Evening Edition

Evening Edition is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Three dead in NATO-led strike on Kadhafi compound

by W.G Dunlop, AFP

2 hrs 27 mins ago

TRIPOLI (AFP) – NATO-led air strikes on Thursday hit Moamer Kadhafi’s compound, killing three people, the Libyan regime said, as rebels celebrated the capture of Misrata airport and fresh diplomatic coups in the West.

The pre-dawn strikes in the capital Tripoli came just hours after Libyan state television showed what it said was footage of Kadhafi meeting tribal leaders, the first new video of him aired since an April 30 air strike that his government termed an attempt on his life.

“Three people died — two of them are journalists and one was their guide who was helping them film a documentary,” government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told a news conference in the Bab al-Aziziya compound that was held next to a large, water-filled crater.

AFP

2 Six dead in NATO-led strike on Kadhafi compound

by W.G Dunlop, AFP

Thu May 12, 8:30 am ET

TRIPOLI (AFP) – NATO-led air strikes hit Moamer Kadhafi’s compound on Thursday, killing six people, the Libyan regime said, as rebels celebrated the capture of Misrata airport and a British invitation to open their first foreign office.

The pre-dawn strikes in the capital Tripoli came just hours after Libyan state television showed what it said was footage of Kadhafi meeting tribal leaders, the first new video of him aired since an April 30 air strike that his government termed an attempt on his life.

“There were three dead here and three dead in another place” in addition to 10 wounded, said the official, gesturing to scattered sandbags next to a crater in a street of the Bab al-Azaziyah compound.

3 Syria crackdown spurs US warning of pressure

AFP

29 mins ago

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syrian security forces pressed on with a crackdown on Thursday, rounding up more opposition leaders, in a “brutal” campaign for which Washington warned that the regime would be held to account.

The army and security services arrested dozens of people in the flashpoint coastal city of Banias and the neighbouring villages of Al-Beyda and Al-Qariri, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said.

Lawyer Jalal Kindo was among those detained in the Mediterranean city of Banias, where security forces have been hunting down dissidents and protest organisers, the London-based group said.

4 19 dead as Syria presses crackdown

AFP

Wed May 11, 4:59 pm ET

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syrian security forces and unidentified gunmen killed at least 19 civilians on Wednesday, as authorities pressed a deadly crackdown on protest hubs across the country, human rights activists said.

Among the dead was an eight-year-old boy, the head of the National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria, Ammar Qurabi, told AFP.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the bloc will look at fresh sanctions this week against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime after already homing in on his inner circle.

5 US and activists accuse Syria of ‘barbaric’ crackdown

AFP

Thu May 12, 5:50 am ET

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Syria’s security forces are pressing a deadly town-by-town crushing of dissent and mass round-up of opposition leaders, according to rights activists, while Washington has slammed the repression as “barbaric”.

Thousands of students meanwhile defied the crackdown to stage a protest in Syria’s second-largest city Aleppo late Wednesday before being dispersed by baton-wielding loyalists and security force personnel, a rights activist said.

At least 19 civilians were killed on Wednesday as troops and unknown gunmen assaulted protest hubs across the country, shelling and firing on some and encircling others with tanks, according to accounts by human rights activists.

6 Yemen crackdown kills 19 as Washington ups pressure

by Jamal al-Jaberi, AFP

Thu May 12, 11:55 am ET

SANAA (AFP) – Gunmen killed three protesters tearing up posters of Ali Abdullah Saleh on Thursday, taking the death toll to 19 over 24 hours of repression and prompting Washington to urge the embattled president to agree “now” to a transfer of power.

Pro-Saleh gunmen on the roof of the ruling party’s headquarters in Al-Bayda, 210 kilometres (130 miles) southeast of Sanaa, opened fire at demonstrators tearing-up posters of Saleh, witnesses and protest organisers said.

Seven protesters were also wounded.

7 Nazi guard freed after German conviction

by Francis Curta, AFP

33 mins ago

MUNICH, Germany (AFP) – A German court sentenced Thursday former Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk to five years in jail but freed him pending a possible appeal and because of his advanced age.

Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk, 91, was convicted of helping kill almost 30,000 people while a guard at the Sobibor extermination camp in German-occupied Poland in 1943.

But presiding judge Ralph Alt ordered his immediate release, pending a final decision by a federal court and possible appeal, saying the accused no longer posed a threat to society.

8 Spain scrambles tents, food for refugees of deadly quake

by Denholm Barnetson, AFP

2 hrs 47 mins ago

LORCA, Spain (AFP) – Army and emergency workers pitched tents and handed out food to thousands of evacuees Thursday after a killer 5.1-magnitude quake smashed through a historic Spanish city.

Nine people, including a child, perished when Spain’s deadliest quake in more than 50 years rocked the southeastern city of Lorca on Wednesday, the regional government of Murcia said.

An open-air funeral mass will be held in the city Friday morning, attended by Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, Crown Prince Felipe and his wife Letizia.

9 Early drug therapy curbs HIV transmission: study

by Kerry Sheridan, AFP

20 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – People with HIV who take antiretroviral drugs before their health declines have a 96 percent lower risk of transmitting the virus to a partner, a breakthrough global study released Thursday said.

The large study that covered mainly heterosexual couples in Africa, India and the Americas was hailed by AIDS experts as a “game-changer” that will transform how the disease is managed, 30 years after it first surfaced.

Until now, antiretroviral therapy was known to improve the health of people infected with human immunodeficiency virus, but this is the first study to show a solid impact on preventing transmission to an HIV-negative partner.

10 Protester ‘critical’ following austerity demo clashes

by John Hadoulis, AFP

Wed May 11, 4:16 pm ET

ATHENS (AFP) – A Greek protester was critically injured during clashes with police Wednesday as thousands demonstrated against a new wave of austerity cuts designed to keep the country’s sinking economy above water.

The man in his 30s is in a “critical but stable” condition in intensive care after undergoing emergency surgery for a head injury, the Greek health ministry said.

A communist group said on its website the activist had suffered blows from a truncheon during an incident on the sidelines of the demonstration organised by the Greek trade unions.

Reuters

11 Consumers feel pinch of gasoline costs in April

By Lucia Mutikani, Reuters

48 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The economy struggled to gain momentum early in the second quarter, with retail sales posting their smallest rise in nine months in April and wholesale prices increasing more than expected.

Other data on Thursday showed new claims for unemployment benefits fell 44,000 last week to 434,000 as one-time factors that had led to a spike in the prior week reversed. But the level of claims still suggested hiring was softening.

“There are still headwinds for the economy stemming from the high gasoline and food prices for the consumer as well as input prices for producers,” said Omair Sharif, an economist at RBS in Stamford, Connecticut. “Given the high input costs, it looks like firms are scaling back on their hiring plans.”

12 Regulators press on with Wall Street crackdown

By Kevin Drawbaugh, Reuters

1 hr 2 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A broad crackdown on Wall Street is churning forward, even as regulators assured a Senate panel on Thursday they would seek more input on how to pick which financial institutions need stricter policing.

Members of a new inter-agency council on U.S. economic stability said they would extend their public comment period on how to choose important banks, insurers and hedge funds for heightened surveillance and tougher capital rules.

The concession by the Financial Stability Oversight Council came as a House of Representatives panel was expected to vote on Friday for weakening the consumer protection provisions of 2010’s Dodd-Frank law and slowing down implementation of its new rules for derivatives markets.

13 Special report: The bin Laden kill plan

By Caren Bohan, Mark Hosenball, Tabassum Zakaria and Missy Ryan, Reuters

38 mins ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A pivotal moment in the long, tortuous quest to find Osama bin Laden came years before U.S. spy agencies discovered his hermetic compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

In July 2007, then Senator Barack Obama’s top foreign policy advisers met in the modest two-room Massachusetts Avenue offices that served as his campaign’s Washington headquarters. There, they debated the incendiary language Obama would use in an upcoming speech on national security, according to a senior White House official.

Pakistan was a growing worry. A new, highly classified intelligence analysis, called a National Intelligence Estimate, had just identified militant safe havens in Pakistan’s border areas as a major threat to U.S. security. The country’s military leader, Pervez Musharraf, had recently cut a deal with local tribes that effectively eased pressure on al Qaeda and related groups.

14 Debt crisis could still spread to EU core: IMF

By Christiaan Hetzner and Dina Kyriakidou, Reuters

Thu May 12, 11:35 am ET

FRANKFURT/ATHENS (Reuters) – Despite bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal, Europe’s debt crisis may yet spread to core euro zone countries and emerging eastern Europe, the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday.

The warning came as government sources in Athens said international inspectors checking on Greece’s compliance with its EU/IMF rescue package had found problems and were pressing for deeper spending cuts to cover a likely revenue shortfall.

A Reuters poll of investors and economists showed an overwhelmingly majority believe Greece will restructure its debt, possibly as soon as late this year. Most fund managers expect Athens to pay back less than half of what it owes.

15 NATO hits Gaddafi compound, rebels seek aid

By Joseph Logan, Reuters

Thu May 12, 1:13 pm ET

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – NATO bombed Muammar Gaddafi’s compound on Thursday, hours after the Libyan leader ended doubt about his fate by making his first television appearance since another air strike killed his son nearly two weeks ago.

The leader of the rebels seeking to end Gaddafi’s 41-year rule visited London to drum up aid for his movement. The White House said a senior rebel delegation would be received for the first time in Washington on Friday.

Rebels fighting against Gaddafi for almost three months are in control of the east of the country, while Gaddafi’s forces control the capital Tripoli and nearly all of the west.

16 Early drug treatment greatly cuts spread of HIV

By Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters

48 mins ago

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Men and women infected with the AIDS virus who take antiretroviral drugs immediately rather than waiting to become more ill dramatically cut the risk of infecting a sexual partner, U.S. researchers said on Thursday.

The findings in the study conducted in nine countries are expected to energize global efforts to slow the AIDS virus. The study showed that taking these drugs does not only slow the virus in people already infected, but makes these people far less infectious and far less likely to spread HIV to others.

The landmark study, mostly involving heterosexual couples, found a 96 percent reduction in HIV transmission to an uninfected sexual partner when antiretroviral drug treatment began early, before a person’s immune system begins to weaken under the onslaught of the virus.

17 German court convicts then frees Nazi guard Demjanjuk

By Christian Kraemer, Reuters

59 mins ago

MUNICH (Reuters) – A German court convicted John Demjanjuk on Thursday for his role in the killing of 28,000 Jews in the Sobibor Nazi death camp, then set the 91-year-old free because of his age.

Holocaust survivors at first welcomed the Munich court’s verdict that Demjanjuk, who was exonerated in another war crimes case in Israel two decades ago, was an accessory to mass murder as a guard at Sobibor camp in Poland during World War Two.

But they then expressed dismay at Judge Ralph Alt’s decision to free Demjanjuk despite handing down a five-year sentence.

18 In his native Sri Lanka, Rajaratnam is no household name

Reuters

Thu May 12, 9:06 am ET

COLOMBO (Reuters) – Even in the heart of Sri Lanka’s financial capital, convicted hedge fund founder and one-time billionaire Raj Rajaratnam remains a mystery to many on the island of his birth.

Found guilty of 14 counts of conspiracy and securities fraud on Wednesday in New York in one of the United States’ largest hedge fund insider trading cases, Rajaratnam’s fate and infamy in his adopted country has drawn negligible attention in Sri Lanka.

“Who is that? I really don’t know,” said a man who identified himself only as Fernando, when asked what he thought about Rajaratnam inside Colombo’s World Trade Center, the Indian Ocean island nation’s financial hub.

19 Special report: Europe’s Greek tragedy

By Noah Barkin, Reuters

Thu May 12, 9:59 am ET

BERLIN (Reuters) – Valentine’s Day is supposed to be a celebration of love between partners, but that was in short supply when ministers from Europe’s single currency zone met on the fifth floor of the Justus Lipsius building in Brussels on February 14.

After a brief lull in their debt crisis at the start of 2011, tensions in the 17-nation euro area had returned and financial markets were piling new pressure on the bloc’s weakest members.

Ten days earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy had sparked an angry EU backlash by unveiling a plan to impose debt limits and harmonize wage policies across the vast economic area of 330 million people.

20 Exclusive: Ireland will seek to reschedule EU-IMF loans

By Padraic Halpin, Reuters

1 hr 55 mins ago

DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ireland wants to reschedule debt issued under its EU/IMF rescue package and will not accept less favorable treatment than other bailed out countries in changing the deal, its public expenditure minister said on Thursday.

Ireland, which between 2011 and 2013 will borrow 67.5 billion euros ($96 billion) from its creditors at a maturity averaging 7.5 years, is seeking improvements in the terms to ease a debt pile inflated by bank bailouts and a yawning budget deficit.

Brendan Howlin told Reuters that the government intended to seek to reschedule the International Monetary Fund/European Union portion of its debt in due course. “Obviously long-term rescheduling of debt is something that would be desirable and we will deal with it,” Howlin, appointed in March to the newly created expenditure department, said.

21 Analysis: Thinking the unthinkable on Europe’s debt crisis

By Luke Baker, Reuters

Thu May 12, 10:18 am ET

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – There is a solution to Europe’s debt crisis. It’s called proper fiscal and political union. The only problem is Germany, France, Austria, Finland, the Netherlands and quite a few others would never accept it.

For well over a year, Europe’s leaders have been coming up with bold, multi-billion-euro measures to try to put a stop to the debt rot eating away at Greece, Ireland and Portugal, and which could soon affect other member states such as Spain.

The net result, especially when looked at through the eyes of the financial markets, is no improvement. Greece and the others are no closer to resolving their problems, and the likelihood of a debt default or restructuring has only risen.

22 Takeda seeks global reach with $12 billion Nycomed bid

By Emi Emoto and Quentin Webb, Reuters

Thu May 12, 12:01 pm ET

TOKYO/LONDON (Reuters) – Japan’s largest drugmaker Takeda Pharmaceutical is in talks to buy privately held Swiss rival Nycomed for more than $12 billion to extend its global reach into Europe and emerging markets, according to sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

The purchase would offer Takeda, a mainly Asian- and U.S.-focused maker of drugs for diabetes and heart disease, access to lung-disease drug Daxas, just approved in the United States, and a portfolio of over-the-counter consumer products.

Broadening Takeda’s horizons and revenue base is key to its future success and could explain the hefty price, analysts say.

23 India’s PM Singh backs Afghan peace plan

By Jonathon Burch and Amie Ferris-Rotman, Reuters

Thu May 12, 12:28 pm ET

KABUL (Reuters) – Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, on a visit to Afghanistan Thursday, said India strongly supported a plan by Kabul to reconcile with Taliban-led insurgents, New Delhi’s first public backing of the plan.

India was rattled when the United States and NATO agreed earlier this year to a plan by Afghan President Hamid Karzai to reintegrate Taliban fighters and reconcile with their leaders after nearly 10 years of fighting.

New Delhi has feared attempts to reach out to the insurgents would give rival Pakistan, which holds influence over the militants, a greater say in the Afghan peace process and might ultimately lead to a Taliban takeover when Western forces leave.

24 Nissan Q4 rises, sees return to pre-quake output by October

By Chang-Ran Kim, Asia autos correspondent, Associated Press

Thu May 12, 7:51 am ET

YOKOHAMA, Japan (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co produced a stronger than expected 7.2 percent rise in quarterly operating profit despite Japan’s biggest earthquake on record and predicted its global output would return to normal by October.

That would see the maker of Tiida and Altima models return to normal production at least a month ahead of rival Toyota Motor Corp and adds to hopes that the global parts bottleneck for automakers resulting from the March 11 Japan quake and tsunami will be resolved sooner than thought.

Toyota said on Wednesday that production would gradually begin to normalize in June, as much as two months earlier than expected.

25 Japan current account surplus slumps after quake

By Stanley White and Tetsushi Kajimoto, Reuters

Thu May 12, 3:05 am ET

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s current account surplus tumbled in March from a year earlier as exports fell and imports rose following a devastating earthquake and tsunami, and the surplus could shrink further as power shortages make it difficult for exporters to restore production to levels seen before the disaster.

Bank lending fell in the year to April at the slowest rate in 17 months as some companies sought extra funds at the start of the new fiscal year, which came after the earthquake that struck the northeast on March 11.

Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano said the quake is expected to shave 1 percentage point off GDP in the current fiscal year that began in April, but expressed confidence that damage to output can be overcome.

26 AIG’s $9 billion offering could be pulled: sources

By Ben Berkowitz and Clare Baldwin, Reuters

Wed May 11, 10:08 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – American International Group and theTreasury on Wednesday said they will sell around $9 billion in AIG stock, but sources familiar with the situation said the Treasury would pull the sale if it cannot be done profitably.

AIG shares have fallen by more than a third this year, bringing the stock close to the government’s $28.72-a-share break-even point. There has been speculation in recent days that the offering would have to be priced well below that in order to get done.

But the sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Treasury was committed to making a profit on this and future offerings and would pull the deal off the table if it could not do so.

27 Syrian tanks shell towns, at least 19 killed

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Reuters

Wed May 11, 11:03 pm ET

AMMAN (Reuters) – Syrian tanks shelled residential areas in two towns and at least 19 people were killed across the country, rights campaigners said, as President Bashar al-Assad’s forces fought to crush a seven-week uprising.

Assad, fighting the most serious challenge to his 11-year rule, has sent troops and tanks into several cities in the last two weeks to try and end protests inspired by Arab revolts which toppled leaders in Egypt and Tunisia.

Wednesday was one of the bloodiest days apart from the main Friday protest days, when thousands use the platform of weekly Muslim prayers to demonstrate. Most of the violence occurred in the southern Deraa province, where unrest erupted on March 18.

28 Clashes in Greece as EU and IMF start key visit

By Renee Maltezou and Ingrid Melander, Reuters

Wed May 11, 7:58 pm ET

ATHENS (Reuters) – A group of 150 hooded demonstrators attacked three policemen in an Athens hospital after a protester was seriously injured in an anti-austerity march on the first day of a visit by EU and IMF inspectors.

Police had fired several rounds of teargas earlier on Wednesday to disperse stone-throwing protesters as senior EU and IMF envoys began talks with the government on stepping up fiscal reforms needed to get the next slice of a bailout package.

“The hooded youths broke into the hospital manager’s office and beat up three policemen who were there investigating the protester’s injuries,” said a policeman who declined to be named. “Two policemen were slightly injured and one suffered more serious injuries to the head.”

29 Rajaratnam verdict shocks some at hedge fund event

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss, Reuters

Wed May 11, 7:59 pm ET

LAS VEGAS (Reuters) – Some hedge fund managers and investors attending a conference here audibly gasped when the news flashed on TV screens that Raj Rajaratnam had been convicted on all 14 counts of insider trading.

“Wow, gosh. I don’t know what to say,” whispered a prominent industry executive.

The executive was responding to a person standing next to him who muttered: “Guilty on all 14 counts.”

30 Analysis: Rajaratnam defense gambles — and loses big

By Jonathan Stempel, Reuters

Wed May 11, 6:17 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) – As a court official read the verdict aloud in a Manhattan federal courtroom, hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam’s lead lawyer John Dowd began ticking off the “guilty” counts on his verdict sheet.

Before the official could say “guilty” 14 times, Dowd put his pen down, tucked his glasses away and leaned back in his chair. It had been a long trial. He had lost.

Then, an hour or so later, the 69-year-old veteran defense lawyer and former U.S. Marine Corps captain was once again his combative self.

31 Yemen forces fire on protests in 3 cities; 9 dead

By Mohammed Ghobari and Mohamed Sudam, Reuters

Wed May 11, 3:38 pm ET

SANAA (Reuters) – Yemeni forces opened fire on demonstrators in three cities on Wednesday, killing at least nine and wounding scores in escalating bloodshed that could ramp up public fury at the president’s refusal to step down.

In the capital Sanaa, forces fired on a crowd of tens of thousands marching to the cabinet building. At least six demonstrators died and around 100 were wounded, said a doctor heading a makeshift clinic for wounded protesters at the scene.

He said the number of dead could rise.

AP

32 Props aplenty in Senate show on big oil tax breaks

By LAURIE KELLMAN and STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press

10 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The hearing was for verbally flogging oil company CEOs, and no senator bothered to pretend it was about making gasoline prices more affordable or helping the economy recover. Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch set the tone Thursday when he opened with a portrait of a dog sitting on a pony.

Sen. Charles Schumer countered with a reference to a unicorn. Sen. Pat Roberts suggested a rhinoceros. It was a fit opening for a show where the oil executives served as props for politicians needing to show voters that they, too, are angry about $4 a gallon gasoline.

“This is not going to change the price at the gas pump,” Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus admitted as he gaveled the proceedings to a close.

33 McCain: Torture did not lead to bin Laden death

By DONNA CASSATA, Associated Press

1 min ago

WASHINGTON – Waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques were not a factor in tracking down Osama bin Laden, a leading Republican senator insisted Thursday.

Sen. John McCain, who spent 5 1/2 years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, also rejected the argument that any form of torture is critical to U.S. success in the fight against terrorism.

In an impassioned speech on the Senate floor, the Arizona Republican said former Attorney General Michael Mukasey and others who back those tactics were wrong to claim that waterboarding al-Qaida’s No. 3 leader, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, provided information that led to bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan.

34 Demjanjuk convicted over Nazi camp deaths

By DAVID RISING, Associated Press

2 mins ago

MUNICH – Retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk was convicted Thursday of accessory to murder as a low-level Nazi death camp guard, a groundbreaking decision setting a precedent that could open the floodgates to a new wave of prosecutions in Germany.

Demjanjuk was sentenced to five years in prison on 28,060 counts of accessory to murder for the number of people who were killed in the Sobibor death camp when the court said evidence shows he stood guard there in 1943.

But the 91-year-old will spend no immediate time behind bars after Presiding Judge Ralph Alt ordered him released from custody pending his appeal – a process that could take at least a year.

35 Romney: Mass. health law differs from Obama’s

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

10 mins ago

ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Mitt Romney says last year’s Democratic-passed health care law is a federal government takeover of health delivery. But he says his somewhat similar Massachusetts law was right for his state.

The likely Republican presidential candidate on Thursday defended the law enacted in 2006 when he was Massachusetts governor. Both the state and federal laws require people to obtain health insurance.

Romney said his program was a state solution to a state problem. He said the Obama-backed law is a power-grab by the federal government to impose a one-size-fits-all plan on all 50 states.

36 Pressure mounts on Gadhafi within Libya’s capital

By DIAA HADID and MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press

11 mins ago

TRIPOLI, Libya – Pressure is mounting on Moammar Gadhafi from within his stronghold in the Libyan capital, with increasing NATO airstrikes and worsening shortages of fuel and goods. Residents said Thursday there has also been a wave of anti-government protests in several Tripoli neighborhoods this week – dissent that in the past has been met with zero tolerance and brutal force.

Gadhafi’s rebel opposition, meanwhile, received major political boosts from abroad. Britain promised to provide them with police gear, and the Obama administration invited a rebel delegation to the White House for talks on Friday.

Those announcements followed a new round of NATO airstrikes early Thursday that hit Gadhafi’s fortified compound in Tripoli. Just hours beforehand, the Libyan leader had appeared on state TV for the first time since his son was killed nearly two weeks ago. Before his appearance, rumors swirled that he had been killed or injured.

37 Obama asks FBI chief to stay, seeks Congress OK

By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent

10 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Reluctant to see another shake-up in his national security team, President Barack Obama said Thursday he wants to stick with FBI Director Robert Mueller, the sturdy face of the bureau whose term has spanned from the Sept. 11 attacks on America to the killing of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden. Key lawmakers indicated support for Obama’s surprise decision.

Keeping Mueller on the job would require an act of Congress since the law allows an FBI director to serve only for 10 years, and Mueller’s term is up on Sept. 4.Obama said he wants Obama to remain for two more years, which would keep him in place well after the next presidential election, into September 2013.

Mueller is the longest-serving FBI chief since J. Edgar Hoover, whose checkered 48-year term ended with his death in 1972 and led Congress to put the term limit in place.

38 Border agents killed in train collision named

By JACQUES BILLEAUD, Associated Press

19 mins ago

GILA BEND, Ariz. – Authorities in Arizona have released the names of the two Border Patrol agents who were killed when their SUV was struck by a train as they were trying to capture a group of suspected illegal immigrants.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security says Agents Eduardo Rojas Jr. and Hector Clark were killed early Thursday in a rural farming area near Interstate 8 and the town of Gila (HEE’-lah) Bend, about 85 miles southwest of Phoenix.

Both agents were based in the Border Patrol’s Yuma sector. No other information on the agents was immediately available.

Did you get that?  These Border Patrol Agents didn’t get their heads chopped off by Illegal Mexican-Islamic Drug Smuggler Terrorists.  They parked on a train track and as everyone knows, trains are tools of Socialism (except for Dagny Taggart’s).

39 How the oil industry saves $4.4B a year on taxes

By JONATHAN FAHEY, AP Energy Writer

Thu May 12, 9:32 am ET

NEW YORK – Motorists are paying nearly $4 for a gallon of gasoline as the oil industry reaps pre-tax profits that could hit $200 billion this year.

This makes another big number hard to take: $4.4 billion. That’s how much the industry saves every year through special tax breaks intended to promote domestic drilling.

President Barack Obama is increasing pressure on Congress to eliminate these tax breaks – including one that is nearly a century old – at a time of record budget deficits. The President and congressional Democrats say eliminating the tax breaks will also lower gas prices by making alternative energy sources more competitive.

40 Reboot of Broadway’s ‘Spider-Man’ flies again

By MARK KENNEDY, AP Drama Writer

Thu May 12, 1:35 pm ET

NEW YORK – Taking a page from the comics, producers of Broadway’s “Spider-Man” musical are hoping their battered hero can somehow return from the dead.

“Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” Broadway’s most expensive and audacious show, emerges from a three-week hiatus on Thursday night with what the creative team and producers say is a cleaner story, tighter music and more love story.

About a dozen people were waiting for the box office at the Foxwoods Theatre to open to buy tickets Thursday morning and, in a sign that demand may be softer than when the musical first opened its doors in November, tickets for the reimagined show were available for that night’s performance.

41 Mortgage rates at 2011 low, but many won’t benefit

By JANNA HERRON and DEREK KRAVITZ, AP Real Estate Writers

20 mins ago

NEW YORK – Mortgage rates have hit lows for the year and could soon near the decades-low levels of last year.

Those rates are providing an incentive for buyers, along with falling home prices. They’re tempting for refinancers, too.

Still, analysts say the combination isn’t likely to lift the depressed housing industry or contribute much to the overall economy. In many metro areas, real estate is straining under the weight of foreclosures, higher down-payment requirements, tighter credit, still-high unemployment and buyers’ expectations of even lower prices.

42 House panel OKs defense bill, delays gay service

By DONNA CASSATA, Associated Press

Thu May 12, 2:16 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Republican efforts to delay President Barack Obama’s new policy allowing gays to serve openly in the military and limit his authority to slash the nation’s nuclear arsenal face formidable opposition in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

Early Thursday morning, the House Armed Services Committee approved a broad, $553 billion defense bill that would provide a 1.6 percent increase in military pay, fund an array of aircraft, ships and submarines and meet the Pentagon’s request for an additional $118 billion to fight wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The vote was 60-1, with Rep. John Garamendi, D-Calif., opposing the legislation.

43 Panel says US must act now to curb global warming

By DINA CAPPIELLO, Associated Press

18 mins ago

WASHINGTON – An expert panel asked by Congress to recommend ways to deal with global warming said Thursday that the U.S. should not wait to substantially reduce the pollution responsible and any efforts to delay action would be shortsighted.

But that’s exactly what Republicans and some Democrats in Congress are trying to do.

With a majority in the House and many freshman lawmakers skeptical of the science behind climate change, Republicans are pushing measures to block the federal government from controlling greenhouse gases.

44 Despite problems, NRC says US nuke plants safe

By MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

26 mins ago

ROCKVILLE, Md. – Inspectors have found problems with equipment, training and procedures at some U.S. nuclear reactors, but none serious enough to undermine confidence in the plants’ continued safe operation, a federal task force said Thursday.

The problems identified during inspections over the past two months did not pose a significant safety risk and have been corrected, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said.

“As we stand today, the task force has not identified any issue we think would undermine our confidence in the continued safety and emergency planning of nuclear plants in this country,” said Charles Miller, who oversees environmental management programs for the NRC and is leading the review.

45 White House unveils cybersecurity plan

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press

35 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Companies that run critical U.S. industries such as power plants would get government incentives to make sure their systems are secure from computer-based attacks, the White House said Thursday, detailing its broad proposal to beef up the country’s cybersecurity.

The approach is similar to congressional legislation already in the works, but some criticized it as being too weak Thursday, while the business community said it preferred a voluntary program rather than government mandates.

Under its proposed legislation, the White House would give the Department of Homeland Security the authority to work with industry to come up with ways to secure their computer systems and protect against cyber threats. If a company fails to do so, or comes up with an inadequate plan, DHS would be able develop its own security framework for that firm.

46 The ramp: Green, scrawny and irrationally adored

By JOCELYN NOVECK, AP National Writer

48 mins ago

NEW YORK – It’s scrawny. It’s dirty. It’s bulbous. Its very name is rather pedestrian.

If you had to think of the most unlikely adjective to describe a ramp, “sexy” would probably be it.

And yet that’s just the word that comes to chef Marc Forgione as he tries to describe what a ramp – yes, just a little old wild leek – means to him.

47 Ethics Committee refers Ensign case to Justice

By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press

1 hr 5 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Former Sen. John Ensign of Nevada made false statements to the Federal Election Commission and obstructed a Senate Ethics Committee’s investigation into his conduct, the panel said Thursday in a scathing report that sent the matter to the Justice Department for a criminal investigation.

Ensign, a Nevada Republican, resigned his seat May 3 rather than face continued scrutiny and possible public hearings about his affair with the wife of one of his top Senate aides, a payment to the aide’s family, and the aide’s lobbying after leaving Senate employment.

The committee also asked the FEC to investigate possible campaign finance law violations.

48 FACT CHECK: Gingrich sketches a too-rosy past

By CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press

1 hr 23 mins ago

WASHINGTON – Republican presidential aspirant Newt Gingrich is hitching his star to the era of economic growth in the 1990s when he was House speaker, declaring “We’ve done it before. We can do it again.” But his account of what he did before is inflated.

The economy wasn’t as rosy during his time in leadership as he’s claiming – his numbers are off. And he appears to be taking all the credit for actions that were at least as much the doing of the Democratic president, Bill Clinton, as they were his own.

A look at some of Gingrich’s statements about the past and the present, made in his presidential campaign announcement video this week and subsequent Fox TV interview, and how they compare with the facts.

49 Wild horses wouldn’t be wildlife in Nevada

By SANDRA CHEREB, Associated Press

1 hr 58 mins ago

CARSON CITY, Nev. – Wild horses – symbols of the American West that receive protections from the federal government – would have less standing than mollusks when it comes to Nevada water law under a measure that seeks to deny mustangs and burros status as wild animals.

The six lines contained in the measure define the term “wildlife” as “any wild mammal, wild bird, fish, reptile amphibian, mollusk or crustacean found naturally in a wild state, whether indigenous to Nevada or not and whether raised in captivity of not. The term does not include any wild horse or burro.”

Under state law, holders of water rights must show “beneficial use” of the valuable resource before a permit is granted by the state engineer. Benefiting wildlife is one such allowable use.

50 White House: No more photo re-enactments

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer

2 hrs 45 mins ago

NEW YORK – The White House said it is ending its long-running practice of having presidents re-enact televised speeches for news photographers following major addresses to the country, a little-known arrangement that fed suggestions of fakery when Barack Obama announced the death of Osama bin Laden.

After Obama’s live, late-evening address from the East Room of the White House on May 1, five photographers were ushered in to shoot pictures as the president stood at the podium and re-read a few lines of his speech – a practice that news organizations have protested for years.

Even though The Associated Press and other news outlets said in captions to the photos that they were taken after the president delivered his address, many people who saw them may have assumed they depicted the speech itself. That raised questions of whether news organizations were staging an event.

51 Critics call for AZ sheriff to resign, be indicted

By AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press

Wed May 11, 11:50 pm ET

PHOENIX – Critics of America’s self-proclaimed toughest sheriff on Wednesday called for his resignation and for the federal government to indict him and take control of his office amid allegations of corruption, racial profiling, and misspending.

The call for action comes after a recent investigation revealed evidence of corruption among Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s top commanders, and emails cited in court documents showed that top deputies circulated offensive jokes about Mexicans even as they were being scrutinized over allegations of racial profiling.

“We’re the laughing stock of the world,” said Salvador Reza, an organizer of a local immigrant rights group who joined County Supervisor Mary Rose Wilcox, a state representative and others at a news conference where they called for Arpaio’s resignation.

2 comments

  1. When Florida banned “sexual contact” with “animals,” state lawmakers may have accidentally banned sex altogether, since humans are animals.

    Florida Senate fails basic biology, accidentally outlaws sex.

       An act relating to sexual activities involving animals; creating s. 828.126, F.S.; providing definitions; prohibiting knowing sexual conduct or sexual contact with an animal; prohibiting specified related activities; providing penalties; providing that the act does not apply to certain husbandry, conformation judging, and veterinary practices; providing an effective date.

       source (pfd)

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