they had detected in northern Iraq and to the rebel attack near the outpost. Most of the 15 Turkish dead were killed near the outpost in heavy rebel fire from northern Iraq, Gurak's statement said. The Web site of the pro-Kurdish Firat news agency quoted Kurdish rebels as saying they used rocket launchers and assault rifles in the attack. Two soldiers were missing, Gurak said. The insurgents have kidnapped Turkish soldiers in the past during similar attacks. Gurak said Turkish forces killed at least 23 Kurdish rebels, but more may have died during the artillery and air force attacks in northern Iraq. Ahmed Deniz, a PKK spokesman in northern Iraq, said Saturday afternoon that the rebels had attacked a small Turkish army camp from four directions and that the fighting was continuing. He would not give any figures on rebel casualties and vowed to keep fighting. An American Embassy statement said, "We mourn with the citizens of Turkey and extend our condolences to the families of the soldiers who lost their lives." "President George W. Bush has labeled the PKK a common enemy of the United States, Turkey and Iraq, and we reiterate our long-standing call for the PKK to lay down its arms and cease its violence once and for all," it said. Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh urged Turkey "to deal with this criminal act wisely and to show restraint." Next week, Turkey's Parliament is to vote whether to extend for another year a mandate authorizing the military to carry out cross-border operations against Kurdish rebel bases in northern Iraq. The current authority expires Oct. 17. ...MORE
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